Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

NIL

Louisville baseball returns to the College World Series — with a new look and a story to tell | Sports

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — The names on the Jim Patterson Stadium left-center field wall are familiar. They’re etched in College World Series history: 2007, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2019 — the five times Louisville baseball reached Omaha. Now they’re adding 2025. But this one feels different. “This time last summer, our program could have just crashed,” […]

Published

on


LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — The names on the Jim Patterson Stadium left-center field wall are familiar.

They’re etched in College World Series history: 2007, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2019 — the five times Louisville baseball reached Omaha.

Now they’re adding 2025. But this one feels different.

“This time last summer, our program could have just crashed,” Louisville head coach Dan McDonnell said Thursday to reporters in Charles Schwab Field. “We were low. We were in the valley.”

Instead, this team climbed out.

The Cardinals open play Friday night at 7 p.m. against Oregon State, a storied program with a chip on its shoulder — much like Louisville. A year removed from missing the NCAA Tournament, the Cards return with a group that’s not only still standing, but has grown stronger.

McDonnell’s teams have long been known for offense and energy. But it’s the pitching staff that’s carried Louisville through the postseason — with a 2.04 ERA, tops in the NCAA Tournament, and just 12 earned runs allowed in 53 innings.

It helps when you get back a captain.

Catcher Matt Klein missed two months after being hit by a pitch in February. He returned for the postseason and has made an immediate impact — both behind the plate and in the batter’s box.

“Everybody feels comfortable throwing to Matt,” said Friday starter Patrick Forbes. “We know he’s going to give it 100 percent when he’s back there. That’s all you can ask for. It’s great to have him back. I think it’s a big reason why the pitching staff has had a lot of success in the postseason.”







Louisville baseball Charles Schwab

The Louisville baseball team explores Charles Schwab field ahead of their first practice in Omaha for the College World Series.




McDonnell added: “We had such high hopes for Matt… clearly looked like our best all-around hitter, team captain, a catcher back there with a reputation we have for success with our catchers. I give Matt a lot of credit… Probably, in the long run, is probably going to be a better baseball player for it because he had to lean over the railing. He really got to kind of see it more as a coach, probably. … I think he was better prepared when he came back.”

But what’s gotten Louisville back to Omaha isn’t just health. It’s loyalty.

In an era of college baseball defined by transfers and NIL deals, McDonnell knows this run doesn’t happen if veterans like Forbes, Eddie King Jr., Zion Rose and others don’t stay put.

It’s here that McDonnell’s voice kicks up a notch. This time a year ago, the departures from the program were a bit breathtaking. A dozen players in a month. All-ACC shortstop Gavin Kilen, eventually ranked the top transfer in the SEC, went to Tennessee. Third baseman Brandon Anderson went to Purdue. Right-hander Carson Liggett was among the top pitchers who left.

“As I said, we were in the valley, but that’s why I have so much appreciation for those kids who could have taken more money,” McDonnell said. “They could have taken schools that were selling, I guess you say, more than us. But you can only sell more money than us, I’m sorry. … If you’re chasing more money, good luck. But you want to list the other 25 qualities, let’s go toe-to-toe and let’s see whose resumé stacks up.”

Louisville will open the series with one who stayed. Forbes, a junior from Bowling Green, has been a strikeout machine, with 102 Ks in 66 innings. He’ll be backed by a bullpen that’s allowed just one run in 18.2 postseason innings. Offensively, King leads the team with 17 home runs and is hitting .556 over the last 10 games.

Louisville’s opponent, Oregon State, brings its own pedigree to the stage.

The Beavers have won three national championships and are making their ninth CWS appearance since 2005. The last time these teams met was on this stage — a 2013 College World Series matchup that Oregon State won 11-4. This is a program that lost its conference, simply watched the Pac-12 pick up and leave, and had to navigate 35 road games to get back to Omaha.

“I’m impressed by the adversity and what they had to go through,” McDonnell said. “Being on the road and traveling… it doesn’t surprise anybody in college baseball as to why they’re here and how good and dangerous they are.”

But as Louisville has shown over the past couple of weeks, there’s a little danger on its roster, too. And there’s also connection — forged through last year’s frustration, through months of injury setbacks, through a culture McDonnell has built over nearly two decades, that spread rapidly to the transfers and young players he added.

“This group has been very close,” McDonnell said. “Either way, no matter what happened in the postseason, this group got us back on track, and it’s been a lot of fun. I like where we’re at. I’ve talked about schools that have won a national championship that really don’t have much experience being out here. Experience is a coin flip. I think there’s good and bad with it. My job is to feed off of these kids and what makes them go and where they’re at and just support them in that. … We’re going to have fun. We’re going to throw the ball, catch the ball, hit the ball — and let the scoreboard kind of take care of itself.”

