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Nation’s top recruit calls out reporter over ‘false narrative’

Jackson Cantwell made his long-awaited college decision on Tuesday, with the No. 1 overall recruit in the 2026 class announcing his commitment to Miami (Fla.). But as he celebrated his public allegiance to Mario Cristobal and the Hurricanes, the 5-star offensive tackle also sideswiped one of college football’s top recruiting reporters. Speaking with the Georgia […]

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$14 Million NIL Payroll Signals New Era for UNC Basketball

Last Updated on June 12, 2025 After a turbulent season that ended with a narrow entry into the NCAA Tournament, North Carolina head coach Hubert Davis followed through on promises to reshape the Tar Heels basketball program. At the center of this transformation is a strategic push into the modern NIL and transfer portal era—headlined […]

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Last Updated on June 12, 2025

After a turbulent season that ended with a narrow entry into the NCAA Tournament, North Carolina head coach Hubert Davis followed through on promises to reshape the Tar Heels basketball program. At the center of this transformation is a strategic push into the modern NIL and transfer portal era—headlined by hiring a general manager and a substantial increase in financial commitment.

According to Inside Carolina, UNC’s NIL payroll has surged to over $14 million this year—nearly three times what it was a season ago. The increase in funding coincides with the addition of Jim Tanner, a longtime NBA agent, who joined the staff as general manager. Tanner’s NBA ties and experience with player representation align with the growing demands of college basketball, where NIL deals, transfers, and international recruitment now dominate.

Based on figures from the UNC salary information database, Tanner is set to earn $850,000 this year. The entire staff’s compensation package could exceed $7 million, Inside Carolina reports. Meanwhile, Davis himself secured a two-year contract extension, signaling the university’s renewed commitment to bolstering the program’s infrastructure.

Recognizing the evolving landscape, Davis has been vocal about the need to modernize the program’s approach.

“The old model for Carolina basketball just doesn’t work,” Davis said earlier this year on the Carolina Insider podcast. “It’s not sustainable. It has to build out because there’s so many things in play with NIL, the transfer portal, agents, international players. You just need a bigger staff to be able to maintain things. You need a bigger staff so I can do what I’m supposed to be doing, and that’s coaching basketball.”

As part of the revamp, North Carolina is reloading its roster with both high school recruits and transfers. The Tar Heels secured the No. 15-ranked recruiting class nationally, according to the On3 Industry Team Recruiting Ranking. Leading the class is Five-Star Plus+ forward Caleb Wilson, ranked No. 5 overall in the 2025 cycle by the On3 Industry Ranking.

Mar 31, 2025; McDonald’s All-American West forward Caleb Wilson (8) dunks the ball during the Sprite Jam Fest at Barclay’s Center. Photo courtesy: Pamela Smith via Imagn

In the transfer portal, UNC added five players, including former Arizona standout Henri Veesaar, who ranks No. 25 in the On3 Industry Transfer Rankings. The program also picked up international guard Luka Bogavac, further diversifying its talent pool.

The changes come after a 23–14 record in the 2024–25 season, which saw the Tar Heels sneak into the NCAA Tournament as the final team selected. They defeated San Diego State in the First Four but fell to Ole Miss in the first round.

With increased financial backing, expanded staff, and an upgraded roster, North Carolina is positioning itself to reclaim its place among college basketball’s elite.

  • Hailey Rissinger

    Hailey is a Sport Management graduate student at the University of Florida, specializing in Sport Law and seeking a certificate in Social Media. As a former Division I collegiate athlete, Hailey has a passion for helping athletes experience success on and off the field. Hailey is working toward a career in the NIL industry, helping athletes profit off of their Name, Image, and Likeness through developing their personal brand.

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Men’s Soccer Announces 2025 Fall Schedule

Story Links PHILADELPHIA – Saint Joseph’s men’s soccer head coach Tim Mulqueen has announced the team’s 2025 fall schedule, which features eight home matches at Sweeney Field in his first season leading the program at his alma mater.   “It’s a full-circle moment for me as we enter the fall season,” Mulqueen […]

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PHILADELPHIA – Saint Joseph’s men’s soccer head coach Tim Mulqueen has announced the team’s 2025 fall schedule, which features eight home matches at Sweeney Field in his first season leading the program at his alma mater.
 
