College Sports
Egor Demin's rising NBA draft stock should be boon for Kevin Young's program
This article was first published in theCougar Insiders newsletter. Sign up to receive the newsletter in your inbox each week. BYU ushered in a new era of leadership with the elevation of deputy athletic director Brian Santiago to replace retiring AD Tom Holmoe. This appointment is an attempt by the administration to continue the momentum […]

This article was first published in theCougar Insiders newsletter. Sign up to receive the newsletter in your inbox each week.
BYU ushered in a new era of leadership with the elevation of deputy athletic director Brian Santiago to replace retiring AD Tom Holmoe.
This appointment is an attempt by the administration to continue the momentum shown in football and basketball this past year in the Big 12. What we’ve seen is BYU take a huge leap in recruiting the past year. It is no secret that Santiago has proven to be a huge asset for BYU in fundraising and building relationships with donors. It also doesn’t hurt that his golfing buddy is Utah Jazz and Utah Mammoth owner Ryan Smith.

Special Collector’s Issue: “1984: The Year BYU was Second to None”
Get an inclusive look inside BYU Football’s 1984 National Championship season.
In this piece, I outline how one of Santiago’s biggest challenges is finding somebody to be his own Brian Santiago.
Here are some of our stories from the past week on this major change in Cougar sports:
- What Brian Santiago said about his detractors (Jay Drew)
- Brian Santiago explains his promotion priorities (Jackson Payne)
- BYU makes it official after reviewing 50 candidates (Jackson Payne)
Question of the week
Egor Demin is climbing up NBA mock draft boards. How does Demin’s draft impact Kevin Young’s pitch to BYU basketball recruits?
Jay Drew: For the first half of the 2024-25 season, it appeared that Egor Demin’s development was going to become a fly in the ointment in first-year BYU coach Kevin Young’s proclamation that the Provo school would become a pipeline to the NBA under his watch. Demin was struggling, and slowed by a lower leg injury that was probably worse than most people knew.
But Demin’s remarkable turnaround, and the way he has seemingly zoomed up NBA mock draft boards, could be another feather in Young’s cap. The Russian’s well-documented performance in the NBA combine has been fun to watch. He told reporters all season he was a better shooter than his percentages showed, and he went out in Chicago and proved that.
If Demin is a lottery pick — and he should be, I’ve come around to believe — that will only give Young more ammunition with recruits when he outlines his ability to use NBA methods and NBA-type resources at BYU to develop them for professional basketball.
I just had a conversation with new transfer guard Nate Pickens, from UC Riverside, and he talked extensively about those NBA ties and said it was the No. 1 reason he chose BYU over several other suitors.
Dick Harmon: Egor Demin remains Kevin Young’s first lottery pick recruit and it was imperative that he ultimately be the banner man for BYU’s basketball program under a new regime. Demin did struggle for part of the season, and his shooting wasn’t impressive as he struggled to find a role as a facilitator and point guard with Fouss Traore, Keba Keita, Richie Saunders and Trevin Knell. But if you look at the last 10 games of his freshman year, he was impressive as an all-around passer, shooter and finisher at the rim.
Demin’s NBA stock has climbed steadily since the end of the season. He’s made shots at the combine at an impressive rate, displayed excellent shooting mechanics and impressed NBA scouts and player personnel directors with his interviews and personality.
If Demin can go No. 10 to 12, it would be key in Young’s pitch to sell NBA preparation at BYU. With incoming freshman AJ Dybantsa projected to be the No. 1 pick in the 2026 draft, that would be the second car in a train gaining momentum. It doesn’t take much imagination to see that incoming sophomore from Baylor Robert Wright could be a lottery pick next year and that would add rocket fuel to Young’s pitch at high-stakes recruiting of five-star elite high school players.
I spoke to a referee this week who officiated games Dybantsa has played. He said if he were allowed to come out now, he’d be picked before Duke freshman Cooper Flagg.

Cougar tales
Last week in this newsletter, we reported the BYU football program was far from done, and on Monday it was officially announced that the Cougars had flipped 2026 three-star receiver Terran Saryon from Washington of the Big Ten. He had previously chosen the Huskies over Oregon.
