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NCAA argues Zeigler would be first to play 5 DI seasons in 5 years

Associated Press Attorneys for two-time Southeastern Conference defensive player of the year Zakai Zeigler accuse the NCAA of trying to dodge facts and law by asking a federal judge to deny the Tennessee point guard’s preliminary injunction seeking to play a fifth season in as many years. Zeigler’s attorneys compared the NCAA’s motion filed Monday […]

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Associated Press

Attorneys for two-time Southeastern Conference defensive player of the year Zakai Zeigler accuse the NCAA of trying to dodge facts and law by asking a federal judge to deny the Tennessee point guard’s preliminary injunction seeking to play a fifth season in as many years.

Zeigler’s attorneys compared the NCAA’s motion filed Monday to misdirection and said it used “cherry-picked” or “fundamentally flawed” data ahead of Friday’s hearing on the preliminary injunction request before U.S. District Judge Katherine A. Crytzer in Knoxville.

“Rather than recognize the evolution of antitrust law’s application to its business model, the NCAA relies on outdated legal arguments. And rather than address the law as it is, the NCAA mischaracterizes it to defend its illegal actions,” Zeigler’s attorneys wrote in a response filed Tuesday.

Zeigler sued the NCAA on May 20 over its rules limiting him to four seasons in a five-year window as an unlawful restraint of trade under both federal and Tennessee laws. His lawsuit argues he could earn between $2 million and as much as $4 million with another season.

The NCAA argued Monday that Zeigler’s injunction request should be denied because he is asking the court to make him the first athlete in history to play a fifth season in Division I “as a matter of right.” The NCAA also said using the case of Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia doesn’t help because that case was “decided in error.”

Pavia, who started his career at a junior college, was granted another year to play a fifth season, a ruling the NCAA is appealing. Zeigler played four seasons at Tennessee and already has graduated. The NCAA’s motion said the life of a collegiate athlete is enabled by the Four-Seasons Rule, which creates a stream of opportunities for rising high school athletes.

The NCAA argued the Four-Seasons Rule is necessary for DI athletics to exist separately from “purely professional athletics.”

Zeigler is asking the court to eliminate lines between the NCAA’s compensation rules subject to the Sherman Act and eligibility rules that don’t involve compensation. The NCAA said nothing would stop Zeigler from asking for a sixth or seventh season while pursuing a doctorate degree if he wins.

“College athletics is a means to a better end for student-athletes — not the end itself,” the NCAA motion said.

Zeigler also has known since stepping on the Tennessee campus that he had five years to complete four seasons of basketball and could have challenged the Four-Seasons Rule at any time, the NCAA said.

“Whatever emergency underlies Plaintiff’s request for relief is of his own making,” the motion said.

It noted Zeigler can keep playing basketball with foreign leagues or the NBA’s G League since “if he had a viable path to the NBA, given his resume, he would already be a viable prospect.”

The U.S. Department of Justice also filed a brief Tuesday encouraging the judge to apply Alston’s “flexible” rule of reason approach to Zeigler’s injunction request and “consider how the rule may benefit competition in the relevant labor market” and potentially enhance the athlete experience.

Alston was the 9-0 Supreme Court case ruling in June 2021 that opened the door for compensation. The high court agreed with a lower court’s determination that NCAA limits on education-related benefits that colleges offer athletes who play Division I basketball and football violate antitrust laws.

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AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll




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College quarterbacks turning NIL earnings into venture capital investments

College athletes are channeling their NIL earnings into venture capital investments. Front Office Sports reports that three college quarterbacks — including a potential top-five pick — are putting their money into VC-backed start-ups. South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers — projected as one of the top signal-callers in the 2026 NFL Draft — Southern Methodist University’s Kevin […]

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College athletes are channeling their NIL earnings into venture capital investments. Front Office Sports reports that three college quarterbacks — including a potential top-five pick — are putting their money into VC-backed start-ups.

South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers — projected as one of the top signal-callers in the 2026 NFL Draft — Southern Methodist University’s Kevin Jennings and Kansas State University’s Avery Johnson have invested in The Cashmere Fund. According to Front Office Sports, the fund is a “Nasdaq-listed venture capital fund that allows non-accredited investors to invest in VC-backed start-ups.”

Buffalo Bills players Josh Allen and Damar Hamlin are also investors.

“There was some business savvy in all of them,” Elia Infascelli, CEO of Cashmere, told Front Office Sports. “Avery Johnson is a business major, for example. They didn’t need to do this, but they wanted to.

