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Ole Miss Baseball Lands Pair of Commitments From Talented Transfer Portal Prospects

Mike Bianco and the Ole Miss Rebels continue navigating a critical offseason in Oxford with the program remaining active in the NCAA Transfer Portal. After falling in the Oxford Regional last month, Ole Miss has hit the recruiting trail with force in order to reconstruct the roster ahead of the 2026 season. On Thursday, the […]

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Ole Miss Baseball Lands Pair of Commitments From Talented Transfer Portal Prospects

Mike Bianco and the Ole Miss Rebels continue navigating a critical offseason in Oxford with the program remaining active in the NCAA Transfer Portal.

After falling in the Oxford Regional last month, Ole Miss has hit the recruiting trail with force in order to reconstruct the roster ahead of the 2026 season.

On Thursday, the Rebels added their first commitment of the offseason after Grand Canyon left-handed pitcher Grant Richardson pledged to the Rebels.

The 6-foot-3, 220-pounder came out of the bullpen for first six appearances of the season before developing into a top-of-the-rotation pitcher and starting his final eight games.

Richardson had the highest strikeout rate per nine innings in Grand Canyon’s all-time history at 12.43 (min. 50 innings).

The talented southpaw ranked among the Western Athletic Conference’s tops in: strikeouts per nine innings (12.43, third), strikeouts (70, eighth), ERA (3.73, 12th) and opponent batting average (.245, 13th).

During his 2024 campaign, Richardson struck out 70 batters and walked 30 in 50.2 innings as a sophomore.

Fast forward to Saturday and the Ole Miss program got back to work in the NCAA Transfer Portal with the Rebels reeling in a pair of sought-after transfers.

Who’s been added to the 2026 roster?

No. 1: Tristan Bissetta – Outfielder [Clemson]

The South Carolina native entered the NCAA Transfer Portal after three seasons with Clemson where he saw significant production during the 2024 season.

Bissetta’s 2025 campaign was cut short due to injury, but still managed to hit .227 with a .358 on-base percentage in 31 games played.

In 75 at-bats last season, Bissetta logged 13 runs with 17 hits, 16 RBI, 15 BB with 28 strikeouts.

The 6-foot-1, 225-pounder hit .298 with seven homers and 34 RBI during the 2024 season in his most productive year with the Tigers.

No. 2: Daniel Pacella – Outfielder [Illinois State]

Pacella, a First-Team All-Missouri Valley Conference selection, started in 56 games for the Red Birds last season on his way to a career year with the program.

The 6-foot-4, 235-pounder logged 59 RBI, which became the seventh-most in a single season in program history, while also leading Illinois State with a .355 batting average.

He had 41 extra-base hits during the 2025 season, including 20 home runs. The home run count is the second-most in a single season in program history.

Pacella wrapped up his time at Illinois State second all-time in career home runs with 45 total and RBI with 169 across three seasons.

One of the most decorated players in Illinois State baseball history, Pacellla was a back-to-back all-conference selection during his time with the program.

He’ll be a player to keep tabs on in the 2025 MLB Draft with the Ole Miss Rebels looking to get him to Oxford for the 2026 season.

Ole Miss Football Target, Top-10 Quarterback in America Earns Elite 11 Invite

Ole Miss Basketball Beats Out North Carolina Tar Heels, UCONN for Top-50 Prospect

Ole Miss Women’s Basketball Lands in Early Top-25, Named ‘Offseason Winners’

Follow Zack Nagy on Twitter: @znagy20 and Ole Miss Rebels On SI: @OleMissOnSI for all coverage surrounding the Ole Miss program.

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NIL

5-Star WR Cederian Morgan Commits to Alabama over Colorado, Florida, Georgia

Alabama has a long line of superstar wide receivers, and the university added a potential future star to the mix on Wednesday. Per Hayes Fawcett of Rivals, 5-star wide receiver Cederian Morgan announced his commitment to the Crimson Tide. Morgan is the No. 2 receiver and No. 12 overall player in 247Sports’ composite, and he […]

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Alabama has a long line of superstar wide receivers, and the university added a potential future star to the mix on Wednesday.

Per Hayes Fawcett of Rivals, 5-star wide receiver Cederian Morgan announced his commitment to the Crimson Tide. Morgan is the No. 2 receiver and No. 12 overall player in 247Sports’ composite, and he chose Alabama over offers from Colorado, Florida and Georgia, among others.

