NIL
If Anybody Set Precedent for Potential Kane Archer Return to Arkansas, It’s His New Coach
photo credit: Nick Wenger / Nebraska Athletics To be clear, this is a day of celebration for Greenwood High quarterback Kane Archer. One of the most celebrated prep quarterbacks in the history of the state has had plenty on his plate over this last season, not least of which was grappling with the death of […]


To be clear, this is a day of celebration for Greenwood High quarterback Kane Archer.
One of the most celebrated prep quarterbacks in the history of the state has had plenty on his plate over this last season, not least of which was grappling with the death of one of his beloved teammates while preparing for a Friday night game.
As a state, Arkansas isn’t exactly pumping out elite football players left and right, so any time a native earns a full scholarship to a major conference program, it’s a big deal. In the months leading up Archer’s Tuesday announcement of becoming the latest UCF football commit, he fell in love with the Orlando program and his potential for growth there.
“UCF has the most complete campus I’ve been to,” Archer told UCFSports’ Brandon Helwig. “I really like UCF a lot.”
That’s not an insult to the other schools who had made Archer’s top seven: Appalachian State, Louisville, Missouri, Ole Miss, SMU and of course Arkansas. That’s just a testament to how much love he felt from the Golden Knights. He is, after all, the first class of 2026 quarterback on board there.
Still, among certain Arkansas football fans, a sense of loss lingers. Of what could have been.
Archer had been offered by Razorbacks in eighth grade and for many years, fans dreamed about what he could do on the Hill if given the chance one day.
He has certainly delivered on the field. Greenwood carries a 26-game win streak into the 2025 season, and Archer will be looking to lead the school to its third straight state title. Last year, he was named the 2024 Gatorade Player of the Year in Arkansas after throwing for 3,880 yards, 57 touchdowns and only two interceptions while adding 795 yards and 10 touchdowns on the ground. Archer broke a national record, too, by completing a sensational 81.5% of his passes.
While Greenwood’s finest likely won’t be following in the footsteps of Tyler Wilson as a freshman, that doesn’t mean the dream of Kane Archer as a Razorback is dead. Given the transfer portal, things can certainly change in the coming years. Home will always be the Natural State for the talented 17-year-old.
More and more, Arkansas fans lament the loss of an in-state high school talent only to see him boomerang back a year or two (or three) later.
Here’s just a sampling of some of them:
Courtney Crutchfield (Missouri to Arkansas)
Markell Utsey (Missouri to Arkansas)
Luke Jones (Notre Dame to Arkansas)
Broderick Green (USC to Arkansas)
Anthony Switzer (began career at A-State, then followed Blake Anderson to Utah State, then came to Arkansas last year)
It’s even happened with two former Hog quarterbacks: the late Ryan Mallett and Jacolby Criswell, who has since committed the rare double boomerang, bouncing back between Arkansas and North Carolina on two separate occasions.
If any former quarterback knows that you can always return from where you came from, it’s UCF football coach Scott Frost.
Frost, the master of not burning bridges, has pulled a boomerang twice over the course of the last few decades.
Like Archer, he grew up in a one-program state bleeding red. Except for Frost, it was spending his childhood in Wood River, Nebraska, which is just farther from Lincoln than Greenwood is from Fayetteville. He fell in love with the Nebraska football program. “I basically grew up on this campus when my mom was a track and field coach here and I was running around, getting into trouble and getting run over on the Devaney Center track,” Frost said in 2020.
The 50-year-old Frost, like Archer, chose to leave the state coming out of high school, however. At that point, the legendary Tom Osborne hadn’t yet won any national titles and Frost wanted to learn under Stanford coach Bill Walsh, one of the game’s greatest minds and architect of the west coach offense which fueled the San Francisco 49ers’ NFL dynasty in the 1980s.
