NIL
Listen: How will UTEP manage paying its collegiate athletes?
How UTEP is affected by NIL era as schools begin p | RSS.comHow UTEP is affected by NIL era as schools begin p | RSS.com Diego Mendoza-Moyers: Earlier this month, the world of college athletics changed forever. After the National Collegiate Athletics Association – the NCAA – agreed to a settlement with former college athletes […]

Diego Mendoza-Moyers: Earlier this month, the world of college athletics changed forever. After the National Collegiate Athletics Association – the NCAA – agreed to a settlement with former college athletes earlier this month, Division 1 schools will now begin directly paying college athletes, splitting as much as $20.5 million annually with players of different sports.
Just a few years ago, that would have landed a school in deep trouble. But now, it’s created something of a free agent market for college athletes. And for schools like UTEP that won’t approach anywhere near $20 million in revenue to split with athletes, it shifts the competitive landscape. A recruit’s relationship with a school’s coaching staff now will matter less than the dollars the school is willing to dole out to the player.
UTEP is having to get creative quickly. The head coaches of the school’s main sports – football, men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball – are having to add fundraising to their list of duties so the programs can compensate players and keep them from transferring elsewhere.
And, compared to a lot of other schools of its size, UTEP at the moment has limited resources to divvy up. One of the first steps the school took was doing away with the women’s tennis program earlier this year. And, for years, the school’s track and field program has had a lot more success than the football team. But Jim Senter, UTEP’s athletic director, is now having to figure out how to pay college football recruits and also stay competitive in sports that generate less revenue.
It all means more turnover on the school’s different sports teams. A lot of players, especially on the basketball team, have left to pursue more money elsewhere. And on the flip side, UTEP was able to put some funds together to land Malachi Nelson, a quarterback who, a couple of years ago, was rated as the top high school football player in the country.
And amid all of this, UTEP is preparing to transition to the Mountain West Conference, a higher-profile conference than Conference USA, which it’s leaving after this school year. But UTEP will have to beef up its resources to be able to pay players anywhere near as much as the better-funded schools in the new conference, such as the University of Nevada-Las Vegas and the University of New Mexico.
I’m your host, Diego Mendoza-Moyers, and I sat down this week with ESPN 600 radio hosts Steve Kaplowitz and Adrian Broaddus, as well as El Paso Matters assistant editor Pablo Villa, to talk about the different aspects of this shift in college athletics, and the challenges and opportunities it presents for UTEP.
But before we move on to our conversation with Steve and Adrian:
This El Paso Matters Podcast episode is sponsored by Tawney, Acosta and Chaparro: truck crash and injury attorneys. Their team of local, seasoned trial attorneys are ready to help if you’ve been injured in a crash.
Steve, Adrian, thanks for joining me and Pablo.
Adrian: Thanks for having us.
Steve: Thank you.
Diego: So, let’s get right into it. Can you guys share some thoughts with us about how the NCAA’s recent settlement related to NIL affects UTEP, and how revenue sharing will work at UTEP and all that kind of stuff?
Steve: Sure. So, clearly, every school has an opportunity to opt in to the revenue sharing as a result of the settlement. Some universities might decide to wait, and we’ll talk about UTEP in a moment, how that could affect them. Others are going to say, “Yes, let’s go.”
Because, now, there’s two ways to look at the way revenue sharing is going to work, guys. Number one, schools are going to start to back-pay athletes who jumped in on this lawsuit over the last 10 years and make sure that, as every school pays a portion of those damages, they will go to the former athletes.
Now, we don’t know how many UTEP athletes joined the lawsuit. That wasn’t privy to us, but everybody around the whole NCAA has to pay all of the athletes, no matter whether their former athletes opted in or not.
Also, part of the revenue share could go to the current and future athletes. And what’s important there is that you can use that money on top of NIL to help supplement this. And, for example, let’s say a school has a foreign athlete. Foreign athletes were not eligible to collect NIL. That’s just the way the whole process worked. But, with revenue share, all of a sudden, you can now give foreign athletes a stipend versus no money whatsoever from the NIL.
Adrian: Yeah. The other thing I’d say, Steve, to all of this is it’s about $20.5 million dollars that each school will receive annually for the NIL base compensation thanks to the settlement that we’re seeing with the NCAA and the Supreme Court. How quickly UTEP jumps into this – I mean, I’ll swing it back to you on that, Steve, because of it’s complicated with UTEP making the transition from Conference USA to the Mountain West. But, I will say this, what we do know from UTEP, so far, is back in April, the UTEP athletic department announced that they would disband the women’s tennis program.
And that’s interesting because, at that point, they cited rising costs with revenue sharing. And they were saying how they’ve got to save some money down the line. So, that was the most cost-effective model to really go off of when it came to disbanding women’s tennis. That was kind of, like, the first move, Steve, where they really took in order to try to combat the NIL and the revenue sharing.
Steve: Now, you said $20.5 million, and I think that it’s important to note that not every school is going to have $20.5 million to distribute. That’s the maximum amount of money. And there are certain Power 4 schools that will be making so much money from their media deals that they’ll be able to easily take that amount and start putting it back in. But there’s plenty of Group of 5 schools, like UTEP, that could be dealing with a fraction of that amount of money because they simply will not be receiving $20.5 million.
It could be closer to $4 million, $5 million, depending on what their media deal is. And, for UTEP, it’s all about the Mountain West. Because this season coming up is their final year in Conference USA, and UTEP is not receiving a penny from that media deal. So, I’ve already been told that UTEP will not opt in to revenue sharing this year because there’s no money to share, because they’re not getting anything from that. In fact, they’re raising money to help offset the lack of media rights money that they should be getting and also having to pay Conference USA to get out and going into the Mountain West.
Diego: Yes, Steve, and I’ll just jump in. Can we talk some numbers here? I’m curious, what’s UTEP’s NIL fund going to look like this year? And then, how does the transition to the Mountain West affect that with the TV deal you’re talking about?
Steve: OK, it’s a great point. It’s something we talk about here, Adrian and I, on the show all the time. As we know now, UTEP has about $600,000 in NIL for men’s basketball. They went from zero to about $600,000 now for football. And I believe they also have about $120,000 for women’s basketball.
And what’s interesting to note is, take women’s basketball, for example. That money has been raised solely by (head coach) Keitha Adams. And the same thing goes for Joe (Golding) for basketball for men’s and (head coach) Scotty Walden for football. A lot of the coaches are having to help raise that money themselves because, if they don’t, it’s not going to magically appear in an NIL fund.
So, it’s almost like the coaches now have become active fundraisers to try and build up their NILs.
Adrian: Yeah. And I’ll just say to put it on a national scale, guys, where UTEP is trying to stand out is to be creative in NIL. Other programs at the Group of 5 level – you talk about the UTSAs of the world, you talk about maybe even other conference mates that UTEP had in the past, like UAB or even North Texas – they have much bigger pools to get from when it comes to NIL.
And UTEP used to be in the same conference as these guys. So, when you compare UTEP to other teams in the Mountain West or other schools in the Mountain West, they’re near the bottom. Right now, in Conference USA, when it comes to, I guess, basketball and football, they’re closer to the top. They’re probably middle of the pack, but closer to the top. It’s just not as competitive as where they need to be going next year into the Mountain West.
Diego: Yeah, and I guess that’s sort of – just to go back to your point, Steve, I mean, so we’re talking this year, UTEP maybe is not going to have a whole lot of money going around. But maybe after they transition to the Mountain West, you think there will be millions more? Is that what we’re talking about here?
Steve: Potentially. Now, here’s also what’s really interesting to think about these media deals, okay? So let’s take Conference USA, for example. Each school is supposed to have now about $800,000 a year in their media deal, but that’s not necessarily the case because certain schools like Middle Tennessee and Western Kentucky were looking at moving a few years ago when all that conference reshuffling took place. But they ultimately chose to stay in Conference USA.
Well, Conference USA said, “You know what, we’re going to give you more than these other schools because we didn’t want to lose you.” So, it doesn’t always divide up equally among each school the way you would think. Same thing’s going to go for the Mountain West.
Their new media deal is going to happen starting next year when we see the exodus of certain programs and the arrival of UTEP and other schools. So, we’ve already been told that, based on the media deal, it could be around that $48 (million) to $54 million-a-year range total in media rights.
Well, guess what? UNLV could receive a bigger chunk of that money than UTEP and other schools because UNLV has been on the verge of leaving and going to the (Pac-12). And Mountain West worked really hard on trying to keep UNLV around. That’s also kind of interesting is when we hear this total dollar amount from media rights, not everybody is going to receive an equal share. And some schools might receive more if they have, let’s say, more to lose than others. And that could be the case even going into the Mountain West if you’re UTEP.
Adrian: And I’ll add to that by just saying, look, the biggest part when you talk about how they’re growing or how they’re maybe growing that NIL in the future, they have to. If you’re not growing that NIL, you’re going to be left in the dust behind.
There have been UTEP athletes who people might write off and say “Oh, well, they didn’t contribute as much as fans wanted them to contribute to the team at the time.” Well, they hit the transfer portal, they go to a school that might, on paper, seem pretty similar to UTEP. But then they get a big pay raise. They go to another school and they get paid a lot more than they were making here at UTEP.
Which, again, it’s UTEP being competitive in these mid-major or Group of 5 fields like they wouldn’t be any other time.
Steve: So, we’ll give you an example of that. Corey Camper, OK, part of the UTEP basketball team last year – got hurt, but he was one of their top scorers, right? Corey Camper goes to Nevada. We heard that the NIL dollar figure for Corey Camper Jr. is $300,000. That’s half of UTEP’s total NIL right now at $600,000.
So, you say to yourself, “How can UTEP afford to keep players around if this is what they’re getting in the open market?” David Terrell Jr., their starting point guard from the last couple of seasons, goes to North Texas. He gets $160,000 in NIL value. And again, that is a quarter of UTEP’s total NIL. Point is this, guys, is that UTEP, like a lot of schools, has to just cope with the fact that they’re going to be building a new team every year.
Because, if you have a good season, chances are you’re going to go into the portal, you’re going to try to make more money. And until UTEP has more money to offer, they’re going to have a very difficult time retaining their top talent from year to year.
Pablo: So, really good insights from you guys, Steve and Adrian. It’s a real pleasure to be here listening to all this.