Per 247Sports, Morgan is the third five-star recruit in the class of 2026 to commit to the Crimson Tide, joining edge rusher Xavier Griffin and cornerback Jorden Edmonds. The commitment fulfills the Alabama native’s goal to stay home.

“I get to stay home and play for the in-state school that I grew up a fan of,” Morgan told Rivals’ Chad Simmons (h/t Keegan Pope of On3.com). “It is a great feeling. This was like a dream for me. I have been there so many times and Alabama is home for me.”

A 6’4″, 210 prospect, Morgan stars for Benjamin Russell High School in Alexander City, Alabama. As a junior, he produced 70 catches for 1,162 yards and 14 touchdowns. He averaged 16.6 yards per catch.

In addition to his prowess on the football field, Morgan is a multi-sport athlete who also plays basketball and competes in track and field. On the basketball court, he averaged 14.4 points and 11.3 rebounds during his junior year. He’s also a two-time state qualifier in the high jump.

Still, the football field is where Morgan thrives the most, and he appears to be a polished prospect who can make an immediate impact at Alabama. 247Sports scouting analyst Gabe Brooks described him as a “uniquely gifted pass-catching target with outstanding physical tools and athletic chops” who “projects as a high-major impact player with traits that suggest long-term NFL Draft high-round potential.”

Crimson Tide fans are surely going to be excited to see Morgan paired with star receiver and fellow Alabama native Ryan Williams in 2026.



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NIL

Should Texas Longhorns join LSU and sell advertising on jerseys?

To help come up with the $20.5M to pay their athletes, LSU is planning to sell advertisements on all its teams’ jerseys. I think this is a terrible, unforgivable mistake not worth a fraction of what they’d get in return.https://t.co/S8UPjpcMNY — Zach Barnett (@zach_barnett) July 2, 2025 Searching for a potential NIL edge, the LSU […]

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Searching for a potential NIL edge, the LSU Tigers have announced they will sell a sponsorship patch on their iconic jerseys. The Baton Rouge Advocate reports LSU “hopes the NCAA will allow schools to sell patches on their jerseys.” In the event the governing body clears it, the Tigers project they can generate “multiple millions of dollars a year” doing so.

The report says LSU has already identified an advertising partner and has decided out where the patches would go on every jersey, from cross country to football. LSU deputy AD for revenue generation Clay Harris says the program can generate millions a year. But he also says the ad emblem won’t go overboard. “We don’t have this as some crazy, NASCAR-like situation,” Harris said.

Not everyone is pleased with the plan.

Of course, college football jerseys already have a couple forms of advertising on them already. First, there’s the apparel maker’s patch. Be it Nike, or Adidas or Under Amour, the jersey manufacturer makes sure their logo is easily visible. Adidas has even increased the size of its logos on jerseys in the English Premier League.

Each college team also carries their conference logo. While that patch shows unanimity among conference member schools, make not mistake – it is an ad.

International soccer clubs are the real trailblazers in jersey sponsorships. Almost all European teams have a jersey sponsor and it is front and center, the biggest logo on the entire jersey. The team’s logo is typically relegated to a small patch on the left side. London club Arsenal, for example, makes $68.25 million dollars a year from Emirates Airlines.

In the US, the NBA has had jersey advertising for eight years now. The NBA allows teams to sell one sponsorship patch placed on the front left shoulder of player uniforms. Teams make significant money from the ads, averaging $10.88 million per year. New NBA Champion Oklahoma City, for example, has a Love’s travel shop patch.

The NHL doesn’t have jersey sponsors, but the league does allow helmet sponsors.

One decision that needs to be made is the size and look of the patches. Will the sponsor try to match the team colors? Will LSU have a patch that actually clashes with its purple and gold? Where will the logo go? LSU has not shared their exact plan.

Fans won’t like the new advertising space, but if it is successful in Baton Rouge, you can bet more, if not all, teams will adopt the idea. Tradition be damned. The additional revenue stream has been discussed by athletic directors for over a year.





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NCAA gets it Right

CLEMSON — The NCAA got something right. On Wednesday, the NCAA Division I Committee for Legislative Relief approved a one-time blanket waiver that allows designated student-athletes to enter the NCAA Transfer Portal outside of the standard transfer windows. The waiver applies to individuals identified as Designated Student-Athletes (DNA) under the House settlement and enables them to declare […]

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NCAA gets it Right

CLEMSON — The NCAA got something right.