“They are investors in the fund just like any other person would invest in the fund.”

Cashmere is working with college athletes to bring more attention to their fund and attract additional investors.

“At 18, 19, or 21, to think about long-term relationships and invest without any immediate upside today, that’s rare,” Infascelli explained.

NIL has created new opportunities for college athletes. For those who won’t turn pro, these ventures offer a path to financial stability beyond their college careers.

Matt Higgins worked in national and local news for 15 years. He started out as an overnight production assistant … More about Matt Higgins



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Kendrick Perkins Gets Roasted For Making Outrageous Cooper Flagg Comparison

It’s fair to say Kendrick Perkins is extremely high on Cooper Flagg. PublishedJune 25, 2025 10:48 AM EDT•UpdatedJune 25, 2025 10:48 AM EDT Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link One of the greatest aspects of the NBA Draft is the talking heads in the media trying to come up with player comparisons for prospects, and Kendrick […]

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It’s fair to say Kendrick Perkins is extremely high on Cooper Flagg.

One of the greatest aspects of the NBA Draft is the talking heads in the media trying to come up with player comparisons for prospects, and Kendrick Perkins truly outdid himself with his Cooper Flagg comp.

It’s only natural for folks in the media to compare prospects to some of the best players in the league. That is what stirs the pot, and comparing a top-tier prospect to a player that averages 10 points per game doesn’t exactly make for the most exciting content.

NBA Draft Prospects Give Varying Opinions Of NIL Effect On College Basketball

Given the fact that Flagg has been the sure-thing first-overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft since his high school days, he’s been compared to essentially every notable player in the league up to this point. It has forced the media to think outside of the box when coming up with any sort of original thought about the undisputed best player in the draft.

Perkins took a swing at doing just that during ESPN pre-NBA Draft coverage on Tuesday, and delivered an all-time comparison for the former Duke star.

“This is how I look at Cooper Flagg, if LeBron James and Kevin Garnett had a baby, you’d get Cooper Flagg,” Perkins said.

Now look, Perkins makes some fair points while describing Flagg as an all-around player, such as James, and then as a tenacious competitor like Garnett, but it feels like a significant stretch to go ahead and try and lump him into a category of two of the best players to ever do it.

Folks on social media went to town on Perkins after his strange comment about Flagg:

The NBA Draft is set to get underway at Barclays Center in Brooklyn at 8:00 PM ET on Wednesday.





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Athletes First makes bold move to enhance college football presence

Athletes First already has some of the more renowned players in the NFL, not to mention a top-shelf coaching clientele that includes the likes of Ryan Day and Brian Kelly at the collegiate level as well as Matt LeFleur on the NFL side.  Now, the organization is making multiple moves to wade deeper into college […]

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Athletes First already has some of the more renowned players in the NFL, not to mention a top-shelf coaching clientele that includes the likes of Ryan Day and Brian Kelly at the collegiate level as well as Matt LeFleur on the NFL side. 

Now, the organization is making multiple moves to wade deeper into college football.

Multiple sources tell FootballScoop that Athletes First has hired longtime top Notre Dame personnel executive Dave Peloquin as well as LSU’s Jordan Arcement to bolster their college sports division — specifically the company’s process of identifying potential prep and college players who project to potential top-tier college Name, Image and Likeness clients as well as NFL prospects.

The company has several notable NFL clients, including former Notre Dame All-America safety Kyle Hamilton as well as Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott. 

In a role that sources told FootballScoop essentially as as the company’s general manager of the collegiate division, Peloquin instantly brings wtih him almost a quarter-century work from his time at Notre Dame — spanning from his student-work as an undergraduate assistant. 

Starting in Bob Davie’s Notre Dame Fighting Irish program, Peloquin is one of the rarest individuals in all of college football — his value extending through five full-time Notre Dame football coaches beginning with Davie, transitioning to Ty Willingham, Charlies Weis, Brian Kelly and, finally, in multiple roles for Marcus Freeman.

He was both retained by all those Irish coaches and turned down numerous job opportunities to head up personnel departments for several other Power Conference programs, including in the Big Ten and SEC.

Arcement steadily grew in LSU’s recruiting department since his arrival in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in 2022, following work at the University of Virginia. Most recently, Arcement was LSU’s director of recruiting communications and external relations. He also has coached in the prep ranks and played collegiate football at Nicholls State (La.).

The moves from Athletes First signal the company’s willingness to try to be on the leading edge of ongoing changes in college athletics, specifically college football.

