NIL
Olivia Dunne testifies against $2.8B NCAA settlement

Olivia Dunne, one of the most-followed collegiate athletes on social media, testified against the NCAA’s $2.8 billion House settlement in the final hearing on Monday.
Dunne was one of four college athletes who testified against the settlement. The LSU gymnast expressed her objections to the formula used to set name, image and likeness (NIL) value of an athlete. She insisted that her NIL estimation was too low.
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She described herself as “a Division I athlete, a businesswoman, and I’ve been the highest-earning female athlete since the NIL rules changed.” She said the settlement failed to acknowledge her true value.
“This settlement uses old logic to calculate modern value,” Dunne said. “It takes a narrow snapshot of a still maturing market and freezes it, ignoring the trajectory we were on and the deals we lost and the future we could have had.”
A plaintiffs’ attorney later said that the gymnast would receive an updated allocation.
FLORIDA WINS NCAA TOURNAMENT OVER HOUSTON AFTER ERASING 12-POINT DEFICIT IN THRILLING FASHION

The House settlement, named after Arizona State swimmer Grant House, will allow schools to pay 22% of their revenue from media rights, ticket sales and sponsorships directly to college athletes for the use of NIL. Payments from outside sources would still be allowed.
NOLA.com noted that the settlement would offer more than $2.5 billion to athletes who could not earn NIL money before the NCAA changed its rules in 2021. The report also noted that most of the damages would be paid out to former football and men’s basketball players of power-conference schools because their sports create the most revenue.
The settlement also called for a clearinghouse to make sure any NIL deal worth more than $600 is pegged at fair market value in an attempt to thwart supposed pay-for-play deals.
On Monday, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken gave no indication that the complaints changed her mind about the settlement. She acknowledged the concerns and asked each attorney for fresh feedback on several topics. Her decision is expected to come in a few weeks.
“Basically I think it is a good settlement, don’t quote me, and I think it’s worth pursuing,” Wilken said. “I think some of these things could be fixed if people tried to fix them and that it would be worth their while to try to fix them.”
Wilken has already granted preliminary approval of the settlement involving the NCAA and its largest conferences. It is set to take effect on July 1.

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“Today’s hearing on the landmark settlement was a significant step in modernizing college sports,” the NCAA said in a statement. “If approved, the settlement will allow student-athletes the opportunity to receive nearly 50% of athletic department revenue in a sustainable and fair system for years to come.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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NIL
Are Ohio companies interested in NIL deals with high school athletes?
Dec. 8, 2025, 6:05 a.m. ET
Fred Horner bleeds black and orange.
The owner of Advanced Industrial Roofing is a Massillon football booster and member of the Sideliner program, an initiative where community members act as mentors for varsity players, providing personal guidance and support.
He’s willing to help out Washington High School athletes any way he can. But don’t expect his company to start handing out lucrative name, image and likeness deals to high school students now that the agreements are legal in Ohio.
NIL
The College Football Playoff Committee took the messy route, but still landed on the right bracket
If you want to hammer the College Football Playoff Committee for taking the scenic route on the way to the final bracket reveal, go ahead. That wasn’t the path many of us would have taken, especially if the goal were to set a clear expectation of what the final CFP bracket would look like.
Through more than a month of nationally televised CFP rankings shows, the Committee insisted on keeping Notre Dame slotted ahead of Miami. It didn’t matter that Miami possessed a head-to-head win and an identical record. The Committee told us repeatedly that it felt Notre Dame was better. As a result, we believed that’s what the people in that conference room in Grapevine, Texas, would do at the end.
They didn’t. On Sunday, when the final bracket featured Miami and not Notre Dame, it caused confusion and frustration. No, it was a shock. People couldn’t fathom how two idle teams could be flipped on Selection Sunday when neither team played during championship weekend.
We’ll get into why that happened later, but here’s the important thing: It’s not about the journey, it’s about the destination. And the destination was unequivocally correct. The games still matter and the notions of what we — or the people on the Committee — think would happen in the future didn’t come into play, even if we spent the last month thinking they would.
Miami couldn’t have been left out of the bracket while maintaining the integrity of the games. Had the CFP Committee included Notre Dame and not Miami, what they think would have taken priority over what happened on the field. Notre Dame and Miami’s resumes were similar enough that the result of the game had to matter the most. It couldn’t be ignored. It wasn’t.
