Connect with us

NIL

College Football Playoff seeding model is changing to reward top teams in rankings – Tar Heel Times

Posted May 22, 2025 The College Football Playoff will convert beginning this coming year to a straight-seeding model that ranks all 12 teams in order of the final playoff rankings of the regular season, the group’s management committee announced on Thursday. The new policy will no longer include an opening-round […]

Published

on








The College Football Playoff will convert beginning this coming year to a straight-seeding model that ranks all 12 teams in order of the final playoff rankings of the regular season, the group’s management committee announced on Thursday. The new policy will no longer include an opening-round bye for the four highest-ranked conference champions.
(USA Today)

Related: Other News

UCLA and Arizona create Bill Walton Game this November
UCLA basketball will pay tribute to one of its icons this November. It will also play a very big basketball game close to home. The…

5 all-time spiciest Pacers-Knicks rivalry moments
It’s another chapter in the heated Eastern Conference rivalry that’s produced so many incredible moments: the Knicks and Pacers are set to face off in…

Power conferences working on contract to bind schools to new enforcement rules, with punishments
Officials from the Big Ten, SEC, Big 12 and ACC are circulating a draft of a groundbreaking and first-of-its-kind document intended to prevent universities from…

Video: Locked On Tar Heels – UNC Baseball, Jake Knapp, Controversial NIL Proposals
Host Isaac Schade breaks down the implications of proposed NIL agreements and how schools might face conference expulsion if they don’t comply. Discover how Georgia…

College Football Playoff seeding model is changing to reward top teams in rankings




Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

NIL

Ohio State AD Ross Bjork on the House v. NCAA settlement

Two things will not change in college sports with the settlement of the House v. NCAA case, Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork said: Athletes will still go to class in pursuit of a degree, and they will still play games. “Everything in the middle of that is going to be different,” Bjork told reporters […]

Published

on


Two things will not change in college sports with the settlement of the House v. NCAA case, Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork said: Athletes will still go to class in pursuit of a degree, and they will still play games.

“Everything in the middle of that is going to be different,” Bjork told reporters during a press conference to discuss the effects of the House settlement. “That’s OK. We’re all adapting.”

On June 6, federal judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement after prolonged negotiations. The settlement includes a $20.5 million cap on name, image and likeness that athletic programs will pay its players directly. Until now, NIL payments were run through non-university sources, primarily collectives, though colleges could work with them.

Ohio State will use $18 million on NIL payments in four sports – football, men’s and women’s basketball and women’s volleyball. Bjork declined to say what percentage of that money each sport will get, though it’s certain football will get most of it. OSU will spend $2.5 million to pay for 91 additional scholarships spread among its 36 varsity programs.

Bjork said the settlement does not fix all of college sports’ problems. But he said it does provide clarity after three years without clear-cut rules since NIL rights were granted.

“It’s not perfect, but it’s progress we’ve never had before,” Bjork said. “It’s transformational progress.”

Here are six takeaways from Bjork’s press conference:

Ohio State’s 36 varsity sports are here to stay

Ohio State takes much pride in having 36 varsity sports, and that will continue in a post-House landscape. OSU and Stanford are tied for the most varsity sports in the country.

“That was the starting point,” Bjork said. “We will maintain 36 sports. You have an obligation to the young people in those programs. There are a lot of historical programs that compete here. We want to maintain that. We want to grow that.”

Allocating resources to those programs might look different, he said. Not all sports will get an increase in scholarships. A few might face a reduction, though Bjork declined to specify which sports those might be. He said Title IX requirements mandating gender equity would factor into it.

But eliminating sports is not a consideration.

“We can generate the right kind of revenue,” Bjork said. “We’ve recalibrated the expenses the right way.”

Bjork believes OSU remains well-positioned for football

NIL funds were crucial to retaining the seniors and attracting transfers for Ohio State’s 2024 national championship run. OSU was regarded as one of the biggest spenders in NIL. But now that there’s a cap of $20.5 million – or $18 million outside of new scholarships – could that leveling of the playing field be to OSU’s disadvantage?

Bjork doesn’t believe so.

“Ohio State football is a built-to-last championship brand,” he said. “That’s not going away.”

OSU players will still be able to make money on top of what their NIL compensation is. Third parties can arrange deals with a player as long as they are deemed by the newly created College Sports Commission to be of fair-market value and a valid business purpose and not used as a recruiting incentive. Given the passion for OSU football and the size of the Columbus market, Bjork believes that will add to the attractiveness of Ohio State to potential Buckeyes.

“We think we’re in a very competitive spot,” he said.

OSU is devising a formula for NIL payments

The challenge of disbursing NIL now falls on Ohio State. It will have to decide how much to play each player.

“How we navigate it is going to be an evolution,” Bjork said.

He said coach Ryan Day and general manager Mark Pantoni are using analytics to determine the value of each position. Bjork said the hiring of defensive coordinator Matt Patricia, a longtime coach in the NFL, which has had a salary cap since 1994, will be “tremendously valuable.”

Patricia knows how the NFL values different positions.

“You can apply that to college,” Bjork said. “We will always be at the front of the game from a competitive standpoint, but others will have essentially the same resources. Then it’s a matter of how you continue to recruit to a championship brand, and we’re going to be right there every year.”

Bjork believes College Sports Commission judgments will stand

Since the announcement of the College Sports Commission, skeptics have questioned whether its rulings will be affirmed if challenged in court. After all, market value is usually considered to be whatever someone is willing to pay.

But Bjork believes the long negotiation between the parties in the House case will allow the College Sports Commission’s rulings to stand.

“I think what people are missing is it already has stood up in court,” he said. “It was approved. The settlement allowed for the (Power 4) conferences to create rules of engagement. The rules were then created based on valid business purpose, a range of compensation and associated entities. A judge has already signed off on this, and there’s arbitration, which is really hard to pierce.”

Bjork favors CFP expansion

Ohio State was a beneficiary of College Football Playoff expansion in 2024. Under the previous four-team system, the Buckeyes wouldn’t have qualified. Already, there has been talk of further expansion from 12 to 14 or 16 teams.

Bjork is in favor of it, though he didn’t specify a number.

“I could go either way,” he said.

Buy Ohio State posters, books, gear from CFP title win

He favors expansion because it would create more opportunities for players to play for a championship. More games also mean more revenue.

“We need more content because that will drive more revenue, that can drive more NIL opportunities for our athletes,” Bjork said.

The SEC and Big Ten, which are the two most powerful leagues, have pushed for several automatic qualifiers from their conferences. If the playoff expands, that could reduce the incentive to keep conference championship games.

“If you’re doing AQ (automatic qualifier) spots with play-in (CFP) games, could there be a different model? I think that’s a conversation that has to continue,” Bjork said.

Bjork still wants flexibility for football game times

Many OSU fans are grumbling about the noon kickoff for the much-anticipated season opener against Texas on Aug. 30, just as they complained about the Buckeyes being scheduled for eight noon games last year.

Bjork told The Dispatch in May that the Buckeyes tried to get the Texas game moved to prime time and even proposed moving the game to Aug. 31. But Texas, as is its right in the game contract, declined to play on a Sunday. Fox, which gets dibs on games for its Big Noon kickoff, wouldn’t budge, either.

“Really, there’s no flexibility in the contracts,” Bjork said. “Fox bought the noon window. CBS bought the afternoon window. NBC has the night window, and the Big Ten Network and Peacock layer into that.

“What we need is more flexibility. We have carried the day for Big Noon. There’s no question about it if you look at the viewership. We understand why Fox went with Big Noon. We understand why we’re picked all the time, but we’re hoping for more flexibility.”

He said Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti will work with the networks, but he’s not optimistic it will get results.

“Can anything change anytime soon?” Bjork said. “Probably not because those contracts are rigid, and they’re locked in for several years.”

Get more Ohio State football news by listening to our podcasts.

