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Jacksonville Sharks and Action Sports Jax 24/7 Network unveil 2025 partnership
The Sharks will also be featured weekly on the daily Brent & Austen Show on the Action Sports Jax 24/7 Network. The show is hosted by Brent Martineau and former Jags player and current UFC fighter Austen Lane.Advertisement >>> STREAM ACTION SPORTS JAX 24/7 LIVE <<< Shark Bites is the Sharks’ weekly coaches show originating […]

The Sharks will also be featured weekly on the daily Brent & Austen Show on the Action Sports Jax 24/7 Network. The show is hosted by Brent Martineau and former Jags player and current UFC fighter Austen Lane.Advertisement
>>> STREAM ACTION SPORTS JAX 24/7 LIVE <<<
Shark Bites is the Sharks’ weekly coaches show originating from Island Wing and it will be seen on the Action Sports Jax 24/7 Network platforms on Fridays and Saturdays for football fans. The first home game airing on Jacksonville’s only 24/7 sports network will be on April 6 when the Sharks host the Vegas Knight Hawks at 6:05 pm.The network can be found at www.actionsportsjax.com and the Action News Jax app, or you can bring the games and entire network to the big screen using the Action News Jax NOW app on Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, Samsung Smart TVs, and Google TV.
The network can be found at www.actionsportsjax.com and the Action News Jax app, or you can bring the games and entire network to the big screen using the Action News Jax NOW app on Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, Samsung Smart TVs, and Google TV.
It’s the biggest sports show on social media in Jacksonville and has grown to new platforms with the birth of the new Action Sports Jax 24/7 Network.Advertisement“We’re proud to bring the excitement of Jacksonville Sharks football to loyal fans,” Omesh Somaru, VP and General Manager of WFOX-TV and WJAX-TV said in the release. “When we launched Action Sports Jax 24/7 Network a year ago, these are the types of partnerships we were hoping to form and the kinds of programming we wanted to provide our viewers.”
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High school football will never be the same in era of transfers, NIL money
When Charles Dickens began his 1859 novel “A Tale of Two Cities” with the legendary line, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” who knew that it would aptly describe the state of amateur football in 2025? From college athletics to high school athletics, if you’re a parent, coach, athlete […]

When Charles Dickens began his 1859 novel “A Tale of Two Cities” with the legendary line, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times,” who knew that it would aptly describe the state of amateur football in 2025?
From college athletics to high school athletics, if you’re a parent, coach, athlete or fan, you have plenty of stories to tell. Take notes, because there’s so much material you’ll be able to write a book, launch a podcast or participate in court cases still to be decided.
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“It’s all crazy,” said future Hall of Fame football coach Matt Logan of Corona Centennial.
Football isn’t in a crisis but it is in a black hole with stakeholders seeking an escape path.
With final rules still not adopted in how name, image and likeness is supposed to work and college programs not only paying their own athletes but high school recruits, too, everyone is adjusting on the fly. Parents trying to navigate the changes are hiring agents, who are showing up to high school camps trying to find clients. There’s the college transfer portal and something similar in high school that saw more than 17,000 students switch schools in California last year.
Until NIL rules are figured out, it’s roll your eyes and don’t be surprised at anything.
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Read more: High school football transfers tracker: Which top players are switching schools?
Some elite high school players have been reclassifying their graduation years to take advantage of money opportunities. And that’s after parents held them back entering high school to be bigger, stronger and faster as a 16-year-old freshman.
It’s all legal and even logical but the changing landscape is riddled with pros and cons and bad actors.
One big concern in high school sports is that parents might be too focused on scholarships for their kids and earning NIL money while forgetting the real reason people play sports — for the love of the game.
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“For me, the whole value in sports has been degenerated,” Logan said. “You don’t play sports to get a scholarship. You play to learn how to lead, how to take orders, how to be a good teammate, how to work together. This could be the only chance to have fun, play with their friends, have a great experience.”
