Sports
Power conferences pressuring schools on no

The price tag for power conference schools to compete in athletics at the highest level could be a lot higher than the $20-plus million a year they’d pay athletes under current terms of the pending House vs. NCAA settlement.But the additional cost wouldn’t be monetary; it would be exacted in the form of legal rights.And it wouldn’t be the athletes, but rather the conferences themselves, exacting it.That’s the bottom line on an eye-opening Yahoo! Sports report that power conference officials have distributed to schools a draft of an agreement each would be required to sign, under threat of expulsion, in the aftermath of the House settlement. The agreement would bind schools to abiding by the rules of the College Sports Commission, which would be the new enforcement agency in college athletics, and waive the right to bring legal action against its rulings, regardless of any state laws to the contrary.
It’s a bold step that could itself be fraught with legal peril, but it’s a necessary one.
Competitive balance between power conference schools and the Group of Five leagues has long been a lost cause, and the divide there is only widening. But any hope of achieving some semblance of competitive balance within the power conferences might rest in part on this still-evolving document.
Despite the likelihood that the House settlement will include a provision for rules and enforcement around NIL contracts for athletes, a number of states, most recently Tennessee, continue to pass laws that shield schools from any NIL accountability whatsoever.
The NCAA will cough up a projected $2.8 billion in the House settlement, which will usher in the revenue-sharing era of college sports. But for that massive price to be anything close to money well spent from the NCAA’s perspective, the settlement must also provide legally-sustainable parameters for competitive balance. Widely-varying state laws threaten to upend that balance before it even begins. Hence, the message from conferences to schools with this binding agreement appears to be: get on board with uniform rules for all, or find another league.
The House settlement’s vessel for reining in out-of-control NIL contracts is known as NIL Go, a clearinghouse to be run by the accounting firm of Deloitte that will assess the fair market value of an athlete’s name, image and likeness to approve or reject NIL deals. Per Yahoo, Deloitte recently informed ACC athletic directors that while past NIL deals between public companies and athletes would’ve been approved by the clearinghouse at a 90% clip, past NIL deals between boosters and/or collectives would’ve been rejected at a rate of 70%. In other words, companies can’t afford to pay athletes more than their endorsements are worth, but boosters can and will. Because boosters couldn’t care less about endorsement value as long as the athletes are scoring touchdowns and making 3-pointers.
No shocker there, but it illustrates the huge gap between what some athletes’ endorsements are truly worth, and what they’re getting paid.
The clearinghouse, no doubt, will face legal challenges of its own; even if schools are bound by an agreement not to sue, individual athletes can fight in court for their NIL deals on their own. But for the clearinghouse to have any chance at all of succeeding in its mission, every school that signs up for revenue sharing has to be on the same legal page where rule enforcement is concerned.
What’s happening here, in the big picture, is that the interests of both the NCAA and the power conferences are falling into alignment. Despite the fact that the NCAA, at its core, is just a collection of member schools, that doesn’t mean the NCAA and power brokers at the conference level are always in lockstep.
In this case, they certainly are.
And they’d better stay that way, because the House settlement probably won’t settle anything.
Tuscaloosa News columnist Chase Goodbread is also the weekly co-host of Crimson Cover TV on WVUA-23. Reach him at cgoodbread@gannett.com. Follow on X.com @chasegoodbread.
Sports
Emmaleigh Allen named SAC Volleyball Scholar Athlete of the Year
HICKORY, N.C. – Thanks to her contributions both on and off the court, Emmaleigh Allen has been named the South Atlantic Conference Volleyball Scholar Athlete of the Year.
The honor recognizes a student-athlete’s combined excellence in academics, athletics, service, and leadership. Allen is the first Bear to win this award.
Allen was an All-SAC Second Team honoree this season, helping the Bears reach the second round of the NCAA Tournament for just the third time in program history. The senior finished the year with 304 digs, 246 kills, 36 service aces, and started all 31 matches, playing in all but two sets. She was named the SAC Offensive Player of the Week on September 29th for her performances against Catawba and Mars Hill.
The former SAC Freshman of the Year and AVCA Honorable Mention All-American had to persevere these past two years as she missed the entirety of the 2024 season due to injury. Allen didn’t miss a beat this season and was named a team captain by head coach Nicole Barringer.
“Emmaleigh has been a leader for us since she got here. She’s been a leader on the court, in the weight room, and in the classroom. She’s a high achieving individual and is very deserving of this award. We are proud of her and grateful she is a Bear!”
Off the court Allen is just as impressive, holding a 3.95 cumulative GPA in accounting, finance, and management. She was named to the CSC Academic All-District Team in both 2023 and 2025, the only years she was eligible. In 2024 the Wooster, Ohio, native was honored as the Broyhill Family Foundation Scholarship recipient from the Charles M. Snipes College of Business and Economics. She is also involved on campus a tutor and is the vice president of The Hidden Opponent, a club dedicated to mental health advocacy.
Her commitment to excellence and character has earned high praise from university leadership and her coaching staff, who cite her discipline, leadership, and ability to elevate those around her as hallmarks of her collegiate career.
Sports
18 Husker Grads Win in Competition, Classroom – University of Nebraska
Lincoln – A total of 18 current and former Husker student-athletes across all sports will receive their degrees during University of Nebraska-Lincoln Winter Commencement ceremonies at Pinnacle Bank Arena on Saturday, Dec. 20 at 9 a.m.
Seven members of the Nebraska football team headline the graduating class, led by honorable-mention All-Big Ten defensive backs DeShon Singleton, Ceyair Wright and Malcolm Hartzog Jr. The trio of Blackshirts are joined by Janiran Bonner, Aidan Flege, Tyler Knaak and Dylan Parrott. The seven football players who came to Nebraska from seven different states helped the Big Red to back-to-back bowl games in 2024 and 2025.
AVCA All-Region and All-Big Ten volleyball middle blocker Rebekah Allick will earn her degree as a management major. The Lincoln native helped the Huskers to an unbeaten regular season, a Big Ten championship and a trip to the NCAA Elite Eight in 2025. During her career, she was part of three straight teams that won Big Ten titles and advanced to a pair of NCAA Final Fours, including the 2023 NCAA Championship match.
Baseball’s Riley Silva added a pair of Big Ten titles to the graduating class. The outfielder from Cambridge, Ontario, Canada helped the Huskers to back-to-back Big Ten Tournament championships in 2024 and 2025.
Husker soccer players Lauryn Anglim and Sadie Waite also graduated from Nebraska with Big Ten championships in their careers. Anglim (Omaha, Neb.) and Waite (St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada) were starters on NU’s conference title-winning team that advanced to the 2023 NCAA Elite Eight.
The Nebraska track and field/cross country programs contribute six members to the graduating class, including the most decorated individual in the class – 2025 NCAA indoor high jump champion Tyus Wilson. The senior from Sterling, Kan., is a four-time Big Ten high jump champ and a two-time first-team College Sports Communicators Academic All-American.
Teammate Adria Navajon added a Big Ten individual championship for the Husker men’s track and field in the heptathlon in 2025. Liem Chot, Jacquelyn Abanses, Hannah Godwin and Rebecca Pecora round out the list of track and field graduates.
Current men’s basketball guard Sam Hoiberg will add a degree as a sports media and communication major. Hoiberg, who helped the Huskers capture the College Basketball Crown postseason tournament title a year ago, has started every game during Nebraska’s nation-leading 15-game winning streak. The 11-0 Huskers are ranked No. 13 nationally heading into Sunday night’s home game with North Dakota at Pinnacle Bank Arena.
Overall, the 18 Husker graduates in December came to Nebraska from nine states and three foreign countries.
Nebraska continues to feature one of the highest graduation rates in the nation, while leading the nation with 19 NCAA Impact Awards (formerly known as Today’s Top 10) across all sports. Nebraska also leads the Big Ten and ranks second in NCAA Division I with 373 College Sports Communicators Academic All-Americans across all sports. More than 100 Nebraska student-athletes all time have earned prestigious NCAA Postgraduate Scholarships.
December 2025 Nebraska Student-Athlete Graduates (18)
Jacquelyn Abanses (Track & Field/Cross Country) – Lutz, Florida (Business Administration)
Rebekah Allick (Volleyball) – Lincoln, Nebraska (Management)
Lauryn Anglim (Soccer) – Omaha, Nebraska (Nutrition & Health Sciences)
Janiran Bonner (Football) – Ellenwood, Georgia (Child, Youth & Family Studies)
Liem Chot (Track & Field/Cross Country) – Lincoln, Nebraska (English)
Aidan Flege (Football) – Lincoln, Nebraska (Management)
Hannah Godwin (Track & Field/Cross Country) – Kearney, Nebraska (Biological Sciences)
Malcolm Hartzog Jr. (Football) – Silver Creek, Mississippi (Child, Youth & Family Studies)
Sam Hoiberg (Basketball) – Lincoln, Nebraska (Sports Media & Communication)
Tyler Knaak (Football) – Cottonwood Heights, Utah (Environmental Studies)
Adria Navajon (Track & Field) – Rubi, Barcelona, Spain (Child, Youth & Family Studies)
Dylan Parrott (Football) – Eldridge, Iowa (Management)
Rebecca Pecora (Track & Field) – Pioltello, Milan, Italy (Biochemistry/Biological Sciences)
Riley Silva (Baseball) – Cambridge, Ontario, Canada (Child, Youth & Family Studies)
DeShon Singleton (Football) – Amite, Louisiana (Child, Youth & Family Studies)
Sadie Waite (Soccer) – St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada (Marketing)
Tyus Wilson (Track & Field) – Sterling, Kansas (Elementary Education)
Ceyair Wright (Football) – Los Angeles, California (Child, Youth & Family Studies)
Sports
Wisconsin volleyball NCAA semifinal talking points
Sports
ONCE IN A LIFETIME – Baylor
Baylor Bear Insider
GRAPEVINE, Texas – Benjamin Dalton knows that he may never get another chance to coach an athlete as elite as Nathaniel Ezekiel.
