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Denver Men's Soccer to Host Golf Tournament Friday, May 2

Story Links Registration and Sponsorship Information DENVER’S HOME FOR COLLEGE SPORTS For registration and sponsorship opportunities, including signage and hole sponsorships, click here for more information. DENVER – The University of Denver men’s soccer program will host its annual golf tournament on Friday, May 2 at the University of Denver Golf Club at Highlands Ranch. […]

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Denver Men's Soccer to Host Golf Tournament Friday, May 2

DENVER’S HOME FOR COLLEGE SPORTS

For registration and sponsorship opportunities, including signage and hole sponsorships, click here for more information.

DENVER – The University of Denver men’s soccer program will host its annual golf tournament on Friday, May 2 at the University of Denver Golf Club at Highlands Ranch. Check-in will begin at 7 a.m. and the shotgun start will begin at 8 a.m. MT.

This year’s tournament includes a pre-tournament breakfast, post-tournament lunch and awards, live scoring via the golf genius app, a Denver Soccer swag bag, a hole-in one contest, a longest driving contest, a closest to the pin contest and a Pins & Aces custom polo. 

“The tournament is a great opportunity for Denver Soccer alumni and supporters to come together to benefit the program,” Jack and Sheila Weinberg Head Men’s Soccer Coach Jamie Franks said. “Last year we had 72 golfers join us, and we hope to break 80 this year. The overarching objective of the event is to elevate the experience for our student-athletes here at the University of Denver. These funds allow us to travel to play top-25 teams and bolster our RPI while allowing us to continue to foster an environment where the student-athletes can be challenged, excel and forge lasting memories that will resonate far beyond the confines of competition.”

Visit DenverPioneers.com for complete coverage of all 18 of Denver’s NCAA Division I sports.
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Texas Tech Red Raiders – Official Athletics Website

OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. – Thursday night might have marked Texas Tech’s debut at the Women’s College World Series. It certainly wasn’t for NiJaree Canady. The junior right-hander, no stranger to the biggest stage in softball, powered the Red Raiders in the circle, tossing a two-hit shutout to lead Texas Tech to a 1-0 victory over […]

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OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. – Thursday night might have marked Texas Tech’s debut at the Women’s College World Series. It certainly wasn’t for NiJaree Canady.

The junior right-hander, no stranger to the biggest stage in softball, powered the Red Raiders in the circle, tossing a two-hit shutout to lead Texas Tech to a 1-0 victory over Ole Miss at Devon Park. The win, which marked the first shutout by a team making its Women’s College World Series debut in 20 years, propels Texas Tech to the winner’s side of the bottom bracket where the Red Raiders will await the winner of the nightcap between No. 9 UCLA and No. 16 Oregon.

It was the third career complete game shutout at the Women’s College World Series for Canady, who made two previous trips with Stanford the last two seasons. Both of those outings came in elimination games, however, not in an opener, as Canady limited Washington to only one hit as a true freshman in 2023 and then tossed a three-hit shutout of Oklahoma State a year ago.

Canady retired the first 16 hitters she faced in the win as the Rebels didn’t get a runner on base until a one-out single up the middle from Angelina DeLeon in the sixth. The bottom of the Ole Miss lineup accounted for both of the hits against Canady with Taylor Malvin following with a line-drive single just off the outstretched glove of Bailey Lindemuth at third base.

Canady (31-5) responded with one of her 10 strikeouts and then a pop up to Lindemuth in foul territory to end Ole Miss’ lone threat of the game. She followed by striking out the side in the seventh, capping the performance with just how she started the outing after fanning all three Rebels she faced in the first.

Texas Tech (51-12) has now shut out its opponents in 26 of its 51 wins this season, adding on to a school record the Red Raiders set weeks ago. It was the seventh complete game shutout for Canady this season as she went the distance for the 19th time.

The Red Raiders (51-12) scored their only run in the fourth as Lauren Allred made it all the way from first on an Alana Johnson double down the left field line. Johnson reached third on the hit after Ole Miss Jaden Pone misplayed the ball at the wall, giving Allred more time to score the game’s lone run. It marked the 21st-consecutive game Texas Tech has scored before its opponent, the longest active streak in Division I currently.

The run disrupted a strong performance from Ole Miss starter Aliyah Binford (11-4), who kept Texas Tech’s bats at bay with only four hits and an unearned run in six full innings. Texas Tech loaded the based against Binford later in the fourth before she escaped trouble with a ground ball double play back to the circle.

