












Start your morning with Buzzcast with Ted Keith: Recapping Day 2 of the Brand Innovation Summit in Chicago; NWSL Championship heading to San Jose; Atlanta gets closer to NHL dreams

The NWSL will hold its 2025 championship on Nov. 22 at PayPal Park in San Jose, where second-year club Bay FC plays its home matches as a tenant of the Earthquakes. It marks the second time in three years the league will hold its title game in California after Snapdragon Stadium in San Diego hosted in 2023. CPKC Stadium in K.C. hosted the match last year.
The decision to award hosting duties to Bay FC comes as little surprise given the massive investment the club’s owners, led by private equity firm Sixth Street, made with its then-record $53M expansion fee in 2023. The team has been a strong draw out of the gate, averaging 13,617 fans per match during its inaugural regular season in 2024. The club is scheduled to host a match later this season at Oracle Park in S.F., where it hopes to set a new NWSL single-game attendance record.
The title game will air on CBS for the fourth straight season and also stream on Paramount+. Google Pixel will make its second appearance as the match’s presenting sponsor.
The league will continue its practice of hosting its championship at a neutral site rather than allowing the higher-seeded participating team to host the match. NWSL Commissioner Jessica Berman has expressed a preference for the neutral-site model from an operational and promotional standpoint.

The College World Series starts today in Omaha, and Police Chief Todd Schmaderer said that he is “aware of the potential for immigration-related demonstrations” at the event. Posting on X, Schmaderer wrote, “Our goal is to support the free expression of speech while also ensuring the safe enjoyment of the sporting event itself. Both can and should occur peacefully and without disruption to public safety.” Protests against federal immigration enforcement operations have “popped up in the nation’s major cities,” including L.A. Tensions are “elevated in Omaha” after ICE raided a meatpacking plant earlier in the week. While the OPD has “always maintained a strong police presence” during the tournament, department officials plan to “take extra precautions this year” (OMAHA WORLD-HERALD, 6/12).

The Univ. of Michigan’s athletic department is “projecting a balanced budget” of $266.3M for FY2025-26, receiving $15M in “support from the university.” Michigan’s athletic department “received the funds from the university to help offset expenses associated with” the House settlement. Michigan will spend $20.5M to “fully participate in revenue sharing and will add approximately” $6.2M in new scholarships. Michigan football will play six games at Michigan Stadium this season and “revenue from spectator admissions is projected to decrease” by $19.1M “compared to the revenues from eight home games in 2024,” reflected in FY2024-25. Distribution from the Big Ten from television contracts is “expected to increase” by $5.8M (DETROIT NEWS, 6/12).

Tennis player Ben Shelton has joined WME roster of tennis players. The list includes Serena Williams, Carlos Alcaraz, Iga Swiatek, Taylor Fritz and Frances Tiafoe. Shelton had been repped by Team8 since 2022, when he turned pro (TENNIS, 6/12). This is a “major blow” to Team8, as Coco Gauff left the company in April to launch her own venture in conjunction with WME. Now, they are losing a “second American tennis star” in three months. Team8 was co-founded by former tennis player Roger Federer and his long-time agent Tony Godsick. Meanwhile, Shelton remains “one of the faces of On’s tennis division,” while Federer is a “shareholder, ambassador, and collaborator for the Swiss sportswear brand” (SI, 6/12).

Rogers Communications “cleared the last hurdle in its purchase” of Bell’s stake in MLSE, and the transaction is “expected to close next month.” The Canadian Radio-television & Telecommunications Commission on Thursday approved Rogers’ takeover of Bell’s NBA TV Canada assets. The boards for the NHL, NBA, MLS, CFL and AHL “all approved the change in ownership” earlier this month. Rogers announced in September that it had agreed to purchase Bell’s stake in MLSE for C$4.7B. The purchase would “double Rogers’ stake in the company” to 75% (SPORTSNET.ca, 6/12).

Singer Taylor Swift and Chiefs TE Travis Kelce “were among the celebrities that flocked to Amerant Bank Arena” for Game 4 of the Oilers-Panthers Stanley Cup Final. There were “rumblings ahead of Thursday’s game that the couple “might attend the final.” The VIP entrance to the arena was “closed off and the media elevator was not available to be used for a period of time before pregame warmups began.” The pair was “shown on the television broadcast during the first period of the game” (AP, 6/13). Video of their arrival “was shared on X by the NHL’s official account.” The pair thoughtout the night “was seen cheering on the Panthers while sitting in the team’s section” (TODAY.com, 6/12).
The Oilers won the game 5-4 in OT to tie the series at 2-2. Game 5 will take place Saturday night at Rogers Place in Edmonton.

The Bears are “exploring a sale of the minority stake” owned by late Andre McKenna Sr., according to sources. The exact size of the stake is unknown. McKenna, a former chair of McDonald’s, died in 2023. It is likely the Halas family, along with team investor Pat Ryan, will “have the right of refusal for any potential investors.” Galatioto Sports Partners was hired to handle the potential sale. Bears CEO Kevin Warren has been “considering private equity transactions” since the league granted approval for institutional investors last year. A number of NFL teams have sold minority stakes in recent months, including the 49ers, Chargers and Dolphins (BLOOMBERG NEWS, 6/11).
The second day at SBJ’s Brand Innovation Summit saw discussions held about the buildup to the World Cup, next gen sports content, partnering with college athletics and much more.
In case you missed it, here are some of the things that have been covered so far at the conference:

The World Bowling League, backed in part by Dodgers SS Mookie Betts, will “roll out with six franchises … early next year.” The league is in the “advanced stage of finalising franchises in Japan, South Korea, Singapore and India.” WBL CEO Adi Mishra was light on details but said that pro bowlers “would compete in the core sport while celebrities would take part in auxiliary events, with teams collecting points throughout the season.” He also did not provide financial details of Betts’ purchase but indicated that negotiations on the “sale of the remaining franchises were in the final stages” (REUTERS, 6/13).
SBJ checks out the 1895 Club, the USGA’s top hospitality offering at the U.S. Open.
BetMGM is looking for a VP/Media & Growth Marketing. The Jersey City-based position is responsible for leading strategy, development, and activation of digital, offline, SEO, affiliate, media partnerships, and social media of driving player acquisition for sports betting, etc (BetMGM).
BetMGM is looking for a Senior Dir/CRM Operations & Player Communications. The Jersey City-based position is responsible for owning the player lifecycle communications, optimization, and operations marketing strategy across CRM, loyalty, lifecycle, and omnichannel engagement for all brands and product verticals (BetMGM).
The White Sox are looking for a Dir/Marketing & Advertising. The Chicago-based position is responsible for managing the annual marketing and advertising budgets, executing high-impact campaigns, refining segmentation strategies for both general and Hispanic markets, and optimizing media performance across paid, email, web, and app channels (White Sox).
PGA Tour is looking for a Community Engagement Manager. The Charlotte-based position is responsible for building and implementing the year-round community engagement and messaging plan, managing charity and outreach programs hosted by the Truist Championship and cultivating positive relationships with key community constituents and local media (PGA Tour).
A crowd of 5,126 “showed up to watch” the S.F. Unicorns face the Washington Freedom in the Major League Cricket season opener and the Bay Area debut at the Oakland Coliseum (S.F. CHRONICLE, 6/12).
Sources said that Grizzlies G Ja Morant has “parted ways” with Lift Sports Management. He joined the agency in April 2024 (Memphis COMMERCIAL APPEAL, 6/12).
The TAMPA BAY BUSINESS JOURNAL went with the header, “Does St. Petersburg need baseball?” When the city landed an MLB team in 1995, it was “lauded as a statement of credibility — the kind of deal that would make it easier to convince developers … to invest in the city.” Thirty years later, city leaders are “staring down the possibility of losing the Rays.” Losing a professional sports franchise “has long been regarded as a black eye, particularly for up-and-coming Sun Belt cities like St. Pete.” But the city has “grown tremendously since the first pitch was thrown” on March 31, 1998. Some real estate developers and civic leaders say St. Pete “has evolved so much since then that the Rays’ potential departure won’t be a catastrophic economic blow.”
Also:
“The gate-keeping of who is and isn’t allowed to talk about hoop when … the biggest experts talking about hoop seem to have some of the wildest opinions out there, I think is unfair.”
Nick Wright responds to Tyrese Haliburton (and ex-NBA stars in media): pic.twitter.com/SzOJWK3I03
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) June 12, 2025
Vernon Krause, the man behind ‘The Gathering’ brought to tears when I asked him about seeing this positive vote after years of hard work by him and his team.
They’re ready for an #NHL team, should the league decide to expand and come back to Georgia. pic.twitter.com/HqnmOnXs64— Maria Martin (@Ria_Martin) June 12, 2025
“In 2024, 21 years after it was first released, the original cast album for this show made the Top 40 for the first time.”
The Morning Buzz offers today’s back pages and sports covers from some of North America’s major metropolitan newspapers:
“What is ‘Wicked’?”
By Matt Baker, Justin Williams and Stewart Mandel
Utah took college sports’ biggest step into private equity yet Tuesday when it approved a plan to partner with a private investment firm, Otro Capital, which would have an ownership stake in a new, for-profit business to fund Utes athletics and increase revenue.
The first-of-its-kind partnership comes with risks, and the terms must still be finalized after receiving unanimous approval Tuesday from the university’s board of trustees. But Utah administrators billed it as a nine-figure venture that could stabilize the Utes in a period of nationwide college athletics upheaval. It’s also the clearest window yet into a complex model schools across the country have been assessing for more than two years, a model with dynamic risks and rewards that could transform the heart of major college athletics.
“The upside is the difference between surviving and thriving,” university CFO Anthony Wagner said.
Here’s how the private-equity partnership would work and how it fits into the national landscape:
The school started a new company called Utah Brands & Entertainment. The Utes will own most of this company, but Otro Capital will also own part of it. The new company will handle some things most athletic departments do (like ticketing, events, sponsorships and NIL) but try to do them even better to make more money for the school and the investment firm.
The Utes would remain in control of big decisions like hiring/firing coaches and scheduling. Although the company will distribute NIL payments to players, the Utes would still control who gets how much.
The company will be under the university’s foundation and chaired by the Utes’ athletic director. On a potential seven-person board, the athletic director and three other Utah foundation members would be joined by two members from Otro Capital and another university supporter/investor.
The company would submit audits to Utah’s trustees, and the university would have the ability to buy back its share of the company from Otro Capital.
During a panel discussion at the SBJ Intercollegiate Athletics Forum on Tuesday, NCAA president Charlie Baker called the deal “really well thought out and really well designed” because the school still controls athletics’ decision-making process. Yahoo! Sports reported Tuesday that the Utes cleared the proposal with the NCAA.
No specific dollar figures were mentioned during the board presentation and discussion, but school president Taylor Randall said the platform will allow the Utes to raise “hundreds of millions of dollars over time.”
“This is not a one-time transaction,” Randall said.
That said, the partnership is expected to include a significant initial transaction. Athletic director Mark Harlan called a “short-term solution” of capital something “that’s very important” for the program. Trustees discussed the possibility of a seven-year term to the partnership.
The Utes were caught between the rising costs of college sports and the growing gap between the SEC/Big Ten and everyone else. When schools were allowed to start paying players directly this year, that added a $20.5 million expense for Utah and every other team that wants to compete nationally. That expense is harder for schools in the Big 12 and ACC to fund because, as Harlan said, they’re “certainly tens of millions behind other conferences.”
Utah administrators said they did not want to raise student fees to fund athletics. They didn’t want to cut sports or cut academic/research programs, either. Because the status quo, Randall said, “jeopardized the future” of Utah as a powerful program, the Utes decided to become the first program to make this move.
“There’s equal risk of actually not doing anything,” Randall said.
Because financial details are either not yet finalized or not public, we can’t fully assess them. But generally, private equity groups don’t get into partnerships to lose money. What happens if this venture doesn’t make as much as both sides expect?
Foundation CEO David Anderson acknowledged a “tension” between commercial success and the university’s mission. Utah administrators said in the presentation that the school would be able to veto a sponsorship opportunity that doesn’t align with its values, but how might that work in practice?
A rosier risk is that Utah undervalued itself because it’s the first program to make a deal like this. Anderson told the board that if the deal becomes below market value, Otro Capital will effectively have to match the new numbers.
It describes itself as an “operator-led private equity firm with deep expertise” in sports, media and entertainment. The portfolio for the New York-based firm includes FlexWork Sports (a marketing/event group focused on youth camps) and a stake in the Formula One racing team BWT Alpine.
One of Otro’s co-founders, Alec Scheiner, was the Cleveland Browns’ president from 2012 to ’16. The other, Brent Stehlik, worked in pro sports with NFL, MLB and NHL franchises.
Probably.
A few schools (like Kentucky and Clemson) have already formed companies to handle some of the business of college athletics. Utah simply took that idea a step further by adding an outside investor to the mix. The Utes aren’t the only program in these financial straits, so don’t be surprised if others follow to the same proposed solution.
Schools and conferences have been looking into outside money for a long time; Utah’s deal has been in the works for two years.
Florida State seriously explored a similar idea in 2023 but stopped short of executing anything. The Big 12 previously considered conference-wide private equity and capital deals in ’24 and early ’25 but never garnered enough support among its members. “We’re just not ready to jump in just yet,” Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark told Front Office Sports this May.
The Big Ten spent more than a year exploring similar opportunities before a nontraditional investor emerged this summer: UC Investments, a non-profit public pension and arm of the UC system, offered Big Ten members $2.4 billion in capital in exchange for a 10 percent stake in a newly formed company that would hold the league’s media and sponsorship rights. That deal is now on hold due to public opposition from two members, Michigan and USC. Michigan board chairman Mark Bernstein has called the proposal akin to “a payday loan.”
Gov. Ron DeSantis criticized the current structure of college football’s name, image, and likeness (NIL) policies and players’ use of the transfer portal to move to different schools in an exclusive interview with The Floridian publisher Javier Manjarres.
“This whole NIL and transfer portal has got to be worked out a little bit,” DeSantis said. “If they’re selling your jersey with your name on the back, you should get money for it if they are using your name, image, and likeness.”
Gov. DeSantis signed a bill allowing college athletes to profit from their name, image, and likeness back in 2020. It was later amended to allow schools, coaches, and athletic departments to assist athletes in the NIL process so Florida could stay on an even playing field with other states that had adopted similar policies.
While the governor has advocated for more player rights, he critcized the use of college football’s transfer portal, which has arguably overrun the sport with player transformers and fans wondering who stayed at their flagship school from year to year.
According to a report from NBC Sports, the number of FBS [Football Bowl Subdivision] transfers increased from 1,561 in 2018-19 to over 3,700 in last year’s cycle. FBS transfers from scholarship players also significantly rose over the past several years.
“To then say, I played three games, coach, I need more NIL money, or I’m going to transfer to another school, that’s almost like they have more rights than pro athletes do,” DeSantis commented. “I think there needs to be some reform of that.”
Gov. Ron DeSantis is a big sports fan. His son, Mason, is also a big fan of the Florida State Seminoles, with the governor often sharing predictions from his son on the outcome of the Noles’ football games on social media.
However, the governor played it fair when speaking about one of Florida State’s chief rivals, the University of Miami, and their rightful spot in the College Football Playoff (CFP).
“The Hurricanes should be in the college football playoff,” DeSantis suggested.
At the time, the governor argued that the team’s strength of schedule, their head-to-head win against the University of Notre Dame, which had been ahead of Miami in the rankings for months despite the team’s win, along with each school’s scoring margin against common opponents, was enough to lift the Canes into the final rankings.
Miami beat Notre Dame 27-24 in Week 1 of the season. In addition, the Hurricanes defeated three common opponents (NC State, Pittsburgh, Stanford) by a larger margin than the Irish.
Both teams also played Syracuse, with the Irish winning by 63 points, while the Hurricanes won by 28.
The governor was right. Miami was selected to be in the CFP last Sunday. The 10th-seed Hurricanes will play the 7th-seed Texas A&M Aggies in the first round of the playoff in College Station on Dec. 20.
DeSantis also advocated for the Fighting Irish to get in, but they were not selected in the final rankings.
In talking to sources, JMI, in conjunction with the UK basketball staff, is requiring prospective student-athletes to sign away NIL rights that would normally be untouched at any other school. A highly structured brand partnership agreement is something uncommon at other schools, but it is something Kentucky has pursued in accordance with JMI, making this arrangement unique to the current landscape of college basketball recruiting.
“I will say that Kentucky is the only school I’ve dealt with that even has anything remotely like this in their contracts,” one anonymous source said
LAS VEGAS — Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark publicly backed his ACC counterpart Tuesday after Notre Dame’s athletics director tore into the league over the Irish being left out of the College Football Playoff.
Notre Dame AD Pete Bevacqua has openly questioned the ACC’s support after Miami — an ACC member — jumped the Irish for the final at-large CFP berth. Bevacqua told “The Dan Patrick Show” on Monday that Notre Dame’s relationship with the ACC sustained “permanent damage.”
His decision to go after the league so forcefully, and so publicly, didn’t sit well with Yormark.
“Pete’s behavior has been egregious,” Yormark said Tuesday during a panel at the Intercollegiate Athletics Forum in Las Vegas. “It’s been egregious going after [ACC commissioner] Jim Phillips when they saved Notre Dame during COVID. We all knew, and it was very transparent — [CFP committee chairman] Hunter [Yurachek] was very transparent about it, that as Notre Dame and Miami got closer together, head-to-head would be a factor.”
Notre Dame AD says ACC did ‘permanent damage’ to relationship with push for Miami over Irish
Robby Kalland

In 2020, Notre Dame was granted temporary ACC membership to play a full football schedule during the shortened season.
“I think [Bevacqua] is totally out of balance in his approach, and if he were in the room, I’d tell him the same thing,” Yormark said Tuesday.
In the penultimate CFP rankings, BYU sat between Notre Dame and Miami but fell to Texas Tech in the Big 12 Championship Game, giving the committee room to take a hard look at the Hurricanes and Irish. Miami’s season-opening win over Notre Dame became the decisive wedge that pushed the Hurricanes into the field.
Bevacqua argued the ACC “singled out” two-loss Notre Dame as it worked to elevate Miami.
“We were mystified by the actions of the conference to attack their biggest business partner in football and a member of their conference in 24 of our other sports,” Bevacqua said Monday.
Phillips rejected that assertion.
“The University of Notre Dame is an incredibly valued member of the ACC, and there is tremendous respect and appreciation for the entire institution,” Phillips said in a statement Monday. “With that said, when it comes to football, we have a responsibility to support and advocate for all 17 of our football-playing member institutions, and I stand behind our conference efforts to do just that leading up to the College Football Playoff Committee selections on Sunday.
“At no time was it suggested by the ACC that Notre Dame was not a worthy candidate for inclusion in the field. We are thrilled for the University of Miami while also understanding and appreciating the significant disappointment of the Notre Dame players, coaches and program.”
Notre Dame declined a bowl invitation after the school was left out of the playoff.
Yormark was a proponent for BYU’s inclusion in the playoff, but said he understood why the Cougars were not included in the field after suffering a second loss to Texas Tech.
“I think overall, they did the right job,” Yormark said. “It’s progress over perfection. The selection process will never be perfect. And our goal as commissioners and the management committee is how do we improve upon it?”
LAS VEGAS — The ACC has found itself in the College Football Playoff crossfire in two of the past three seasons, and now the league is pushing for swift changes to the format.
ACC commissioner Jim Phillips on Wednesday called for an immediate expansion of the 12-team playoff and said he wants the CFP to examine whether it should scale back the weekly rankings released during the five weeks leading up to Selection Sunday.
The window to expand before the 2026-27 season is closing fast. ESPN granted CFP leaders an extension until Jan. 23 to finalize a decision. The prevailing expectation had been that the playoff would stay at 12 teams because the 10 FBS conferences and Notre Dame have been unable to reach consensus on a 16-team (or larger) model.
“I would prefer not to wait another year, but I only speak for the ACC,” Phillips said Wednesday after a speaking engagement at the Intercollegiate Athletics Forum.
Notre Dame’s fury over its exclusion from this year’s CFP helped change the tone. Athletic director Pete Bevacqua accused the ACC of pushing for Miami to be selected over the Irish. Notre Dame has a football scheduling partnership with the ACC and is a full member of the conference in 24 other sports. Bevacqua said Monday the school’s relationship with the ACC suffered “permanent damage” because of what he believed were ACC attacks on Notre Dame’s résumé.
Conference commissioners met Tuesday in Las Vegas to discuss the playoff, but no format agreement emerged. Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark told CBS Sports he also prefers expansion now rather than waiting until 2027-28. The SEC remains focused on a 16-team format, an SEC spokesperson told CBS Sports.
“We have good teams being left out,” said Phillips, “I think we have that responsibility to make sure that we get to a number that we feel better about, that either we believe anybody after that wouldn’t necessarily win [a national championship], or we at least cut into that margin. And I don’t know what we can get done in the next six weeks, but we’re committed to staying together and working together and working with the management committee to figure this thing out.”
Phillips reiterated his opposition to any format that awards disproportionate automatic qualifiers to the power leagues. The Big Ten recently proposed a 16-team model that would give both the Big Ten and SEC four AQs each, while the ACC and Big 12 would receive two apiece.
The Big Ten and SEC control the votes needed to set the future format, but the sides have yet to reach an agreement on any structure beyond 12 teams. The Big Ten floated a 24-team model earlier this fall, but it failed to gain SEC support — though several SEC athletic directors remain intrigued by the concept, industry sources told CBS Sports.
