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Cowboys Wrap Up Day One Of NCAA Action

Round 1 Results CARLSBAD, Calif. – Oklahoma State’s men’s golf team posted a 5-over 293 during the first day of play at the NCAA Championship on Friday to stand in a tie for 14th place at the Omni La Costa Resort and Spa. The second-ranked Cowboys finished the day in a five-way tie for their positioning […]

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Cowboys Wrap Up Day One Of NCAA Action

Round 1 Results

CARLSBAD, Calif. –

Oklahoma State’s men’s golf team posted a 5-over 293 during the first day of play at the NCAA Championship on Friday to stand in a tie for 14th place at the Omni La Costa Resort and Spa.

The second-ranked Cowboys finished the day in a five-way tie for their positioning at the par-72, 7,480-yard layout. OSU will begin its second round four shots outside of the top 10.

Sophomore Preston Stout led the way for OSU individually, posting a 1-under 71 to come in tied for 25th place. Starting on the back nine, Stout bogeyed two of his first five holes before carding birdies at the 15th and 18th to get back to even for the day. He would sandwich a bogey at the third with birdies at the second and fourth to stand at 1-under for the day with five to play.

Stout posted his fifth birdie of the day at the sixth before carding a bogey at the seventh on his way to a 1-under 35 on his second nine of the day.

Sophomore Ethan Fang also posted five birdies during his round before ultimately signing for a 1-over 73 to share 47th place.

Sophomore Eric Lee’s 74 tied him for 63rd place.

Freshman Filip Fahlberg-Johnsson and sophomore Gaven Lane each signed for 3-over 75s to finish the day tied for 79th place.

OSU will begin its second round tomorrow at 8:30 a.m. (CST) and will be grouped with Auburn and Ole Miss. Live scoring is available at scoreboard.clippd.com.

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NIL Collective Alliance 412 Comments on House Settlement, Future Role

Pitt’s preferred NIL collective over the past few years released a statement on Monday, days after the House Vs. NCAA settlement news. “The settlement in House v. NCAA represents a landmark moment in the continued evolution of college athletics. After years of uncertainty, we’re encouraged to see much-needed structure and definition begin to take shape […]

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Pitt’s preferred NIL collective over the past few years released a statement on Monday, days after the House Vs. NCAA settlement news.

“The settlement in House v. NCAA represents a landmark moment in the continued evolution of college athletics. After years of uncertainty, we’re encouraged to see much-needed structure and definition begin to take shape in the NIL and student-athlete compensation landscape. We commend the University of Pittsburgh’s athletic department for its steady leadership and commitment to student-athletes throughout this period of change. Pitt has remained focused on doing things the right way — by putting student-athletes first and setting a standard for what responsible and forward-thinking progress can look like.”

PSN has been covering Alliance 412 for years, since its inception. Alliance 412 was founded by Pitt graduate Chris Bickell, who donated $20 million to Pitt athletics in September 2021, with the mission to, “connect University of Pittsburgh student-athletes, local and national companies, charitable organizations, and the community to create lasting and sustainable relationships that impact and benefit all.”

Bickell, along with Jeff Goldberg, John Pelusi, Doug Whaley, and others, have led Alliance 412 through the turbulent era of college athletics seen in the past few years. Now, with the statement put out by the collective, it appears they are still striving to help out in the coming era.

“At Alliance 412, our mission has never been solely about providing financial support. We’re here to help Pitt student-athletes grow as individuals — by building their brands, making smart financial decisions, and developing tools for success well beyond their playing days,” the release continued. “As this new model emerges, we remain fully committed to empowering athletes to maximize their opportunities — especially through initiatives that fall outside the scope of university-directed compensation. This is a new era, and one we welcome. One in which Alliance 412 will continue to serve as a trusted partner to the University, our donors, and — most importantly — our student athletes.”

Sandy Schall, Coldwell Banker





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Power conferences create NIL enforcement arm to cut cheating. Will it work? | Washington State University

Cast against their brown and beige office backdrops, the four horsemen of the settlement spoke as one. Tony Petitti, Jim Phillips, Greg Sankey and Brett Yormark — commissioners of the conferences that control major college sports — conducted a remote news conference Monday morning to share their views on the momentous House v. NCAA settlement and what’s next for […]

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Cast against their brown and beige office backdrops, the four horsemen of the settlement spoke as one.

Tony Petitti, Jim Phillips, Greg Sankey and Brett Yormark — commissioners of the conferences that control major college sports — conducted a remote news conference Monday morning to share their views on the momentous House v. NCAA settlement and what’s next for the industry.

They were joined on the Zoom call by Teresa Gould, commissioner of the Pac-12, which was a named defendant in the lawsuit (along with the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, SEC and NCAA) and therefore a participant in constructing the post-settlement world order.

Together, the quintet reiterated the need for congressional help to codify rules and provide antitrust protection in order to end the barrage of legal challenges to the NCAA.

They explained that the distribution of $20.5 million to athletes starting July 1 won’t be determined at the conference level. How much to allocate to football, men’s basketball and the Olympic sports will be a campus decision.

And they acknowledged the post-settlement world is evolving. They don’t have all the systems and personnel in place to immediately clean up what Phillips (ACC) called “an unregulated environment with no rules and no enforcement.” They believe answers, and solutions, will come with time.

But is there any reason to believe cheating will disappear? That pay-for-play, which has taken so many forms over the decades, will be expunged from the system? That “bad actors,” as Sankey (SEC) described them, will be banished forever?

If effort and determination count, the clean-up effort could succeed.

“It’s progress over perfection,” Yormark (Big 12) explained. “There will be challenges. But we’re very confident.

“Our schools want rules. We’re providing rules, and we will be governed by those rules. And if you break those rules, the ramifications will be punitive.”

As part of the settlement, the power conferences created the College Sports Commission, with a chief executive, Bryan Seeley, a former lead investigator for Major League Baseball, and a singular mission: Ensure NIL deals are legitimate.

For the past four years, they have been anything but.

Remember the old-fashioned cheating, when bags o’ cash were given to recruits and their handlers in exchange for signatures on letters of intent? The moment NIL became the law of the land in the summer of 2021, a new, legal form of pay-for-play emerged, courtesy of booster collectives.

High school recruits and transfers alike were lured to schools by collectives offering six- and seven-figure deals. Those deals did not require players to participate in the promotional and endorsement opportunities at the heart of what the NCAA described as legitimate NIL.

The fake NIL was under-the-table cheating out in the open — unregulated but entirely legal.

Which brings us to the College Sports Commission (CSC) and the industry’s latest attempt to clean up the player procurement process.

In addition to the $20.5 million they will receive directly from the schools as part of the House settlement, athletes retain the ability to strike NIL deals with third-party entities. The difference: Now, they must report any contract of at least $600 to NIL Go, a technology platform designed by Deloitte that will determine if deals fall within a reasonable range of compensation. (That’s code for fair market value.)

If NIL Go rejects the deal, athletes have the option to adjust the terms and resubmit.

Or they could seek arbitration.

In theory, they could ignore NIL Go, agree to the contract and take the field (or court). But there’s a risk to competing with an invalid NIL deal, because the schools are arming the CSC with enforcement authority.

How will Seeley, a former assistant U.S. attorney, gather evidence? He won’t have subpoena power.

Also, who will design the penalty matrix?

“We’re in the process of developing some of those rules and structure and overall implementation,” Phillips said.

The industry is watching, and skeptics are everywhere.

Even if NIL Go successfully filters out the illegitimate business deals — the financial arrangements that are outside a reasonable range of compensation — the specter of pay-for-play remains.

And it could very well take a familiar form. That’s right, folks: Get ready for the return of bags o’ cash.

