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Former Georgia, Arizona State quarterback Jaden Rashada heading to Sacramento State
Former Georgia, Arizona State quarterback Jaden Rashada heading to Sacramento State – myMotherLode.com 8

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Group effort, gutsy calls propel Texas Tech softball into WCWS semifinals
Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco on facing UCLA in Women’s College World Series Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco on facing UCLA in Women’s College World Series OKLAHOMA CITY — “I want you to just take off and go kamikaze.” Makayla Garcia had no idea what to make of Gerry Glasco’s words. She just […]


Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco on facing UCLA in Women’s College World Series
Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco on facing UCLA in Women’s College World Series
OKLAHOMA CITY — “I want you to just take off and go kamikaze.”
Makayla Garcia had no idea what to make of Gerry Glasco’s words. She just knew she had to trust the Texas Tech softball head coach.
Locked in a scoreless battle with UCLA in the winner’s bracket of the Women’s College World Series, the Red Raiders had their best chance to score a run. NiJaree Canady’s double put runners at second and third with one out in the top of the fifth inning. After Lauren Allred got caught trying for home for the second out, the opportunity seemed to be slipping through their grasp.
Glasco, though, is nothing if not ambitious. Multiple times throughout the season he’s sent runners when it wasn’t ideal, admitting he’s a coach who likes to take chances.
This was a big chance. Glasco was asking Garcia, the Lubbock native who joined the Red Raiders after winning a Division II national title with UT-Tyler as a freshman, to steal home plate.
“We had a plan,” Garcia said. “Coach Glasco told me, ‘We’re gonna go and we’re gonna take a chance.’ I had to trust him in that moment and I trust him.”
With Victoria Valdez facing two strikes at the plate, the Texas Tech catcher took a pitch, which was called a ball. UCLA catcher Alexis Ramirez didn’t notice that Garcia hadn’t stopped running home, so she casually threw the ball back to pitcher Taylor Tinsley.
Valdez backed off the plate just enough for Garcia to have a clear path, allowing Garcia to slide between Ramirez’s legs for the first run of the game.
“I thought it was just a cool moment,” Garcia said. “It was a crazy moment just to slide in between someone’s legs in the World Series.”
While NiJaree Canady was again her dominant self in the circle (seven strikeouts, four hits, two walks and one run allowed in the complete-game win) and added the key double to set up the score — Garcia came in to pinch run for Canady — the Red Raiders needed the entire team to secure the 3-1 victory over the Bruins.
Following Garcia’s steal of home, Kaniya Bragg hit a solo home run to tie the game in the bottom of the fifth. That’s when freshman Hailey Toney showed again that she has Canady’s back.
During the Lubbock Regional championship against Mississippi State, Canady — battling a blister and strong West Texas winds — allowed a pair of three-run innings to the Bulldogs. Each time, Toney hit a solo home run in the bottom of the frame to turn momentum back in Tech’s favor.
The Magnolia native did it again Saturday night in Devon Park. Toney battled Tinsley to a full count, then took the seventh pitch of the at-bat over the wall in right for another home run. Toney hit four home runs throughout the regular season and has three in Tech’s 10 postseason games.
“My second at-bat, I was on it,” Toney said. “I felt good when I swung, it just didn’t happen to go my way. And then my third at-bat, I just was literally trusting my swing and (Glasco) telling me to get on top. Get on top, and then it just happened.”
Trust is a crucial factor for Glasco, not just the coach trusting the players, but the players trusting the coach. Glasco said he makes substitutions and pinch-hitting decisions partly on feel, but mostly on needing to give everybody in the dugout a chance to show they belong.
“I think it’s really important to give them a chance, give kids chances to help us,” Glasco said. “We get up at 8:30 and go hitting at 9 o’clock. We’ve had to work. … Everybody’s doing the same thing every day, and they may only get one at-bat, but that one at-bat’s really important for them mentally to know that they had an opportunity to help their teammates and to play for the sisters in the dugout.”
That’s why Glasco opted to give Logan Halleman a pinch-hit opportunity in the sixth, and why he gave one to Raegan Jennings in the seventh with two outs. It wasn’t something Bailey Lindemuth or Demi Elder did or didn’t do, it was about giving everybody a chance to contribute.
Jennings delivered in her opportunity, blooping an RBI single in the top of the seventh to give Canady an insurance run.
“I thought,” Glasco said, “I want them have a chance to help us.”
Texas Tech needed reserves in Garcia and Jennings to come away with the win. Glasco isn’t afraid to insert anybody into the game, because he feels the players need to stick together, especially this late in the postseason.
“It has to be like a sisterhood,” Glasco said. “It has to become like a family of players that they’re fighting for each other, and that’s your strongest. … you get more power out of that emotionally than any other thing, when you get them playing to take care of the family. So I gotta give them a chance.”
Glasco wants to give his players opportunities, even in big moments. The first one Friday was telling Garcia to steal home. It paid off in a highlight-worthy play, and gave the hometown kid another reason to be thankful for her return to Lubbock.
“It’s definitely just so special to put Lubbock on the map,” Garcia said, “and getting to show everyone what Texas Tech is really made of.”
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‘A Lot of It’s Up in the Air’: Bill Belichick Weighs In on How He Is Navigating the Uncharted Waters of NIL as UNC HC
NFL contracts have always been streamlined and at the fingertips of a coach like Bill Belichick. But the former Patriot is learning that navigating NIL is a very different challenge. For a coach who came from a league full of rules, there’s currently a noticeable lack of them when it comes to recruiting in the […]

NFL contracts have always been streamlined and at the fingertips of a coach like Bill Belichick. But the former Patriot is learning that navigating NIL is a very different challenge. For a coach who came from a league full of rules, there’s currently a noticeable lack of them when it comes to recruiting in the NCAA.
When we think of Belichick, we think of many traits and attributes. But perhaps the most noticeable of all his quirks is how meticulous he is about his ways. When you’re 73, you eventually grow accustomed to doing things a certain way.
However, a recent interview with Rece Davis suggests that Belichick hasn’t yet figured out the rules of NIL. It’s been an interesting navigation process for him, mostly filled with questions and trying to understand his parameters.
“For me, it’s really pretty simple. Tell me what the rules are, and then we’ll play by them. Right now, a lot of it’s up in the air,” Belichick shared on ESPN College Football.
“Once the house settlement’s done, once some rules are solidified, and honestly, it’ll probably take a year for this to settle in and see how things go. There’ll be some adjustments made.”
It definitely still feels like the Wild Wild West when it comes to the current state of NIL. At the moment, there’s no standardized set of rules—at least at the federal level. That’s why the NCAA has called on lawmakers to establish a uniform framework around it.
But with the amount of issues going on in the world right now, mixed with other factors like convenience and timeliness, NIL doesn’t seem like it’s going to be sorted out anytime soon. At least, not for another 2-3 years.
Yet, Belichick doesn’t seem to care about what the rules are going to be for it. He simply wants to know what they are so that he can legally operate his UNC Tar Heels football team.
“I’d say right now, it’s a lot of ‘we’re not sure, we’ll have to wait and see.’ Some people view it one way, some people view it another way. You just have to come to an agreement on that. But I think things will settle eventually,” Belichick concluded.
It’s not exactly what fans of college football want to hear. Complaints surrounding Ohio State and Oregon’s ability to essentially pay for their football rosters drew the ire of many this past season. And with no rules on how much you can give to players, it’s become a contest of popularity, and who has the highest NIL payroll.
For Belichick, this must be tough to navigate. In the NFL, there was a free agency period, and every team had a hard salary cap they couldn’t exceed. It was a much clearer and more defined set of rules… and fairer, too.
But now in college, who knows how much NIL payroll UNC has to offer? Furthermore, who knows how much they’re allowed to spend, when they can spend it, or how much more other schools have? That’s information privy to very few. Belichick certainly has access to some of it, but it must still be difficult to fully grasp.
It’ll be interesting to continue tracking how Bill adjusts to college football. The product on the field may be similar, but off it, it’s a whole different ballgame. That’s what he’s learning day by day.
NIL
NIL Money is Impacting the NBA Draft, Possibly the Blazers
One of the more underrated stories in the NBA Draft each year is the withdrawal of candidates who initially test the draft-class waters but pull back before the actual show for various reasons. Draft withdrawals can affect any team selecting below the premium lottery positions. This year that includes the Portland Trail Blazers. Ricky O’Donnell […]

One of the more underrated stories in the NBA Draft each year is the withdrawal of candidates who initially test the draft-class waters but pull back before the actual show for various reasons. Draft withdrawals can affect any team selecting below the premium lottery positions. This year that includes the Portland Trail Blazers.
Ricky O’Donnell of SB Nation has written about draft withdrawals this year. A partial list of players who stood a good chance of being drafted if they hadn’t withdrawn include Miles Byrd, Alex Condon, Boogie Fland, Karter Knox, Yaxel Lendeborg, Tahaad Pettiford, Labaron Philon, Milos Uzan, and Darrion Williams. None of these players projected to be a lottery pick, but Lendeborg and Pettiford for example were mocked pretty often as solid first round picks, while others were seen as late first round to early second round prospects.
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If it wasn’t clear already, it’s now unmistakable that NIL money is persuading many players to stay in the college ranks when previously they would have given the NBA draft a shot. Just 106 players registered as early entry candidates initially, a number now further reduced due to withdrawals. Compare that 2021, the last draft before NIL. 353 players registered that year. The total has declined every year since.
The numbers are a bit murky on how much exactly specific players are getting, but top player Cooper Flagg is said to have pulled down over $4 million this past season. We do know aggregate information; the average NIL amount from 8/1/2024 to 4/20/2025 was $53,643, but the median was just $3,371. This means that the top players were getting the lion’s share of NIL money. Just 9% of the players earned more than $10,000. Presumably multiple potential NBA draftees would lie in that top 9%.
If you get drafted this year at #25 in the first round, your salary is pegged at $2,983,320. Let’s say you slip into the second round. Your salary is no longer set by your draft position. You may be offered the NBA minimum of $1.27 million. Or perhaps a two-way contract at half that amount. Of course, there is also the risk that you get drafted and simply don’t make the team. Or not get drafted at all.
Instead, you get two huge advantages by going back to school. First, you’re now eligible to make as much NIL money was you would have gotten in the NBA if you would have been drafted in the first round outside of the lottery. If you were pegged to go in the second round, you’d make more. That’s money in the bank with no worry of slipping on draft day or getting cut. Second, you have the opportunity to raise your stock, and that can pay off big time. If you can go from #25 now to #10 next year you will more than double your yearly salary every year of your rookie contract. Suddenly waiting another year could make significant economic sense.
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While none of the withdrawals were players that the Blazers presumably were scouting to pick at #11, they could have an impact both in the short and long term. If the Blazers had been entertaining trading down, the player pool below #11 has now been weakened. On the other hand, the value of pick #11 may have gone up. If you are the Orlando Magic picking at #25, you might have had your eye one of the players who have withdrawn, and you might not like the remaining options. Maybe that gives you an incentive to try to trade up, making the picks above them more valuable.
Another dynamic might play out in the years to come. With so many quality players staying out of the draft, we might get some stronger drafts in the future. The number of players declaring for the draft won’t continue to go down forever; sooner or later players delaying the draft will start coming out and the numbers will start rebounding. If players are staying in college longer, they are more developed and mature, closer perhaps to the NBA player they are destined to become. The first-round pick in 2029 and pick swaps in 2028 and 2030 acquired from the Bucks in the Damian Lillard trade might yield players who are ready to contribute right away, hopefully at a time when some of the current Blazers are at the height of their powers.
It’s all part of the calculations the Blazers front office is making right now. It’s not just about who the best player might be to take at #11, but also the value in potentially trading that pick, especially if such a deal could add draft assets for a future, potentially deeper draft.
More from blazersedge.com:
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Cooper Flagg’s Stunning Duke NIL Earnings Revealed
Cooper Flagg’s Stunning Duke NIL Earnings Revealed originally appeared on Athlon Sports. During his lone season with the Duke Blue Devils, former No. 1 overall recruit Cooper Flagg lived up to the billing as the next great American prospect. Advertisement Although he and the Blue Devils fell in the Final Four to eventual runner-up Houston […]

Cooper Flagg’s Stunning Duke NIL Earnings Revealed originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
During his lone season with the Duke Blue Devils, former No. 1 overall recruit Cooper Flagg lived up to the billing as the next great American prospect.
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Although he and the Blue Devils fell in the Final Four to eventual runner-up Houston Cougars, Flagg led Duke in all five major statistical categories en route to a 35-4 record. In addition to being named ACC Player of the Year, Flagg also became the ninth Duke player to be named Naismith Men’s College Player of the Year.
Aside from prospering on the court, many fans likely assumed that Flagg was compensated quite well off of it, thanks to his Name, Image and Likeness earning potential. Although it’s not always an exact number, his NIL Valuation according to On3 was a staggering $4.8 million. A mark that only trailed Texas quarterback and nephew of Peyton Manning, Arch Manning.
However, as revealed during an interview with Bob Costas by insider and author Howard Bryant, Flagg’s earnings were significantly higher than the estimated numbers.
Duke Blue Devils forward Cooper Flagg (2).Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images
After initially asking Costas how much money he thought Flagg brought in during his lone season in Durham, Bryant answered his own question with a jaw-dropping figure. As a result of Flagg inking monster deals with New Balance and Fanatics, he was bringing in at least $28 million on the year.
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“He had a $13 million deal with New Balance and then $15 million with Fanatics,” Bryant said.
A staggering mark, considering an April report revealed that at least eight teams in college basketball will spend over $10 million on their entire roster for next season.
While around $30 million is chump change by any means, Flagg’s earnings will more than double following next month’s NBA Draft. Flagg has been projected to be the top pick for over a year, and now that the Dallas Mavericks have the pick, the safest assumption in the world is that he will be heading to the Lone Star State. According to Spotrac, the No. 1 pick is set to sign a four-year deal worth nearly $63 million.
Turns out being a generational basketball prospect pays quite well, who knew?
Related: Cooper Flagg Makes Big Career Move Before NBA Draft
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on May 31, 2025, where it first appeared.
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South Carolina baseball to have two more entering transfer portal
On Saturday evening, two Gamecocks announced their intentions of leaving South Carolina baseball via the transfer portal. DH/1B/OF Jase Woita will leave following just one year with the program. Pitcher Eddie Copper will also transfer after his second year in Columbia. Both Woita and Copper announced their plans on social media. Woita transferred to South […]


On Saturday evening, two Gamecocks announced their intentions of leaving South Carolina baseball via the transfer portal. DH/1B/OF Jase Woita will leave following just one year with the program. Pitcher Eddie Copper will also transfer after his second year in Columbia. Both Woita and Copper announced their plans on social media.
Woita transferred to South Carolina last offseason from junior college as a corner infielder/designated hitter known for his big bat from the left side. He flashed some pop this season, logging six home runs in a sometimes-starting, sometimes-reserve role. He will have one year of eligibility remaining at his next stop.
Copper played a role for the Gamecocks during the 2024 season until an elbow injury ended his season. Following his subsequent surgery, Copper couldn’t quite make it back to the mound from his injury for the 2025 campaign. Because of the medical redshirt, he will have three years left to play collegiately.
Woita and Copper join Will Tippett, Roman Kimball, Wyatt Evans, Tyler June, Cayden Gaskin, and Ryan Bakes as Gamecocks to enter the transfer portal this spring.
South Carolina baseball transfer portal resources:
Jase Woita South Carolina Baseball Bio from GamecocksOnline
PRIOR TO CAROLINA
- Attended Kansas City Kansas Community College in Kansas City, Kan., where he was a two-time KJCCC All-Tournament selection
- Hit .427 with 13 doubles, 11 home runs and 65 RBI in 2024 while missing 21 games due to a hamate injury
- Named a National Junior College Offensive Player of the Week and a KJCCC Hitter of the Week on March 24, 2024
- KJCCC All-Conference honorable mention (2023, ’24)
- Had a .411 batting average with 20 doubles, 12 home runs and 73 RBI in 2023
- Redshirted his freshman season in 2022 due to injury
- Prepped at St. Pius X High School in Lincoln, Neb., where he hit .341 with 11 doubles, four home runs and 34 RBI as a senior
- Pitched his senior year in 2021 and had a 5-0 record with a 1.01 ERA in 34.2 innings
- All-City and All-State (2021)
- Academic All-State (2020, ’21)
- Played tennis at St. Pius X and was the 2019 Nebraska state tennis champion
PERSONAL
- Born on September 12, 2002
- Son of Jeff and Marcy Woita
- Brother, Ian, plays baseball at Kansas City Kansas C.C.
- Major is services management
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Eddie Copper South Carolina Baseball Bio from GamecocksOnline
AWARDS
- First-Year SEC Academic Honor Roll (2024)
SOPHOMORE (2025)
- Redshirted
FRESHMAN (2024)
- Made eight appearances and seven starts his freshman season as a Gamecock
- Was 1-1 with a 4.56 ERA and 27 strikeouts in 23.2 innings pitched
- Held opponents to a .242 batting average
- Missed the final seven weeks of the regular season due to injury
- Earned the win against Gardner-Webb (Feb. 27), striking out five in five innings, allowing just one run
- Had six strikeouts in back-to-back outings vs. The Citadel (March 5) and Georgia State (March 12)
- Pitched four scoreless innings, striking out a pair and allowing a hit vs. Winthrop (Feb. 20)
- Made his Carolina debut against Miami (Ohio) on Feb. 16
HIGH SCHOOL
- Attended P27 Academy in Lexington, S.C., his senior season
- Earned five wins and struck out 81 batters in 58.2 innings pitched with a 2.29 ERA as a senior
- Went to Germantown Academy in Fort Washington, Pa., his first three years of high school
- All-Conference selection (2021, ’22)
- Perfect Game Preseason All-Atlantic Region first team (2023)
- Perfect Game Preseason Underclass All-Atlantic Region first team (2022)
- Perfect Game Preseason Underclass All-Atlantic Region second team (2021)
- Was the No. 4 overall prospect and the No. 3 right-handed pitching prospect in the State of Pennsylvania in the class of 2023 by Perfect Game
- Played summer baseball for Artillery Baseball Scout Team (2023)
PERSONAL
- Born on Oct. 31, 2004
- Son of Nicole and Ed Copper
- Major is sport and entertainment management
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Celebrating the Football Life of Legendary Coach Peter Mazzaferro
By Jim Fenton BRIDGEWATER, Mass. — Peter Mazzaferro had a number of different addresses after graduating from Suffield Academy in Connecticut. He spent four years at Centre College in Danville, Ky., graduating in 1954, and pursued a Master’s degree at Springfield College in Massachusetts. Mazzaferro was then drafted into the U.S. Army and […]

By Jim Fenton
BRIDGEWATER, Mass. — Peter Mazzaferro had a number of different addresses after graduating from Suffield Academy in Connecticut.
He spent four years at Centre College in Danville, Ky., graduating in 1954, and pursued a Master’s degree at Springfield College in Massachusetts.
Mazzaferro was then drafted into the U.S. Army and was stationed in Texas and Virginia, and he was also a teacher and coach in Philmont, N.Y.
He was a college coach at Waynesburg University and Geneva College in Pennsylvania and also Curry College in Milton, Mass.
After all those stops, Mazzaferro found a permanent home when he was hired as an assistant football coach at the former Bridgewater State College in 1966 by head coach Ed Swenson.
At the age of 36, Mazzaferro landed in a spot where he would settle in, becoming the long-time head coach and an associate professor in the Department of Physical Education.
Mazzaferro was the Bears’ head coach from 1968 until 2004, compiling a 195-137-7 record.