On Wednesday, the NCAA Division I Committee for Legislative Relief approved a one-time blanket waiver that allows designated student-athletes to enter the NCAA Transfer Portal outside of the standard transfer windows.

The waiver applies to individuals identified as Designated Student-Athletes (DNA) under the House settlement and enables them to declare their intent to transfer between July 7-Aug. 5. The waiver creates a unique transfer portal window for DNA, distinct from the regular transfer periods.

An athlete is eligible to be placed on a DSA list if they were eligible for practice and/or competition on a team last year and if they lost their roster spot because of the new roster limits, as a result of the House settlement or was an eligible member of a team in 2024-25, such as walk-ons or was recruited and assured by their school of a 2025-26 roster spot.

Athletes put on a DSA list are exempt from roster limits at their current school and are exempt from roster limits at their new school should they transfer. The DSA tag remains with the athlete for their career, which was another piece negotiated in the settlement.

“I think it is the right thing to do,” Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney said in May to The Clemson Insider at the ACC’s Spring Meetings when asked about the possibility of those DSA that walked-on in 2024-25 getting the opportunity to be grandfathered in. “It is a win for the young people that have sacrificed a lot to create an opportunity for themselves in life through doing the work.”

Tuesday’s action by the NCAA came about after federal judge Claudia Wilken informed the NCAA back in May that she would not approve the House settlement unless some changes were made regarding new roster limits.

The settlement agreement initially required schools to trim their rosters. Football for instance, which has as many as 120 players (85 scholarships + walk-ons) will be forced to trim down to 105 scholarship players by the start of the season.

“You grandfather all the kids that were on the roster, and you give them an opportunity to finish. That’s the right thing to do,” Swinney said. “And to me, it’s low-hanging fruit. It avoids a lawsuit, most likely.

“The crazy thing, we said this last summer, but now that it’s gotten to the finish line, it’s pretty obvious – you’re going to take an opportunity away that otherwise would be there. It might matriculate three or four years or so, but we’ve got some kids that are going on their fourth year or their fifth year that we’re going to have to cut. Now, the good news, we don’t have to cut till the first week of [the Aug. 30 season opener vs.] LSU, to 105.”

Still, making those cuts is something Swinney has admittedly been “dreading.” He has not been a fan of having to cut his walk-on program and has expressed how difficult it would be to cut players this summer to meet the requirement.

Swinney, though, pointed out that some of Clemson’s players have already “kind of cut themselves.”

“We haven’t cut anybody yet – we had some kids that cut themselves because they knew, well, I’ve got to go through mat drills, spring ball, summer workouts, fall camp, just to get cut,” Swinney said. “And that was really sad for me because it’s just unbelievably tough and committed young people that are chasing their dreams and just trying to be the best version of themselves, and relationships and all the things that come from being a part of a team.”

Swinney, of course, was a walk-on at Alabama, where he earned a roster spot and eventually a scholarship. He was a part of the Tide’s 1992 National Championship team. He then became a graduate assistant at Alabama and later an assistant coach.

He made his way to Clemson as Tommy Bowden’s wide receivers coach in 2003 and became the Tigers interim head coach in 2008 following Bowden’s mid-season resignation and earned the permanent head coaching title in December of the same year.

Since then, Swinney has compiled a 180-47 record at Clemson, winning two National Championships and nine ACC titles.

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NIL

Jeremiah Smith signs with Adidas but can’t wear its shoes during games

Jeremiah Smith has signed a name, image and likeness contract with Adidas, but Ohio State’s star sophomore receiver will not be wearing the company’s shoes during games. Ohio State has a contract with Nike as its uniform provider, and Smith will be obligated to wear that company’s shoes during OSU-related activities. Smith will wear Adidas […]

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Jeremiah Smith has signed a name, image and likeness contract with Adidas, but Ohio State’s star sophomore receiver will not be wearing the company’s shoes during games.

Ohio State has a contract with Nike as its uniform provider, and Smith will be obligated to wear that company’s shoes during OSU-related activities. Smith will wear Adidas during non-OSU activities.

In a post on X, Smith said, “Three Stripes for life.”

“One of the most memorable moments from last season was losing my black stripe and officially becoming a Buckeye,” Smith said in an Adidas news release. “Fast forward a year and I’m blessed to be adding three, joining the fastest brand in football. It’s crazy to be partnering with a brand that has such a talented roster of players and that I’ve been wearing since I was a young kid. We’re not done yet.”

The top recruit in the 2025 recruiting class nationally, Smith caught 76 passes for 1,315 yards and 15 touchdowns as a freshman last season. His 56-yard catch of a Will Howard deep ball late in the fourth quarter against Notre Dame all but clinched OSU’s national title.

Adidas has also signed NIL deals with OSU commitments Chris Henry Jr. and Kayden Dixon-Wyatt.

Buy Ohio State posters, books, gear from CFP title win

Get more Ohio State football news by listening to our podcasts.

Ohio State football beat writer Bill Rabinowitz can be reached at brabinowitz@dispatch.com or on bluesky at billrabinowitz@bsky.social.



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$2.3 million QB has four

Ohio State wide receiver Jeremiah Smith is the latest highly-touted athlete to ink an NIL deal with major apparel brand Adidas. Smith broke out in a big way as a true freshman last season. The former five-star out of Opa Locka, Florida, led the Buckeyes in receiving on the way to a national championship, earning […]

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$2.3 million QB has four

Ohio State wide receiver Jeremiah Smith is the latest highly-touted athlete to ink an NIL deal with major apparel brand Adidas.

Smith broke out in a big way as a true freshman last season. The former five-star out of Opa Locka, Florida, led the Buckeyes in receiving on the way to a national championship, earning the Big Ten’s freshman and receiver of the year honors alongside First-Team All-America and Freshman All-America selections.

Smith also broke Ohio State’s freshman receiving records previously held by Pro Football Hall of Famer Chris Carter after racking up 76 catches for 1,315 yards with 15 touchdowns.

NIL opportunities have been there for the taking for Smith, whose On3 NIL valuation has risen to $4.2 million ahead of his sophomore season. He partnered with big brands like Nintendo, EA Sports, Lululemon, Redbull and American Eagle Outfitters before adding Adidas to the growing list.

Adidas previously signed Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter and No. 1 overall pick Abdul Carter. Additionally, Nebraska quarterback Dylan Raiola is in the fold and responded to Smith’s endorsement on Wednesday.

Raiola, also a sophomore, holds a $2.3 million NIL valuation and signed with Adidas this spring.

“Welcome to the fam,” Raiola responded on Instagram.

Smith enters his sophomore season ranked as the third most valuable player in college athletics behind a pair of top quarterbacks in Texas’ Arch Manning and Miami’s Carson Beck.

The Buckeyes will open the 2025 season at home against Texas on Aug. 30 at noon ET (Fox).

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Georgia’s new NIL partnership should have other schools very worried

College football has been the wild west in the NIL and transfer portal era, but finally, the House v. NCAA settlement that went into effect on July 1 is attempting to bring an end to the total lawlessness. The settlement allows athletic departments to pay athletes directly, but only from a revenue-sharing pool that is […]

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College football has been the wild west in the NIL and transfer portal era, but finally, the House v. NCAA settlement that went into effect on July 1 is attempting to bring an end to the total lawlessness. The settlement allows athletic departments to pay athletes directly, but only from a revenue-sharing pool that is capped at $20.5 million (for the Power Conferences). 

Outside NIL payments are still permitted, but they now have to go through a clearinghouse to ensure that they are market value and are not pay-for-play deals disguised as marketing opportunities. 

The teams that organized their NIL collectives earliest had the most success in the early NIL era because they were able to outspend their opponents, particularly on the recruiting trail and transfer portal market. Now, that advantage has been leveled, with every program operating with the same revenue-sharing budget, so head coaches and general managers are scrambling to find a way to get a leg up in the new environment. 

The most obvious place to look for an advantage is with outside NIL funding that will get through the clearinghouse. To compete in that market, Georgia has announced a new partnership with Learfield to handle most of its athletes’ NIL opportunities.

Founded in 1972 as a farm radio network in Missouri, Learfield has adapted into one of the leading media and technology companies in college athletics with the mission of “Powering the connection of fans to the brands and experiences they love.” 

Learfield partners with 137 colleges in some capacity, now including the Georgia Bulldogs, but just because the SEC powerhouse wasn’t first to this model, which will effectively replace its Classic City Collective, doesn’t make it any less scary for the rest of the conference and college football. 

With so much high school football talent in and around the Atlanta area, Georgia was long a sleeping giant before Kirby Smart arrived. Then, Smart tapped into those resources and rode them to a national championship. Now, with the Bulldogs as perennial title contenders, if the athletic department has found another way to get their athletes paid beyond the revenue-sharing money, then there’s no reason to believe that Georgia football will be knocked off its perch anytime soon. 



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