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NIL is giving college basketball players the power. Should the NBA draft wait?

CHICAGO − Yaxel Lendeborg rubbed his hands together seated inside Wintrust Arena, a wave of excitement and anxiety coursing through him as he laid out the options again before his first official NBA audition was set to begin. The former UAB star is an intriguing figure among the group of players taking part in this week’s […]

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NIL is giving college basketball players the power. Should the NBA draft wait?


CHICAGO − Yaxel Lendeborg rubbed his hands together seated inside Wintrust Arena, a wave of excitement and anxiety coursing through him as he laid out the options again before his first official NBA audition was set to begin. The former UAB star is an intriguing figure among the group of players taking part in this week’s 2025 NBA Draft Combine. He’s facing the sort of decision prospects invited to this annual league event never did in the past. 

Lendeborg is a potential late first-round draft pick, according to draft experts, who could also slide into the second round – when contracts are not guaranteed – depending on how his pre-draft workouts go. The 6-foot-10 big man also committed to Michigan in April as one of the country’s most coveted transfers amidst an explosion of money being paid to college football and basketball players through name, image and likeness compensation and the anticipated implementation of revenue sharing by the NCAA for the 2025-26 season.    

The 22-year-old has until the NCAA’s May 28 withdrawal date to pull out of the draft and retain his college eligibility. And sounds torn about it right now. More torn than any of the other college hopefuls around him this week.

“The NBA is ultimately the goal for a lot of guys. It’s just college is so tempting because of the money,” Lendeborg told USA TODAY Sports. “I’m 50-50 between the NBA and Michigan, and I just hope that a team can let me know early so I don’t mess anything up.”

How NIL changed the 2025 NBA draft

The dynamics and financial implications of the traditional NBA draft decision tree have changed because of the money players can now make at the college level. There were only 106 early entrants in the 2025 NBA draft, which is the lowest figure in a decade and down from 353 in 2021. There were also more players from the Portsmouth Invitational, a pre-draft event for college seniors, invited to the NBA Draft Combine (18) than recent years.  

The trends are in direct correlation to the rapid increase in NIL money being doled out by college basketball programs. For one season, the starter for a power conference team in college will often make more than an NBA player on the first year of a rookie deal. For many, it might be the most money they ever make in one season playing basketball.The attempts to thread that needle, of maximizing money made in college and in the NBA, has infused chaos into the college ranks through the transfer portal and constant roster churn. It played out this week in Chicago as numerous college coaching staffs were on hand to both support their participating players at the NBA draft combine, and quietly hope the feedback convinces them to come back to college for another season. “A case of food poisoning – nothing serious – would be good for the University Michigan right now,” Wolverines assistant coach Mike Boynton joked on Tuesday before explaining they always knew there was a chance Lendeborg would go to the NBA.UAB Blazers forward Yaxel Lendeborg (3) dribbles the ball upcourt against the North Texas Mean Green during the first half at Dickies Arena.It’s yet another ripple effect of the power shift within college sports.“We’ve got the best of both worlds,” said St. John’s star R.J. Luis, who entered the NBA draft and the NCAA’s transfer portal this offseason. “We’re basically like semi-pros. We got like one-year contracts basically (in college). It’s just about trying to find the best opportunity at the right moment.”’Good for the basketball ecosystem’The NBA doesn’t seem to mind this, either.Five league executives told USA TODAY Sports at the draft combine that the implementation of name, image and likeness at the college level has produced minimal disruptions for the league or its draft process. Some view it as a positive development despite the issues NIL created for college basketball teams. As one NBA general manager put it, “The guys will come into the draft eventually.”“You’re still getting the top-end guys, but you’re not going to get sophomores and juniors,” said an NBA front office executive who runs his team’s college scouting operation. “You’re going to see a gap in the draft the next couple years, especially in the second round. But most guys choosing to go back (to college) would struggle to stay (in the NBA) anyways. Now these guys can build brands in college. In the long run, it might be better.”“It’s good for the basketball ecosystem,” added another NBA team executive.  But there will still be players like Lendeborg placed in a precarious spot, hoping the measurements, scrimmage performances and meetings with NBA officials at the combine and a flurry of workouts the next two weeks provide more clarity. The Pennsauken, New Jersey native only played 11 varsity basketball games in high school and had to go the junior college route before arriving at UAB. There is no precedent for what he’s going through because a fringe first-round pick five years ago wouldn’t also be mulling NIL deals worth millions of dollars. 

