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‘NIL money is crazy’ – 2025 Draft projected first-rounder announces shock decision over his NBA future

A projected 2025 NBA first-round pick has revealed a stunning decision over his future. The announcement was made on Tuesday, with just under a month to go until the 2025 NBA Draft. 3 UAB Blazers forward Yaxel Lendeborg holding his AAC Tournament MVP trophy in March 2024Credit: Getty 3 Lendeborg spotted during a November 2024 […]

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A projected 2025 NBA first-round pick has revealed a stunning decision over his future.

The announcement was made on Tuesday, with just under a month to go until the 2025 NBA Draft.

UAB Blazers basketball player Yaxel Lendeborg holding the Most Outstanding Player trophy.

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UAB Blazers forward Yaxel Lendeborg holding his AAC Tournament MVP trophy in March 2024Credit: Getty
UAB Blazers forward Yaxel Lendeborg (#3) during a basketball game.

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Lendeborg spotted during a November 2024 gameCredit: Getty

The NCAA deadline for players to withdraw from the NBA Draft and maintain college eligibility is Wednesday at 11:59 pm ET.

So on Tuesday, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported that Yaxel Lendeborg will withdraw from the 2025 NBA Draft to spend his final collegiate season at the Michigan Wolverines.

The decision comes as a surprise, as Lendeborg was a projected first-round pick in the 2025 NBA Draft.

“While it’s been and still is a dream of mine to play in the NBA, I feel the development and growth as a player and a person I will gain at the University of Michigan will be very beneficial,” Lendeborg told ESPN.

Fans were stunned at Lendeborg’s decision to remain in college for one more season.

“Did NOT see this one coming,” one wrote.

“I am kinda shocked by this,” another commented.

“NIL money is crazy,” a third added.

Lendeborg played for the UAB Blazers from 2023 and 2025.

Last season, the 22-year-old averaged 17.7 points, 11.4 rebounds, 4.2 assists, 1.8 blocks, and 1.7 steals per game.

‘Every Knicks fan needed this’ – Stephen A. Smith handed prop by Malika Andrews after being left ‘feeling sick’

Lendeborg also shot 55 percent from two-point range and 36 percent from deep.

He was the AAC Tournament MVP in 2024 and received a first-team All-AAC and AAC Defensive Player of the Year nods in each of the last two campaigns.

Lendeborg was the No. 1 big man in the NCAA transfer portal and committed to coach Dusty May in April.

He was the No. 1 big man in the NCAA transfer portal and committed to coach Dusty May in April.

The 6-foot-9 Lendeborg’s draft stock was rising after his performance in the NBA Draft combine earlier this month.

Headshot of Yaxel Landeborg at the NBA Draft Combine.

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Landeborg was projected to be a first-round pick in the 2025 NBA Draft after a productive junior season and NBA Draft combine performance this monthCredit: Getty

Lendeborg was expected to be drafted between the No. 20 and No. 30 picks.

But he has the chance to be drafted earlier in the 2026 NBA Draft.

And Lendeborg will be part of a Wolverines squad that has aspirations to win the NCAA tournament next season.

Michigan appeared in the Sweet 16 of the 2024-25 NCAA tournament.



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Former NC State cornerback Shyheim Battle living the dream in the European League of Football :: WRALSportsFan.com

By Pat Welter When you’re living the dream, sometimes you wake up on the other side of the world. “It’s really a dream come true,” Shyheim Battle said. “I’ve always said I wanted to travel the world playing the game of football. I didn’t know it would happen this way.” Battle is a former Rocky […]

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When you’re living the dream, sometimes you wake up on the other side of the world.

“It’s really a dream come true,” Shyheim Battle said. “I’ve always said I wanted to travel the world playing the game of football. I didn’t know it would happen this way.”

Battle is a former Rocky Mount High School star and a four year starting cornerback at NC State. He’s currently a cornerback for the Frankfurt Galaxy of the European League of Football (ELF), formerly the NFL Europe, something he never could have imagined this time last year.

“It’s not really what I expected it to be, it was a really a big culture shock,” Battle said. “Coming to Germany I thought I was going to be seeing a lot of castles and old English looking stuff. Frankfurt is a more modernized city, it’s similar to New York.”

