NIL
Qatar Airways signs $97m deal to sponsor new rugby tournament
Alamy via Reuters Connect Blair Kinghorn of Scotland scores a try against Australia at Murrayfield. The sides will compete in rugby’s new Nations Championship 8-year deal for Nations Championship Qatar to host competition in 2028 Biggest title sponsorship in rugby The agreement is the biggest title sponsorship in international rugby, according to The Guardian. The […]

Alamy via Reuters Connect
- 8-year deal for Nations Championship
- Qatar to host competition in 2028
- Biggest title sponsorship in rugby
The agreement is the biggest title sponsorship in international rugby, according to The Guardian. The value for each Nations Championship edition is more than million, compared with about .5 million for Guinness’s deal to sponsor the Six Nations tournament, the newspaper said.
Qatar will host the second Nations Championship in 2028. The country will have the option of staging the event again in 2030 or 2032 if revenue targets are met.
Other regional airlines, such as Emirates, Etihad and Riyadh also sponsor football teams and stadiums across Europe.
The eight-year deal will cover the qualifying matches and finals for the first four editions of the rugby union tournament from 2026 to 2034.
Saudi Arabia’s spending spree has included establishing the breakaway LIV Golf tour, hosting world title fights in boxing, buying Premier League club Newcastle United and winning the right to host the 2034 World Cup.
The championship will pit the Six Nations teams (France, Ireland, England, Scotland, Wales and Italy) against the leading southern hemisphere sides – Argentina, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa – and others.
Qatar Airways has agreed a million deal to sponsor the new World Rugby Nations Championship.
Gulf money has been pouring into sport in recent years. Qatar Sports Investment, a subsidiary of the country’s sovereign wealth fund the Qatar Investment Authority, owns the French football team Paris Saint-Germain. Qatar Airways is the club’s shirt sponsor.
Qatar had wanted to stage the first four Nations Championship finals, but the Irish and French unions rejected that proposal.
NIL
Softball Begins Los Angeles Regional on Friday with SDSU
Story Links TEMPE – Sun Devil Softball makes its 34th appearance in the NCAA Softball Championship when it faces San Diego State on Friday at 7 p.m. AZT on ESPN2 in the first round of the Los Angeles Regional. Arizona State is the No. 2 seed at the regional, […]

TEMPE – Sun Devil Softball makes its 34th appearance in the NCAA Softball Championship when it faces San Diego State on Friday at 7 p.m. AZT on ESPN2 in the first round of the Los Angeles Regional. Arizona State is the No. 2 seed at the regional, while San Diego State is the No. 3 seed.
UCLA is the host and No. 1 seed of the Los Angeles Regional. They will face No. 4 seed UC Santa Barbara in the first game at 4:30 p.m. AZT on Friday. The double-elimination bracket at Easton Stadium will feature three games on Saturday, leaving two teams to play in the Region Final on Sunday.
How to Follow
All NCAA Tournament games will be available for viewing on the ESPN Family of Networks. Courtney Lyle (PBP) and Danielle Lawrie (analyst) will call the action in Los Angeles.
Live scoring will be available during each game. Links for all of the live features are available on the softball schedule page at TheSunDevils.com.
Updates will also be provided on social media via X/Twitter (@asusoftball) and Instagram (@sundevilsb).
Sun Devil Notes
The Sun Devils are 35-19 this season and have earned a regional bid for the first time since 2022. They finished fifth in the Big 12 regular season standings at 14-10 and advanced to the semifinals of the Big 12 Championship.
ASU enters the Regional fourth in the Big 12 with a .303 batting average and a .843 OPS. They average 4.78 runs per game and place third in the conference with 420 hits, fourth with 50 home runs and 51 stolen bases.
Arizona State pitchers hold a 3.40 ERA and 1.38 WHIP entering Friday. The staff leads the conference – and ranks eighth in the NCAA – with an average of 7.73 strikeouts per seven innings while adding a 3.12 strikeout-to-walk ratio.
