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Jay Johnson and the LSU Tigers have landed a commitment from Kansas State infielder Seth Dardar, he revealed via social media on Sunday. Dardar, a Louisiana native, began his career at Columbia prior to making the move to join the Kansas State Wildcats. During the 2025 season, he logged a team best .326 batting average […]
Jay Johnson and the LSU Tigers have landed a commitment from Kansas State infielder Seth Dardar, he revealed via social media on Sunday.
Dardar, a Louisiana native, began his career at Columbia prior to making the move to join the Kansas State Wildcats.
During the 2025 season, he logged a team best .326 batting average with 18 doubles and a 1.065 OPS.
A consistent hitter, Dardar tallied 60 hits, 45 RBI and 13 home runs last season for his Wildcats squad.
The New Orleans (La.) Holy Cross standout started in 50 games for Kansas State on his way to becoming a coveted transfer in the portal.
Now, he’s made his move. Dardar will head home to suit up for the Bayou Bengals in his final season of eligibility.
Dardar took to social media to reveal his announcement:
“First and foremost I want to thank Kansas State University and the entire coaching staff for affording me the opportunity to make memories and friendships this year that will last a lifetime. To the Manhattan community and K-State fan base, thank you for taking me in and making me feel at home.
“The overwhelming support and love I felt from everyone at Kansas State is something I will cherish forever.
“With that being said, I have decided to come home and live out my dream to play at Louisiana State University! Thank you to everyone who was a part of my journey that has led me to this position, and thank you Coach Johnson, Coach Jordan, and the rest of the LSU staff for giving me the opportunity to live out this dream. Geaux Tigers!!!”
Dardar is the second Transfer Portal addition for the LSU Tigers after adding High Point star Brayden Simpson last week.
Simpson, one of the top prospects in the NCAA Transfer Portal, is coming off of a career season for High Point.
The coveted infielder primarily handled business as a third baseman for High Point this past season where he shined for his Panthers squad..
Simpson had a dominant two-year stretch at High Point with his 2025 campaign quickly putting his name on the map.
He rounded out the season batting .389 with 22 home runs, 77 RBI and a .477 on base percentage this past season.
Simpson is a Swiss Army Knife in the infield and has also spent some time at first base in 2024 and second base in 2023.
In 2024, the talented High Point transfer started in all 62 games where he batted .300 with 12 home runs and 45 RBI. He started in 58 games this year.
With the likely departure of star infielder Daniel Dickinson and multiple veteran infielders this offseason, Johnson and Co. go into the Transfer Portal and immediately make a splash.
Simpson revealed a commitment to the LSU Tigers last Friday with Johnson continuing to recruit at an elite level during his time in Baton Rouge.
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It’s not every day you see the sixth man of a national championship team with remaining eligibility decide to transfer. That same player then choosing to make the move to a conference rival and fellow title contender is unheard of — but that’s the reality in 2025 with the portal and NIL. Kentucky was thrilled […]
It’s not every day you see the sixth man of a national championship team with remaining eligibility decide to transfer. That same player then choosing to make the move to a conference rival and fellow title contender is unheard of — but that’s the reality in 2025 with the portal and NIL. Kentucky was thrilled to take advantage of the unique circumstances when Denzel Aberdeen unexpectedly became available, moving quickly to earn his commitment after talks fell through between the standout guard and Florida.
Pope and the Wildcats were motivated to get it across the finish line, whatever it took. And the feeling was mutual.
“Our phone call lasted about three hours, to be honest. … When (Kentucky) called, I was like ‘Man, I got to come here and play for Coach Pope,’ who is obviously another national champion,” the Gator-turned-Wildcat said in June. “And just the school itself, the people here, the atmosphere is crazy… When they called it was pretty much a no-brainer for me. I was like, yeah, I got to do it. I’m ready.”
What did it take to close the deal, exactly? At the time, Aberdeen’s father, Ian, told KSR+, “We really wanted to stay here at Florida, but negotiations went south a little bit,” and left it at that.
Now, Todd Golden is sharing the Gators’ side of the story — and you don’t have to read too far between the lines to figure out why Aberdeen is no longer in Gainesville. It’s nothing personal, to be clear, as he actually has nothing but good things to say about the senior guard as a person and player.