Texas Tech will face either UCLA or Oregon at 6 p.m. CT Saturday with television coverage provided on ESPN.



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2025 Women’s College World Series Bracket: Updated matchups, scores, schedule

With the first two rounds in the books, it’s now on to Oklahoma City. The 2025 Women’s College World Series has arrived, and the eyes of the softball world turn toward Devon Park. The SEC has a strong presence at the WCWS with five teams left in the bracket – four of which are on […]

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With the first two rounds in the books, it’s now on to Oklahoma City. The 2025 Women’s College World Series has arrived, and the eyes of the softball world turn toward Devon Park.

The SEC has a strong presence at the WCWS with five teams left in the bracket – four of which are on the same side. Oklahoma is the highest seed remaining, and the Sooners are making their ninth straight trip to OKC.

The 2025 Women’s College World Series includes a double elimination format before the championship series, which will be a best-of-three series. Here is the full bracket, including updated matchups and results from Devon Park.

Women’s College World Series Bracket

Thursday, May 29

Game 1: No. 6 Texas def. No. 3 Florida, 3-0

Joley Mitchell powered Texas past Florida in the opening game of the Women’s College World Series on Thursday afternoon. Mitchell hit a solo home run to left field in the top of the second inning to open the scoring, then blasted another solo home run to right center in the top of the sixth inning to double the lead. Katie Stewart tacked on another solo shot in the sixth to make it 3-0, as pitcher Teagan Kavan befuddled Florida all day. The Gators managed just two hits in the loss.

Game 2: No. 2 Oklahoma def. No. 7 Tennessee, 4-3

Tennessee might have been the better team on Thursday afternoon, but it had no answers for Ella Parker. Parker provided the lone run for the Sooners early on with a solo shot to right field, but Oklahoma found itself trailing 3-1 in the bottom of the seventh inning. Then Parker came to the plate with runners at the corners and two outs. She wasted no time taking Volunteers ace Karlyn Pickens deep for a second time, sending the Sooners to the winner’s bracket in the Women’s College World Series with a walk-off 4-3 win.

Game 3: No. 12 Texas Tech def. Ole Miss, 1-0

After the first two games went off without a hitch, storms in the Oklahoma City area forced the start of this matchup to be pushed back by over an hour. When the two teams were able to come together following the delay, it was a battle between pitchers. Red Raiders were able to get on the board first in the fourth inning via a double from outfielder Alana Johnson as star pitcher NiJaree Canady carried a perfect game into the sixth inning. Despite breaking up the incredible start, Rebels were unable to find their way to home plate behind Canady’s commanding 10-strikeout performance.

Game 4: No. 16 Oregon vs. No. 9 UCLA – 9:30 p.m. ET, ESPN2

Friday, May 30

Game 5: Florida vs. Tennessee – 7 p.m. ET, ESPN2
Game 6: Ole Miss vs. Loser of Game 4 – 9:30 p.m. ET, ESPN2

Saturday, May 31

Game 7: Texas vs. Oklahoma – 3 p.m. ET, ABC
Game 8: Texas Tech vs. Winner of Game 4 – 7 p.m. ET, ESPN

Sunday, June 1

Game 9: Winner of Game 5 vs. Loser of Game 8 – 3 p.m. ET, ABC
Game 10: Winner of Game 6 vs. Loser of Game 7 – 7 p.m. ET, ESPNU

Monday, June 2

Game 11: Winner of Game 7 vs. Winner of Game 9 – 12 p.m. ET, ESPN
Game 12 (if necessary): Winner of Game 11 vs. Loser of Game 11 – 2:30 p.m. ET, ESPN
Game 13: Winner of Game 8 vs. Winner of Game 10 – 7 p.m. ET, ESPN2
Game 14 (if necessary): Winner of Game 13 vs. Loser of Game 13 – 9:30 p.m. ET, ESPN2

Championship Series – Best of 3

Game 1 – June 4, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN
Game 2 – June 5, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN
Game 3 (if necessary) – June 6, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN



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College sports lurches forward, hoping to find a level playing field with fewer lawsuits | National

MIRAMAR BEACH, Fla. (AP) — On the one hand, what this new version of cash-infused college sports needs are rules that everybody follows. On the other, they need to be able to enforce those rules without getting sued into oblivion. Enter the College Sports Commission, a newly created operation that will be in charge of […]

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MIRAMAR BEACH, Fla. (AP) — On the one hand, what this new version of cash-infused college sports needs are rules that everybody follows.