About the Los Angeles Regional
UCLA earned the No. 9 national seed with a 49-10 overall record and a runner-up finish in the Big Ten by going 17-5. Megan Grant (23) and Jordan Woolery (20) have combined to hit 43 home runs while Savannah Pola is batting .439.
San Diego State earned an automatic bid to the tournament after winning its third straight Mountain West tournament with a 37-17 record. Bella Espinoza leads SDSU with 62 hits, while Shannon Cunningham has eight home runs and 35 RBIs.
UC Santa Barbara won six straight elimination games to capture the inaugural Big West Championship with a 34-24 record. Giselle Mejia leads the Gauchos with a .391 average while Bella Fuentes has 11 home runs and 60 RBIs.
Postseason History
ASU will be making its 34th appearance in the NCAA Softball Tournament. The Sundevils have an 85-52 record in the Regional round, and the Sun Devils have advanced to the Super Regionals, which began during the 2005 season, 10 times in program history, with the last coming in 2022. The team has reached the Women’s College World Series 19 times overall, including 12 times since softball became an NCAA sport in 1982, with four National Championships.
NCAA Tournament Experience
Only two players on this year’s ASU squad – AJ Murphy and Nehanda Lewis – have played in an NCAA Regional. Murphy has played in 12 NCAA postseason games with San Diego State over three seasons. Murphy went 11-for-38 (.289) in those outings with three doubles, two home runs, and eight RBIs.
Lewis made one appearance as a pinch runner for UCF during the 2023 Tallahassee Regional. Kelsey Hall was on the 2021 Fresno State team that played in the Los Angeles Regional, but she was out with an injury.
Strike First, Finish Strong
The Sun Devils have habitually scored early in games, outscoring their opponents 89-46 in the first two innings this season. ASU has crossed the plate 52 times in the first inning, more than in any other. Those early runs contribute to a 24-3 record when the Sun Devils score first, including a 16-2 mark when scoring in the first inning.
ASU has also put teams away by scoring late in games. They have an 81-57 edge in scoring in the fifth and sixth innings, with 47 runs scored in the fifth alone. The Sun Devils are 23-1 when leading after five and 27-0 when leading after six.
Three is Key
Scoring at least three runs in a game has been crucial to a positive result for the Sun Devils this season. ASU has gone 33-6 when they put three-plus runs on the board, including an 18-0 record when they score at least six runs.
In contrast, the team is just 13-19 when the opposition scores at least three runs and 22-0 when they hold the opposition to two or fewer.
Brown is Back
After sitting out last season with an injury, Kenzie Brown has returned as one of the top pitchers in the country. Entering the weekend, Brown is third in the NCAA with 265 strikeouts and second at 11.77 strikeouts per seven innings. Her strikeout total is the highest of any pitcher in a Power 4 conference.
Brown had 18 strikeouts against BYU on March 6 to tie the ASU record for strikeouts in a 7-inning game. She ranks in the Big 12 top five in 11 statistical categories, including second by allowing 4.13 hits per seven innings, third with a 1.29 ERA, and fourth with 19 wins. Brown’s strikeout total is the 10th-most for a season in ASU history, and she has double-digit strikeouts in a game 11 times.
Hall Pass
Kelsey Hall opened the season in the starting lineup 277 days after tearing her ACL. Having started all 54 games, Hall is batting .325 with a .929 OPS. She leads the team with 47 RBIs, posting 53 hits with six doubles and 10 home runs.
In her sixth season of collegiate softball, Hall ranks 28th among players with 159 RBIs and 30th with 364 total bases. She is also 33rd with 152 runs scored and 39th with 40 home runs.
Tanya Time
Tanya Windle leads the team with 60 hits and a .368 batting average. She also has 13 doubles and three triples, ranking third in the Big 12 in doubles and seventh in hits. Windle has 17 multi-hit games and four games with three-plus hits.
Windle ranks 17th among active NCAA players with 12 triples in her career. Her .392 career batting average is 13th among active players with at least 475 career at-bats.
Freshman Gem Part 1
Tiare Ho-Ching is batting .344 with 56 hits and 24 RBIs. The freshman has one of the two 4-hit games by a Sun Devil this season while adding eight multi-RBI outings. Ho-Ching has a hit in 10 of the last 14 games, with four multi-hit games during the run.