“It’s going to be different. I think Denzel is a great young man, and we’re grateful for the time that he spent in our program,” Golden told Jon Rothstein of CBS Sports. “He obviously helped us win a national championship last year, and took advantage of the new world of college basketball and free agency.”
Ah, there it is. The new world of college basketball and free agency.
What does Golden mean by that? Well, Aberdeen saw his value at an all-time high as a title-winning supersub and cashed out with a blue-blood basketball school. If the winningest tradition in the sport wants to not only expand your role, but also give you a massive pay raise along the way, you’d be crazy to pass on the opportunity, right?
His now-former coach doesn’t blame him.
“He had a program like Kentucky that was able to come in here and take advantage, give him an opportunity — both from a basketball standpoint and financially — that was probably a little too good for him to turn down,” Golden said.
That was the path Aberdeen chose, and now, he has to look those Gator fans in the face on Valentine’s Day when Kentucky travels to Gainesville to take on Florida on Feb. 14.
Odds are good he’ll get booed. Odds are also good that the fierce competitor in him that helped Golden win his first championship will also be ready to give his old team his best shot.
“He’s going to have to come back into the O’Dome and get received by our fans. Our staff will be ready to compete against Denzel, and I think Denzel will be ready to compete against us,” Golden said. “He’s a great young man and a good player, but it’s a great example of what college basketball is like in 2025. We had to play against Riley Kugel last year at Mississippi State after he was a Gator for a few years, so it’s something that you’re starting to see more and more.”
Golden isn’t thrilled about the situation, but he gets it. And above all else, he’ll have his guys prepared when that ball is tipped.
That’s something he guarantees.
“Again, Denzel is a great, great guy, and we’re not necessarily happy to see him in Kentucky blue, but we’re going to be ready to compete against him,” he said. “I can promise you that.”
Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark is listed out for Tuesday’s contest against the Seattle Storm, according to beat writer Tony East. It will mark the 16th straight game that Clark has missed as she recovers from a right groin injury. Clark suffered the injury on July 15 against the Connecticut Sun, and it also caused […]
Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark is listed out for Tuesday’s contest against the Seattle Storm, according to beat writer Tony East. It will mark the 16th straight game that Clark has missed as she recovers from a right groin injury.
Clark suffered the injury on July 15 against the Connecticut Sun, and it also caused her to miss the WNBA All-Star Game that month. She has now been sidelined more than a month and has about two weeks left to make her return before the end of the regular season.
The good news is that Clark appears to be close to getting back on the court for game action. She was present at the team’s shootaround Sunday morning prior to a game against the Minnesota Lynx, marking her first time working with the team since suffering the injury.
Still, Clark has yet to make her return to the practice court. The Fever fell into a tie for eighth place in the WNBA standing after a 97-84 loss against the Lynx on Sunday and are only one game ahead of the ninth-place Los Angeles Sparks.
That in mind, Clark can’t return soon enough to save her team’s postseason hopes. But they’ll have to be without her for at least one more game when the Fever take on the Storm at 7 p.m. ET on Tuesday.
Fans waiting for more Caitlin Clark apparel will be getting some in the very near future. The Indiana Fever star announced Monday that she has a new logo collection set to release soon through Nike.
“Logo collection coming soon,” Clark wrote on X. “Signature product dropping 2026.”
The “signature product” that Clark is referencing is a signature shoe as well as a signature apparel collection, per Chloe Peterson of The Indianapolis Star. That collection will include shirts, pants, hoodies and shorts, along with special pieces in adult sizes only.
The first drop from the logo collection is set to release on Sept. 1 and will feature a navy and yellow t-shirt. After that, a full apparrell collection featuring the logo will drop on Oct. 1.
“To me, this is more than just a logo, it’s a dream come true,” Clark said in a statement announcing her logo. “People always talk about leaving your mark on the game — and this is another way I can do that.”
Clark will become the third WNBA player to have a shoe released through Nike, joining Sabrina Ionescu and A’ja Wilson. Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese, who was in the same draft class as Clark and won a national championship against her in college, has her first signature shoe set to drop later this year with Reebok.
