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Double trouble

Loren LaPorte and her coaching staff put in the work. And, accordingly, the ninth-year James Madison softball coach had strong feelings about the way her first swing at recruiting former Beaver standout Payton List initially played out. When LaPorte said she watched List dominate WPIAL competition she envisioned a career path much like that of […]

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Double trouble

Loren LaPorte and her coaching staff put in the work.

And, accordingly, the ninth-year James Madison softball coach had strong feelings about the way her first swing at recruiting former Beaver standout Payton List initially played out.

When LaPorte said she watched List dominate WPIAL competition she envisioned a career path much like that of her three previous first-team All-American players — Jailyn Ford, Megan Good and Odicci Alexander — who all shined as pitchers and hitters at the NCAA Division I level.

“It’s something that we really like as part of our game and what we do and when we go out recruiting,” LaPorte said. “We recruited Payton out of high school, and she was kind of the next two-way player, All-American in our eyes. She chose Virginia Tech, and we were a little upset about that.”

After List took a redshirt year as a freshman in Blacksburg, though, she opted to enter the NCAA transfer portal.

LaPorte didn’t miss her shot the second time around.

“We were one of the first people to call her,” she said. “I think it was between us and Tech in the recruiting process, so we already had a great relationship in that process. We told her, we were like, ‘We want you to do both,’ and I think she was looking to go somewhere that believes in that.

James Madison redshirt sophomore pitcher Payton List, a Beaver product, delivers a pitch during the Sun Belt Conference championship game May 10. (Courtesy of James Madison athletics)

“There’s a lot of programs in the country that will not let their pitchers swing a bat or play a position,” she added. “She knew that was never going to be the case with us because of the success we’ve had with players like her.”

LaPorte’s persistence was rewarded this spring.

List blossomed into one of the nation’s top two-way players, leading her team at the plate with a .380 batting average while also collecting team highs with a 1.153 OPS, .709 slugging percentage, 14 home runs and 34 RBIs.

The Dukes’ designated player also dominated in the circle. The 5-foot-11 redshirt sophomore collected a team-low 3.07 ERA with a 12-8 record, three complete games and 74 strikeouts over 107 innings.

“I just take it game by game,” said List, who graduated from Beaver in 2022. “I try not to think about it. I just do the best of my ability in each game for my teammates.”

List received first-team All-Sun Belt Conference recognition after James Madison narrowly missed out on an NCAA tournament berth with a 3-2 loss to Coastal Carolina May 10 in the conference tournament championship game. She was also named a National Fastpitch Coaches Association Division I Second Team All-Mid-Atlantic Region selection.

“I’m on the All-American committee,” LaPorte said. “There’s only six of us on the committee that vote for All-American. I said, ‘Payton, I want to be in the room next year putting your name on the board for All-American.’ I think that’s her goal, is to be an All-American, and that’s hard to do.

“I think she is already somewhat the face of the program.”

Getting to that distinction so quickly did not come easily.

List said she learned a lot about herself during her redshirt season at Virginia Tech.

“Things don’t come easy,” she said. “You’ve got to work for it, and that showed there. You’ve also got to find your people. At Virginia Tech, it wasn’t really the best fit for me people-wise. I wasn’t enjoying myself. When you’re not enjoying yourself, you’re not going to enjoy the sport that you play either. I learned that lesson. Whenever I got in the portal, I chose family more than the business of the softball team.”

Business picked up for List, though, immediately upon arriving at James Madison’s Harrisonburg, Va., campus.

As a freshman, List hit .333 with a .649 slug²ging percentage, nine home runs and 29 RBIs. She also compiled a 10-9 record in the circle with a 5.51 ERA and 76 strikeouts over 89 innings en route to being named the Sun Belt Conference Freshman of the Year.

“The most I had to mature in was the mental game, and not getting into my head too much, knowing that you’re not going to be perfect every single time,” List said. “That was a lesson I learned a lot this year.”

James Madison redshirt sophomore Payton List, a Beaver graduate, compiled a 12-8 record with a team-best 3.07 ERA this season. (Courtesy of James Madison athletics)

LaPorte said List’s ability to hit a variety of different pitches has served her well.

“It’s hard to figure out how to get her out,” LaPorte said. “When she connects, her ball-exit [velocity] is probably 70-75 [mph] every time. Even when she miss-hits balls, they still get down, they still get hits, because she’s so strong.”

Once she steps out of the batter’s box and into the pitcher’s circle, LaPorte said List relies on her elite velocity.

