NIL
Money Matters, Part I
Story Links Intercollegiate athletics have entered a historic new era after judge Claudia Wilken recently granted final approval to the $2.8 billion settlement of the class-action antitrust lawsuit House v. NCAA. Over the next three Fridays, we will be examining the immediate and future implications of the House Settlement and what it means for WVU […]

Intercollegiate athletics have entered a historic new era after judge Claudia Wilken recently granted final approval to the $2.8 billion settlement of the class-action antitrust lawsuit House v. NCAA. Over the next three Fridays, we will be examining the immediate and future implications of the House Settlement and what it means for WVU athletics.
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – On Friday, June 6, Senior District Judge Claudia Wilken granted final approval to the settlement of House v. NCAA anti-trust lawsuit filed in 2020 by former Arizona State swimmer Grant House and former TCU women’s basketball player Sedona Prince.
The lawsuit combined other cases and challenged the NCAA’s restrictions on revenue sharing related to media rights, seeking to allow schools to pay student-athletes for their name, image and likeness (NIL). The lawsuit argued the NCAA’s restrictions on revenue sharing and NIL payments violated the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890.
The recent settlement, approved by Wilken, ended the NCAA’s long-standing amateurism model by allowing direct compensation to student-athletes of up to $20.5 million per institution beginning on July 1, 2025.
This amount will increase by 4% annually over the next 10 years.
In addition, $2.8 billion in back pay will be awarded to former Division I student-athletes who competed between 2016 and 2024 and did not receive NIL compensation.
New rules will limit the number of players permitted on team rosters and a new independent entity, the College Sports Commission LLC (CSC), will be tasked with enforcing rules related to revenue sharing, NIL deals and roster sizes. Former Major League Baseball executive Bryan Seeley has been hired to oversee the organization as its CEO.
There have already been challenges to the settlement, and more are likely.
Five days after Wilken’s approval, eight female athletes filed an appeal arguing that the distribution of the settlement funds will violate Title IX because they believe female athletes will receive less money than men’s basketball and football players.
Other legal challenges are looming, including disputes related to the value of NIL deals.
West Virginia University director of athletics Wren Baker, in a recent wide-ranging, sit-down interview with WVUsports.com, admits the recent settlement is only a beginning to the end.
“I think it’s a great first step,” he said. “Not everybody in the general public – the media and the attorneys who pontificate on social media – thinks what we have is unsustainable, but I think everybody who is actually involved in this sees this as unsustainable.
“When you have schools around the country such as Kentucky and Ohio State, schools in conferences that get the largest payouts and have massive budgets, that are incurring big deficits – Texas A&M is having to cut a bunch of staff – you can see that what we have is not sustainable. I think the House Settlement is a really good first step to building a model that’s fair to student-athletes; that increases scholarships; that establishes a significant revenue share for student-athletes; and sets a model in place that is more sustainable.”
Baker, however, believes congressional involvement is also necessary.
“I don’t think this will be the end game,” he explained. “There are going to have to be some other steps. Certainly, President (Donald) Trump has talked about establishing a commission to look at this, and there has been hearing after hearing in D.C. Do we get traction to actually put forth some meaningful legislation?
“If people care about college sports and people care about programs being able to offer a full complement of intercollegiate sports with experiences similar to what we currently have, especially in Olympic sports, we have to put in place a model that is sustainable.”
Baker has had discussions with some of the state’s Congressional delegation about this topic and he believes they are understanding and supportive of West Virginia University’s position.
“We are starting to see some bi-partisan support for some considerations here,” he said. “This isn’t just about the power conference schools. Every state has schools, even if it is not in a power conference. They have schools that they take great pride in, or schools that represent the state’s brand, so we need a model that is sustainable for the 350 schools, not just the 24 or 36 biggest in collegiate sports.”
What the House Settlement means for West Virginia University, according to Baker, is some immediate clarity.
His visits with Mountaineer fans around the state frequently include questions about which entity to donate: The Mountaineer Athletic Club or the Country Roads Trust.
“We now have a system and an established amount of revenue that we can share,” he said. “We know that we have real NIL that we can continue (to distribute), but now here is the process that it must go through. (Supporters) don’t have to worry about, ‘Do I give here, or do I give there? Does my gift count toward my donation requirement for my seats?’
