NIL
Eight Elite College Basketball Recruits Make Major NIL Announcement
In this modern era of college athletics, players are possibly as valuable as they have ever been. It isn’t uncommon for a player, whether it be basketball or football, to be offered a massive payday before playing a single minute of action at their respective college. On Wednesday, Adidas took to social media to announce […]

In this modern era of college athletics, players are possibly as valuable as they have ever been.
It isn’t uncommon for a player, whether it be basketball or football, to be offered a massive payday before playing a single minute of action at their respective college. On Wednesday, Adidas took to social media to announce its 2025 high school NIL class, featuring recruits from both the 2026 and 2027 recruiting classes.
The class consists of eight of the top recruits in the country, headlined by 2026 five-star shooting guard Caleb Holt, who ranks as the No. 5 player in the country according to On3’s Industry Rankings on the men’s side, and Kate Harping, who ranks as the No. 2 player in the class of 2026.
NIL
Tennessee guard Zakai Zeigler’s petition to play fifth season of college basketball denied by federal judge
Getty Images A request for a preliminary injunction from Tennessee guard Zakai Zeigler’s representation seeking a fifth season of college basketball eligibility was denied Thursday in Knoxville, Tennessee, by U.S. District Judge Katherine A. Crytzer. The denial came nearly a week after hearing arguments in the case as Zeigler’s attorneys petitioned the court on the […]


A request for a preliminary injunction from Tennessee guard Zakai Zeigler’s representation seeking a fifth season of college basketball eligibility was denied Thursday in Knoxville, Tennessee, by U.S. District Judge Katherine A. Crytzer. The denial came nearly a week after hearing arguments in the case as Zeigler’s attorneys petitioned the court on the grounds of being unfairly financially restricted by the NCAA’s so-called “four-seasons” rule, which states athletes must compete in four seasons within a five-year window.
Zeigler completed four seasons in four years and is part of the first class post-pandemic that was not granted an additional year of eligibility.
What the court said
His representation filed a lawsuit against the NCAA in May in the case requesting the preliminary injunction citing federal and state antitrust laws were violated. However, Crytzer wrote in her assessment that the argument in which the NCAA unduly restricted him under a violation of the Sherman Act did not hold up.
“This Court is a court of law, not policy,” Crytzer wrote via the Associated Press. “What the NCAA should do as a policy matter to benefit student athletes is beyond the reach of the Sherman Act and TTPA and by extension, this Court.”
The reason why college basketball players with no remaining eligibility are entering the NCAA transfer portal
Kyle Boone

Reaction from Zeigler’s legal team
A granting of a preliminary injunction may have been a ground-breaking development in the ever-changing college athletics eligibility landscape. Zeigler is the first non-junior college player to file suit against the NCAA, though Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia — a former junior college product — sued and won in a similar case seeking an additional year of eligibility after arguing the NCAA’s rule counting junior college participation toward overall eligibility violated antitrust laws.
“We are disappointed the Court declined to grant a preliminary injunction on the basis that the NCAA does not directly control NIL compensation, just days after the House settlement confirmed they would do exactly that,” Litson PLLC and the Garza Law Firm, both of which represent Zeigler, said Thursday in a statement. “This ruling is just the first chapter of what we believe will ultimately be a successful challenge. We intend to press forward and are evaluating the best path ahead for Zakai.”
Zeigler, a two-time SEC Defensive Player of the Year winner and three-time All-SEC performer, played 138 games across four seasons with the Vols. He is unlikely to be selected in this month’s NBA Draft but would have stood to earn millions of dollars the next season, his counsel argued, if he had been given an additional year of eligibility.
NIL
Tennessee softball coach Karen Weekly calls out tampering, NIL issues in college softball
Karen Weekly is going hard at tampering issues in college softball. Despite Tennessee’s immense success under her tutelage, the Lady Vols coach has an issue with where the sport stands in 2025. Evidently, Weekly has no issue with NIL in itself, believing it’s a tremendous revelation that women can make money on their collegiate careers. […]