“She’s the hardest thrower on the team when it comes to velo and she’s down,” LaPorte said. “She doesn’t give up a whole lot of home runs. I think the biggest thing to move forward for her is her command. We did struggle with walks this year. If you look at her numbers, her walks are way too high. She’s just got to get a little bit better command early in the count and be a little bit more efficient.”

LaPorte said the expectations are high for List moving forward.

“Payton is someone that she is so naturally gifted in our sport,” LaPorte said. “She can do things that we can’t teach and that’s a big reason why she is the ballplayer that she is. She is probably one of the most athletic players we’ve had in here, and you have to be that way in order to be a two-way player at this level.

“On top of that, I think, she is great to be around,” she added. “I think her teammates really enjoy having her around. I think now that she’s going to be an upper classmen she is kind of stepping into a leadership role. I do think she’s ready for it.”

List said she also takes comfort in a couple other former WPIAL players on James Madison’s roster.

Junior catcher Bella Henzler is a Hampton graduate, while freshman utility player Cali Legzdin is a Beaver Falls product.

Henzler took a medical redshirt in 2025 but was named first-team all-conference in 2024, hitting .347 with 11 home runs and 10 doubles.

Legzdin hit .348 with a 1.004 OPS and .580 slugging percentage. She hit seven home runs with 31 RBIs and a team-high 11 doubles and 24 stolen bases.

“I think it’s really cool that we have that many people representing the WPIAL on our team, especially at a school in Virginia,” List said. “I think it’s cool that our coaches are still going back to Pittsburgh … and knowing that there are those WPIAL girls and knowing that we are good.

“You can also find home in those people because they understand where you come from.”

List said she is excited about her prospect moving forward along with those of her program. She said she intends to lead the Dukes on a couple of long runs in the NCAA tournament.

“I think it’s getting everyone on the same page and knowing we can make the NCAA regionals,” List said. “We should have this year. I know we lost a lot of people, but we have a lot of people coming in and a lot of people who are still dedicated to this team.”



John is a copy editor and page designer at the Post-Gazette, but he’s currently on strike. Email him at jsanta@unionprogress.com.

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Report: Princeton’s Caden Pierce to redshirt, enter the NCAA Transfer Portal

Offseason movement has slowed in college basketball with the calendar turning to June. That said, next season’s cycle of the portal already apparently has a big name set to be in it. Princeton’s Caden Pierce is to be a very early entry into next spring’s cycle for the NCAA Transfer Portal. That’s according to reporting […]

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Offseason movement has slowed in college basketball with the calendar turning to June. That said, next season’s cycle of the portal already apparently has a big name set to be in it.

Princeton’s Caden Pierce is to be a very early entry into next spring’s cycle for the NCAA Transfer Portal. That’s according to reporting today by ESPN’s Jeff Borzello that Pierce will be redshirting this upcoming season to preserve his final year of eligibility to now spend playing for a new program.

“NEWS: Princeton star Caden Pierce, the 2023-24 Ivy League Player of the Year, plans to redshirt next season in order to finish his degree before entering the transfer portal and playing his final season elsewhere in 2026-27, he told ESPN,” Borzello tweeted out this afternoon.

Pierce, a native of Glen Ellyn, Illinois, has spent the past three seasons playing for Princeton with 90 appearances made as a full-time starter for the Tigers. In that career in New Jersey, Pierce has averaged 11.9 points (48.7% FG, 32.7% 3PT on 1.0 makes), 7.9 rebounds, 2.5 assists, and 1.0 steals per game, which made him the team’s leading rebounder in every year he had there and second-leading scorer in each of the past two.

Pierce developed from being Ivy League Rookie of the Year to being selected each of the past two years as All-Ivy. That included being Ivy League Player of the Year and First Team All-Ivy as a sophomore when he posted his career-best numbers of 16.6 points (54.6% FG, 34.2% 3PT), 9.2 rebounds, 3.2 assists, and 1.2 steals per game.

Over his three years in the program, Princeton went 66-25 (.725), including 30-10 in conference play to win three conference titles, two regular-season ones and one league tournament, in the Ivy. That led to one appearance in the NCAA Tournament in 2023 as the Tigers were a No. 15 seed who upset No. 2 Arizona and No. 7 Missouri to reach the Sweet 16, the furthest they’ve advanced in the modern era, before losing to No. 6 Creighton. Pierce, a freshman at the time, averaged 6.3 points (35% FG) and 8.7 rebounds during that run.