More Louisville Baseball Coverage:

How to Watch | Louisville vs. Oregon State; time, matchups, CWS odds

CRAWFORD | The Cardinals are chasing a title. Knox is chasing childhood. They’re in it together.

Coffee with Crawford | Louisville’s Eddie King didn’t try to be a hero — he just moved the ball

Copyright 2025 WDRB Media. All Rights Reserved.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

NIL

Fernando Mendoza Named As Nominee For the 2025 Allstate / AFCA Good Works Team

 Allstate and the American Football Coaches Association today announced a record-breaking 197 nominees for the 2025 Allstate AFCA Good Works Team®, the highest in the award’s 34-year history. College football student-athletes and head coaches from all levels of the sport are recognized for their commitment to community service and leadership beyond the gridiron.  Indiana junior […]

Published

on


 Allstate and the American Football Coaches Association today announced a record-breaking 197 nominees for the 2025 Allstate AFCA Good Works Team®, the highest in the award’s 34-year history. College football student-athletes and head coaches from all levels of the sport are recognized for their commitment to community service and leadership beyond the gridiron. 

Indiana junior quarterback Fernando Mendoza was recently named as a nominee for the 2025 Allstate / American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) Good Works Team ®, both organizations recently announced.

The 6-foot-5, 225-pound Cal transfer partnered with La Burrita in Berkley to launch the Mendoza Burrito.  Honoring his Cuban heritage with the ingredients, all proceeds from each sale went to the National MS Society in honor and support of his mother has multiple sclerosis, and to raise awareness for multiple sclerosis.

Mendoza said in a recent interview with NBC Sports the initiative raised over $11,000 for the National MS Society.

Allstate and Wuerffel Foundation Elevate Impact

For the second year, Allstate is partnering with the Wuerffel Foundation to align two of college football’s most meaningful honors: the Allstate AFCA Good Works Team and the Allstate Wuerffel Trophy. Together, they recognize student-athletes who demonstrate excellence in community service, academics and athletics. 

Established in 1992, the Allstate AFCA Good Works Team recognizes college football athletes for their unwavering commitment to community service and their “good works” off the field. In addition to being actively involved with a charitable organization or service group, each player must also maintain strong academic standing to be considered for a spot on the Allstate AFCA Good Works Team.

“When nearly 200 young athletes choose to serve, it creates a ripple effect far beyond the game,” said Danny Wuerffel, former NFL quarterback, Heisman Trophy winner and College Football Hall of Famer for whom the Allstate Wuerffel Trophy is named. “Their leadership in the community is just as worthy of recognition as their performance on the field.”

  • 11 players from the NCAA FBS
  • 11 players from the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), Divisions II, III and the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA)
  • 1 honorary head coach

The final roster of 23 award recipients announced in September will bring together:A voting panel of former Good Works Team members, head coaches and journalists select the team roster based on outstanding leadership on and off the field.

As a redshirt sophomore in 2024, Mendoza passed for (3,004 yards).  He finished in the top-10 on Cal’s single-season charts in total offensive yards (No. 7; 3,109 yards), passing efficiency (No. 8; 144.59) and yards passing (No. 9; 3,004 yards).

Indiana opens fall camp on July 30, and begins the 2025 season on Aug. 30 against Old Dominion at home.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Patrick Mahomes Gets Honest About Eli Manning’s Hot Take on NIL: “You’re Bringing So Much Money to the University”

Some college sports fans will tell you that they support the concept of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL). Others will tell you that true amateurism should have remained the standard in collegiate athletics. And there are plenty of people, athletic background or not, on both sides of the aisle. Take Eli Manning. In May 2024, […]

Published

on


Some college sports fans will tell you that they support the concept of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL). Others will tell you that true amateurism should have remained the standard in collegiate athletics. And there are plenty of people, athletic background or not, on both sides of the aisle.

Take Eli Manning. In May 2024, he teamed with Jaxson Dart to raise money for his alma mater’s NIL collective. His general feeling on NIL when it was first introduced, though, paints a picture opposite to that of his future partnership.

“I know how immature I was at 20 years old and I wouldn’t have spent it the right ways. It scares me from that perspective, it scares me from chemistry of the locker room with some guys getting endorsements and if they’re not playing well, how his teammates will handle that.”

Manning has every right to change his mind, especially after experiencing three seasons with NIL. His adaptation of his mindset demonstrates an understanding of the nuance required for NIL debates.

When discussing NIL as a whole, you can’t limit the conversation to future NFL and NBA stars. There are thousands of players in countless other sports, not to mention football and basketball themselves, that will never get professional contracts, let alone generational wealth.

This is why Patrick Mahomes told CNBC’s Alex Sherman that NIL is a boon for college athletics.

“At the end of the day, I think it’s a good thing that players are getting paid. I mean… you’re bringing so much money to a university. There has to be a way that you can earn a profit. It doesn’t have to be a huge profit… it’s cool to see people that might not have the ability to earn this money at any other point of their life… being able to change their families.” 