One of the things I wanted to touch on, it’s a money thing as well, but one of the sentiments that’s been expressed with UTEP’s move to the Mountain West is this feeling that they’re going to be able to ride the coattails of programs like a Boise State when they make the playoff. They get the payouts from those media deals that happen in the postseason. But you mentioned UNLV, a program that the Mountain West worked really hard to keep. But Boise State is not one of those teams, right? They’re going to be leaving to the Pac-12 in 2026.
We can’t predict the future, of course, but it seems like at least one of the football powers from that conference will be gone by the time UTEP gets in there. How much do things like that hurt UTEP in the long run? Because, yes, we struggled to build our own money here locally, but now we might not even be able to count on that money throughout the rest of the conference.
Steve: Yeah, you’re not going to count on that money because what’s going to happen is Boise State’s money that they made will be split. amongst the current schools in the Mountain West, minus the schools leaving for the Pac. So, the New Mexicos, the Wyomings, the Air Forces, they’re the schools that are going to profit from that.
The Nevadas, the UNLVs, not necessarily the UTEPs. So, you can’t count on that money right now. And, unfortunately for UTEP, they can’t count on any of the Conference USA money either because that’s not going to them. That’s kind of the thing fans don’t really necessarily understand. UTEP is in limbo right now. They’re not making money going into the Mountain West, and they’re certainly not making money staying in Conference USA.
And that’s really the biggest reason why, when they raised the $10 million to try to help with the transition, it was to cover a lot of these missing revenue funds that would normally be filtering into the school.
Adrian: And I would just say that UTEP’s got to worry on their side about winning on themselves. I mean, you’re talking about a basketball organization on the men’s side that hasn’t been to the NCAA tournament since 2010. And hasn’t had an NCAA tournament win since 1992. I mean, we’re talking more than three decades’ worth of basketball right there that you haven’t had that success in the NCAA tournament.
On the football side of things, success doesn’t really come at UTEP when it comes to football. You talk about winning seasons, the last winning season they had, sure, 2021, they go to the New Mexico Bowl and they lose in the final quarter against Fresno State that year. They were 7-6. But, I mean, the last bowl win UTEP had was 1967 against Ole Miss at their own bowl, the Sun Bowl, the hometown bowl. So, you talk about that football program, they’ve got to stay in their own lane and just try to find their own success. Same with men’s basketball.
Instead of worrying about what other teams in Conference USA or even the Mountain West are doing in the future, you’ve got to win if you’re UTEP.
Diego: Yeah. Maybe we didn’t appreciate (late former UTEP head football coach) Dana Dimel enough. But, let me say this. So, we’re saying they’re not going to get enough money from Conference USA, or at least for this year. When they enter the Mountain West, maybe there will be some TV money. We’re not sure. So, at this point, UTEP, as it relates to NIL, is really just relying on local donors. Is that fair to say?
Steve: That’s correct. That is absolutely correct. And, obviously, the most wealthy donors in this city and around the area aren’t pumping tons of money into UTEP like other schools are. Because if they were, we’d see the NIL over a million, easily, in football and basketball. Which, honestly, that’s kind of the minimum benchmark they need to at least be competitive in the Mountain West.
They have to have a football NIL over a million dollars and they need a basketball NIL of over a million dollars. And something Adrian brought up, which is really true, when you don’t win, you don’t put fans in the seats. And when you don’t have butts in the seats, you don’t make any money. And, that’s the other issue right now, is if the football program was averaging 30,000 to 40,000 fans a game, and the basketball program was averaging 8,000 to 10,000 fans a game, then the university would be making enough money to sustain on itself and be able to put it back into these other programs, which they’re not right now.
And that’s the other issue is – and fans will say, “Well, we’re not coming until they win.” Well, something’s got to give, right? They either have to start winning to get fans in or, they got to have the fans just commit and say, “You know what? Regardless of what happens, we’re going to go to help try to support this athletic department.” But, if you’re a fan and you’ve seen a product that has not been good for so long and prices aren’t dirt cheap to go watch games, especially as a season ticket-holder, it’s hard to justify spending that money. So, that’s the other issue that UTEP has right now, is just fan support.
Adrian: Yeah. And I’d say it’s not so much donor fatigue guys as it’s, I would say, for donors, it’s almost donor confusion. There’s just so many buckets that UTEP needs to fill, right? They need to fill the support, athletic side, when it comes to just helping these teams out, whether it’s private jet, whether it’s meals for some of these organizations or some of these teams, giveaways that might happen, you name it.
And then on the flip side, it’s acquiring the talent, retaining the talent and throwing the money out there for that. And then on top of all that, it’s facility maintenance too. So, you’re talking about having to maintain these facilities, make sure they’re up-to-date, modern, so that when you bring recruits into El Paso and you have people here, you have people who want to stay and be here for their college experience.
Diego: Yeah. And it can’t help that two of the sellouts we saw last year, NMSU in basketball and then the other sellout against Southern Utah in football, UTEP lost both of those games in kind of painful fashion, right? And, so, you have sellouts, right, you put fans in seats and then the product isn’t exactly what, I think, fans would like to see.
I wonder, though, as it relates to the transition to the Mountain West, I wonder how you think that will affect recruiting for UTEP at all, right? In addition to the dollars, will it help that maybe UTEP will be playing some more prominent programs, right?
Steve: It will, assuming the Mountain West stays where it’s at right now. Now, listen, there’s still the possibility that UNLV could end up in the Pac, despite everything the Mountain West has tried to do to keep UNLV around. And let’s just say the Pac expands, brings UNLV with them, and then all of a sudden you just lost the Las Vegas market, right? And that’s a prominent program out there.
So, that’s the other thing. We still don’t know for sure what the Mountain West is even going to look like when UTEP joins it. And that’s the other issue that needs to be in play here, because the Pac is not done expanding. We keep hearing Texas State, but that might not be it, guys. There might be other schools coming, and if they continue to take from the Mountain West and deplete the conference pretty soon, UTEP’s going to be going into a league that doesn’t look much different than Conference USA.
Adrian: Yeah, let’s talk about the sports that are making money, right? Like men’s basketball and football. So, for football, on their side, they have a philosophy of “Let’s recruit Texas high school athletes and let’s go after those guys.” When you talk about geographic reasons, I like the Mountain West much better compared to Conference USA.
You’re telling me that a family from East Texas is going to make the trip out to Delaware, to Lynchburg, Virginia? No, it’s not going to happen. They’re going to be more inclined to go out west. and maybe make the New Mexico trip to Albuquerque, jump on a flight from Dallas, to Las Vegas because it’s nonstop and they could watch UTEP versus Nevada, UTEP versus UNLV. There’s more of a geographic sense when it comes to football.
Now, basketball, they recruit all over the country, at least under their current regime, under Joe Golding. They recruit the DMV area very well. They’re going to go out and recruit the Midwest. They’re going to get junior college guys. So, for men’s basketball, I don’t think it really matters as much. Although, I would like, on the men’s basketball side of things, for them to tap into more of the West Coast area. If they’re going to more of the west, if they’re playing Mountain West teams, go to the West Coast. Go find yourself some Cali guys who can hoop.
Diego: Yeah, kind of on the recruiting strategy, I guess, we’ve seen Scotty Walden, his approach, as you said, I think he’s really more focused on high school players and I’ve seen him quoted saying, “We can’t outbid the big schools and, so, we got to kind of bring guys in and recruit from the high school level.”
And, then, Joe Golding has really focused very little on recruiting from high school right? We’ve seen a lot of turnover the last couple of years, mostly guys from the transfer portal. And, so, it seems like those are two different approaches in the NIL era. Maybe it has to do with the sport, right? Maybe basketball just lends itself more to guys coming in and out. But, I just wonder what you all make of those two kinds of recruiting strategies we’ve seen from the head football coach and basketball coaches at UTEP?
Steve: UTEP basketball cannot afford to recruit via high school like they used to. You can’t, because there’s so much turnover now that you almost have to look at putting the best possible team on the floor year-to-year. Maybe you bring in one or two freshmen a year. Maybe. But, even so, if a freshman comes in, chances are they’re not going to play.
So, you have to think about it as, “Hey, we need the portal,” because you’re only dealing with a roster of 14, 15 guys versus, right now, 85 in football. So there’s a big, big difference there. And, in basketball, all you really need are three, four difference makers, and you could be an NCAA tournament team.
Where in football, it’s so much bigger than that. You need just a huge roster, and you need a great line. You need skill players. You need a quarterback. You need defensive stoppers. There’s so many more components to having a winning football team versus a winning basketball team.
Adrian: And this is the first time around that we’ve ever seen on the football side of things where players weren’t necessarily poached, but you could kind of read between the lines that they were poached after spring. Like, the spring ball happens and then guys hit the portal and then they magically land on another team within a day or so. Like, come on.
These coaches are in these players’ DMs, their direct messages. They’re talking to these athletes illegally because there’s not a window where you can actually go into the players’ direct messages and say, “Hey, I want to recruit you. Are you in the portal?” That’s not legal out there, but there’s still teams doing it. Why? Because the transfer portal, even when we’re talking about NIL, it’s the wild, wild west.
There’s no regulations out there with this. There’s no one policing this across college athletics. We just saw something last week where Wisconsin is trying to sue the University of Miami and, and also one of their student athletes who made the decision to transfer over from Wisconsin to Miami saying that he breached sort of his NIL contract.
So, we’re seeing these things evolve on a daily basis, we’re seeing new landmark decisions, even in courts, being decided on a daily basis, and it’s truly the wild wild west when you talk about NIL.
I’d also say this, for sports like volleyball, women’s basketball, track, they have to get extremely, extremely creative on how they recruit athletes here to El Paso or how they sell this program to people when you don’t have things like NIL.
Steve: It’s even more amazing to think that volleyball has been this good with no NIL. Let’s be honest, because they’ve been able to bring in players and have a conference championship-caliber program here in the last few years. Ben Wallis has. And athletes are making nothing. And by the way, athletes now are starting to get NIL for volleyball. He kept a player here that was offered a six-figure deal to leave elsewhere, and she decided to stay.
Now, granted, they’ve got some NIL now versus none over the last couple years. But even still, how much longer can they sustain that once the revenue sharing comes into play and volleyball teams from around the country can start to give good money to their athletes that currently aren’t aren’t making as much right now?