“It’s a full-circle moment for me as we enter the fall season,” Mulqueen said. “There’s a deep sense of pride being able to lead this program. We’ve built a schedule that will challenge us right away. I’m excited to see how this group embraces the work, culture and opportunity to compete at a high level.”
 
The Hawks open the season on Saturday, Aug. 23, hosting VMI in the fourth all-time meeting between the two schools and the first since 2018. Saint Joseph’s then travels for a pair of road matchups, visiting Merrimack on Aug. 28 and Villanova on Sept. 1. The Merrimack match marks a rematch of last season’s first-ever meeting, while the Hawks and Wildcats face off for the first time since 2017.
 
After an eight-day break, Saint Joseph’s returns home on Sept. 9 to host Rider. The Hawks then embark on a three-match road swing, beginning at Dayton on Sept. 13 to open Atlantic 10 play. SJU travels to Bryant for a non-conference midweek contest on Sept. 16, followed by a city rivalry game at La Salle on Sept. 20.
 
The Hawks close out September with home matches against Loyola (Md.) on Sept. 23 and Duquesne on Sept. 27.
 
October kicks off with a trip to Davidson on Oct. 4. Saint Joseph’s then hosts Loyola Chicago (Oct. 8) and George Washington (Oct. 11) at Sweeney Field. The match against the Revolutionaries will serve as both Senior Day and Alumni Day, with kickoff set for 2 p.m.
 
Saint Joseph’s visits Lehigh on Oct. 14 before playing its final two home games of the regular season: Rhode Island on Oct. 18 and Bucknell on Oct. 21. The Hawks then conclude the regular season on the road, traveling to George Mason on Oct. 25 and Boston College on Oct. 31.
 
Game times are subject to change. All times are Eastern.










Date Opponent Location Time (ET) Notes
Sat, Aug 23 VMI Home 7 PM Season/Home Opener
Thu, Aug 28 Merrimack Away 4 PM
Mon, Sept 1 Villanova Away 12 PM
Tue, Sept 9 Rider Home 7 PM
Sat, Sept 13 Dayton* Away 7 PM Atlantic 10 Opener
Tue, Sept 16 Bryant Away 6 PM
Sat, Sept 20 La Salle* Away 7 PM
Tue, Sept 23 Loyola (Md.) Home 7 PM
Sat, Sept 27 Duquesne* Home 2 PM
Sat, Oct 4 Davidson* Away 1 PM
Wed, Oct 8 Loyola Chicago* Home 7 PM
Sat, Oct 11 George Washington* Home 2 PM Senior Day/Alumni Day
Tue, Oct 14 Lehigh Away 6 PM
Sat, Oct 18 Rhode Island* Home 2 PM
Tue, Oct 21 Bucknell Home 7 PM Home Finale
Sat, Oct 25 George Mason* Away 7 PM Atlantic 10 Finale
Fri, Oct 31 Boston College Away 7 PM Regular Season Finale



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Louisville baseball's Tanner Shiver is getting married during College World Series

Louisville baseball infielder Tanner Shiver is set to marry his fiancée, Katelyn Farmer, on June 20 in Jeffersontown.How will they pull it off if the Cardinals make a deep run in the College World Series? Shiver explains below.Louisville baseball infielder Tanner Shiver is eyeing a deep run in the College World Series with coach Dan […]

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Louisville baseball's Tanner Shiver is getting married during College World Series


Louisville baseball infielder Tanner Shiver is set to marry his fiancée, Katelyn Farmer, on June 20 in Jeffersontown.How will they pull it off if the Cardinals make a deep run in the College World Series? Shiver explains below.Louisville baseball infielder Tanner Shiver is eyeing a deep run in the College World Series with coach Dan McDonnell and the Cardinals.