If it wound up being ignored, that would have thrown the selection process into a chaotic world where the Committee members could veer from the guardrails — the games – and do whatever they want. So for at least another year, we get to live in a world where the CFP Committee leaned on the results of the games more than personal notions.
If you want to get into why the CFP Committee made this harder on themselves, that’s fine. They could have ranked Miami higher from the get-go, which would have stripped away all of the shock and confusion Notre Dame fans are feeling right now. The Committee made this harder for no reason.
So what’s the explanation for how the jump happened?
“Not until they really got to close proximity — side by side — with the move with BYU were we able to evaluate just those two teams. We always had someone between them,” CFP Committee chair Hunter Yurachek said on ESPN’s broadcast.
It’s all nonsense. How the CFP Committee could ignore the result of that game until its final deliberations doesn’t really make sense. If you’re questioning the process, please do it. There are plenty of holes to poke. But poking the process after the results are right is much better than poking the process after unjust results.
That brings us to Alabama, which got in despite losing to Florida State at the beginning of the year and getting blown off the field by Georgia in the SEC title game Saturday. Why didn’t Notre Dame and Miami go? How did Alabama get in still? Well, it all came back to who you beat.
Yes, Alabama had one more loss than Notre Dame. But its strength of schedule — which ranked No. 11 in comparison to Notre Dame at No. 42 and Miami at No. 44 — carried the day. Contrary to the propaganda the SEC dispersed last year about being penalized for playing tougher schedules, Alabama was actually forgiven for the extra loss because it beat Georgia during the regular season. That’s the benefit of playing in a tougher conference. You get a mulligan.
People have reason to be upset because of the unorthodox path the CFP Committee took.
But leaving Miami out in favor of Notre Dame would have been a miscarriage of justice. Feelings would have taken precedence over results, which ultimately means seasons could be simulated and teams could be slotted based on data.
This CFP Committee, more than others in the past, felt erratic. It felt like this Committee could have done something unconventional. But at the end of the road, it did what was right.
Even if you’re angry, be happy about that.
NIL
Major changes predicted after controversial College Football Playoff decision
Whatever decisions the College Football Playoff selection committee eventually make, there seems to always be some form of controversy, and the 2025 bracket was no different after a consequential decision between Miami and Notre Dame.
With that controversy in mind, ESPN college football announcer Chris Fowler believes the playoff format and selection process could undergo yet more reform in the future.
More change could be on the way
“This is a bracket that’s going to be talked about forever. And not just because Notre Dame got excluded. But because of the framework that created the choices that the committee had to make,” Fowler said on Sunday’s selection show.
Fowler pointed to the “tweak” the College Football Playoff made a year ago, when it ended the confusing distinction between seeding and ranking, and believes another structural alteration could follow after this year’s dilemma.
“There’s going to be something more than a tweak going forward because all of a sudden, inclusivity, which most people in the sport think is a pretty good idea…
“Inclusivity sounds good until teams like Notre Dame and Texas and Vanderbilt get squeezed out. Then people have a serious problem with it.” he said.
Notre Dame felt it coming
Schools take a brave face in public when they have a chance to make the playoff, but the reality behind the scenes is often a little more nerve-racking.
Fowler added: “This is one we’re going to talk about for a long, long time. If you’re Notre Dame, you’re crushed. They were worried about this.”
“I know they projected confidence, but there was a lot of unease on the part of Marcus Freeman and others because they saw them drop last week and now in consecutive weeks without playing, they have dropped in the rankings. And it ends up costing them despite a 10-game winning streak to finish the season.”
Miami over Notre Dame was the right call
Notre Dame had been ranked ahead of Miami in the College Football Playoff rankings until Selection Day itself, when they swapped the Irish for the lower-ranked Hurricanes at the most crucial moment.
Still, despite whatever criticism there may be around the selectors’ decision-making process or timing, what happened on the field still should trump everything else, the ESPN veteran says.
“I have no problem with Miami getting in based on the head-to-head, even though it was early in the season,” Fowler said.
“They won that game at the line of scrimmage… That was real. It was a late field goal that won it, but it still matters. And I think has to matter, or there’s no incentive to schedule any kind of meaningful non-conference game.
“That’s not the committee’s job to protect that, or the committee’s job to protect with a sentimental eye [the] conference championship games, but those are also in danger, as we know, going forward.”
Read more from College Football HQ
NIL
Major college football program declines bowl game bid after losing head coach
The Iowa State Cyclones will not play a postseason bowl game after all.
Iowa State (8-4) has reportedly declined a bowl bid as the program moves immediately into a coaching transition that accelerated this week, multiple people familiar with the situation told On3.
The decision arrived after Matt Campbell accepted the Penn State job, and Iowa State named Washington State’s Jimmy Rogers to replace him.
The Sun Belt fined Marshall $100,000 after it withdrew from the Independence Bowl in 2024 because of a mass player exodus.
The Big 12 itself has fined member schools previously in 2025 for other infractions, so financial penalties or public reprimands are within the conference’s authority.
The Big 12 will formally review Iowa State’s decision and consult with bowl partners to determine a potential fine or punishment.
Iowa State turns down bowl bid, sources told @On3sports. Cyclones are 2nd Big 12 team that was bowl eligible that opted not to play & could be subject to a league fine, source saidhttps://t.co/oRbPrNx5PJ pic.twitter.com/e8uSvvxc2u
— Brett McMurphy (@Brett_McMurphy) December 7, 2025
The Cyclones opened the 2025 season 5-0 and at one point reached the national rankings, but a four-game midseason slide pushed them off that path.
The team recovered with late wins over TCU, Kansas, and Oklahoma State and reached bowl eligibility with a 20-17 road victory at TCU on November 8.
The season finished at 8-4 overall and 5-4 in conference play.

The reported decision to decline a bowl is tied directly to off-field upheaval.
Campbell’s move to Penn State and the subsequent arrival of Rogers left Iowa State confronting immediate questions about who would coach a bowl game, which assistants would stay for postseason preparation, and how roster availability might be affected amid late-season transfers and staff turnover.
Initial reporting cites those uncertainties, along with the program’s desire to pivot quickly toward building for 2026, as the rationale for opting out.
This choice comes on the heels of a similar development earlier in the week: Kansas State, another bowl-eligible Big 12 team, informed the conference it would not accept a bowl invite.
Read More at College Football HQ
- Nick Saban sends strong message on head coach replacing James Franklin at Penn State
- ‘College GameDay’ announces celebrity guest picker for SEC Championship game
- Kirk Herbstreit reacts to ESPN College GameDay’s historic reveal
- Andy Reid reportedly involved in coaching candidate rejecting Penn State
NIL
Notre Dame football only hurts itself by opting out of bowl
Updated Dec. 7, 2025, 6:24 p.m. ET
- Notre Dame has declined to participate in a bowl game after being left out of the College Football Playoff.
- The team was passed over for the CFP in favor of Miami, a team that defeated the Irish during the season.
Let me see if I’ve got this straight. The team that gets more help, more deference from the College Football Playoff and the bowl system than any other, is taking its ball and going home.
Well, boo-freaking-hoo.
No bowl game for Notre Dame, everyone. They’ll show that CFP selection committee who’s boss.
They’ll walk right out of the bowl system, and into the loving, waiting arms of self-pity. Which, of course, tracks.
You’ve got to be kidding me.
Notre Dame lost to Miami, and lost the CFP argument. Not only that, the Irish have beaten no team with a pulse, and had no argument that could stick.
No amount of whining and complaining is going to change it. Certainly not a statement released four hours after the CFP did the right thing by choosing the Canes over the Irish, one that humbly thanked friends, family and fans and declared the team was “hoping to bring the 12th national title to South Bend in 2026.”
How about finishing 2025 first?
How about toughen up, hop on a plane to beautiful Orlando and play a grinder of a bowl game against a tough, physical BYU team that — I know this is going to shock you — is also upset about not reaching the CFP.
To say nothing of the life-sized Pop-Tart that awaits the winner of the best non-CFP game of the postseason.
This Notre Dame move just smacks of elitism, of we’re better than you and your playoff and we’re going to prove it. Only there’s one teeny-weeny problem: The CFP does’t need Notre Dame.
The games will go on, a national champion will be crowned and another year will be added to the last time Notre Dame won it all. Which is 1988, in case you’re wondering.
Just how long ago was that? It was also the same year Indiana last beat Ohio State before Saturday night’s monumental moment in the Big Ten Championship game.
