Connect with us

NIL

Mark Wasikowski considers next step to build Oregon baseball program

The Oregon Ducks season has come to an end. Now, head coach Mark Wasikowski is looking ahead at how he can continue to build up the Oregon baseball program. Immediately following the Ducks’ NCAA Regional elimination, Wasikowski met with media members. There, he emphasized that the next step for Oregon is continuing to build the […]

Published

on


The Oregon Ducks season has come to an end. Now, head coach Mark Wasikowski is looking ahead at how he can continue to build up the Oregon baseball program.

Immediately following the Ducks’ NCAA Regional elimination, Wasikowski met with media members. There, he emphasized that the next step for Oregon is continuing to build the culture and the program as a whole to eventually get over the proverbial hump.

“Well, continuing to build a culture,” Mark Wasikowski said. “Continue to build a program. It’s a program that we’re trying to build. It’s not just a player. We pride ourselves on not being a transactional group. We invest in these young people with all of our hearts, we love them.”

Oregon dropped their first two games in the Eugene Regional. That included against Cal Poly on Saturday to get eliminated and end their season. Still, from that, Mark Wasikowski pointed to players like Jeffery Heard both as who he wants the program to represent and who he feels the worst for amid the loss.

“To see Jeffery Heard today,” Wasikowski said. “When he gets an opportunity to play for Anson Aroz, who doesn’t get a chance to finish possibly his last season of college baseball by being somebody that the NCAA would be extremely proud of. A young man who has a college degree was a near 4.0 student. He was our SAAC, which is Student Athlete Advisory Committee representative, to the president and athletic director. He served on multiple boards at the University of Oregon and was a spokesman for the program and truly a tremendous young man. For him to not get the opportunity to be able to be on the field today is probably the thing that hurts me personally, right now, at the moment.”

Jeffery Heard was a key offensive player for Oregon. He went 3-5 at the plate with two RBIs. He’d also score two runs. Still, that wasn’t enough to overcome Cal Poly and now Oregon turns to the future.

“Without getting into the grand scheme of things, I just hurt for that young man because of his investment in college sports, in the great University of Oregon that it is, and the people. For us not to be able to have him on that baseball field today, maybe it’s the reason why he chooses to come back,” Wasikowski said. “But if he doesn’t choose to come back, I hope it’s not for the heartburn of the experience that he just had.” 

When Mark Wasikowski took over at Oregon, the Ducks were coming off a 27-29 season. At that time, the Ducks hadn’t been to the NCAA Tournament since 2015. They had also not won a conference regular season since 1957 and had never won a conference tournament. Since Wasikowski has taken over, the Ducks have made the NCAA Tournament five times and made the Super Regional twice. They’ve also won a conference tournament and won the Big Ten regular season in 2025.

Now, Oregon looks to take the next step as a program. That would mean making it to the College World Series for the first time since 1954.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

NIL

Reece Potter believes this Kentucky team would be banned in a college basketball video game with ‘all 99s’

On June 30, EA Sports announced that it is reviving its college basketball series, starting in 2028. While this year’s Kentucky team won’t be in the game, center Reece Potter didn’t mind daydreaming about what the Wildcats would look like if they were included. “We’d definitely be one of those teams that you’d probably have […]

Published

on


On June 30, EA Sports announced that it is reviving its college basketball series, starting in 2028. While this year’s Kentucky team won’t be in the game, center Reece Potter didn’t mind daydreaming about what the Wildcats would look like if they were included.

“We’d definitely be one of those teams that you’d probably have to ban, I’m gonna be honest with you,” Potter said. “In (EA Sports) College Football (25), there was a couple schools, where everybody was like — ‘You can’t use those teams because they’re too good.’

“I feel like we’d definitely probably be one of them. We’re gonna have all 99s probably, definitely going to be on the X-list, ‘You can’t use Kentucky basketball versus me.’”

Potter transferred to Kentucky this offseason after spending two years at Miami (OH). Potter is a Bluegrass State native and went to Lexington Catholic Academy, which is just a few miles down the road from the University of Kentucky.

Potter averaged 6.5 points, 3.7 rebounds and 1.2 assists per game last season while shooting 46.6% from the field and 36.7% from beyond the arc. Despite Potter’s successful campaign, he isn’t expected to see much action for the Wildcats this season.

Potter’s jokes about the team’s 99 ratings aside, Kentucky loaded up on legitimate talent this offseason. The Wildcats secured the No. 2 class in On3’s 2025 Team Transfer Portal Rankings.

The class includes standouts such as former All-ACC guard Jaland Lowe and projected 2026 lottery draft pick Jayden Quaintance. Moreover, Kentucky is returning a significant portion of its talent from last season.