He’s also hearing wedding bells.

Shiver is set to marry his fiancée, Louisville native Katelyn Farmer, on June 20 at St. Michael Church in Jeffersontown. They met as students at Tennessee Tech and picked the date not long after he proposed to her on Dec. 7, 2023, “thinking that my baseball career was going to be over,” Shiver said.

Has it ever felt so good to be so wrong? Having entered the NCAA transfer portal and landed at U of L, the Maryville, Tennessee, native is about to play on the biggest stage of his life. If the Cards can take care of business on their side of the CWS bracket, he’ll spend his first day as Farmer’s husband competing in the national championship series.

“Omaha, Nebraska, is going to be part of our story for the rest of our lives,” Shiver said.

Louisville’s CWS journey begins at 7 p.m. Friday against No. 8 seed Oregon State at Charles Schwab Field. Depending on how that game goes, the Cards will play either No. 9 seed Coastal Carolina or Arizona at either 2 or 7 p.m. Sunday.At the earliest, U of L could punch its ticket to the national championship series by June 18. If it wins its side of the bracket after dropping one of its first three games in the double-elimination tournament, Shiver won’t be able to fly back to the 502 until June 19.The plan for June 20 isn’t changing. First, Shiver and Farmer will say “I do” at St. Michael. Then, they’ll celebrate with a reception at The Olmsted in St. Matthews.”When the reception ends, I think at like 10 or 10:30 p.m., (I’ll) try to get on a plane and get back to Omaha, Nebraska, before midnight and then wake up and play the next day,” Shiver said.

The honeymoon might have to be put on hold, however. The national championship series begins at 7 p.m. June 21 and could take until June 23 to decide a winner.

“My whole plan was for her to not figure out where we’re going until we got to the airport,” Shiver said. “Now, I don’t know if it’s going to be possible to keep it from her. I’m going to try and keep it a secret still, though. But, we’re going somewhere tropical; that’s what she knows.”

Shiver was jokingly asked if Farmer has been rooting for Louisville during this unexpected postseason run, knowing it could affect her wedding day. He told reporters you’d be hard-pressed to find a better support system.

“Both of her sides of the family are from here; they’re huge Louisville fans,” Shiver said. “So, when the opportunity came for me to come to the University of Louisville, much less our team have success and get to Omaha, they’re very excited. She’s been fired up.”

So fired up that, after the Cards punched their ticket to the CWS by beating Miami in a super regional last weekend at Jim Patterson Stadium, she and Shiver reenacted their proposal on the field with the trophy.

“Katelyn’s been the biggest blessing from God that I could ever ask for,” Shiver said. “She’s supported me in everything that I’ve ever done — athletically, non-athletically. She pushes me to be a better man and to follow my faith and to keep God first and each other second and we’ll figure out the rest. That’s kind of been the motto of our relationship, and that’s one reason why we want to get married as soon as all of this is over.

“I tell some of these young guys who have girlfriends all the time; I’m like, ‘You’ll know when you find a wife; because there’s just something different about them.’ From the moment I met her, there was something different about her.”

To buy tickets to see Louisville baseball play at the College World Series in Omaha, click here.

Reach Louisville men’s basketball reporter Brooks Holton at bholton@gannett.com and follow him on X at @brooksHolton.

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Ohio State AD Ross Bjork addresses NIL strategy for student

Ohio State announced on Monday that it’s launching a new strategic group that’s designed to support, streamline and enhance NIL opportunities for student-athletes. COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State Athletics Director Ross Bjork is speaking Thursday afternoon on how Ohio State is now allowed to directly compensate student-athlete through revenue shares. The press briefing comes after […]

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Ohio State AD Ross Bjork addresses NIL strategy for student

Ohio State announced on Monday that it’s launching a new strategic group that’s designed to support, streamline and enhance NIL opportunities for student-athletes.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State Athletics Director Ross Bjork is speaking Thursday afternoon on how Ohio State is now allowed to directly compensate student-athlete through revenue shares.