Ohio State football beat writer Bill Rabinowitz can be reached at brabinowitz@dispatch.com or on bluesky at billrabinowitz@bsky.social.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

What we do, don’t know about Missouri NIL, house settlement future

Missouri athletic director Laird Veatch struck a relatable tone to begin a nearly half-hour-long press conference with local media to address the changes coming to college athletics. “I really have a disclaimer,” Veatch said from inside Mizzou Arena on Thursday. “And that is that this is, as you know, very much an evolving landscape. So, […]

Published

on


Missouri athletic director Laird Veatch struck a relatable tone to begin a nearly half-hour-long press conference with local media to address the changes coming to college athletics.

“I really have a disclaimer,” Veatch said from inside Mizzou Arena on Thursday. “And that is that this is, as you know, very much an evolving landscape. So, I don’t pretend to be the expert on everything.”

A lot has changed in college athletics this month, and that’s before the biggest waves have even reached the shore.

A new era of student-athlete compensation is set to go into effect July 1 after U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken granted final approval June 6 to a settlement that will usher in a proposed revenue-sharing model to college athletics. 

That means Missouri, like any other institution that opts into the model, will be able to share an estimated $20.5 million directly to student-athletes across this fiscal year. That number will incrementally increase each year.

That’s the foundation of the settlement, but the approval is going to bring a multitude of changes to the way players are paid, the types of deals that will be sanctioned via third-party NIL, and, of course, the way athletic departments handle the upcoming changes.

There is a lot of ground to cover, and not all of it is stable or particularly transparent.

Here’s what we do and don’t know about the way Mizzou will operate in the post-settlement era:

Do know: ‘Bulk’ of Missouri’s revenue will go to football, men’s basketball

As expected, a majority of Missouri’s delegated revenue will go to football and men’s basketball. That’s following a common pattern around the country, as the two sports that generate the most revenue will get the most to pay players.

Veatch said there will be other sports and athletes that earn revenue-sharing money, but Eli Drinkwitz and Dennis Gates’ squads are getting the lion’s share.

“The bulk of our revenue-share funds will go to football and men’s basketball, similar to the conversation you’re seeing across the country,” Veatch said. “In large part in line with how money is generated, but also the brand value that those student-athletes bring to Mizzou.”

Don’t know: How money will be distributed, who else can earn share

What we do not know, however, is exactly how much each sport will earn. Some universities have provided the percentages that will go to football, men’s basketball and other sports.

For instance, Georgia has announced they plan to mirror the house settlement’s back damage formula amounts, which, per Ross Dellenger of Yahoo, would allocate 75% to football (approx. $13.5 million), 15% to men’s basketball (approx. $2.7 million), 5% to women’s basketball (approx. $900,000) and 5% to the remainder of the sports. 

Ohio State AD Ross Bjork has announced it will start by paying football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and women’s volleyball.

But, for now, Mizzou will not be disclosing how or where exactly it allocates its money.

“I don’t feel like we’re in a position to share specific sports or specific details and amounts,” Veatch said. “And the reason for that, candidly, is because until we’re at a point where this process allows for that kind of transparency across the board of all sports, I just candidly don’t see a competitive value or a strategic incentive for us to disclose those specifics. 

“I do think that will likely happen in time across the board, but until that time, I just don’t think it’s in the best interest of Mizzou.”

Do know: Scholarships are being added, with money to come out of rev-share pool

Scholarship limits have been eliminated in favor of roster limits across the board are coming as part of the settlement, meaning most sports will have fewer walk-ons. Missouri will spend about $3 million adding 60 new scholarships for the upcoming season. Seemingly, $2.5 million of that will come out of the revenue-sharing pool.

That means, like most schools, Mizzou is probably operating with approximately $18 million to pay players in revenue-sharing money in the 2025-26 fiscal cycle.

Don’t know: How ‘NIL Go’ — third-party NIL clearinghouse — will work

Revenue-sharing comes directly from the school. That’s new and will come directly from the school. 