On the other, they need to be able to enforce those rules without getting sued into oblivion.

Enter the College Sports Commission, a newly created operation that will be in charge of counting the money, deciding what a “fair market” deal for players looks like and, if things go well, helping everyone in the system avoid trips to court whenever a decision comes down that someone doesn’t like.

With name, image, likeness payments taking over in college, this group will essentially become what the NCAA committee on infractions used to be – the college sports police, only with the promise of being faster, maybe fairer and maybe more transparent.

In a signal of what the CSC’s most serious mission might be, the schools from the four biggest conferences are being asked to sign a document pledging not to rely on state laws – some of which are more permissive of payments to players — to work around the rules the commission is making.

“We need to get out of this situation where something happens, and we run to our attorney general and file suit,” said Trev Alberts of Texas A&M, one of 10 athletic directors who are part of another group, the Settlement Implementation Committee, that is helping oversee the transition. “That chaos isn’t sustainable. You’re looking for a durable system that actually has some stability and ultimate fairness.”

Number crunching to figure out what’s fair

In this new landsacpe, two different companies will be in charge of two kinds of number crunching.

The first, and presumably more straightforward, is data being compiled by LBi Software, which will track how much schools are spending on every athlete, up to the $20.5 million cap each is allowed to distribute in the first year of the new arrangement expected to begin July 1.

This sounds easy but comes with the assumption that universities – which, for decades, have sought to eke out every edge they can, rulebook or no – will provide accurate data.

“Over history, boosters have looked for ways to give their schools an advantage,” said Gabe Feldman, a sports law professor at Tulane. “I think that will continue even with the settlement. It’s anyone’s guess as to how that manifests, and what the new competitive landscape looks like.”

Adding some level of transparency to the process, along with the CSC’s ability to deliver sanctions if it identifies cheaters, will be key to the new venture’s success.

“There’s legal risk that prohibits you from doing that,” Alberts said. “But we want to start as transparent as we can be, because we think it engenders trust.”

Good intentions aside, Alberts concedes, “I don’t think it’s illogical to think that, at first, it’s probably going to be a little wonky.”

How much should an endorsement deal be worth?

Some of the wonkiest bookkeeping figures to come from the second category of number crunching, and that involves third-party NIL deals. The CSC hired Deloitte to run a so-called clearinghouse called “NIL Go,” which will be in charge of evaluating third-party deals worth $600 or more.

Because these deals aren’t allowed to pay players simply for playing – that’s still technically forbidden in college sports — but instead for some service they provide (an endorsement, a social media shoutout and so forth), every deal needs to be evaluated to show it is worth a fair price for what the player is doing.

In a sobering revelation, Deloitte shared with sports leaders earlier this month that around 70% of third-party deals given to players since NIL became allowable in 2021 would have been denied by the new clearinghouse.

All these valuations, of course, are subject to interpretation. It’s much easier to set the price of a stock, or a bicycle, than the value of an athlete’s endorsement deal. This is where things figure to get dicey. Though the committee has an appeals process, then an arbitration process, ultimately, some of these cases are destined to be challenged in court.

“You’re just waiting to see, what is a ‘valid business purpose’ (for an NIL deal), and what are the guidelines around that?” said Rob Lang, a business litigation partner at Thompson Coburn who deals with sports cases. “You can see all the lawyer fights coming out of that.”

Avoiding court, coordinating state laws are new priorities

In fact, elements of all this are ripe to be challenged in court, which might explain why the power conferences drafted the document pledging fealty to the new rules in the first place.

For instance, Feldman called a law recently enacted in Tennessee viewed by many as the most athlete-friendly statute in the country “the next step in the evolution” of state efforts to bar the NCAA from limiting NIL compensation for athletes with an eye on winning battles for recruits and retaining roster talent.

“What we’ve seen over the last few years is states trying to one-up each other to make their institutions more attractive places for people to go,” he said. “This is the next iteration of that. It may set up a showdown between the schools, the NCAA and the states.”

Greg Sankey, the commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, said a league spanning 12 states cannot operate well if all those states have different rules about how and when it is legal to pay players.