There have been football scandals in recent years — twice at Narbonne High, which had City Section championships taken away in 2019 and 2024 for using ineligible players. Now the football community is focused on what the Southern Section intends to do this fall about Bishop Montgomery, which supposedly has numerous transfer students (some from Narbonne) and is so confident the players will be declared eligible that a trip to Hawaii and a nonleague game against powerful Mater Dei have been scheduled.
Every week, coaches have to decide how to deal with players and parents who have little patience and many options. It’s a balancing act, and for the elite of the elite, coaches can’t even count on juniors returning as seniors because of opportunities to skip ahead to college.
“I understand why they are doing it. They have my full support,” said Sierra Canyon coach Jon Ellinghouse, who’s losing star defensive lineman Richard Wesley to Oregon a year early after he reclassified to the class of 2026.
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Ellinghouse is embracing the idea his job is to “put them into positions to have life-changing opportunities.”
There are many different paths to success and failure. Remember how LaVar Ball didn’t care that his youngest son, LaMelo, was 13 years old playing summer basketball as a freshman for Chino Hills. He threw him in against older players and the rest is history. He averaged 25.2 points this season for the Charlotte Hornets as a 23-year-old in his fifth NBA season.
There are others who were 19-year-old seniors in high school, stopped developing, kept switching schools and will probably blame their coaches for not making the pros when the truth is it’s difficult to become a professional athlete.
It is the best of times with all kinds of money to be given out for being a good athlete. It is the worst of times because many of the treasured lessons from playing amateur sports no longer receive priority treatment. What happened to the importance of getting a college degree?
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It will take someone with magical ideas to return a balance to the amateur sports world.
Sign up for the L.A. Times SoCal high school sports newsletter to get scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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Oklahoma’s Brent Venables, Auburn’s Hugh Freeze among coaches who can significantly boost ranking in 2025
We here at CBS Sports recently released our ranking of all 68 coaches at the Power Four level, from 68 all the way down to No. 1. Naturally, the top 25 — and especially the top 10 — tends to dominate conversation and consternation among fans that believe their coach is too low, or another […]

We here at CBS Sports recently released our ranking of all 68 coaches at the Power Four level, from 68 all the way down to No. 1. Naturally, the top 25 — and especially the top 10 — tends to dominate conversation and consternation among fans that believe their coach is too low, or another team’s coach is too high.
But for those that like to look beyond, it’s a fascinating exercise to debate which coaches will move the most between this year’s rankings and the 2026 crop. Every year, plenty of coaches make a rapid ascent or take a precipitous fall in these rankings, based largely on performance in the season prior.
For instance, Colorado’s Deion Sanders leapt a whopping 28 spots from No. 61 all the way to No. 33 after winning nine regular season games with the Buffaloes last season. Then there’s Arizona State’s Kenny Dillingham, who jumped 46 spots to No. 18 after guiding the Sun Devils to a Big 12 title.
Ranking the top 25 Power Four college football coaches entering the 2025 season
Tom Fornelli

So, in light of the rankings release, it felt appropriate to take a look at the Power Four coaches that can boost their stock the most during the 2025 season.
2024 rank: 36 | 2025 rank: 23
Bielema bounced back from a disappointing 2023 to deliver Illinois its first 10-win campaign in 23 years last season. The Fighting Illini return a litany of key players from that squad and, as such, have real College Football Playoff upside entering the 2025 campaign. Quarterback Luke Altmyer is back as one of the Big Ten’s best signal callers, though Illinois has to overhaul its wide receiver room this offseason. The defense is anchored by standouts like edge rusher Gabe Jacas, a potential first-round pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, and defensive back Miles Scott. Illinois also has a very manageable schedule — it only plays two teams that finished 2024 with a winning record in conference play — that lends itself to at least 10 wins, which might just be sufficient for an at-large College Football Playoff bid.