But, third-party NIL — old NIL — still exists. Third-party NIL is the method of paying players that has existed since it originated in 2021. Now, however, any NIL deals from businesses or boosters, or any other source will go through a clearinghouse review and can be approved or denied.

The power conferences have spearheaded the implementation of a ‘College Sports Commission,’ tabbing LBi Software and accounting firm Deloitte to create a clearinghouse system to review any third-party NIL deal that is greater than $600 in value. The clearinghouse will be called ‘NIL Go.’

Qualifying third-party deals will be submitted by the student-athlete to NIL Go, and a commission-created computer algorithm will determine whether those deals are legitimate or not.

Legitimate deals are meant, per the algorithm’s calculations, to be for a “valid business purpose” and be within “a reasonable range of compensation” for that particular student-athlete. Both of those are extremely open to interpretation (and probably, at some point, lawsuits).

But, until litigation happens, that’s besides the point. The clearinghouse’s main goal is to crack down on illegitimate deals.

So, what’s an example of a legitimate and likely-to-be-approved submission versus an illegitimate and unlikely-to-be-approved submission?

Well … nobody really knows. Not even Veatch, an SEC AD.

“We don’t know, again, because we haven’t gone through the process,” Veatch said. “So, I think we’ll have to learn as we go over the coming months, and as those third-party NIL deals are entered by student-athletes and they receive information and feedback, then we’ll learn with them. But until we go through that process, … we can’t speculate really any more than you can.”

Do know: How most Missouri/student-athlete contracts will be paid

Veatch said most of the revenue-sharing contracts that Missouri creates with student-athletes will include monthly payments to the player. 

The AD also said that it will be possible to sign multi-year deals with an athlete.

There is no current status quo for this. Likely, universities across the country operate differently when it comes to contracts.

Don’t know: What those contracts will look like

These contracts are not expected to be public record, and universities seemingly will do their best to keep them from entering the public sphere.

That means if you want to know how much Mizzou is spending on its football team through revenue-sharing this upcoming year, you’re out of luck. Mizzou, realistically, like most institutions, will not disclose that information.

“I think we are tracking more and more toward an atmosphere where we have … that type of transparency,” Veatch said. “I don’t think we’re there yet, and in large part because we are still dealing with student-athletes, and they are young people with protections, legal protections, from some of those areas that have to be worked through, and we have to get advice on (it) before we can provide those kind of specifics. 

“So, I could see that happening down the road, and maybe that’s in our future, but I think that’s one of the many, many questions that has to be answered on the legal front first.”

That also means it’s unlikely that we know exactly what the ramifications are for breaking the terms of a contract by, say, transferring after one season on a multi-year contract.

Don’t know: If any of this will work

Let’s play the hypothetical game for a moment.

What’s stopping a willing booster from filing a series of $599 payments to circumnavigate the clearinghouse threshold?

What’s stopping a university situated in a state with supremely lenient NIL legislation — Tennessee, for instance — from suing the NCAA or the clearinghouse when its rules and decisions counter what they have written in law at the state level?

What’s stopping a never-ending stream of lawsuits for any number of reasons, including but not limited to eligibility, Title IX or contract disputes?

What is binding any university to, plainly, play ball with the new rules when it may be more advantageous not to?

At present, it appears to mainly be faith, hope and wishes.

Veatch indicated that his recent meetings on the subject have shown him that coaches and administrators want to get on the same page with a uniform set of rules; that a widespread frustration with the current landscape of college athletics may bring the nation’s athletic departments together to embrace this next step.

That does, frankly, seem a little friendly for the often-cutthroat business that is college sports.

Some universities and states have gone to great lengths to circumvent upcoming changes and to create advantages for paying players. Missouri led the charge on that back in 2023, by the way.

Now, a proposed set of uniformity is coming, and the coaches who cried chaos will get the chance to play by the same set of rules.

Will it happen?

“This is only (going) to be as successful as the members decide to make it, right?” Veatch said. “And if we are committed to it and give it a chance, then that’s a starting place. Will there be lawsuits, will there be continued outside pressures? Absolutely, right? And that’s why it is a step, but it’s not the last or final step. 