Pierce will now be another significant loss for the Tigers since the end of last season. Their most notable was the transfer of Xaivian Lee (Florida), a Top-40 overall transfer and No. 10 PG in the portal per On3’s 2025 Top Transfer Portal Players, after consecutive years on the All-Ivy First Team. Darius Gakwasi also entered his name into the portal, with no commitment since, back in March.

There’s a full other season to play before the portal will open again in college basketball in eight or nine months come March. It’ll be then when Pierce will eventually become available for his next school with this big news on his future.

To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire. 

The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.





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USC Trojans, Lincoln Riley To Make First College Football Playoff This Season?

With the expansion last season, more teams have the opportunity to make the College Football Playoff than ever before. The USC Trojans and coach Lincoln Riley have not yet made the College Football Playoff, but they have a much higher chance, and perhaps the 2025 season will be the year they make it. As the […]

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With the expansion last season, more teams have the opportunity to make the College Football Playoff than ever before. The USC Trojans and coach Lincoln Riley have not yet made the College Football Playoff, but they have a much higher chance, and perhaps the 2025 season will be the year they make it.

As the 2025 College Football season nears, Fox Sports’ Joel Klatt revealed his top 10 teams most likely to make their first playoff appearance. At No. 7, Klatt named the USC Trojans, giving the team hope for the year, but Riley and the program will not be able to have a repeat of last season.

“They started last season with a win over LSU, and I thought that was going to propel them to a potential playoff season last year. In Lincoln Riley’s first year, they were a game away from going to the playoff. So, I personally believe that Riley has maybe come under some criticism that might not be fair, but I could be wrong,” Klatt said. “You can’t go seven and five again. You just can’t.”

USC Trojans, Lincoln Riley To Make First College Football Playoff This Season?

Nov 16, 2024; Los Angeles, California, USA; Southern California Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley watches game action against the Nebraska Cornhuskers during the second half at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images / Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Last season, there was uncertainty surrounding USC with quarterback Miller Moss taking over the team and Chicago Bears’ Caleb Williams off to the NFL. When the Trojans opened up the season with a 27-20 win against the LSU Tigers, there was hope. 

The team also took the Penn State Nittany Lions into overtime, showing their potential, but USC ended up finishing the season with a 7-6 overall record, going 4-5 in Big Ten conference play.

Of the six losses, five were within one score, but the team has to win those games, or there is no chance of getting into the College Football Playoff. This season, quarterback Jayden Maiava is set to lead the team, and after going 3-4 last year as a starter, he showed his potential, and he can lead the offense to success.

USC Trojans, Lincoln Riley To Make First College Football Playoff This Season?

Dec 27, 2024; Las Vegas, NV, USA; Southern California Trojans quarterback Jayden Maiava (14) throws the ball against the Texas A&M Aggies in the first half at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images / Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

MORE: Los Angeles Lakers’ Bronny James Turns Heads In NBA Summer League Debut

MORE: USC Trojans Legend, Detroit Lions’ Amon-Ra St. Brown Ranked Among Best NFL Players

MORE: USC Trojans 5-Star Recruits Elbert Hill, Keenyi Pepe, Mark Bowman Headline Prized Recruiting Class

The Trojans are entering the season with a talented roster, but there are still question marks. Wide receivers Makai Lemon and Ja’Kobi Lane have high potential, as both could be top 2026 NFL Draft picks. USC also brought in Prince Strachan through the transfer portal, which was a crucial addition after losing much depth following the 2024 season.

While the attention is on USC’s offense with Riley being an offensive-minded coach, the Trojans’ defense can be overlooked. USC hiring defensive coordinator D’Anton Lynn ahead of the 2024 season was a big addition, and the defense improved drastically. 

USC Trojans, Lincoln Riley To Make First College Football Playoff This Season?

Nov 2, 2024; Seattle, Washington, USA; USC Trojans wide receiver Ja’Kobi Lane (8) participates in pregame warmups against the Washington Huskies at Alaska Airlines Field at Husky Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images / Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

With the Trojans bringing in key defensive players such as four-star defensive lineman Jahkeem Stewart and Georgia transfer defensive lineman Jamaal Jarrett, USC could be physical upfront, leading to much success.

“There was much improvement on the defensive side of the ball. They brought in Rob Ryan as an assistant this offseason. Defensive line is actually looking like a strength right now, which hasn’t been the case for them in the past,” Klatt said.

The two toughest games on USC’s schedule in 2025 are on Oct. 18 against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish and on Nov. 11 against the Oregon Ducks. Both were top-five teams last season, and even with roster changes, are expected to be top teams again. 