The press briefing comes after a federal judge approved the terms of a $2.8 billion antitrust settlement last week, which will allow schools to directly pay players through licensing deals.

You can watch the briefing on 10TV+ or in the player below.

“The signing of the House settlement Friday by Judge Claudia Wilken will reshape collegiate athletics. Ohio State and schools around the country will now be permitted to directly compensate student-athletes through revenue sharing, which is actually institutional NIL rights,” Bjrok said in a statement.

“The Department of Athletics will fully fund the revenue sharing program, which will total $20.5 million and includes funding for additional scholarships for both women’s and men’s sports. We remain committed to maintaining the student-athlete model, offering 36 intercollegiate sports and providing scholarships to all 36.”

Ohio State announced on Monday that it’s launching a new strategic group that’s designed to support, streamline and enhance Name, Image and Likeness opportunities for student-athletes.

The strategic group will be called the Buckeye Sports Group.

Ohio State says a key part of the settlement is the implementation of a Fair Mark Evaluation process and a “range of compensation” designed to establish standardized benchmarks for NIL deals across sports and institutions. The Buckeye Sports Group intends to serve as a centralized hub for NIL brand deal facilitation, corporate partnerships, student-athlete storytelling and NIL support.

The Buckeye Sports Group will have access to Learfield’s Compass NIL technology to facilitate deal transactions and gain insights into student-athlete interests.

The group will support Ohio State student-athletes with a focus on three areas: deal facilitation and management, content creation and storytelling and support services.

In a move to streamline and optimize NIL operations, the group will work to consolidate existing NIL collectives under a single marketing team. The founding members of THE Foundation and The 1870 Society, two existing NIL collectives, will remain engaged and serve in an advisory capacity to the new group.

The university also announced a new internal resource center that it says will be designed to enhance success across varsity sports.

To read more about the new group, click here.

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Texas Tech athlete makes history with $1 million NIL deal | News

NiJaree Canady was named the 2024 USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year. NiJaree Canady, a 22-year-old African American softball phenom, has become the first college softball player to sign a Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deal worth more than $1 million, a historic moment in collegiate sports. The former Stanford ace transferred to Texas […]

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NiJaree Canady

NiJaree Canady was named the 2024 USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year.


NiJaree Canady, a 22-year-old African American softball phenom, has become the first college softball player to sign a Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deal worth more than $1 million, a historic moment in collegiate sports.

The former Stanford ace transferred to Texas Tech, where she secured a groundbreaking $1,050,024 one-year contract through the Matador Club, an NIL collective affiliated with the university. The deal includes a $1 million direct payment, $50,000 for living expenses, and an additional $24 in honor of her jersey number.

According to BlackNews.com, Canady, who was named the 2024 USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year, entered the transfer portal shortly before Texas Tech hired Coach Gerry Glasco. He acted quickly to bring her to Lubbock—with backing from NFL quarterback and Red Raider alum Patrick Mahomes—and offered her not just a starting role but an expanded opportunity to develop her offensive skills.

“The coaching staff and their vision were a major reason I made this decision,” Canady told ESPN. She described her transition from Stanford’s Palo Alto campus to West Texas as smooth, not- ing that the environment reminds her more of her hometown of Topeka, Kansas.

Excelled despite injury

USA Today noted that Canady’s impact on the field was immediate and unmatched. Despite suffering a minor injury, she helped lead Texas Tech to its first Big 12 regular-season and conference titles, finishing the season with a 26-5 record and a nation-leading ERA of 0.86.

She also threw a two-hit shutout with 10 strikeouts to deliver the program’s first-ever win at the Women’s College World Series. Coach Glasco called Canady the best pitcher he’s ever coached and said he believes she can lead Texas Tech to a national championship.

Her resume is as stacked as her fastball is deadly. In addition to her 2024 USA Softball Player of the Year honor, Canady received the Honda Sport Award, was a two-time Women’s College World Series All-Tournament Team selection and dominated at Stanford with a 41-10 record and a 0.67 ERA over two seasons.