Phillips is also pushing to reevaluate the CFP’s weekly rankings shows on ESPN. The committee’s top 25 is currently unveiled in each of the five weeks before Selection Sunday. The group drew criticism this year for keeping Miami below Notre Dame until flipping them in the final week, citing the Week 1 head-to-head result.
“The weekly shows draw a lot of interest. They’re incredibly disruptive and very hard for the schools and the conferences,” Phillips said. “And I understand why we do the shows, and it’s part of the agreement with ESPN. but it causes great anxiety throughout. We have to find a better way moving forward as it relates to some of that, some of that pre-information.”
Phillips said it is unclear whether any adjustments can be made under ESPN’s contract, and commissioners did not address the issue during Tuesday’s meeting.
College football’s weekly reveal schedule is unique. By contrast, the NCAA basketball tournaments release a top-16 preview one month before Selection Sunday, before the field is selected in March.
“You’ve gotta believe that those 16 teams are gonna be in the field at 68, right?” Phillips said. “So there’s less pressure there, and it’s a fun thing and kind of a way to create interest with a month to go before Selection Sunday.”
Part of the disruption in the ACC’s playoff push this season was the logjam at the top of its regular-season standings. Miami, the highest-ranked ACC team in the CFP, did not reach the ACC Championship because of the league’s five-way tiebreaker policy. Virginia and Duke met in the title game, with the five-loss Blue Devils emerging as the ACC champion, placing more uncertainty on whether the power conference would be left out of the CFP completely this month.
Phillips wants to explore tweaking the tiebreaker policy and implementing CFP rankings into the protocol.
“Who knew that we would get to the seventh tiebreaker with five teams that were 6-2?” he said. “It’s just the stars aligned in a way that nobody predicted, but no one should throw shade on Duke. They earned the right. Everybody had a chance to be part of that tiebreaker, and they played great. They won the league. They held the trophy. So I was super happy for Duke. It worked out the way it was supposed to work out relative to that’s the tiebreaker we put in place, but we’ll come back together. It would be smart of us to now also have a CFP maybe component in there, in the tiebreaker.”
The ACC eliminated divisions in 2023, before the additions of Cal and Stanford in an expansion to 17 teams, further complicating a large league without divisions.
Phillips suggested all conferences follow similar tiebreaker protocols, citing the power conferences all set to play nine conference games starting next season. The ACC and SEC recently voted to move from eight to nine conference games.
“Maybe there’s something that allows less confusion about what everybody’s tiebreaker is in college football,” Phillips said.
In this day and age, college football programs are generally inclined to accept massive donors from virtually any stripe of life. After all, it wasn’t that long ago that a story bounced around about a South American cartel funding NIL for one school. That story wasn’t true, but a recent story could make for bedfellows nearly as strange as that one.
Tulane and James Madison have dealt with a period of massive disbelief following each school earning a College Football Playoff berth. While one Group of Five team is all but certain to gain a CFP spot, a second team was a surprise. Because 8-5 Duke snuck into the ACC title, James Madison jumped the Blue Devils in the CFP pecking order and claimed a second G5 spot. Many have argued that neither Tulane nor James Madison belong in the Playoff.
But Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia took his dig and turned it in an interesting direction. The Vanderbilt passer, who has an NIL valuation of $2.5 million per On3, made a particularly bold offer. Pavia’s team at 10-2 finished just outside the CFP picture, had a different reaction to the CFP selection controversy. Specifically, Pavia offered to put his money where his mouth is.
It’s a 12-team Playoff. Put every team that is good… This G5 team, if a G5 team wins it, I would donate whatever I got in NIL back to that team. I would do that if a G5 team ever wins it.
Diego Pavia
Admittedly, Pavia’s cash is probably safe. Tulane is currently a 17.5 point underdog to Ole Miss in its first round game, and James Madison is a 21.5 point underdog against Oregon. ESPN’s FPI gives the Green Wave about a 1 in 6 shot to win their game and the Dukes a just under 1 in 8 shot to win. Even then, a winning G5 team would have to plow through two more games, with the first coming against a top four foe– Texas Tech in the case of James Madison and Georgia in the case of Tulane.
Pavia’s consternation runs contrary to his own coach’s comments. In a refreshing recent turn, Clark Lea told reporters that Vandy missing the Playoff was “no one’s fault except our own.” It’s safe to say that Pavia felt a bit differently, and in fact made his multi-million dollar wager against the relevance of the Group of Five teams. Considering that Pavia himself came from a Group of Five team at New Mexico State, he of all people should have realized that in the new era of college football, anything can (and probably will) happen.
First Tee Winter Registration is open
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