NIL
Goold Notches Sixth TSWA Pitcher of the Week Nod
Story Links CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — Chattanooga’s Peja Goold was named the Tennessee Sports Writers Association (TSWA) Pitcher of the Week for the fourth consecutive week and sixth time this season. She went 2-0 in the Mocs’ series against Samford, striking out 17 total over three games. In her first game, she […]

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — Chattanooga’s Peja Goold was named the Tennessee Sports Writers Association (TSWA) Pitcher of the Week for the fourth consecutive week and sixth time this season.
She went 2-0 in the Mocs’ series against Samford, striking out 17 total over three games. In her first game, she struck out eight in a come-from-behind walk-off win. During the second game, the Stockton, Calif., native struck out nine and had a no-hitter going into the sixth. Goold finished allowing two hits and one run in the 5-1 victory.
Goold is third in the NCAA for shutouts with eight and ninth with 207 strikeouts this season. She leads the Southern Conference in complete games, ERA, hits allowed per seven innings, innings pitched, shutouts, strikeouts, strikeouts per seven innings, victories and WHIP.
Chattanooga moved into first place over the weekend, sweeping Samford who was tied for the conference lead heading into the three-game series. UNCG fell in two of three games on the road at Mercer leaving Chattanooga out front by a game-and-a-half over the Spartans. The Mocs entered the D1Softball Mid-Major Top 25 Wednesday with a 36-12 overall record.
The Mocs close out the home slate tonight against non-conference foe Tennessee Tech at 5:00 p.m. at Frost Stadium and finish the regular season on the road at SoCon rival ETSU. The pair will play one game Saturday evening at 5:00 p.m. and a double header Sunday beginning at 1:00 p.m.
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SOFTBALL
Feb. 11 | Player: Danielle Jason (Tusculum); Pitcher: Maya Johnson (Belmont)
Feb. 18 | Player: Abbie Buckner (Sewanee); Pitcher: Reagen Huskey (Sewanee)
Feb. 25 | Player: Brianna Asmondy (Trevecca): Pitcher: Maya Johnson (Belmont)
March 4 | Player: Hayden Dye (Carson-Newman); Pitcher: Peja Goold (Chattanooga)
March 11 | Player: Presley Williamson (Chattanooga); Pitcher: Peja Goold (Chattanooga)
March 18 | Player: Morgan Jennings (Union University); Pitcher: Ashlan Sensing (Trevecca Nazarene)
March 25 | Player: Abbee Klinefelter (Tennessee Tech); Pitcher: Maya Johnson (Belmont)
April 1 | Player: Alyssa Suits (King University); Pitcher: Taylor Long (Chattanooga)
April 8 | Player: Kailey Snell (Chattanooga); Pitcher: Peja Goold (Chattanooga)
April 15 | Player: Kailey Snell (Chattanooga); Pitcher: Peja Goold (Chattanooga)
April 22 | Player: Olivia Lipari (Chattanooga); Pitcher: Peja Goold (Chattanooga)
April 29 | Player: Morgan Jennings (Union); Pitcher: Peja Goold (Chattanooga)
NIL
Nick Saban gives blunt answer about the future of college football
Nick Saban might be retired from coaching, but he’s not finished with college football—not even close. Just days after it was revealed that former President Donald Trump plans to create a new commission to “fix” college sports, Saban was named as a co-chair. You’d think that might come with some fanfare or at least a […]

Nick Saban might be retired from coaching, but he’s not finished with college football—not even close.
Just days after it was revealed that former President Donald Trump plans to create a new commission to “fix” college sports, Saban was named as a co-chair. You’d think that might come with some fanfare or at least a detailed plan. But Saban? He’s just as confused as the rest of us.
Speaking ahead of the Regions Traditions Pro-Am event in Birmingham, Alabama, the legendary former Alabama coach—and current ESPN College GameDay analyst—was asked about his role on the new commission. His response was about as blunt and honest as it can get.
“To be honest with you, I don’t really know much about this commission,” Saban said. “I don’t really know what the commission will do. I think we know what needs to be done, I just think we need to figure out who’s got the will to do it. I learned one thing about coaching all these years: when you get into a subject like this that’s very complex, it’s probably good not to talk about it off the cuff. So I’ll find out more about it, and if there’s something I can do to help college football be better, I’ll always be committed to do that. I was committed to do that as a coach, to help players be more successful in life, and I’d continue to do that same thing now.”
It doesn’t get much more direct than that. Saban is willing to help, sure—but it’s clear he wasn’t exactly looped in on the fine print before the announcement was made. That hasn’t stopped people from already weighing in on what this commission might do—or criticizing its existence altogether.
What This Commission Is Supposed to Do
According to what’s been reported so far, the new presidential commission is expected to take a deep dive into the chaos currently swirling around college athletics. The NIL (Name, Image, Likeness) era has cracked open the door to booster overreach, shady deals, and Wild West-style bidding wars for players. And that’s just scratching the surface.
Among the big issues the commission is expected to address:
- The frequency of player movement via the transfer portal
- The involvement of boosters and so-called NIL collectives
- Whether college athletes should be considered employees
- How Title IX would apply to any future revenue-sharing
- And even the makeup of conferences and television contracts
That’s a laundry list of complicated, hot-button topics that don’t exactly come with easy answers.
What Nick Saban Might Want to See Change
To be fair, Nick Saban has spent the last few years voicing concerns about where college football is headed. He’s been one of the loudest voices advocating for national NIL regulation. On ESPN and in front of Congress, he’s repeatedly made the case that the system needs structure—less chaos, more accountability.
So, assuming Saban ends up taking a more active role on this commission, what changes might he push for? Based on his recent comments and past positions, here are a few likely areas of focus:
- NIL Oversight and Revenue Sharing – Saban has said many times that he supports players earning money—but not under the current system that rewards bidding wars more than merit. He’s been a fan of national guidelines, transparency, and even hinted at salary caps to level the playing field.
- Tighter Transfer Portal Rules – The transfer portal has turned into a revolving door, with athletes hopping schools at a rate that leaves rosters in a constant state of flux.
- Agent and Representative Regulation – One of the lesser-discussed areas that Saban has criticized is the role of unqualified agents representing players in NIL deals.
Saban’s not wrong to say it’s a complex issue—and it’s probably smart of him not to go off script before he’s had time to review the details. But let’s be real: when Nick Saban talks, the college football world listens, and it will be interesting to see what is accomplished — if anything — through this commission.
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NIL
ACC commissioner Jim Phillips feels good about the league’s newfound stability after chaos
By MARK LONG AMELIA ISLAND, Fla. (AP) — The Atlantic Coast Conference is entering a period of stability. How long it lasts is anyone’s guess. Not even commissioner Jim Phillips knows for sure. “I still live one day at a time,” Phillips quipped. The ACC wrapped up its spring meetings Wednesday at the Ritz-Carlton in […]

By MARK LONG
AMELIA ISLAND, Fla. (AP) — The Atlantic Coast Conference is entering a period of stability.
How long it lasts is anyone’s guess. Not even commissioner Jim Phillips knows for sure.
“I still live one day at a time,” Phillips quipped.
The ACC wrapped up its spring meetings Wednesday at the Ritz-Carlton in Amelia Island, with athletic directors and coaches having spent three days discussing wide-ranging issues affecting football and basketball.
The event came amid the backdrop of the pending $2.8 billion NCAA settlement, which would allow schools to share up to $20.5 million annually directly with their athletes.
The ACC spent the past two years tracking that legal battle while also wading through contentious litigation from two of its top member schools, Clemson and Florida State.
The Tigers and Seminoles approved a settlement in March that changed the league’s revenue-distribution model to benefit schools with marquee football brands. Both would presumably fall into that category.
Although the 2030-31 season looms as a potential spot for more changes to the college football landscape, the revised deal should fortify a league that looked to be on the verge of collapse while falling further behind the Southeastern Conference and the Big Ten.
“I just think you got to settle down,” Phillips said, noting he envisions four or five years of stability ahead. “And I think college athletics needs it to settle down, not just the ACC. I think we’ve positioned ourselves for that, and that’s a good thing. It just is.
“Chaos and the constant wondering of what’s happening here or there, I just think that distracts from the business at hand. But I feel good about where we’re at.”
The league’s revised revenue-distribution model incorporates TV viewership as a way for the league’s top programs to generate more money.
Florida State, for example, expects roughly $18 million extra annually from the tweaked structure. Those schools outside the top tier could see a decline of about $7 million a year.
“We’re really excited that this is now put behind us,” FSU athletic director Michael Alford said. “We have a path going forward. We have a path to really look at how we control the conference together, how we expand on the great brands that are in this conference and really promote the ACC and especially ACC football moving forward and give it its day in the sun.”
Even though ACC schools are bracing for the NCAA settlement and how it will change their business model, Phillips believes President Donald Trump’s proposed commission on collegiate athletics could help.
“We have not been able to get this thing into the end zone, so to speak,” Phillips said. “If the President feels that a commission could potentially help, I’m all for it.”
The proposed commission would be co-chaired by former Alabama coach Nick Saban and current Texas Tech board of regents chairman Cody Campbell.
“I think it’s well-intended,” Phillips said. “I do feel that the time is right based on all the work that’s previously been done and a supportive administration that’s in there. So I’m hopeful that that can be a positive to an end result that gets us a standardized law across the country with NIL.”
NCAA president Charlie Baker spoke at the ACC meetings Monday and said he was “up for anything” if it helped formalize NIL laws that differ from state to state.
“I think it speaks to the fact that everybody is paying a lot of attention right now to what’s going on in college sports,” Baker said. “I’m up for anything that can help us get somewhere.”
While power four conferences — the ACC, the Big Ten, Big 12 and the SEC — continue to negotiate the future of the College Football Playoff beginning in 2026, Phillips declined to reveal specifics regarding the league’s stance on automatic qualifiers.
“I remain steadfast about fairness in the system and access,” he said. “Out of respect for my colleagues, I want to hold off on commenting about AQs and specific models.”
The 16-team playoff model that has been widely discussed would grant four automatic berths to the Big Ten, four to the SEC, two to the ACC and two to the Big 12. That would leave four bids, with as many as three of those going to at-large teams and the other to the highest-ranked team from the Group of Six.
The ACC, according to several coaches, wants three guaranteed spots.
“You start to wonder if we are going to have an invitational,” SMU coach Rhett Lashlee said. “Every year, one league may be better than the other, and it can change to some degree.
“To say we’re going to pick teams based on what’s happened the last 15 years, especially in an environment where we have more and more parity with the way the rules are, I think it’s a slippery slope.”
___
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NIL
Nineteen13, a new NIL collective, launches to support BC student
Established in 1913, Bakersfield College was seen as a new place to offer more opportunities for students, enhance knowledge and put them on a path toward success. Established in 2025 and announced Tuesday, a new organization, Nineteen13, hopes to provide a similar supportive outlet for student-athletes at Bakersfield College with what they are calling the […]


Established in 1913, Bakersfield College was seen as a new place to offer more opportunities for students, enhance knowledge and put them on a path toward success.
Established in 2025 and announced Tuesday, a new organization, Nineteen13, hopes to provide a similar supportive outlet for student-athletes at Bakersfield College with what they are calling the first-ever Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) collective in California at the community college level.
NIL
Cowboy Baseball Closes Out Regular Season At Home
Games 47-49: Arizona State • May 15-17 / 6 p.m., 6 p.m., 12 p.m. • Stillwater, Okla. • O’Brate Stadium (8,000) OKLAHOMA STATE COWBOYS 24-22 overall (12-12 Big 12) National Ranking: n/a • NCAA RPI: 53 Streak: Lost 1 • H: 15-6 • A: 5-12 • N: 4-4 Head Coach: Josh Holliday, 13th Season […]

Games 47-49: Arizona State • May 15-17 / 6 p.m., 6 p.m., 12 p.m. • Stillwater, Okla. • O’Brate Stadium (8,000)
24-22 overall (12-12 Big 12)
National Ranking: n/a • NCAA RPI: 53
Streak: Lost 1 • H: 15-6 • A: 5-12 • N: 4-4
Head Coach: Josh Holliday, 13th Season at OSU (469-260-2)
ARIZONA STATE SUN DEVILS
35-18 overall (18-9 Big 12)
National Ranking: n/a • NCAA RPI: 41
Streak: Won 3 • H: 26-9 • A: 9-8 • N: 0-1
Head Coach: Willie Bloomquist, 4th season at ASU (125-99)
TV: ESPN+ (Dave Hunziker & Tom Holliday)
Radio: Cowboy Radio Network & The Varsity App KSPI 93.7 FM / KSPI 780 AM okla.state/GetVarsity (Rex Holt & Matt Davis)
Stats: okstate.statbroadcast.com
X: @osubaseball (in-game scoreboard/updates)
Series: Cowboys lead, 18-17
Last: 3/8/23 in Stillwater; Cowboys won, 7-4
- Oklahoma State is 24-22 and coming off a series win at Baylor in which the Cowboys won the first two games of the series.
- Up next, the Cowboys conclude the regular season when they host Arizona State in a Thursday-Saturday series at O’Brate Stadium.
- OSU is 12-12 in Big 12 play and eighth in the conference standings.
- The Pokes own a .256 team batting average and .459 slugging percentage and are averaging 6.5 runs per game. Colin Brueggemann leads OSU with a .316 batting average, 11 doubles and 48 RBIs to go along with 12 home runs.
- OSU’s pitching staff sports a 4.36 ERA; the Cowboys rank among the nation’s best in shutouts (5), strikeouts per nine innings (10.2) and strikeout-to-walk ratio (2.64).
- Arizona State is 35-18 and brings a three-game winning streak to Stillwater after a Tuesday night run-rule win at home vs. Grand Canyon.
- At 18-9 in Big 12 play, the Sun Devils are second in the conference standings.
- The Sun Devils are hitting a Big 12-best .322 as a team and averaging nearly nine runs per game. Matt King is hitting a team-high .386, while Isaiah Jackson leads ASU with 15 homers and 62 RBIs.
- ASU’s pitching staff sports a 5.18 ERA and has 578 strikeouts and 229 walks in 460 2/3 innings.
- OSU owns an 18-17 advantage in the all-time series and has won the last six meetings. OSU is 11-5 against the Sun Devils under head coach Josh Holliday.
NIL
How Boise State Challenges College Football’s Playoff System
While the sports world is focused on the NBA and NHL Playoffs, something nefarious is happening in college football. No, true believer, the college football world isn’t rescinding NIL and the Transfer Portal. However, a significant change appears, influencing how the college football playoff selection process will select its top teams. And you can blame […]

While the sports world is focused on the NBA and NHL Playoffs, something nefarious is happening in college football. No, true believer, the college football world isn’t rescinding NIL and the Transfer Portal.
However, a significant change appears, influencing how the college football playoff selection process will select its top teams. And you can blame Boise State for once again being the great disruptor of the game.
Years ago, the Bowl Championship Series, BCS, was designed to highlight the big market schools and eliminate any opportunity for any team outside their cartel from competing and crashing their party.
The Boise State Broncos, who defeated Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl, provided a blueprint for beating the BCS. The cartel eliminated the BCS, moving to a two-team, four-team, and now twelve-team playoff.
Boise State surprised the world last year by securing a first-round bye because it was one of the four highest-ranked conference champions. Pundits and the commissioner of the Big 12, whose team was behind Boise State, were outraged.
Although it would’ve been insane for the Broncos to host a playoff game on the Blue they settled for playing Penn State in the Fiesta Bowl. Although Boise State lost, several power brokers vowed never to let their top finish happen again.
CBS Sports reports that the college football cartel plans to eliminate conference champions’ first-round byes, as Kevin Miller would say, so much for letting them compete on the field.
This is the last year of the current agreement, meaning all conferences and Notre Dame must agree to the change. Next year, only the Big 10 and SEC will decide the format.
We’ll continue to update you on this developing story.
The 10 Most Important Moments in Boise State Football History
Gallery Credit: Marco
The 10 Most Important Moments in Boise State Football History
Gallery Credit: Marco
Former Boise State QB Is Now a Dad
Fans in Boise are obsessed with this little guys name!
Gallery Credit: Mateo, 103.5 KISS FM
NIL
John Calipari touts Arkansas basketball's roster continuity at Little Rock roadshow stop
LITTLE ROCK — John Calipari, more or less, hits the same topics when he speaks. There was no team when he was first hired, the transfer portal needs to be solved, he’s still going to recruit freshmen, last season’s Arkansas basketball team’s turnaround was due to the players coming together. 0

LITTLE ROCK — John Calipari, more or less, hits the same topics when he speaks.
There was no team when he was first hired, the transfer portal needs to be solved, he’s still going to recruit freshmen, last season’s Arkansas basketball team’s turnaround was due to the players coming together.
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