Non-athletes can use their talents to generate revenue while in college. Prior to NIL, universities saw immediate returns on a team’s hard work while the athletes pocketed nothing.

It wasn’t fair to the players. NIL took some of that power and redistributed it to them. So it’s good that Mahomes and others are recognizing that NIL’s main mission is being accomplished.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

UConn stars Azzi Fudd, Sarah Strong sign NIL deals with Unrivaled league founded by Huskies legends

UConn women’s basketball stars Azzi Fudd and Sarah Strong will be among the new collegiate faces of Unrivaled, the 3-on-3 league launched by Huskies legends Breanna Stewart and Napheesa Collier in 2025, after signing NIL deals with the organization. Fudd and Strong announced they will be a part of the league’s 14-player NIL class this […]

Published

on


UConn women’s basketball stars Azzi Fudd and Sarah Strong will be among the new collegiate faces of Unrivaled, the 3-on-3 league launched by Huskies legends Breanna Stewart and Napheesa Collier in 2025, after signing NIL deals with the organization.

Fudd and Strong announced they will be a part of the league’s 14-player NIL class this season during an event at WNBA All-Star weekend in Indianapolis on Saturday. The UConn duo appeared at Unrivaled’s All-Star headquarters alongside LSU star Flau’jae Johnson, who signed a deal with the league last year. Johnson and former UConn star Paige Bueckers launched the league’s “The Future is Unrivaled” campaign in Dec. 2024, and Bueckers is expected to compete in Unrivaled this upcoming season after completing her rookie year in the WNBA with the Dallas Wings.

Advertisement

The new class of NIL athletes also includes USC’s JuJu Watkins, UCLA’s Lauren and Sienna Betts and Kiki Rice, Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo, Texas’s Madison Booker, Iowa State’s Audi Crooks, LSU’s MiLaysia Fulwiley, TCU’s Olivia Miles, South Carolina’s Ta’Niya Latson and Michigan’s Syla Swords.

Johnson and Bueckers, like every professional player who competes in Unrivaled, received an investment stake in the league as part of their agreements, so the same will likely be true for the 2025 NIL signees. Watkins is also already part of Unrivaled’s star-studded investor group, which includes UConn coach Geno Auriemma, South Carolina coach Dawn Staley, NBA stars Steph Curry and Giannis Antetokounmpo, 23-time Olympic gold medalist Michael Phelps and USWNT legend Alex Morgan.

Unrivaled exceeded expectations in 2025, reportedly generating more than $27 million in revenue and nearly breaking even in its inaugural season. The league averaged 221,000 viewers on TNT during the regular season and the playoffs, and the championship saw a significant increase drawing 364,000 viewers. Unrivaled also paid its 36 players an average of $220,000, which is higher than the WNBA’s regular maximum salary in 2025.

Fudd has always had a national presence as the former No. 1 recruit in the Class of 2021, but she joins Unrivaled amid a spike in popularity following UConn’s run to the NCAA Championship. The redshirt senior’s first three college seasons were heavily impacted by injuries, but she completed a triumphant comeback from an ACL tear in 2024-25 and was recognized as the Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four. Fudd’s NIL portfolio includes partnerships with Bose, TurboTax, skincare brand Paula’s Choice and hair color brand Madison Reed among others. She also announced Thursday that she is hosting a new podcast on the iHeart Radio network titled “Fudd Around and Find Out,” the viral phrase that her mother Katie wore on a t-shirt during the national title game.

Advertisement

Strong is also a rising star in the college game after coming to UConn as the No. 1 ranked recruit in the 2024 class and winning WBCA Freshman of the Year in 2025. She had a historic first season with the Huskies, making the All-Final Four team and breaking the record for most points by a freshman ever in an NCAA Tournament. Unrivaled will be one of Strong’s most prominent NIL deals to date, but she has also partnered with Epic Games and VKTRY, a performance shoe insole for athletes.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Patrick Mahomes Gets Honest About Eli Manning's Hot Take on NIL

Some college sports fans will tell you that they support the concept of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL). Others will tell you that true amateurism should have remained the standard in collegiate athletics. And there are plenty of people, athletic background or not, on both sides of the aisle. Advertisement Take Eli Manning. In May […]

Published

on

Patrick Mahomes Gets Honest About Eli Manning's Hot Take on NIL

Some college sports fans will tell you that they support the concept of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL). Others will tell you that true amateurism should have remained the standard in collegiate athletics. And there are plenty of people, athletic background or not, on both sides of the aisle.

Take Eli Manning. In May 2024, he teamed with Jaxson Dart to raise money for his alma mater’s NIL collective. His general feeling on NIL when it was first introduced, though, paints a picture opposite to that of his future partnership.

“I know how immature I was at 20 years old and I wouldn’t have spent it the right ways. It scares me from that perspective, it scares me from chemistry of the locker room with some guys getting endorsements and if they’re not playing well, how his teammates will handle that.”

Manning has every right to change his mind, especially after experiencing three seasons with NIL. His adaptation of his mindset demonstrates an understanding of the nuance required for NIL debates.

When discussing NIL as a whole, you can’t limit the conversation to future NFL and NBA stars. There are thousands of players in countless other sports, not to mention football and basketball themselves, that will never get professional contracts, let alone generational wealth.

This is why Patrick Mahomes told CNBC’s Alex Sherman that NIL is a boon for college athletics.

“At the end of the day, I think it’s a good thing that players are getting paid. I mean… you’re bringing so much money to a university. There has to be a way that you can earn a profit. It doesn’t have to be a huge profit… it’s cool to see people that might not have the ability to earn this money at any other point of their life… being able to change their families.” 

Non-athletes can use their talents to generate revenue while in college. Prior to NIL, universities saw immediate returns on a team’s hard work while the athletes pocketed nothing.

It wasn’t fair to the players. NIL took some of that power and redistributed it to them. So it’s good that Mahomes and others are recognizing that NIL’s main mission is being accomplished.

Continue Reading

NIL

Memphis guard Sincere Parker arrested on assault charge after girlfriend says he choked her

Associated Press MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Memphis guard Sincere Parker was arrested Saturday on an aggravated assault charge for an attack on his girlfriend, who told police that he choked her and hit her, according to court documents. The woman told police that the attack occurred on May 27 at the Memphis apartment the couple […]

Published

on


Associated Press

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Memphis guard Sincere Parker was arrested Saturday on an aggravated assault charge for an attack on his girlfriend, who told police that he choked her and hit her, according to court documents.

The woman told police that the attack occurred on May 27 at the Memphis apartment the couple shared. She reported that Parker pushed her, slapped her in the face and choked her, leaving her bruised and bloodied, according to a police report.

The woman also told police that Parker broke her cellphone because he didn’t want her to have the digital key to the apartment.

A warrant for Parker’s arrest was issued Friday and the 22-year-old was taken into custody Saturday. An arraignment was scheduled for Monday on charges of felony aggravated assault and misdemeanor vandalism.

It was not immediately clear whether Parker had an attorney.

The 6-foot-3 Parker transferred to Memphis after averaging 12.2 points last season for McNeese, helping the Cowboys and coach Will Wade reach the second round of the NCAA Tournament. He played his first two seasons for Saint Louis.

___

AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Unrivaled Announces NIL Deals With College Stars JuJu Watkins, Azzi Fudd, More

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! JuJu Watkins, Flau’Jae Johnson and Azzi Fudd are three of 14 top women’s college basketball players that Unrivaled is signing to name, image and likeness deals, the league announced Saturday. It’s the second consecutive year that the 3-on-3 league that was founded by Napheesa Collier and Breanna […]

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

JuJu Watkins, Flau’Jae Johnson and Azzi Fudd are three of 14 top women’s college basketball players that Unrivaled is signing to name, image and likeness deals, the league announced Saturday.

It’s the second consecutive year that the 3-on-3 league that was founded by Napheesa Collier and Breanna Stewart has had NIL with college players. In its inaugural season, Unrivaled had deals with Paige Bueckers and Johnson.

Watkins, who plays for USC but is sidelined with an ACL injury, has also previously been involved with Unrivaled as an investor in its Series A funding round.

Johnson, who is at LSU, and Fudd, at UConn, both were on hand for the announcement, as were Notre Dame’s Hannah Hidalgo and UConn’s Sarah Strong.

Other players signed include TCU’s Olivia Miles, UCLA’s Kiki Rice and Lauren and Sienna Betts, Texas’ Madison Booker, Iowa State’s Audi Crooks, LSU’s MiLaysia Fulwiley, South Carolina’s Ta’Niya Latson and Michigan’s Syla Swords. The players range from sophomores to seniors.

Women’s basketball players have been able to take advantage of NIL opportunities over the last few years with Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, Bueckers and Johnson at the forefront of it. Reese played in Unrivaled in its first season.

[MORE: Top 10 Women’s College Basketball Players with the Highest NIL Valuations]

As part of the initiative, the class will be attending a multi-day event at the league’s headquarters in Miami, which will include skill development and content shoots.

“This transformational, first-of-its-kind initiative brings together the best of the best and reflects our deep commitment to elevating the women’s game and holistically supporting athletes,” Luke Cooper, President of Basketball Operations at Unrivaled, said in the initiative’s announcement. “Investing in elite women’s basketball talent is central to Unrivaled’s mission.”

Unrivaled completed its inaugural season this past March, and is gearing up for its second this coming January.

Reporting by The Associated Press.

Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily!



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending