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How ETSU approaches NIL and the transfer portal

JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (WCYB) — In recent years, significant changes in college athletics have become the norm. NIL and the transfer portal have changed how schools operate. News 5’s Casey Goetz sat down with ETSU athletic director Richard Sander to see how ETSU is navigating this new era. FULL INTERVIEW: 5

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How ETSU approaches NIL and the transfer portal

In recent years, significant changes in college athletics have become the norm.

NIL and the transfer portal have changed how schools operate.

News 5’s Casey Goetz sat down with ETSU athletic director Richard Sander to see how ETSU is navigating this new era.

FULL INTERVIEW:

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Newest ESPN mock draft drops Kyson Witherspoon from top 10

ESPN’s second MLB mock draft was a lot different than the first, including the landing spot for Oklahoma ace Kyson Witherspoon. ESPN on Wednesday released its 2025 MLB mock draft 2.0 as Kiley McDaniel predicted the first 40 picks of the upcoming 2025 MLB Draft for the second time. This time around, McDaniel projected Witherspoon […]

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ESPN’s second MLB mock draft was a lot different than the first, including the landing spot for Oklahoma ace Kyson Witherspoon.

ESPN on Wednesday released its 2025 MLB mock draft 2.0 as Kiley McDaniel predicted the first 40 picks of the upcoming 2025 MLB Draft for the second time. This time around, McDaniel projected Witherspoon to go 13th overall to the San Francisco Giants, compared to eighth overall to the Toronto Blue Jays in his first mock last month.

“Witherspoon has some landing spots in the top 10, but Arkansas’ Gage Wood is closing in on him as the top college righty,” McDaniel wrote. “I think both will land just outside of the top 10. The Giants have been tied to many of the aforementioned second cut of college players, with Wehiwa Aloy and Marek Houston also coming up a lot, and Irish quite similar to recently traded former first-rounder James Tibbs.”

Kyson Witherspoon predicted to go outside top 10 in 2025 MLB Draft

According to ESPN, Witherspoon is the 10th-best overall prospect in the 2025 MLB Draft. The MLB ranks Witherspoon as the No. 8 overall draft prospect and Bleacher Nation recently projected him to go to the Texas Rangers at No. 12.

This season as a junior, Witherspoon was named a First-Team All-America by Perfect Game and NCBWA Second-Team All-American after one of the best seasons from a pitcher in college baseball. He was also an All-SEC First-Team honoree.

Witherspoon led the SEC with a 2.65 ERA, which also ranked 23rd in the country. He was also first in the conference with 10 wins and fourth with 124 strikeouts. He had a 10-4 record in 16 starts as OU’s right-handed ace.

In his two-year career at OU after transferring from Northwest Florida State College, Witherspoon posted a 3.16 ERA and 18-6 record.

Outside of Witherspoon dropping, ESPN’s newest mock draft also featured a new top pick in LSU left-handed pitcher Kade Anderson, who dethroned Ethan Holliday, a third baseman from Stillwater High School in Oklahoma. Holliday was now predicted to go fourth to the Colorado Rockies, where his father, Matt, also started his MLB career.

OU commit Eli Willits, a shortstop from Fort Cobb-Broxton High School in Oklahoma, was also a projected top-10 pick at No. 7 to the Miami Marlins.

The first round of the 2025 MLB Draft will be on July 13 during MLB All-Star Week in Atlanta, Georgia.

Read more about OU baseball



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Florida amendment approves ‘forbidden funds’ for NIL payouts through 2028

Florida public universities will be allowed to use “auxiliary funds” to help support the new revenue sharing model established by the House v. NCAA settlement, according to an amendment passed by the Florida Board of Governors on Wednesday. Schools around the country are entering an adjustment period for the major changes brought on by the […]

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Florida public universities will be allowed to use “auxiliary funds” to help support the new revenue sharing model established by the House v. NCAA settlement, according to an amendment passed by the Florida Board of Governors on Wednesday.

Schools around the country are entering an adjustment period for the major changes brought on by the House Settlement and new revenue sharing model.

The recent House Settlement ruling ushered in a new era in the NIL space. Beginning July 1, participating schools will be able to allocate up to $20.5 million to athletes this year, with that number increasing incrementally on an annual basis.

That $20.5 million figure isn’t a required landing point for schools. However, staying competitive in the NIL space is certainly important to maintain winning programs at the highest level.

In light of the House Settlement’s approval, which will lead to increased athletics spending, Florida public university leaders like FSU Board of Trustees Chair Peter Collins pushed for the state to amend a law that previously banned using certain funds from use in athletics, according to On3’s Ira Schoffel.

“Auxiliary funds, which come from areas such as housing, bookstores and parking fees, previously were forbidden from use in athletics in an effort to keep state sports programs self-sufficient,” Schoffel wrote.

As a result of the amendment passed by the Florida Board of Governors, schools like Florida State and Florida, among others, will be able to temporarily use up to $22.5 million in those previously forbidden funds for NIL revenue-sharing payouts over a three-year period.



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How Does the House v. NCAA Settlement Affect NIL for Collegiate Athletes? What to Know

After years of buildup and legal arguments, the House v. NCAA reached a settlement on revenue share for collegiate athletes on June 6. The $2.8 billion, ten-year settlement will pay current and past players for missed name, image and likeness opportunities. Still, it most notably will allow colleges to pay current players directly starting July […]

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How Does the House v. NCAA Settlement Affect NIL for Collegiate Athletes? What to Know

After years of buildup and legal arguments, the House v. NCAA reached a settlement on revenue share for collegiate athletes on June 6. The $2.8 billion, ten-year settlement will pay current and past players for missed name, image and likeness opportunities. Still, it most notably will allow colleges to pay current players directly starting July 1. 

U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken gave final approval of the landmark settlement. This comes after five years of litigation, followed by another year of discussions and edits, following the NCAA and power conferences’ initial decision to settle the suit in 2024. 

This ruling ends the amateurism status of the NCAA and provides a new framework of rules and regulations to help tame what some have called the “Wild West” era of NIL. Currently, NIL collectives operate virtually free from any sort of regulation, which results in widespread tampering across college sports and multiple lawsuits every time a player leaves a school for another after receiving a payment from the school they left. 

This most notable incident took place recently, when quarterback Madden Iamaleava transferred from Arkansas to UCLA during the spring transfer portal window. Iamaleava was an early-enrollee member of the Razorbacks’ 2025 high school recruiting class. He transferred after just spending a few weeks with the program. 

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The school’s collective, Arkansas EDGE, is still pursuing its legal dispute against Iamaleava. According to CBS Sports, they’re seeking $200,000 in repayment following his decision to leave before he touched the field. This case marks a new and aggressive approach to NIL contract enforcement, which is likely to become a more common occurrence as NIL contracts become a requirement for players to enroll at a new school. 

According to the Associated Press, universities will share up to $20.5 million with student-athletes directly across all sports. That cap will increase by at least four percent each year throughout the ten-year agreement. As far as the current planned distribution model goes, most schools are expected to allocate roughly 75 percent of future revenue to football players, 15 percent to men’s basketball, five percent to women’s basketball and the rest to all remaining sports. However, other schools plan to mirror the gross revenue each sport averages, which would likely result in more than 85 percent of the money earned being allocated to football players.

One of the main arguments against the settlement was that the new roster limits could result in thousands of student-athletes losing their spots due to imposed limitations across all 43 NCAA-sponsored sports. 

This counterargument led to a delay in the final ruling until a compromise was reached. While the judge asked for a plan to be proposed that would “grandfather in” current athletes, the power conferences instead proposed a compromise that would allow schools the option to temporarily exceed the roster limits until the players exhausted their eligibility. 

Once the roster limits are enforced, some sports will gain spots that they didn’t have in previous years, but most will be shrunk down despite being able to offer unlimited scholarships within those thresholds. 

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Louisville walks off Oregon St 7-6 on King’s sacrifice fly in College World Series elimination game

Associated Press OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Eddie King Jr. drove in the winning run with a sacrifice fly in the bottom of the ninth inning that gave Louisville a 7-6 victory over Oregon State on Tuesday and knocked the Beavers out of the College World Series. The Cardinals (42-23) avenged a 4-3 walk-off loss to […]

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Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Eddie King Jr. drove in the winning run with a sacrifice fly in the bottom of the ninth inning that gave Louisville a 7-6 victory over Oregon State on Tuesday and knocked the Beavers out of the College World Series.

The Cardinals (42-23) avenged a 4-3 walk-off loss to Oregon State last Friday and advanced to the Bracket 2 final. They must beat Coastal Carolina on Wednesday and again Thursday to reach the best-of-three CWS finals.

Just like Oregon State (48-16-1) on Friday, Louisville squandered a late lead only to come back and win.

“It’s the value of being the home team,” Cardinals coach Dan McDonnell said. “Sometimes people act like it’s not that big a deal. It’s amazing when you get the last three outs and you get to walk somebody off. So, very fortunate that we were in that situation today.”

Kellan Oakes faced the top of the Louisville lineup to start the bottom of the ninth. Alex Alicea walked and Lucas Moore was awarded first base on catcher’s interference when his bat nicked Wilson Weber’s mitt as he fouled off a pitch. The Cardinals loaded the bases when Matt Klein put down a bunt that Oakes (5-1) booted, the Beavers’ third error of the day and eighth in three CWS games.

That brought on freshman Zach Edwards to face Jake Munroe, who got caught looking at strike three.

“I struck out on a call I didn’t like,” Munroe said. “I was upset about it. Did a little 360, saw Eddie, and I said, ‘Oh, yeah, we’re good.’ That’s kind of the special thing about this lineup.”

King fouled off a pitch and took two balls before he sent a fly to center. Alicea tagged up from third, and Canon Reeder had no chance to make a throw home.

King was mobbed behind first base, with teammates squirting their water bottles at him and fans chanting “Edd-ie! Edd-ie!”

“Just hearing chants like that in a moment like that, it warms my heart,” King said. “And I’m so glad that it could be for Louisville.”

Cardinals pitchers repeatedly worked out of trouble until they couldn’t in the top of the ninth.

“Right there at the end, we probably shocked the heck out of everybody,” Beavers coach Mitch Canham said. “They bring guys in, we’re finding ways to get on base — hit by pitch, base hit, what have you.”

Aiva Arquette homered to left-center on Wyatt Danilowicz’s first pitch, and Gavin Turley, Weber and AJ Singer reached to load the bases with no outs.

Oregon State tied it 6-all when Tyce Peterson’s slow roller glanced off Alicea’s glove at shortstop and into the outfield grass, allowing two runs to score. Tucker Biven (5-0) struck out Jacob Krieg, and Carson McEntire got Reeder to pop out.

“You knew they were going to make a rally there late,” McDonnell said. “And we pitched so well, but one of their best hitters jumps on a heater, and their other best hitter (Turley) fights off a ball and it drops. It’s like, OK, you’re in it here now; you’re going to have to grind this out and earn it. And they made us earn it.”

The Beavers played as an indepedent this year and will again next season before the Pac-12 ramps back up in 2026-27. They had only 19 regular-season home games, logged nearly 25,000 air miles and won enough to be the No. 8 national seed in the NCAA Tournament. They won five elimination games in regionals and super regionals.

“What a season we had. What a run,” Arquette said.

___

AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports




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Conferences starting over on 2026 CFP format, and I’m stunned (lol)

Is anyone else getting tired of the constant back and forth between the various conferences over the College Football Playoff format? Maybe I’m overly sensitive, but just seeing commissioners and athletics directors (and coaches) seemingly never stop giving their opinions on what the CFP’s 2026 format should be has become a tired tale, in my […]

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Is anyone else getting tired of the constant back and forth between the various conferences over the College Football Playoff format?

Maybe I’m overly sensitive, but just seeing commissioners and athletics directors (and coaches) seemingly never stop giving their opinions on what the CFP’s 2026 format should be has become a tired tale, in my humble opinion.

Of course, to be fair, a lot of money is at stake in the CFP, which this past season moved to 12 teams and will stay at 12 participants in the upcoming season, along with some changes to the seeding format that were revealed earlier this spring. After that, the chatter is that the CFP could move to 16 teams in 2026, but the different power leagues aren’t in agreement over the format.

For our beloved Syracuse football, what does it mean? Well, that’s tough to say at this juncture. Head coach Fran Brown has said his singular focus on the field is to win national championships, so regardless of how many automatic qualifiers the Atlantic Coast Conference has in the future, the main thing that the Orange can do to control its own destiny is pile up a lot of victories and make it darn near impossible for the CFP selection committee to leave the ‘Cuse out.

When it comes to the Big Ten and the SEC, there are so many egos in the room.

Okay. So without question, the Big Ten Conference and the Southeastern Conference rule the college football world. The last two national champs are from the Big Ten – Ohio State and Michigan – while SEC squads such as Alabama, Georgia and LSU have won chips in recent years.

Some of the talk is that the Big Ten and SEC each want four automatic qualifiers in a 16-team CFP. Huh? Let’s not be greedy here, folks. I understand why those two conferences want multiple automatic qualifiers. They annually have the top teams, and those squads play the toughest league schedules.

Still, two conferences automatically getting half of the 16 CFP participants? I’ll have a tough time thinking that’s in any way fair. Then again, nothing in life is fair, much less the CFP.

Personally, I’d be all for a 16-team CFP that features the four power-conference champions, the next two highest-ranked league champs, and the next 10 highest-rated teams regardless of their conference affiliation.

Maybe that’s wishful thinking, though.

As college football reporter Brett McMurphy noted in a post on X, the deadline for finalizing the CFP’s format in 2026 is December 1. He reported that conference commissioners are starting over as it pertains to the 2026 format.

I’m stunned (insert sarcasm here).

Tom Fornelli, a national writer with CBS Sports, had an insightful column earlier this week where he suggested ideas for the CFP’s 2026 format. He’s on board for 16 teams, with straight seeding and no bonus given to conference champions as it relates to their seeds.

Fornelli suggests that the top six conference champions land automatic bids. The Big Ten and the SEC each get three automatic bids. That gets us to 10 teams. Fornelli writes that no conference can have more than four teams in the 16-team field, meaning that every year, there would be a minimum of four at-large berths available to the ACC, the Big 12, the Group of Five conferences and, presumably, Notre Dame.

The speculation will continue onward until a 2026 format is decided for the CFP. My advice to Syracuse football and its ACC peers: just win games.





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Mike Elko smacks down wild NIL rumor about star transfer wide receiver

KC Concepcion is set to be one of the most important players for Texas A&M football next season. The star wide receiver, a transfer from NC State, comes to the Aggies after two highly productive years up in Raleigh, and was one of the most highly-coveted players in the transfer portal. In this modern era […]

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KC Concepcion is set to be one of the most important players for Texas A&M football next season. The star wide receiver, a transfer from NC State, comes to the Aggies after two highly productive years up in Raleigh, and was one of the most highly-coveted players in the transfer portal.

In this modern era of college football, then, this means that most fans conclude that he will command a high amount of leverage when it comes to NIL compensation. So no one was surprised when a number began circulating recently of 2.5MM total compensation for Concepcion in this upcoming year.

As a matter of fact, I took that reporting to mean that the Aggies were taking the next step to be competitive in the NIL space. There’s a lot that’s still opaque about amounts that certain players are earning, and the lack of transparency makes things difficult, but it didn’t seem out of the question that Concepcion could be earning that much from the collective and other deals.

Mike Elko dismisses rumored, eye-popping NIL amount for KC Concepcion: “He does not have that much money”

However, Mike Elko at a coach’s night last night had some definitive words about such rumors.

This does not necessarily mean that the Aggies are not competitive on the NIL front: I don’t think that they would have a guy like Concepcion on the team if they weren’t competitive. It clearly is not their entire pitch to any recruit, unlike certain schools.

But it’s good for Elko to address these things in one way, because it can lead to other recruits being of the belief that, if they are offered less, they are being lowballed. If that’s not the case, then it doesn’t help anyone.

This was a smart move by Elko to dismiss this rumor. It’s hard to be upfront as a modern college football program, but the strategic way that Elko is doing so is paying off.





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