The ‘Cats only lost two players to the transfer portal last season — neither of which were starters. In contrast, Kentucky is returning 2024 All-SEC Second-Team selection Otega Oweh, along with other contributors: Brandon Garrison, Collin Chandler and Trent Noah.

Kentucky is ranked No. 5 in On3 college basketball expert James Fletcher III’s “way-too-early” 2025-26 rankings. Additionally, the Wildcats are tied with Florida for the third-best odds to win the national championship next season. Simply put, Kentucky will be a handful for any opponent next season.

“We always say we’re the deepest team in the country, one through 15 guys, everybody can probably play anywhere in the country,” Potter said. “Every single day, it’s a challenge. Every single day, everybody is trying to bring it, fighting for spots. Our whole team can go… I feel like that’s what is gonna make us a national championship (team).”



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Texas Tech FB Commit Felix Ojo Lands Eye-Popping Revenue-Sharing Deal

Texas Tech commit Felix Ojo is one of the first big winners in the revenue-sharing world that has now begun in college sports. As part of his commitment to Texas Tech, the five-star offensive tackle recruit agreed to a three-year, $2.3 million revenue-sharing deal with the school, The Athletic reported. Ojo’s deal is believed to […]

Published

on


Texas Tech commit Felix Ojo is one of the first big winners in the revenue-sharing world that has now begun in college sports. As part of his commitment to Texas Tech, the five-star offensive tackle recruit agreed to a three-year, $2.3 million revenue-sharing deal with the school, The Athletic reported.

Ojo’s deal is believed to be one of the largest revenue-sharing agreements between a school and a student-athlete since the approval of the House v. NCAA settlement in June, which allowed schools and student-athletes to agree to revenue-sharing deals starting on July 1. The deal will pay Ojo $775,000 per year, according to The Athletic.

When news first broke about Ojo’s commitment, his agent, Derrick Shelby of Prestige Management, told ESPN that the revenue-sharing deal he received was worth $5.1 million. While that figure isn’t fully guaranteed, Ojo’s revenue-sharing deal can climb to that number if there’s a large jump in the cap schools can spend on revenue-sharing deals with student-athletes, The Athletic added in its report. 

Entering the 2025-26 academic year, schools are allowed to spend roughly $20.5 million in revenue-sharing deals per year across all sponsored sports. However, that number is expected to increase on a yearly basis. 

Ojo can’t officially put pen to paper on his revenue-sharing agreement with Texas Tech just yet, though. Recruits can’t sign their revenue-sharing deals with schools until the signing period begins, which is Dec. 3 for FBS football. Student-athletes enrolled for the 2025-26 academic year could begin negotiating revenue-sharing deals with their current schools starting on July 1. 

Still, Ojo will likely become one of the richest players in college football, at least through revenue sharing, when he takes the field in 2026. To put his agreement in perspective, the total potential value of Ojo’s agreement ($5.1 million) would be equal to what a fourth-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft would make over the totality of their rookie deal, per Spotrac. Ojo could actually make more on a per-year basis than those players as well, as NFL rookie deals are four years long. 

“Football is a brutal sport, and athletes are not able to play professionally until their graduating class has been in college three years,” Shelby told ESPN of Ojo’s deal. “It was important to be able to secure Felix Ojo’s future and give him and his family some security as he continues to develop into a first-round NFL draft pick.”

Prior to landing Ojo in a rich revenue-sharing deal, Texas Tech has made major financial commitments in obtaining and securing student-athletes as of late in the name, image and likeness (NIL) era. Softball phenom NiJaree Canady has reportedly received two $1 million deals through Texas Tech’s NIL collective, reciting one to transfer from Stanford in 2024 and earning another to remain with the school in June. 

Basketball star JT Toppin also remained at Texas Tech following his All-American season in 2024-25 by reportedly signing a $3 million deal with the school’s NIL collective. That deal has made Toppin one of the most valuable players in all of college sports. 

Texas Tech’s JT Toppin has been one of the biggest beneficiaries in the school’s financial commitment to athletics. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images)

That spending has also carried into the football program. The Red Raiders spent more than $10 million through their NIL collective to land 21 players in the transfer portal this offseason, according to The Athletic. Its transfer portal class ranked as the second-best this offseason, via 247 Sports. 

Ojo, who also had offers from and visited Michigan, Texas, Florida, Ohio State and others, headlines a 2026 recruiting class that currently ranks 26th in the nation, via 247 Sports. He’s currently 247 Sports’ fifth-best prospect in the Class of 2026 and is the best recruit the program has ever landed, according to the recruiting service. 

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.


