NIL
Huskies Punch Ticket to the 2025 BIG EAST Championship Game
VILLANOVA, P.a. – The No. 2 seed UConn softball team defeated the No. 4 seeded Creighton Bluejays in the BIG EAST semifinal, 12-1 in a six inning run rule on Friday evening, advancing the Huskies to the BIG EAST championship game on Saturday, May 10 at 5:00pm. UConn advances to the championship […]
VILLANOVA, P.a. – The No. 2 seed UConn softball team defeated the No. 4 seeded Creighton Bluejays in the BIG EAST semifinal, 12-1 in a six inning run rule on Friday evening, advancing the Huskies to the BIG EAST championship game on Saturday, May 10 at 5:00pm. UConn advances to the championship series for the for the third time in the last five years.
Payton Kinney made her second consecutive start in the circle at the BIG EAST Tournament for the Huskies, marking her 25th start of the season. Kinney was sensational, tossing 4.0 scoreless innings, giving up just one hit, adding three strikeouts. The right hander moves to 14-5 this season.
UConn got their offense going early, scratching a run across in the first inning, giving the Huskies a 1-0 lead. UConn loaded the bases for Kaitlyn Breslin who was hit by a pitch, forcing in Grace Jenkins from third base.
In the third inning Grace Jenkins doubled the Huskies lead with a solo home run to center field, her 20th of the season, edging the UConn lead to 2-0.
In Jenkins’ next plate appearance in the fifth inning, the BIG EAST Player of the Year took Creighton’s starter deep once again, this time it was a towering two-run shot to right field, her 21st of the year, extending the Huskies lead to 4-0.
The two-run homer from Jenkins jump started the UConn offense, as the Huskies pushed across three more runs in the fifth inning, putting UConn in the driver’s seat with a 7-0 lead.
Cat Petteys continued her hot hitting at the plate, homering in her fourth straight game, as the rookie hit a two-run shot to right center field, the 14th homer of the season for the BIG EAST Freshman of the Year.
Later on in the fifth inning, UConn manufactured another run with two outs on back to back base hits. Haley Coupal got it started with a single to left field. Kaitlyn Kibling followed with a double to left center, scoring Coupal all the way from first base.
Sydnee Koosh came on in relief for Kinney in the fifth inning, making her 26th appearance this season for the Huskies. Koosh went just 0.2 inning giving up one run on a pair of hits.
Creighton scored their lone run of the game in the fifth inning on a bases loaded walk, making it 7-1.
Hope Jenkins came on in relief for Koosh in the middle of the fifth inning, making her 31st appearance of the season for the Huskies. Jenkins closed out the game in the circle, keeping the Bluejay lineup hitless through her 1.1 innings, adding a strikeout.
UConn’s offense put up another five spot in the sixth inning, putting the game out of reach for Creighton at 12-1. The Huskies once again loaded up the bases for the middle of the order to do damage. Petteys knocked in her third RBI of the game with sac fly to center field, scoring Grace Jenkins from third base. Breslin followed with a single to left field, scoring Kaiea Higa from second base.
Haley Coupal capped off the big inning with a three-run homer off the scoreboard in left field, her second of the season, securing the run rule victory in the BIG EAST semifinals.
News and Notes
- Three Huskies had three RBI in Grace Jenkins, Cat Petteys, and Haley Coupal.
- Grace Jenkins recorded her third multi-home run game this season and the fourth of her career. She notched her fourth three-hit game this year, and her team leading 18th multi-RBI game, giving her 67 RBI this season. Jenkins extended her on-base streak to 29 straight games.
- Cat Petteys has hit two home runs through her first two career postseason games. Petteys has homered in her last four straight games, the most by a Husky this season.
- Payton Kinney has started in five straight games for the Huskies. She retired 8 straight Bluejay hitters from the first to fourth innings.
- Haley Coupal has had back to back multi-hit games to begin her 2025 BIG EAST campaign. This is the fourth multi-RBI game for Coupal this season.
- Kaitlyn Breslin recorded her 14th multi-RBI games this season.
- Kaiea Higa recorded her 15th multi-hit game this season.
- UConn’s offense scored double digit runs for the 14th time this season.
- UConn loaded the bases twice.
- UConn advances to the championship series for the for the third time in the last five years.
Up Next
UConn advances to the BIG EAST championship game on Saturday, May 10 at 5:00pm. UConn will play the winner of Creighton vs. Providence set to take place before the championship game at 1:30pm.
Follow our social media pages for updates.
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Instagram – UConnSoftball
Facebook – UConn Softball
NIL
Texas A&M Coach Frustrated With Lack of Clarity in Upcoming NCAA Settlement
The impending House vs. NCAA settlement approval is expected to shake up NIL and college football in some significant ways. Everything from NIL salary caps to roster limits will be implemented in some fashion or another starting on July 1. While many view this new framework in a largely positive light, some have voiced concerns […]

The impending House vs. NCAA settlement approval is expected to shake up NIL and college football in some significant ways. Everything from NIL salary caps to roster limits will be implemented in some fashion or another starting on July 1.
While many view this new framework in a largely positive light, some have voiced concerns over the expedited nature of the implementation and how the rules are, in essence, being switched around on programs in the middle of the offseason.
One prominent figure who falls into this category is Texas A&M Aggies head coach Mike Elko, who recently discussed his frustrations with the uncertainty surrounding the settlement implementation at the annual SEC spring meetings.
According to Outkick’s Trey Wallace, Elko’s frustrations primarily centered on the proposed $20.5 million revenue-sharing cap.
He compared it to the NFL model, noting that they would never suddenly decide to change their cap rules in the middle of the offseason.
“I couldn’t imagine an NFL team getting halfway through the offseason and deciding to change their salary cap rules,” Elko said. “That’s what I guess we’re doing.”
Elko’s frustrations aren’t entirely without merit, as nobody truly knows just how much these new regulations will change the college football landscape until they are actually put into place.
The salary cap is just one of many groundbreaking changes that could be implemented.
The new rule is set to allow athletic departments to pay their student-athletes directly, with a cap of $20.5 million to be split among each sport. Athletes will still be allowed to receive outside NIL endorsements, but these will now require approval from an independent clearing house.
Roster limits are also expected to be added to the sport, with each school allowed to have up to 105 athletes on their football roster each season, which is 20 more than the 85 scholarship limit the NCAA had been allowing up to this point.
It’s clear that this new era of NIL is going to cause far more confusion than answers at the outset, but it’s something Elko and every other coach will have to deal with.
More NIL News
NIL
The College Football Transfer Portal is Moving, but to When?
The NCAA created a big mess by opening up a can of worms with little to no advanced planning. The four-letter “non-profit” threw its constituents a bone by giving them the transfer portal and NIL. It turned into an avalanche of lawsuits that threaten the entity’s existence. You cannot put the toothpaste back into the […]

The NCAA created a big mess by opening up a can of worms with little to no advanced planning. The four-letter “non-profit” threw its constituents a bone by giving them the transfer portal and NIL. It turned into an avalanche of lawsuits that threaten the entity’s existence.
You cannot put the toothpaste back into the tube, but you can spread that toothpaste out more evenly over a couple of brushes. Right now, the sport of college football has an entire tube of toothpaste on the brush for the month of December.
After the Super Bowl, the NFL has free agency in March, followed by the draft in late April. College football ends its regular season. Less than a week later, it holds its draft (Early Signing Period), then begins its one-month free agency period (transfer portal), most of which is wrapped up before the postseason concludes.
It’s a damn mess.
The calendar is unsustainable. The powers that be tried to alleviate strain on college football coaches by moving up the Early Signing Period to the first Wednesday in December. It removed in-home visits from the recruiting process, but gave coaches more time to specifically focus on securing visits and landing players from the transfer portal.
This year’s transfer portal opened on Monday, Dec. 9. There was also a second window following spring practice. Both are subject to change and there is growing momentum around the sport to make it happen.
Transfer Portal Potential Changes
Earlier this year at the AFCA Convention, coaches lobbied to eliminate the spring transfer portal window. I think most would agree that the sport can still operate successfully with just one transfer portal window. The biggest question is when will the transfer portal open and who will make that decision? Kirby Smart has some thoughts.