2024 rank: 67 | 2025 rank: 46
Brown blew all reasonable expectations out of the water in his first season at Syracuse. The rookie head coach led the Orange to their first 10-win season since 2018, and just their third 10-win campaign since the turn of the century, while beating three ranked teams along the way. Now all eyes are on what Brown’s Syracuse does an encore. Gone are quarterback Kyle McCord, who was selected in the sixth round of the 2025 NFL Draft, and leading receivers Jackson Meeks (NFL) and Trebor Pena (transferred to Penn State). Syracuse will turn to either LSU transfer Rickie Collins or Notre Dame transfer Steve Angeli to take over at quarterback. The Orange definitely have major questions, but Brown’s upside as a coach is undeniable.
2025 college football coach rankings: Deion Sanders, Bill Belichick headline Power Four coaches ranked 68-26
Tom Fornelli

Hugh Freeze, Auburn
2024 rank: 33 | 2025 rank: 47
Freeze almost has to move up, right? Not that it’s a guarantee, but more in the sense that, if the Tigers don’t see some serious improvement, Freeze could be on the way out. As the rankings indicate, he’s certainly been trending in the wrong direction. Going back to his last season at Ole Miss, he’s 7-17 in SEC games. Auburn missed out on a bowl last season after barely making it to the postseason in Freeze’s debut year on The Plains. He’s done a good job upgrading Auburn’s talent level, and he may have found the answer at quarterback in former five-star prospect and Oklahoma transfer Jackson Arnold. Arnold has plenty of weapons to throw it to, an experienced offensive line to play behind and a defense across the ball that should keep opposing scores low. The pieces are there for Freeze to have a respectable year. He just has to deliver.
2024 rank: 54 | 2025 rank: 30
It hasn’t taken too long for Key to pick up the pieces left by former Georgia Tech coach Geoff Collins. Last season, the Yellow Jackets opened the year by downing a top-10 Florida State team (though that win aged like milk), crushed No. 4 Miami’s CFP hopes in November and then took Georgia to eight overtimes in the regular season finale after taking a lead deep into the fourth quarter. The Yellow Jackets have 14 wins over the past two seasons and have finished no worse than fourth in the ACC. They bring back veteran quarterback Haynes King and one of the nation’s best running backs in Jamal Haynes. Tech could shake the ACC up in 2025, and Key may make his way into the vaunted top-25 of our coach rankings.
CBS Sports coach rankings: Numbers reveal conference biases, polarizing names and our 2025 Hater of the Year
Tom Fornelli

2024 rank: 44 | 2025 rank: 48
Few preseason darlings have generated as much buzz as Texas Tech. Landing the No. 2 class in 247Sports’ Team Transfer Rankings, with more four-star transfers signed than any other program, probably has something to do with it. It’s clear that the Red Raiders are all-in on the NIL era of college athletics. Now they’re primed to take advantage of a perennially wide-open Big 12 race. Winning the conference and qualifying for the playoff could mean McGuire takes a Dillingham-esque ascent in next year’s coach rankings.
Sherrone Moore, Michigan
2024 rank: 52 | 2025 rank: 58
Michigan’s 2024 season was a lot better than the 8-5 record may indicate. The Wolverines beat a top-15 USC team and closed the year with wins against Ohio State (the eventual national champs) and Alabama. Three of those five losses came against College Football Playoff teams. Of course, Jim Harbaugh reset the expectations at Michigan, but realistic minds knew that the Wolverines would take some step back in 2024 given what they lost off of their national title-winning squad. Now Moore has two hand-picked quarterbacks in Fresno State transfer Mikey Keene and five-star freshman Bryce Underwood, the No. 1 prospect in the class of 2025. It seems like a question of when, and not if, Underwood takes over Michigan’s offense. If he lives up to the hype, the Wolverines could push for the Big Ten once again.
Brent Venables, Oklahoma
2024 rank: 34 | 2025 rank: 52
Venables’ Sooners did not take the SEC transition well. Sure, they pulled off a gigantic upset against Alabama, but they were outscored by an average of 15 points in their other four games against ranked conference opponents and then capped the whole campaign with a loss against Navy in the Armed Forces Bowl. So, in an effort to ensure Oklahoma doesn’t fall too far behind, Venables made sweeping changes in the offseason. He’ll handle defensive play-calling duties while handing the offensive coordinator role to Ben Arbuckle, who engineered some of the nation’s most effective passing offenses at Western Kentucky and Washington State. Arbuckle’s Wazzu QB, John Mateer, followed him to Norman. Oklahoma also signed five wide receiver transfers to bolster a position decimated by injuries and portal departures. As long as the offensive line takes a big leap, the rest of Oklahoma’s offense should follow, and that would mean improvement for the Sooners.
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Vanderbilt will play Ole Miss for SEC Tournament Championship
The SEC Tournament in Hoover doesn’t get the same buzz as the SEC Tournament in Nashville but it often still delivers the hits. The best week in college baseball will come to an end at the Hoover Met on Sunday. We will get an unexpected champion. No. 4 seed Vanderbilt will face No. 7 seed […]

The SEC Tournament in Hoover doesn’t get the same buzz as the SEC Tournament in Nashville but it often still delivers the hits. The best week in college baseball will come to an end at the Hoover Met on Sunday. We will get an unexpected champion.
No. 4 seed Vanderbilt will face No. 7 seed Ole Miss for the conference crown on Sunday afternoon. Let’s ride.
After completing a sweep of Kentucky in their home finale in Nashville, Vanderbilt beat Oklahoma 6-1 to move to the semifinals and crushed archrival Tennessee (10-0) by run rule on Saturday to move to the championship game. Tim Corbin appears to have another national title contender on the West End. Vandy will play for the program’s third conference title in the last six years (removing the COVID-19 season) on Sunday. Corbin has an argument for having the best program in the SEC for the last decade.
Mike Bianco also may have an argument.
After finishing 16-14 in SEC play, Ole Miss earned the No. 7 seed in the SEC Tournament and has quickly marched to the championship round. The Rebels beat Florida 3-1 on Wednesday to advance to the quarterfinals. Ole Miss then upset No. 2 seed Arkansas before knocking off No. 3 seed LSU. Ole Miss has gotten excellent pitching all weekend as this team has given up only three runs through three games. The Rebs will attempt to keep it rolling on Sunday as this program looks to capture its third SEC Tournament crown.
Mike Elko and Tim Corbin each own national championship rings. Now the two legendary head coaches will go head-to-head for an SEC title on Sunday in Hoover. The college baseball postseason remains undefeated. Let’s crown a champion before moving to the selection show on Sunday where Kentucky is expected to be very much on the bubble.
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Field Of 64 Predictions, How To Watch
The Men’s College World Series is here! The NCAA selection show is Monday morning at 9 a.m. PT. How to watch and predictions for the field of 64 reveal the No. 4 Oregon Ducks (42-14) as potential hosts of a regional, despite being upset by the Nebraska Cornhuskers in the Big Ten baseball tournament. Many […]

The Men’s College World Series is here! The NCAA selection show is Monday morning at 9 a.m. PT. How to watch and predictions for the field of 64 reveal the No. 4 Oregon Ducks (42-14) as potential hosts of a regional, despite being upset by the Nebraska Cornhuskers in the Big Ten baseball tournament.
Many conference champions will be crowned on Sunday, so expect more changes but as of now, Oregon has dropped from No. 12 to No. 18 in the RPI following a 1-1 week in Omaha.
The tournament bracket will be announced during the selection show at 9 a.m. PT on Monday, May 26 on ESPN2 or ESPNU.
Top-seeded Oregon had its 11-game winning streak snapped in the final game of pool play, losing to Nebraska 7-3 on Saturday morning. Nebraska was the No. 8 seed in the conference tournament, and the Cornhuskers advanced to face the Ducks after a walk-off win in extra innings over the Michigan State Spartans.
Originally scheduled for Friday night, the game between Oregon and Nebraska was postponed due to inclement weather.
D1Baseball revealed new projections after play on Saturday. The good news is, the Ducks were predicted to host a regional at PK Park in Eugene, with Arizona, Virginia and Fresno State as opponents. Oregon is a predicted No. 8 national seed.
Mark your calendars! Here is the 2025 NCAA DI baseball tournament schedule:
Selection show: Monday, May 26 at 9 a.m. PT on ESPN2 or ESPNU
Regionals: Friday-Monday, May 30-June 2
Super Regionals: Friday-Monday, June 6-9
First day of MCWS games: Starts Friday, June 13
MCWS finals: Saturday – Sunday/Monday, June 21-22/23
MORE: Why New College Football Playoff Seeding Format Bothers Oregon Ducks Fans
MORE: Miami Hurricanes’ NIL For 5-Star Recruit Jackson Cantwell Under Fire By College Football Analyst
MORE: Cleveland Browns To Trade Quarterback: Dillon Gabriel, Shedeur Sanders, Joe Flacco?
Led by coach Mark Wasikowski, the Ducks were the No. 1 seed in the Big Ten Tournament after winning a share of the conference’s regular season title. Wasikowski was also named the Big Ten Coach of the Year, but the Ducks are looking to add some more hardware to the trophy case.
After the early loss in the Big Ten Tournament, Wasikowski took much of the blame.
“Well obviously I didn’t do a good enough job of getting them reset and ready to go for today,” Coach Wasikowski said May 24. “One team showed up and they were ready to play and one team showed up and didn’t look as ready to play as the other team and that was us. That’s on me.”
The Ducks will need to bounce back after an uncharacteristic loss to the Cornhuskers for a chance to get back to Omaha. Oregon fell behind early on Saturday morning vs. Nebraska and struggled to produce offense against Nebraska’s pitching. Nebraska scored two runs in the first and added an unearned run in the second inning to take a 3-0 lead. Oregon committed a season-high four errors, three coming in the first five innings with two leading to runs.
Here is D1Baseball’s projected field of 64 on May 24.
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Former Georgia QB raises red flags over Carson Beck’s maturity
In the offseason, Miami made one of the biggest moves in college football by securing former Georgia quarterback Carson Beck for a reported $4 million NIL deal. Beck, a Jacksonville native and former four-star recruit, brings a ton of experience to the Hurricanes as they aim to build upon their 10-3 season. Beck’s decision to […]

In the offseason, Miami made one of the biggest moves in college football by securing former Georgia quarterback Carson Beck for a reported $4 million NIL deal. Beck, a Jacksonville native and former four-star recruit, brings a ton of experience to the Hurricanes as they aim to build upon their 10-3 season.
Beck’s decision to transfer to Miami came after a notable tenure at Georgia, where he compiled a 24–3 record as a starter and threw for 7,912 yards and 58 touchdowns over his career. His 2024 season was cut short due to a UCL injury sustained during the SEC Championship game, leading him to reconsider his initial declaration for the NFL Draft and instead opt for another season to help his draft stock. The overall feeling around Beck was that while he had his good moments, there were too many question marks — 12 interceptions last season — for him to go to the NFL.
While Beck is looking to follow the path of No. 1 overall pick, and former one-year Miami transfer QB Cam Ward in 2025, concerns have been raised regarding his maturity and off-field conduct. Former Georgia quarterback Aaron Murray highlighted potential red flags in an interview with On3’s The Hard Count. He cited instances of locker room disconnect and distractions stemming from social media activity and personal relationships. Murray emphasized the importance of focus and leadership from the QB, especially given Beck’s role as a high-profile transfer and the expectations coming from a substantial NIL deal.
Beck was involved in public breakup and also had cars stolen from his home in the spring. Murray’s concerns are valid but as the summer passes, the stories around Beck will become more football-related and the outside noise should fade.
Despite the off-field discussions, Beck has shown promising signs in his recovery from injury. Reports indicate that he has resumed throwing and is actively participating in team activities. Miami appears to be well-positioned for a run at an ACC Championship and a potential College Football Playoff berth.