She also represented Team USA in the 2024 Jaan All-Star Series.

Before college, Canady was a standout at Topeka High School, where she was a two-time Kansas Gatorade Player of the Year and led her team to back-to-back state championships. She graduated in 2022 and was ranked as the No. 11 softball recruit in the nation by Extra Innings Softball.

Off the field, she’s equally grounded—an academic All-American who enjoys reading and spending time with her dog.

She is the daughter of Bruce and Katherine Canady, and her brother Bruce Jr. plays football at Cal. Canady’s NIL deal not only sets a new benchmark for college softball but also signals a shift in opportunities for Black female athletes in a space that other demographics have long dominated.

“She’s changing the game—literally and financially,” Glasco said.



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Zakai Zeigler Loses Preliminary Injunction Against NCAA, The Fight Isn’t Over

Zakai Zeigler has lost the first round of this fight against the NCAA. PublishedJune 12, 2025 11:55 AM EDT•UpdatedJune 12, 2025 11:55 AM EDT Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link After filing a lawsuit against the NCAA last month hoping for another year of eligibility, former Tennessee guard Zakai Zeigler was delivered some bad news by […]

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Zakai Zeigler has lost the first round of this fight against the NCAA.

After filing a lawsuit against the NCAA last month hoping for another year of eligibility, former Tennessee guard Zakai Zeigler was delivered some bad news by a judge in East Tennessee on Thursday morning. 

The lawsuit, which was filed in the Eastern District of Tennessee, challenged the NCAA’s ability to keep a player from participating for a fifth year, with NIL earnings being the main sticking point of Zeigler’s lawsuit against the organization. 

In the motion filed against the NCAA, Zakai Zeigler argued that the NCAA’s rules that allow players to only have four seasons of competition in a five-year window was an unlawful restraint of trade that falls within the state and federal laws pertaining to antitrust. 

During their argument for Zeigler to receive another year of eligibility, his lawyers made it a point to say that the former Tennessee guard could make upwards of $4 million next season, and that the NCAA was preventing him from cashing-in on his NIL. This again was argued as an antitrust violation, to which the judge did not see as a matter pertaining to this court. 

“The court is a court of law, not policy. What the NCAA should do as a policy matter to benefit student athletes is beyond the each of the Sherman Act and TIPA,” Judge Katherine Crytzer wrote in her ruling. 

“Further, Plaintiff has failed to show that the remaining preliminary injunction factors support an injunction. Plaintiff’s asserted harms, including loss of substantial NIL opportunities and to the NIL market, are more monetary in nature, and future money damages award might adequately redress them.”

There Could Be A Glimmer Of Hope For Zakai Zeigler, Others

While the judge did deny the injunction, there was a certain portion of her ruling that could present a path for Zeigler if they continued to push. 

The court discussed how the ‘Four Seasons’ rule was a factor in how the plaintiff presented their case, mentioning that Zeigler failed to present sufficient evidence that the Four-Seasons rule would produce ‘anti-competitive’ effects in the market for student-athlete services and NIL compensation in Division I basketball. 

But, there was a kicker from the judge, who cited the Alston case. 

“But the current market realities are fundamentally different, as Alston confirmed. Whether an antitrust violation exists necessarily depends on a careful analysis of market realities. If those market realities change, so may the legal analysis.” 

She is pretty much saying that if Zeigler’s lawyers present further evidence that he is actually being harmed by not being allowed to profit off NIL for a fifth year, there could be a change in the courts’ mindset. 

The judge also pointed out that with the number of roster spots that are currently available for athletes on a basketball team, the injunction would actually harm those who are currently enrolled and committed to a particular school, while also mentioning that it would hurt high school athletes in their recruitment.

“Plaintiff failed to produce sufficient evidence showing that granting an injunction would serve the public interest,” Judge Crytzer wrote. 

This was always a half-court shot for Zakai Zeigler. But, the judge did present a different avenue for his team to take, if they could present further evidence. 

While the preliminary injunction wasn’t granted, the plaintiff has certainly not heard the final whistle yet. 





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