USC Trojans, Lincoln Riley To Make First College Football Playoff This Season?

Sep 28, 2024; Los Angeles, California, USA; Southern California Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley reacts after a game against the Wisconsin Badgers at United Airlines Field at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images / Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

There are a couple of games that could be season-defining, starting on Sept. 27 against the Illinois Fighting Illini. Illinois finished the season as the No. 20 team in the nation, and with many returning players, including quarterback Luke Altmyer, the outcome of that game could define where USC stands next season.

The following game, on Oct. 11, after a bye week, USC will face the Michigan Wolverines. Michigan had a down season, but with an elite recruiting class coming in, including the No. 1 quarterback Bryce Underwood, the Wolverines are in a similar position to USC. Both programs are looking to turn things around in 2025, and this will be a crucial game for both teams.

The USC Trojans will kick off the 2025 season against the Missouri State Bears on Aug. 30.



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Bill Belichick, Deion Sanders Among Coaches Not in ‘College Football 26’

For the first time in either of its college football video game series, EA Sports incorporated real-life coaches into “College Football 26.” But as over 300 real-life coaches were included in the game, those who got to play “College Football 26” on its early release day recognized that two of the most well-known coaches in […]

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For the first time in either of its college football video game series, EA Sports incorporated real-life coaches into “College Football 26.” But as over 300 real-life coaches were included in the game, those who got to play “College Football 26” on its early release day recognized that two of the most well-known coaches in the sport weren’t among them.

North Carolina’s Bill Belichick and Colorado’s Deion Sanders declined to lend their likeness for “College Football 26” to EA Sports, The Athletic reported. Miami (Fla.) coach Mario Cristobal and Iowa’s Kirk Ferentz are also among the head coaches who aren’t in “College Football 26.”

Belichick’s decision not to be featured in “College Football 26” shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise. During his 24 seasons as head coach of the New England Patriots, Belichick frequently declined EA Sports to use his likeness for the “Madden” video game series. Instead, the game developers would have a random character as the head coach of the Patriots.

As for Sanders, he typically lent his likeness to EA Sports for the “Madden” series during his playing career. The reasoning for why Belichick, Sanders and other coaches who didn’t lend their likeness for “College Football 26” is unclear.

Similar to what EA Sports did with Belichick when he opted not to appear in the “Madden” video game series, coaches who declined to appear in “College Football 26” were replaced by random characters. “Hector Luna” is the coach of UNC in place of Belichick, while “Kirk Patrick” is Colorado’s coach in place of Sanders, according to On3

While the most prominent Belichick isn’t in “College Football 26,” there is a member of the family in the game. UNC defensive coordinator Steve Belichick allowed EA Sports to use his likeness in “College Football 26,” the game’s principal game designer, Ben Haumiller, said in June. 

“Bill Belichick, historically, famously was not in ‘Madden’ for a lot of years. We chased him forever. We even had coach [John] Madden reach out to him,” Haumiller told the “Split Zone Duo” podcast. “So, when this opportunity came around, that was a joke internally, like, ‘Are we going to get Bill?’ And they never did. 

“When it came to Belichick, there were some questions of how he would show up. Ultimately, we were never able to come to a resolution with him. Hopefully, that changes.”

Unlike his father, North Carolina defensive coordinator Steve Belichick will appear in “College Football 26.” (Photo by Peyton Williams/Getty Images)

Steve Belichick, the eldest of Belichick’s two sons, became UNC’s defensive coordinator shortly after his father became the program’s head coach. He was Washington’s defensive coordinator under Jedd Fisch last season, marking his first year of coaching college ball. He previously spent several seasons on his father’s coaching staff with the Patriots.

Stanford interim coach Frank Reich, Utah State’s Bronco Mendenhall, Western Kentucky’s Tyson Helton, Jacksonville State’s Charles Kelly, UAB’s Trent Dilfer, Louisiana-Monroe’s Bryant Vincent, New Mexico’s Jason Eck and Kent State’s Mark Carney are the other FBS head coaches who reportedly declined to lend their linked for “College Football 26.”

As several head coaches declined to share their likeness for “College Football 26,” a handful of the game’s top coaches appeared on one of the covers for the video game. Ohio State’s Ryan Day, Penn State’s James Franklin, Georgia’s Kirby Smart, Arizona State’s Kenny Dillingham, Ole Miss‘ Lane Kiffin and Oregon’s Dan Lanning each appeared on the cover of the deluxe version of “College Football 26.”