“They can also do NIL deals directly with student-athletes, and I think our student-athletes bring a lot of value,” Baker continued. “If you want to advertise in the state of West Virginia, there is no better partner to do that than WVU athletics. By far, we have the biggest brand and bring the most attention to the state.
“If you want a spokesperson for WVU athletics, it’s most likely going to be one of our student-athletes. I think it makes a lot of sense for people to continue to do those NIL deals with student-athletes, but now there are really two pathways that fans can help us rather than these multiple pathways of where they have to figure out how they can best be an asset.”
Baker views the newly created College Sports Commission as an independent means of regulating the new system. In the past, the NCAA enforcement arm was comprised of peers investigating peers and the process was often viewed as cumbersome and inconsistent.
Baker believes having an independent entity enables the CSC some additional flexibility from an enforcement standpoint.
“If we’re going to give the House Settlement any kind of chance (having oversight is important),” Baker explained. “Every coach you talk to says they want a system in place, and then they immediately pivot to trying to game the system.
“I think you would be hard-pressed to find anyone who would defend the investigative and regulatory arm of the NCAA. It took forever; it was peer reviewed; it lacked teeth at times, and certainly, the NCAA could have done what the CSC is about to do, but at some point, there is a crisis of confidence from the general public, from the coaches and from administrators.
“I believe this is more of a professional model and structure, and it’s something that is really important, and I’m excited about. I’m also excited that they hired somebody who came from the professional ranks.”
Regarding team roster sizes, Baker maintains roster compositions and travel squads have already been in place for years based on competitive factors in each sport.
That’s different than scholarship limitations.
“The scholarship limits have been removed because there legally wasn’t a justifiable way, and that would have been the next (court) challenge and, in fact, it’s already starting to work its way through the courts,” he said. “If you were to say green, yellow or red for issues that would run afoul of antitrust, rosters are kind of in the green.
“Where we’ve ultimately landed is we’re going to set a roster, and it’s going to be done more for competitive reasons, but within that it’s really at the institutional discretion how many scholarships they want to allocate,” Baker added. “In reality, let’s take men’s and women’s basketball. Prior to the House Settlement, the men’s basketball scholarship limit was 13 and women’s was 15. Well, most of the time both are probably going to end up with 12 or 13 scholarship players anyway.”
He continued.
“You can only play so many, and the more of them you have sitting on the bench discontent, the more problems you have. You want to leave room for walk-ons anyway, and if you start extending your roster out to 17, 18 or 20 players, you have less time to spend with each one.
“I don’t know that we are going to look at increasing scholarships in men’s and women’s basketball because, really, they are kind of where they need to be.”
Despite having some clarity, the House Settlement does not fully address the collective bargaining aspect of the process.
That’s the slippery slope that will likely require congressional intervention.
“I think the criticism of the system that we have developed is that student-athletes didn’t have a voice in it, but I think the truth of the matter is, if they were employees and we were collectively bargaining, I’m not sure they would have walked away with as many benefits as they are walking away with in this settlement,” he pointed out. “The plaintiff’s counsel was really good at fighting for the student-athletes.
“There is a segment of athletic directors that would be willing to view student-athletes as employees, but it’s a really tough precedent for campuses, because then you start running the risk of, ‘Okay, what about the band students or the theater students and all these different clubs and organizations you have?’ What ends up happening to club and rec sports?”
Baker recalled his collegiate experiences to make his point.
“I spent very little time contemplating what I read in a book or what I learned in a seminar,” he said. “I think about the experiences I had. Yes, the college experience is about what you discover in textbooks, but it’s really more about what you find within yourself. What’s your calling? What’s your passion? What’s your purpose? What do you want to do with your life?”
Baker sees an employment model diminishing this experience for all students.
“Why are you coming to college? You are coming to college because of the experiences and the relationships you make, and the development that you experience as a person going to a new place and being on your own,” he explained. “If you are diminishing all that, what’s the point?
“If we can find a way in some kind of federal bill to have a collective bargaining-type of conversation that doesn’t require employment, which doesn’t currently exist, that could ultimately help us get there.”
Next Friday, we will examine the House Settlement’s $20.5 million per-school allocation, and how that impacts West Virginia University’s current athletics’ budget.
NIL
NIL numbers revealed for 5-star Ducks commit
Oregon has won some massive recruiting battles during Dan Lanning‘s tenure, including a few in the 2026 class. But it’d be hard to argue many were bigger than landing five-star edge rusher Anthony Jones over both Texas A&M and Alabama on Thursday. The St. Paul’s Episcopal (Ala.) product was considered a longtime lean to the […]

Oregon has won some massive recruiting battles during Dan Lanning‘s tenure, including a few in the 2026 class. But it’d be hard to argue many were bigger than landing five-star edge rusher Anthony Jones over both Texas A&M and Alabama on Thursday.
The St. Paul’s Episcopal (Ala.) product was considered a longtime lean to the in-state Crimson Tide, and even named them as his No. 1 school in the past few weeks. But behind the scenes, Dan Lanning and Co. continued to push the right buttons. The distance from Alabama all the way up to Eugene ultimately didn’t deter him from committing to the Ducks.
He has a strong relationship with Oregon’s coaching staff, led by Lanning and defensive coordinator Tosh Lupoi, his primary recruiter. But the Ducks were also very competitive when it came to the NIL/revenue-sharing offer they made to Jones, too.
“Certainly, you don’t win this kind of recruiting battle without being heavily armed on the NIL front,” Rivals VP of Recruiting Steve Wiltfong said on Friday. “I think Anthony ‘Tank’ Jones is someone that is getting a deal worth over $1 million for his first season. Oregon, Texas A&M and Alabama all battled on that front. And then where Oregon is at as a program. He said, ‘I think we can get Oregon closer to that first national championship that they covet.”
Oregon has known be one of the premier spenders in college football since the advent of the NIL era, both in the transfer portal and in high school recruiting. But their money is not limitless, especially in the new revenue-sharing era. Earlier this spring, they bowed out of the race for Five-Star Plus+ OT Jackson Cantwell, who is reportedly set to receive in the $2.5 million range from Miami.
The Ducks were a top school and at one time predicted to land Cantwell before the Hurricanes made their final push and got him in the boat in May. Among other top recruits, USC tight end commit Mark Bowman is reportedly set to receive $5 and $6.5 million over three years, according to On3’s Pete Nakos.
Mirroring the NFL, quarterbacks, offensive tackles and pass-rushers are premium positions on recruiting. Five-star passers Faizon Brandon, Ryder Lyons and Jared Curtis are set receive between $750K and $1.5 million, per Nakos’ reporting.
Jones give the Ducks another elite prospect to build around
The 6-foot-3, 245-pound Jones is the No. 22 overall prospect in the 2026 class, according to the Rivals Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all three major recruiting media companies. He also ranks as the nation’s No. 4 edge rusher and the No. 2 recruit in the Yellowhammer State.
With him in the fold, Oregon now has four five-star commitments and seven commits ranked in the top-100 nationally.
As a junior, Jones recorded 84 tackles, 18 tackles for loss, and 16 sacks.
He is also a standout on the track, winning the Alabama 6A discus state championship as a junior with a toss of 161 feet, 5 inches. In the shot put, he threw 56 feet, 3.75 inches to take home silver.
NIL
Mattingly Joins Illinois Softball as Director of Operations
Story Links CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – Head softball coach Tyra Perry announced on Friday the addition of Megan Mattingly as the program’s director of operations. “We are thrilled to welcome Megan to our staff!” Perry said. “Having grown up immersed in the Fighting Illini sports culture, she brings a deep passion for […]

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – Head softball coach Tyra Perry announced on Friday the addition of Megan Mattingly as the program’s director of operations.
“We are thrilled to welcome Megan to our staff!” Perry said. “Having grown up immersed in the Fighting Illini sports culture, she brings a deep passion for the game and a strong connection to our community. Her dedication and competitive spirit were evident during her playing days, and we are confident that she will bring that same drive and excellence to this new role.”
Mattingly returns to her home state and joins the Fighting Illini after spending the last three years working at Southridge High School in Huntingburg, Indiana. While there, she served as the head softball coach while working within the physical education/strength and conditioning department from 2022-25. Mattingly also held roles as an assistant volleyball coach from 2023-24 and assisted with graphic design in 2024. She was the Southridge Middle School athletic director during the 2022-23 academic year.
During the 2025 NCAA Tournament, Mattingly was a regional site representative at the University of Oklahoma, acting as the NCAA’s on-site liaison while collaborating with athletic directors to ensure full compliance with tournament policies, procedures, and game day operations during NCAA Regionals. In that role, she also coordinated communication between NCAA staff, the host institution, teams, officials, and media to ensure smooth event execution; oversaw game day logistics including team arrivals, facility readiness, credential distribution, and schedule adherence; and resolved real-time issues related to weather delays, protocol enforcement, and team logistics while maintaining professionalism and NCAA standards.
A native of Danville, Illinois, Mattingly – née Megan Burton – played softball at the Division I level at Eastern Illinois, where she competed from 2018-22. As a senior in 2021, she earned OVC Player of the Year, All-OVC First Team, OVC Scholar Athlete of the Year, and NFCA All-Mideast Region First Team honors. Across her five-year career with the Panthers, Mattingly played in 220 games, making 218 starts, while hitting .302 with 212 hits, 151 runs scored, 115 RBI, 74 stolen bases, 55 walks, and 46 doubles. She was tabbed an All-OVC Second Team selection as a sophomore in 2019.
Mattingly graduated from EIU with a bachelor’s degree in kinesiology and sports studies in 2020 before getting her master’s in educational leadership in 2022.
“I am so grateful for the opportunity to work for the University of Illinois,” Mattingly said. “I am excited to be a part of Illinois Softball and the strong culture that is embedded within the program. This is home, and I am truly excited to be part of the FamILLy.”
NIL
Aug. 1 is here. Can Auburn football turn around its 2026 recruiting class?
Summer 2025 was a period of change in college football, as the House Settlement regarding college sports was approved, forever changing the landscape of college football and how college athletes can make money. It was also a rough time for Auburn football’s recruiting efforts. The Tigers’ 2026 class suffered a handful of decommitments and dropped […]

Summer 2025 was a period of change in college football, as the House Settlement regarding college sports was approved, forever changing the landscape of college football and how college athletes can make money.
It was also a rough time for Auburn football’s recruiting efforts. The Tigers’ 2026 class suffered a handful of decommitments and dropped all the way down to No. 89 in 247Sports’ recruiting team rankings at one point.
Head coach Hugh Freeze and athletic director John Cohen attributed the issues to the changes brought on by the House Settlement and how the athletic department put together its revenue sharing plan.
“I’m here to tell you, we’re gonna do this the right way,” Cohen told reporters on July 2 before an AMBUSH alumni event in Alexander City.
Cohen was alluding to the idea that other schools may not be following the new rules of the settlement. He hinted at schools throwing out unrealistic numbers to recruits in verbal offers, something he said Auburn wasn’t going to do.
In that same breath, Cohen told reporters that Aug. 1 would be a big day for the long-term success of Auburn’s recruiting. That’s the day that those verbal offers can start going into writing, a chance for schools to put their money where their mouth is, so to speak.
“That’s a big day,” Cohen said. “It’s not rumor, it’s not innuendo, it’s not, ‘This person said this.’ It’s an offer on paper.”
Now, that day is here. While Cohen and Freeze never said that things would turn around immediately, the recruiting efforts will be looked at through a different lens until signing day.
But how did things get here, and where could they go from here?
Within 11 days in June, Auburn lost three four-star recruits before adding one three star and a four-star quarterback by month’s end. After losing one more four-star recruit, Auburn addressed its challenges with the 2026 recruiting class before picking up four recruits to finish July, including three four-stars.
Here’s a timeline of how the summer unfolded:
Timeline
June 6 | The House Settlement officially passes, meaning schools can officially begin paying athletes directly starting July 1
June 12 | 4-star linebacker JaMichael Garrett decommits from Auburn
June 22 | 4-star linebacker Shadarius Toodle flips from Auburn to Georgia
June 23 | 4-star wide receiver Devin Carter flips from Auburn to Florida State
June 24 | 3-star offensive tackle Nikau Hepi commits to Auburn, breaking the streak of decommitments
June 26 | 4-star quarterback Peyton Falzone commits to Auburn, becoming the first quarterback commit in the Tigers’ 2026 class
July 1 | 4-star wide receiver Denairius Gray flips to Kentucky, dropping Auburn’s class to No. 89 in the country
July 2 | Cohen and Freeze address the media in Alexander City, explaining the recruiting struggles and pointing two Aug. 1 date
July 4 | 3-star tight end Kentrell White commits to Auburn
July 8 | 4-star linebacker Adam Balogun-Ali commits to Auburn
July 17 | 4-star offensive lineman Wilson Zierer commits to Auburn
July 21 | 4-star linebacker Jaquez Wilkes commits to Auburn, becoming the Tigers’ first top 100 commit in the 2026 class
July 31 | The College Sports Commission provides new guidance for third-party NIL deals, allowing NIL collectives to pay athletes if the deals are for a “valid business purpose.”