He doesn’t want to stay in school just because of the money. But he also doesn’t want to go to the NBA and not have a chance to be a rotation player quickly. He only needs one team to promise him he will get one to stay in the draft. He just needs to know before May 28.

“If it doesn’t happen by then,” Lendeborg said, “then the decision is going to be really hard to make.”

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How NIL money is reshaping the NBA draft: Fewer early entrants, more college stars staying put | Sports

Will Wade’s work building N.C. State into an immediate winner included the pursuit of an entrant in the NBA draft, just in case he returned to college. It wasn’t a huge risk: With all the cash flowing in college, the number of early entrants to the NBA draft has continued to shrink. This year’s draft […]

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Will Wade’s work building N.C. State into an immediate winner included the pursuit of an entrant in the NBA draft, just in case he returned to college.

It wasn’t a huge risk: With all the cash flowing in college, the number of early entrants to the NBA draft has continued to shrink. This year’s draft starts Wednesday night with its lowest total of those prospects in at least 10 years.


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Georgia Tech pitching rotation gets big addition from transfer portal

The pitching for the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets could be something of a weakness for the team, as they will lose Mason Patel and Jaylen Paden, so the team will be looking for someone to step up as a starting pitcher for the Yellow Jackets, and also a reliable relief option for the team as […]

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The pitching for the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets could be something of a weakness for the team, as they will lose Mason Patel and Jaylen Paden, so the team will be looking for someone to step up as a starting pitcher for the Yellow Jackets, and also a reliable relief option for the team as well. Yellow Jackets head coach James Ramsey got the offseason started by addressing just that.

Adding to the Yellow Jackets pitching rotation will be former Rutgers Scarlett Knight pitcher Justin Shadek. The redshirt sophomore started 15 games for the Scarlett Knights last season, and putting up a 5-4 record. Shadek proved himself to be a consistent start at times, as he pitched at least seven times, which all came within his last 11 starts. So while it took Shadek a while to get the ball rolling, once he did, he was putting up good numbers.

Shadek posted a 7.78 ERA last season, but that is to be expected of a player that is entering his first season of college baseball and making that jump from high school to college.

Perhaps Shadek’s best performance last season seen him pitch five innings against the Purdue Boilermakers in which he struck out a season-high seven batters and only allowed one run to score.

Vadek will transfer to the Yellow Jackets with two years of eligibility left, and could be a vital part of continuing the success that the team had last season, along with this new era of Yellow Jackets baseball with James Ramsey.



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Former Maryland basketball assistant explains Kevin Willard’s rants, talks Terps’ NIL situation: “Good luck.”

Former Maryland basketball assistant David Cox was among the finalists for the job when Kevin Willard left for Villanova. But Buzz Williams got the job, so Cox followed Willard up the road to Nova, where the basketball program will purportedly have more money to spend on players because it doesn’t have to support big-time football. […]

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Former Maryland basketball assistant David Cox was among the finalists for the job when Kevin Willard left for Villanova. But Buzz Williams got the job, so Cox followed Willard up the road to Nova, where the basketball program will purportedly have more money to spend on players because it doesn’t have to support big-time football.

If that sounds familiar, it should. Everyone recalls Willard’s public complaints about`basketball funding, and his private beef with the football program getting so much money. Cox explained those comments during an interview on 1st String Podcast.

