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Historic Low NBA Draft Early Entrants in 2025: How It Happened and Why It Matters

The 2025 NBA Draft has shattered expectations with just 106 early entrants declaring, marking the lowest total in a decade. This seismic shift represents a stunning reversal from the post-COVID peak of 353 players in 2021, signaling fundamental changes in how elite basketball talent navigates the path to professional careers. Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) […]

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The 2025 NBA Draft has shattered expectations with just 106 early entrants declaring, marking the lowest total in a decade. This seismic shift represents a stunning reversal from the post-COVID peak of 353 players in 2021, signaling fundamental changes in how elite basketball talent navigates the path to professional careers.

Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) opportunities have revolutionized collegiate athletics, creating a financial landscape in which many players find staying in school more lucrative than risking uncertain draft positions.

This unprecedented situation has far-reaching implications for both the NBA talent pipeline and college basketball’s competitive ecosystem.

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College Sports Network’s Men’s College Basketball Transfer Portal tracks the comings and goings of every athlete who has entered the transfer portal. Find out who’s entered and where they’re going now!

How Many Early Entrants Were There in the 2025 NBA Draft?

The NBA officially announced 106 players filed as early entry candidates for the 2025 NBA Draft, scheduled for June 25-26 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. This represents a dramatic decline from 195 players last year and an even steeper drop from 242 the year before.

For context, early entrant numbers peaked at 353 declarations in 2021, making 2025’s figure the lowest since 2015.

Despite reduced quantity, top-end talent remains exceptional. Duke’s Cooper Flagg stands as the consensus projected first overall selection after a freshman campaign that earned him the Wooden Award and National Player of the Year honors.

Rutgers guard Dylan Harper (19.4 points, four assists per game) and Texas guard Tre Johnson form the next tier of highly coveted prospects, with Harper praised as potentially “the best scorer in this draft.”

Why Were 2025 NBA Draft Early Entrant Numbers Down?

The primary driver behind this historic low is college basketball’s transformed economic reality through NIL deals. Many borderline NBA prospects who might have previously tested professional waters are now earning guaranteed seven-figure NIL incomes while remaining in school.

This fundamentally alters the risk-reward calculation when compared to the uncertainty of two-way NBA contracts worth approximately $600,000 next season.

Several college programs now design their NIL deals with specific conditions that block players from exploring the NBA draft. If players test the draft waters, they risk losing their lucrative college paydays, creating a powerful financial incentive to stay on campus.

This approach has further suppressed early declaration numbers as players commit to collegiate programs with guaranteed compensation.

Another contributing factor is the waning impact of COVID-19 eligibility waivers. Last year, 55 of 195 early entrants held extra NCAA eligibility from the pandemic-affected 2020-21 season. This year, only five early entrants remain from the COVID waiver era, indicating college basketball’s natural progression beyond this temporary eligibility expansion.

Why Low 2025 NBA Draft Early Entrants Matters

The historically low early entrant pool creates significant strategic challenges for NBA front offices, particularly those holding selections outside the lottery. Teams with picks in the 40s are expressing genuine concern that those selections may hold little value in this talent-starved environment.

Even teams selecting in the late 20s and 30s question whether those picks will deliver the typical return on investment expected from those draft positions.

This talent shortage is especially concerning because the 2025 draft class was already considered somewhat weak in depth. NBA teams across the league have expressed serious doubts about the overall quality of this draft class. Many scouts believe the talent drops off significantly after the first couple of picks.

The diminished early entrant pool has only exacerbated these concerns, potentially making this one of the shallowest drafts in recent memory and forcing teams to reevaluate their talent acquisition strategies.

The financial implications extend beyond team planning to player decision-making as well. Players on the bubble between lottery selection and late first-round status now face compelling financial motivation to improve their draft position with another collegiate season.

The difference between being selected 20th versus 4th equates to approximately $13 million in guaranteed money over two years, a significant incentive that’s reshaping career trajectories.

KEEP READING: 2025 NBA Mock Draft 1.0: Cooper Flagg & Dylan Harper Headline a Star-Studded Draft Class

For college basketball, this trend represents a transformative windfall. Programs retain more top-tier talent, substantially improving the overall quality and star power of the collegiate game. Florida’s 2025 national championship team exemplifies this advantage, powered by Walter Clayton Jr., who returned for a second year with the Gators.

This isn’t merely a one-year anomaly but potentially the beginning of a new normal in basketball talent development.

As the NIL marketplace matures and players become increasingly sophisticated in managing their professional trajectories, the resulting talent stratification, with only the most elite prospects declaring early, could fundamentally reshape both the NBA draft process and college basketball’s competitive landscape for years to come.

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Recruit at center of NIL arguments

Jackson Cantwell Commitment: Miami Hurricanes football lands top recruit Nixa High School’s Jackson Cantwell picked Miami (Florida) as his college destination during a ceremony on Tuesday afternoon in Nixa. Since committing to the Miami Hurricanes football program, Nixa offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell has been the source of much online argument because of national reports of […]

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Since committing to the Miami Hurricanes football program, Nixa offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell has been the source of much online argument because of national reports of what he’ll receive in Name, Image and Likeness compensation.

Some reporters covering the Hurricanes’ football program believe such reports of his compensation resulted from intentional leaks by the other programs pursuing the top-ranked recruit. Cantwell’s family has downplayed the extent of the compensation and its impact on his decision to commit to the Hurricanes.

“It’s just a blessing to get paid to play the game I love,” Cantwell said Tuesday when asked directly about NIL, while also praising the work done by his agent, Drew Rosenhaus. “There are so many people who dream about getting to do that. The NFL is usually the end-goal, and it is for me as well.”

Jackson Cantwell calls out national college football reporter

National college football reporter Pete Nakos of On3 Sports reported a week before Cantwell’s decision that Miami had offered him a $2 million NIL deal, which was said to be the most of any school.

While Cantwell talked up his relationship with the Miami coaching staff and its ability to develop offensive linemen into NFL prospects, the report still led many to believe the only reason Cantwell picked Miami over schools like Georgia, Oregon and Ohio State was because of money.

In a one-on-one interview with DawgNation, a Georgia website that attended Cantwell’s commitment, Cantwell called out Nakos for the report.

“It’s not the same narrative that people like Pete Nakos are pushing right now,” Cantwell said. “The false narrative that that’s why I’m choosing… I think relationships won out with Miami.”

Miami Hurricanes football reporters call out report

Miami insiders were also quick to call out the reports.

“When you see a story like this, you ask yourself where it came from,” a report by CanesInSight said. “The agenda here is crystal clear, and Georgia knows how to play this game. It’s ‘let’s make this seem like that if he goes to Miami, it’s only because of money.’ Then, if he chooses Miami, then it’s that he’s following the bag, and it’s a stigma on the kid. It’s a strategic leak by people who want him in Georgia.”

Mike Ryan, an executive producer on The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz and owner of CanesInSight, doubled down against the report after Cantwell committed.

“A lot of bad leaks started sprouting out last week about Miami having the most aggressive NIL offer,” Ryan said on X. “Always a pretty solid indicator other schools feel like they’re losing a battle. It’s weird when Miami loses a recruiting battle to Oregon or UGA, it’s never about NIL somehow.”

Jackson Cantwell said relationships led him to Miami Hurricanes football

Throughout his recruitment, Cantwell, a 6-foot-8, 320-pounder, spoke at length about his relationship with and appreciation for Miami coach Mario Cristobal and offensive line coach Alex Mirabal, calling them the best developers of offensive linemen in the nation. He often pointed to their track record, specifically the rise of offensive tackle Penei Sewell, now one of the better linemen in the NFL.

Miami should have multiple offensive linemen drafted in the 2026 NFL Draft, including Francis Mauigoa, who is being touted as a first-rounder.

“Whenever you have Mario Cristobal and Alex Mirabal, you know you’re gonna be in a good spot and you’re going to be developed by some of the best out there,” Cantwell said. “They’re producing guys, and they’re really successful. The guys up front have turned their program into a winner. I’m just excited to be a part of that.”

Still, the unknown amount of money the 16-year-old will make has been the source of argument, ignoring that Georgia, Oregon and Ohio State also likely had large sums on the table.

Jackson Cantwell recruiting coverage



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Reece Potter knew he would commit the second Kentucky called: “It’s a dream come true.”

Miami (OH) transfer Reece Potter didn’t know what to expect when he entered the portal in late March — but he certainly didn’t expect things to unfold the way they did in April, then early May. His phone wouldn’t stop ringing, hearing from programs and coaches he never would have imagined would be prioritizing him […]

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Miami (OH) transfer Reece Potter didn’t know what to expect when he entered the portal in late March — but he certainly didn’t expect things to unfold the way they did in April, then early May. His phone wouldn’t stop ringing, hearing from programs and coaches he never would have imagined would be prioritizing him after two seasons in the MAC.

Among them? North Carolina, Washington, Louisville and UConn.

“It was really crazy. The phone was always ringing with different people talking to you, trying to give their pitch on why you should go to their school,” he told KSR. “It was crazy. It was really cool hearing from all these schools, the Hubert Davises and Dan Hurleys — I mean, it’s just wild. There were some people that I grew up watching and you watch on TV every day. It’s wild for those people — you get that call and it says ‘Maybe: Hubert Davis’ or however it was marked. It’s wild for sure, it was fun.”

Then the text messages and phone calls came in. At that point, it was over.

“Once Kentucky called me, it was like, ‘It’s time, I’m done talking to these people. Let’s get to the business,’” Potter said.

As a Lexington, the opportunity to return home and play for the winningest tradition in college basketball history was too much to pass up. Sure, other schools offered more playing time (and maybe more cash), but Kentucky was selling something money can’t buy.

The process wasn’t immediate, though. He knew immediately he wanted to wear the blue and white, but his parents wanted him to take a deep breath and think through the decision, not committing out of emotion.

“When Kentucky called me, it was a dream come true, but I still had to make the best decision for myself,” he told KSR. “Always in the back of my mind it was like, ‘You’ve got to go there. You have to go there.’ But my parents were very supportive, they were like, ‘Just take your time, just kind of see what’s all out there.’

“Once they contacted me, I took a week to settle down a little bit. Right away, I was like, ‘Yeah, yeah, I’m going there. I’m going there.’ My dad was like, ‘Relax, relax. I know that’s your dream school, but just take a week for yourself. Really understand what that would mean for you, if that’s the decision you want.’”

Then a week went by and he was just as excited then as he was when the process started, confirming what he knew from day one: Kentucky was home.

“So after that week, I kind of got down to contacting the other schools, like, ‘What’s the deal here?’ I always knew I was going here, so it was easy after that,” Potter said. “I called my parents, I was like, ‘I’m going there.’ They were like, ‘Yeah, we always knew you were gonna do that, but we just wanted you to make the best decision for yourself.’ So I’m glad it’s over, and I’m glad to be able to be a part of this.”

How is he feeling a little over a week following his commitment, the dust now settled ahead of move-in to open June?

“The decision was a dream come true, for sure. All of the hecticness is out of the way, so now, I’m able to relax and kind of just enjoy this decision I was able to make,” he continued. “It’s setting in, for sure. It’s still a dream come true. I

“‘m just waiting to put on the jersey for the first time and be able to walk out to Rupp Arena. That’s going to be the biggest thing.”

Once a kid watching Kentucky as a fan, he now gets to represent his hometown as a Wildcat himself. Quite the dream come true.



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Oklahoma, Texas A&M among the contenders in NCAA softball tourney

OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma looked primed to have a bit of a drop-off this season. What You Need To Know Texas A&M is the No. 1 overall seed after falling just short of the Women’s College World Series last year Fourteen of the SEC’s 15 teams made the tournament Nine are seeded and hosting regionals […]

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Oklahoma, Texas A&M among the contenders in NCAA softball tourney

OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma looked primed to have a bit of a drop-off this season.


What You Need To Know

  • Texas A&M is the No. 1 overall seed after falling just short of the Women’s College World Series last year
  • Fourteen of the SEC’s 15 teams made the tournament
  • Nine are seeded and hosting regionals — No. 1 Texas A&M, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Florida, No. 4 Arkansas, No. 6 Texas, No. 7 Tennessee, No. 8 South Carolina, No. 10 LSU and No. 15 Alabama
  • The tournament begins Friday

The four-time defending Women’s College World Series champion Sooners lost the core of the group that had won those titles.

Thanks to the transfer portal and an already deep roster, coach Patty Gasso’s team is back in a familiar spot. Oklahoma enters the NCAA Tournament as the No. 2 overall seed.

The Sooners want more. Many key players are freshmen and transfers who haven’t won a national title.

Pitcher Sam Landry was honored as the Southeastern Conference’s newcomer of the year. The transfer from Louisiana was the No. 1 overall pick in the Athletes Unlimited draft. She’s 19-4 with a 2.04 ERA.

Two of the Sooners’ most powerful hitters are freshmen. Gabbie Garcia has 16 homers and Nelly McEnroe-Marinas has 14.

In the circle, freshman Audrey Lowry is gaining confidence. She’s 6-0 with a 3.24 ERA. She threw three perfect innings in relief in an SEC semifinal win over Arkansas.

“I don’t think any of them have felt like they’ve arrived yet,” Gasso said of her freshmen. “Their work ethic is quite different in a in a wonderful way of how you would want to see freshmen come in, and they just keep asking for more — coming in and hitting at night on their own, those types of things. And it shows.”

Oklahoma (45-7) opens regional play Friday against Boston University. Omaha and California also are in the regional and will play each other Friday.

The Sooners have won in less spectacular fashion than in past years, but the results largely have been the same. In their first season in the SEC, the Sooners won the regular-season title and tied for the tournament title after the final against Texas A&M was canceled because of weather.

Oklahoma’s biggest stars on offense have been sophomores Ella Parker and Kasidi Pickering, both holdovers from last year.

Parker leads the Sooners with a .417 batting average. She has 11 homers and 44 RBIs and leads the team with 17 doubles. Pickering is hitting .404 with 14 homers and 45 RBIs.

Oklahoma is the clear favorite to advance, but Gasso doesn’t want to hear it.

“I’m not listening to what naysayers might say or, ‘Well, you’ve got the easiest (regional),’” she said. “When people say that, you just have to plug your ears.”

Angry Aggies

Texas A&M is the No. 1 overall seed after falling just short of the Women’s College World Series last year.

The Aggies almost knocked off No. 1 seed Texas in a Super Regional in 2024. Texas A&M won the opener, then led Game 2 before the Longhorns rallied to win in extra innings. The Aggies trailed 6-2 in the decisive third game, then scored three runs in the seventh before losing 6-5.

All three games in the super regional were decided by one run. Texas went on to be the national runner-up.

Now, Texas A&M (45-9) is in Texas’ position.

Emiley Kennedy has a 21-4 record with a 2.68 ERA.

Mya Perez leads the Aggies with a .447 batting average, 14 homers and 68 RBIs. Amari Harper is hitting .407 and Koko Wooley is hitting .393. KK Dement has 13 homers.

SEC power

Fourteen of the SEC’s 15 teams made the tournament.

Nine are seeded and hosting regionals — No. 1 Texas A&M, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Florida, No. 4 Arkansas, No. 6 Texas, No. 7 Tennessee, No. 8 South Carolina, No. 10 LSU and No. 15 Alabama.

Ten of the past 12 national champions come from the current SEC, with Oklahoma having won six of those titles.

Familiar face?

Florida State, which won the national title in 2018 and was runner-up in 2021 and 2023, will try to return to the WCWS.

The Seminoles (46-9), who lost to Oklahoma in a Super Regional last year, are the No. 5 seed and the highest-seeded team outside the SEC.

Isa Torres, a finalist for USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year, is hitting .447 with eight homers and 44 RBIs.

The Seminoles open play Friday against Robert Morris. Auburn and South Florida also are in their regional.

New Big Ten

The Big Ten is well-represented with the addition of ex-Pac-12 powers UCLA, Oregon and Washington. The newly expanded conference sent eight teams to the NCAA Tournament.

No. 9 seed UCLA (49-10) hosts UC Santa Barbara on Friday. The Bruins have won a record 12 national titles.

No. 16 seed Oregon (47-7), the Big Ten regular-season champion, will begin postseason play at home against Weber State on Friday.

Washington (34-17) is in the Lubbock Regional with No. 12 seed Texas Tech.

Five of the old Big Ten teams qualified. Michigan, the Big Ten Tournament champion, is in the Austin Regional with Texas. Indiana, Nebraska, Ohio State and Northwestern also received bids.

Indiana (33-18) leads the nation with a .368 team batting average. The Hoosiers are in the Fayetteville Regional with Arkansas.

Hokie spoilers

Virginia Tech could be a problem in the Tuscaloosa Regional.

The Hokies (41-11) feature two players who were selected in the Athletes Unlimited draft. The Blaze took pitcher Emma Lemley at No. 3 and the Bandits chose utility player Cori McMillan at No. 4.

McMillan is a finalist for USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year. She leads the nation with 30 homers and has 63 RBIs in one of the most prolific power-hitting seasons in Division I softball history.

Michell Chatfield has 15 homers and Bre Peck has 14.

Lemley has a 17-7 record and a 2.74 ERA with 180 strikeouts in 148 innings.

The Hokies open Friday against Belmont. Alabama plays Jackson State in the other game on Friday.

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The MyPerfectFranchise Daily Recap: The bigger picture in UGA recruiting

Here is the May 15 edition of The Daily Recap presented by My Perfect Franchise. The bigger picture Rivals’ Adam Gorney excellently laid out the practical way to approach what happened between Georgia and offensive lineman Jackson Cantwell, who committed to Miami on Tuesday. Most felt Cantwell was going to choose Georgia up until the […]

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Here is the May 15 edition of The Daily Recap presented by My Perfect Franchise.

The bigger picture

Rivals’ Adam Gorney excellently laid out the practical way to approach what happened between Georgia and offensive lineman Jackson Cantwell, who committed to Miami on Tuesday.

Most felt Cantwell was going to choose Georgia up until the day of his commitment ceremony. However, his relationship with the Miami coaching staff and a hefty NIL compensation package ended up swaying the Hurricanes’ way. While the recruiting loss stings, Gorney pointed out that head coach Kirby Smart is not going to put that kind of money on the line for one player.

While talent is key in college football, there are many other factors involved. After all, no one player is bigger than the overall concept of a team.

“Smart is just not going to push his entire stack into the middle on one player, say, Cantwell,” Gorney wrote. “If the Bulldogs can circle back on five-star Immanuel Iheanacho or make a less-costly run at four-stars Carter Scruggs, Malakai Lee, Ekene Ogboko and others, that might be more rewarding in the end. At least, that’s the bet Smart is making.

“With more NIL money freed up as Cantwell packs his flip flops for South Beach, Georgia can spread more around to multiple offensive linemen, to four-star tight end Mark Bowman, to four-star all-purpose back Derrek Cooper, to five-star linebacker Tyler Atkinson and others.”

There are numerous approaches to building a roster. Smart’s preferred method in the NIL era is to get as many talented and motivated players on his team. Paying a large sum on one player is going to cut into what the program can afford on other players.

In addition, back in March, Smart said what he wants to see out of young players in his program.

“I want to see the fire,” Smart said. “I want to see the passion, the energy. I want to see who wants to be a good football player. Who really cares about this game. Like, they care more about the game than they do their NIL revenue stream. Like if you really, really, really care about the game and want to be good it doesn’t matter about any kind of money. It matters how I play the game and more and more we’re seeing across college football, the purest, the ones that care about the game the most, play the hardest.”

“And usually the team that plays the hardest wins. I know everybody thinks it’s just whoever is more talented but there is a whole lot to how hard you play and how much you care about it.”

Still a great offensive line

Heading into the 2025 season, Georgia figures to field a great offensive line. In fact, ESPN analyst Cole Cubelic believes the Bulldogs have the best offensive line in the SEC.

“I think last year is a bit of an anomaly for Georgia,” Cubelic said. “Right this second, I am going with Georgia as the No. 1 group. I think injuries got in the way.”

Cubelic is confident in the bulk of Georgia’s line, including center Drew Bobo, who is set to replace Jared Wilson as a starter. Interestingly enough, he said that Earnest Greene is among the few question marks of the group.

“I am going to give Earnest Greene a little bit of a pass, …” Cubelic said. “I’ve seen great football in this kid. It’s out there. The film of Earnest Greene being dominant is there. Consistently can it come back? Maybe, if it does, I think Georgia’s got a chance to be the best offensive line in the SEC.”

Also on UGASports

Film don’t lie: Drew Bobo.

Ryland Zaborowski continues to progress from his elbow injury.

Previewing No. 4 Georgia’s upcoming baseball series against Texas A&M.

One last homestand

Are you a displaced corporate executive or want to put your career in your own hands? Or are you an experienced entrepreneur wanting to diversify? Well, Andy Luedecke can help!

Andy is a longtime Rivals board member, diehard college football fan and franchise veteran. He owns multiple franchises and businesses and uses his expertise to help others find their American Dream through a very thorough and FREE consultation process.

Call Andy, put your life and career in your own hands. It’s 100% free, so what do you have to lose?!!

Find Your Perfect Franchise at MyPerfectFranchise.Net

Contact Andy Luedecke anytime at: andy@myperfectfranchise.net or (404) 973-9901.



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Ohio legislator authors bill to curtail Ohio State noon kickoffs

In recent years, Ohio State football fans have become increasingly frustrated with the high volume of noon kickoffs their beloved Buckeyes have been forced to play. One Ohio legislator is hoping to remedy that. Ohio Representative Tex Fischer has authored a bill that would prohibit Ohio State from playing marquee games before 3:30 p.m. ET. […]

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In recent years, Ohio State football fans have become increasingly frustrated with the high volume of noon kickoffs their beloved Buckeyes have been forced to play.

One Ohio legislator is hoping to remedy that.

Ohio Representative Tex Fischer has authored a bill that would prohibit Ohio State from playing marquee games before 3:30 p.m. ET. A notable exception would be for the Buckeyes’ annual rivalry game against Michigan, which traditionally kicks off at noon.

Since Fox, one of the Big Ten’s television partners, introduced its “Big Noon Saturday” window ahead of the 2019 season, Ohio State has become a fixture of the earliest broadcast time of the day. The Buckeyes have played 35 noon games since the start of the 2019 season, including seven last year on their way to their first national championship in a decade. Each of Ohio State’s final six regular-season games began at noon, three of which came at home.

The bill, as written, would prevent any game from being played in the state of Ohio if it meets both of the following criteria:

  1. One of the competing teams is a football team from a state university
  2. Both teams are ranked in the top 10 of the Associated Press poll of the FBS

Of note, only one of the Buckeyes’ 2024 games would have fallen under that criteria: The Nov. 23 meeting with Indiana, a game in which the Buckeyes and Hoosiers were ranked No. 2 and No. 5 in the AP Top 25, respectively. Ohio State played only one other top-10 team in the noon slot against No. 3 Penn State, though that was on the road.

If the bill becomes law, the ramifications for skirting it would be steep. The legislation states that if a game starts before 3:30 p.m., the Ohio attorney general will impose a fine of $10 million against either the host team’s conference (the Big Ten) or the television network, whichever one scheduled the earlier kickoff.

While noon kickoffs offer fans, particularly those watching from home, time to take in other college football games from across the country later in the day, they’re generally an annoyance for fans attending the game in person, forcing them to wake up earlier in the morning and giving them less time to tailgate.

When Fox debuted “Big Noon Saturday,” it was a way for the network to air a marquee matchup during what’s typically a barer early slate rather than having to compete against the SEC’s longstanding 3:30 p.m. game on CBS or ESPN’s primetime game (CBS now primarily airs a Big Ten game during the 3:30 p.m. slot as part of a new media rights deal with the conference). Fox adds some pageantry to its noon kickoff by bringing the network’s pregame show, “Big Noon Kickoff,” to the site of the game, much in the same way ESPN does with “College GameDay.”

Unfortunately for Ohio State, the Big Ten’s most consistently successful program since “Big Noon Saturday” launched six years ago, that interest in putting the Buckeyes in marquee time slots for Fox often means receiving a disproportionate share of early start times.

The bill hasn’t yet appeared on the Ohio legislature database, but text of it was published Thursday by journalist D.J. Byrnes of The Rooster.





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Kirby Smart Paints Grim Picture For College Sports in Latest Statement Regarding NIL

Georgia Bulldogs head coach Kirby Smart paints a concerning future for college athletics with his latest statement regarding NIL. College football head coaches are constantly forced to navigate new issues revolving around the league and have seen the sport undergo some massive changes over the past decade. But no other change appears to be more […]

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Georgia Bulldogs head coach Kirby Smart paints a concerning future for college athletics with his latest statement regarding NIL.

College football head coaches are constantly forced to navigate new issues revolving around the league and have seen the sport undergo some massive changes over the past decade. But no other change appears to be more headache-inducing than the emergence of NIL.

While the policy change has been viewed as an overall positive, it has brought forth its fair share of issues. Many of which have created financial ripples throughout college athletics. Georgia Bulldogs head coach Kirby Smart shared his thoughts on the issue and expressed his desires for the sport moving forward.

“I just want to be able to have a freshman come in and not make more than a senior and I’d like for other sports to be able to still survive.” Said Smart. “You know, we’re on the brink of probably one to two years away from a lot of schools cutting sports.”

While football is a massive sport that produces millions of dollars in revenue each season, other sports may be forced to go by the waist-side due to the increase of competitive prices when it comes to fielding a football roster.

Unfortunately, there does not seem to be a simple fix for the issues that the NIL era of college football presents, and the sport (along with other college athletics) will likely continue to undergo a litany of changes in the near future.





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