Karen Weekly is going hard at tampering issues in college softball. Despite Tennessee’s immense success under her tutelage, the Lady Vols coach has an issue with where the sport stands in 2025.
Evidently, Weekly has no issue with NIL in itself, believing it’s a tremendous revelation that women can make money on their collegiate careers. However, her problem is with coaches and recruiters from other programs contacting players before they even enter the transfer portal. That has her calling out any and all tampering.
“I think we can all agree on two things: 1) Women making money in sports is awesome and long overdue,” Weekly posted on X on Friday. “2) Contacting players (directly or indirectly) before their season ends and signing them to NIL deals before they enter the portal is wrong. Money isn’t the issue, tampering is!”
If you’re a fan of college athletics, it feels like this was inevitable. We’ve seen rumors of tampering in a myriad of other sports, and it would’ve certainly been naive to think that college softball was immune to the problem.
Karen Weekly has been around the bend and found success as college softball has evolved on and off the field. This is one change she won’t stand for, and she’s fighting for justice. We’ll see if she calls anyone out by name or if the NCAA takes notice of the Lady Vols’ leader’s warning in the future.
More on Karen Weekly, Tennessee Volunteers
Moreover, Tennessee made the Women’s College World Series for the second time in the last three seasons under Weekly’s guidance. There are plenty of memories that come along with that run, even if the Lady Vols would have preferred to keep things going all the way to the top. Still, she’s grateful.
“My heart is full because of the young ladies to my right and the young ladies in that locker room. They’re sad for all the right reasons,” Weekly stated earlier this June. “It’s not about wins and losses. It’s about the joy they’ve experienced being together every single day, and I think people saw that in the way we played. They saw them bounce back. They saw how resilient, how gritty and tough they were.
“This has been a group that has been just so much fun to coach. Because they allowed us to coach them, and everything we asked of them all through the season, they bought in completely and just made it really, really fun. My office and our clubhouse is right by the front door. And every one of these guys, they walk in, they have a smile on their face and they greet you.”
All in all, Karen Weekly has been leading the Tennessee program since 2002 and has found plenty of success during her time there, going to the Women’s College World Series nine times. Now, she’ll go back to the drawing board and look to put together another great group of Lady Vols to compete for next season.
— On3’s Dan Morrison contributed to this article.
NIL
Marshall University
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. – Marshall University Women’s Basketball head coach Juli Fulks announced the signing of four transfers for the 2025-26 season. Emily Bratton, Ni’Kiah Chesterfield, Emari Doby, and Timaya Lewis-Eutsey come to Marshall with college basketball experience. The four join incoming freshmen Olivia Olson, who was signed last November by Fulks, and Zenthia Stowers, a […]

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. – Marshall University Women’s Basketball head coach Juli Fulks announced the signing of four transfers for the 2025-26 season.
Emily Bratton, Ni’Kiah Chesterfield, Emari Doby, and Timaya Lewis-Eutsey come to Marshall with college basketball experience.
The four join incoming freshmen Olivia Olson, who was signed last November by Fulks, and Zenthia Stowers, a six-foot forward with international experience playing for the New Zealand U18 National Team.
Bratton made 18 appearances with the Miami RedHawks as a freshman in 2024-25. The finalist for Ms. Basketball Ohio averaged 23 points as a high school senior.
“We’re excited about her future in a Marshall uniform.”
– @Juli_Fulks on @emily_bratton_
#ALLIN pic.twitter.com/pghjWFe0VH
— Marshall Women’s Basketball (@HerdWBB) May 12, 2025
Chesterfield has two years of college basketball experience at Tusculum. In 54 games across the last two seasons, the six-foot forward averaged over 15 points per game on 53 percent shooting, and six rebounds per contest.
It’s Official
Welcome @NikiahChesterf1 to our Family!
#ALLIN pic.twitter.com/ItI1VLn8hG
— Marshall Women’s Basketball (@HerdWBB) May 6, 2025
Doby joins the Herd from Illinois-Springfield, and played at DI Denver University in 2023-24. She averaged 12.0 PPG and 5.0 rebounds per contest with UIS last season.
It’s official, @Emari_JD is a part of The Herd!
#ALLIN pic.twitter.com/I4eVfxJkVm
— Marshall Women’s Basketball (@HerdWBB) May 29, 2025
Lewis-Eutsey has three seasons of experience at VCU. Two seasons ago with the Rams, she finished on the leaderboard of the Atlantic 10 in field goal percentage (.481), free throw percentage, and steals (45). She was named to the All-A10 Third Team in 2023-24.
Got us one!
Welcome, @timayalewiss to The Herd
#ALLIN pic.twitter.com/FfIPnyaZVW
— Marshall Women’s Basketball (@HerdWBB) May 13, 2025
For all the latest information about Marshall Athletics, follow @HerdZone on X and Instagram.
To follow all Thundering Herd sports and get live stats, schedules and free live audio, download the Marshall Athletics App for iOS and Android.
NIL
Oklahoma softball has what it takes to make another CWS push in 2026
The 2025 Women’s College World Series came to an end late last week and a national champion other than the Oklahoma Sooners was crowned for the first time in five seasons. The Sooners gave way this year to Texas and Texas Tech, both of which posted wins over Oklahoma on the way to the national […]