“So, coach was looking ahead, not necessarily at last year or even behind in the last two years. He might have had some issues here and there that needed to be addressed and either did or didn’t, but that wasn’t a big issue. He was looking towards the future, and if you look towards the future, if we would have stayed at Maryland, we would have had about, going in the next year, $4.5 million. No more collective, so you can’t you know just raise that money and put it in a pot and add it on. You can get fined for that as a school. I think the fine is like $5 million if they catch you using illegal money outside of the money that’s allotted to you, so we couldn’t take that chance,” he said.

“So if we would have came back this year, into the Big Ten with let’s just say with a $5 million roster [or] $6 million roster, we probably would have finished close to last place … And then we would have been fired.”

More below from Cox on Willard’s comments, the differences he’s noticed at Villanova, where he thinks Derik Queen will land and more:



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Fewer early entrants, more stars staying put

Will Wade’s work building N.C. State into an immediate winner included the pursuit of an entrant in the NBA draft, just in case he returned to college. It wasn’t a huge risk: With all the cash flowing in college, the number of early entrants to the NBA draft has continued to shrink. This year’s draft starts Wednesday night with […]

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Will Wade’s work building N.C. State into an immediate winner included the pursuit of an entrant in the NBA draft, just in case he returned to college.

It wasn’t a huge risk: With all the cash flowing in college, the number of early entrants to the NBA draft has continued to shrink. This year’s draft starts Wednesday night with its lowest total of those prospects in at least 10 years.

“Now you can play the long game a little bit more,” Wade told The Associated Press, referring to how college players can look at their futures. “Look, I can get paid the same I would get paid in the G League, the same I would get paid on a two-way (contract), some guys are getting first-round money.”

And more money is on the way.

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It’s been four years since college athletes were permitted to profit off the use of their name, image and likeness (NIL), opening the door for athlete compensation that was once forbidden by NCAA rules. Next week, on July 1, marks the official start of revenue sharing where schools can begin directly paying athletes following the $2.8 billion House antitrust settlement.

For Wade, that led to signing Texas Tech’s Darrion Williams after 247sports’ fifth-ranked transfer withdrew from the draft.

“Basically now if you’re an early entry and you’re not a top-20, top-22 pick — where the money slots — you can pretty much make that in college,” the new Wolfpack coach said.

It’s all part of a seismic change that has rippled through college athletics since the pandemic, its impact touching the NBA. Players willing to “test the waters” in the draft before returning to school now have a lucrative option to consider against uncertain pro prospects.

And it shows in the numbers.

“With all the money that’s being thrown around in NIL, you’re having a lot less players put their names in,” Detroit Pistons president of basketball operations Trajan Langdon said. “You’re having pretty good players pulling their names out.”

Declining number of early entrants

This year’s drop is significant when compared to the years before anyone had heard of COVID-19. There was a spike of college players jumping into the draft in the pandemic’s aftermath, when they were granted a free eligibility year to temporarily make even a fourth-year senior an “early” entrant.

But those numbers had fallen as those five-year players cycled out of college basketball, and they’re now below pre-pandemic levels. That decline coincides with NIL’s July 2021 arrival, from athletes doing paid appearances or social-media endorsements to boosters forming collectives offering NIL packages amounting to de facto salaries.

As a result:

— Eighty-two players appeared on the NBA’s list of early entrants primarily from American colleges with a smattering of other teams, down 49% from 2024 (162) and nearly 47% compared to the four-year average from 2016-19 (153.5);

— Thirty-two remained after withdrawal deadlines, down from 62 last year and 72.0 from 2016-19;

— Adding international prospects, 109 players declared for the draft, down from 201 last year and 205.0 from 2016-19;

— And only 46 remained, down from 77 in 2024 and 83.8 from 2016-19.

More college players weighing options

Duke coach Jon Scheyer understands draft dynamics, both for no-doubt headliners and prospects facing less clarity. He sees college athlete compensation as a “legitimate gamechanger.”

“Hopefully it allows players to decide what’s truly best for their game,” Scheyer told the AP. “It allows them to analyze: ‘Am I actually ready for this or not?’ Where money doesn’t have to be the deciding factor. Because if money’s the deciding factor, that’s why you see kids not stick. The NBA’s cutthroat. It just is.”