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Sports Business
The headline on CBS Sports website told a depressing story, one that poisons our love of collegiate athletics — “Women’s College World Series 2025: Texas Tech’s historic NIL investment leads to program’s first appearance.” The subhead is even worse. “NiJaree Canady became the first softball player to net a $1 million NIL deal; now, she’s […]

The headline on CBS Sports website told a depressing story, one that poisons our love of collegiate athletics — “Women’s College World Series 2025: Texas Tech’s historic NIL investment leads to program’s first appearance.” The subhead is even worse. “NiJaree Canady became the first softball player to net a $1 million NIL deal; now, she’s leading the Red Raiders to history.”
Like most of you I hate the “Wild West” we have been relegated to until the adults in the room – athletic directors, commissioners, lawyers, judges and politicians – can agree to set fence lines with the student-athletes. And the longer it takes to get ‘em strung, the more fans collegiate athletics will lose.
These kinds of stories, while true, make me angry because they are dominating the narrative of collegiate athletics. But can two things be true at the same time?
I’ve devoted the better part of my life to college athletics and frankly, the same way you’ve considered giving up your season tickets, I’ve considered pulling the plug on this old keyboard. But that was before I walked into the Friday post-game press conference, where the losing team was understandably emotional after the loss.
But it was as if someone attached me to the business end of a defibrillator as my heart started to beat for college athletics again.
On the same day we saw how money ball can change the destiny of a program with the hiring of a coach and a generational arm talent, FSU catcher Micheala Edenfield and head coach Lonni Alameda’s five-minute post-game conversation reminded us of what we have loved about college athletics, and what makes it so fundamentally different from professional sports.
The patient may be on life support, but as you listened to the interaction between Edenfield, herself an NIL recipient, and Alameda, who is battling cancer, you feel hearts beating, theirs and yours.
“While I was catching, I was looking around, trying to soak in all my surroundings at the Plex, trying to recognize the changes that happened during my time here, the new scoreboard, the speaker system, the plaque with all the All-American pieces behind home plate, taking a look at my family and really soaking that part in,” Edenfield said. “I really couldn’t have asked for anything more than for the team to be present on defense at that point.”
Down 2-0 in the top of the final inning, with a runner on first and no outs, Edenfield came to the plate to face the “Million Dollar Arm” with a chance to extend the series to game three.
“I was still very, very, emotional. It was tough; the acceptance piece,” Edenfield recalled. “I think I was 0-2 and I was breathing some of the biggest breaths of my life. And I told myself the work has been done. You just have to trust it.”
She delivered a double. Runners on second and third. No outs. The crowd was on their feet as a base hit would tie the game against the dominating Canady.
Edenfield gave credit to the mentorship of her college coach for the peace she felt at the plate with her team’s season on the line.
“She told me this past week, ‘It has all been written. It’s just a matter of trusting our process and what that looks like. Control the ‘feelings’ part and come out with the facts,’ ” Edenfield said of the softball coach’s hardball life lesson.
Yes, there were questions about softball but it was the conversations in between those questions that remind us of why college sports, played by 17- to 22-year olds, is foundationally different than adult pro leagues.
“What did this team mean for you?” a reporter asked Alameda, who paused to gather herself before answering what was a question she answered from the heart.
“You talk about adversity,” she began, choking back tears. “It has definitely meant a lot. For me personally, it has been my rock (during cancer treatment). “(I) could come here for four or five hours and not have to think about what is going on.
“(The team) are so good about having love. ‘How you doing?’ Check in. And go from there. So it’s been cool, you know? It’s been part of my process — going every week — and now I’m going to have to call someone for that process to help me out. Yeah, it’s been a lot. It’s been emotional a lot. We’ll see how we move forward. I have a couple more infusions to go.”
Alameda had more to say about the life lessons they experienced together.
“It’s crazy. We talked about adversity in the beginning, not knowing this was going to happen,” she said. “We’ve had so many things hit us left, right and center, and we bounce back. I would just allude to what Michaela said, we’ve been a really tight group, so we’ve been able to handle any kind of adversity. And when I introduced the word adversity, I knew we would be travelling a lot, so the girls would be tired because we would be in a lot of different time zones. I had no idea Kennedy (Harp) would go down, we’d have a (campus) shooting, we would have cancer… I just had no idea all those other things would be coming, and they’ve handled it with great grace and pride and love and I’m just thankful for my situation in particular, too.”