The 2025 Women’s College World Series came to an end late last week and a national champion other than the Oklahoma Sooners was crowned for the first time in five seasons.
The Sooners gave way this year to Texas and Texas Tech, both of which posted wins over Oklahoma on the way to the national championship series. In the end, it was the hated Longhorns putting their name on the WCWS championship trophy for the very first time, winning two of three games from a Texas Tech team that was making its very first trip to Oklahoma City and the WCWS.
The looming question in Sooner Nation after an atypical season by Oklahoma standards — the Sooners’ 52 wins in 2025 was the fewest since 2015 — was this just a temporary pause as Patty Gasso and Co. retool and readjust to the new world order in college sports to come back as strong as ever going forward?
More pertinently, can Oklahoma not only make it back to the WCWS again in 2026 — it’s almost as if the Sooners have a contract with the overseers of the WCWS that prohibits them from being excluded — but be in a position to win it all and begin an all new championship run?
The answer to the former is “yes,” and because of that, it’s also “yes” to the latter question. After all, history tells us that when Oklahoma makes it to the Women’s College World Series, it has a really good chance of taking home the championship trophy. The Sooners have made it to the WCWS 18 times since 2000 under Gasso, won the national championship eight times and finished as national runner-up twice during that span.
Oklahoma softball has what it takes to get back to the CWS next season
Until the Sooners don’t make it to Oklahoma City and the WCWS, it would seem pretty foolhardy to count them out. And the 2026 group looks really stacked and seasoned looking ahead to next season.
No one outside of the Oklahoma softball program or perhaps the state of Oklahoma could have imagined in their wildest dreams that a team that had to replace 14 spots on a 22-player roster this past season would be playing in the Women’s College World Series this season, let alone be one of the final four teams left standing and just three wins away from a record fifth straight national title.
Thirteen members of the 2025 Sooner roster were underclassmen, nine of those were freshmen, including three freshmen in the starting lineup. Typically, you wouldn’t consider a team with that many young and new players to be on a par with the best teams in the sport
No team has been more dominant in the past quarter century of college softball than the Oklahoma Sooners. OU has been to the WCWS 22 times in program history. Eighteen of those, including this season, have been since 2000, tied with UCLA for the most of any team over that span.
The Sooners aren’t the only team that brings back offensive firepower and lockdown pitching for the 2026 season. In fact, it’s entirely possible that the eight teams we see in next season’s Women’s College World Series have a very familiar look.
A couple of way-too-early projections we’ve seen have reigning champions Texas, Texas Tech, Tennessee, Oregon and Oklahoma returning to the big stage in OKC a year from now, and could 2026 be the year former Sooner Jordy Bahl makes her WCWS return, but in a different uniform?
Any coach or player will tell you it’s a very difficult road to get to the WCWS, and to be able to do it year after year — let alone win it all — is a truly remarkable accomplishment. Whatever happens next college softball season, it should be another strong year for Oklahoma softball. And let’s be brutally honest: It would be a big disappointment if the Sooners fail to make it back to Oklahoma City.
NIL
Former Vols WR Grant Frerking was a paid UT consultant, media NIL president at same time
Grant Frerking, a former Tennessee Vols wide receiver and paid consultant in Josh Heupel’s UT football program, is alleged of significant financial scams and crimes. Frerking, who essentially had been the face of On3’s Name, Image and Likeness division since he exited the UT football program after the 2022 season as On3’s President of NIL […]