Get more from College Football Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more




Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Former College Athlete Launches App to Help High School Athletes

Former College Athlete Launches App to Help High School Athletes ✕ Crown App FREE VIEW 0

Published

on

Former College Athlete Launches App to Help High School Athletes






Former College Athlete Launches App to Help High School Athletes

































Crown App

FREE

VIEW

Continue Reading

NIL

Urban Meyer shares comical response after being approached to fill a college GM role this off season

No role in college football has become more important in the past 12 months than the General Manager position. While the GM position has been around for several years now, the evolution of NIL, revenue sharing, and the transfer portal have quickly made it a post where experience is key, so much so that we’ve […]

Published

on


No role in college football has become more important in the past 12 months than the General Manager position.

While the GM position has been around for several years now, the evolution of NIL, revenue sharing, and the transfer portal have quickly made it a post where experience is key, so much so that we’ve profiled some of the high profile pursuits of guys like Texas Tech’s James Blanchard by Notre Dame for their opening, and more recently Louisville poaching top Kentucky assistant Vince Marrow to the vital off-field role.

With a premium on experience, it’s only logical that former head coaches who have successfully built championship rosters would be high on a team’s short list for the position.

One of those coaches fitting that mold is Urban Meyer, who shared this past week during a podcast where they welcomed first-year Oklahoma GM Jim Nagy onto the show that he was brought in by an unnamed program to talk about filling their GM role.

“I don’t know if I even told Rob and Mark this, but I had a school come see me this year and ask if I wanted to be the GM, and a couple other phone calls,”  

“You start to think, ‘OK, they actually came to see me,’ so I said, ‘Yeah, I’ll meet and I’ll sit down with you guys.’”

When Urban asked about the job description for the role, it was a full and immediate stop for the coaching veteran and 2025 College Football Hall of Famer.

“I said, ‘OK, what is the job description?’ They said, ‘Well, basically you meet with all the agents of the 17 and 18-year-olds, and I thought, ‘I’d rather step on a rusty nail and pull it out myself.’”

Safe to say Meyer is comfortable with his spot on Fox’s Big Noon Kickoff show for the foreseeable future.

Hear Meyer’s story, as well from more on Nagy on the GM role in Normal in the clip.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Texas Tech transfer Tyler Boudreau commits to Alabama baseball

Earlier this past week, the Alabama Crimson Tide baseball program landed yet another commitment via the NCAA transfer portal in right-hander pitcher Tyler Boudreau. Boudreau comes to Tuscaloosa after spending the 2025 season at Texas Tech, his lone in Lubbock.  With the Red Raiders, the right-hander made a total of 13 appearances during the 2025 […]

Published

on

Texas Tech transfer Tyler Boudreau commits to Alabama baseball

Earlier this past week, the Alabama Crimson Tide baseball program landed yet another commitment via the NCAA transfer portal in right-hander pitcher Tyler Boudreau.

Boudreau comes to Tuscaloosa after spending the 2025 season at Texas Tech, his lone in Lubbock. 

With the Red Raiders, the right-hander made a total of 13 appearances during the 2025 season, 10 of which were starts. Over that span, Boudreau owned a 1-4 record with a 6.65 ERA and a 49:23 K:BB ratio across 47.1 innings pitched, with opponents also owning a combined .254 AVG against.

Following his commitment to the Crimson Tide, Boudreau joins the likes of John Lemm and Owen Sarna, among others, who have committed to Alabama out of the transfer portal in recent weeks. 

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion.

Continue Reading

NIL

Mike Young, Virginia Tech Embrace Global…

In an offseason full of movement across the college basketball landscape, Virginia Tech head coach Mike Young didn’t just dive into the transfer portal — he went across the ocean. The headline addition is Neoklis “Neo” Avdalas, a 6’8 guard/wing from Greece who flirted with the NBA Draft before ultimately committing to the Hokies in […]

Published

on


In an offseason full of movement across the college basketball landscape, Virginia Tech head coach Mike Young didn’t just dive into the transfer portal — he went across the ocean.

The headline addition is Neoklis “Neo” Avdalas, a 6’8 guard/wing from Greece who flirted with the NBA Draft before ultimately committing to the Hokies in June. But he’s not the only international piece in the program as the Hokies also added German C Antonio Dorn. With the additions of Avdalas and Dorn, Young and his staff are making it clear: international recruiting is no longer a side project in Blacksburg — it’s a focal point.

And Mike Young is very happy to add both of these players to his team, especially the potential 2026 NBA first round pick Avdalas.

“Thank God we got him,” Young said of Avdalas. “We needed to get him, and we’re fortunate enough to do so.”

Avdalas first appeared on Virginia Tech’s radar back in early April, and that is thanks to a connection between assistant coach Chester Frazier and NBA agent Alex Saratsis, who represents stars like Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bam Adebayo.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending