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Judge addresses privacy concerns in bankruptcy case of Deion Sanders' son Shilo

A federal judge in Denver this week addressed an ongoing issue in the bankruptcy case of Colorado football player Shilo Sanders: “This is a bankruptcy case, and the finances of Mr. Sanders is public record, so some of that information is going to be for the public to understand and everyone to understand,” Judge Romero […]

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Judge addresses privacy concerns in bankruptcy case of Deion Sanders' son Shilo

A federal judge in Denver this week addressed an ongoing issue in the bankruptcy case of Colorado football player Shilo Sanders:

“This is a bankruptcy case, and the finances of Mr. Sanders is public record, so some of that information is going to be for the public to understand and everyone to understand,” Judge Romero said.Sanders, son of Colorado football coach Deion Sanders, filed for bankruptcy in October 2023 after falling into more than million in debt, almost all of it owed to one person – a former security guard at his school in Dallas named John Darjean.The trustee’s attorney, Peter Cal, said in court this week that he was going to work with Shilo’s attorney to get affidavits from Deion Sanders and Shilo’s mother to “make sure they provide sufficient information so the (bankruptcy) trustee understands… whether there’s any money in those trusts that belong to the bankruptcy estate and whether any money has been used that the bankruptcy estate is entitled to.”

If the judge sides with Darjean, Shilo would be on the hook to pay back the debt, including from future earnings.

Colorado's Shilo Sanders

Why is the privacy of Shilo Sanders’ information at issue?

“The reason we’re having these hearings relates to Mr. Sanders and his present financial situation and how that information will get disseminated to creditors, the (bankruptcy) trustee, Mr. Darjean and anyone else who’s interested, as every other bankruptcy debtor is before this court,” Judge Romero said during a status conference in the case this week. “This is a transparent process, but the question is how widely disseminated (it will be). Eventually everyone is going to know. It will be fully public eventually, most likely, at least certain aspects of it. There will be certain aspects that will always be confidential, but in general, details will come out.”

Shilo Sanders’ attorney, Keri Riley, said her client is trying to make sure he doesn’t violate confidentiality agreements in his NIL deals.Shilo Sanders, 24, is seeking to free himself of his debt in bankruptcy court − a taxpayer-funded judicial system in which one of the prices of trying to erase such debt is to go through a transparent, public process for it.

Shilo Sanders’ NIL deals are a big part of it

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

Darjean won an .98 million default judgment against Shilo in 2022 after suing Shilo and accusing him of severely injuring him during an assault by him in 2015, when Shilo was 15 years old and Darjean was trying to confiscate his phone at school. Shilo previously claimed he acted in self-defense but didn’t show up at trial to contest it in 2022.Judge Michael E. Romero urged the parties involved to make progress on their disputes about this matter but also reminded Sanders’ attorney that Sanders’ overall financial situation is now a “public record.”But he still wants certain aspects of his business information to be private and under a protective order that shields it from public disclosure, particularly his deals with those paying him for his name, image and likeness (NIL).In December, Romero denied a summary judgment request by Darjean, who had asked the court to rule that Shilo’s debt cannot be discharged under the law because it resulted from a “willful and malicious” injury inflicted by Shilo, the debtor. The judge’s denial of this request means that issue is headed to trial instead, but no trial date has been set. That narrow issue relates to Shilo’s state of mind during his incident with Darjean in 2015 and whether it was “willful and malicious.”“Initially, the protective orders that we’ve proposed are really targeted to protect the confidential business information of the debtor (Shilo Sanders),” Riley told the judge this week. “Obviously he is a party to, or… his entities are a party to a number of name, image, likeness agreements that are fairly new in the world of college sports and are in fact confidential business information. A lot of them have confidentiality clauses and we don’t believe should be part of the public disclosure.”

Where does this bankruptcy case stand now?

After filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, Shilo’s finances are undergoing scrutiny from the bankruptcy trustee who is in charge of gathering his non-exempt property for the bankruptcy estate on behalf of Shilo’s creditors. In this case, Darjean also is fighting Shilo’s attempt to discharge the debt because he wants to collect on all of what Shilo owes him.How much privacy should Sanders be given related to his business dealings in this case?

The trustee also is pursing affidavits from Shilo’s family, including Deion Sanders, after Darjean previously raised the issue that Shilo may be funneling his earnings to a trust held by his father.Darjean’s attorney, Ori Raphael, agreed this week to have that trial decided by the judge instead of a jury.

No jury trial on nature of the alleged incident in 2015

The case still appears to be months away from closing after Shilo recently completed his final college football season at Colorado. This week, the trustee in the case issued three subpoenas seeking financial information about Shilo from the University of Colorado, Wells Fargo bank and Redpoint Financial Group, an accounting firm, to help assess and round up Shilo’s property and financial condition on behalf of creditors.

The issues involving protective orders were not resolved yet, but the judge made clear he wanted them to be soon so the case can proceed with the discovery of evidence. He also denied a previous request by Darjean to expand the investigation into Shilo’s finances with so-called Rule 2004 examinations of Shilo and Deion Sanders. The judge instead said Darjean could pursue discovery of evidence through other means.Now as the bankruptcy case proceeds on multiple fronts, the trustee and Darjean are seeking detailed information from Sanders about his finances. But Sanders’ attorneys also want to guard against certain information being shared or disclosed in court as part of the public proceedings.The judge said the “primary reason” for meeting in conference this week was the discovery evidence that is being requested of Shilo Sanders, his related NIL entities and family members. He wants to determine “to what extent that can be disclosed and under what condition.”

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Rich Rodriguez shows interest joining Nick Saban on Trump’s College Sports Commission

President Donald Trump can be seen at college football games, UFC events, and even NASCAR races. Trump enjoys appearing at sporting events, and recently has entered himself into the college athletics space, attempting to create order in a wild west that is college sports. It was inevitable that the NIL system currently in place was […]

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President Donald Trump can be seen at college football games, UFC events, and even NASCAR races. Trump enjoys appearing at sporting events, and recently has entered himself into the college athletics space, attempting to create order in a wild west that is college sports.

It was inevitable that the NIL system currently in place was going to cause issues. This spring marked the first player to sit out of practice over money disputes. The players currently have all the power and there are no guardrails on how much schools can pay players, making it unfair in some sense.

NIL hasn’t been used like it’s intended so far. Originally, NIL was put in place so players could make money off autographs and jerseys with their name on them. But now, it’s used by boosters to pay players to play for their alma mater.

Trump is stepping in. Trump is reportedly creating a College Sports Commission, which will reportedly be led by former West Virginian and college football legend Nick Saban and Texas businessman Cody Campbell. The commission will regulate the transfer portal, boosters and college athlete employment.
This would be the first leader of college sports and potentially create a system that has structure.
Saban might not be the only West Virginian on the commission. In a recent interview with Sirius XM, Rich Rodriguez showed interest in helping his friend, Saban.

“I’m going to give him my cell number if they want an active coach on the deal,” Rodriguez said. “I’ll be on that sucker. I’ve got some experience. I can help from a current standpoint. I don’t know if they need me, though.

Like Saban, Rodriguez has been coaching for a long time, not as long as Saban and a lot fewer championships, but he’s seen the change and evolution of the sport.

All spring, Rodriguez voiced his problems with the NCAA. Rodriguez didn’t like the roster limit to 105, how there’s a spring portal, where a player you coached all spring can just leave, and how there are no limitations to how much a player can be paid.

Rodriguez has the background to be a candidate for the commission.

So far, it sounds like Saban will lead. Rodriguez agrees it should be the greatest college football coach of all time as the leader.

“He is the greatest college football coach of all time,” Rodriguez said. “He has a great grasp of the game in general… He’s truly about college football.”

Almost all professional sports leagues have a commissioner who settles issues throughout the league. College football doesn’t because it’s governed by the NCAA. After NIL was passed, the NCAA lost all its power, leaving it to the schools and players, creating chaos.