The full release for “College Football 26” will take place on Thursday, but some users were able to start playing the game on Monday if they pre-ordered the deluxe version. 

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4 Football Players Sue NCAA Using Diego Pavia’s Legal Playbook

In the latest iteration of college athletes suing to play beyond exhaustion of their NCAA eligibility, four former JUCO football players who want to play for Vanderbilt and other FBS programs have asked a federal judge in Tennessee to enjoin the NCAA from enforcing eligibility rules. Chris Bellamy, Demarcus Griffin, TJ Smith and Targhee Lambson […]

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In the latest iteration of college athletes suing to play beyond exhaustion of their NCAA eligibility, four former JUCO football players who want to play for Vanderbilt and other FBS programs have asked a federal judge in Tennessee to enjoin the NCAA from enforcing eligibility rules.

Chris Bellamy, Demarcus Griffin, TJ Smith and Targhee Lambson filed a complaint for injunctive relief on July 3. They’re represented by attorneys Ryan Downton and Salvador M. Hernandez, a duo who have litigated on behalf of Vanderbilt quarterback and former JUCO transfer Diego Pavia’s thus far successful case to play a sixth season this fall. 

The four plaintiffs seek to play past the NCAA’s basic Division I eligibility framework. This framework limits college athletes to four seasons of intercollegiate competition—including JUCO and D-II competition—within a five-year period and, the complaint stresses, stipulates that a JUCO student who transfers to a D-I program has three years of D-I eligibility even if they didn’t play a sport at their JUCO school. 

The players contend this framework violates antitrust law by constraining the market for athletic services offered by D-I football to former JUCO football players. Lost NIL opportunities are emphasized as an economic harm to the players, who also lose out on potential revenue-sharing opportunities resulting from the House settlement. The four hope that Pavia’s win in the same federal district in Tennessee—the Vandy quarterback’s case is currently on appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit—provides helpful precedent. 

Bellamy is a wide receiver who played at two junior colleges and a couple of seasons at New Mexico State. According to the complaint, Bellamy has been admitted into Vanderbilt and promised a spot on the football team. Griffin is a defensive back at Louisiana Tech University and earlier played for a junior college and the University of Houston. Griffin’s roster spot “and NIL money” are waiting for him at Louisiana Tech should he regain eligibility, the complaint asserts. Smith is a quarterback who has played at a junior college, D-II college and Florida Atlantic University. The complaint says several D-I colleges are interested in Smith if he’s deemed eligible to play. Meanwhile, Lambson is a running back who played for Snow Community College and then Southern Utah University. Vanderbilt, the complaint states, is interested in Lambson joining the Commodores for 2025.

The complaint tracks familiar arguments raised in Pavia and the growing list of eligibility cases that have followed. Bellamy, Griffin, Smith and Lambson maintain that junior shouldn’t count against the D-I eligibility clock. Most junior colleges are governed by the National Junior College Athletic Association, which has no affiliation with the NCAA. The four players argue that JUCO football is nothing like D-I football, including because D-I football generates “billions of dollars in revenue” and its games are regularly televised and streamed. 

“To be clear,” the complaint argues, “while the NJCAA streams a total of 13 games over its entire season, the NCAA televised 40 games just last Saturday alone, and televises a similar number every single week of the season (not to mention several games on other nights of the week).”

Differences in NIL opportunities are also cited as a key distinction between JUCO and D-I football. The complaint cites data showing that while 2024 NIL market for college football was estimated at $1.1 billion, “only $6.5 million—less than six-tenths of 1%—went to non-NCAA Division I football players.” Further, the complaint references how D-I football, especially at a power conference school, provides essential training and exposure for the NFL Draft.

The complaint also asserts NCAA eligibility rules unfairly punish JUCO players compared to similarly situated groups. Consider the NCAA eligibility clock of a football player who graduates from high school and then plays another season in a post-grad year. His eligibility doesn’t run during that post-grad year, even if it occurs after he graduated from high school. Likewise, a football player who graduates from high school and then becomes a pro athlete in another sport still has five years to play four seasons of football. 

To illustrate, the complaint references Chris Weinke, who became a football player at Florida State in 1997 as a 25-year-old after a six-year pro baseball career. Athletes who serve in the military are also mentioned as not facing the same NCAA restrictions experienced by JUCO players. The complaint argues that if the NCAA and its member institutions were genuinely concerned that former JUCO players might upset competitive balance in D-I football because they’re (relatively) older and more seasoned, the NCAA “would preclude other older athletes from competing” in D-I.