Like most American college football players, Battle’s dream is still the NFL. He got a rookie mini camp invite from the New York Jets after the 2024 NFL draft and also tried out for the New Orleans Saints. After those opportunities didn’t work out, Battle continued training and waiting at home in North Carolina. 

“It was frustrating to deal with, I had to find ways to keep my mind in a happy place,” Battle said. “I had to stay ready at all times, because I didn’t know when I would get a call.”

When his phone wasn’t ringing, he started making some calls of his own. His chiropractor turned him on to the ELF and after some research of his own, he realized he had a connection.

“My quarterback my freshman year at NC State, Matthew McKay, was already playing for [the Frankfurt Galaxy], I [direct messaged] the team and Matt personally and said ‘are you looking for any corners.’ Matt told me that he got me, and within about 48 hours I received a call.”

Battle was able to receive one of 4 allotted roster spots for American players with Frankfurt.

“It’s different country to country, I’m in Germany so most of our team is German,” Battle described. “When I got to Spain and play against Madrid, their whole team is Spanish.”

He’s six hours ahead of eastern time and sometimes it feels further than that. He’d love to play closer to home next season.

“This is the dream, I’ll do whatever it takes,” Battle said. “But I’d like to get back around my family man, it’s been a long time, we still check in with each other.  The time difference is so crazy.”

Humble and hungry, Battle is ready to wake up wherever this dream takes him next.

“It’s not easy, it’s never going to be easy, it’s not going to be how you dreamed of it,” Battle said. “Only one percent gets to experience their dreams as a kid. Stay the course man, don’t give up and stay around positive people.”



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James Franklin Wants to Be a ‘Transformational’ Coach

James Franklin’s body of work in college football crosses an important line of demarcation in the sport. The Penn State football coach played and coached in Division III football as the launch pad to a career in a game that wasn’t yet a business. Now, Franklin coaches in a business built around a game, to […]

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James Franklin’s body of work in college football crosses an important line of demarcation in the sport. The Penn State football coach played and coached in Division III football as the launch pad to a career in a game that wasn’t yet a business. Now, Franklin coaches in a business built around a game, to which he’s constantly trying to adapt without losing sight of his purpose.

“I think the majority of people got into coaching college football, in my generation, to be transformational on young people’s lives” Franklin said recently. “None of us, my age or older, got into this business because of money. It was because you love the game of football and you wanted to help young people grow and mature. I worry a little bit now that, because of how the sport has changed, there’s people being attracted to the sport for the wrong reasons.”

Entering his 12th season at Penn State, and 15th season as a head coach, Franklin has developed into a pragmatic voice of the game. He addresses college football’s questions and inconsistenies with firm boundaries but a measured hand. Franklin talks about revenue sharing, the transfer portal, conference scheduling, NIL, roster limitations and every other debate point about the game through a common lens. Franklin wants college football to be transformational in a transactional world.

The recent House vs. NCAA settlement means that, beginning July 1, Penn State and other athletic departments can begin paying players directly for the first time. Penn State will fund revenue sharing for football to the maximum. It’s only practical for a national championship contender.

Penn State and Franklin recruit with revenue sharing and NIL in mind, sometimes top of mind, and are willing to pay for talent. Yet Franklin also wants money to be part of a package, not the focus, in playing at Penn State.

“The way the sport has changed from a transfer portal perspective and from an NIL perspective, I think there’s also young people and families that are making decisions based on a transactional experience rather than a transformational experience,” Franklin said. “So for us, we’re one of a handful of programs that are still holding on to [wanting] it to be as transformational an experience as possible. I think that aligns with Penn State and what our values are and how we want this program to be run. That’s something that was always very important to me.”

Certainly, Penn State football has traded in being transformational for decades through “Success With Honor.” However, Franklin also must understand modern college football, which believes that funding programs also can be “transformational.” At Penn State, the balancing act is more complex.

“It was also very obvious to me coming to Penn State that that was very important to our alumni and very important to this community and very important to our lettermen,” Franklin said. “So we are fighting, scratching, clawing to balance those two things. There’s an aspect that you have to embrace the evolution of college football. But you don’t have to abort what your values are and and how you still want it to go. And I think there’s a way that you can really blend the both, so that the kid, the family, the program, the university … can still really provide a similar experience that we always have.”