Saryon is a shifty slot receiver who has close ties to previously announced 2026 commit Brock Harris, a tight end from St. George. The two had become close during seven-on-seven competitions in the offseason.
The Cougars also added Sefanaia Alatini, a 6-foot-3, 200-pound three-star defensive back and receiver from St. Francis in Oakland, California, making a huge foray with this 2026 class. He had offers from Arizona, Boise State and UNLV.
BYU’s men’s and women’s track and field teams took second place in the Big 12 championships after Texas Tech’s sprinters scored a gob of points in the final day. The Cougars, more suited to prepare for the NCAA championships where those points will be spread out among the field, saw several meet and school records fall during the competition. You can read about Ben Barton winning the decathlon and James Corrigan’s title run in the steeplechase here. Corrigan won the 5,000 meters and broke the meet record, as reported here.
In the women’s competition, Megan Hunter broke the two-minute barrier in winning the 800 meters and Lexy Halladay-Lowry won the 5,000 in the final day of the championship.
Here’s a piece reviewing the struggles of men’s volleyball going down the wire in 2025.
From the archives
From the X-verse
- Tipton predicts BYU hoops will recruit elite level (@Tiptonedits)
- Dybantsa visits first Latter-day Saint meeting (@Cougwire)
- BYU fanbase ranked No. 7 (@ghanson)
Extra points
Fanalysts
Comments from Deseret News readers:
- Coaching, NIL and culture are all important to attract talent. NIL must be competitive with what a player can get elsewhere, but coaching and culture are the deciding factors.
- How many one-and-done players did BYU have from this past year? ONE. How many one-and-done players will BYU have next season? Probably ONE. U make it sound like every player is a one-and-done. Not true.
- There’s many substantial donors to the NIL collective. If you think it’s just one, you’re mistaken.
- There’s still LDS kids on the team and more in the pipeline. We would have had three more on this year’s team but Hall, Chandler and Wahlin chose to leave BYU for another school after committing.
— CougFaninTx
The continuous money references are making the comments section for BYU basketball beyond boring. Can we maybe create a chatroom for all of those who want to continue harping on BYU over NIL? Maybe they can go there and have a big happy boring community together. The rest of us can focus on what appears to be a possibility of an exceptional basketball season.
— Valhalla
Up next
- May 22 | 8 a.m. | Baseball | vs. Arizona at Big 12 tournament
- May 23| 8 am | Men’s golf | NCAA Championships
- May 28 | 9 a.m. | Track and Field | NCAA West Prelims
College Sports
What does the House V. NCAA settlement mean for Penn State athletics? | Penn State Sports News
Friday night was monumental for college athletics. California Judge Claudia Wilken approved the $2.8 billion House v. NCAA settlement — an agreement that was a long time coming after nearly a year of deliberation and months of waiting for approval. The decision means Division I schools can now pay their athletes directly, while new scholarship […]

Friday night was monumental for college athletics. California Judge Claudia Wilken approved the $2.8 billion House v. NCAA settlement — an agreement that was a long time coming after nearly a year of deliberation and months of waiting for approval.
The decision means Division I schools can now pay their athletes directly, while new scholarship and roster limits will be effective July 1. A salary cap will also be in place, which is estimated to begin at $20.5 million per school in 2025-26.
Additionally, the NCAA will pay back $2.8 billion in damages across the next decade at approximately $280 million annually to all D1 athletes who participated between 2016 and 2024.
Revenue sharing
Most athletic programs, including Penn State, plan to use the majority of the revenue-sharing money on football, but every other team is also set to receive investment from the Nittany Lions in this new era of college athletics.
Per NIL-NCAA, it’s been estimated that Penn State will spend 91% of that $20.5 million on football and men’s basketball. Men’s hockey comes in third with an estimated $394,839 available to pay its athletes, then wrestling with $310,241.