The No. 7 Oregon Ducks and coach Dan Lanning scored when they landed 5-star receiver recruit Dakorien Moore. Unanimously rated as the No. 1 receiver in the 2025 recruiting class, Moore has a chance to shine for the Ducks right away, catching passes from quarterback Dante Moore. Moore is already impressing coaches and becoming a […]
The No. 7 Oregon Ducks and coach Dan Lanning scored when they landed 5-star receiver recruit Dakorien Moore. Unanimously rated as the No. 1 receiver in the 2025 recruiting class, Moore has a chance to shine for the Ducks right away, catching passes from quarterback Dante Moore.
Moore is already impressing coaches and becoming a top NIL earner. Moore landed a new exclusive partnership with a celebrity brand alongside Ohio State cornerback Devin Sanchez, Texas linebacker Colin Simmons and Colorado Buffaloes quarterback Julian Lewis.
Performance apparel brand Legends partnered with Moore as a “future legend” with three more elite athletes ahead of the 2025 college football season: Lewis, Sanchez and Simmons.
Moore is the most highly-anticipated Duck freshman in a long time after a dazzling career at Duncanville High School, one of the premier high school football teams in Texas. Moore has already received comparisons to Alabama wide receiver Ryan Williams and Ohio State wide receiver Jeremiah Smith.
Moore is on nearly every list of most-exciting freshman to watch in 2025. Better yet, he is eager to prove that he belongs as a focal point on the Ducks’ offense.
Although he hasn’t yet played a college snap, the Legends brand added Moore to the elite group of upcoming stars on powerhouse programs.
“We’re proud to introduce four of college football’s most electrifying athletes as the newest members of the Legends family. This brand was built by and for the ones rewriting the playbook, and these guys are on their way. The Future Legends are here to leave their mark,” Legends announced the NIL partnership on Instagram.
The Legends ownership group includes celebrities and athletes like Quavo, Baker Mayfield, DeAndre Hopkins, Matt Barnes, Marcus and Markieff Morris, Steve Nash and Larry Nance Jr.
Lewis has the 12th-highest NIL valuation on the Oregon roster. At the top is Oregon Duck wide receiver Evan Stewart ($1.1 million.) Stewart has over 2.4 million followers across his social media platforms of Instagram, TikTok, and X. Stewart suffered at torn patellar tendon in his knee in June and he could be out for the entire 2025 football season.
Moore looks to step up to fill some of the void that Stewart’s injury causes.
Moore has a growing $497,000 NIL Valuation after NIL deals that include Legends and NXTRND.
His $497,000 NIL Valuation ranks No. 28-highest among college football wide receivers. The only freshman to have a higher NIL valuation than Moore is quarterback Akili Smith Jr. ($545,00.)
On social media, Moore boasts 150,000 followers on Instagram, 111,000 followers on TikTok and 20,000 followers on Twitter/X.
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Oregon has yet to release an official depth chart for its first game of the season but all signs point to Moore starting as a freshman at receiver. Ducks coaches and players and have all highlighted Moore’s blazing speed and impressive maturity.
In exclusive interviews with Oregon Ducks on SI reporter Bri Amaranthus, Oregon coach Dan Lanning revealed how the crown jewel of Oregon’s recruiting class is quickly acclimating to college.
“He wants to be perfect,” Lanning told Amaranthus. “He works extremely hard. He does. He has huge expectations, and I think that’s hard, but he’s handled that really, really well. He loves ball. He works every single day to get better. Really talented, obviously, and I think he’ll make a big impact for our team. So, I’m excited to see what Dakorien does.”
Moore’s football accolades jump off the page already:
Ducks fans will be eager to see Moore in his first game action, when Oregon hosts Montana State on Saturday, Aug. 30 at 1 p.m. PT in Autzen Stadium.
For over two decades, NFL coaches tried to emulate Bill Belichick, the mastermind behind six Super Bowl titles with the New England Patriots. Now, as he begins his first season in college football with North Carolina, Belichick appears to be following in the footsteps of another NFL icon-turned-college-coach: Deion Sanders. FOX Sports’ Colin Cowherd sees […]
For over two decades, NFL coaches tried to emulate Bill Belichick, the mastermind behind six Super Bowl titles with the New England Patriots. Now, as he begins his first season in college football with North Carolina, Belichick appears to be following in the footsteps of another NFL icon-turned-college-coach: Deion Sanders.
