NIL
Colleges consider unusual ideas to address NIL, transfer portal chaos
By MAURA CAREY, AP Sports Writer As the amateur model of college athletics disintegrates, a handful of unusual ideas have been floated as ways to reign in some of the chaos surrounding the explosion in name, image and likeness compensation and a transfer portal that sees thousands of athletes changing schools every season. Whether any […]


By MAURA CAREY, AP Sports Writer
As the amateur model of college athletics disintegrates, a handful of unusual ideas have been floated as ways to reign in some of the chaos surrounding the explosion in name, image and likeness compensation and a transfer portal that sees thousands of athletes changing schools every season.
Whether any of the ideas end up being implemented is unknown and every school is awaiting a decision from a federal judge on whether a $2.8 billion antitrust settlement against the NCAA and the five largest conferences will take effect as early as July 1. If it does, that opens the floodgates for schools to share millions in revenue directly with their athletes amid a host of other changes.
Here is a look at some of the topics:
Athlete contracts
A formal agreement between an athlete and a school is not a new concept, but with the uptick of NIL deals the thought of pro-style contracts is becoming increasingly more common.
There are plenty of ways to get creative with contracts. Rich Stankewicz, operations director for Penn State’s NIL collective Happy Valley United, said he favors an incentive-based approach — essentially adding money for athletes who not only perform but stick around.
“I personally really like the idea of incentivizing performance in school, those kinds of things that would only be occurring in the season while they’re playing,” Stankewicz said. “If more money is paid out in those time frames, then that gives the incentive for the player to stay and see those dollars from their contract, rather than potentially collect up front and then decide the grass is greener somewhere else three months later, barely doing any school, you know, without playing at all.”
Transfers and buyouts
This topic is red hot at the moment. Entering the transfer portal comes with the risk of not landing in a better spot — or any spot — but athletes have shown every single season over the past few years that they are comfortable going anyway. Athletic departments are beginning to fight back.
Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek recently encouraged the school’s NIL collective to pursue legal action after quarterback Madden Iamaleava departed for UCLA after just five months in Fayetteville. Iamaleava allegedly collected significant money upfront and cited homesickness as his reason for following his brother to California.
This is a scenario Penn State hopes to avoid. And the importance of contract details is clear.
“Commonly, there’s nothing binding students in certain instances to the institution they’re with for the entirety of the contract,” Stankewicz said. “We’ve definitely looked into having measures in place to discourage transfers during the time of the contract. There are a bunch of different ways to do that, from buyouts to how you load the contract.”
Athletes as employees
Groundbreaking shifts in the landscape have sparked conversations about athletes becoming official employees of their universities.
It’s a controversial subject to say the least. Universities would become responsible for paying wages, benefits, and workers’ compensation and schools and conferences have insisted they will fight any such move in court (some already have).
Complexities go beyond the concept. While private institutions fall under the National Labor Relations Board, public universities must follow labor laws that vary from state to state and it’s worth noting that virtually every state in the South has “right to work” laws that present challenges for unions.
There is also a new administration in power now, said Michael LeRoy, a labor and employment professor at Illinois who has studied the NCAA and athlete rights.
“With the election of Donald Trump, and what that would mean for a new National Labor Relations Board, what that would mean for repopulating the courts with judges who are likely not congenial to that view, I no longer have much hope that we’ll get a ruling in the next 5-10 years that these are employees,” LeRoy said.
Despite the lack of employment status, LeRoy said, athletes should advocate for themselves and use the entertainment industry as a model. He said athletes currently are offered “take-it-or-leave-it” NIL contracts when a broader approach might have benefits.
“I think athletes should start to look at Hollywood and Broadway contracting arrangements that deal with publicity rights,” he said. “I think there’s a way to frame this collectively. The framework of collective bargaining and employment, I would say, the entertainment industry generally offers a blueprint for success.”
Playing for another school
Things are so chaotic right now that the very lines of who an athlete is playing for could get blurred.
Saying he was inspired by the NBA’s G League, University of Albany basketball coach Dwayne Killings is proposing a two-way contract for college players. Albany would welcome transfers from top-tier programs who need more seasoning and help them develop — with plenty of game time vs. sitting on the bench — before sending them back to their original program, where they’d be ready to compete.