“It’s also why we need congressional support, why we need to have, at some level, some federal action that gives us a level of protection so we can continue to move forward with the collegiate model in a new way, in a new day. And we’ve taken an important step to move that forward, but it is only a step.”



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Commissioners confident in new NIL rules, but who will enforce it?

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Maybe we’ve been reading this whole NIL rules thing wrong. It requires a look back through history. For over 100 years there’s been some kind of body to organize the schools to level the playing field for everybody. Nobody has found anybody who could enforce those rules and make it stick. With […]

Published

on


FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Maybe we’ve been reading this whole NIL rules thing wrong.

It requires a look back through history. For over 100 years there’s been some kind of body to organize the schools to level the playing field for everybody.

Nobody has found anybody who could enforce those rules and make it stick. With very few exceptions of the death penalty and some bans, nobody really pays much attention to punishments. Despite what they say publicly it really doesn’t bother them.

Now, conference commissioners say they’re confident about enforcing new rules around name, image and likeness (NIL) deals, but admit major questions remain about what happens when those rules are broken.

On Monday, ACC commissioner Jim Phillips and his counterparts from the SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, and Pac-12 met with reporters to discuss the new enforcement regime.

The group, which included Greg Sankey (SEC), Tony Petitti (Big Ten), Brett Yormark (Big 12), and Teresa Gould (Pac-12), all said the new framework represents progress.

The specifics are still being hammered out.

“We’re in the process of developing some of those rules and structure and overall implementation of that,” Phillips said. “Now that we have Bryan [Seeley] on board, I think we’ll be able to move a little bit quicker. But we want to get this right.”

Former MLB executive Bryan Seeley was named CEO of the new College Sports Commission on Friday, just hours after the settlement was announced.

His task is to lead enforcement on everything from revenue sharing to NIL deal vetting and roster limits. Starting June 7, athletes must report NIL deals of $600 or more to the Commission.

It will be interesting to see if everybody plays follow the leader on that without finding a reporting loophole. Schools have been good at finding them for decades.

The stakes are high. In 2025-26, each school will be allowed an annual cap of $20.5 million for athlete payments, a figure that will increase over the next decade. The new system is designed to bring stability and fairness to student-athletes, Phillips said.

“Our schools want rules, and we’re providing rules, and we will be governed by those rules,” said Earmark. “If you break those rules, the ramifications will be punitive.”

That said, the exact penalties for violations are still unclear. What may be even murkier is nobody knows if this honor system will have penalties that bite hard enough to make anybody really follow them.

To ensure oversight, accounting firm Deloitte and LBi Software will monitor salary cap management and run the NIL clearinghouse, known as NIL Go. The platform will review deals to ensure they serve a valid business purpose, rather than acting as recruiting inducements.

“If you want an unregulated, open system, just raise your hand and let me know,” Sankey told coaches and university presidents. “And universally, the answer is, ‘No, we want oversight. We want guardrails. We want structure.’”

With states passing their own NIL laws, commissioners say they need help from Congress to standardize the rules nationwide.

Sankey, who recently discussed the issue with former President Donald Trump and Notre Dame athletic director Pete Bevacqua, emphasized that “Congress exists to set national standards and we’re not going to have Final Fours and College Football Playoffs and College World Series with 50 different standards.”

Leaders across college sports have echoed this call.

“A patchwork of state laws will make it impossible to run national championships on a level playing field,” University of Notre Dame president Rev. John I. Jenkins told The New York Times earlier this year.

Despite the uncertainty, commissioners are bullish about the new model.

“What’s not debatable is that this new model does bring stability and fairness to student-athletes in college sports,” Phillips said. “We’ve been in an unregulated environment with no rules and no enforcement. We’re now going to have a foundation and structure laying out those rules.”

Some athletes and advocates remain cautious.

“It’s a positive step, but true fairness won’t come until athletes have a seat at the table in shaping these rules,” said Jason Stahl, executive director of the College Football Players Association, in a statement to ESPN.

The next few months will be critical, as the College Sports Commission works to finalize enforcement details and schools adapt to the new system.

For now, the commissioners’ optimism is interesting, but don’t forget that’s largely for public relations correctness.

“Progress over perfection,” Yormark said. “We’ll meet the challenges as they come.”

Maybe the biggest challenge will be finding an enforcer everybody can agree to put up with. Rules are one thing, following them something else.

If everybody had a track record of honesty, none of it would really matter.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Ohio State to share revenue with athletes from four sports in 2025-26

Ohio State will directly pay athletes playing for its football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and women’s volleyball teams starting next month, athletic director Ross Bjork said. “Those are the four we’ll start with,” Bjork said. “We hope we can expand.” Related NCAA settlement article: What does the NCAA settlement mean for college sports? We answer […]

Published

on


Ohio State will directly pay athletes playing for its football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and women’s volleyball teams starting next month, athletic director Ross Bjork said.

“Those are the four we’ll start with,” Bjork said. “We hope we can expand.”

The payments are part of a revenue-sharing model taking effect as a result of a historic settlement of three antitrust cases against the NCAA and major conferences. A federal judge approved the settlement last week, allowing the payments to begin on July 1.

The Buckeyes are poised to share the maximum allowable revenue, which is estimated to be about $20.5 million over the 2025-26 academic year with increases by percentage points over the next decade.

As $2.5 million for the funding of additional scholarships across 36 varsity sports counts toward the school’s revenue share cap, Ohio State will be able to dedicate $18 million for paying athletes for the use of their name, image and likeness. The NIL deals struck between outside entities and athletes do not count against the cap.

“This is more opportunity for athletes than ever before,” Bjork said.

Bjork did not offer a breakdown of how the money would be divided among the Buckeyes’ four sports, but most is expected to end up going to football and men’s basketball, the highest revenue-generating sports for the athletic department.

According to financial records, football and men’s basketball were responsible for 95% of the department’s sport-specific revenue during the 2024 fiscal year.  

In a previous interview with The Dispatch, Bjork said the Buckeyes were prioritizing paying athletes in the sports that maintain the highest market value and factored a variety of metrics to account for their popularity.

The impact of Title IX, the federal gender equity law, is expected to be more limited in revenue sharing after the U.S. Department of Education in February rolled back guidance requiring payments to be proportional among male and female athletes.

Joey Kaufman covers Ohio State football for The Columbus Dispatch. Email him at jkaufman@dispatch.com and follow along on Bluesky, Instagram and X for more.

Get more Ohio State football news by listening to our podcasts





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Ohio State Athletics Director Ross Bjork addresses NIL strategy for student

Ohio State announced on Monday that it’s launching a new strategic group that’s designed to support, streamline and enhance NIL opportunities for student-athletes. COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State Athletics Director Ross Bjork discussed how the university will directly compensate student-athletes through revenue shares on Thursday. Bjork’s comments come after a federal judge approved the terms of […]

Published

on

Ohio State Athletics Director Ross Bjork addresses NIL strategy for student

Ohio State announced on Monday that it’s launching a new strategic group that’s designed to support, streamline and enhance NIL opportunities for student-athletes.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State Athletics Director Ross Bjork discussed how the university will directly compensate student-athletes through revenue shares on Thursday.

Bjork’s comments come after a federal judge approved the terms of a $2.8 billion antitrust settlement last week, which will allow schools to directly pay players through licensing deals.

You can watch the briefing in the player below.

“The signing of the House settlement Friday by Judge Claudia Wilken will reshape collegiate athletics. Ohio State and schools around the country will now be permitted to directly compensate student-athletes through revenue sharing, which is actually institutional NIL rights,” Bjrok said in a statement.

During Thursday’s press conference, Bjork said the university is set to distribute $20.5 million of revenue-shared dollars that can be given to an athlete. $2.5 million of that will be toward scholarships. The remaining $18 million will be shared between four sports: football, men’s and women’s basketball and women’s volleyball. Bjork said the university will use metrics to determine how much money is distributed to each sport.