The CSC is designed to eliminate the donor collectives that paid players (legally) without demanding anything in return except a signature and their best effort on gameday.

But if deep-pocketed fans of School X want to help the team secure vital commitments from coveted transfers or blue-chip prospects, is the CSC really going to stop them?

Pay-for-play could simply return to its former location — under the table — and proceed with limited hesitation.

How can the CSC police the actions of thousands of donors representing hundreds of schools across 10 major college conferences?

How could it investigate and punish private citizens?

Will the schools report suspicious activity, invite Seeley to town and hand over whatever evidence helps expose transgressions committed by a million-dollar donor who is also helping to fund the new engineering building?

The commissioners know far more about the CSC than we do.

They have discussed the clean-up project extensively with campus officials desperate for law and order.

They made a shrewd move hiring a former assistant U.S. attorney and not a college sports lifer.

But it’s difficult to ignore the leap-of-faith component built into their new world order. College sports has too many athletes with financial needs, too many sources of cash and too many fans who care about winning above all else.

The result is a revamped system that’s rooted in best intentions but dependent on a leap of faith.

“Ultimately,” Sankey said, “it’s incumbent upon everyone, presidents and chancellors, athletic directors, head coaches, assistant coaches and staff and, yes, commissioners, to make the terms of this settlement work.”



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$2.8 billion settlement means universities must pay student-athletes :: WRALSportsFan.com

A federal judge in California gave final approval to the $2.8 billion settlement between the NCAA, major conferences and former players. As a result, schools will be able to directly pay athletes. Show Transcript MARKET ON BARBIE ROAD HAS BEEN IN BUSINESS FOR MORE THAN 50 YEARS. SO PRETTY SOON, UNIVERSITIES WILL HAVE TO START […]

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A federal judge in California gave final approval to the $2.8 billion settlement between the NCAA, major conferences and former players. As a result, schools will be able to directly pay athletes.



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Penn State, UCLA taking first eight-figure private capital deals with Elevate

Elevate announced Monday morning a $500 million private capital fund to help college sports’ athletic departments navigate the revenue-sharing era. Dubbed the College Investment Initiative, Penn State and UCLA are the first two clients, signing eight-figure private capital deals with Elevate, sources confirmed to On3. Elevate touted two signings when it announced the multi-million dollar […]

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Elevate announced Monday morning a $500 million private capital fund to help college sports’ athletic departments navigate the revenue-sharing era. Dubbed the College Investment Initiative, Penn State and UCLA are the first two clients, signing eight-figure private capital deals with Elevate, sources confirmed to On3. Elevate touted two signings when it announced the multi-million dollar capital fund on Monday.

It’s only the starting point for the investment fund. Elevate’s other university clients include Alabama, Notre Dame and Florida. Penn State and UCLA are making college sports history by being the first two athletic departments to take on private capital. Sportico first reported the news on Monday afternoon.

In a statement to On3 on Monday, Elevate said it isn’t “announcing any clients associated with this investment initiative, those two schools are Elevate ticket operations clients.” UCLA stated in an email to On3 that it is exploring expanding its partnership with Elevate, and is not part of the College Investment Initiative.

“Elevate serves as our partner in ticketing strategy and operations,” Penn State athletic director Pat Craft said in a statement. “To clarify, our relationship is strictly limited to these services, and we have no affiliation or involvement with any private equity firm or fund.”

Elevate, a global sports and marketing agency, has partnered with private equity firm Velocity Capital Management and Texas Permanent School Fund Corporation to provide schools with money and resources to develop revenue-generating projects. The College Investment Initiative provides a new funding source for athletics programs pursuing projects, such as facility upgrades and renovations.

It’s an unprecedented moment in college sports. Private equity has circled in on college sports in recent years. Weatherford Capital and RedBird Capital Partners combined their powers (and billions in cash) last spring to create Collegiate Athletics Solutions.

“It’s upfront capital, as we do have a multi-year agreement for Elevate services and from a payback perspective as well, on that capital investment,” Elevate’s chief business officer for college, Jonathan Marks, told On3 in an interview on Monday. “We believe that the $500 million is just a starting point. With the discussions that we’ve had before the announcement, to what we’re having now, we firmly believe we’re going to be able to increase that significantly, and expect to have another three to five or six deals done by football season. We expect that number to continue to grow from there.”

The news comes on the heels of the House v. NCAA settlement, which was approved on Friday. 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.

Marks told the Sports Business Journal on Monday that Elevate is considering conference-level funding opportunities through league-controlled assets, such as jersey patches, field logos and tickets. The company has relationships with the ACC and Big East.

Velocity, the sports-focused private equity firm launched by David Abrams and Arne Rees in 2021, is an existing investor in Elevate. The Texas Permanent School Fund is Velocity’s majority backer, having committed $200M late in 2024, and holds an ownership stake in the firm.



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Pete Thamel: President Trump’s involvement post-House settlement isn’t ‘a magic bullet’

Now that the House settlement has been approved, there’s a renewed focus on what various political bodies can do to help ease the transition for college athletics programs. And whether President Trump can swoop in and make things much easier remains a topic of conversation. Some have outright called for the president’s aid. But ESPN […]

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Now that the House settlement has been approved, there’s a renewed focus on what various political bodies can do to help ease the transition for college athletics programs. And whether President Trump can swoop in and make things much easier remains a topic of conversation.

Some have outright called for the president’s aid. But ESPN analyst Pete Thamel doesn’t necessarily see Trump as a fix-all for college sports.

Thamel outlined the backdrop of the situation on The Paul Finebaum Show on Wednesday. He began:

“President Trump is interested in college athletics. I’ve heard that from myriad sources,” Thamel said. “You know, Paul, because I think you’ve been there in DC, the SEC and other leagues have kind of paraded themselves through to ask for Congressional help over the years. There’s been a handful of trips from the major conferences. The commissioners have been there a bunch. There has been a plea to Washington D.C.”

So far, that plea has mostly fallen on deaf ears. Not necessarily because the people, like President Trump, who are being called on aren’t interested. But moreso because the issues are so complex.

It’s been hard to get the various major parties at play all on the same page. How might that happen?

“President Trump has mentioned a potential executive order,” Thamel said. “That isn’t really what’s needed here. There needs to be Congressional help. I think what we can say with certainty is that President Trump is intrigued and wants to help and has talked about helping. How that manifests itself is still a ways away, and I don’t think his involvement right now is a magic bullet, by any ways.”

Thamel summed up where things are at right now when it comes to the president’s potential involvement and solutions. Bottom line: He’s not convinced presidential involvement is the answer.

“I think Trump is like genuinely interested in college sports,” Thamel said. “I think a lot of his base is in a lot of the states where college sports really matter. So politically it’s probably a wise thing for him to be intrigued by. But his interest level translating to Congressional result, there’s still a giant disconnect.”



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How the House v. NCAA Settlement Changes NIL Forever

The pivotal House v. NCAA settlement was approved Friday and will usher in a new era of NIL (name, image, and likeness) and collegiate athletics at large. FOS college sports reporter Amanda Christovich joins Baker Machado and Renee Washington to explain the ruling’s effect on schools and athletes. Plus, tennis writer Giri Nathan joins to discuss the […]

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The pivotal House v. NCAA settlement was approved Friday and will usher in a new era of NIL (name, image, and likeness) and collegiate athletics at large. FOS college sports reporter Amanda Christovich joins Baker Machado and Renee Washington to explain the ruling’s effect on schools and athletes.

Plus, tennis writer Giri Nathan joins to discuss the instant-classic French Open final between Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz, why it signifies the official change of eras for tennis, and how Sinner’s doping scandal affects his status and the sport at large.

We also talk about the Stanley Cup Final with Kathryn Tappen of NHL Network, and a Michael Jordan rookie card is selling for more than $2 million.





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