Instead of getting turned into the next Joe Montana upon his arrival in Palo Alto, Frost started logging snaps at safety. So he packed up his bags after two seasons and transferred back home to play for Nebraska, where he led the Cornhuskers to a share of the national championship as a senior.
Scott Frost, Kane Archer Share a Lot
Frost and Archer both know what it’s like to have your beloved home state program sour on you to an extent, too.
Frost, now in his second stint as UCF football head coach, coached the Golden Knights to a 13-0 season and a national championship according to only two sources of note – the school itself and the Colley Matrix.
He parlayed that into a yet another return to Lincoln, but things didn’t go as planned with the native son in charge. Instead, in three seasons, Frost suffered a 5–22 record in games decided by eight points or less, and an 0–14 record against ranked opponents before getting the axe three games into his fifth year.
He returned to Orlando in December, to take over for Gus Malzahn, another Arkansas native.
The UCF program hasn’t had the greatest of luck with imports from this state – as you can see in the below shots at Malzahn, KJ Jefferson and Terry Mohajir, the former A-State athletic director – but the hope is fourth time’s a charm.

Certainly, Archer has also gone through some humbling experiences. Despite his elite performances, the standout quarterback has continued to drop in the national recruiting rankings. Once considered a high four-star prospect by multiple services, Archer is now a consensus three-star and is not nationally ranked by any outlet. He likely didn’t hear from Bobby Petrino as much as he would have liked since the Hogs’ OC instead went with class of 2026 quarterback Jayvon Gilmore.
Gilmore is 6-foot-6 and Petrino likes those taller quarterbacks. Archer is listed at 6’1” but may be a bit shorter than that. Once it became clear that Archer wasn’t Arkansas’ priority any more, a few fans cooled on the former golden child too.
For now, Archer doesn’t have to worry about any of that. He can get on with the business at hand of having an all-time senior season. That must be a relief.
Frost didn’t return to Orlando to take over at UCF until December, but it only took a few months for him to make a deep impression on Archer.
“Coach Frost is one of the realest people I’ve ever met,” Archer told UCFSports.com. “He’s very straightforward and will tell you the truth whether you like it or not.”
Maybe, one day in the far future, that will entail a conversation that ultimately leads to Archer returning home. Frost would definitely be a coach who could empathize on that front.
But Frost knows something else: how it feels to have a renowned offensive genius cool on you. For him, that was Bill Walsh. For Archer, it’s Bobby Petrino.
The disappointment which led to Frost to leave Stanford opened the door to a college career that became the envy of most every other quarterback. Time will tell if Archer leaving his home state leads to the same.
“I want to be labeled as the greatest to ever come out of Arkansas,” he told the Hawg Talk Podcast. “I’m going to keep working until I get there. I don’t care what it takes.”
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Archer’s View on NIL Aligns with Pittman
During that interview with the Hawg Talk Podcast, Kane Archer gave an answer to a particular question on NIL in college football that seemed to perfectly align with the philosophy of Arkansas football coach Sam Pittman.
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See Archer’s full interview here:
Michael Main contributed to this story.
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See our latest here:
More coverage of Arkansas football, Kane Archer and UCF football from BoAS…
NIL
Martin Named First Team All-Region by ABCA/Rawlings
MANHATTAN, Kan. – Kansas State junior Maximus Martin received First Team All-Central Region recognition Tuesday, as the American Baseball Coaches Association revealed the 2025 ABCA/Rawlings All-Region teams. Martin is one of seven players from the Big 12 Conference named to the All-Central Region First Team, a region compiled of 37 schools. First Team All-Region […]

Martin is one of seven players from the Big 12 Conference named to the All-Central Region First Team, a region compiled of 37 schools. First Team All-Region selections are eligible for ABCA/Rawlings All-America honors, which will be announced Friday, June 13 prior to the start of the 2025 NCAA Division I College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska.
A native of Edgewater Park, New Jersey, Martin is the fifth player in the Pete Hughes era to garner All-Region honors, joining MLB Draft picks Zach Kokoska (2021) and Tyson Neighbors (2023), and first-rounders Jordan Wicks (2021) and Kaelen Culpepper (2024).
In his first season at K-State, the Second Team All-Big 12 selection produced a slash line of .320/.420/.612, compiling 18 doubles and 14 home runs – tied fourth in the single-season records. Martin was one of the league’s top offensive performers, finishing the regular-season in the top-10 in three categories.
Martin, who garnered both Big 12 Player and Newcomer of the Week honors, turned in a team-leading 18 games with two or more hits, while he was second with 15 multi-RBI games.
On March 10, he became the first Wildcat in school history to be named the Golden Spikes Player of the Week after he registered incredible 2.714 OPS with five home runs and 12 RBI in the Wildcats series sweep of William & Mary.
K-State ended its 2025 campaign with a 32-26 overall record, including a record-breaking 17 conference wins to earn its second straight trip to the NCAA Tournament.
NIL
Logan Storley believes NIL money could affect how many collegiate wrestlers go to MMA
One of the early shifts in mixed martial arts came when dominant American wrestlers entered the game, nullifying strikers and often being able to smother jiu jitsu specialists with their size, strength and dominant top games. Former interim Bellator welterweight champion and current PFL contender Logan Storley believes MMA’s future will see far fewer wrestlers […]

One of the early shifts in mixed martial arts came when dominant American wrestlers entered the game, nullifying strikers and often being able to smother jiu jitsu specialists with their size, strength and dominant top games. Former interim Bellator welterweight champion and current PFL contender Logan Storley believes MMA’s future will see far fewer wrestlers make the transition to the sport thanks to name, image and likeness (NIL) deals at the collegiate level.
The ability of college athletes to make significant money through NIL deals has caused a massive shift in how sports operate at the university level. While splashy deals around “revenue sports” such as basketball and football, oft-overlooked sports have seen an influx of cash for athletes.
Take, for example, NiJaree Canady, the softball player who transferred to Texas Tech and signed a $1 million NIL deal (she just signed a second such deal for next season). Texas Tech made the investment into their program and it paid off with a run to the finals of the Women’s College World Series.
With programs expanding their push for championships to “non-revenue sports” through NILs for elite athletes, Storley — himself a four-time NCAA Division I All-American for the Minnesota Golden Gophers — thinks college careers could be enough for wrestlers to avoid moving to a high-risk career in MMA.
“Right now we’re in a weird time with MMA with NIL money coming in and we’re not seeing as many wrestlers come over,” Storley told MMA Fighting. “NIL has changed a lot. Guys are getting paid a lot of money. So we haven’t seen a ton of wrestlers come over. … Some of these guys are making a million, $1.5 million-with your top recruits, do you come fight after that?”
UFC Pound-for-Pound Fighter Rankings: Merab Dvalishvili closing in on top spot; Kayla Harrison moves up
Brian Campbell
MMA has never been a guaranteed path to financial security, even if you prove to be a very good fighter, and that has not changed in the current landscape.
Building yourself up on the regional scene to get experience means small purses while also paying to train, and the better the training, the higher the cost.
With the UFC as the end goal for most fighters, with the most prestige and the highest potential pay, most fighters now come into the UFC through competing on Dana White’s Contender Series (DWCS). Impress enough on DWCS and you’ll be offered a UFC contract which pays $10,000 to fight, with a $10,000 win bonus. Assuming three fights per year, all victories, that’s $60,000 annually. And that’s before taxes, fees paid to managers and coaches, specialized diets, basic training costs and gear. Oh and then whatever is left you get to live off of.
Two-time former GLORY light heavyweight kickboxing champion Artem Vakhitov split a pair of kickboxing fights with former UFC middleweight and light heavyweight champion Alex Pereira and earned a contract on DWCS with the hopes of meeting Pereira in a big-money UFC clash in the near future.
Vakhitov then walked away from the UFC contract when UFC officials were not willing to budge on their entry-level contracts, even for a fighter with a built in rivalry with one of their biggest fighters that could be used to sell tickets and pay-per-views.
Secondary promotions have also continued to fall under the UFC’s dominance. Pride, EliteXC, Strikeforce, Bellator, and so on, have all folded over the years, with just PFL and ONE standing as potentially valid places for a top athlete to ply their trade outside of the UFC’s Octagon. And PFL purchased Bellator before not using many of the top athletes that came with the deal, releasing many of them with one, or even zero, PFL fights.
“I think the landscape of MMA has changed,” Storley, who fights in the 2025 PFL welterweight tournament semifinals on Thursday, said. “With Contender Series and less guys on the roster with PFL, Bellator’s gone, it’s changed a little bit. Wrestling has some money, and there’s no security in your early career in MMA. That’s just the truth of it. The first few years are very, very tough, and I think with guys making money over there and going into coaching and coaching roles, you have a little more security.”
NIL
UW Athletics shifts NIL responsibilities to in-house Dawgs Unleashed
Montlake Futures, UW’s official third-party NIL collective, will begin relinquishing its responsibilities to Dawgs Unleashed, UW’s internal NIL division, following the House settlement. (From @anyamashita) https://t.co/XYH1e9ZITV — Seattle Times Sports (@SeaTimesSports) June 9, 2025 The ironic twist to the House v. NCAA settlement agreement is now, starting on July 1, everything Name, Image, and Likeness related […]

The ironic twist to the House v. NCAA settlement agreement is now, starting on July 1, everything Name, Image, and Likeness related when it comes to athletics, will be in-house for the University of Washington.
Through Dawgs Unleashed — founded in October 2024 to serve as UW’s internal NIL operations — will now be the go-to for fans and the university alike when it comes to contributing to the ever-evolving arms race in the world of intercollegiate athletics — most of which is centered around the cash cow that is college football.
According to the Seattle Times, who spoke with Montlake Futures’ executive director Andrew Minear — the previous official third-party collective used by UW student-athletes since NIL came into existence legitimately in July 2021 — on Monday, there is a changing of the guard for the better.
“We feel pretty good about what we did. We’re just going to continue to encourage our donors and fans to love Husky athletics and support them the best they can so we can continue to be dominant in all of our sports,” Minear told Andy Yamashita.
With the school moving its NIL operations in-house it will allow athletes to use UW branded merchandise and smoothen out other red-tape factors that Montlake Futures and other NIL entities didn’t have the ability or capacity to facilitate, especially with a reported $20.5 million figure floated for each athletic department to allocate throughout football, men’s and women’s basketball and other sports programs.
Joe Kelly, who previously served as the head of major gifts for UW, is leading the charge for Dawgs Unleashed, which should also help assist major companies create NIL partnerships with athletes who dawn purple and gold, with Amazon, Alaska Airlines, Boeing, Costco and dozens of other major businesses within the city that could separate the Huskies from most other college football programs that don’t have a major metropolitan city near campus.
As part of the House v. NCAA $2.8 billion settlement reached last week, previously agreed to deals through entities like Montlake Futures, won’t be subject to the same scrutiny as new deals signed after July 1, which was a significant factor for many spring and winter portal transfers to frontload deals with agents knowing the settlement was expected to come before the start of the 2025 season
NIL
Men’s College Basketball Adds Challenge, but No Quarters—Yet
Men’s College Basketball Adds Challenge, but No Quarters—Yet Privacy Manager Link 0

NIL
2025 College World Series Predictions & Preview With Chris Lemonis
Image credit: (Photo by Eric Francis/Getty Images) On this week’s College Baseball Podcast, Baseball America college writers Jacob Rudner and Peter Flaherty are joined by 2021 national champion head coach Chris Lemonis to break down super regional action, preview the College World Series and make predictions for a national champion. Time Stamps (0:35) Super regional […]

Image credit:
(Photo by Eric Francis/Getty Images)
On this week’s College Baseball Podcast, Baseball America college writers Jacob Rudner and Peter Flaherty are joined by 2021 national champion head coach Chris Lemonis to break down super regional action, preview the College World Series and make predictions for a national champion.
Time Stamps
- (0:35) Super regional review with Chris Lemonis
- (7:15) College World Series preview with Chris Lemonis
- (15:30) Scouting top draft prospects
- (24:24) The impact of NIL and portal
- (28:25) Are college exit velos out of control?
- (32:00) Chris Lemonis’ pick to win it all
- (33:00) Coastal vs. Arizona
- (34:33) Oregon State vs. Louisville
- (37:38) UCLA vs. Murray State
- (39:43) LSU vs. Arkansas
- (41:13) Flaherty and Rudner make picks to win it all
- (42:28) Picks to Click
- (47:50) Final thoughts
Want more podcasts like this one? Subscribe below!
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NIL
Patty Gasso would like to see Women’s College World Series format change
Patty Gasso and her Oklahoma Sooners softball team have become as much a fixture at the Women’s College World Series in recent years as the singing of the national anthem. They don’t always win it all, however, carting home the championship trophy in seven of the last 11 seasons is pretty darn close to it, […]

Patty Gasso and her Oklahoma Sooners softball team have become as much a fixture at the Women’s College World Series in recent years as the singing of the national anthem.
They don’t always win it all, however, carting home the championship trophy in seven of the last 11 seasons is pretty darn close to it, and the Sooners were the national runner-up in one of the other seasons. Moreover, Oklahoma has made it to the Women’s College World Series in 13 of the last 14 seasons.
Suffice it to say that when Gasso, the winningest active head coach in NCAA Division I softball, has something to say, people listen. Or at least they should.
The Oklahoma head coach of 31 years had something to say at this year’s WCWS about the current format and that she’d like to see a change implemented.
Gasso would like to see the “if necessary” doubleheader game eliminated when teams reach the national semifinal stage of the tournament.
Oklahoma lost to eventual national runner-up Texas Tech in the national semifinals this year and was eliminated from championship contention, but had the Sooners won that game, the current rules call for a second game to immediately follow the same day to determine which team advances to the championship series.
The Sooners did not have to play the “if necessary” WCWS doubleheader elimination game this year, but they have had to go through that tenuous and exhausting process several times in recent seasons.
“Can I go on a soapbox for one second, please, everyone?” Gasso said to reporters during the postgame press conference following the WCWS loss to Texas Tech. “Because I’m old, I don’t care what anyone thinks anymore,” she quipped.
“I’ve been in this tournament enough, and there’s one thing that has to change, and I’ve got to say it out loud, and I hope to committee is going to look at this. If we are all about women’s athletics and women’s sports and rah, rah, do not make us play doubleheaders to get to a national championship series. Don’t do that. It should not happen.”
If the winner-take-all game is necessary, she said, come back the next day and play it. Don’t put both teams into a bind where they’re not at their best for such an important game.
To say that’s the way it’s always been isn’t the best excuse, Gasso said.
Oklahoma has had to play three such doubleheader games in the last five seasons the WCWS has been held. In 2019, the Sooners had to defeat Alabama in a second game the same day after losing the first game 1-0. Two years later, OU lost in the opening round to Cinderella James Madison and had to beat them twice the same day, a couple of days later, to move on to the championship series.
And in 2022, the Sooners had to play the second game in a doubleheader against UCLA after falling in the first game in the semifinal round and forcing a winner-take-all second game.
Oklahoma survived all three times and went on to win the national championship, but Gasso feels strongly that it shouldn’t have to be that way.
“Please, let’s try to change that even if it’s going to cost a little bit of extra money,” the Sooner head coach concluded. “These athletes deserve it. And thank you very much.”
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