Bjork hopes more sports will be added in the future.

Bjork said he the university is committed to offering 36 intercollegiate sports and providing scholarships to all 36 programs.

Ohio State announced on Monday that it’s launching a new strategic group that’s designed to support, streamline and enhance Name, Image and Likeness opportunities for student-athletes.

The strategic group will be called the Buckeye Sports Group.

Ohio State says a key part of the settlement is the implementation of a Fair Mark Evaluation process and a “range of compensation” designed to establish standardized benchmarks for NIL deals across sports and institutions. The Buckeye Sports Group intends to serve as a centralized hub for NIL brand deal facilitation, corporate partnerships, student-athlete storytelling and NIL support.

The Buckeye Sports Group will have access to Learfield’s Compass NIL technology to facilitate deal transactions and gain insights into student-athlete interests.

The group will support Ohio State student-athletes with a focus on three areas: deal facilitation and management, content creation and storytelling and support services.

In a move to streamline and optimize NIL operations, the group will work to consolidate existing NIL collectives under a single marketing team. The founding members of THE Foundation and The 1870 Society, two existing NIL collectives, will remain engaged and serve in an advisory capacity to the new group.

The university also announced a new internal resource center that it says will be designed to enhance success across varsity sports.

To read more about the new group, click here.

Continue Reading

NIL

UConn basketball star Azzi Fudd announces major skincare NIL partnership

Fresh off a National Championship and graduation from UConn, Final Four Most Outstanding Player Azzi Fudd has added a major skincare partnership to her diverse NIL portfolio. Returning to the Huskies for another season with the chance to repeat, Fudd has fully taken the baton from former teammate Paige Bueckers as one of the most […]

Published

on

UConn basketball star Azzi Fudd announces major skincare NIL partnership

Fresh off a National Championship and graduation from UConn, Final Four Most Outstanding Player Azzi Fudd has added a major skincare partnership to her diverse NIL portfolio.

Returning to the Huskies for another season with the chance to repeat, Fudd has fully taken the baton from former teammate Paige Bueckers as one of the most marketable and NIL-active athletes across the country. The All-Big East First Team member announced a new partnership with Paula’s Choice, as their first college athlete ambassador.

Through multiple Instagram collab posts with the brand, Fudd showcases the ease and efficiency of Paula’s Choice skincare wipes while staying active on the hardwood. In addition to social content, the brand will sponsor Fudd’s upcoming youth basketball camp.

“I’m very new to beauty, skin care, all of that stuff, but a lot of my friends use [Paula’s Choice] and so I’d tried some of their stuff,” Fudd told Glossy. “So when they reached out, I was super excited,”

“They have really amazing products,” Fudd continued. “[It’s a brand I feel good to] put my name next to – something that I can be proud of and not embarrassed by and that I use and want to use.”

As a redshirt junior this past season for UConn, Fudd averaged 13.6 points per game and led the Huskies with a 43.6 three-point field goal percentage. Battling injuries for most of her career, she started 30 games last year and is now positioned for an All-American senior campaign as the team leader, with Bueckers moving onto the WNBA as the Dallas Wings’ top draft selection.

Off the court, she has stared in NIL campaigns with Bueckers – including for Madison Reed, Bose and Oreo – but will certainly now be the face of a variety of brands as she is one of the most followed college basketball players in the country. Her previous partnerships include the likes of Under Armour’s Curry Brand, Raining Cane’s, Turbotax and JanSport, among others.

Fudd currently has a 97 “O2W Score” from Out2Win, the leading AI-powered athlete marketing intelligence platform – making her one of the top brand ambassadors in all of college sports.

– Enjoy more NIL Daily on SI –

Oregon Football star QB Dante Moore gives back with heartfelt gift to hometown alma mater

Kansas State star quarterback preps for Summer in new NIL campaign

Star Ohio State football commit Brady Edmunds using NIL money for the greater good

Documentary series on USC Player of the Year returns to follow injury recovery

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending