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JMU SPCE inks deal for football field logo ad

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JMU SPCE inks deal for football field logo ad

With sponsorship logos on the playing surface now allowed by the NCAA, James Madison secured its first such deal at Bridgeforth Stadium, announcing last week that the JMU School of Professional and Continuing Education had purchased the right to place its logo at each 25-yard line.

The four-year agreement is an amendment to an existing sponsorship deal between JMU SPCE and JMU Sports Properties and like most JMU athletic department sponsorships, was facilitated by Learfield. The enhanced deal will pay JMU athletics $1,066,675 total through the 2028-29 academic year, more than doubling the previous cost for JMU SPCE.

“Not only does this enhance our revenue, which allows us to maximize student-athlete opportunities and enhance the experience we can provide,” JMU athletic director Matt Roan said in a press release, “it is most remarkable in that it is a testament to part of the mission of collegiate athletics, which is to shine a spotlight on the institution and, in this case, promote lifelong educational opportunities for our community. We’re grateful for the commitment of the SPCE leadership, as well as for the efforts of our JMU Sports Properties leadership and team.”

Schools such as Tennessee and South Carolina had already announced 25-yard line sponsorships with corporate partners, but JMU’s is believed to be the first between a Division I athletic department and one of its academic entities. Other kinds of sponsorship deals, including stadium signage and logos on basketball courts, with different branches of public colleges, are quite common, however.

JMU’s School of Professional and Continuing Education largely targets non-traditional students seeking professional certificates, adult degree programs, youth education programs and test prep courses, among other things.

The previous contract between SPCE and JMU Sports Properties was for a total of $492,459 over five years and included ribbon board advertising at home football and basketball games, sponsoring the “Kids Zone” at basketball games, digital displays during home volleyball matches, commercials during ESPN+ and radio broadcasts and more.

JMU SPCE will make quarterly payments of between $63,750 and $69,661.25 for the duration of the contract and has an exclusive window to negotiate renewal of the deal between Jan. 1 and March 1 of 2028.

JMU had more than 10,000 donors to the Duke Club this year, its most ever and has seen donations more than double since announcing a move to FBS and the Sun Belt Conference. But the Dukes, situated in a relatively small market with no local Fortune 500 companies headquartered in the Shenandoah Valley, have lagged behind some peers in terms of corporate money coming into the program, particularly Old Dominion.

The Monarchs lead the Sun Belt in corporate sponsorship money while sitting in the nation’s largest metro area without an NBA, NFL, MLB, NHL or MLS franchise.

“When you think of our peers, Old Dominion has a different ability to get corporate support than we do,” JMU associate athletic director for communications and strategic initiatives Kevin Warner said earlier this year. “You find the revenue where you can or you continue to work toward that, but there’s different pieces that affect everybody differently as you maximize revenues.”

With the cost of doing business at the Division I level going up thanks to increased scholarships, revenue sharing and other expenditures, JMU has been aggressive about increasing its donor base and revenue via corporate sponsorships.

While the naming rights for Bridgeforth Stadium and Showker Field have long been spoken for, JMU was able to generate some revenue with the opening of the Dukes’ new basketball arena in 2020. Atlantic Union Bank paid $2.25 million for 10-year naming rights to the building, while UVA Health Systems paid $3.5 million for seven years’ worth of advertising on the sideline of the basketball court.

The new deal with JMU SPCE highlights a continued financial relationship between JMU Athletics and the University as a whole. Much of the Dukes’ gameday revenue goes back to the university in the form of concessions and apparel sales.

Concessions at Bridgeforth Stadium and the Atlantic Union Bank Center are part of the university’s overall food service contract with Aramark, while proceeds from licensed Dukes gear go to the JMU Foundation.

Non-JMU sports events at the Atlantic Union Bank Center and Bridgeforth Stadium are often also money makers for the university at large rather than the athletic department.

Some of that is slowly shifting toward more profits going to sports. JMU athletics negotiated a deal with The Basketball Tournament to host the event this summer, with JMU athletics receiving $60,000 in rent from TBT.

This fall, a new concession item, the Champions Philly, will be on the menu at Bridgeforth Stadium, with one dollar from each sale going to the JMU Duke Club.

JMU is also continuing to rely on Learfield, a third-party marketing company that works with more than 200 college programs, to increase sponsorship revenue as fundraising becomes a more specialized part of the overall athletic department.

“Revenue generation has kind of always existed under the umbrella of athletics administration,” Roan told the Daily News-Record in an interview this spring. “I think what we’ve seen over the last several years, and even more right now, how important that work is in that there are almost two different umbrellas now. There’s administration that still has communications and game events, but separately there’s all those other elements we are talking about [revenue].”

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No. 2 seed ASU volleyball advances to Sweet 16 in NCAA Tournament

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Updated Dec. 5, 2025, 11:15 p.m. MT



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Babcock sets record as Pitt women’s volleyball team rolls in 1st round of NCAA Tournament

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Olivia Babcock didn’t realize her performance during the first round of the NCAA women’s volleyball tournament gave her the Pitt record for most kills in a season. Babcock knew she met the previous record holder, Wendy Hatlestad, during alumni weekend.

Babcock recorded 13 kills during the Panthers’ 25-10, 25-17, 25-13 win Friday night at Petersen Events Center in front of a crowd of 4,240. Babcock now has 558 kills, going past the single-season record of 555 Hatlestad set in 2003.

“I was talking to her two weeks ago,” Babcock said. “That’s crazy I just met her. But I think it says a lot about how much my team trusts me to take those big rips, and it gives me the opportunity to score and get as many kills as I do.”

Everyone had a good night hitting for the top-seeded Panthers, who advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament for the 10th straight season.

The Panthers committed only four attack errors against UMBC (13-12) and finished with a hitting percentage of .551.

“It’s really good to start out and to remind ourselves to maintain high standards,” Babcock said. “Obviously, all of these teams have made it into the tournament because they’re an amazing team, and everyone’s going to bring their best volleyball. I think we just need to make sure that we’re playing our best, too, because, especially in these matches, we don’t wanna slip up and give away a set or a match.”

Pitt (27-4) hasn’t dropped a set in the first round since it beat VCU, 3-1, in 2017 at Penn State.

The Retrievers qualified for the tournament after winning the America East Conference for the fifth time in the past six seasons. Pitt setter Brooke Mosher, who finished with 34 assists, said the Panthers got themselves in system thanks to their good passing.

Blaire Bayless was second for the Panthers with nine kills, and Abby Emch contributed eight.

“That made it really easy for me to spread the ball around and get the middles involved,” Mosher said. “Then, I trusted my teammates to be able to put the ball away.”

Pitt lost the first point of the match after UMBC delivered on a kill by Jalynn Brown. The Panthers responded by scoring the next three points, capping the surge with an ace by Izzy Masten.

UMBC struggled to find holes in Pitt’s defense. The Retrievers hit .129 and were led by seven kills from Hannah Dobbs.

UMBC coach Kasey Crider was happy with how they played.

“We don’t have an Olivia Babcock slayer, so, bummer,” Crider said. “I’ve been to this tournament a few times as a head coach and assistant coach, and I’ve never walked away from the tournament thinking we were the best at the end until today. It still hurts, but there were no regrets.”

Pitt will take on Michigan in the second round Saturday. The Wolverines advanced by beating Xavier. The Panthers are 3-6 all-time against the Wolverines.

Pitt’s only meeting with Michigan in the NCAA Tournament came in 2018, when the Wolverines upset Pitt in five sets at Petersen Events Center.

Mosher, who previously played in the NCAA Tournament with Illinois, said she doesn’t feel any extra pressure playing as the No. 1 seed.

“I think just being in the tournament has its own weight in itself,” Mosher said. “Every game your season is on the line, which is the same no matter who you are.”

Josh Rizzo is a freelance writer.





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Kansas State volleyball vs Nebraska in NCAA Tournament channel, time

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Dec. 6, 2025, 6:03 a.m. CT



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Women’s track and field begins indoor season at M City Classic

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MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – The St. Olaf College women’s track and field team turned in 13 performances that ranked on its all-time performers’ list at the season-opening M City Classic on Friday at the University of Minnesota Fieldhouse.

First years accounted for 11 of the 13 performances that ranked on St. Olaf’s all-time list at the unscored meet, which included teams from the NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III, National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), and club levels. In addition to the top-10 list performances, senior Ella Landis posted St. Olaf’s lone first-place finish at the meet by winning the one-mile run in 5:17.28.

In her first collegiate meet, first year Evangeline Sappington broke onto the program’s all-time performers’ list in both the 60-meter dash and 200-meter dash. Sappington was the top Division III finisher and was 10th overall in the 200-meter dash (26.84), while also taking second among Division III competitors and 16th overall in the 60-meter dash. Sappington’s time in the 60-meter dash ranks second on the Oles’ all-time list – just four one-hundredths of a second off the record – and her time in the 200-meter dash is fifth.

Sophomore Izzi Jaeckle clocked in with St. Olaf’s No. 4 time in the 60-meter dash by placing 17th (8.10), while first year Ellie Semple also broke onto the list in 10th with a time of 8.28 seconds to finish 27th. Sophomore Logan Paulsen moved up to seventh on the Oles’ list with a sixth-place performance in the shot put (12.48m, 40′ 11 ½”), while first year Abigal Frei cleared 3.26 meters (10′ 8 ¼”) for a No. 5 all-time result and an eighth-place finish.

First years Svea Frantzich and Claire Stein recorded St. Olaf’s No. 8 and No. 10 scores in the pentathlon by finishing seventh (3,005) and eighth (2,993), respectively. Frantzich tied for third in the long jump (5.44m, 17′ 10 ¼”) and was sixth in the 60-meter hurdles (9.47), which both ranked on St. Olaf’s all-time list. Stein also tied for third in the long jump (5.44m, 10′ 10 ¼”) to highlight her day. First year Annika Walsh was the runner-up in the high jump (1.62m, 5′ 3 ¾”) – fifth all-time – and was seventh in the 60-meter hurdles (9.48) – ninth all-time – as part of a ninth-place finish in the pentathlon (2,881).

St. Olaf will be back in action in 2026 at the Ole Opener at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 17 at Tostrud Center.

 



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Second-Screen Golf Experiences : Player Profiles

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At the 2025 JM Eagle LA Championship, IRCODE debuted Player Profiles, a new LIVE+ capability to bring fans closer to athletes without prompts, QR codes, or static triggers.

In addition to offering an on-site fan experience, IRCODE, as a Technology Partner, introduced an interactive viewer experience for fans at home. When players appeared on-screen, viewers used the IRCODE app to scan their screen and instantly accessed a full, interactive profile for shopping their favorite players’ gear, diving deeper into their stories and learning more about the causes that are meaningful to them.

Player Profiles leverages IRCODE’s patented EXACT Match technology and proprietary computer vision, and applies real-time visual recognition to usher in the next generation of second-screen entertainment.



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Catch Saturday’s Basketball and Indoor Track and Field Action

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BEREA, Ohio – Fans can follow or watch Saturday’s Baldwin Wallace University basketball and indoor track and field action via live results, statistics or video.

The men’s and women’s indoor track and field teams open the 2025-26 season when it travels to Cleveland to compete in the Spartan Alumni Holiday Classic hosted by Case Western Reserve University inside the Veale Convocation, Recreation and Athletic Center at 11:00 a.m.

Live Results: 

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3MlDQcr

FloCollege On Demand Live Video:

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3KFq6st

The men’s basketball team travels to New Concord for the first game of a men’s and women’s Ohio Athletic Conference and Hoops for Hunger Food Drive doubleheader against Muskingum University on Performance Court inside the Anne C. Steele Center at 1:00 p.m.  Fans can receive free admission to the game with a donation of canned food, a non-perishable item, or a monetary contribution.

Tickets:

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3WGuwll

Live Statistics:

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/493Gehq

FloCollege On Demand Live Video:

https://flosports.link/47hSw2V

The No. 21 nationally ranked women’s basketball team travels to New Concord for the second game of a women’s and men’s Ohio Athletic Conference and Hoops for Hunger Food Drive doubleheader against Muskingum University on Performance Court inside the Anne C. Steele Center at 4:00 p.m.  Fans can receive free admission to the game with a donation of canned food, a non-perishable item, or a monetary contribution.

Tickets:

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3WGuwll

Live Statistics:

https://bwyellowjackets.cc/49Ist7Q

FloCollege On Demand Live Video:

https://flosports.link/4qu1Fyr

 



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