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Pima College offering NIL support to student-athletes

After leading the Pima College women’s basketball team to the NJCAA Division II title game in 2024-25, Aztecs coach Todd Holthaus picked up another recruiting tool this week. Pima’s head coach Todd Holthaus gathers the Aztecs for last-second instructions before the tip-off against Scottsdale in the NJCAA Region I, Division II semifinal at Pima Community […]

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After leading the Pima College women’s basketball team to the NJCAA Division II title game in 2024-25, Aztecs coach Todd Holthaus picked up another recruiting tool this week.






Pima’s head coach Todd Holthaus gathers the Aztecs for last-second instructions before the tip-off against Scottsdale in the NJCAA Region I, Division II semifinal at Pima Community College West, March 7, 2024.




His players will now be able to seek NIL opportunities via Opendorse, after the school announced a partnership with the NIL platform this week. Pima says it is the first Arizona community college to provide NIL support for its athletes.

“I think having the opportunity to do that, for some of these kids, may make their recruiting decisions easier,” Holthaus said. “They know they can come to Pima and take advantage of it.”

It isn’t NIL as it is now most commonly defined — as in booster-fueled NIL collectives that sometimes pay players up to six- or seven-figure annual amounts — but instead it is in the traditional commercial NIL sense where athletes connect with business or individuals via Opendorse profiles.

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“Our budgets are so small that we’re lucky if we get a local business to sponsor us or donate to us,” said Holthaus, who is also Pima’s assistant AD. “So it’s nothing on that (collective) level and that’s OK, because we don’t have the manpower to regulate something like that. But Opendorse allows the athlete to work as an individual, and they get to handle it themselves.”

Several Pima athletes have already established profiles on Opendorse, including several men’s soccer players and men’s basketball starter Gabe Oldham. Their profiles typically offer videos, social media posts or appearances for fees starting at $10 while there’s also a link to profiles for businesses to send offers.






Pima center Gabe Oldham (32) rises above the crowd to snare an inlet pass during the first half against Chandler-Gilbert in Tucson on March 7, 2025.




“Kids nowadays, high school seniors, they love that kind of stuff,” Holthaus said. “They’re social media professionals, and a lot of them have thousands of followers. So now they can do these little marketing deals or promote products and make a few extra bucks.”

Pima AD Ken Jacome said in a statement that the partnership with Opendorse would allow the school to strengthen relationships with local businesses and community members “in ways that uplift both our athletes and our region.”

Athletes who create Opendorse platforms while at Pima can also continue them if they enroll at another college or university. But in the meanwhile, NIL may offer Pima athletes a chance to supplement or maybe even replace traditional ways of funding their educations.

“Our kids have always had to either do federal work study or find a job on the side,” Holthaus said. “But some of them are social media savvy enough that they can do these shout-outs, and they can do things via social media where you don’t have to go clock in and clock out. It’s something they can do in their free time between classes.

“We’re just excited about it.”

Contact sports reporter Bruce Pascoe at bpascoe@tucson.com. On X(Twitter): @brucepascoe



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Latest NCAA Baseball Rankings – Georgia Bulldogs Stay Put Ahead of SEC Tournament

The Georgia Bulldogs stayed put in the latest NCAA baseball rankings. The final weekend of the regular season wrapped up and now it is postseason play time. The Georgia Bulldogs ended their regular season on a good note as they took the series against Texas A&M by winning game three on Saturday. However, the series […]

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The Georgia Bulldogs stayed put in the latest NCAA baseball rankings.

The final weekend of the regular season wrapped up and now it is postseason play time. The Georgia Bulldogs ended their regular season on a good note as they took the series against Texas A&M by winning game three on Saturday. However, the series win didn’t do anything for them in the latest rankings.

Georgia did earn the fifth seed for the SEC tournament that is this week in Hoover, Alabama. The Bulldogs will play the winner of Kentucky and Oklahoma and the winner of Georgia’s game will move on to play Vanderbilt in the quarterfinals.

While the SEC tournament provides one last shot for teams give a good final impression, all that matters is where they are seeded next Monday during the field of 64 selection show. The Dawgs are in a good spot and will likely earn a top seed which will allow them to host the regional and super regional rounds.

Last season, Georgia advanced to the super regional round and faced off against NC State, but fell one game short of making it to Omaha. This season, they will look to final punch their ticket to the College World Series.

In the latest rankings though, there isn’t much of an update for Georgia as they stayed right where they were last week.

  1. LSU
  2. Texas
  3. North Carolina
  4. Oregon
  5. Arkansas
  6. Florida State
  7. Oregon State
  8. Auburn
  9. Vanderbilt
  10. Georgia
  11. Coastal Carolina
  12. Southern Miss
  13. UCLA
  14. Clemson
  15. Florida
  16. Georgia Tech
  17. Ole Miss
  18. DBU
  19. Northeastern
  20. UC Irvine
  21. Tennessee
  22. NC State
  23. Alabama
  24. TCU
  25. Kansas

Join the Community:

You can follow us for future coverage by clicking “Follow” on the top right-hand corner of the page. Also, be sure to like us on Facebook @BulldogMaven & follow us on Twitter at @DawgsDaily

Other Georgia News:





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Is Miami paying too much for 5-star OT Jackson Cantwell? College insiders react to massive NIL deal

Miami invested heavily in its future along the offensive line last week with the commitment of five-star tackle Jackson Cantwell. The Hurricanes and Cantwell, the No. 10 overall prospect in the 2026 recruiting class, negotiated an NIL deal 247Sports previously reported approaches $2 million annually.  As a decision on the NCAA v. House settlement nears, […]

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Miami invested heavily in its future along the offensive line last week with the commitment of five-star tackle Jackson Cantwell. The Hurricanes and Cantwell, the No. 10 overall prospect in the 2026 recruiting class, negotiated an NIL deal 247Sports previously reported approaches $2 million annually. 

As a decision on the NCAA v. House settlement nears, Cantwell’s annual figure could essentially amount to roughly 10% of Miami’s “salary cap,” begging the question: Is it practical to allocate that much money to a player who will not take a snap in college for more than a year.

More than a half-dozen sources within college football were asked by 247Sports what they thought of Miami spending big for Cantwell and whether devoting that much money for one high school offensive tackle is worth it.

“If you can pay it, do it,” said one SEC director of player personnel. “Go get that guy.”

It may not be that cut and dried once the House settlement — a decision that could come in a matter of days — is officially approved. All future NIL deals more than $600 will be subject to approval from a clearinghouse that will determine whether they meet the standard of fair market value. Schools, at least on paper, will be far more limited in their spending with revenue sharing (expected to be $14 to $16 million for most Power Four football programs) making up the majority of a pseudo salary cap.

“If it’s coming out of the rev share, there’s no f–king way,” the same SEC director of player personnel said. “That’s a quarterback or a starting left tackle. Cantwell is going to start his career and be at best a quality starter. Not a great one. Not an elite one.”

While most of the sources agreed that $2 million per year is excessive for an offensive tackle recruit, others were more open minded. 

“Yeah, but you can only have one of them,” said an ACC director of player personnel. “You have to invest up front, and that’s what the market is around. You gotta be damn sure (they’re the one).”

When asked about Cantwell’s price tag, a Big 12 general manager said that he’d much rather sign three high school offensive tackles at $100,000 each. The more darts you throw, the more likely it is one will stick and end up as a bargain.

Others weren’t willing to pay up for any high-profile linemen, arguing quality depth across the board in that room is more important than having a single elite piece and deficiencies elsewhere.

“I don’t find that to be the most effective way to build a roster long term,” an SEC director of scouting said. “But in reality, yes, some teams are going to spend that on a premium position or two each class because either they badly need the position in the short term or maybe they just don’t want to play against them for three-plus years.”

There’s no guarantee a $2 million player will stay happy either. That’s their salary floor. There’s nothing preventing a high school player with that sort of salary from coming back and asking for more money once they produce on the field.

That scenario can end in disaster as evidenced by the Nico Iamaleava saga earlier this year.

Cantwell’s future is uncertain, which is what makes Miami’s commitment to him such a fascinating development as college football is set to once again go through foundational change.

“It’s an interesting case study,” said one Big 12 director of player personnel.


InsideTheU is your source for intel and analysis on the Miami Hurricanes. The trusted staff of Gaby Urrutia, David Lake and Chris Stock provides the latest team news, recruiting and transfer scoop, opinions and more. It’s the largest Miami Hurricanes site on the web with market leading coverage for the most dedicated community of fans. Be the first to know the latest scoop with a VIP membership and unlock all the insider content at InsideTheU. 





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Georgia Tech Baseball Now Projected To Host A Regional For First Time Since 2019

Georgia Tech not only got their second straight series win over a ranked ACC opponent, but the Yellow Jackets are now ACC regular season champions for the first time since 2005. Georgia Tech (39-16, 19-11 ACC) came out on top in a tight ACC race that saw six teams win at least 17 conference games, […]

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Georgia Tech not only got their second straight series win over a ranked ACC opponent, but the Yellow Jackets are now ACC regular season champions for the first time since 2005.

Georgia Tech (39-16, 19-11 ACC) came out on top in a tight ACC race that saw six teams win at least 17 conference games, earning its first regular-season championship since it tied for first place in 2011 and its first outright title since 2005. It is Tech’s fifth regular-season championship under legendary 32-year head coach Danny Hall (1997, 2000, 2004, 2005, 2011), who announced in March that this would be his final season at the helm of the Yellow Jackets. 

After a midseason losing streak, it looked like Georgia Tech was going to play its way out of hosting a regional, but with a late-season surge, the Yellow Jackets are now once again projected to host. In the latest D1 Baseball Field of 64 Projections, Georgia Tech is hosting a regional as the No. 16 national seed. The other teams in the region include Tennessee, Arizona State, and Columbia. If Georgia Tech won the regional, they would advance to the super regional to likely face No. 1 overall seed Texas in Austin.

Top-seeded Tech has a double-bye in next week’s ACC Tournament and opens postseason play on Thursday at 3 p.m. against No. 8-seeded Wake Forest, No. 9-seeded Miami (Fla.) or No. 16-seeded California. The single-elimination tournament will be held at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, N.C.

Here is the full bracket for next week:

Game 1: No. 9 Miami vs No. 16 Cal (9:00 a.m. E.T.)

Game 2: No. 12 Virginia Tech vs No. 13 Stanford (1:00 p.m. ET)

Game 3: No. 10 Louisville vs No. 15 Pitt (5:00 p.m. ET)

Game 4: No. 11 Notre Dame vs No. 15 Boston College (9:00 p.m. ET)

Game 5: Winner of Game 1 vs No.8 Wake Forest (9:00 a.m. ET)

Game 6: Winner of Game 2 vs No. 5 Clemson (1:00 p.m. ET)

Game 7: Winner of Game 3 vs No. 7 Duke (5:00 p.m. ET)

Game 8: Winner of Game 4 vs No. 6 Virginia (9:00 p.m. ET)

Game 9: Winner of Game 5 vs No. 1 Georgia Tech (3:00 p.m. ET)

Game 10: Winner of Game 6 vs No. 4 NC State (7:00 p.m. ET)

Game 11: Winner of Game 7 vs No. 2 Florida State (3:00 p.m. ET)

Game 12: Winner of Game 8 vs No. 3 North Carolina (7:00 p.m. ET)



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2025 NCAA Softball Super Regional matchups, schedule

The 16 teams have advanced to Super Regionals and the times are now set. Which teams will forge their path to the Women’s College World Series? All Times Eastern Tallahassee Super Regional No. 12 Texas Tech @ No. 5 Florida State THURSDAY, MAY 22 | 7:00 PM I ESPN2FRIDAY, MAY 23 | 3:00 PM I […]

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The 16 teams have advanced to Super Regionals and the times are now set. Which teams will forge their path to the Women’s College World Series?

All Times Eastern

Tallahassee Super Regional

No. 12 Texas Tech @ No. 5 Florida State

THURSDAY, MAY 22 | 7:00 PM I ESPN2
FRIDAY, MAY 23 | 3:00 PM I ESPN2
SATURDAY, MAY 24 | 7:00 PM

Austin Super Regional

No. 11 Clemson @ No. 6 Texas

THURSDAY, MAY 22 | 9:00 PM I ESPN2
FRIDAY, MAY 23 | 9:00 PM | ESPN2
SATURDAY, MAY 24 | 9:00 PM

Norman Super Regional

No. 15 Alabama @ No. 2 Oklahoma

FRIDAY, MAY 23 | 5:00 PM I ESPN2
SATURDAY, MAY 24 | 3:00 PM
SUNDAY, MAY 25* | TBD

Gainesville Super Regional

Georgia @ No. 3 Florida

FRIDAY, MAY 23 | 11:00 AM I ESPN
SATURDAY, MAY 24 | 11:00 AM
SUNDAY, MAY 25* | TBD

Fayetteville Super Regional

Ole Miss @ No. 4 Arkansas

FRIDAY, MAY 23 | 8:00 PM I ESPNU
SATURDAY, MAY 24 | 9:00 PM
SUNDAY, MAY 25* | TBD

Knovxille Super Regional

Nebraska @ No. 7 Tennessee

FRIDAY, MAY 23 | 7:00 PM | ESPN2
SATURDAY, MAY 24 | 5:00 PM
SUNDAY, MAY 25* | TBD

Columbia Super Regional

No. 9 UCLA @ No. 8 South Carolina

FRIDAY, MAY 23 | 1:00 PM I ESPN2
SATURDAY, MAY 24 | 1:00 PM
SUNDAY, MAY 25* | TBD

Eugene Super Regional

Liberty @ No. 16 Oregon

FRIDAY, MAY 23 | 10:00 PM | ESPNU
SATURDAY, MAY 24 | 7:00 PM
SUNDAY, MAY 25* | TBD

More from Softball America:

Regional Scores and Updates
Coaching Carousel Discussion Board
Transfer Portal Wire



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Prominent CFB Analyst Very Critical of Massive NIL Deal Given to High Schooler

The recent commitment of elite 2026 offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell to the University of Miami sent shockwaves through the college football world. Several of the nation’s top programs, including the University of Georgia Bulldogs, pursued the five-star recruit before he made his decision. While his decision certainly grabbed plenty of headlines on its own, the […]

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The recent commitment of elite 2026 offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell to the University of Miami sent shockwaves through the college football world. Several of the nation’s top programs, including the University of Georgia Bulldogs, pursued the five-star recruit before he made his decision.

While his decision certainly grabbed plenty of headlines on its own, the reported $2 million NIL payday that Cantwell received from Miami has become a much bigger topic of discussion.

Legendary Georgia head coach recently broke his silence on the matter, and another well-known Bulldog has also come out with some rather choice words for the Hurricanes and their decision to spend so much on Cantwell.

David Pollack, who played for the Dawgs from 2002-04, was recently asked about the reported NIL deal Miami agreed to shell out for Cantwell’s services. According to On3’s Sam Gillenwater, the two-time All-American was very critical of the move, to put it lightly

“If you want to spend this much money on a quarterback, we can have the conversation. I’m not spending $2 million on an offensive lineman. Like, I’m just not,” Pollack said. “An offensive lineman is obviously going to be in the mix, can be great, can control the game. The likelihood of them getting dinged up and hurt is highly possible. Like, you play a physical position up front like that, you’re going to get – it’s going to happen.”

For Pollack, making these kinds of NIL investments should clearly only be reserved for the positions that can be true game changers. Quarterback is obviously the most important position on the field, so it makes more sense in his eyes to invest there first.

When it comes to the O-line, however, it just doesn’t make much sense to shell out what he views as quarterback NIL money for an offensive tackle, no matter how dominant the player may be. There are just far too many variables for Pollack’s liking.

At the end of the day, though, all that really matters is whether or not the Hurricanes view it as a wise investment, and clearly, they do. Pollack can disagree with the move all he wants, but it’s just the reality of modern-day recruiting in the age of NIL.



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NBA Teams Reportedly Aware Michigan’s Lendeborg Has ‘Multimillion-Dollar NIL Package’

Michigan forward Yaxel Lendeborg’s reportedly large NIL deal may affect his 2025 NBA draft future, as he could choose to play for the Wolverines during the 2025-26 season. ESPN’s Jeremy Woo reported Monday that NBA teams are “aware Lendeborg has a multimillion-dollar NIL package to attend Michigan next season.” The 22-year-old spent two years at […]

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Michigan forward Yaxel Lendeborg’s reportedly large NIL deal may affect his 2025 NBA draft future, as he could choose to play for the Wolverines during the 2025-26 season.

ESPN’s Jeremy Woo reported Monday that NBA teams are “aware Lendeborg has a multimillion-dollar NIL package to attend Michigan next season.”

The 22-year-old spent two years at UAB from 2023-25 before transferring to Michigan in April, but explained that he wanted to go through the pre-draft process.

“I’m focused on the draft process and making the NBA right now,” Lendeborg said, per ESPN’s Jonathan Givony. “I want a guaranteed contract. That’s the biggest thing, make sure I am in a good spot. I would prefer to play college basketball in Ann Arbor than be in and out of the G League on a two-way. I want to find a safe spot.”

If Lendeborg’s projected draft range drops, he may earn more from playing a year with the Wolverines compared to his first contract in the NBA. The No. 30 overall pick in the 2025 draft can earn as much as $2.7 million for the 2025-26 season, via Spotrac.

Lendeborg was projected to be selected with the No. 31 pick in the latest mock draft from Bleacher Report’s Jonathan Wasserman.

In 37 games with UAB last season, he averaged 17.7 points while leading the AAC with 11.4 rebounds per game. Lendeborg also racked up 1.7 steals and 1.8 blocks on a nightly basis, shooting 52.2 percent from the field and 35.7 percent from behind the arc.

As the draft draws closer, NBA teams appear to have an eye on Lendeborg’s pending decision regarding his college career.



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