FOX Sports’ Colin Cowherd sees a lot of similarities between the team that Belichick has entering Year 1 in Chapel Hill and the team that Coach Prime built in his first year at Colorado. In fact, Cowherd believes that the Tar Heels will go through similar ups and downs to the ones Sanders’ Buffs experienced in 2023.
“They’re gonna sell out games,” Cowherd said on “The Joel Klatt Show.” “It’s gonna be fascinating. It’ll be great for TV ratings. At the end of the year, you’re like, ‘I don’t know how good they are, but it’s a good story.’
“[The Buffaloes and Tar Heels] are better now than they were before Deion or Bill got there, because I think the boosters [at both schools] stepped up and allowed them to buy some very, very special players.”
To Cowherd’s point, there isn’t much continuity on the Tar Heels’ roster. Belichick brought in 41 players through the transfer portal to go along with 30 recruits. Even though North Carolina’s transfer portal class was ranked as the ninth-best in the nation by 247Sports, Cowherd believes all the moving pieces will be too much for Belichick in Year 1.
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“Forty transfers? C’mon,” Cowherd said. “I mean, Bill was hard on his first- and second-round draft picks to start. He liked to draft guys, sit them, [have them] learn the system and then play them in Year 2. Those were like 24-year-old guys, and Bill rarely went and spent big money in free agency until one of those final years.
“Forty new players? Limited practice time? I don’t know, it’s got a Colorado feel to it. That’s why it’s so ironic they’re opening with TCU, because that’s who Deion opened with at Colorado.”
Joel Klatt agreed with that sentiment, adding that Sanders brought in superior talent in his first year at Colorado between quarterback Shedeur Sanders and two-way star Travis Hunter.
While Klatt recognized that North Carolina is in a better position (6-7 in 2024) now than Colorado was when Sanders took over (1-11 in 2022), he cited a point that Tom Brady made in a recent episode of “The Joel Klatt Show: Big Noon Conversations” for why he thinks Belichick will experience a bit of a learning curve in the college game.
“Tom was fascinated by how Bill is going to handle young players because of his expectations when it comes to game situation preparedness,” Klatt said. “He doesn’t have the time to prepare with those guys like you would at the right level. I thought it was a really smart point that Tom made.”
Between NCAA rules and academic obligations, college players can only spend so much time with their coaches each week during the season. That’s obviously different from the NFL, where players and coaches can meet for hours on end every week, with Brady telling Klatt he wonders how much information Belichick’s players will be able to retain.
Still, Klatt believes that Belichick will be able to coach and scheme North Carolina to enough wins in 2025 for it to be considered a successful season.
“I can’t keep my eyes off of this situation at UNC because I actually think he’s going to succeed,” Klatt said. “This is not a league that’s overwhelmingly difficult. The ACC — if you can be better in those situations than your opponent, then you can win close games. Am I crazy to think that Bill Belichick will work at North Carolina?”
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A Democratic U.S. lawmaker sent a letter to leaders at the more than 350 Division I schools across the country Monday, warning of a two-tier college sports system with haves and have-nots if a proposed bill to regulate the industry passes without changes. In the letter, Sen. Maria Cantwell of Washington, the ranking member of […]
A Democratic U.S. lawmaker sent a letter to leaders at the more than 350 Division I schools across the country Monday, warning of a two-tier college sports system with haves and have-nots if a proposed bill to regulate the industry passes without changes.
In the letter, Sen. Maria Cantwell of Washington, the ranking member of a committee that oversees college sports, says the SCORE Act would “incentivize a Power 2 conference system that will create inequities for other conferences and leave behind small to mid-sized schools.”
The “Power 2” she references is the Big Ten and Southeastern Conference, which share the decision-making power for the future of the College Football Playoff, which with its $7.8 billion media-rights deal is the single-largest financial driver of all college athletics.
The House is expected to vote on the SCORE Act next month. It would provide the NCAA a limited antitrust exemption, override state laws designed to regulate name, image, likeness payments and prevent athletes from becoming employees of their universities.
Cantwell argued against those parts of the bill, while also focusing on language that she said would lead to the removal of the 22% cap on revenue-sharing implemented by the recently approved lawsuit settlement. This school year, the 22% cap equals $20.5 million that can be paid out to players, but some schools will be able to exceed that using third-party deals that have to be approved by the newly created College Sports Commission.