“I think a lot of coaches would understand this,” the Baylor assistant coach said of Ezekiel, the 2025 NCAA 400-meter hurdles national champion and Bowerman finalist. “There are some athletes that are once in a lifetime. And not only the talent level, but who is as a young man. He’s a phenomenal human being and an amazing athlete. So, very fortunate, very thankful.”
The fan favorite to win The Bowerman, college track and field’s equivalent of football’s Heisman Trophy, Ezekiel lost out to Arkansas sprinter Jordan Anthony at Thursday’s presentation ceremony at the Gaylord Texan Resort & Convention Center.
“It’s pretty amazing to come out here and see them recognize you for all the hard work and effort you put into the whole year,” said Ezekiel, a nine-time All-American who was also the silver medalist in the 400 meters at the NCAA Indoor Championships. “Every one of us was expecting to be called. Him getting it is cool, and if I got it, it was cool, too. But you have to be happy for other people’s success as well.”
The other men’s finalist was sprint hurdler Ja’Kobe Tharp from Auburn, while Alabama’s Doris Lemngole won the female Bowerman award over Michigan hurdler Savannah Sutherland and New Mexico distance runner Pamela Kosgei.
Ezekiel was Baylor’s first-ever Bowerman finalist, an award that was started in 2009 to honor the nation’s top male and female collegiate track and field athlete.
“Even this morning, I was thinking about many greats we’ve had in the past that probably would have won it,” Baylor head coach Michael Ford said, referencing Michael Johnson and Jeremy Wariner, in particular. “For Nate to be our first (finalist), it’s always going to be historic. I’m proud of Nate, he had a great season. To me, this doesn’t diminish what he did in his four years at Baylor.”
In an interview with Bowerman host and ESPN analyst Larra Overton, Nate talked about writing down the same goal each year and praying about winning a national championship. He finished fourth in the 400 hurdles as a freshman, then won bronze medals each of the next two seasons before a breakthrough senior season with a PR time of 47.49 that ranks as the third-fastest in collegiate history.
“My junior year, when I wrote it down again and it didn’t happen, I thought, ‘Man, God doesn’t like me,”’ he said.
Saving his best for last, though, Ezekiel also set the Baylor program record in the indoor 400 with a time of 44.74. He is also the only man in NCAA history to hold multiple top-10 marks in the outdoor 400-meter hurdles with the third, seventh, eighth and ninth-fastest times.
“When I was looking at Baylor and I kind of looked into their track record, I saw what Clyde Hart had actually done with the program, with the likes of Michael Johnson and Jeremy Wariner,” Ezekiel said. “And then also, with Coach Ford with Trayvon Bromell. I just said, ‘Okay, I have to step in, and I have to leave my name on the mark and do some great things.”’
And that he did, winning six Big 12 championships in addition to his success on the national stage. Turning pro this summer, Ezekiel finished fourth in the 400 hurdles at the World Championships in Tokyo, running a Nigerian national-record time of 47.11.
“I want to be an inspiration to little kids in Africa and around the world,” he said. “And when they look at me, they see a symbol of hope, a symbol of excellence. And whatever you wish in your mind, you have the power to chase your goals and actually make it happen.”
Reflecting on his four years as a student-athlete at Baylor, Nate said, “It’s actually a great community, great people and great coaches.”
“They made me feel like it’s home for me and made things easier for me. Honestly, it was a splendid experience, which I loved.”
Sports
Fans Invited to Kentucky Volleyball Watch Party for National Championship Match in Historic Memorial Coliseum – UK Athletics
LEXINGTON, Ky. – Big Blue Nation is invited to cheer on Kentucky Volleyball as the Wildcats compete for the National Championship during a Lexington Watch Party on Sunday, Dec. 21 inside Historic Memorial Coliseum.
Kentucky will play Texas A&M in the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Mo. ABC will broadcast the match, which will be shown live on the HMC videoboard.
Admission is free, and doors will open at 2:30 p.m. ET.
First serve scheduled for 3:30 p.m. ET.
Concessions will be available throughout the event.
Event Details:
- Who: Kentucky Volleyball fans
- What: National Championship Watch Party
- When: Sunday, Dec. 21 | Doors open 2:30 p.m. ET | Match begins 3:30 p.m. ET
- Where: Historic Memorial Coliseum, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky.
- Admission: Free
Come out and support the Wildcats as they chase a national title!
Sports
Nebraska track and field star wins national honor
Dec. 19, 2025, 6:31 a.m. CT
A Nebraska track and field star won a national honor after a record-setting week. Axelina Johansson was named Big Ten Field Athlete of the Week and USTFCCCA National Athlete of the Week.
Johansson set a school record, a Swedish record and an NCAA indoor record in the shot put with a throw of 19.72m (64-8 ½). She set the records while winning the shot put title at the Husker Holiday Open.
She’s had an accomplished career, competing in the 2024 Summer Olympics and finishing tenth overall. The Hok, Sweden native, also won an NCAA title in the shot put in 2023.
Nebraska returns to competition on Friday, Jan. 16 and Saturday, Jan. 17 at the Graduate Classic at the Devaney Center Indoor Track.
Contact/Follow us @CornhuskersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Nebraska news, notes and opinions.
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