“The best development happens on the floor, not necessarily on the scout team, given the new 15-man scholarship limits,” Killings told CBS Sports.
And then there is Division III, which recently approved an unusual pilot program: Athletes would play for one school but do their coursework at another school that does not sponsor varsity athletics.
The NCAA said the program, which would run during the next academic year, “will offer expanded pathways for student-athletes to pursue their academic objectives and complete their participation opportunity.”
“This program intends to address the changing, dynamic higher education environment we find ourselves in right now,” said Jim Troha, president of Juniata and chairman of the DIII President’s Council. “It recognizes existing academic programs and provides flexibility to expand participation opportunities for student-athletes.”
The program will be assessed before any decisions on whether to make it permanent or expand it.
NIL
Texas Topples Texas Tech and Its $1M NIL Star to Win WCWS
Texas Topples Texas Tech and Its $1M NIL Star to Win WCWS Privacy Manager Link 0

NIL
Replay Friday as Texas wins title
OKLAHOMA CITY — Texas softball showed little mercy while rolling past Texas Tech in Game 3 of the Women’s College World Series finals and claiming the school’s first national championship. The Longhorns (56-12) blasted Texas Tech in a10-4 win while finally making Texas Tech pitcher NiJaree Canady look human. They scored five runs in the […]

OKLAHOMA CITY — Texas softball showed little mercy while rolling past Texas Tech in Game 3 of the Women’s College World Series finals and claiming the school’s first national championship.
The Longhorns (56-12) blasted Texas Tech in a10-4 win while finally making Texas Tech pitcher NiJaree Canady look human. They scored five runs in the first inning and eventually chased the Red Raider ace from the game after the first inning. Texas ended the game with 12 hits, including a 3-run homer from Leighann Goode and a grand slam by Mia Scott.
Texas pitcher Teagan Kavan picked up her fourth complete-game win of this WCWS and her sixth all-time WCWS win, which breaks the previous school record of five held by Cat Osterman.
Texas Tech (54-14) fell short of its first national championship in its first WCWS appearance.
Read below for a replay and highlights from the Longhorns’ championship-clinching win over Texas Tech in game three.
Texas vs Texas Tech softball score updates
Game 3 College Softball World Series
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | T | |
TECH | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
TEXAS | 5 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 0 | 0 | x | 10 |
Final: Texas 10, Texas Tech 4
Texas Tech gets a leadoff hit from pinch hitter Makalya Garcia, and Texas commits a third error. But a brilliant play by Katie Stewart – she fearlessly runs into the wall to make a catch in foul territory – and another nice throw from Stewart to Scott at third for a tagout help the Longhorns avoid much drama on their way to a first national championship.
End 6: Texas 10, Texas Tech 3
Texas strands two, including Kayden Henry at third. Samantha Lincoln did her job for Texas Tech in the circle. Teagan Kavan will come back out to try and wrap up her fourth complete-game win of the WCWS, a presumed MOP award and the first national championship for Texas.
Middle 6: Texas 10, Texas Tech 3
Texas commits its second error of the game – this one a throwing error by 2B Leighann Goode – but it doesn’t bother Teagan Kavan, who doesn’t allow a hit. The Longhorns are three outs or one run away from their first national championship.
End 5: Texas 10, Texas Tech 3
Samantha Lincoln comes into the game for Texas Tech and gets through the Texas lineup without any damage with some help from 2B Alexa Langeliers. See, the Red Raiders do have other pitchers.
Middle 5: Texas 10, Texas Tech 3
Texas Tech finally gets to Texas starter Teagan Kavan with three runs and four hits. But Kavan stretches her streak of consecutive innings without an earned run to 29 ⅔ innings since an error by 3B Mia Scott with two outs came before all the Red Raider runs.
End 4: Texas 10, Texas Tech 0
Mia Scott delivers the dagger for Texas with a grand slam. A fitting end to stellar WCWS as well as an all-time career. Oh, by the way, there is an 8-run, 5-inning mercy rule this year. Hasn’t been for a decade, but there won’t be much argument from anyone.
Middle 4: Texas 6, Texas Tech 0
Texas Tech gets its first hit against Teagan Kavan with a single from Hailey Toney, but nothing else. Because we don’t believe in jinxes at the Official Texas Softball Live Blog, a couple of housekeeping notes: There is no 8-run, 5-inning mercy rule in the WCWS finals, and any weather delays after the fifth inning will likely be endured instead of having officials call the game. And there is rain in the forecast later.
End 3: Texas 6, Texas Tech 0
The Texas batters love not seeing NiJaree Canady in the circle. Reese Atwood leads off with a double into the gap against Tech pitcher Chloe Riassetto, and Katie Stewart follows with an RBI double. Katie Cimusz almost got the second homer of the day but it’s just short.
Middle 3: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0
Texas starter Teagan Kavan throws another clean inning and has yet to allow a hit. She’s now up to 27 ⅔ straight innings without allowing an earned run at this WCWS.
End 2: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0
Chloe Riassetto, the first Texas Tech to see action since the Lubbock Regional, handles her business against Texas by allowing just one hit. Now, will Tech coach Gerry Glasco bring NiJaree Canady back into the game, or has Tech’s Terminator of a pitcher finally reached her wall?
Middle 2: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0
Three up, three down for Texas starter Teagan Kavan and the Longhorns. A dream start for Texas, which is seeking its first national championship. And Chloe Riassetto will come in at pitcher for Tech. This is a move no one expected to see. Remember: NiJaree Canady can return to the circle for Tech.
End 1: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0
Texas strikes first, and in a big way. With two outs, Leaighann Goode sends the first pitch she sees from NiJaree Canady over the centerfield wall for a 3-run homer. Five runs, five hits and one error in the frame for Tech. Kayden Henry uses that track speed to get an infield single with one out, and Mia Scott follows with a single into right field. Reese Atwood then slices a single into left field to score Henry, and Scott and Atwood both advance on an error when the throw from left field hits 3B Bailey Lindemuth in the back. Katie Stewart then follows with another RBI single to set up Goode’s heroics.
Middle 1: Texas 0, Texas Tech 0
Unlike the first two games, Texas Tech doesn’t load the bags in its first at-bat. In fact, Tech doesn’t get a hit against Texas starter Teagan Kavan. But there was epic at-bat by Lauren Allred that lasted 12 pitches before Kavan hit Allred on the elbow.
Texas vs Texas Tech: NiJaree Canady signs another $1 million NIL deal
ESPN reported on Friday that Texas Tech pitcher NiJaree Canady will return to the Red Raiders for the 2026 season after another NIL deal worth in excess of $1 million. ESPN cited her manager, Derrick Shelby of Prestige Management Group, as the source of the information. Shelburne’s report calls it “another seven-figure NIL contract with the Matador Club,” which is a Texas Tech NIL collective. Co-founder John Sellers and his wife, Traci Sellers, were at the forefront of Canady’s first deal in more than $1 million last summer.
Texas batting order
- RF Ashton Maloney
2. CF Kayden Henry
3. 3B Mia Scott
4. C Reese Atwood
5. LF Katie Stewart
6. 1B Joley Mitchell
7. SS Leighann Goode
8. DP Katie Cimusz
9. 2B Kaydee Benne
Texas Tech batting order
- CF Mihyia Davis
- SS Hailey Toney
- 1B Lauren Allred
- RF Alana Johnson
- 2B Alexa Langeliers
- P NiJaree Canady
- LF Demi Elder
- C Victoria Valdez
- 3B Bailey Lindemuth
Texas starting pitcher
Texas coach Mike White will turn to ace Teagan Kavan, who only threw ⅔ of an inning last night. She has yet to allow an earned run in 24 ⅔ innings this WCWS and boasts a 4-0 record in starting head-to-head matchups with Texas Tech starter NiJaree Canady.
Texas Tech starting pitcher
NiJaree Canady has thrown every one of the Red Raiders’ 496 pitches in the WCWS and that won’t change with the season on the line. Canady has given up 10 hits and five runs through the first two games of the series with 13 strikeouts and two walks.
What time does Texas softball play Texas Tech today?
- Time: 7 p.m. CT
- Date: June 6
- Location: Devon Park in Oklahoma City
How to watch Texas softball vs Texas Tech today
TV: ESPN
Streaming: ESPN+
Radio: https://texas.leanplayer.com/
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NIL
Judge Approves Landmark House v. NCAA Settlement
Judge Approves Landmark House v. NCAA Settlement Privacy Manager Link 0

NIL
Winners and Losers of the House v. NCAA NIL Settlement in College Sports
The core element of the House v. NCAA settlement is that the NCAA will pay out $2.576 billion to the settlement damages classes and also begin a 10-year term in which Division I schools will be able to directly pay student-athletes with a pool (read: salary cap) of up to 22 percent of the Power […]

The core element of the House v. NCAA settlement is that the NCAA will pay out $2.576 billion to the settlement damages classes and also begin a 10-year term in which Division I schools will be able to directly pay student-athletes with a pool (read: salary cap) of up to 22 percent of the Power Five conference schools’ average athletic revenues each year. That 22 percent figure is estimated to be approximately $20.5 million in 2025-26.
Any payments from that pool would be on top of existing benefits. So, student-athletes will still be able to receive full-tuition scholarships, free room and board, grants, academic support, nutrition, medical resources, etc. They’ll also still be able to get paid via NIL deals (more on that later).
Overall, this is a win for student-athletes in their decades-long fight for revenue-sharing. They’ll finally get a piece of the pie.
The biggest pieces of pie, though, have been reserved for the revenue-producing sports—football, men’s basketball, and to a lesser extent women’s basketball. Players from those sports are receiving 95 percent of the settlement payments.
For most Power Four schools, a majority of their $20.5 million salary cap will undoubtedly be spent on those sports as well, with football likely—and unsurprisingly—getting the largest allocation.
NIL
Judge approves landmark House v. NCAA settlement
Fifty-nine months after the initial class-action House v. NCAA suit was filed, it has been resolved. Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement on Friday in the U.S. Northern District of California, marking a landmark decision in the history of college sports. Since the NCAA was founded in 1906, institutions have never directly paid athletes. […]

Fifty-nine months after the initial class-action House v. NCAA suit was filed, it has been resolved. Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement on Friday in the U.S. Northern District of California, marking a landmark decision in the history of college sports.
Since the NCAA was founded in 1906, institutions have never directly paid athletes. That will now change with the settlement ushering in the revenue-sharing era of college sports. Beginning July 1, schools will be able to share $20.5 million with athletes, with football expected to receive 75%, followed by men’s basketball (15%), women’s basketball (5%) and the remainder of sports (5%). The amount shared in revenue will increase annually.
Power Four football programs will have roughly $13 to $16 million to spend on rosters for the 2025 season. Many schools have front-loaded contracts ahead of the settlement’s approval, taking advantage of contracts not being vetted by the newly formed NIL clearinghouse.
Instead of facing $20 billion in back damages, the NCAA and Power 5 conferences signed off on a 10-year settlement agreement that includes $2.776 billion in back damages. The NCAA is responsible for paying the amount over the next decade – $277 million annually. Roughly 60% will come from a reduction in distribution to institutions. The NCAA is tasked with closing the other 40%, which will come through reducing operating expenses. Some of the top athletes in recent memory will make millions.
The settlement also imposes new restrictions on college sports. An NIL clearinghouse will be established, titled “NIL Go” and run through Deloitte. All third-party NIL deals of $600 or more must be approved by the clearinghouse. If not approved, the settlement says a new third-party arbiter could deem athletes ineligible or result in a school being fined. In a gathering at the ACC spring meetings last week, Deloitte officials reportedly shared that 70% of past deals from NIL collectives would have been denied, while 90% of past deals from public companies would have been approved.
Speaking with sources on Friday, On3 has learned that multiple schools are sending over rev-sharing contracts, so deals are getting signed as soon as midnight.
“Because the alleged anticompetitive effect of the associated entity third-party NIL provisions has not been established, and because defendants advanced pro-competitive justifications for these NIL provisions at the final approval hearing, it is not clear that such provisions violate the Sherman Act under the rule of reason,” Wilken wrote in her decision on Friday. “Thus, the associated entity third-party NIL provisions do not preclude the court from granting final approval.”
Roster limits are also set to be introduced. Wilken recently pushed back on the limits automatically being put in place, stating that the settlement would not move forward if roster spots were not grandfathered in. NCAA and power conference attorneys, along with plaintiffs’ attorneys, agreed on a plan to phase in roster limits.
Under the plan, athletes who had their positions cut will be eligible for reinstatement at schools’ discretion. It also permits athletes who leave or are not retained by their current school would keep grandfather status at a new school. Proposed rosters include football (105), men’s and women’s basketball (15), baseball (34), men’s and women’s soccer (28), softball (25) and volleyball (18).
And while the settlement will usher in a new era of college sports, plenty of questions continue to linger. Drafted conference membership contracts are circulating at the Power Four level. The agreements spell out that institutions must waive their right to sue the College Sports Commission, the new enforcement entity to be created following the House v. NCAA settlement approval.
The contracts are a direct shot at Tennessee’s new state law, which allows schools and their NIL collectives to continue to pay above the cap, creating a competitive advantage. Not signing the membership agreement could result in schools being kicked out of their conferences or risk being blackballed by the rest of the Power Four. The College Sports Commission, run by the Power Four, is also expected to hire a commissioner. The expectation is Major League Baseball executive Bryan Seeley will be targeted for the role, according to Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger.
Many across college sports have expressed doubt that the settlement will be able to halt third-party NIL collective payments. Sources expect lawsuits surrounding Title IX, the rev-sharing salary cap and the newly founded NIL clearinghouse to be filed.
In a letter published on Friday night, NCAA president Charlie Baker called the settlement “a new beginning” for the governing body.
“Together, we can use this new beginning to launch college sports into the future,” Baker wrote in the letter to the membership. “… In the weeks ahead, we will work to show Congress why the settlement is both a massive win for student-athletes and a road map to legislative reform.”
NIL
How college athletes will be paid after House v. NCAA settlement
The House v. NCAA settlement was officially ratified on Friday, clearing the way for universities to directly pay athletes starting in 2025. The settlement is expected to formally take effect on July 1, 2025, after it was approved by Judge Claudia Wilken of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. This […]

The House v. NCAA settlement was officially ratified on Friday, clearing the way for universities to directly pay athletes starting in 2025. The settlement is expected to formally take effect on July 1, 2025, after it was approved by Judge Claudia Wilken of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.
This settlement marks one of the greatest shifts in the history of college athletics by paving the way for formalized pay-for-play for the first time ever. The NCAA cleared several rules banning the practice in the lead-up to the settlement, and the new reality is now here.
So how will players be paid, and what impact will this have on the structure of college football heading forward?
How will players be paid?
Starting in 2025, colleges will be able to opt into revenue sharing with athletes. Athletic departments will be allowed to use their own funds to pay players, with a cap expected to hover around $20 million annually per school. That figure is intended to cover all athlete compensation across varsity sports — not just those that generate revenue.
The number represents approximately 22% of average athletic department revenue across power conference athletic departments. The settlement estimates that the total cap will start at around $20.5 million per school in 2025-26 and could rise to nearly $33 million per school in the next decade. Between the revenue sharing, scholarships and other athletic benefits, the NCAA believes that compensation to athletes could push close to 50% of athletic revenue in many athletic departments.
There are few guidelines in place for how the money should be distributed across sports. The expectation is that more than 70% of the funds — around $15 million — will go to football at power-conference schools. However, individual schools have the discretion to allocate funds as they choose. For example, Kentucky or UConn could decide to spend 50% of their budget on men’s basketball. Non-football schools in conferences, like the Big East, could gain a major advantage when funding other programs.
It remains unclear how Title IX will factor into the model, though at least some funds will likely be directed toward women’s sports. While players will be compensated directly for participating in college athletics, potentially through contracts worth seven figures or more, they still won’t be classified as employees. Instead, their compensation is expected to resemble that of independent contractors.
Which schools will be eligible?
Any NCAA schools that opted into the House settlement will be allowed to participate in revenue sharing, regardless of level or funding. Schools in the Big 12, Big Ten and SEC have all confirmed that they will pay out the full $20+ million rev share each season. The AAC notably is requiring schools to rev-share $10 million with their athletes over the next three years. Sacramento State, an FCS school hoping to transition to FBS, also intends to share revenue. Any school at any level of the NCAA can technically opt into the agreement as long as they in exchange follow the terms of the settlement. Plenty of FBS schools, however, will forego the major new expense.
Who will administer the new sport?
In the wake of the settlement, the Power Four conferences will take over regulation and enforcement of player compensation issues. They plan to create a new organization called the College Sports Commission, and will hire a CEO soon after the settlement. Power conference schools will be pressured to sign onto the new organization or risk expulsion from their conferences.
The CSC will be in charge of enforcing the upcoming salary cap and working with Deloitte to create the NIL clearinghouse. Additionally, they will police and enforce punishments for circumventing the salary cap or improper athlete compensation.
The decision to move player compensation to the CSC was spurred by the plaintiffs in the House case. The NCAA will continue to focus its enforcement efforts on its traditional issues heading forward, including player eligibility, academics, competition and a variety of other topics.
Can players still sign school NIL contracts?
The new agreement will allow players to sign outside contracts. However, a new wrinkle requires NIL contracts to be sent through a clearinghouse run by Deloitte to ensure “fair market value” based on an actual endorsement. For example, a rotation offensive lineman could potentially make six figures in the NIL era. While they will still be allowed to do that with a revenue-sharing contract, future NIL contracts are expected to be far more stringent. Additionally, the NCAA has the right to prohibit NIL compensation from a group it classifies as “Associated Entities or Individuals,” which would seem to mean boosters.
Take a player like Cooper Flagg at Duke. His brand value would be considered high for Duke, which could allow the school to pay him for an endorsement without pulling from their revenue sharing money. Notably, Texas coach Steve Sarkisian claimed Quinn Ewers did not take any money from their collective, instead signing endorsement contracts to claim his millions.
Per reports, Deloitte told ACC officials that 90% of existing NIL contracts with public companies would have been approved. More than 70% of deals with booster collectives would have been denied.
The rule is intended to prevent schools from using fake NIL deals to circumvent the salary cap. However, the likelihood of this is highly dependent on whether the Deloitte-run clearinghouse will have any teeth. At least one high-profile sports lawyer has argued for athletes to refuse to disclose NIL deals to the clearinghouse. It remains to be seen how the NCAA will attempt to handle a punitive case of cap circumvention.
The race to keep up with $40 million rosters is shaking college football
John Talty
What will happen to collectives?
There’s no one consensus answer on the future of collectives; every school will handle them differently. Some will sunset their collectives and move all operations in-house. Others will use third-party collectives as a support tool for services like connecting athletes with outside endorsements or financial education. Different collectives have different relationships with their respective schools.
Will rev-share contracts be binding?
The short answer is — no one knows. Arkansas became the first school to publicly hire an attorney to enforce conditions on an NIL contract when quarterback Madden Iamaleava opted to transfer to UCLA. According to CBS Sports’ Brandon Marcello, Iamaleava’s deal requires a buyout of 50% of the remainder of his contract should he transfer.
Earlier this offseason, Wisconsin lost defensive back Xavier Lucas to Miami and similarly claimed that he was flaunting a two-year binding revenue sharing contract with the school. At this point, no formal legal challenge has been filed. Lucas is now on the roster at Miami.
The binding nature of contracts could be a key complication still remaining for the pay-for-play era. It could soon be addressed by the courts.
Is this the end?
Even though the House v. NCAA settlement is coming down, it doesn’t solve the biggest remaining questions around contracts, athlete movement, eligibility, NCAA enforcement power or a plethora of other issues. Key athletics leadership has consistently gone to Washington, D.C., to lobby for federal legislation.
Additionally, former Alabama coach Nick Saban and Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville (now a senator) have spoken to president Donald Trump about an executive order to help clarify rules. Trump has proposed a presidential commission to discuss college football issues, though it has not come to fruition. However, the House settlement will at least bring a backdrop for any solutions to be written on.
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