More Penn State Football



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Athletic Directors reveal which sports will benefit from the House Settlement

It’s the dawn of new era in college athletics. Thanks to the new landmark House vs. NCAA settlement being approved, schools will now have $20.5 million to disperse throughout their athletic department for revenue sharing. The tricky part, how teams will do so. Obviously, college football is the biggest revenue sport out there, and with […]

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It’s the dawn of new era in college athletics.

Thanks to the new landmark House vs. NCAA settlement being approved, schools will now have $20.5 million to disperse throughout their athletic department for revenue sharing. The tricky part, how teams will do so. Obviously, college football is the biggest revenue sport out there, and with basketball being second. But there are also other sports that deserve some money. But will they actually get any of the ‘House Settlement’ money?

With it being days following the historic announcement, a few Athletic Directors are starting to share which sports will receive money. Ohio State AD Ross Bjork shared there will be four Buckeye sports that get money, and that’s likely going to be the norm most schools follow.

“Yes, we have $20.5 million of revenue-shared dollars that can now be given to the athlete,” Bjork said. “And as part of that, anytime you add a new scholarship – in any sport – whether it’s one, five or 91 like we did, that has to count against the $20.5 million, up to $2.5 million. Does everyone follow that? Twenty-point-five million, minus $2.5 million for scholarships – we added 91 – so therefore there’s $18 million to distribute to our sports. The scholarship part has not been widely publicized, but any time we add a scholarship we have to count it against (the $20.5 million maximum).

“We are going to allocate the $18 million starting in four sports: women’s volleyball, women’s basketball, men’s basketball and of course our football program. We really tried to use metrics and a formula, while also balancing some Title IX approach in this as well.”

Ohio Stat

Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

While football, both basketball teams, and women’s volleyball will likely be the four sports for most schools that receive money from the revenue sharing, Oklahoma will help out a couple of other sports.

Speaking at a Board of Regents meeting on Thursday, Oklahoma athletics director Joe Castiglione said that six sports will be a part of the program’s revenue share: football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, baseball, softball and women’s gymnastics.

According to Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark, he says a model a lot of schools are focusing in on is the 75-15-5-5 model.

“Many schools have been very public already about how they’re going to distribute it,” Yormark said of revenue share. “One of the models out there, not to say it’s right or wrong, is 75, 15, 5 and 5. 75% to football, 15% to men’s basketball, 5% to women’s basketball and 5% to other Olympic sports. But there are probably going to be variations of that model and it’ll be determined by the schools themselves.”

It’s clear football will get the lion’s share of the money, but other sports are going to get involved with the revenue sharing, while others are left out for dry.

– Enjoy more NIL Daily on SI –

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College coaching legend John Calipari has a hilarious take on NIL money

Star Ohio State football commit Brady Edmunds using NIL money for the greater good

Texas A&M star WR KC Concepcion will be cashing in on and off the field in 2025



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Miami baseball lands commitment from batter-turned-pitcher

Miami Hurricanes baseball received a significant boost this week with the official commitment of UNLV right-hander Michael Taylor. At 6-foot-4, 225 pounds and hailing from Somerset County, New Jersey, Taylor brings an intriguing mix of experience. He spent four seasons at Fordham as an infielder before making the switch to pitching at UNLV. I am […]

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Miami Hurricanes baseball received a significant boost this week with the official commitment of UNLV right-hander Michael Taylor. At 6-foot-4, 225 pounds and hailing from Somerset County, New Jersey, Taylor brings an intriguing mix of experience. He spent four seasons at Fordham as an infielder before making the switch to pitching at UNLV.

This past season, he recorded a 3.86 ERA with 27 strikeouts over 21 innings of relief duty. He allowed 18 hits, conceded 10 runs (9 earned), issued 13 walks, and struck out 27 batters. Taylor routinely sits in the low 90s with his fastball and throws a sharp cutter. That combination, paired with his imposing frame, gives him the physical and technical foundation to succeed in the ACC. At 24 years old during the upcoming season, Taylor will be one of the veterans in the bullpen.

Prior to pitching at UNLV, Taylor was a full-time batter who fielded at third and first base. He began his college baseball career at Fordham in 2021, where he appeared in 7 games, going 2-for-5 (.400) with a double and 1 RBI. In 2022, he saw more action with 26 games played, posting a .239 batting average, .390 OBP, and .435 slugging percentage across 46 at-bats. In 2023, Taylor logged 35 games with 20 hits in 96 at-bats, hitting .208 with 1 home run and 14 RBIs. His final college season at Fordham in 2024 saw more limited production with 3 hits in 35 at-bats (.086) over 17 games.