The SEC has been drafting legislation for states to pass to unify the rules across the conference. Ultimately, Sankey and a lot of other people would love to see a national law passed by Congress that does that for all states and all conferences.

That will take months, if not years, which is why the new committee drafted the document for the schools to sign.

“We are all defendant schools and conferences and you inherently agree to this,” Alberts said of the document. “I sat in the room with all of our football coaches, ‘Do you want to be governed?’ The answer is ‘yes.’”


AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports



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College Football Hall of Fame adjusts eligibility criteria to induct Mike Leach

Legendary coach Mike Leach tragically passed away at the age of 61 back in 2022, his death coming ahead of Mississippi State’s appearance in the ReliaQuest Bowl vs. Illinois. That game, won by the Bulldogs with interim coach Zach Arnett leading the team to a 19-10 victory in Leach’s honor, proved to be the difference […]

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Legendary coach Mike Leach tragically passed away at the age of 61 back in 2022, his death coming ahead of Mississippi State’s appearance in the ReliaQuest Bowl vs. Illinois. That game, won by the Bulldogs with interim coach Zach Arnett leading the team to a 19-10 victory in Leach’s honor, proved to be the difference in his eligibility for the NFF College Football Hall of Fame.

Leach finished his career with a record of 158-106, good for a win rate of 59.8 percent. The cutoff for the Hall of Fame? 60 percent — one victory separating the Pirate from consideration.

That was the case, at least, leading to understandable outrage from the football community following his unexpected death. He may not have won a conference or regular season championship across stops at Texas Tech, Washington State or Mississippi State, but his status as an offensive mastermind and impact on the game popularizing the Air Raid alongside Hal Mumme — including a two-year stint at Kentucky from 1997-98 to help Tim Couch become the No. 1 overall pick in the NFL Draft — made him more than deserving.

The College Football Hall of Fame obviously agrees, altering its eligibility requirements to lower the minimum win percentage to 59.5 percent, opening the door for Leach as a potential inductee.

“The NFF is committed to preserving the integrity and prestige of the NFF College Football Hall of Fame,” NFF President & CEO Steve Hatchell said in a statement. “This adjustment reflects thoughtful dialogue with leaders across the sport and allows us to better recognize coaches whose contributions to the game extend beyond a narrow statistical threshold.”

Going into effect beginning with the 2027 NFF College Football Hall of Fame Ballot, coaches with win rates of 59.5 percent must have served as a head coach for a minimum of 10 seasons with at least 100 games and will be eligible for consideration three full seasons after retirement or immediately following retirement if they are at least 70 years of age. Active coaches will be eligible upon reaching the age of 75.

In two seasons at Kentucky, Leach helped the Wildcats set six NCAA records, 41 Southeastern Conference records and 116 school records in 22 games. UK went 12-10 in that span while earning an Outback Bowl bid in 1998. From there, he became Bob Stoops’ first offensive coordinator at Oklahoma and the rest was history, getting his first head coaching shot at Texas Tech a year later in 2000.

Now, thanks to some eligibility adjustments, he’s on his way to the College Football Hall of Fame.

We’ll be calling it the Pirate Rule until further notice. Time for the late, great Mike Leach to receive the recognition he deserves in Atlanta in 2027.



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Could agents or NIL come to high school sports?

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (WNDU) – There’s a lot that high school athletes have to deal with: schoolwork, practice, maybe going after a college scholarship. And now with the changes to Rule 19, transferring to a school that offers better opportunities “If I’m a good athlete and I want to be a part of a winning […]

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SOUTH BEND, Ind. (WNDU) – There’s a lot that high school athletes have to deal with: schoolwork, practice, maybe going after a college scholarship.

And now with the changes to Rule 19, transferring to a school that offers better opportunities

“If I’m a good athlete and I want to be a part of a winning team, I may be the best player in a local suburb, and I want to win,” says Kirk Butler, talent president for 90 Ninety One Sports Agency. “If I’m going to want to win, I may have to go to another high school to do so.”

RELATED: What is Rule 19?: A breakdown of Indiana’s new transfer rule for high school athletes

Butler is a high school sports agent that works with over 80 athletes across the country. He helps them connect with specialized trainers and interact with college coaches. Now, it’s also about connecting with high school coaches

“We can facilitate some of those connections and relationships,” Butler says. “We have a platform tool where an athlete at the high school level can upload videos and send them to prep schools, send them to colleges, send them to junior colleges, community colleges. Because they might not necessarily be able to reach a coach and say, ‘Hey, please take a look at my video.’”