Coach Mazzaferro died on Friday, May 30 at the age of 94.
After his 34-year teaching and 36-year coaching career ended, Mazzaferro could be found at the Bridgewater State football, basketball and baseball games, following the athletics program closely while in his 90s.
The school meant a lot to Mazzaferro, who was born in Torrington, Conn., on June 24, 1930.
“It’s been my whole life, really,” Mazzaferro once said. “I dedicated my life to Bridgewater State football.”
Mazzaferro was in need of a job in 1966, and Swenson, who he had met at a coaching clinic in the Catskills, was there to offer one.
After two seasons on Swenson’s staff, Mazzaferro was elevated to the head job when Swenson, also the director of athletics, stepped down.
The Bears won six New England Football Conference titles and made it to the NCAA Division 3 tournament in 1999 and 2000 under Mazzaferro. He also guided them to ECAC postseason games in 1989 and 1992.
Mazzaferro was the New England Football Writers Divisions 2-3 Coach of the Year in 1989 and 1999. BSU went 34-6-1 from 1989-92, putting together a 10-0 regular season on the way to the NCAAs.
He received the George C. Carens Award in 1996 for outstanding contributions to college football in New England and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the All-American Football Foundation.
“I had met Ed Swenson at a coaching clinic up at the Catskills,” recalled Mazzaferro. “One time when I was coaching at Waynesburg (University in Pennsylvania), he asked me to play them.
I looked at the football guide and Bridgewater wasn’t even listed. I didn’t know much about it.
“I came here and they gave me faculty ranking and a decent salary, so I never thought of leaving.
“If I had never met Ed Swenson back then, “I guess I never would have known about Bridgewater State.”
Mazzaferro was a defensive end on the Centre College football team in the 1950s and ran the quarter-mile in track in addition to playing basketball. Mazzaferro was inducted into Centre’s Athletics Hall of Fame in 2008.
Whenever Mazzaferro was discussing his alma mater, he was sure to note that Centre pulled off one of the greatest college football upsets in 1921, knocking off Harvard.
Mazzaferro was inducted into the Bridgewater State University Athletics Hall of Fame in 1994.
“We refer to him as ‘Papa Bear,'” Rich Florence, who played for Mazzaferro from 1971-74 and was an assistant coach from 1977-93, once said. “He’s touched and he’s impacted the lives of so many players. It’s almost tough to count them. He’s just so well respected.”
Joe Verria, the current head coach at BSU, also played for Mazzaferro from 1976-79 and became one of his assistants in 1988.
“He’s someone who has dedicated his life to BSU football, BSU athletics,” Verria once said. “When I came here my freshman year, he was my head coach and he’s the one who gave me the opportunity to coach college football and I’ve been here ever since.”
Bridgewater State honored Mazzaferro on Sept. 8, 2023 when it named the Bears’ home field the Peter Mazzaferro Field.
“The reason is really clear,” said BSU President Fred Clark at the time. “He’s done so much for us, 36 years as not just a coach but a physical education faculty member, and in both areas he excelled.
“It’s the way he coached that influenced my enthusiasm. He focused on fair play, strong character and understood the importance of not just creating great students but creating great people.
“We remember where we’ve come from and as we’re moving forward into the future, we remember that we stand on the shoulders of truly great people that created the foundation on which we’ve built.
“Peter Mazzaferro is one of those folks who created the remarkable foundation here at Bridgewater State.”
Mazzaferro wrote a book, “Dropkick Me Through the Goalposts,” detailing his life and coaching career. He told the story of teaching and coaching at Ockawamick Central School near Albany, N.Y., where one of the students was Oliver North, the Marine involved in the Iran-Contra scandal.
He was also an expert on western Pennsylvania because of his time at Waynesburg and Geneva and rattled off the names of outstanding football talent from the area like Joe Montana, Joe Namath, Mike Ditka, Dan Marino and Johnny Unitas.
Mazzaferro also worked at camps operated by Clair Bee, the famous basketball coach.
But for all of his stops along the way, none could top all of the time that he spent at Bridgewater State dating back to the mid-1960s.
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