Grant Frerking, a former Tennessee Vols wide receiver and paid consultant in Josh Heupel’s UT football program, is alleged of significant financial scams and crimes.
Frerking, who essentially had been the face of On3’s Name, Image and Likeness division since he exited the UT football program after the 2022 season as On3’s President of NIL University as well as director of athlete network development, was terminated by the company late last month, On3 founder Shannon Terry said in a statement posted to the X platform formerly known as Twitter.
On3 is aware of allegations concerning a former employee, whose employment ended on May 27, 2025. On3 has a zero tolerance policy for blatant violations of its internal standards and values, and takes allegations of criminal misconduct seriously. An internal investigation into… pic.twitter.com/FcL3Z1NFm2
— Shannon Terry (@ShannonTerry) June 11, 2025
But in explosive reporting from the Knoxville News Sentinel this week, Frerking was revealed to be a contract employee of the University of Tennessee’s athletics department and specifically for Josh Heupel’s Tennessee football program.
Per the report, UT paid Frerking as a contract consultant to the tune of $30,000 for a two-year contract that expires at month’s end. UT officials told the KNS that Frerking no longer worked for UT and “has not done any recent work on campus.”
However, Frerking had still be heavily involved in Tennessee athletics as recently as just six months ago.
Numerous sources told FootballScoop in recent weeks that Frerking was a host at an exclusive event for the University of Tennessee’s fundraising arm, The Tennessee Fund, on the last day of April at Nashville’s posh Hall’s Chophouse.
Indeed, invited guests received an invitation to the UT event that was to be “graciously hosted by Grant Frerking” and two additional individuals that FootballScoop is not naming at this time. Numerous high-ranking members of the UT athletics department such as basketball and football coaches as well as athletics director Danny White are typical attendees at those events.
Additionally, though he was never classified as an employee of the organization, numerous sources told FootballScoop that Frerking was involved with Spyre Sports, the collective that has been personally endorsed by White, and had attended their tailgates and various other functions. Spyre is the group that has handled virtually all Tennessee football players’ NIL deals now for several years — including the projected $8 million deal for since-departed Vols quarterback Nico Iamaleava.
“Words cannot describe how excited and honored to join the Board of Directors for Volunteer Legacy, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit,” Frerking posted to his Instagram page at the time. Frerking recently switched his social media account to private.
On3’s Terry, who’s been a dynamic force in online coverage of college football and recruiting as a founder of Rivals and 247Sports in addition to On3, has issued several statements that condemned Frerking’s behavior and also shined a light on Frerking’s dismissal from On3.
Terry was particularly direct in light of the Knoxville paper’s report on Frerking’s advisory role for Heupel’s program.
On3 had no knowledge of this relationship. Grant was explicitly instructed not to engage, either directly or indirectly, with the University of Tennessee or its associated collective. On multiple occasions during his employment, he was asked to confirm compliance with this… https://t.co/6rUtzVVgSy
— Shannon Terry (@ShannonTerry) June 12, 2025
Frerking was spotlighted for his entrepreneurial work with his former company Metro Straw while playing for the Vols as a walk-one wideout through six seasons that ended in 2022. In addition to features from ESPN and The Athletic, Frerking became a media regular on a variety of shows that included the SEC Network staple “The Paul Finebaum Show.”
NIL
Florida State Seminoles baseball transfer portal tracker
Florida State baseball is set to be active in the NCAA transfer portal as head coach Link Jarrett aims to retool his roster with hopes of another deep postseason run in 2026. The Seminoles went 42-16 and lost in the Super Regional rounds to Oregon State after winning the Tallahassee regional with a sweep. In […]

Florida State baseball is set to be active in the NCAA transfer portal as head coach Link Jarrett aims to retool his roster with hopes of another deep postseason run in 2026.
The Seminoles went 42-16 and lost in the Super Regional rounds to Oregon State after winning the Tallahassee regional with a sweep. In Jarrett’s third season, FSU were led by stars Jamie Arnold, Alex Lodise and Max Willlimas, but of the three, none are expected back on campus come 2026.
With that comes the need to replace production to find ways to compete in the ever-changing landscape of collegiate athletics. FSU has already been active with a number of departures and a handful of incoming in the transfer portal.
The NCAA transfer portal will be open for players until July 1.
FSU baseball has already landed a pair of transfers
The Seminoles’ season has been over for less than a week, but the program has already brought in a pair of transfers in Davidson infielder Eli Putnam and FAU pitcher Trey Beard.
Beard spent two seasons at Florida Atlantic University, starting in 30 of his 32 appearances for the Owls. He posted a 7-1 record in his sophomore season with a 3.14 ERA and 118 strikeouts in 86 innings of work.
Putnam is a versatile infielder who can play any of the four positions, and he’s a strong bat. He hit .349 in his final season at Davidson with 19 home runs and 62 RBI on 84 hits.
Who has FSU baseball added in the transfer portal
- Trey Beard, Lhp, Jr – FAU
- Eli Putnam, Inf, Rs-Sr – Davidson
Which FSU baseball players have left the program
- Mason McDougall, Lhp, Jr.
- Hudson Rowan, Lhp, So.
- Brady Louck, Lhp, So.
Liam Rooney covers Florida State athletics for the Tallahassee Democrat. Contact him via email at LRooney@gannett.com or on Twitter @__liamrooney
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