Consumers, the complaint maintains, are also harmed by eligibility rules that exclude former JUCO players because of seasons played and years past. There are “negative downstream effects on nationwide consumers who attend college football games and watch college football on television,” the complaint charges. 

Along those lines, D-I football rosters lose out on potential players who could enhance the quality of play. 

“Teams,” Bellamy, Griffin, Smith and Lambson argue, “may be less competitive without the ability to retain skilled transfer players for an additional season, fans lose the opportunity to see those college athletes compete for their favorite teams on gameday and the product of NCAA athletics is less compelling for consumers.”

The NCAA will answer the complaint and defend its eligibility rules, which have withstood some of the recent legal challenges. 

In a statement shared with Sportico, an NCAA spokesperson said, “the NCAA stands by its eligibility rules, including the five-year rule, which enable student-athletes and schools to have fair competition and ensure broad access to the unique and life-changing opportunity to be a student-athlete. The NCAA is making changes to modernize college sports but attempts to alter the enforcement of foundational eligibility rules—approved and supported by membership leaders—makes a shifting environment even more unsettled. As legal outcomes continue to differ from case to case, the NCAA believes partnering with Congress is essential to provide clarity and stability for current and future student-athletes.”

The case is before U.S. District Judge Aleta A. Trauger. 



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Big 12 DRAMA

BIG 12 MEDIA DAYS: NIL Drama and Commissioner’s playoff stance shakes up CFB landscape. The Big 12 Squad breaks down the hottest topics from Big 12 media day 1 Author: wwltv.com Published: 10:52 PM CDT July 8, 2025 Updated: 10:52 PM CDT July 8, 2025 0

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BIG 12 MEDIA DAYS: NIL Drama and Commissioner’s playoff stance shakes up CFB landscape. The Big 12 Squad breaks down the hottest topics from Big 12 media day 1

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Los Angeles Native Will Gasparino Transferring from Texas to UCLA

  About 2 minutes reading time.  Alfred Ezman – World Baseball Network  |    Jul 8th, 2025 4:30pm EDT On Tuesday, Texas power hitter Will Gasparino announced that he will be transferring to UCLA for the 2026 college baseball season.   Gasparino has spent the past two seasons playing for the Texas Longhorns in Austin. While […]

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Los Angeles Native Will Gasparino Transferring from Texas to UCLA


  About 2 minutes reading time.
 Alfred Ezman – World Baseball Network  |    Jul 8th, 2025 4:30pm EDT


On Tuesday, Texas power hitter Will Gasparino announced that he will be transferring to UCLA for the 2026 college baseball season.  

Gasparino has spent the past two seasons playing for the Texas Longhorns in Austin. While there, he developed good power in his swing with 25 home runs in those two seasons combined.  

He hit double figures in home runs in both the 2024 and 2025 college baseball seasons respectively.  

In 2025, he helped lead the Texas Longhorns to their first SEC regular season title in their first season in the conference. This landed the team the second-overall national seed in the 2025 NCAA Tournament.  

A Return Home to Los Angeles – The decision to transfer to UCLA is a homecoming move for Gasparino, as he is a native of Los Angeles.  

He played for Harvard-Westlake High School, where he became a talented recruit in the 2023 class. According to Perfect Game, he was the number one outfielder and a top ten player from the state of California.  

He was also a top ten outfielder and top 50 player nationally in the 2023 high school class.  

UCLA Bruins are Retooled for 2026 – In 2025, the UCLA Bruins went to the College World Series after a solid season where they went 48-18 overall and 22-8 in Big Ten play.  

Head coach John Savage’s team won a share of the Big Ten regular season title with the Oregon Ducks. It was the Bruins first season in the Big Ten conference.  

Along with Gasparino, UCLA will feature one of the best players in college baseball in its lineup in Roch Cholowsky.  

The addition of Gasparino makes the Bruins more potent and poised for another great season in 2026.  

Gasparino Playing Summer Ball in the Cape Cod League – For right now, Gasparino is currently playing summer baseball in the Cape Cod League for the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox. 

He has three hits, three RBI, and three walks over the course of eight games.  

It is Gasparino’s second season in the Cape Cod League after he played for the Chatham Anglers in 2024.  

Photo: Will Gasparino, right, celebrates a home run against Texas St. with third base coach Nolan Cain during an NCAA baseball game on Tuesday, April 1, 2025, in Austin, Texas. (AP Photo/Stephen Spillman)

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