Women’s hockey and women’s volleyball are expected to receive $83,794 and $79,371 respectively, while women’s basketball is estimated to have $63,218 to pay its athletes. Men’s tennis is set to receive the least amount with just $15,064, an average of $1,674 per player.
Women’s soccer will receive $61,440 with the men getting $39,825. Baseball has $53,323 to use, while softball is estimated to have $47,991. In short, each sport at Penn State is getting some sum of money to share among its athletes.
It’s worth noting that these estimates assume “each school limits total revenue sharing to 22% of its annual athletic department revenues – this is the percentage utilized in the proposed settlement in House v NCAA.
This money is on top of scholarship earnings and separate from NIL money, which will now have to be reported through the new NIL Go portal. The portal will be run by Deloitte with the purpose of reviewing all third-party NIL deals worth $600 or more in aggregate to ensure deals are made at fair market value.
Roster limits
While the settlement eliminates scholarship limits, it adds roster limits, meaning each team will have to decrease the number of players on its roster. This change allows any athletes on the team to receive scholarship aid, allowing teams to offer a scholarship to each player up to the roster limits.
Men’s basketball is limited to 15 athletes, while the women are capped at 14. Baseball has a limit of 34, and men’s and women’s lacrosse are capped at 48 and 35, respectively.
Women’s volleyball is allowed 15 roster spots, men’s hockey has 26 and women’s hockey is capped at 23. How the revenue sharing allocated to each team is split among the roster is up to the discretion of the program.
There are rules to “grandfather” in the roster limits, which Judge Wilken requested when she paused the implementation of the settlement.
The final ruling reads: “…the parties modified the [settlement agreement] to provide that settlement class members whose roster spots were taken away or would have been taken away because of the immediate implementation of the SA will be exempt from roster limits at any Division I school for the duration of their college athletics careers.”
In short, those who would’ve been cut because of the new roster limits will instead have the opportunity to play out the rest of their collegiate eligibility.
Penn State will have until June 15 to fully commit to revenue sharing and will have to “designate” athletes it wants grandfathered in. Fall sports must have its roster cut down to its new limit by its first game of the 2025 season, with the exception of the designated athletes. Winter and spring sports must do the same by Dec. 1.
MORE SPORTS CONTENT
After nearly a year of deliberation, a new era of college sports is here.
College Sports
It’s official: A new era of college sports is here
College sports fans, the future is now. A federal judge has approved the House v. NCAA settlement on revenue sharing, clearing the way for it to take effect on July 1. From that day on, Division I schools will be allowed to directly pay their student-athletes, so long as they stay under a predetermined annual […]

College sports fans, the future is now.
A federal judge has approved the House v. NCAA settlement on revenue sharing, clearing the way for it to take effect on July 1.
From that day on, Division I schools will be allowed to directly pay their student-athletes, so long as they stay under a predetermined annual cap.
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NIL, or name, image and likeness, deals, including from booster-funded collectives, will remain available to college athletes, but most deals will now be reviewed by a clearinghouse aimed at making the NIL market more organized and fair.
The now-approved settlement will also bring with it new scholarship rules and roster limits, and it will resolve multiple antitrust lawsuits with a $2.8 billion payout to athletes who couldn’t access NIL funds in the past due to the timing of their college careers.
Lingering legal issues
Although the ruling will change college sports as you know it, it actually won’t create much work for school leaders in the short term.
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Most programs are already prepared for a post-settlement world since Judge Claudia Wilken granted preliminary approval of the plan in October.
Over the past few months, coaches have been meeting with athletes about the changes and school administrators have prepared for revenue sharing, such as by hiking the price of concessions, as the Deseret News previously reported.
Final approval of the settlement does open the door to new types of lawsuits, including legal battles over the clearinghouse’s assessments of NIL deals.
College sports experts, including Stewart Mandel at The Athletic, anticipate battles over athletes’ “fair market value” and athlete employment rights.
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“I remain skeptical that (the settlement) will solve much of anything,” Mandel wrote in early April.
The House v. NCAA settlement is expected to supercharge debates over related antitrust issues, including whether student-athletes are employees.