“I think it’d be a great question to ask some people, but my opinion is the implementation committee, which comes from the settlement,” Smart said from the SEC spring meetings in Destin. “Appointed [10] ADs, two from each Power conference, who hear the conference’s perspective. And ultimately, those [10] ADs – which are appointed coming off the settlement – will have to make a lot of implementation decisions that are not part of the settlement. The ‘nuggets,’ let’s call it. Here’s the settlement, and then the nuggets are going to come from these [10] ADs.”
Kentucky’s Mitch Barnhart would be among the ten who would make that decision. Smart made a case for opening up the transfer portal in January.
January makes sense on the football calendar, only interfering with a few teams still playing in the CFP, but it interferes with the academic calendar. Unless schools make changes, there isn’t enough time to transfer schools before spring semesters begin.
Greg Sankey made it clear that SEC coaches want the transfer portal in January. Big Ten coaches are lobbying for March or April, and there’s one more proposal.
A May transfer portal date has been kicked around by some administrators. It makes the most logical sense in this humble blogger’s opinion. It’s the only vacant month on the calendar, and it would give the sport a nice kick in the news cycle during an otherwise dull time, right before the start of the official college football new year at spring meetings. However, coaches don’t want their future players working out at other schools in the spring. They want them on campus ASAP.
Changes are coming to the transfer portal, and like so many changes in college football, there are no easy answers.
NIL
‘We’re waiting as patiently as we can’: SEC is in limbo waiting on House settlement
The world of college sports is scheduled to change drastically on July 1 when schools can start directly paying student-athletes for the first time in NCAA history. Except there is just one big problem — the settlement has not been passed. Everyone in the college sports space is still awaiting word on from Judge Claudia […]

The world of college sports is scheduled to change drastically on July 1 when schools can start directly paying student-athletes for the first time in NCAA history. Except there is just one big problem — the settlement has not been passed.
Everyone in the college sports space is still awaiting word on from Judge Claudia Wilken if the settlement will be passed after the NCAA and its lawyers were asked to make adjustments to the roster limit rules. The expectation is that this will go through but you just never know until it’s final.
“We’re waiting as patiently as we can,” SEC commissioner Greg Sankey told the media on Monday at the league’s annual spring meetings.
The SEC and all of the other power conferences are all-in on this revenue-sharing plan that will hopefully provide them with structure and a governing body system that can enforce rules and help limit the pay-for-play era with third parties heavily involved in sports. However, things can change quickly if Judge Wilken turns down the settlement. Sankey was asked about alternate options if that denial occurred. The most powerful man in college athletics would not get into details but billable hours almost always find a way.
“I think there are likely several. And I’ll let my lawyers speak to that within my room rather than publish it,” Sankey explained. “I think we’re still waiting and focused on preparing for a settlement as has been presented at this point.”
“I think we’ve prepared as well as we are able. Now anytime something is new, I’ve said this, there’s going to be turbulence. There’s going to be questions to be answered.”
Greg Sankey says that the SEC has multiple alternative courses of action to take if the settlement is turned down. For now, the league plays the waiting game while the clock ticks. Revenue-sharing is just 34 days away.
NIL
Steve Sarkisian Shoots Down Texas' Massive Rumored NIL Roster Cost
Texas Longhorns head coach Steve Sarkisian refuted reports that the team is spending up to $35 to $40 million on its roster this year. Earlier this offseason, the report garnered attention across the internet, but Sarkisian clarified that his team has not spent that much on their roster. “What’s frustrating on that was it was […]


Texas Longhorns head coach Steve Sarkisian refuted reports that the team is spending up to $35 to $40 million on its roster this year. Earlier this offseason, the report garnered attention across the internet, but Sarkisian clarified that his team has not spent that much on their roster.
“What’s frustrating on that was it was a little bit of irresponsible reporting,” Sarkisian said on College Sports on SiriusXM. “One anonymous source said that’s what our roster was. I wish I had 40 million on our roster, we’d probably be a little bit better team than we are. The idea to think that a lot of other schools aren’t spending money to get players. It’s the state of college football right now. It is what it is. We’re fortunate, don’t get me wrong. We’ve got great support.”
“What’s crazy about this day and age,” Sarkisian continued. “One guy writes an article from an anonymous source that says that’s what are roster is, everybody ran with it. And I’m talking real publications ran with it. … Nobody asked me one question.”
Sarkisian did express gratitude for the support and success the team has had, but made it clear that they are not spending that much on their players.
The Longhorns will return to play on Aug. 30, when they begin the 2025 season against Ohio State.
More College Football on Sports Illustrated
NIL
Five Illini Earn CSC Academic All-District Accolades
Story Links CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – Five Illinois softball players earned College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District honors, the organization announced on Tuesday. Page Berkmeyer, Adisyn Caryl, Eileen Donahue, Stevie Meade and Lauren Wiles took home the academic honors. This is the third time Meade has been awarded the accolade while Berkmeyer earned […]

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – Five Illinois softball players earned College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District honors, the organization announced on Tuesday. Page Berkmeyer, Adisyn Caryl, Eileen Donahue, Stevie Meade and Lauren Wiles took home the academic honors.
This is the third time Meade has been awarded the accolade while Berkmeyer earned the distinction for a second-straight year. Caryl, Donahue and Wiles were given the distinction for the first time in their careers.
Berkmeyer closed out her senior campaign slashing .272/.384/.361. The catcher continued to shine behind the dish, ranking third all-time in the Illini record books with 41 runners caught stealing. Berkmeyer received her undergraduate degree in 2024 and is pursuing her masters in Animal Science.
Caryl finished second on the team with a .321 batting average during her sophomore campaign. The third baseman was the only Fighting Illini player to start every game this season. The 11 doubles Caryl amassed tied for first on the team while the seven homers ranked second. Caryl is majoring in Elementary Education and Spanish.
Donahue paced the Fighting Illini with a .331 batting average, .574 slugging percentage, 10 home runs and 35 RBI this season. The sophomore appeared in 46 games, starting 44 primarily playing at first base. The Chicago native is majoring in Elementary Education.
Meade concluding her time donning the orange and blue slashing .273/.489/.340. The outfielder’s 11 doubles and two triples were tied for first on the team this season. Meade leaves her legacy on the Illini program, becoming the all-time leader in sacrifice hits. Meade graduated with her degree in Interdisciplinary Health.
Wiles posted a 4.24 ERA with 36 strikeouts during her senior campaign. The pitcher tossed four complete games and recorded one complete game shutout this season. Her 67.2 innings pitched ranked third among the Illini pitching staff. Wiles received her master’s in Management this spring.
To be eligible for the award, a nominee must have a 3.50 GPA and is at least a sophomore academically and athletically. Nominees must also be a starter or important reserve to the team and participated in at least 90 percent of the games during the 2025 campaign.
NIL
Texas’ Steve Sarkisian makes bold College Football Playoff prediction
Kirby Smart on college football’s future Kirby Smart urges leaders to prioritize the game’s future over personal or conference agendas in playoff talks. MIRAMAR BEACH, Fla. – Alert the statue makers. Their services would be needed in January, if a college football team navigates this season undefeated. That’s the way Steve Sarkisian sees it, anyway. […]


Kirby Smart on college football’s future
Kirby Smart urges leaders to prioritize the game’s future over personal or conference agendas in playoff talks.
MIRAMAR BEACH, Fla. – Alert the statue makers. Their services would be needed in January, if a college football team navigates this season undefeated.
That’s the way Steve Sarkisian sees it, anyway.
The Texas coach boldly predicted Tuesday that college football might have seen its last undefeated national champion. And in the off-chance that another perfect team emerges, bust out the bronze, Sarkisian says.
Michigan most recently pulled off perfection with its 2023 team. The Wolverines went 15-0, emerging victorious from a four-team College Football Playoff.
Now, with a 12-team playoff in place and a bigger playoff likely on the horizon, national champions play more than 15 games.
This season’s national champion will play a minimum of 16 games. Ohio State captured glory with a 14-2 record last season. The Buckeyes lost twice during the regular season before winning the national championship from the No. 8 seed line.
Ohio State became the first two-loss champion since 2007 LSU. Get used to more of that, says Sarkisian.
“This idea of somebody is going to go 16-0 in college football, man, put a statue up somewhere of that team,” Sarkisian said before the SEC’s spring meetings began here this week, “because I just don’t know if that’s going to happen again.”
Interesting opinion.
Count me among the skeptics, though, that we’ve seen the last of the undefeated national champions. This sport isn’t known for parity. It’s known for a small batch of schools dominating.
Sarkisian himself built a roster that could be poised to do some dominating this year.
Kirby Smart explains why perfection remains possible
Consider Georgia coach Kirby Smart skeptical of Sarkisian’s prediction that we’ve seen the sport’s last undefeated team.
Smart’s 2022 squad went undefeated, one of five teams to achieve the feat during the 10 years of the four-team playoff.
Smart’s thinking goes like this: Unless some framework is put in place to keep a team from outspending everyone else in this pay-for-play era, what’s to stop the emergence of an undefeated super team filled with highly paid players?
“You could end up with some haves and have nots out there,” Smart said, “and ultimately teams could drive prices and go buy a championship with a super team. I think we could see that if there’s not parity. We don’t really know if there’s going to be or not.”
A federal judge is considering whether to approve a legal settlement that would unlock revenue-sharing with athletes. That settlement would cap how much revenue each institution could share with athletes, functioning as something of a salary cap on rosters. However, even in that revenue-sharing landscape, separate NIL deals outside the school framework still could be brokered, allowing a roster to exceed the revenue-sharing cap.
College football’s landscape started evolving after NIL deals launched in 2021. Transfer rules also loosened that year. Those changes made it more difficult for one team – say, Alabama or Georgia – to stockpile a three-deep of all-stars.
“The portal and the lack of the depth” made going undefeated more difficult, Smart acknowledged.
Also, a longer season increases the runway for injuries. Both Texas and Georgia dealt with injuries to their starting quarterbacks last season. Georgia lost in the CFP quarterfinals to Notre Dame while starting a backup quarterback, after Carson Beck injured his elbow in the SEC championship game.
Texas is top candidate to be next undefeated national champion
Sarkisian ranks among the likeliest coaches to produce an undefeated champion within this structure.
The Longhorns possess the necessary ingredients to go undefeated:
∎ A lush bankroll. A handsomely paid roster doesn’t guarantee success, but let’s not kid ourselves, no pauper is winning a title in this pay-for-play model. Ohio State won with the help of spending $20 million to improve its roster. Texas, with its deep war chest, is believed to be among the teams driving up the market price this season.
∎ A good quarterback. Ohio State’s Will Howard peaked at the right time last season and delivered some of his finest performances throughout Ohio State’s four playoff victories. Texas will hand its quarterback reins to Arch Manning. He’s among the preseason favorites for the Heisman Trophy.
∎ A coach (and a school) that attracts talent and develops it. Ohio State’s Ryan Day can recruit and develop. So can Sarkisian. Day entered last season on the shortlist of best coaches without a national championship. Sarkisian heads up that list this season, after Texas’ consecutive trips to the CFP semifinals.
Arch Manning leads a talented Texas team that’s transitioning
Perfection talk aside, it’s evident that Sarkisian likes his roster. Texas must transition to new starters at key positions, including quarterback, but fresh starters doesn’t equate to a youthful roster.
“We’re not necessarily young. We’ve just got some new faces (starting),” Sarkisian said, “guys who have been in our program, who have been working on their craft, who have been developing, and now it’s their opportunity.”
Take Manning, for example. He’s no pup, after two seasons as Quinn Ewers’ backup.
Manning started two games last season while Ewers recovered from an injury, and Sarkisian kept using Manning in select situations after Ewers returned.
The toughest roadblock to Texas achieving perfection probably isn’t the season’s length, but rather the location of its toughest regular-season games.
The Longhorns will play at Ohio State in the season opener and at Georgia in November.
If Manning and the Longhorns beat the Buckeyes at The Horseshoe, the victory would trumpet a message that Texas perfection is possible.
Anyone know any statue makers in Austin?
Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.
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