“If passed, the SCORE Act will entrench the current arms race to recruit and retain athletes and leave small and mid-sized schools unable to compete for championships and postseason games, along with the inability to earn the increased revenue that comes with those opportunities,” Cantwell wrote.
Though crafters of the bill have touted bipartisan support in the House — Reps. Janelle Bynum, D-Ore., and Shomari Figures, D-Ala. are among the backers — Democrats have largely framed it as a giveaway to the NCAA, which supports it, at the expense of athletes, who would lose the right to challenge the system on a number of fronts.
Cantwell noted media reports that Pac-12 schools that were previously part of what was then known as the Power Five will receive 63% less in revenue from TV rights than before the latest round of conference realignment.
She also pointed out a new arrangement in the Atlantic Coast Conference that calls for 60% of the league’s distribution to be based on viewership ratings that are largely driven by football and men’s hoops — a provision designed to appeal to its highest-profile teams.
“Ultimately, the broad antitrust exemption in the SCORE Act would widen existing inequities among schools and conferences, creating long-term instability for schools of all sizes,” Cantwell said.
The SCORE Act would need the backing of at least seven Democrats in the Senate to pass as a standalone bill, though there’s a chance it could be attached to a larger piece of must-pass legislation, which would diminish their chances of making substantive amendments.
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Will Nico Iamaleava become the cautionary tale of NIL? That’s a question on college football fans’ minds ahead of the start of the 2025 season, months after a very messy divorce between Iamaleava and Tennessee in mid-April, which was reportedly sparked by failed attempts to renegotiate the quarterback’s name, image and likeness compensation package. FOX […]
Will Nico Iamaleava become the cautionary tale of NIL?
That’s a question on college football fans’ minds ahead of the start of the 2025 season, months after a very messy divorce between Iamaleava and Tennessee in mid-April, which was reportedly sparked by failed attempts to renegotiate the quarterback’s name, image and likeness compensation package.
FOX Sports’ Joel Klatt and Colin Cowherd discussed the topic on a recent episode of “The Joel Klatt Show,” with Cowherd making a bold statement about Iamaleava’s decision to depart Knoxville.
“He shouldn’t have left Tennessee,” Cowherd said. “They [the Volunteers] have better players. You’re gonna face more NFL bodies maybe in that schedule compared to UCLA’s this year. … But he is good, and he is kind of what the NFL is looking for. He moves really, really well.”
Why did Iamaleava leave Tennessee in the first place?
Those representing Iamaleava were reportedly seeking a renegotiated package that would pay him approximately $4 million for the upcoming season rather than the $2.4 million he was expected to earn. A back-and-forth disagreement ensued, which led to head coach Josh Heupel moving on from the star quarterback because “no one is bigger than” the program.
Iamaleava entered the transfer portal and committed to UCLA the following week. He has declined to discuss the specifics of his new NIL agreement, which will reportedly pay him just shy of $2 million this season.
“Here’s why I would defend Nico a little bit,” Klatt said of the Southern California native. “He never really got a chance to tell his side of the story. You know, Tennessee ran out basically a propaganda effort and got to tell the story without Nico being involved at all. It was not all about money. It really wasn’t. If it was, he wouldn’t have gone to UCLA, which is the tell-tale sign.”
Klatt also pointed to the offensive system Heupel runs at Tennessee and how it limited Iamaleava’s skillset.
“He wanted the offense to grow with him. … That offense that Josh Heupel runs is … almost like a glorified high school offense … and the reason that it doesn’t develop a quarterback is because everything is a half-field read. … Nico understood that. … They wanted the offense to expand and to grow and to develop, and when it didn’t do that through spring football, that’s when he was like, ‘I don’t know if this is the right place for me.'”
UCLA is entering Year 2 under new head coach DeShaun Foster after finishing 5-7 overall and 3-6 in conference play last fall. If all goes well for Iamaleava, this could very well be his only season with the Bruins before entering the 2026 NFL Draft.
“I hope he succeeds,” Klatt said about Iamaleava. “We’ll see.”
UCLA opens the 2025 college football season against Utah at 8 p.m. ET Saturday on FOX.
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