“Industry leaders have asked Congress to write a new law that would prevent athletes from becoming employees and provide the NCAA with an antitrust exemption to create some caps on player pay and transfers,” per ESPN.
Background of the House settlement
Although many legal battles are yet to be fought, most college sports leaders see the House v. NCAA settlement as an important step forward.
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Supporters believe it will help tame the chaos of the current NIL era, which began in 2021, when the Supreme Court ruled that individual athletes, not their schools, should control — and be able to profit off of — athletes’ name, image and likeness rights.
That ruling ultimately made it harder for many programs to hold on to their star players, since it made it possible for booster collectives at other schools to tempt them away with major NIL deals, as the Deseret News previously reported.
While top athletes will still be able to snag huge deals moving forward, the settlement returns some power to schools — and should reduce the influence of collectives.
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“NCAA president Charlie Baker and others believe the deal will help schools regain control and tamp down the sky-rocketing, largely unregulated market for paying college players through third parties,” ESPN reported.
In a letter released Friday after the House settlement was approved, Baker wrote that he believes stabilization is on the way for college sports, but knows challenges remain. He called on Congress to take action to ensure that schools can enter the new era on solid ground.
“Opportunities to drive transformative change don’t come often to organizations like ours. It’s important we make the most of this one,” Baker wrote.
College Sports
CRCA All-America honors for Aho and Miller
Story Links WILMINGTON, Del. – Senior Maddie Aho and sophomore Delaney Miller of the Skidmore College women’s rowing team were both named to the Collegiate Rowing Coaches Association (CRCA) All-America Second Team as announced by the organization on Friday. The CRCA All-American Awards recognize the most outstanding collegiate rowers and coxswains […]

WILMINGTON, Del. – Senior Maddie Aho and sophomore Delaney Miller of the Skidmore College women’s rowing team were both named to the Collegiate Rowing Coaches Association (CRCA) All-America Second Team as announced by the organization on Friday.
The CRCA All-American Awards recognize the most outstanding collegiate rowers and coxswains across all NCAA divisions and the lightweight category. These athletes have demonstrated elite athletic performance, leadership, consistency, and dedication throughout the season, earning distinction among the top rowers in the nation.
This prestigious recognition honors athletes who have contributed significantly to their teams while meeting high standards in competition and training. The All-American teams also serve as the foundation for the selection of Athlete of the Year Finalists—with one ultimate Athlete of the Year selected from each division.
Both Aho and Miller earned All-Liberty League accolades on Thursday – Aho on the First Team, Miller on the Second Team. The recognition makes them just the second and third student-athletes in program history to claim All-America honors.
2025 CRCA All-Americans
First Team | School | Athlete Name | Grad Year | Major | Hometown |
1 | Bates College | Hannah Burdick | 2025 | Biology | Lyme, NH |
2 | Ithaca College | Maggie Farber | 2025 | Psychology | Orleans, MA |
3 | Trinity College | Alley Johnson | 2025 | Environmental Science | Lincolnville, ME |
4 | Tufts University | Lucy Howell | 2025 | Astrophysics | Hong Kong |
5 | Tufts University | Hannah Jiang | 2026 | Cognitive and Brain Sciences | New Trier Illinois |
6 | Tufts University | Rose Tinkjian | 2026 | Biology | Newton MA |
7 | Wesleyan University | Ruby Roberts | 2027 | Economics and Psychology | Belmont, MA |
8 | Wesleyan University | Alex Stanislaw | 2025 | Italian and Science and Techonology Studies | Burlington, CT |
9 | Williams College | Isabel Mikheev | 2025 | Math and Economics | Norwich, VT |
| |||||
Second Team |
| ||||
1 | Catholic University of America | Anne Mountcastle | 2026 | Nursing | Dallas, TX |
2 | Ithaca College | Lily Babcock | 2025 | Occupational Therapy | Staatsburg, NY |
3 | Skidmore College | Maddie Aho | 2025 | Art History | Putney, VT |
4 | Skidmore College | Delaney Miller | 2027 | Art | Exeter, NH |
5 | The United States Coast Guard Academy | Katharine Morgan | 2025 | Government | Glenside, PA |
6 | Trinity College | Camille Schubert | 2025 | Chemistry | Lake Oswego, OR |
7 | Tufts University | Samara Haynes | 2026 | International Relations and Environmental Studies | Montclair NJ |
8 | Wellesley College | Bronwen (Bronnie) Bailey | 2027 | Biochemistry | Newport, RI |
9 | William Smith College | Ava Lee | 2025 | Environmental Studies | South Kent, Conn |
College Sports
Penn State’s James Franklin chimes in on CFP format changes | Penn State Football News
On Friday, Sept. 2, 2022, the first domino fell. That day, the College Football Playoff board voted unanimously to expand the current field of four teams to 12 by 2026 with the hope of it being implemented by 2024 — a wish that ended up coming true. Fast forward three years, and a second domino […]

On Friday, Sept. 2, 2022, the first domino fell.
That day, the College Football Playoff board voted unanimously to expand the current field of four teams to 12 by 2026 with the hope of it being implemented by 2024 — a wish that ended up coming true.
Fast forward three years, and a second domino is close to its tipping point. Higher ups continue to debate the idea of once again expanding the playoff to 14 or 16 teams in the bracket, a change Penn State athletic director Pat Kraft said he’s “not against” back in February — but Kraft wants some other snags in college football smoothed out before that happens.
“The more teams in and the more kind of tournament you have, I think it’s great,” Kraft said. “We got to continue to look at all the other aspects of that. If you have 16 going on playing into like March, be going to February, I mean, my football players do go to class. They got to go to school. So what are we doing? And so I think we have to understand the bigger impact of that.”
It doesn’t seem like any of Kraft’s concerns are en route to being amended, but there are other aspects of a potential expansion that find themselves at the forefront of these debates. The Big Ten and SEC have both expressed desire to have four automatic qualifiers in each conference.
The pair’s argument dates back to the fall when debates were swirling over which conference was better in 2024 and which one deserved to have more teams in the playoff. As someone who’s been a head coach in both, James Franklin addressed those comments directly on Nov. 20.
“The right thing to be talking about is the two best conferences in all of college football are the Big Ten and the SEC and we should have the most teams in,” Franklin said. “I don’t think we need to take shots in the Big Ten at the SEC because that’s been proven over time. And I don’t think the SEC should be taking shots at the Big Ten.”
Franklin’s comments suffice as foreshadowing for the now ongoing debate about altering the format of the playoff. Ohio State head coach Ryan Day said plainly Wednesday that the Big Ten should have four automatic bids.
“We’re in the Big Ten, and we have 18 teams and some of the best programs in the country,” Day told ESPN. “I feel like we deserve at least four automatic qualifiers.”
Speaking with the media for the first time since the Blue-White Game, Franklin was asked right off the bat if he agrees with the comments made by one of his rivals. While the Nittany Lions’ head coach indirectly declined to give an answer, Franklin did share some thoughts on the matter.
“It’s an interesting discussion with a lot of different perspectives and a lot of people that have very, very strong feelings in terms of what’s in the best interest of college football, what’s in the best interest of fans, what’s in the best interest of the sport. And I get all of it,” Franklin said. “The majority of people that have strong opinions have an agenda and are biased based on what’s good for them, right?”
As for the Big Ten and SEC specifically, Franklin pointed to the “discrepancies” he notices across college football. Some teams play less conference games, while others aren’t even in a conference, things Franklin feels are reasons why the pair are fighting to have their way with the playoff.
“When you have some conferences playing nine games, some conferences playing a conference championship, some teams not in a conference. It makes it really difficult,” Franklin said. “The other issue you’ve had in the past, every conference and every team or every AD would have the same vote. Well, if we have more teams in our conference now, and have a greater level of competition week in and week out. Why should it be balanced?”
Former Temple head coach and Penn State running backs coach Stan Drayton gave his thoughts on the matter as well, sharing Franklin’s sentiment that there are a lot of different ways to decide who makes the playoff and college football just needs consistency across the board.
Regardless, the debate remains scorching hot, and it’s unclear whether a decision will be made any time soon. One thing is clear, though — the College Football Playoff could look very different come 2026, and more dominoes might keep falling to create a world where the Big Ten and SEC run the sport.
“Our conferences are built differently. Everybody shouldn’t get the same vote… A Penn State vote shouldn’t be the same vote as a school X,” Franklin said. “The way it worked in the old NCAA structures, everybody got the same vote, all the conferences got the same vote, and I guess what I’m saying is I agree with it the way it sits right now, because it’s not even, but let’s spend as much time as we possibly can on trying to get it consistent across the board.”
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College Sports
Panthers spend their Saturday training the next generation of hockey hopefuls
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Typically, at the Baptist Health IcePlex, there are Panthers on the ice. Well, today, there are kittens and cubs. It’s part of the Learn-to-Play Program, where they teach the game’s basics to kids. In previous years, there have been around 750 children in the program, but this year, that number has […]

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Typically, at the Baptist Health IcePlex, there are Panthers on the ice. Well, today, there are kittens and cubs.
It’s part of the Learn-to-Play Program, where they teach the game’s basics to kids.
In previous years, there have been around 750 children in the program, but this year, that number has increased to an estimated 1,000 children.
For the next two weeks, all eyes in the South Florida sports world will be on the Panthers as they look to win back-to-back Stanley Cups.
While the defending champions aim to win the series against the Edmonton Oilers, a group of youngsters seeks to help grow the game.
“It’s cool,” said Mason Bobo, a Learn to Play athlete.
“It’s very cool,” said Sloan Munoz, a Learn to Play athlete.
That very cool enthusiasm from the kids is courtesy of the Learn to Play Program.
The Program is for boys and girls from five to nine, aiming to provide cost-effective hockey lessons to kids while also offering free equipment.
While the kids love the gear, there was one problem for Bobo. “I don’t have a number,” when asked what number he’d like to wear, “19.”
That’s right, the fan favorite is Matthew Tkachuk, and these young hockey stars get on-ice training with Florida Panthers Alumni and USA Hockey-certified coaches—the same people who trained Tkachuk.
Now for the goods: what do these kids love most about the program?
“I really like skating and shooting the puck in the goal. It’s just a really fun sport,” said Munoz.
The program allows each kid to share the same practice facility as the defending Stanley Cup champs.
“It’s exciting, and it’s really fun. Hockey is probably one of my favorite sports,” said Munoz.
It’s reactions like that that make parents so happy to have the Panthers reaching back to the youth and growing the game in South Florida.
“It’s a great program to get the kids started. We love the Panthers, and it’s awesome to be sponsored by the Panthers and NHL. It’s great to be in our neighborhood and to be able to interact with Stanley and Victor,” said Mason’s dad Barrett Bobo.
College Sports
Judge approves NCAA House settlement, changing the landscape of collegiate athletics
Very late on Friday afternoon, we got a massive end-of-the week news dump when a judge officially approved a settlement in the NCAA v. House case. With the ruling, the landscape of college athletics will soon look very different than it has prior. The goal of the settlement is to provide structure to the NIL […]

Very late on Friday afternoon, we got a massive end-of-the week news dump when a judge officially approved a settlement in the NCAA v. House case. With the ruling, the landscape of college athletics will soon look very different than it has prior. The goal of the settlement is to provide structure to the NIL landscape in college football, which is currently effectively a free-for-all. Following the ruling, On3 discussed some of the ramifications of the ruling.
“Since the NCAA was founded in 1906, institutions have never directly paid athletes, On3’s Pete Nakos wrote. “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.
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“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 . . .
“ . . . 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.”
It remains to be seen exactly how the new rules will affect USC specifically. Given the Trojans’ recent hire of Chad Bowden and the subsequent revamping of their recruiting operation, USC seemingly has the right people in place to bring the program into college football’s new era.
This article originally appeared on Trojans Wire: NCAA House settlement approved, as college sports braces for impact
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