The Blue Devils are expected to have three players selected in the first-round Wednesday, including presumptive No. 1 pick Cooper Flagg alongside top-10 prospects Kon Knueppel and Khaman Maluach. They also had players sorting through draft decisions.

Cooper Flagg’s relentless work ethic, competitive spirit could make him NBA’s next prodigy

Freshman Isaiah Evans — a slender wing with explosive scoring potential — withdrew instead of chasing first-round status through the draft process. Incoming transfer Cedric Coward from Washington State rapidly rose draft boards after the combine and remained in the draft.

“There’s no substituting the money you’re going to make if you’re a top-15, top-20 pick,” said Scheyer, entering Year 4 as successor to retired Hall of Famer Mike Krzyzewski. “But if you’re not solidified as a first-round pick, why risk it when you can have a solid year and a chance to go up or be in the same position the following season?”

College compensation is re-shaping the draft pool

Langdon, himself a former Duke first-rounder, sees that evolution, too.

His Pistons had their first playoff appearance since 2019, but lack a first-round selection and own a single pick in Thursday’s second round. Fewer candidates could make the already imperfect science of drafting even trickier in this new reality.

According to the NBA’s 2024-25 rookie scale, a player going midway through the first round would make roughly $3.5 million in first-year salary. That figure would drop to about $2.8 million at pick No. 20, $2.3 million at No. 25 and $2.1 million with the 30th and final first-round draftee.

A minimum first-year NBA salary? Roughly $1.2 million.

“These NIL packages are starting to get up to $3 to $4 to $5 to $6 million dollars,” Langdon said. “These guys are not going to put their name in to be the 25th pick, or even the 18th pick. They are going to go back to school in hopes of being a lottery pick next year. With that pool of players decreasing, it kind of decreases the odds of the level of player we get at No. 37, just the pure mathematics.”

Current NBA players offer insight

Indiana Pacers big man Thomas Bryant and Oklahoma City Thunder counterpart Isaiah Hartenstein, who both played in the seven-game NBA Finals that ended Sunday, illustrate Langdon’s point.

They were back-to-back second-rounders in 2017 (Bryant at 42, Hartenstein at 43), pushed down a draft board featuring early-entry college players in 33 of the 41 picks before them.

Bryant played two college seasons at Indiana before stints with five NBA teams, including Denver’s 2023 championship squad. Would the ability to make college money have changed his journey?

“To be honest, I see it from both sides,” Bryant said. ”If you’re not going to get drafted, you understand that a kid needs money to live in college and everything. So, I understand where they’re coming from on that end.

“But for me, I took the chance. I bet on myself, and I believed in myself, and I worked to the very end. And the thing about me is that if I went down, I was going down swinging. I hang my hat on that. For some, it might not be the same case.”

The American-born Hartenstein moved to Germany at 11 and played in Lithuania before being drafted. As he put it: “I think everyone’s journey is different.”

“I think you should have the right people around you to kind of guide you,” said Hartenstein, a newly minted NBA champion. “I mean, I was lucky that my dad, who was a professional before, kind of guided me. Depending on your circumstances, it’s hard to turn down guaranteed money. If there’s an opportunity to get in a good situation in the NBA, you do that. But it’s a hard decision.”

College now can be more of an allure

At N.C. State, Wade’s pitch to Williams included a leading role and a shot at boosting his draft stock.

The 6-foot-6 junior averaged 15.1 points with multiple big NCAA Tournament performances as the Red Raiders reached the Elite Eight, nearly beating eventual champion Florida.

“He was most likely going to be a second-round draft pick, and his package here is better than probably he would’ve gotten as a second-round pick,” Wade said, adding: “We certainly talked about that. We went over that. We went over the math of everything. We went over the plan on how to accomplish that.”

That’s not to say it’s easy at the college level in this new landscape. Roster management is tricky, including a balancing act of maintaining financial resources to potentially land one player while risking missing out on others.

“It’s the way life works, it’s the way it should work,” Wade said. “If there’s no risk, there’s no reward. The riskiest players, in terms of waiting on the money and waiting them out, are the best players. That’s why they’re in the draft process. We’re not going to be scared of that.”

Nor should he, not with the allure of campus life these days.

Find more sports coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.



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How NIL money is reshaping the NBA draft: Fewer early entrants, more college stars staying put

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Arkansas baseball legend finally being inducted into the College Baseball HOF

After 23 since his retirement, former Arkansas baseball coach Norm DeBriyn will be inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame. He is the second Razorback to earn the honor in the accolade’s 19-year history. Norm DeBriyn to be inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame. When it comes to Hog legends, DeBriyn is […]

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After 23 since his retirement, former Arkansas baseball coach Norm DeBriyn will be inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame. He is the second Razorback to earn the honor in the accolade’s 19-year history.

Norm DeBriyn to be inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame.

When it comes to Hog legends, DeBriyn is in the upper echelons of Arkansas’ athletic history. Spanning across four decades, DeBriyn led Razorbacks’ baseball between 1970 and 2002. In the process, the Ashland, Wis., native won 1,161 games (the most in school history) with a winning percentage of .641. Under DeBriyn’s guidance, the Hogs won two Southwest Conference titles, one SEC title, made 15 NCAA Tournament appearances, and four at the College World Series, finishing as the runner-up in 1979.

It’s without a doubt that DeBriyn laid the groundwork for the machine fans see at Baum-Walker today. Arkansas baseball is arguably the most consistently elite team in the country, with head coach Dave Van Horn at the helm, and one of the supporters of Van Horn landing the job was DeBriyn.

The 18th induction class will be honored at the 2026 Night of Champions event at the home of the College Baseball Hall of Fame in Overland Park, Kan. The ceremony will take place on Feb. 12, 2026. Along with DeBriyn, the College Baseball HOF will induct 20 additional players, coaches, and persons who have otherwise helped grow the game.

THE 2025 COLLEGE BASEBALL HALL OF FAME CLASS

Players

  • Gene Ammann, Pitcher, Florida State University, 1968-70
  • Kris Benson, Pitcher, Clemson University, 1994-96
  • Kip Bouknight, Pitcher, University of South Carolina, 1998-2001
  • Hubie Brooks, Shortstop, Mesa College/Arizona State University, 1976-78
  • Gene Hooks, Third Baseman, Wake Forest University, 1947-50
  • Mike Loynd, Pitcher, Florida State University, 1984-86
  • Mark McGwire, First Baseman/Pitcher, University of Southern California, 1982-84
  • Phil Nevin, Third Base, Cal State Fullerton, 1990-92
  • David Price, Pitcher, Vanderbilt University, 2005-07
  • Earl Sanders, Pitcher, Jackson State University, 1984-86
  • Mike Stenhouse, Outfielder, Harvard University, 1977-79
  • Stephen Strasburg, Pitcher, San Diego State University, 2007-09
  • Joe Thomas, Pitcher/First Baseman, Marietta College, 1994-97

Coaches

  • Norm DeBriyn, Coach, University of Arkansas, 1970-2002
  • *Clint Evans, Coach, University of California, 1930-54
  • *Ray Fisher, Third Baseman/Pitcher/Coach, Middlebury College 1907-09/1910 (Third Baseman/Pitcher/Coach) / University of Michigan / 1921-59 (Coach)
  • Les Murakami, Coach, University of Hawai’i, 1968-97
  • Ray Tanner, Coach, North Carolina State, 1988-96/University of South Carolina, 1997-2012
  • Jerry Weinstein, Coach, Sacramento City College, 1975-98

Administrators / Builders / Umpires

  • Scott Boras, Agent, University of the Pacific, 1972-76
  • Paul Guillie, Umpire – 1990-2014/SEC Coordinator of Baseball Umpires – 2014-current





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