Pablo: To stay on the recruiting point, I mean, you guys have outlined a lot of things that sort of paint a gloomy picture for UTEP over the next couple of years, right?
But Adrian referenced the House-NCAA settlement. One of the components of that is putting that $20.5 million cap on what a school can directly pay its student-athletes. Another component that we’ll see sort of how it plays out over the next three, four years is that it’s supposed to establish tiers of how much you could pay certain athletes, right? Sort of like a rating system. And part of that is it’s meant to keep this wild, wild west picture from continuing, right?
So, you won’t necessarily have an athlete that comes to UTEP that’s going to get a better deal because of that cap, right? And I know it’s really too early to really say anything about how that’s going to impact the recruiting picture, but is that the kind of thing that can maybe keep some of those three-star, two-star athletes from trying to find “better” deals outside of UTEP? Is that something that can sort of keep them here? Or do you guys think that this wild, wild west picture is going to continue?
Steve: Until the portal goes back to the way where you’re only allowed one transfer without sitting out, OK? And they go back to that rule, they’re never going to stick around. They’re always going to see the grass is greener going someplace else. Because, think about it, if you don’t like your situation, jump right into the portal, go someplace else, and immediately you’re eligible.
Or, as it used to be where you had one transfer like that, and then if you wanted to go back in, you had to sit out a year. So, players would always think twice about entering the portal because they don’t want to sit out a year. They want to play immediately. What’s happened is this: they’ve given so much control to student-athletes that now schools have no control left. They have no power in this game. All of the power is with every college athlete.
Adrian: And I would also say this. It depends on how the season goes, right? You have a good season. You have a couple three-star, even four-star, athletes on your roster. Those guys might be thinking, “Well, you know, we did our duty here in El Paso. Now, it’s time to find maybe a more lucrative deal.”
Now, on the flip side, if you don’t have a great roster, then it might be the coach who says to himself, “I need a whole reset. I need to hit a big reset. I don’t care what kind of pedigree the previous players on this roster had on this group. I just need to completely redo my roster. So, that’s why I think year-to-year roster building is so important. Even year-to-year staff turnover, we’re seeing that a lot more at the college level here, because there’s more money at the (Power 4 conference) levels.
Steve: Joe Golding is a great example of what Adrian just talked about. Because, think about this: They didn’t lose all their players because they wanted to leave and go into the portal. Plenty of these players were told “We’re moving on, UTEP is going to take a different direction.” And Joe Golding chose to reset his roster versus the other way around.
He also chose to hire new assistant coaches. He knew after last season – and, by the way, last season every player that could have come back came back, OK? They were all in for basketball and things looked great up until the beginning of the year, and then all of a sudden things went completely downhill and they could never recover. So, he knew “Hey, look, I tried doing it the right way and it didn’t pay off. So, I can’t keep running back with those same guys, we had to look in a different direction.” Which is what they decided to do.
So, interestingly enough, some players, when they have success, are going to try to parlay into a better position. But, in the case of UTEP, their coach, their head coach, knew “Hey, this didn’t work. We have to start over from scratch and completely reset this thing, otherwise the program is going nowhere.”
Diego: Yeah. And on the flip side, it seems like the NIL might create some opportunities for UTEP. I mean, I think we can all look at Malachi Nelson as potentially an opportunity, right? Where, on the flip side, yeah, you have a good season, maybe you go to a bigger school. Or, you’re a touted prospect, maybe it doesn’t pan out as well as you want it to, and then you can sort of – a school like UTEP, maybe through NIL has the opportunity to go, “Hey, come here, we’ll pay you.” And a guy that maybe wouldn’t have – UTEP may not have been on his radar prior, UTEP ends up landing him. And we’ll have to see how the season plays out, and if he even wins the starting job, right? But I just wonder how you all think about a high recruit like Malachi and the situation with him, and how NIL maybe enabled that?
Steve: So, interestingly enough, I think about the Malachi Nelson situation a lot. Because here was the number one player coming out of high school two years ago who’s now at UTEP. And suddenly you have people in the NIL game, donors, that are like, “You know what? If we can get him, we’ve got to get him. Let’s secure him.”
You can’t miss on a situation like this, because UTEP doesn’t have enough people giving to NIL, when they’re giving big dollars, that will afford to just keep giving every year if these NIL gambles don’t pan out. So, I’m really hoping Malachi Nelson is able to do what a lot of people are hoping he does, because then those that helped contribute to his NIL are like, “Hey, we can do this. We can do this with others.” As opposed to saying, “God, what a bust. Why should we keep giving $25,000, $50,000, $100,000 to these NIL players if they’re not going to turn out to be what we hoped they would?”
Adrian: Yeah, and the gripes are valid, right? Because you think about
the Charlie Brown effect that you talked about earlier. You get all excited for the Southern Utah game in football, the coach’s opener, and you lay an egg and you lose in double overtime. And you have everybody show up to the Don Haskins Center for the New Mexico State rivalry battle of I-10 in men’s basketball, and you lose that one. Your season kind of spirals downward from that game.
And I’d say this: while NIL is beneficial – and I’m sorry to paint such a doom and gloom situation, it truly is a doom and gloom situation – the way I look at it because of no regulations involving NIL. But while NIL can help when it comes to getting bigger prospects like
as their last stop, or maybe a bounce back opportunity, it won’t help UTEP retain or get local talent. It just won’t, guys. I worry about that in the future.
Because you’re seeing – I mean, you guys did a great story on El Paso Matters talking about Jake Fette. But it’s not only Fette, it’s guys like Ryan Estrada, who’s now committed to Minnesota. It’s guys like Justin Morales, who took one visit and committed on the spot to Kansas State, even though some of these guys had UTEP offers. I’d throw Daveon Singleton in that same category as well, as one of the top prospects in town and UTEP was able to secure a commitment from him. But I don’t know if you’re gonna get another Deion Hankins, who had an all-time – he is the all-time leading rusher in El Paso football history who decided to go to UTEP versus going to a school in the SEC, like he was recruited back in the day like Arkansas.
Steve: But, historically UTEP has always lost their best prospects to bigger schools. You can go back to Ed Stansbury and how he went to UCLA. You can go to Cliff Tucker, who went to Maryland. And the point is that, long before NIL and long before the transfer portal, was if you were a terrific athlete, chances are, if you had Power 4, Power 5 offers, you were gone. Deion is the exception to the rule. He wanted to play close to home in front of family. He’s a religious man, and he wanted his mom to come watch him play. But for every Deion Hankins, there’s four to five others that are gone because they see the offers coming their way. And, now with NIL dollars attached to it, there’s no way they’re going to want to stick around.
Diego: Yeah, and Pablo’s done some good reporting on Jake Fette’s situation and obviously some offers came in (from) Arizona State and really big schools.
I wonder, can you guys put any dollar figures out there as it relates to compensation of UTEP athletes? And I’m curious, I mean, for, like, the basketball team, are they compensating guys equally? Are the star players getting more? I wonder if you can talk about sort of the dollar figures guys are earning here?
Steve: They’ve had interesting models in basketball. They tried a model where everybody got paid a similar amount of money. That didn’t work. So now they’ve changed the game, and they essentially said, “We’re going to spend big on three or four players, and then we’ll build out the rest of the roster accordingly.”
And you want to know something? I have no problem with that. If they’re spending good money on a nucleus and they provide good value, then that’s probably the way to go. The flip side to that is, well, players not making a lot of money are going to be upset and say, “Well, why should I pass the ball to this guy if he’s making all the money?” And they were worried too much about how to (not) hurt everybody’s feelings. Well, clearly, it’s all about wins and losses. And if you can have the best players for NIL carry your team and lead you, I’m all for it.
Adrian: Yeah, it takes a lot of selflessness, I should say, as a person in the locker room. And I would say it’s also really affecting the smaller sports because, like Steve talked about earlier, you have a volleyball standout who stays in El Paso. I mean, that person right there, that individual is probably getting more NIL, or all the NIL, compared to everybody else on the team.
For football, you maybe make a priority list and you have a list of 10 guys, right, before they establish the $600,000. And you say, “OK, these are our priority guys out there. We’re going to go out and try to pay them.” Whereas men’s basketball might focus on three or four guys for six-figure deals, maybe football has more of a priority list to try to spread the money accordingly, fairly and make their situation – at the end of the day, at the end of the season, these guys should look back and say, “Hey, is my situation better now versus before?” And I think UTEP’s trying to create that environment.
Pablo: Steve, you mentioned Malachi Nelson and that you’ve thought about him a lot. I have as well, and I draw a lot of parallels to his story with Kai Locksley, who you might remember played at UTEP 2018-2019 time frame. Also a celebrated high school quarterback who started at Texas, right, before bouncing around some (junior colleges) and ending up here. A similar path that Malachi has taken, but the one variable that’s completely different is the NIL thing, right?
We saw Kai compete here, and he did alright during his time here at UTEP. If Malachi just does alright, I mean, what does that do with regard to the NIL picture? I mean, does it make UTEP less desirable to other QBs who might be trying to take that similar route? Or, I guess, what kind of impact would that have?
Steve: It’s a really good question because you think about Malachi Nelson and everybody thinks, “Well, if he’s the number one player in the country two years ago and he comes to UTEP, he should immediately take UTEP to a bowl game.” Well, there’s other ways to look at this. Number one, maybe Malachi Nelson was overrated out of high school. Maybe he truly wasn’t the number one overall prospect that everybody thought he was. And you look at his situations at USC and Boise State, he didn’t win the jobs there. So, he comes to UTEP to play for the immediate opportunity to contribute.
But, if Malachi Nelson is not as good as everybody expected, then it would be a tougher go for him even here than people would have otherwise thought. The interesting thing when you talk about Kai Locksley was he came to UTEP to play. That was why he was here. He came because he knew he would have an opportunity to play.
And he did play, but he was on a team in which his skill set really never was able to show how good he could possibly be, whether it was the offensive line, the lack of receivers, the offense in general, because it was more of a conservative offense. Malachi, they’re going to give him the keys to the car and say, “Here. Take the job. We want you to try to take the job.” And not to say Skyler Locklear or Cade McConnell can’t lead the team, but we all know why Malachi was brought in.