There’s no movement to create guardrails, and it’s starting to get out of hand. So much, that Trump felt the need to step in.

College sports, and more specifically college football, is a billion-dollar entertainment business. There needs to be structure before it falls apart even further. Saban’s the favorite to lead the next generation of college athletics, and West Virginia’s very own, Rodriguez, could be helping out, too.

“College football is such a great entity, it’s hard to screw it up,” Rodriguez said. “You can do whatever you want. There’s still going to be that passion for your school and that level of athletes. We’ve done enough things to screw it up in the last couple of years.”





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Mark Pope adding a pair of SEC transfers will be ‘advantageous’ for Kentucky

Mark Pope plucked a pair of highly valuable transfers right from within his own conference. One, Alabama’s Mo Dioubate, made it to the Final Four two seasons ago and then an Elite Eight this past season, while the other, Florida’s Denzel Aberdeen, helped the Gators win a national championship just a little over a month […]

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Mark Pope plucked a pair of highly valuable transfers right from within his own conference.

One, Alabama’s Mo Dioubate, made it to the Final Four two seasons ago and then an Elite Eight this past season, while the other, Florida’s Denzel Aberdeen, helped the Gators win a national championship just a little over a month ago. When it comes to bringing in talented transfers with a winning pedigree from a power conference, you won’t do much better than what Kentucky did in the portal than these two.

And considering the SEC is expected to take a step backward in 2025-26, Pope having two seasoned intranconference veterans on his second roster at Kentucky is no small note — especially after they battled and thrived in what was labeled as one of the best single season runs (2024-25) we’ve ever seen from a conefence in recent memory.

“The SEC guys know the league and they know the physicality,” Pope said of his two incoming SEC transfers during his Tuesday press conference. “And they know the talent, and they kind of know the flow and venues are going to be familiar to them, and all those things are advantageous, but mostly I’m just excited about the guys that we got.”

Dioubate and Aberdeen are both a bit different than the caliber of player Pope targeted in the portal last offseason. They’re defensive-minded athletes with specific offensive skills. But more importantly, they have SEC experience using those traits. Together, they’ve played 75 games against SEC opponents across five total seasons. Dioubate, in particular, went 3-0 against Kentucky last season.

But as Pope has harped on since taking over as Kentucky men’s basketball head coach, it’s not only about basketball when it comes to playing for the Wildcats.

“This Mo Dioubate, man, I think he’s a special person,” Pope said. “Like, I don’t know, his second or third conversation, we were talking about his family and his history and his faith and his commitment to all three of those things… And he wasn’t talking about that, he was talking about his life and how he thought about the world and his decision-making, but it was so clear and transparent that it’s all built on those three foundations.

“I think he’s special. I think he’s special. And then his skill set fits us in a brilliant way. I just can’t wait to see what he can do for us on the court. He’s coming from an incredible program and incredible coaching staff and we’re going to get to enjoy some of the fruit of all the labors that have come with him and by him before he got here. But really excited about him.”

Pope continued by sharing similar thoughts about Aberdeen.

“And this Denzel Aberdeen. I mean, he’s coming here wearing a big, fat, giant ring,” Pope said, referring to Florida’s 2025 national championship run where Aberdeen was a key backcourt piece. “And there’s no way to replace that type of experience. And he’s a beautiful kid, man, like spending time with his parents was really special. Comes from a military family background, and he cares about people, and he’s an incredibly talented basketball player.”

High-level basketball players? Check. High-level people? Another check. And now they get to see what it’s like to bring those traits to a Blue Blood.

“Specifically, those two guys, I can’t wait to get them here,” Pope added. “And I can’t wait for them to come experience basketball at the University of Kentucky, because it’s just different. And even being in this league, I’m excited for those guys, because they get to walk in the doors and then learn how this is so different here.”

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Kansas State University

CINCINNATI, Ohio – K-State could not overcome the early seven runs Cincinnati put on the board, as the Bearcats dealt the Wildcats a 7-0 loss to clinch the final regular-season series Friday night at UC Baseball Stadium.   Cincinnati (31-22, 16-13 Big 12) spotted starter Michael Quevedo for all seven runs, as the senior lefty […]

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CINCINNATI, Ohio – K-State could not overcome the early seven runs Cincinnati put on the board, as the Bearcats dealt the Wildcats a 7-0 loss to clinch the final regular-season series Friday night at UC Baseball Stadium.
 
Cincinnati (31-22, 16-13 Big 12) spotted starter Michael Quevedo for all seven runs, as the senior lefty suffered his second consecutive loss, moving to 6-3 on the year.
 
Tanner Duke, a redshirt sophomore transfer from Baylor, held the Bearcats scoreless through six innings after entering the game in the third. The right-hander retired 11 of the first 15 batters he faced, including setting down the Bearcats in order in the fifth and eighth innings. Duke’s six innings marked his longest relief outing of the year.
 
“It was really disappointing that we couldn’t take advantage of Tanner Duke’s outing,” said seventh-year head coach Pete Hughes. “He was really good after getting settled in and gave us chance to get ourselves back in that game.”
 
“We’ll have the bats ready tomorrow. We’ll be ready. I have a strong belief in these guys,” Hughes added.
 
Cincinnati utilized four pitchers in the shutout, combining for 12 strikeouts, with Brandon Scheurer picking up the win. The reliever limited the Wildcats to just two hits in his 2 2/3 innings (3-0).
 
Five different Wildcats generated a hit in the game highlighted by doubles from Seth Dardar and Shintaro Inoue, who each went 2-for-4. Maximus Martin, Bear Madliak and David Bishop all singled on the night.
 
Four of the Bearcats’ 10 hits were for extra bases, including home runs by Kerrington Cross and Cal Sefcik.
 
K-State was 0-for-9 with runners in scoring position, stranding eight runners on base.
 
HOW IT HAPPENED
Cincinnati opened with a 3-0 lead in the first inning, led by a solo shot from Cross, the Big 12’s batting average leader (.414).
 
The Bearcats tagged Quevedo for four runs in the second to stretch their lead to 7-0, capped by a two-run homer from Sefcik.
 
Bishop and Inoue pieced together a pair of two-out singles in the third, ending starter Carson Marsh’s no-hit bid, but the runners were left stranded with a chopper to third.
 
Back-to-back hits from Martin and Dardar positioned K-State on first and second for the second consecutive inning, until Dee Kennedy lined into a double play to keep the Cats off the board.
 
Inoue led off the eighth with the Wildcats second extra-base hit of the game, lacing a double off the wall in left field. Keegan O’Connor reached on an error before Martin was issued the only walk by the Bearcats’ pitching staff, but reliever Michael Conte fanned the final batter to end the threat and preserve the shutout.
 
INSIDE THE BOX

  • K-State produced seven hits with no errors committed and stranded eight on base.
  • Cincinnati scored seven runs on 10 hits, committed one error and left seven on base.
  • Five different Wildcats generated a hit, led by two each from Inoue and Dardar.
  • Quevedo (6-3) was tagged for the loss, surrendering seven runs on seven hits in his 1 2/3-inning start.
  • Four UC pitchers combined for 12 strikeouts.  
  • Scheurer was awarded the victory in relief, scattering just two hits in 2 2/3 innings of work (3-0).  
  • K-State hit ..167 (2-for-12) with runners on and was 0-for-9 in scoring position while UC was 5-for-15 (.333) with men on base and and 3-for-9 (.333) in scoring position.
  • The Wildcats were 2-for-10 with two outs, while UC was 4-for-11 (.364) and drove in three RBI with two away.

 TEAM NOTES

  • Cincinnati leads the all-time series 3-2, with a 2-0 advantage in games played in Cincinnati.  
  • K-State and UC are tied sixth in the league standings.  
  • Duke’s six innings marked his longest relief outing at K-State.  

 UP NEXT
Sunday’s series finale and final game of the regular season is scheduled for noon CT/1 p.m. ET at UC Baseball Stadium.



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Cowboy Baseball Wins Third Consecutive Big 12 Series

STILLWATER – Oklahoma State knocked off Arizona State by a score of 9-6 Friday night at O’Brate Stadium to clinch its third-straight conference series win.   With the victory, the Cowboys improved to 26-22 overall and 14-12 in Big 12 play, while ASU fell to 35-20 and 18-11 in the league. OSU will go for […]

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STILLWATER – Oklahoma State knocked off Arizona State by a score of 9-6 Friday night at O’Brate Stadium to clinch its third-straight conference series win.
 
With the victory, the Cowboys improved to 26-22 overall and 14-12 in Big 12 play, while ASU fell to 35-20 and 18-11 in the league. OSU will go for the series sweep Saturday, with first pitch for the finale scheduled for noon.
 
The Cowboys had a pivotal four-run fifth inning to take the lead and had big offensive contributions from Brayden Smith, who went 4-4 with a home run, Kollin Ritchie, who had three hits and three RBIs and Nolan Schubar,t who had a three-run homer.
 
Mario Pesca made his seventh start of the season and worked five innings, picking up the win to improve to 6-2. The right-hander allowed four runs on seven hits and struck out three.
 
Pesca gave up a run in the top of the first on a fielder’s choice but struck out Brandon Compton to strand a pair of Sun Devils in scoring position to end the inning.
 
In the bottom of the third inning, Smith deposited a ball into the Cowboy bullpen in left field to even the scoring at one.
 
ASU answered back, scoring three runs between the fourth and fifth innings, highlighted by an Isaiah Jackson homer, to take a 4-1 lead.
 
The Cowboy bats responded with a big inning in the fifth. Drew Culbertson led off with a walk, followed by a single by Smith, and one batter later, Schubart walked to load the bases. Ritchie then hit a two-out, two-run double to left field to put the Pokes within one. Up next, Ian Daugherty followed suit with a two-run double of his own to give OSU a 5-4 lead.
 
Drew Blake took over for Pesca in the sixth inning and worked a clean inning that included a pair of strikeouts.
 
In the bottom of the sixth, Schubart crushed a three-run home run to right field to push the Pokes’ lead to 8-4. The long ball was Schubart’s 16th of the season and 56th of his career, putting him into sole possession of fourth place in Oklahoma State history. The three RBIs also put Schubart over 50 on the season with 52.
 
After Blake’s second scoreless frame in the seventh inning, Ritchie blasted a ball out of the stadium for his ninth home run of the season to push the lead to five.
 
Following a leadoff double in the eighth, Matt Brown came out of the OSU bullpen and issued a walk before picking up a pair of strikeouts and a flyout to end the inning unscathed.
 
The Sun Devils made things interesting in the ninth. After three-straight singles to open the inning, back-to-back sacrifice flies made the score 9-6 before Brennan Phillips got Josiah Cromwick to strike out with a runner on second to end the game.
 



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LSU Softball Upset by Southeastern Louisiana 4-3 in Baton Rouge Regional

BATON ROUGE, La. – Southeastern Louisiana (49-14) rallied back from a 3-0 deficit to pull off the upset and advance to the winner’s bracket of the Baton Rouge Regional, defeating LSU (41-15) 4-3 on Friday at Tiger Park. With the score tied 3-3 in the seventh inning, Southeastern infielder Maria Detillier drew a two-out walk, and […]

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BATON ROUGE, La. – Southeastern Louisiana (49-14) rallied back from a 3-0 deficit to pull off the upset and advance to the winner’s bracket of the Baton Rouge Regional, defeating LSU (41-15) 4-3 on Friday at Tiger Park.

With the score tied 3-3 in the seventh inning, Southeastern infielder Maria Detillier drew a two-out walk, and catcher Cydnee Schneider hit a long single to right-center field that scored Detillier, who beat the throw at home plate for the eventual game-winning run.

LSU suffers its first loss against Southeastern at home in the all-time series (19-1) and falls in the first regional game for the first time since 2022.

LSU pitcher Jayden Heavener (13-5) struck out four batters, allowed two earned runs on four hits, and walked five batters in 6.2 innings.

Southeastern relief pitcher Lainee Bailey tossed 4.2 innings of no-hit softball, surrendering three walks and had one strikeout.  

The Tigers outhit the Lions 7-3. No player for either club recorded multiple hits, but LSU outfielder Jalia Lassiter had a game-high two RBI and two walks.  

In the second inning, infielder Sierra Daniel hit a leadoff single to shallow left field.

She stole second base, and designated player Maddox McKee and infielder Avery Hodge logged back-to-back singles to load the bases. Lassiter stepped to the plate and put LSU on the scoreboard with a two-run ground-rule double to left-center field, giving the Tigers a 2-0 lead.

After shaking off the threat of runners in scoring position in the top of the third, the Tigers tacked on another run in the home half with a run-scoring single by outfielder Jadyn Laneaux to extend its lead to 3-0.

Southeastern responded in the fourth inning with three runs, two unearned, on one hit, tying the game on a wild pitch heading into the fifth frame, and after two scoreless innings, SLU took the lead on a well-struck gapper.

Lassiter opened the bottom of the seventh with a four-pitch walk, and Southeastern put infielder Tori Edwards the game-winning run on the base paths on a four-pitch walk as well with one out recorded.

The SLU defense retired the next two batters to seal the game and advance to a noon CT matchup against Nebraska.

Up Next

LSU will face UConn in an elimination game tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. CT. UConn fell to Nebraska 10-2 in the Baton Rouge Regional opening game.

LSU is 2-0 all-time against UConn. The two clubs will meet for the first time since 2016.

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Follow Zack Nagy on Twitter: @znagy20 and LSU Tigers On SI: @LSUTigersSI for all coverage surrounding the LSU Tigers.





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Tulane Football unleashes better NIL structure than some P4 programs

In the high-stakes world of college football, timing is everything. And Tulane just made a power move that could redefine how NIL works in the American Athletic Conference. On the heels of Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry’s groundbreaking executive order allowing state schools to directly pay athletes for their name, image, and likeness, Tulane didn’t blink. […]

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In the high-stakes world of college football, timing is everything. And Tulane just made a power move that could redefine how NIL works in the American Athletic Conference.

On the heels of Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry’s groundbreaking executive order allowing state schools to directly pay athletes for their name, image, and likeness, Tulane didn’t blink. The Green Wave is already sprinting ahead of the pack.

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Starting July 1, Tulane will bring NIL operations under university control—a seismic shift from third-party collectives. In doing so, the program positions itself to take full advantage of a changing landscape that’s seen programs across the country scramble for structure amidst the murky prelude to the House settlement.

“The proposed House settlement allows universities to manage all these operations,” Tulane athletic director David Harris said in a recent release. “We’ll oversee everything from fundraising to NIL payments in one streamlined model.”

And they’re not short on resources. The school received a $3.5 million private donation to launch the Green Wave Fund, which will fuel Tulane’s NIL payouts moving forward. This means Tulane athletes could begin receiving direct compensation before the 2025-26 season even begins—legally and without NCAA interference.

What’s more, once the House settlement is finalized, Tulane will be among schools eligible to share up to $20.5 million in revenue with its student-athletes annually. The American Athletic Conference has already set a $10 million minimum for NIL distribution—Tulane’s proactive stance ensures it won’t just meet that mark; it could very well set the bar.

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This new era isn’t just about attracting talent—it’s about keeping it. With the ability to directly invest in its players, Tulane has a new tool to retain rising stars and build long-term momentum on the field.

For fans following NIL developments, Tulane’s strategy offers a model worth watching. With institutional backing, a multi-million dollar NIL fund, and zero legal risk, the Green Wave isn’t dipping a toe in the water—it’s diving headfirst into the future of college football.

Related: USC star recruit stands out for donation to high school program

Related: Kirby Smart’s bold take on NIL says everything about College Football’s future



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