The House Settlement takes effect July 1, with Power Conference schools who opt in at the maximum amount able to share $20.5 million in revenue with student-athletes — almost overwhelmingly directing the majority of those funds to football players — annually and with built-in increases of 4% annually over the decade-long terms of the deal.

Additionally, NIL opportunities are still available for college athletes and increasingly more so for high school athletes. At the college level, as part of the House Settlement, all NIL deals valued at more than $600 must be ratified by third-party financial powerhouse Deloitte. Athletes First, like other powerful agencies in college and pro athletics, has long history in dealing with marketing arrangements — the types of which Deloitte is being asked to oversee in the House Settlement. 



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Jay Bilas explains why NIL has positive impact on both college basketball, NBA Draft

This year, the NBA Draft saw its fewest early entrants in a decade. Just 106 players entered the draft by the end of April, which continues a downward trend from 363 declarations in 2021 just before the NIL era began. More players are opting to stay in college and hone their skills now that they […]

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This year, the NBA Draft saw its fewest early entrants in a decade. Just 106 players entered the draft by the end of April, which continues a downward trend from 363 declarations in 2021 just before the NIL era began.

More players are opting to stay in college and hone their skills now that they are able to enter into NIL deals and make money. To ESPN’s Jay Bilas, that helps both the college and professional games.

Bilas said the amount of talent returning to college programs means those players can become more well-rounded by the time they reach the NBA. As a result, both levels can benefit – and it makes the later rounds of the draft a bit more interesting.

“I think what we’re seeing is that NIL and the opportunity to make money while you’re in college has caused players that may have been fringe-first rounders or second-round picks to stay in school longer,” Bilas said on FOS Today. “Why go in when you’re doing so well financially in college? You can wait now and go when you really feel like you’re ready. So we’ve seen, the second round is a lot different with NIL that it would have been in past years, you would’ve seen a lot of players go. And now, they’re staying, and I think that’s nothing but a good thing, certainly, for college basketball, to keep more talent in the game.

“But I think it’s also good for the NBA that they’re getting finished products when they decide to go and players that are really [feeling] like they’re truly ready. I think that’s a good thing for the NBA, as well.”

One of the most notable draft withdrawals was Labaron Philon, who announced his decision to return to Alabama despite having first-round potential and initially saying he’d stay in the draft. On3’s James Fletcher III ranked the former touted recruit as the No. 27 overall player on his Big Board prior to his announcement.

Florida also won big with NBA Draft withdrawals, keeping Alex Condon and Rueben Chinyelu on the roster after last season’s national title. Former Memphis guard PJ Haggerty also withdrew from the draft and eventually announced his decision to transfer to Kansas State for an NIL deal reportedly in the “neighborhood” of $2.5 million. He was considered a fringe second-round pick.

The 2025 NBA Draft officially gets underway Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET. Round 2 will take place Thursday at 8 p.m. ET.



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Shifting the game: the NCAA transfer portal and the new era of college basketball

College basketball used to be about evaluating and developing players; now it’s all about the transfer portal. This spring 2,320 Division I players entered the portal. That’s about 41% of the 5,607 players eligible to play. Coaches aren’t trying to woo players from junior colleges and high school, instead their focus is on the known […]

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College basketball used to be about evaluating and developing players; now it’s all about the transfer portal.

This spring 2,320 Division I players entered the portal. That’s about 41% of the 5,607 players eligible to play. Coaches aren’t trying to woo players from junior colleges and high school, instead their focus is on the known talent looking for a new home.

Jamie Dixon, TCU men’s basketball head coach, gets an updated list of the players in the transfer portal every day. His assistant coaches alert him about players of interest, those who are looking for a better team or more time on the court.

“Recruiting in the portal is different,” Dixon said.  “You are not going to the player’s school; often you are doing Zoom recruitment, and it is a shorter time frame. The players have been to college, so they are not as interested in taking visits, they just want to get to know their value and role.”

When added to the impact of NIL payments, allowing players to be paid for name, image and likeness, it’s clear to see that recent NCAA rule changes have changed college hoops in significant ways. For decades, players were held to a 1961 rule that made all athletes who transferred schools sit out one year and lose a year of eligibility.

That began unraveling early into this century as student-athletes pressed for structural changes with the governing body of college sports.

Because of the sport’s small-roster teams, the portal has an outsized effect on basketball.  For example, after transfers and graduates left, Baylor University brings no returning players into the 2025-26 season. Instead, the team will field a mix of recruits and transfers when they hit the paint this fall. The Bears focus in the portal has been picking up players who have been good at mid-majors. Baylor has picked up seven players from Rice, Texas A&M Corpus Christi, High Point, Omaha and Wyoming.

NCAA men’s Sweet 16 starting fives by the team they played for as Freshmen.

As this year’s NCAA tournament showing, mid-major players are besting recruits as coaches attempt to build a winning team.

Purdue was only team that made the Sweet 16 without having a transfer in their starting five.

This was also the second time in NCAA history that the men’s Final Four was all one seeds.

The transfer portal seems to be a siren to some of the best players from mid-major schools who hope to transfer to schools that are destined for greater success.

This has made the tournament “Cinderella runs” look less likely for the future.

“It is trending towards Power conferences being more dominant because players from mid-majors are transferring up to the Power conferences,” Dixon said.

Coach Dixon also said the shift will require high school players to be patient with their recruitment.

With the transfer portal high school recruits are not only trying to compete against other high school kids for a spot on a division one roster. They are also competing against every other division one basketball player.

Another way coaches are filling their rosters is buying out a player from a European basketball league, promising them NIL money to play in college.

This is something that has never been seen before, and top programs like Kentucky, Michigan, Illinois and Purdue have all done it. The days of teams trying to get young players and keep them together so they can develop seems to be a thing of the past.

It is now about putting the oldest team with the most amount of experience on the court.

“The evaluating is not really there,” Dixon said. “It’s strictly get the production guys that have produced most recently, you are not projecting, you are not evaluating, you are not developing.”



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Extra Points is hiring a new FULL-TIME Writer! Here are the details

Recently, we expanded our Extra Points Editorial Team to include a part-time editor. Today, I’m pleased to announce that we’re hiring again. We’re looking to add a Full-Time Writer to the Extra Points team. I don’t want to spill all the beans about the new content initiative we’re looking to launch (stay tuned, I’ll be […]

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Recently, we expanded our Extra Points Editorial Team to include a part-time editor. Today, I’m pleased to announce that we’re hiring again.

We’re looking to add a Full-Time Writer to the Extra Points team. I don’t want to spill all the beans about the new content initiative we’re looking to launch (stay tuned, I’ll be doing that very soon), but I can share enough to start our hiring process. Here are the details:

Extra Points, a leading newsletter covering business, policy and off-the-field stories in the college athletics industry, is now seeking a writer to lead a newsletter project that will cover the “Money in College Athletics”, from NIL to Private Capital and everything in between. This is a full-time, remote, position. 

Here’s what we’d really need this person to do:

  • Write three newsletters a week, combining original reporting and analysis with smart, value-adding curation, on issues relating to NIL, college sports business, and dealmaking in college athletics.

  • Take ownership of the editorial direction and voice of a new, standalone newsletter, shaping the voice, focus, and community around that brand.

  • Serve as a thought leader in the college sports business space. 

It would be nice, but not required, if this person could also:

Here’s what we really need, experience-wise, from this person:

  • Experience writing about related issues professionally. This is not an entry-level position, as we’ll need a writer who is capable of being a self-starter, knows how to find and cultivate sourcing, and where to find the information that matters to our audience. We don’t necessarily need experience writing about NIL or college sports business, but we would want experience writing about business, college sports, or related industries. 

  • A comfort level working with a small team. This is not a role where each newsletter topic can be directly assigned to you. We work very collaboratively and will be happy to provide advice and structure, but we need folks who are self-motivated. 

  • Comfort working in a remote working environment

  • An understanding of what Extra Points is and who we’re writing for. 

Here are some things we’d like from this person: 

  • At least some understanding and connections within the college sports business space. Who are the relevant stakeholders, what are the major policy questions, and where to find relevant and interesting stories. 

  • Some experience in writing for email-first audiences and platforms. Writing newsletters is slightly different from writing newspaper articles or digital-first blogs.

What we can offer this person:

  • A remote working environment with flexible hours. When you log in is not important to us. We have employees all over the United States right now, so chances are, somebody will be around when you are. 

  • Annual compensation in the $75,000-$105,000 range, with opportunities for bonuses and equity. 

  • Professional mentorship in the sports business/newsletter space

Send a resume (or link to a LinkedIn profile), a clip, and two ideas for stories you’d want to write in this newsletter to THIS LINK RIGHT HERE. We don’t need a cover letter. Please do not email me your application.

I hope this isn’t the last opening we advertise for in the near future. Your readership, paid subscriptions, advertising campaigns and Extra Points Library usage helps give us the resources we need to hire in a sustainable and healthy way.

I’ll share more updates about what we’re up to very, very soon. Thanks for reading!



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