He’s got to perform because, let’s be honest, if Malachi Nelson gets the job and they don’t go to a bowl game and they win three, four, five games, that’s going to be considered a failure. That’s not a success.
Adrian: I just say it’s a real complicated question because it does have future ramifications, and it could have ripple effects in the future. Now, there’s always ways you could spin it positively, right? Like, let’s say the young freshman, redshirt freshman, Shay Smith, gets some playing time. And then you’re talking at the end of the season, “Well, you’ve got a future to build upon.” Or, you throw out Skyler Locklear in the mix and he wins you some games. And it’s like, “Hey, let’s see if he could come back for one more senior year” or whatever that might look like.
It didn’t work out for Malachi Nelson at USC. It didn’t work for him at Boise State. So, at UTEP, this is kind of the resurrection project right here for Malachi Nelson. And there was a reason why he was thrown with Jordan Palmer in the offseason to work with a QB guru who had a chance to play in El Paso. There’s a reason why this coaching staff went all-in to make him one of their priority recruits over the offseason, the spring ball period. I trust my eyes, though. I mean, I watched him in the spring game, and I’d probably say that I’d put him closer to three than I’d put him closer to one, just as of now. But that was April. He has four months between April and August to earn that starting job and to refine his skills.
Steve: I’ll ask you guys this question, okay? And we’re talking about Dana Dimel. We’re talking about Sean Kugler. We’re talking about Mike Price. All three of those guys had recruiting classes near the bottom of the league every single season, right? Every single season. Mike Price took two UTEP teams immediately to bowl games and a third years later. Sean Kugler had one team that went to the New Mexico Bowl, OK? Dana Dimel had another team that went to the New Mexico Bowl. All with the worst recruiting classes in the league.
Last two years, what have we seen from Scotty Walden? The number one recruiting class in Conference USA. And immediately you think, well, that should translate to wins. What if it doesn’t? That’s the other thing to think about, is it’s great having these recruiting classes. It’s terrific for UTEP. They’ve never had this before. But ultimately, guys, it all comes down to wins and losses. Whether you’ve got the worst recruiting class in your league or you’ve got the best, it doesn’t matter if you’re not winning football games.
Diego: Yeah, and on that point, I’ll just mention, I think, one of the top recruits the year before last was Jaylin Jones, who was kind of a pass-rushing linebacker. And he transferred, right, before – he really didn’t have a lot of playing time. And I think people looked at him as, “Hey, let’s develop this guy. He’ll become a star.” And then he leaves, and that seems to be another kind of result, on the flip side, of the NIL era for UTEP.
Just a couple more questions here for you guys. I wonder, you guys have talked about some of the other sports a little bit – volleyball, and I think you mentioned women’s tennis is being done away with. But I wonder if you can expand a little bit on, sort of, the effect of NIL to other sports at UTEP? And could we see a consolidation where UTEP just goes, “Hey, let’s really just stick with football, basketball, maybe volleyball.” Maybe they just try to apportion the money a little bit (to) softball, golf. I think they just added the, what was it, the beach volleyball team recently, right? So, just wonder what you think the effect is on them?
Adrian: Yeah, I would say that the model that they adopt through the revenue sharing will dictate everything, right? I was talking to Steve about this beforehand. Most colleges at the mid-major or Group of 5 level will adopt, like, a 75% to football, 15% to men’s basketball, 5% to women’s basketball and then 5% to other sports model.
Now, I think – and we were talking about this before – but I think UTEP will probably prioritize men’s basketball a little higher than 15 percent. Actually, I would say much higher. This is a basketball town still, and football still needs a little bit more love as far as their fans and also some more wins in order for them to warrant that kind of ratio right there as far as spending.
So, maybe you’re talking about this trickling down to the other non-revenue generating sports in the future. Not to say that those sports don’t matter. I mean, they’re raising banners in Conference USA in track far more than they’re raising banners in men’s basketball or football, the two money-making sports. So, I’d say for all these other sports, If UTEP opts into the revenue sharing next year when they make that transition to the Mountain West, it’ll have that ripple effect down the line for those other sports.
Steve: So, here’s what’s interesting, right? Let’s just say the Miners, just for argument’s sake, make $4 million a year in their media rights deal. And they decide to do the revenue share, and we’re talking 5% spread out to all the sports after football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, right? And then you look at the rest of the sports all divided out. What about the conferences that all have teams that are making $20 million? They go right to the cap, $20.5 million. And they’re dividing 5% of that amount of money.
The point is, UTEP will never be able to compete with the Power 4s. They never will, right? So, you’ve got to hope that between NIL and revenue share, they can compete with all of their schools in the Group of 5. But New Mexico has got a $2 million NIL deal for basketball. That shows you – and UTEP’s going into the Mountain West next year. And New Mexico, they’re probably going to be sticking around. Maybe they grow it to $2.5 million or $3 million. Who knows after their successful season last year?
So, that’s where you’ve got to start thinking about right now. Start looking at these other Mountain West schools and where is UTEP’s NIL going to fall in that? They’ve got to do a lot better, guys, than $600,000 in men’s basketball and $600,000 in football even with revenue share, to try to stay at least near the top half of everybody in the league.
Diego: Yeah. OK, we’ll sort of end here. I just wonder, we’ve had kind of a, like I say, a little bit of gloom and doom, I guess, and also trying to point out some of the opportunities that UTEP’s trying to make with this NIL era. But, I just wonder, can you guys give us a general outlook, right, for how you expect maybe this season to go for the football, basketball, volleyball teams?
And then, just curious, if you think we’ll see a shift once UTEP gets in the Mountain West in terms of competitiveness?
Steve: OK, great question. I’ll start it off here. I think football’s going to win – I said 4-8, okay? They were 3-9 last season. I’m going on the low end of things, 4-8. I keep seeing people that are not from El Paso thinking UTEP’s going to win nine football games this year. And I’m like, can you please find out and tell me how is UTEP going to suddenly go from 3-9 to 9-3? I’ve done this too many years around here to suddenly jump on the bandwagon and say, “Oh yeah, UTEP’s a nine-win football team. They’re not. So, I’ll be very conservative.
And, by the way, 4-8 with their schedule is a disappointment. That will not be a good year. And Scotty Walden will start to hear those same moans and groans like we’ve seen from Joe Golding and Dana Dimel and all these other coaches in the past. Basketball, please. I’ve got no idea. It’s a whole new roster. Everything is different outside of a handful of guys. So let’s just say we go conservative there and we say 15 to 18 wins. Is that going to be near the top of the conference? No. Will that be good enough to get into the NCAA tournament? No. Will fans be upset, especially since Joe Golding just signed a contract extension? Absolutely, yes.
But I haven’t seen these guys enough to just say, “Oh my God, they’re so much better than they’ve been the last couple of seasons.” The only constant we have is volleyball, because Ben Wallis has the nucleus of his team back. They were an at-large NCAA pick last year. They’re going to be good again this year as long as they stay healthy. So, the only sure thing I can tell you right now, here in the summer of 2025, is that I expect volleyball to still be near the top of the league.
Adrian: Yeah, and I’d say for the future for UTEP, in order to remain competitive, they’re going to have to get creative, you all. Is it far-fetched to call UTEP possibly in the future maybe a feeder school to a bigger program? I was talking about something crazy, where could UTEP be like, a rental location? “Hey, I’m Ole Miss, and I have this prospect who’s an incoming freshman. I want UTEP to play him his first two years, and we’ll take him the last two years, junior, senior year.”
Pick a sport. It doesn’t have to be men’s basketball. I just picked men’s basketball because Chris Beard and Joe Golding are friends. So, maybe you make some kind of binding agreement. Since everybody’s throwing out contracts for NIL, these are binding deals through agents that are involved in this process. Why not get creative if you’re UTEP? Be a feeder school. Go out there and compete with higher prospects, with better recruits.
These schools aren’t recruiting freshmen. They don’t want the high school guys. Well, why not have them at UTEP, have them mold and get better here, win here, be competitive here, and then go elsewhere for their final years of college? I think you have to get creative if you’re UTEP. Jump into different hoops that no one else wants to get in. Have general managers in your big money-making sports to help generate more revenue for you. Maybe it’s a former player, an alumni.
We had Tim Hardaway on SportsTalk, and he said that he would love to be the general manager of men’s basketball. So, just examples like that. Get creative if you’re UTEP in order to try to be competitive. If you’re just doing the bare minimum, if you’re UTEP, you’re just going to hit that three to four win threshold every year in football. You’re going to be a .500 team in basketball. Maybe just a middle of the pack group in every other sport.
Steve: I’ll piggyback off of what Adrian just said. OK, a few years back the late Dana Dimel was excited because he just got a recruit in a wide receiver named Jacob Cowing. And I asked him about him, and he said “Man, you’re going to love him. He wanted to go to Texas, and Texas really wanted to take him, but they had no room for him. They were already filled up, so we were able to get him.” And he said he’ll be an instant impact player on this team. And that’s exactly what ended up happening.
And that was before NIL took place. That’s just knowing, “Hey, Texas wanted him.” He was highly regarded. They couldn’t fit him in. Came to UTEP. He starred. Ended up going to Arizona. And now he’s in the NFL. So the only difference is now we could be talking about the NIL version of that. Where, as Adrian said, maybe UTEP is almost like a JUCO, but like a farm system where you take players for a couple of years, let them develop here and then they’ll go off to the Power 4s.
And, to be honest, who cares? As long as this could lead UTEP to winning what would be the – I don’t think fans would care about that. All they want to do is win, that’s all fans care about. And if you could have a player for a year or two to help get to that goal, even if they leave afterwards, the end result is you’re still winning.
Pablo: I don’t disagree with any of the negative sentiments that are being expressed here. I think it’s going to be a challenging year for UTEP sports. The only positive thing I have to say is just the home game I’m looking forward to the most this year is September 11th, when UCLA comes to town to play our volleyball team at Memorial Gym. I think that’s going to be a fun one. Hopefully it sets up the volleyball team for another good season.
Adrian: They’ve had awesome, awesome scheduling in non-conference. That’s a credit to Ben Wallis. I mean, he schedules all these groups who have high, high rankings on their side. and what does that do for UTEP? Well, that makes them an NCAA at-large bid like they were last year.
They play all these non-conference teams. They have success against them. They make a great case and put together a great resume, even though they’re not winning Conference USA, to be an at-large bid in the NCAA tournament.
Steve: And I want to give Jim Senter some credit here, OK, because he takes a lot of grief for the lack of success that the programs have had and the lack of fan support. And all of that is justified. But let’s take Ben Wallis for a second. Very successful volleyball coach, turning UTEP into a winner, which they’ve never been before.
So, what does Senter do? He adds another sport in beach volleyball, makes Ben Wallis the head of it, increases his salary and gives him the bump up to make him paid high enough to where he’s not going to leave. And then, when they find an actual head coach for (beach) volleyball, they don’t take the salary away from Ben. He just oversees it. So, he’s still, right now, the highest paid volleyball coach in the conference, and making enough money to where he’s turning down Power 4 jobs because he sees where his situation is at UTEP, and he’s not looking to jump ship and leave right away.
And it was a smart move. It was a great way to keep him. So, in that regard, I give Senter a lot of credit, because we could have lost Ben Wallis a few years ago. And the volleyball program probably would have dipped like every other program has. But in this sense, it’s still on the way up, because they thought a little bit out of the box, added beach volleyball, bumped up his salary, and now Ben Wallis is paid well enough to where he’s not looking to take that next jump.
Diego: Yeah. And just last comment here. When it comes to men’s basketball, one guy I’m particularly interested in is this guy, Kaseem Watson, who’s 6’9, and scored a lot, I believe, last year at Delaware State, right?
And, so, to your point, Adrian, about UTEP being a farm team, it’s almost like the reverse. They find this guy overperforming in this small conference. They go and pluck him, and it’s almost like now, the best-case scenario is that Kaseem Watson has a great year. Maybe he’s UTEP’s leading scorer. They perform really well in Conference USA, and then he goes somewhere else, right?
And I think you’ve written, Steve, that it’s sort of like, we’re entering this era where that’s kind of the best case scenario. And as a fan, you can’t really root for the name on the back of the jersey anymore, right?
Steve: No, you can’t. Because they’re going to leave you year-to-year. They really are. Just like coaches are going to leave. The minute coaches have success, they’re going to leave. And you want to know something? As long as the program wins, to me, that’s all that matters. That’s all you care about right now.
You can’t get used to players. You can’t get used to coaches. All you can worry about is the name on the front of the jersey and hope that those programs will get back to the levels that we saw years ago.
Adrian: I just think that you can’t take players for granted anymore. If they’re here now, you can’t think that they’re going to be here next year. You can be a fan of the player. You can have support for that player. But know that it’s not as slight to you as a fan if they hit the portal.
And people in El Paso – I think it’s an El Paso thing – guys. People in El Paso take it personal, right? You leave the program, you leave El Paso, you say that you don’t want to be here anymore. They take it personal. We see it on this show all the time.
A player will leave UTEP, they’ll have success or maybe not success at their next location. They might be a pro player, and fans here could not care about them at all. They don’t care anything about it. They don’t want to know anything about what they’re doing at that pro level. They just care that they hit the portal and they’re gone, or they left UTEP at some point.
Steve: And the truth is, this is college athletics. It’s not just here at UTEP. It’s everywhere. If you’re on the biggest stage and you succeed, you’re going to hit the portal because you think you can make even more money. If you’re on the biggest stage and you don’t play, you’re going to leave because you want to get an opportunity to go play somewhere else.
Every roster is the same. They’re all turning over. No schools are keeping their nucleus anymore year-after-year. So, unfortunately for UTEP, they’re now in the same exact boat as every other college in America.
Diego: Cool. This has been a great conversation. We’ll go ahead and leave it there, Steve and Adrian. Appreciate you guys hosting me and Pablo here at your studio and doing this with us. So, thanks so much for your time.
Adrian: Thank you, guys.
Steve: Thanks for having us.
NIL
Which college football stars have the highest NIL projection in 2025?
There is no shortage of star power in college football this year, and some of the game’s biggest names are projected to rake in millions of Name, Image and Likeness dollars as they compete for a postseason berth. Michigan quarterback Bryce Underwood is the only true freshman ranked inside the top 10 of college football’s […]

There is no shortage of star power in college football this year, and some of the game’s biggest names are projected to rake in millions of Name, Image and Likeness dollars as they compete for a postseason berth.
Michigan quarterback Bryce Underwood is the only true freshman ranked inside the top 10 of college football’s top NIL earners after signing a reported $12.5 million deal with the Wolverines. The former five-star holds an On3 NIL valuation of $3 million as he prepares to take the starting role.
Experienced starting quarterbacks like Arizona State’s Sam Leavitt ($3.1 million), Penn State’s Drew Allar ($3.1 million) and Clemson’s Cade Klubnik ($3.4 million) passed up the opportunity to declare for the 2025 NFL Draft, but more development and enticing NIL earnings were too good to ignore.
Among the SEC’s top quarterbacks, Florida’s DJ Lagway ($3.7 million) and South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers both hold NIL valuations of $3.7 million after breaking out as freshmen last season.
LSU quarterback Garrett Nussmeier, another star passer that declined turning pro, ranks fourth nationally with a $3.8 million NIL valuation after leading the SEC in passing.
The only non-quarterback on the list is Ohio State star wide receiver Jeremiah Smith. The sophomore holds an NIL valuation of $4.2 million after helping lead the Buckeyes to a national championship.
Miami paid handsomely for Georgia transfer quarterback Carson Beck, a two-year starter that posted a 24-3 record leading the Bulldogs. The sixth-year senior ranks second with an NIL valuation of $4.3 million and reportedly accepted $4.5 million to play for the Hurricanes.
No. 10 Michigan QB Bryce Underwood, $3 million
No. 9 Arizona State QB Sam Leavitt, $3.1 million
No. 8 Penn State QB Drew Allar, $3.1 million
No. 7 Clemson QB Cade Klubnik, $3.4 million
No. 6 Florida QB DJ Lagway, $3.7 million
No. 5 South Carolina QB LaNorris Sellers, $3.7 million
No. 4 LSU QB Garrett Nussmeier, $3.8 million
No. 3 Ohio State WR Jeremiah Smith, $4.2 million
No. 2 Miami QB Carson Beck, $4.3 million
No. 1 Texas QB Arch Manning, $6.8 million
Leading all college athletes is non other than Texas quarterback Arch Manning. The former five-star has only started two games through his first two seasons, but his talent and family legacy have propelled him to the top in NIL valuations ($6.8 million) by a wide margin.
NIL
Time ticking before Orioles on draft clock later today
The day has arrived when the Orioles can make bold strokes in painting a rosier future for the organization. The draft begins at 6 p.m. and the Orioles hold the 19th selection, followed by the 30th, 31st, 37th, 58th, 69th and 93rd through three rounds. The rest of it plays out Monday. The Orioles obtained […]

The day has arrived when the Orioles can make bold strokes in painting a rosier future for the organization.
The draft begins at 6 p.m. and the Orioles hold the 19th selection, followed by the 30th, 31st, 37th, 58th, 69th and 93rd through three rounds. The rest of it plays out Monday.
The Orioles obtained the 37th pick in the Competitive Balance A round after trading reliever Bryan Baker to the Rays. The move didn’t increase their workload or alter the strategy beyond having the extra selection.
“It’s exciting for our group because this is what we work towards all year is to get ready for the draft, and it just gives us another shot, another pick, some more money, which in terms of strategy gives you a little more flexibility to maybe do some more things,” said Matt Blood, the vice president of player development and domestic scouting. “But it’s really just another opportunity to get another really good player.”
The hope, of course, is that the Orioles land a bunch of them.
Scoring big in the draft is an ideal way to win without substantial increases in payroll. That’s also logic. And the farm system has taken the expected fall from atop baseball’s perch with player promotions and trades.
“My whole world is around now acquiring talent as well as developing talent, and when we have this many picks this high, it gives us an opportunity to acquire more talent than other teams have an opportunity to acquire,” Blood said. “And then it’s a challenge for our coaches to get them to be better than they came in and hopefully get up here and play, so yes, it’s very important.”
“Look, I think they’re all really important,” said executive vice president/general manager Mike Elias. “By and large, we’ve drafted well the last six years or whatever, and a lot of that is the great players that you see out on the field. So all the drafts are important. But when you have this amount of picks, it is more important. There’s no question about it.
“We’ve just got a much bigger opportunity ahead of us and the draft is a lifeblood for a franchise like ours.”
The usual questions hang in the air.
* Are the Orioles attracted to specific characteristics in this class?
“It’s no different than normal,” Blood said. “I think we’re always looking for good baseball players, whether they’re pitchers or hitters, and the things that play at the major league level. That’s what we’re looking for, and that doesn’t really change.”
* Is there more pressure to take a pitcher with so many picks on Day One?
The highest drafted pitcher under Elias was Florida State right-hander Jackson Baumeister at 63rd overall in 2023. Oklahoma State’s Nolan McLean didn’t sign after he was chosen 81st in 2022.
“I personally don’t,” Blood said of feeling the pressure. “I think that my job is to pick the best player that we can possibly pick. And we have pitchers on the board, we have position players on the board, and ultimately we’re gonna be graded on the major league value that we draft. And so our job is to do the best we can at drafting major league value, and if that happens to be a position player, then it is. And if it happens to be a pitcher, then it is. I personally feel pressure to get major league value.”
Elias described it as “very possible,” so he’s saying there’s a chance.
“I hope that we do,” he added. “If you have a lot of picks like this, it’s nice to have a diverse set of picks. But I also, I’ve talked to people, I’ve seen drafts over the years where scouting directors will say they regret trying to diversify a group of picks for its own sake. We’re going to line up the board with how we think the talent is and we’ll take in that regard. But we definitely want to get some pitching in this draft.”
* But what about all those Day One picks?
“We have more picks, so more chances, so yes, if you’re doing the math that way,” Blood said. “I think that we’re gonna continue to follow our strategy of finding the best bet we can, and when you have four picks, that’s four chances versus one, so yeah.”
* Will the Orioles go college or high school at No. 19?
They aren’t saying because they don’t know. Draft life was much easier in the top five.
Blood didn’t agree that high school depth is more pronounced this year, but he added, “There’s definitely a nice group of players that we’re interested in and I think the industry is, as well, and we’re always very excited about young, athletic players, so that’ll be cool.”
* Can the Orioles repeat their recent success when selecting in the 30s and 40s?
That’s overall picks, not rounds, which don’t exist anymore.
Henderson was taken 42nd overall in 2019, Elias’ first draft class. Jordan Westburg was 30th in 2020. Dylan Beavers was 33rd in 2022.
“We absolutely want to,” Blood said. “There’s gonna be some good options there and we’re gonna be excited about the players that we get there. It’s better than picking in the 50s and the 60s and the 70s, so I’ll take it. Three picks there is very exciting for our entire group and I think it’s a great opportunity for the organization.”
* How about that draft money?
The Orioles are packing an unprecedented $19,144,500 in bonus pool funds. They can go overslot, for example, on a high school kid who falls to them.
“We’ll see,” Blood said. “I think that what it allows us to do is be dynamic. I think that we’re gonna be able to make some decisions that other teams aren’t gonna have the opportunity to make, and I think that based on how the draft comes to us – we are picking a little bit later at 19 and then down below that – we’ll have to see what happens. But we’re gonna have the ability to make some decisions that other teams aren’t, and that’s exciting.”
“That gives us a big opportunity to flex our muscle and hopefully, if there are players that cost a little extra money because they’ve got college commitments, we’ll be able to use it,” Elias said. “And I think that the fact that we had picks at 30 and 31 already, it makes us able to acquire a 37th pick because you’ve kind of already scouted players in that neighborhood of the draft. So we should be pretty well prepared for the picks at 37.”
* Can we trust a mock?
You’ll be ridiculed if you do.
The pundits fight the urge to punt on the Orioles, who reveal little to nothing. Heston Kjerstad, for example, seemed to catch just about everyone by surprise after going second overall in 2020.
The only common thread in 2025 is the likelihood of a position player at No. 19, which isn’t much of a reach.
MLB Pipeline has the Orioles selecting California prep third baseman Gavin Fien. ESPN says University of Arkansas shortstop Wehiwa Aloy. CBS Sports tabs Washington prep third baseman Xavier Neyens, who ESPN predicts will go to the Orioles at No. 30. Baseball America’s 6.0 mock predicts that the Orioles will select Texas A&M outfielder Jace LaViolette.
So yes, it’s an exact science.
NIL
SEC Media Days: What To Expect As The 2025 Season Officially Kicks Off In Atlanta
ATLANTA – While Beyoncé and the MLB All-Star Game might be one of the hottest tickets in town over the next couple of days, it’s SEC Media Days that has the attention of college football fans, as “Talkin’ Season” is upon us. If you were looking for the “bat signal” for the kickoff to football […]

ATLANTA – While Beyoncé and the MLB All-Star Game might be one of the hottest tickets in town over the next couple of days, it’s SEC Media Days that has the attention of college football fans, as “Talkin’ Season” is upon us.
If you were looking for the “bat signal” for the kickoff to football season, look no further than the 16 SEC coaches who will take the stage this week inside the College Football Hall of Fame.
The unofficial start to the college football season was last week in Dallas, with Big 12 coaches taking the stage, but there will be plenty of eyes on what transpires in Atlanta, as many questions linger about the sport’s future.
Hope you aren’t tired of hearing about NIL, how players are going to be paid, what kind of problems have already arisen, and how many transfer portal periods there should be, because you’re going to hear a lot more about those subjects this week.
Make sure you follow OutKick for the latest news and interviews, as I will be joined this week by the “Hot Mic” crew at the SEC Media Days.
Trust me, I’m ready to start talking about the upcoming season just as much as you are.
Ok, now don’t get all excited thinking we’re going to get quotes from a few participants that will trigger opposing fan bases, but we’re usually treated to a few moments that cause fans on the message boards to lose their collective minds.

SEC Media Days are here. (Credit: Trey Wallace)
Even though every player who will take the podium in Atlanta has gone through a media training course, there will still be plenty of viral moments that will get us through the next 48 days before kickoff.
And while Lane Kiffin has softened his tone over the past few years, besides his ongoing Twitter jokes, you can expect plenty of coaches to discuss the ongoing problems related to NIL and the House settlement. Thankfully, Vanderbilt’s Diego Pavia is heading to Atlanta with fierce confidence, which usually leads to the quarterback saying a few things that will be used as bulletin board material for opposing teams.
Yes, I said Vanderbilt and bulletin board material in the same sentence.
Who’s Headed To SEC Media Days? Arch Manning Will Be Swarmed
In terms of scheduling each day, there will be plenty of opportunities to listen to coaches discuss how much better their team is going to be this season, while knowing that half of them probably don’t believe the words coming out of their mouths.
Here’s the daily list of coaches you’ll be hearing speak:
- Monday, July 14: LSU’s Brian Kelly, Ole Miss’ Lane Kiffin, South Carolina’s Shane Beamer, Vanderbilt’s Clark Lea
- Tuesday, July 15: Auburn’s Hugh Freeze, Georgia’s Kirby Smart, Tennessee’s Josh Heupel, Texas’ Steve Sarkisian
- Wednesday, July 16: Alabama’s Kalen DeBoer, Florida’s Billy Napier, Mississippi State’s Jeff Lebby, Oklahoma’s Brent Venables
- Thursday, July 17: Arkansas’ Sam Pittman, Kentucky’s Mark Stoops, Missouri’s Eli Drinkwitz, Texas A&M’s Mike Elko
As for the players joining their coaches on the podium, you can expect Tuesday to be the wildest of them all because of Texas quarterback Arch Manning making an appearance.
While there are plenty of people who have already proclaimed Manning to be the second coming of his uncle Peyton, folks might want to pump the brakes. Sure, the Longhorns quarterback has the chance to be great, but we still haven’t seen the young man compete at a high level, save for the two starts he got in 2024.
This week should also be the starting point for South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers to start his unofficial Heisman Trophy campaign, as he speaks with the media alongside his head coach, Shane Beamer, on Monday.
Prevalent Burning Questions Coaches Will Try To Skirt
Is Ty Simpson going to be the starting quarterback for Alabama that can lead them back to the College Football Playoff, under second-year coach Kalen DeBoer?
What about Austin Simmons at Ole Miss? It will be difficult for Lane Kiffin to replace Jaxson Dart, but Simmons might actually be the guy. Kiffin will almost certainly be peppered with questions regarding the transfer portal, and how his Rebels will be looking to make the College Football Playoff after striking out last season with a loaded roster.
How many times will Josh Heupel be asked about Nico Iamaleava leaving Tennessee on the final day of spring practice? Yes, you can expect that question to be asked a lot. Would it have made sense to just pay the quarterback and avoid all the offseason nonsense? Sure, but that whole ordeal was deeper than just Iamaleava looking for a pay-bump.

Josh Heupel and Tennessee have moved on from Nico Iamaleava, but the questions will still be asked (Photo by Wesley Hitt/Getty Images)
You can expect Heupel to give the whole “we’ve moved on, and I’m excited about our quarterback room, with a true competition taking place during Fall camp”. speech. And, yes, the addition of Joey Aguliar will be a topic of conversation.
Oh, and let’s not forget about the other coach who will be peppered with questions, but not particularly about the on-field product.
How Is The Golf Game Of Auburn’s Hugh Freeze? Yes, It Will Be Asked
For the past month, it seems just about every Auburn fan has been concerned about how many times head coach Hugh Freeze has hit the golf course. No, I’m not kidding, and neither was Golf Digest, when the magazine decided to jump into the fun.
While Auburn has been getting beat on the recruiting trail lately, plenty of Tiger fans have blamed this on Hugh Freeze playing several rounds of golf. Yes, folks think these coaches don’t have a life outside of football. Do you know how many coaches sneak off to play a round of golf during the regular season?
I’m sure the number would force you to retract some of your statements about Hugh Freeze.
Even Lane Kiffin took a jab at the Auburn coach on social media. The best response from Freeze should’ve been asking how many times Kiffin has hit the “Gulf of America” for a fishing expedition over the past few months, but Freeze didn’t take the bait.
I would not expect you to learn much about your favorite team this week in Atlanta at SEC Media Days, but I can almost promise you there will be some entertaining quotes that come out of the College Football Hall of Fame.
So, strap in. Make sure you’re following OutKick for the latest news and interviews this week.
NIL
15 Compelling College Players Who Could Go Quickly
Image credit: Gage Wood (Photo by Eddie Kelly/ ProLook Photos) The MLB Draft is equal parts projection and persuasion—a search not just for talent, but for belief. The 15 players highlighted below are among the most compelling college names in this year’s class, each for a different reason. Some lit up Omaha, some carry freakish […]

Image credit:
Gage Wood (Photo by Eddie Kelly/ ProLook Photos)
The MLB Draft is equal parts projection and persuasion—a search not just for talent, but for belief.
The 15 players highlighted below are among the most compelling college names in this year’s class, each for a different reason. Some lit up Omaha, some carry freakish tools, others are works in progress with tantalizing ceilings. This isn’t a ranking. It’s a snapshot of the players who captured our attention—and who might soon convince a front office to call their name early.
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Kade Anderson, LHP, LSU (BA Draft Rank: 4)
If Anderson’s brilliance wasn’t already clear by the time he reached Omaha, he removed all doubt once he got there. The LSU lefthander allowed just one run over 16 masterful College World Series innings, striking out 17—including a complete-game shutout in the national title game. His performance was surgical, unflinching and final.
But the truest measure of Anderson’s dominance came not from the stat sheet, but from the mouths of those who tried to hit him.
“He toys with you,” teammate Steven Milam told Baseball America.
That sentiment echoed through the LSU dugout and well beyond it. Armed with a fastball that danced at the top of the zone and breaking balls that spun at 3,000 rpm, Anderson carved his way through the 2025 season as the nation’s top college arm. He led Division I in strikeouts, earned first-team All-America honors, won Baseball America’s inaugural College Pitcher of the Year award and—fittingly—was named Most Outstanding Player in the College World Series.
To LSU head coach Jay Johnson, the decision for the No. 1 pick is obvious.
“His next pitch,” Johnson said in Omaha, “should be for someplace in the Washington Nationals organization. It’s not close.”
Jamie Arnold, LHP, Florida State (BA Draft Rank: 6)
There’s little mystery to Arnold’s place near the top of draft boards. The Florida State lefthander led the Seminoles back to national prominence with a 2.98 ERA and 278 strikeouts over 190.1 innings since the start of 2024, all while dominating in the crucible of the ACC.
But what makes Arnold compelling isn’t just what he is. It’s what he’s becoming.
Once a two-pitch arm, Arnold spent the offseason developing a changeup to round out his arsenal. By spring, it had turned into a real weapon—arguably too effective, he joked.
“It moves a ton so sometimes it’s hard to gauge where to start it,” Arnold told Baseball America. “But I’d say that’s a pretty good problem to have at this point.”
Arnold throws from a deceptive low slot and pitches with a poise that belies the pressure of his draft status. Where others might tighten, he leans in. Scouts believe that changeup could grade as plus or even double-plus in time, adding even more ceiling to an already high-floor profile.
Arnold enters the first round with one of the most complete arsenals in the class—and the mindset to keep sharpening it.
Liam Doyle, LHP, Tennessee (BA Draft Rank: 8)
When Doyle returned on two days’ rest to close out Tennessee’s regional final against Wake Forest, some called it reckless. Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello had a different take.
“He’d have killed me if I didn’t let him go back out there,” Vitello said—smiling, but only partly joking.
That moment distilled what makes Doyle so compelling. His fastball is a unicorn: a double-plus four-seamer from the left side that dominated hitters all spring. But it’s his mindset—his unrelenting, almost murderous competitiveness—that sets him apart.
Doyle nearly edged out Anderson for the national strikeout lead and regularly overwhelmed hitters with just that one pitch. His secondaries lag behind, but evaluators rave about his makeup and believe it will carry him through the developmental process.
Doyle’s profile isn’t complete, but his drive is. He’s the kind of pitcher who grabs 100 mph on short rest and dares you to swing. And that might just be enough.
Tyler Bremner, RHP, UC Santa Barbara (BA Draft Rank: 11)
Bremner’s 3.49 ERA might not dazzle at first glance. But look closer—over the final six weeks of the season, few pitchers in the country were better. From April 4 to May 16, Bremner struck out 74 while walking just 10 in 43.1 innings, posting a 2.91 ERA and showcasing why so many evaluators believe in his upside.
The 6-foot-2 righthander owns one of the best changeups in the draft and pairs it with advanced command, mid-90s velocity and a calm, controlled delivery. His slider remains a work in progress—flashing promise but needing refinement—but his feel for sequencing and zone control gives him a strong foundation.
More than anything, Bremner’s second half told the story. He didn’t just improve—he surged, revealing the kind of polish and poise that wins over decision-makers in draft rooms. His best ball is still ahead of him and that sentiment could very well push him into the top-15 picks on Sunday night.
Gage Wood, RHP, Arkansas (BA Draft Rank: 18)
No 2025 draft-eligible player delivered a more jaw-dropping moment than Gage Wood. On the sport’s biggest stage, the Arkansas righthander threw just the third no-hitter in College World Series history—missing a perfect game by a single hit batter—and broke the event’s strikeout record with 19.
It was a performance that felt mythic. But for those who’d seen him all year, it wasn’t a surprise.
“He had the best fastball in the SEC,” one opposing coach told Baseball America, calling it an “easy 80” on the scouting scale.
Wood’s fastball—explosive, late-rising and dominant—is his calling card, drawing comparisons to past SEC flamethrowers like Ty Floyd, who previously held the CWS single-game strikeout record. But he’s no one-trick arm. His curveball flashes plus, his slider and changeup show real promise, and his command tightened considerably in 2025.
For scouts who were already convinced, Omaha was simply confirmation. For everyone else, it was a revelation. Expect Wood to hear his name well before Day 1 ends.
Luke Stevenson, C, North Carolina (BA Draft Rank: 25)
Only 16 Division I hitters drafted in the first round since 1982 batted under .300 in their draft year. Stevenson is likely to become No. 18 after Texas A&M outfielder Jace LaViolette becomes No. 17 on Sunday night.
The North Carolina catcher hit just .251 this spring—a figure that puts him in rare and rather unflattering company—but also posted a .414 on-base percentage, walked nearly as many times as he struck out and mashed balls with a 96.5 mph average exit velocity, one of the best marks in the country.
It makes Stevenson one of this year’s most polarizing prospects. The hit tool is a legitimate concern, but almost everything else checks a box. He’s a plus receiver and blocker with an above-average arm, he controls the zone and he plays a premium position. He also doesn’t turn 21 until late July, giving him age-based upside.
The questions now: Which teams will overlook the batting average? And how high are they willing to take him?
Cam Cannarella, OF, Clemson (BA Draft Rank: 27)
Cannarella does almost everything well. He’s a plus runner, a gifted defender in center field with elite instincts and range and a hitter with feel, bat speed and the potential for more power as his frame matures.
But for all that promise, there’s one glaring red flag.
Cannarella’s throwing arm is well below-average—closer to bottom-of-the-scale than just weak. He tore his right labrum as a sophomore, played through it, then underwent surgery before the 2025 season. Though he mostly returned to form at the plate, he was absent from pregame throwing drills and showed severely diminished arm strength in games. Scouts don’t expect him to ever reach average in that category.
At 6 feet, 180 pounds, Cannarella is a classic hit-over-power profile with some physical projection left. The power may come. The arm likely won’t.
Still, elite center field defense is a rare commodity—and that, combined with his contact skills and speed, may be more than enough for a team willing to live with the risk.
Caden Bodine, C, Coastal Carolina (BA Draft Rank: 29)
If you ask opposing coaches who the best defensive catcher in this year’s draft is, many won’t hesitate: Caden Bodine.
“He’s the most complete receiver in the country,” one coach told Baseball America. And the numbers—and eyes—back it up.
Bodine is a high-level pitch framer with an elite feel for stealing strikes, a polished blocker and a strong, accurate arm. His work behind the plate helped anchor Coastal Carolina’s run to Omaha and earned him a reputation as the best defensive catching prospect in the class.
Offensively, Bodine brings advanced bat-to-ball skills and a discerning eye, but his lack of power raises questions about how his offensive game will translate to pro ball. He controls the zone, but the thump is light. In pro baseball, even strong defenders eventually need to do some damage.
Still, organizations value defense at catcher more than ever. And Bodine’s rare polish and poise behind the plate will give him a long runway to figure out the rest.
Devin Taylor, OF, Indiana (BA Draft Rank: 34)
Taylor didn’t leave much room for debate in 2025. He batted .374/.494/.706 with 18 home runs, 13 doubles, 12 stolen bases and drew 52 walks to just 30 strikeouts—numbers that only solidified what he’s been since arriving in Bloomington. Across three college seasons, he never posted an OPS below 1.080 or hit fewer than 16 home runs.
In a draft light on proven college bats, Taylor stands out. His offensive polish, power and patience make him one of the safest bets to hit at the next level.
The question is how much value he can provide elsewhere. Taylor is a below-average athlete who’s likely confined to left field, where his glove and range may limit his impact. But when you hit like he does, teams tend to find room.
He’s a bat-first prospect in a draft starving for college bats—and that alone makes him a strong first-round candidate.
Patrick Forbes, RHP, Louisville (BA Draft Rank: 47)
Forbes is more blank canvas than finished product, but it’s the kind of canvas that comes with unopened paint in all the right colors.
After two years flashing vibrant stuff in relief, Forbes moved into Louisville’s rotation in 2025 and surged up draft boards with a brilliant opening month. The full body of work was less consistent—he finished with a 4.42 ERA over 71.1 innings—but the ingredients were undeniable: a 36.7% strikeout rate, a career-best 10.7% walk rate and flashes of dominance that few in the class could match.
Forbes is a dynamic mover with a whippy arm and a fastball that explodes out of a low three-quarters slot. It sits mid 90s and can touch 100 with late ride, especially dangerous at the top of the zone. He pairs it with a power slider that morphs in shape—sometimes tight and vertical, other times sweeping across the plate—especially effective against righthanded hitters.
His command remains fringy and his changeup rarely appears, but the raw tools are as loud as any arm on the board. What Forbes becomes will depend on which team is ready to pick up the brush.
Cam Leiter, RHP, Florida State (BA Draft Rank: 85)
Few players in this year’s draft offers more unknown—or more upside—than Leiter.
He transferred to Florida State after a solid freshman year at Central Florida and wasted no time showing scouts what made him one of the most electric arms in the class. In just seven starts and 35 innings in 2024, Leiter struck out 56 batters with a high-octane arsenal before a shoulder injury ended his season. Attempts to rehab eventually gave way to surgery, and Leiter didn’t throw a pitch in 2025.
When healthy, he’s a live-armed righthander with a 94-96 mph fastball that’s touched 99 and generated a 30% miss rate. He spins two distinct breaking balls—a hammer curve in the low 80s and a power slider that can blur into cutter territory at its top end velocity. Both flash plus. Against lefties, Leiter will fold in a firm changeup that keeps hitters off balance.
The injury history clouds his draft stock, but the pure stuff and 6-foot-5, 235-pound work-horse frame are loud enough to carry real belief. For teams willing to take a leap, Leiter offers the kind of upside few others can match.
James Quinn-Irons, OF, George Mason (BA Draft Rank: 87)
At 6-foot-5, 230 pounds, Quinn-Irons didn’t look like someone who belonged in the Atlantic 10. And by the end of his career, he didn’t play like it either.
His junior season at George Mason felt like a parting gift. He hit .419 with 16 home runs, 24 doubles and 36 stolen bases while drawing walks, hitting for power and punishing pitchers who dared challenge him in the zone. It was the kind of year that turns heads in any conference. In the A-10, it bordered on absurd.
Quinn-Irons always had the frame, the athleticism, the raw tools. But in 2025, everything started to sync. The swing tightened. The chases came down. And while he still didn’t see much premium velocity, scouts could finally start dreaming big on a player who combined size and speed in ways few others in this class can.
He played all three outfield spots in college, and there’s a chance his straight-line speed keeps him in center. If not, the arm plays in right. Either way, Quinn-Irons was a giant for the A-10. Now he gets a bigger stage.
Cody Bowker, RHP, Vanderbilt (BA Draft Rank: 98)
Without high-octane velocity, Bowker might not be your typical SEC arm.
The Maine native began his college career as a two-way player at Georgetown, quietly flying under the radar until he committed fully to pitching as a sophomore. That decision changed everything. A transfer to Vanderbilt in 2025 gave him a national stage, and he made good on it—posting a 4.38 ERA with 99 strikeouts over 72 innings in the toughest conference in the country.
Bowker doesn’t overpower hitters, but he confuses them. His low-slot delivery adds funk and deception, making his 92–94 mph fastball—which will bump 95—play well above its velocity. His changeup is his best secondary, a fading, tumbling pitch that tunnels beautifully off his fastball and gets swings from both sides. He mixes in a slider and cutter that can sometimes blend, and his continued growth might depend on separating those shapes or introducing a softer breaking ball.
Bowker isn’t finished yet, but the progress is real—and evaluators have noticed. He’s a late-blooming, Northeast-built righty with the traits and temperament to start and the ceiling of a sneaky valuable Day 1 pick.
Grant Jay, C, Dallas Baptist (BA Draft Rank: 128)
There’s nothing subtle about the way Jay plays baseball.
Thickly built and power-packed at 6 feet, 225 pounds, Jay leaves an impression the moment he steps in the box. He hits the ball hard—and often, far. In 2025, he slugged 19 home runs, swiped 14 bases and became Dallas Baptist’s all-time home run leader, blending brute strength with surprising athleticism.
His hands are fast, his wrists strong, and when he connects, the ball jumps. But there’s some volatility baked into the profile. Jay’s swing can lengthen, and his aggressive approach leads to both below-average chase and zone contact rates. It’s a power-over-hit package, especially for a catcher.
That’s where things get interesting. Jay moves well for his size and owns a strong arm, but the finer points of catching—receiving, blocking, consistency—still need work. Some scouts see a future first baseman or corner outfielder. Others think the right development path could keep him behind the plate, where his offensive upside carries far more weight.
For a team willing to bet on strength, tools and positional value, Jay is the kind of swing worth taking. He could be a sneaky Day 1 pick.
Brody Donay, C, Florida (BA Draft Rank: 217)
Of the 15 players on this list, Donay is the least likely to come off the board on Day 1. But he might be the most fascinating gamble.
At 6-foot-5 and 235 pounds, Donay is hard to miss. He’s a towering presence with rare strength and some of the loudest raw power in the class. After transferring from Virginia Tech to Florida, a few subtle swing tweaks—wider base, quieter hands—unlocked a career year. He hit .303 with 18 home runs and posted the best strikeout and walk rates of his career. When he connects, the ball leaves in a hurry.
But getting to that power isn’t always easy. Donay remains a free-swinger with a high chase rate and one of the lowest contact rates among projected top-10 round picks. His defense is similarly split: a cannon arm but slow mechanics and below average receiving. Florida often used him at designated hitter, and his long-term home might be first base or right field.
He’s a player of extremes—huge tools, huge question marks. The team that drafts Donay won’t be playing it safe. But if it hits, the reward could be just as big as the risk.
NIL
How some Big 12 football players are adapting to revenue-sharing
FRISCO, Texas — It’s been close to two weeks since revenue-sharing officially became a dynamic element in college athletics as part of the groundbreaking House settlement, and everyone involved is still getting their feet under them. It’s become a significant moment in intercollegiate athletics, with a Big 12 athletic director comparing it to historic events […]

FRISCO, Texas — It’s been close to two weeks since revenue-sharing officially became a dynamic element in college athletics as part of the groundbreaking House settlement, and everyone involved is still getting their feet under them.
It’s become a significant moment in intercollegiate athletics, with a Big 12 athletic director comparing it to historic events like the creation of the NCAA (1906), the introduction of athletic scholarships (1956), Title IX (1972), the NCAA v. Board of Regents case (1984), and the Fair Pay to Play Act for NIL (2019).
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Institutions across the country had been working around the clock to prepare for the introduction of rev-share on July 1. That mandated educating athletes on the challenges they’ll face, including handling NIL through an online clearinghouse called NIL Go.
Schools now can directly pay athletes, with a cap set at $20.5 million. Most Power 4 programs will allocate a significant portion of that revenue pool toward football, approximately 75%, although this varies from school to school. Those institutions aren’t required to reveal what they’re paying players.
While the topic of money can be a sensitive subject, the players know they’re prepared.
“The topic of money is never really a discussion we intended to have, but they do a good job educating us on the changes or what’s to come,” said UCF linebacker Keli Lawson.
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For many institutions, education extends beyond traditional academics, embracing a holistic approach where player-development personnel collaborate closely with athletes to equip them for the multifaceted challenges they will encounter in their lives and careers.
“These life skills developments are about putting us in situations to be able to develop a part of our life that we probably weren’t taught growing up, such as creating an LLC [Limited Liability Company]. How do savings work? How does credit work? How are you able to build your credit when you’re trying to buy a home? How do you go about doing something like that? What is the difference between a lease and renting?” said Kansas quarterback Jalon Daniels.
Revenue-sharing payments, like NIL deals, are taxable income that athletes must report on their tax returns.
“They’re not just giving money and saying, ‘Here, do whatever you want with it.’ They’re putting us in situations to build a plan and find out what we can do with our finances rather than just going out and saying, ‘Oh, dang, I just got this much money. Let me go ahead and blow it all,’ and then realize that you’ll have taxes later down the line,” Daniels added.
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The Big 12 recently has entered into a multi-year partnership with PayPal, which will facilitate revenue-sharing payments from universities to their athletes through the popular online payment platform. This agreement will also enable athletes to receive NIL payments seamlessly.
Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark said West Virginia was one of the first schools in the conference to utilize PayPal’s HyperWallet.
UCF AD Terry Mohajir talks NIL, construction, Space Game and International games
“Two weeks ago, they brought in a couple of people to talk to us about the revenue sharing because there have been so many changes,” said West Virginia receiver Jaden Bray. “We have to switch to a whole new app. We’ve got to upload everything. There’s so much stuff. So they do a great job of teaching us.”
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Daniels believes this new opportunity will prepare him for a possible career in the NFL.
“It’s a better chance, a better time for you to learn in college when you’re making hundreds of thousands of dollars than when you go to the NFL and you start making 10s of millions of dollars. What are you going to do with it then?” he said.
That said, some coaches warn their players against falling prey to unsavory third-party elements, especially like an agent.
“Some of these guys are taking 20-to-25% [of their income] from these guys,” said Utah coach Kyle Whittingham. “That’s outlandish. It should be 3-to-5% just like the NFL, and certification would be an absolute step in the right direction.”
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Originally from Germany, UCF offensive lineman Paul Rubelt faces limitations with NIL and revenue-sharing due to his status as an international student. However, he remains unfazed by the opportunities his teammates can seize that are often more lucrative.
“I’ve gotten so much through the school,” Rubelt said. “We get gear. We get free food. We receive disbursements, such as scholarship money and housing. That’s a lot of stuff and a free degree. I’m on my second degree now, so that’s more than I can ask of being an international student.”
Bianchi: How Scott Frost’s 5-word truth bomb blew up the Nebraska Cornhuskers
Rublet sees a significant advantage to revenue-sharing.
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“It’s awesome for players to get,” he added. “Can it be out of control? Probably. So there are good [things] and bad [things].”
Throughout it all, it still comes down to what is accomplished on the field, according to Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy.
“The teams and coaches who can put that aside will focus on coaching and playing football and find a way to come together to get the best chance to win. That’s the only way I think we can handle the monetary side of college football at this time,” he said.
Please find me on X, Bluesky or Instagram @osmattmurschel. Email: mmurschel@orlandosentinel.com. Sign up for the Sentinel’s Knights Weekly newsletter for a roundup of all our UCF coverage.
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Spartans’ Chiles NIL Apparel Now Available
Michigan State junior quarterback Aidan Chiles’ collection of clothing merchandise from the official Michigan State NIL store has officially been unveiled ahead of the 2025 regular season. Graphic tees, sweatshirts, jerseys and hoodies with name and number are all available. Many Spartan players have their merchandise available, but Chiles’ will surely be one of the […]

Michigan State junior quarterback Aidan Chiles’ collection of clothing merchandise from the official Michigan State NIL store has officially been unveiled ahead of the 2025 regular season. Graphic tees, sweatshirts, jerseys and hoodies with name and number are all available.
Many Spartan players have their merchandise available, but Chiles’ will surely be one of the top sellers, alongside star receiver Nick Marsh and linebacker Jordan Hall. The new world of college football allows these student-athletes to make substantial money before even stepping on the field in August.
The Aidan Chile Locker Room Is Unrivaled
Gear Up For The Fall!https://t.co/qL5UMhPlyV pic.twitter.com/HtP1lMoUJa— Michigan State NIL Store (@MSUNILStore) July 8, 2025
Per the Michigan State NIL Store webpage, the mission statement for how this site seeks to impact collegiate athletes is as follows:
“At The NIL Store, we prioritize athletes’ success by providing a platform to amplify their brand and connect with fans through officially licensed NIL merchandise. Fans can shop with confidence, knowing they’re supporting their favorite athletes while receiving top-quality product.”
College athletes now have a different level of wealth than the pre-NIL era, where players were pocketing their per diem money just to be able to buy a few nice things. Nowadays, a few hundred purchases on the NIL store will have a true freshman driving around campus in a new BMW.
Chiles’ overall performance will heavily impact the type of traffic that he will receive on this NIL store. Spartans basketball star Tre Holloman saw his NIL store skyrocket in sales following his buzzer-beater winner against Maryland and the performances he posted against bitter rival Michigan.
If Chiles can put together a winning season and make some highlight reel plays, there is no doubt that there will be a bunch of Green and White sweatshirts and jerseys with Chiles’ name on the back. People did the same with Spartan star hockey forward Isaac Howard.
Putting together a successful, winning season in 2025 means that everyone wins. The program as a whole, the fans and their sanity for Michigan State football, and the athletes that receive the monetary increase via the NIL Store.
You can find Chiles and several other Spartans at the official Michigan State NIL Store when you click here.
Stay up to date with everything MSU football when you follow the official Spartan Nation page on Facebook, Spartan Nation, and give us your thoughts WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE, and be a part of our lively community group, Go Green Go White, as well WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE.
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