The next question went to Edenfield who had been crying through Alameda’s answer.
“Oh God,” she said, between a sob and a laugh. “I can’t even look over (at Alameda).”
And then she spoke of what I believe is the reason collegiate athletics is so worth fighting for, and that is the personal development that occurs when a program does it right.
“She truly represents what she speaks of,” Edenfield said of her coach and life mentor. “You’ve got to think (about) 17- and 18-year-old girls deciding to commit to Florida State and you think about the word family. A lot of programs talk about family. I always said the reason I came to Florida State was because family was felt, not spoken. And it speaks volumes top down.”
Now looking directly at Coach Alameda, Edenfield said, “She would probably take the selfless route here, but this place would not be anywhere how it is without her. And I hope you know that.”
In athletics we talked about the collegiate years, from 17 to 22, being the most formative of a student-athlete’s life, where everyone in the building and in the community has an impact on the student-athlete, by their walk as much as their talk.
“I can’t tell you how many times life isn’t perfect and for someone to recognize that from a people perspective and from a softball perspective is so special here,” Edenfield said of Alameda, “because it’s about growing the game but it’s also about growing better people at the same time. I’ve just been so grateful for all five years I’ve spent here, not only to become a better softball player than I ever thought I would be but to leave here a better person, to leave here feeling I’m ready for the real world. For all the girls going through committing and deciding where to go, it speaks volumes when family is felt and not told.”
That short five-minute segment brought tears to my eyes and a smile to my face because it reminded me, and I suggest it should remind us all, that even though Edenfield received NIL compensation from FSU, she also earned a degree and it is abundantly clear she is grateful for the rich developmental experience, which again remains the essence of collegiate athletics even in this NIL era.
Not just women’s sports
I know what you are thinking, the cynic in you says FSU’s women’s programs are awesome and have always been about more than just money. And that may be a fair point as a stereotype. Yes, many women do express their feelings better than most men, including gratitude, but I have the benefit of being exposed to enough male athletes who are also earning degrees and are grateful for their collegiate experience, even if they don’t express it as eloquently as Edenfield.
In fact, FSU Athletics set a record for highest GPA on its football team and across all 18 sports, each of which averaged a 3.0 or better GPA. So obviously not every athlete is attending FSU just to collect their NIL paycheck.
Can we find just a little balance in the narrative we choose to write and talk about?
That CBS headline, while true, is one of many that are fueling a not-completely-accurate narrative that is eroding fan support for collegiate athletics. Those of us who love the game and can still see it’s redeeming value, need to balance the narrative by telling the tradional collegiate stories when we see them.
As I write this, the network ran a long, pre-game feature on FSU star pitcher Jamie Arnold who has raised over $11,000 thus far for a young fan, Bradley, who suffers from Cystic Fibrosis. Arnold is donating $25 per strikeout this season and encourages others to help his friend too.
For more information and to donate,
In the coming months I want do more old-school player features, which introduce players to readers in a way that could help to balance the narrative. What are their interests, college major, and life ambitions? Allow the readers to judge for themselves whether the player is appreciative of the opportunity he’s being afforded to develop as a person or playing strictly for the money.
Some thoughts after the game
Canady is the real deal as a pitcher and helped her own cause with a home run in a 3-0 win in game one and its fair to say the 2024 USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year award winner is also a good interview and ambassador for both Texas Tech and Women’s Collegiate Softball.
But, it’s also objective to note, she didn’t single handedly win the series without help from the Seminoles and her teammates.
Going into the game, you knew FSU’s pitching would have to hold Texas Tech to two earned runs or less per game, which they did. And, the defense would have to play characteristically good defense, which they did not with seven infield errors alone in the second game, which accounted for both unearned runs in the 2-1 loss. That was a surprise.
I think we all thought generating runs would be a challenge. But if FSU could barrel enough balls, you would expect the No. 12 seed to kick the ball around enough for FSU to score more than one run. FSU did barrel some but too frequently they were right at a TT defender who fielded their positions better than expected.
Tip of the cap to Tech; they were a more complete team than expected.
Was it just the million dollars?
Let’s be honest. Canady didn’t transfer from Stanford to Texas Tech for the academics. There are 210 schools ranked between Stanford at No. 4 and Tech at No. 214.
I squirmed when I read this ESPN quote about her decision. “I feel like people thought I heard the number and just came to Texas Tech, which wasn’t the case at all,” she told ESPN. “If I didn’t feel like Coach Glasco was an amazing coach and could lead this program to be where we thought it could be, I wouldn’t have come.”
Don’t miss the relevance of the second part of that quote as not only did Tech invest in an arm, in 2024 they invested in a sport with the hiring of Cary Glasco.
Glasco’s resume lends credence to the back half of that quote. He’s been successful at Georgia, Texas A&M, LSU and Louisiana, as well as at the professional level, so she did have reason to believe he could do what they just did, take TT to the Women’s College World Series.
Glasco has been a part of 12 NCAA Tournament appearances, six NCAA Super Regionals and three Women’s College World Series. Make that four. He also engineered three championships in the National Pro Fastpitch League, and a national championship at the 18U level in travel ball.
Obviously, the relevance of her quote is challenging. Programs with alumni bases with passion for a sport have always been able to invest in that sport by building eye-catching facilities, paying top dollar for coaches, and illegally paying players. Now it’s legal and out in the open.
How did Tech do it?
Do you recognize the name Cody Campbell? He’s the 39-year-old Texas Tech booster who formed the “Matador Club,” Texas Tech’s NIL collective.
A Google search on Campbell tells us his money comes from the sale of his oil company for $4.08 billion in cash and stock, and that he chairs TT’s board of regents.
You may remember when President Donald Trump wanted Nick Saban to co-chair a college athletics review committee? We’ll it was Campbell who was to be Saban’s co-chair. Yeah, that committee – the one Saban says there’s no reason for – and is now “on hold.”
Don’t sleep on programs like the Red Raiders or Lubbock for that matter. Love me some Buddy Holly, so I won’t hate on a town that counts two monuments to Holly among its top five attractions. Hard to believe that beautiful voice was silenced at 22.
Lubbock, a pretty-enough town of 267,000, is what I consider a Texas version of Tallahassee, only without the state Capital or the Gulf of Mexico or however we choose to identify with it. Let’s just say no one has ever woken up in either town wondering how they got there. You must try. Planes, trains and automobiles … and a burro just in case.
Lubbock is 381 miles from Dallas and 591 miles from Houston and there’s nothing but tumbleweeds, longhorn cattle and tiny towns like Spur and Muleshoe in between. Lubbock is 641 miles from Canady’s hometown of Topeka, Kansas, which could help explain her move as well as her friendship with KC Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes.
No, Lubbock is not Palo Alto, where within a short drive you can be watching the Giants in San Fran, the 49ers in San Jose, drive the Monterey Peninsula to Carmel, or spend a day at Half Moon Bay watching big wave surfers wrestle 60-footers at “Maverics.”
If you are going to invest $1 million in one player
More than in any other sport, a great softball pitcher can dominate a series like no other sport. And Canady is one of, if not the hardest throwers ever in the sport, consistently hitting mid-70s. Understand that in softball the pitching rubber is just 43 feet from the plate, where it is 60 feet away in baseball. A 75-mph softball gets to the plate as quick as a 115.5 mph baseball. The fastest pitch in MLB history is 105.8 mph.
While Seminole fans would have rather not have seen Canady, they did get to see one of the best to ever play the game.
“We’re talking about Bo Jackson. We’re talking about Herschel Walker,” Glasco said via ESPN. “We’re talking about a once-in-a-generation player that’s already made a name all over America. She’s a folk hero in our sport and she’s a sophomore.”
While we find collegiate athletics in these troubling times, looking for a lifeline from anyone, let’s try to remind ourselves of those good things about college athletics that are still worth fighting for.
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