That game, that specific night in Indianapolis — merely 130 miles from South Bend — should be a defining statement for Notre Dame and any other blue-blood college football program of the past. The game has changed, drastically.
What was once elite, can easily no longer be. What was once the worst program in college football — with the right hire and whole lot of NIL cash — can be its best.
College football doesn’t need Notre Dame like it used to, doesn’t need the charm and glory and pageantry of the Four Horsemen and Touchdown Jesus and those magnificent gold helmets. Get over yourself, Irish — it’s a new world.
The quicker Notre Dame figures it out, the quicker it realizes every game, every moment on the field, is another chance to convince high school and transfer portal players to come play in the freezing Midwest and try to win a national title for the first time in nearly 40 years.
Young men aren’t interested in taking a stand against anything. They’re invested in making money by playing football, and if you’re really fortunate, maybe somewhat interested in graduating from the same school.
Decades ago, there was an unwritten rule at Notre Dame that prevented the school from playing any bowl game outside the major bowls. But there was a dirty secret behind it.
It wasn’t that Notre Dame was standing on principle, and only wanted to extend a season for players if it meant a major bowl game. It’s because by playing in a bowl game, television-friendly Notre Dame was elevating the status of other schools.
Especially if the Irish lost.
But now there’s another not-so-secret reality for Notre Dame: BYU doesn’t need the Irish. Nor does any other program in college football.
Nor does the CFP or the bowl system or any blue-chip player. The ACC still does, but that’s why Notre Dame is in this mess in the first place.
The best part of the temper tantrum is Notre Dame has been revealed to be just another team, just another program trying to find its way in the ever-changing college football world.
One that isn’t waiting around for the Irish anymore.
Matt Hayes is the senior national writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.
NIL
Booger McFarland calls out historical college football program for skipping bowl game
The College Football Playoff has changed basically everything about college football. If there was any doubt on that front, Sunday’s bowl selection situation provided plenty of proof. Several lower-tier power conference teams turned down bowls, leading to several previously ineligible 5-7 teams being offered bowls only for those teams to turn down bowls. But that whole fiasco was a relatively minor issue compared with the day’s biggest story.
Booger McFarland Goes Old School
While ESPN analyst Booger McFarland has covered college football for over a decade and a half and is aware of all the new shifts in the game, he is at heart still something of an old-school guy. Behind the successful broadcaster lies a nasty former defensive lineman who is nicknamed “Booger” after all. And McFarland’s sensibilities were justly set askew by the Notre Dame Fighiting Irish.
Notre Dame Drops Out
After being the first team out of the College Football Playoff field, Notre Dame turned down an opportunity to play in a bowl game. Reportedly offered a slot in the Pop Tarts Bowl against a BYU team that was the second team out of the CFP field, the Irish instead decided to take their metaphorical ball and go home. Enter Booger with some truth bombs.
Booger’s Thoughts
Weak move https://t.co/IaTK1ufIVl
— Booger (@ESPNBooger) December 7, 2025
McFarland elaborated in another Tweet, stating, “I understand Notre Dame being upset about the playoff but to throw a pity party and not play in a bowl game is quite a new precedent for a 10-2 football team.” In yet another Tweet, he sarcastically suggested that Notre Dame’s behavior was “really teaching the kids a great lesson.”
Florida State Stayed In
This situation is virtually unprecedented. In 2023, an undefeated Florida State team was turned down by the then-four team CFP. Amid much hand-wringing, No. 5 Florida State ended up in the Orange Bowl, where they (without starting QB Jordan Travis due to injury) were waxed 63-3 by Georgia. That said, embrassing as that performance was, Florida State did show up and play the game.
Other Bowl Dropouts
Kansas State and Iowa State also both turned down bowl bids. 8-4 Iowa State is in the midst of a coaching transition after Matt Campbell headed to Penn State and new coach Jimmy Rogers is newly hired. Likewise, Kansas State saw Chris Kleiman retire and Collin Klein begin his own tenure. Both schools were reportedly fined $500,000 by the Big 12 for turning down bowl bids.
No other team has had the audacity to say “CFP or bust” like Notre Dame. Whatever tweaks the CFP will make after a controversial season, to have teams diving out of bowls over a perceived slight is an issue that will certainly be considered. It doesn’t sound like Booger McFarland will forget Notre Dame’s decision anytime soon.
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