Aug. 1 | Verbal offers to recruits in the 2026 class can begin going into writing
What lies ahead?
Aug. 8
Four-star wide receiver Jase Mathews announces his commitment. His finalists include Auburn, LSU, Ole Miss and Texas A&M.
Aug. 21
Five-star safety Bralan Womack announces his commitment. His finalists include Auburn, Ohio State, Florida and Texas A&M. If Womack and Mathews both choose Auburn, it would raise the Tigers’ class ranking from 70 to 33, according to 247Sports.
Aug. 29
Auburn opens the 2025 football season at Baylor.
Peter Rauterkus covers Auburn sports for AL.com. You can follow him on X at @peter_rauterkus or email him at prauterkus@al.com
If you purchase a product or register for an account through a link on our site, we may receive compensation. By using this site, you consent to our User Agreement and agree that your clicks, interactions, and personal information may be collected, recorded, and/or stored by us and social media and other third-party partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
NIL
Flau'jae Johnson Explains How Shaquille O'Neal's Business Portfolio Is Influencing How …
“The newspaper told me how much I made and I couldn’t believe how much I made,” he said, according to TechCrunch. O’Neal’s portfolio also includes Big Chicken, a fast-casual restaurant chain with restaurants nationwide, and Authentic Brands Group, where he is its second-largest shareholder. The brand management company profits from not only O’Neal’s name and likeness […]


“The newspaper told me how much I made and I couldn’t believe how much I made,” he said, according to TechCrunch.
O’Neal’s portfolio also includes Big Chicken, a fast-casual restaurant chain with restaurants nationwide, and Authentic Brands Group, where he is its second-largest shareholder. The brand management company profits from not only O’Neal’s name and likeness but also Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley, Muhammad Ali, and Michael Jackson. O’Neal has also said on record that his investment decisions were influenced by billionaire Mark Cuban, who encouraged him to invest in the alcoholic beverage brand BeatBox. It is no surprise that the next generation is studying O’Neal’s footprint.
“Shaq’s portfolio is the most impressive crazy business portfolio that I’ve seen,” Johnson explained on the “Club Shay Shay” podcast. “And my coach coached him, coach Bob Starkey. So he be telling like, ‘No, you got to watch Shaq, like you got to do what he did in business and all the companies and things he’s over.’ It’s just incredible.”
NIL
Mitch Barnhart says 6 programs will split Kentucky’s revenue-sharing budget but won’t give specifics
As expected, Mitch Barnhart didn’t share specifics on Kentucky’s revenue-sharing plans for the 2025-26 season; however, he did pull the curtain back just a tiny bit. In his press conference at Kentucky Football Media Day, Barnhart said six programs will split the $20.5 million the department has set aside for revenue-sharing this year: football, men’s […]

As expected, Mitch Barnhart didn’t share specifics on Kentucky’s revenue-sharing plans for the 2025-26 season; however, he did pull the curtain back just a tiny bit.
In his press conference at Kentucky Football Media Day, Barnhart said six programs will split the $20.5 million the department has set aside for revenue-sharing this year: football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, baseball, softball, and volleyball. He also said that the $20.5 million is actually $18.5 million when you account for scholarships.
How much will each of those six programs get? Barnhart is keeping that close to the vest.
“The speculation is wonderful,” Barnhart quipped when asked about fans wanting to know revenue-sharing specifics. “I think that not only do the fans want to know, but our opponents want to know. And so I think we’re going to sort of keep it fluid with us and keep it inside our framework.”
That said, Barnhart made it clear that UK’s coaches are happy with the plan, specifically mentioning “great conversations” with Mark Stoops, Mark Pope, and Kenny Brooks. That’s in large part because the amounts each sport gets can change each year based on each team’s needs.
“I will say this: our coaches are pleased with where we are and what we’re doing. And I think that’s the beauty of this cap system that we’re in, is that it is pretty fluid from season to season, from sport to sport, and it can change. And so to sit here and say, we’re going to focus and put this number on that, it may change by the time we get to the end of the semester. It may change by the time we get to the end of the year, based on rosters, based on who’s in your program and who’s not in your program.
“And so we want to be really thoughtful about how we do that. And we think our best advantage in being able to help our coaches in the best way possible is to be really, really nimble in what we do, and we can only do that, we think, if we structure it this way.”
When asked, Barnhart said that the revenue-sharing money doesn’t roll over, meaning that you have to either use it this year or lose it. Helping matters is that this year’s rosters were funded by NIL dollars set in place before the House Settlement went into effect on July 1. How NIL will be handled now, and the role of collectives seems to change by the minute, especially as lawsuits mount. Federal legislation would certainly help.
“The change that has occurred has been massive,” Barnhart said. “We don’t even have a governance structure in place, really, to be honest with you. So you’re asking people to say, hey, this is absolutely the highway or the pathway we’re supposed to go down. I don’t think that’s a reality in anybody’s world. There’s going to be a clunkiness to it, and a getting-started piece to all of this. And hopefully the waters will smooth a little bit, but it is going to be a little bit clunky at the beginning, you have coaches coming out and saying the NIL piece of NILGo is not working. You have others saying it’s working fine. You have the revenue cap.
“So, everyone’s in the weeds, and everyone understands exactly what’s going on. I’ve been in the middle of those conversations for 10 months, 12 months, and it’s a lot. It is an absolute lot. And I’m thankful for people who want to jump alongside federal legislation and help out of Washington. If anybody wants to help, that would be awesome. That’d be great. If we can get an alignment and get people to help. That would be great. But to sit here and be critical of the system that’s only been in place for four weeks, it’s really, really difficult. So, we’ve got to find our way through it and just gently walk through this thing and let it smooth itself out.”
NIL
Mauigoa Named to Wuerffel Trophy Watch List – University of Miami Athletics
CORAL GABLES, Fla. – Miami Hurricanes junior offensive tackle Francis Mauigoa has been named to the 2025 Wuerffel Trophy Watch List, recognizing college football’s top community servant. A native of Ili’ili, American Samoa, Mauigoa has made a significant impact in the South Florida community. His service includes volunteering with the Ronald McDonald House, running free youth […]

CORAL GABLES, Fla. – Miami Hurricanes junior offensive tackle Francis Mauigoa has been named to the 2025 Wuerffel Trophy Watch List, recognizing college football’s top community servant.
A native of Ili’ili, American Samoa, Mauigoa has made a significant impact in the South Florida community. His service includes volunteering with the Ronald McDonald House, running free youth football camps and clinics, and participating in other outreach initiatives in Miami and beyond.
Named in honor of 1996 Heisman Trophy winner Danny Wuerffel, the award celebrates student‑athletes who use their platform to serve others and drive positive change. It stands as a member of the National College Football Awards Association (NCFAA), recognized among the sport’s most prestigious honors.
The winner will be selected by a national committee and fan vote, announced live on the Home Depot College Football Awards show on Dec. 12, 2025, with the Wuerffel Trophy Presentation Gala to follow on Jan. 31, 2026 at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta, Georgia.
To stay up to date with the University of Miami football team during the 2025 season, be sure to follow @canesfootball on Instagram, X and Facebook.
-
Fashion3 weeks ago
EA Sports College Football 26 review – They got us in the first half, not gonna lie
-
Health3 weeks ago
CAREGD Trademark Hits the Streets for Mental Health Month
-
Sports3 weeks ago
New NCAA historical database provides wealth of information on championships
-
Sports2 weeks ago
Adapti, Inc. (OTC
-
Sports2 weeks ago
Volleyball Releases 2025 Schedule – Niagara University Athletics
-
High School Sports1 week ago
100 days to men's college basketball
-
Rec Sports2 weeks ago
Florida woman, 20, accused of pepper-spraying rich men in Miami Beach hotels, stealing their luxury watches
-
Health2 weeks ago
Joliet West alum's basketball clinic focuses on mental health as well as physical performance
-
Youtube3 weeks ago
Hawaii TOP SPORTS MOMENTS! 🏈⚾ | SportsCenter
-
Youtube3 weeks ago
She will remember this forever 💪🙌