With transferring comes questions about Name Image and Likeness payments. It’s not allowed right now in Indiana, but it could always change.

I asked the IHSAA’s commissioner on how they’re approaching this.

“Our philosophy is this: you can’t sell what you don’t own. You don’t own a school’s uniform. You don’t own their facility. You don’t own their name,” says IHSAA Commissioner Paul Neidig. “If a student wants to teach somebody how to shoot a basketball or hit a baseball, or a softball, with their own name and they do it on their own, that’s not necessarily something we’re going to get involved in in the future.”

RELATED: What impact could Indiana’s new transfer rule have on high school sports?

Academics sometimes feel lost in these conversations, but not for Butler.

“Having the trust in parents to say, ‘Hey listen, we know what your athlete wants,’” Butler explains. “But at the end of the day, the first word in that is student-athlete. I care about your grades first, athletics can go after.”

Because while high school athletes do have a lot to handle, school is the thing that makes everything else possible.

Refresher on Indiana’s Rule 19

Previously if a student transferred schools, they would have to sit out one calendar year and miss all three sports seasons.

Now for a first-time transfer, as long as the student isn’t a senior, they will be immediately eligible to play sports at their new school. Think of it like the transfer portal in college sports.

This rule goes into effect this Sunday, June 1, so we’ll be seeing the first students use it heading into next school year’s fall season.

There are still many moving parts within Rule 19. Our WNDU 16 Sports team will have more breakdowns and explainers throughout the week on WNDU 16 News Now and WNDU.com.



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Why does Tennessee softball wear blue? What to know about ‘Summitt Blue’ uniforms

Tennessee softball rallied after a Game 1 loss to Nebraska in the super regionals, winning Games 2 and 3 to advance to the Women’s College World Series. The No. 7 Lady Vols wore their all-blue uniforms for the series-clinching win on Sunday, setting up a first-round WCWS matchup with No. 2 Oklahoma. Tennessee might bring […]

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Tennessee softball rallied after a Game 1 loss to Nebraska in the super regionals, winning Games 2 and 3 to advance to the Women’s College World Series.

The No. 7 Lady Vols wore their all-blue uniforms for the series-clinching win on Sunday, setting up a first-round WCWS matchup with No. 2 Oklahoma. Tennessee might bring back the all-blue uniforms again in Oklahoma City, which might be unusual for some college softball fans not aware of the Lady Vols’ history.

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WCWS bracket 2025: Full schedule, matchups for NCAA softball tournament

All of Tennessee’s women’s sports programs wear “Summitt Blue” uniforms in honor of Pat Summitt, the legendary Lady Vols basketball coach.

Here’s everything to know about Tennessee softball’s blue uniforms, and how they came about:

Why does Tennessee softball wear blue?

Tennessee softball started wearing blue jerseys in 2022, as part of the “Summitt Legacy” collection of uniforms for Vols women’s sports. Lady Vols soccer, volleyball, softball and basketball all have blue uniform options.

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Lady Vols softball stepped it up in 2025, however, introducing a full blue uniform for the first time. Previously, the team wore white or orange pants with their blue jerseys.

The “Summitt Blue” collection launched in 2022 as part of the 50th anniversary of Title IX. It was then when Tennessee officially renamed the blue accents that are part of the school’s colors in honor of Summitt.

“Well, I think I finally got over the idea that we’d look like North Carolina if we wore all Summitt Blue,” Lady Vols softball coach Karen Weekly told the Knoxville News-Sentinel earlier this year. “The little touches to it, like the Summitt legacy patch on it, because Pat Summitt is a big part of our program, a big part of me and Ralph (Weekly). We wouldn’t be here, we wouldn’t have the success we’ve had here if it wasn’t for Pat Summitt.”

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Summitt coached at Tennessee from 1974-2012 and won eight national championships and went to 18 Final Fours. She was gifted the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama and was a part of the inaugural Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame class in 1999.

Summitt retired from coaching in 2012 after being diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s. She died in 2016 at the age of 64.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Why does Tennessee wear blue? ‘Summitt Blue’ uniforms, explained



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