Across five college seasons, Taylor posted a .198 batting average with 36 hits, 7 doubles, 1 triple, and 4 home runs in 182 official at-bats. Before transitioning to pitching at UNLV, Taylor pitched a little bit in the summer of 2022 for Bergen in the ACBL. In 2022, he had a 2.08 ERA in 8.2 innings pitched.





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LSU baseball star sends blunt NIL pitch to popular shoe brand

There is no time like the present, especially in NIL. Ahead of the College World Series, LSU’s star outfielder/pitcher took his shot at pitching his dream brand partnership live on TV. In an interview with Hurrdat Sports, avid Crocs-wearer Jake Brown shared that he spends his own per diem money on the off-field foam footwear […]

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There is no time like the present, especially in NIL. Ahead of the College World Series, LSU’s star outfielder/pitcher took his shot at pitching his dream brand partnership live on TV.

In an interview with Hurrdat Sports, avid Crocs-wearer Jake Brown shared that he spends his own per diem money on the off-field foam footwear – and Jibbitz accessories – suggesting the brand slide into his Instagram DMs to coordinate a deal.

“I have some Crocs slides that I’ve decorated with Star Wars Jibbitz,” he told Hurrdat Sports. “So, I have a Star Wars pair of Crocs and I have Pizza Planet-Toy Story crocs that I bought with some per diem money thanks to Champ Artigues, our baseball ops guy. Thank you so much Champ and great purchase. I love my Crocs.”

Brown – who is hitting .315 on the season with 52 hits, 43 runs and 44 RBIs – even pitched his own Crocs design, themed with animals prints to celebrate his home state of Louisiana, where the sophomore was the top-ranked player as a high school senior.

“I don’t know, like some gators,” he pitched. “Some alligators, something. A pelican, maybe a tiger, anything that we could do. That would be super sweet.”

Crocs has a heavy presence in the NIL space, recently partnering with fellow Tiger Livvy Dunne on a partnership. The brand also added freshman-to-be Cameron and Cayden Boozer of Duke basketball, the nation’s leading scorer Ta’niya Latson now of South Carolina and former Ole Miss quarterback Jaxson Dart, now of the New York Giants.

LSU has won seven National Championships – most recently in 2023 – the second-most in NCAA history and enter their 20th College World Series. Brown and LSU face off against SEC-rival Arkansas to start the College World Series on June 14 at 7PM ET on ESPN.

– Enjoy more NIL Daily on SI –

The $1 million WR’s recruitment heats up between LSU, Miami, Alabama, Tennessee, and others

Oregon Football star QB Dante Moore gives back with heartfelt gift to hometown alma mater

Kansas State star quarterback preps for Summer in new NIL campaign

UConn basketball star Azzi Fudd announces major skincare NIL partnership





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Bianchi

Everywhere you look across the landscape of college sports, athletic directors are holed up in boardrooms and budget meetings, furrowing their brows over spreadsheets and taking a chainsaw to line items like movie villains in a slasher flick — desperately trying to figure out how they’re going to come up with an additional $20.5 million […]

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Bianchi

Everywhere you look across the landscape of college sports, athletic directors are holed up in boardrooms and budget meetings, furrowing their brows over spreadsheets and taking a chainsaw to line items like movie villains in a slasher flick — desperately trying to figure out how they’re going to come up with an additional $20.5 million a year to pay their athletes.

Programs are bracing for staff cuts. Olympic sports are sweating their survival. Facility upgrades are being shelved or downsized.

The University of Kentucky’s athletics department expects to operate at a net loss of nearly $31 million over the next two fiscal years and is borrowing $141 million from the university’s general fund to offset the deficit.

The hoity-toity University of Michigan athletic department is receiving $15 million in support from the university’s general fund so it can balance its budget this year.

And then there’s UCF … calm, calculating and oddly comfortable amid the chaos.

“We’re in a little better position because we’re getting some new money [from the Big 12] as opposed to some other programs that have a $20.5 million bill coming to their athletic department,” UCF athletic director Terry Mohajir says.

I would say UCF isn’t just in a little better position; it’s in a much better position.

Yes, UCF — the young, brash program often dismissed by traditionalists as a Johnny-come-lately — may actually be better equipped to navigate the beginning of the pay-for-play era than the so-called bluebloods.

Why? Because unlike Florida, Florida State, Miami and other marquee programs throughout the country that have long been dining at the wagyu-laden lobster-stuffed banquet table of TV riches, UCF has been living off the crumbs — and learning how to stretch every dollar like a Depression-era homemaker. Now, just as this new system demands schools pony up as much as $20.5 million annually to pay athletes, UCF is suddenly flush with new money, having joined the Big 12 and becoming eligible for a full share of TV revenue starting this year.

To put it plainly: While some schools will need to scramble, cut and beg to fund this new mandate, UCF will simply carve out its share from this fresh windfall of Big 12 media money.

Before moving to the Big 12, UCF’s annual TV revenue from the American Athletic Conference hovered around $9 million. Starting this year, UCF’s Big 12 revenue will spike to approximately $45 million annually — nearly a $36 million jump from the AAC. Even after setting aside the NCAA’s proposed $20.5 million for athlete payments, UCF still pockets $24.5 million. That’s a $15.5 million net increase in TV revenue from where the program was just two years ago.

Meanwhile, the established programs like Florida and Florida State already have baked their SEC and ACC TV money into their oversized athletic budgets. They’ve committed millions to coaching buyouts, bloated staffs and opulent facilities.

Now, they must find $20.5 million more per year — on top of what they’re already spending — to meet the athlete compensation requirements. Some — like Kentucky, Michigan and Washington —are borrowing while others may have to lean harder than ever on donors already fatigued by name-image-likeness (NIL) collectives.

But UCF? The Knights get to pay players with new money — and still come out ahead.

And maybe, too, UCF is better-equipped to navigate the current financial landscape because the Knights are accustomed to pinching pennies, turning dimes into dollars and digging into the couch cushions to stay competitive.

Consider their stadium. While many major programs have spent hundreds of millions on NFL-style cathedrals, UCF opened The Acrisure Bounce House in 2007 for roughly $55 million — a bargain at the time and an incredible steal by today’s standards. FSU would spend more than $55 million if it  needed to buy out Mike Norvell’s contract after this season.

Or consider UCF’s indoor practice facility, completed in 2005. UCF was the first program in the state to build one, beating Florida and Florida State to the punch by nearly a decade. Again, it was constructed with resourcefulness, not extravagance.

UCF has always been a program that maximized efficiency and had to adapt and improvise out of necessity. And this is precisely the type of entrepreneurial spirit that the Knights and other programs will need to succeed in the era of revenue-sharing.

However, where UCF is at a massive disadvantage within the state  and within its own conference is that the Knights don’t have nearly as many well-heeled boosters ready to supplement player salaries with exorbitant “NIL” deals. Even though conference commissioners and coaches say they will follow the new rules in regard to policing third-party (booster) NIL deals, color me skeptical.

It’s been reported by CBSSports.com that Texas Tech — aided by free-spending billionaire booster Cody Campbell — currently has an athletic payroll of $55 million. When I made the statement to Mohajir that it “doesn’t seem believable” that some schools are suddenly going to tell their athletes that they have to take a pay cut, the UCF AD responded, “It doesn’t seem believable, but that’s what they’re going to have to do. There are a lot of provisions to guardrail cap circumvention … and the penalties are punitive.

“I know there are a lot of cynics,” Mohajir added, “but I feel pretty good about it [the new system]. I have to look at it from an optimist’s standpoint. I feel like we’re on the right track. Is it perfect? No. But at this particular time, we need progress over perfection.”

Progress over perfection isn’t just a Mohajir soundbite; you could say it’s a summary of UCF’s entire journey and how it has prepared the Knights for this new era..

You see, this isn’t just about money; it’s about mindset.

UCF was built on budget discipline, innovation and adaptability.

In this new world of college football, a case could be made that the Knights are no longer an afterthought; they’re a trendsetter.

Email me at mbianchi@orlandosentinel.com. Hit me up on X (formerly Twitter) @BianchiWrites and listen to my Open Mike radio show every weekday from 6 to 9:30 a.m. on FM 96.9, AM 740 and 969TheGame.com/listen

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