Ho-Ching has settled in as the team’s leadoff hitter. ASU has gone 25-11 when she bats in the No. 1 spot in the lineup, and she reaches 45 percent of the time when leading off an inning.
Freshman Gem Part 2
Ashleigh Mejia leads the club with 13 home runs and is second with 44 RBIs. Seven of the freshman’s homers have tied the game or given ASU the lead. She had four multi-hit games during April, with 11 multi-RBI games during the season.
Her 13 home runs are the second-most by a Freshman in the Big 12 this season and fifth-most by a freshman in ASU history. Mejia batted .310 and was third in the Big 12 with nine home runs and second with 26 RBIs in conference games.
Around the Horn
Samantha Swan has been behind the plate at some point in every game this season while starting at catcher 53 times. She is batting .313 with 46 hits and 13 doubles. Her four games with at least three hits are tied for the most on the team.
AJ Murphy capped the regular season with a .365 average and five home runs. She homered twice in the final four games of the regular season and tallied seven multi-hit games.
Meika Lauppe enters the Regional as the No. 2 pitcher on the staff with a 9-8 record, three saves, and a 3.13 ERA. Her 77 strikeouts are second on the team, and she limits the opposition to a .285 batting average.
NIL
How Mizzou is dealing with uncertainty
The Missouri Tiger athletic department was prepared for change. Athletic Director Laird Veatch had the Tigers’ ready for the implementation of revenue sharing and roster limits, prepared to take advantage of new rules and opportunities as soon as they arose. But then, the House settlement wasn’t passed immediately, and now the Tigers are stuck in […]

The Missouri Tiger athletic department was prepared for change.
Athletic Director Laird Veatch had the Tigers’ ready for the implementation of revenue sharing and roster limits, prepared to take advantage of new rules and opportunities as soon as they arose.
But then, the House settlement wasn’t passed immediately, and now the Tigers are stuck in a holding pattern, waiting to find out if they cut all their walk-ons and prepared for revenue sharing for nothing.
“You’re kind of building the plane as you fly, so to speak,” Veatch said. “… There’s a lot of challenges, a lot of unknown, but we get enough information where we’re able to make some of the key decisions. And, you know, we’re now right at a point with the settlement, where we’re waiting to hear, what’s that kind of final piece with the roster limits and how does this work out? So, we made a lot of decisions up to this point and we continue to adjust and work through that as it finalizes.”
The delay has directly affected the Tigers’ ability to build rosters moving forward.
From the football team having December discussions to the basketball team working in the portal.
“I spent a ton of time trying to figure out the new revenue sharing system and how do you, how are you going to divide the money and the cap,” Missouri football coach Eliah Drinkwitz said. “And what are we going to do with NIL and how do we get to 105, then … the judge says we may grandfather in roster limits. I don’t know what the crap is going on.
“We wasted a lot of mental energy and I’ve heard from a lot of players, we told all our guys in Decemver, you know, ‘This is what we think the new framework is going to be,’ and now, if they go back to grandfathering it in, it’s just frustrating.”
That frustration isn’t new for Drinkwitz. Every year he has been at Missouri, there has been some type of major change to how college football, and sometimes college sports in general, operates. From NIL and the transfer portal to the college football playoff expanding to the still likely implementation of revenue sharing.
And while the Tigers have grown into one of the most successful programs in the sport these past couple of years, that frustration continues to build for the coach.
“Let the practitioners have a say in what we’re doing,” Drinkwitz said. “… We’ll adapt, we’ll adapt to whatever they say, we’ll find a way, we’ll figure it out. But I hope, my hope, is that we understand this is an unbelievable game. College athletics is a worthwhile fabric of the culture of the United States of America, not just football, not just basketball, not just revenue-generating sports, but also the olympic sports, they all matter. We need to have some sort of governing structure that doesn’t have a lawsuit every single day.”
But even if the House settlement passes soon, that wish for a more centralized governing body would still take time to develop and more major changes would have to be implemented almost immediately for a semblance of stability. The clearest example, Veatch noted, is the timing of the sports calendar, largely shown through the football and basketball transfer portals, which occur during the heart of the sports’ postseasons.
“This is one of the many reasons why we need the House settlement to go through and get approved,” Veatch said. “So that we can then move on to all the other things, right? And that is one of the many things we need to really work through is our calendar and how we manage, you know, transfer portals and not only for football, for all of our sports. That there needs to be adjustments that will continue to take place after, after that, after that is settled, then we move on to the next thing.”
The Missouri Tigers have succeeded in recent years because they have been adaptable and willing to change with the times. Taking advantage of NIL early on, building through the transfer portal where possible, investing in the future and making plans for what is to come.
But now the Tigers have spent so much time planning for what was expected to be the next step, they just have to sit and wait for it to happen.
NIL
Georgia insider confirms everyone’s suspicion, NIL money took Bulldogs down
Five-star offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell is officially off the board. Cantwell, who is the No. 1 player in the country, has opted to commit to Miami (FL) over Georgia, Ohio State and Oregon. This news came as somewhat of a surprise because not long ago the Bulldogs were the team predicted to win this recruitment. […]

Five-star offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell is officially off the board. Cantwell, who is the No. 1 player in the country, has opted to commit to Miami (FL) over Georgia, Ohio State and Oregon.
This news came as somewhat of a surprise because not long ago the Bulldogs were the team predicted to win this recruitment. And not long ago actually means not long ago because 24 hours before his commitment most recruiting experts were siding with Georgia in this recruitment.
But Cantwell once again proved that no one ever actually knows what is happening in a recruitment because he ditched Georgia at the last second.
So why did Cantwell pick the Hurricanes over Georgia? Immediately after committing he shared how he loved Miami’s coaching staff and their proven ability to develop offensive lineman. But there was another reason he chose Miami, and insider Brooks Austin with Bulldogs on SI confirmed what everyone thought after seeing Cantwell choose Miami.
Sources told me last week price tag for Jackson Cantwell escalated to close to $5m.
Miami called and called late into the evening. Eventually the guranteed money won out I’m told.
That being said, Mirabal and a few million aren’t a bad decision.
— Brooks Austin (@BrooksAustinBA) May 13, 2025
Jackson Cantwell chose Miami because of the money
According to Austin, Cantwell chose Miami because of their large NIL offer. Austin details how Miami was calling Cantwell “late into the evening” and were continuing to increase their offer until he said yes.
About a week ago, Cantwell reportedly was set to make about $2 million from Miami in his first season alone, but Austin shared that Cantwell now expects to make $5 million from Miami. Austin later explained that this $5 million is split between two years, with another increase likely to come ahead of his third season with the Hurricanes.
Knowing how much NIL factored into Cantwell’s decision, it’ s hard to imagine a scenario where Kirby Smart is that upset. In fact, Smart has been quoted saying he doesn’t want players in his program that appear to only care about NIL. So according to this philosphy, missing on Cantwell isn’t all that bad.
No one can deny Cantwell doesn’t love a lot of things about Miami, but it’s also impossible to suggest that NIL wasn’t the biggest factor in his decision to choose the Hurricanes over Georgia.
NIL
U.S. Senator turns heads by wanting more control over NIL
The gloves are off, and Senator Tommy Tuberville isn’t holding back. In a recent interview with CNN, the former Auburn football coach-turned-lawmaker doubled down on his mission to reshape college athletics—and it starts with rolling back what he sees as the chaos created by Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) compensation. “I think the NIL is […]

The gloves are off, and Senator Tommy Tuberville isn’t holding back. In a recent interview with CNN, the former Auburn football coach-turned-lawmaker doubled down on his mission to reshape college athletics—and it starts with rolling back what he sees as the chaos created by Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) compensation.
“I think the NIL is in dire need of restructuring,” Tuberville said, referencing a new college sports commission in the works, with Alabama legend Nick Saban reportedly involved. The commission, according to Tuberville, is designed to bring “order” back to the NCAA’s new financial era—where players now hold a piece of the power that used to belong solely to schools and coaches.
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But let’s be clear: Tuberville isn’t just concerned with fairness—he wants control. In an earlier radio interview, Tuberville spelled out what he envisions: “Everybody would be on the same level. We’ve got to come up with some rules for the transfer portal, possibly a contract for players.” Translation? Less money, less mobility, and more regulation on the athletes who are finally seeing their value recognized.
And he’s not alone. Tuberville cited conversations with Auburn basketball coach Bruce Pearl, who called NIL and the transfer portal “an absolute disaster.” But who’s it really a disaster for? Players like Livvy Dunne, Bronny James, and Shedeur Sanders raked in millions—earning what the market says they’re worth. On3 recently estimated Dunne’s NIL valuation at $3.9 million, while Sanders was close to $4.6 million.
The outcry from coaches and politicians sounds less like concern for college sports and more like panic over a shift in power dynamics. Tuberville’s push to restrict freedom and earning potential paints a clear picture: they want amateurism for the players and professionalism for everyone else.
The danger? If this commission is formed without athlete representation, it won’t be reform—it’ll be regression.
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Fans of college sports need to stay loud. NIL isn’t the problem—it’s progress. And if Tuberville gets his way, the clock might just be turned back on the student-athletes who’ve finally started to win.
Related: Kentucky recruit makes unique decision with bold NIL power move
Related: Prep Hoops star makes major announcement regarding future
NIL
Report: Details emerge on proposed spring college football calendar, single transfer portal window
A proposal for a new spring college football calendar was shared with coaches at the ACC spring meetings, Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger reported. It would include adding six contactless OTA-style practices, and a single transfer portal window continues to be discussed for either January, March or April. Under the proposal – shared with multiple ACC coaches […]

A proposal for a new spring college football calendar was shared with coaches at the ACC spring meetings, Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger reported. It would include adding six contactless OTA-style practices, and a single transfer portal window continues to be discussed for either January, March or April.
Under the proposal – shared with multiple ACC coaches – the OTA-like practices would likely be in May or June, according to Dellenger. The limit of 15 spring practices will still be in place, meaning teams would have 21 total counting the contactless practices.
Another version also includes the ability to spread those practices over two five-week periods between February and April and late May into June, per Dellenger. Regardless, a decision is not expected until one comes on a single transfer portal window, as well as the House v. NCAA settlement.
The idea of OTA-style practices gained steam this past spring as programs around the country opted not to hold traditional spring scrimmages. Many around college football also called for a potential change to the calendar due to the expanded College Football Playoff, including Ohio State coach Ryan Day as his team comes off a national championship victory over Notre Dame.
As for the transfer portal, current rules call for two windows – one in the winter after the final CFP rankings announcement and another during the spring. However, coaches don’t want the portal to open during the spring, according to On3’s Pete Nakos. Instead, they want one singular window.
“I’m certainly in favor of shortening the portal windows,” South Carolina head coach Shane Beamer previously told On3. “I’m not anti-portal. We’ve benefited from the portal, but people don’t need two different portal windows that cover around six weeks to decide that they want to transfer from somewhere. You either want to be a part of that program or you don’t.
That decision, however, won’t come until after one comes down on the House settlement. Judge Claudia Wilken sent the two sides back to make changes to the verbiage around roster limits and threatened to deny final approval if they did not do so. Those revisions came last week as the plaintiffs and defendants agreed to a plan to allow schools to opt-in to “grandfather” spots on roster for athletes who were set to lose them due to the settlement.
Friday marks the deadline to file objections to the revisions. Now, it’s up to Wilken to decide whether the agreement warrants final approval.
NIL
Kentucky’s Mark Pope sends blunt $200M NIL message to rest of NCAA
If Kentucky basketball is playing a money game, head coach Mark Pope just went all-in. With a smirk and a mic-drop moment, Pope claimed the Wildcats are operating on a nearly $200 million roster. Yes, you read that right — $200 million. Advertisement “It’s close to $200 million,” Pope said during a recent press conference, […]

If Kentucky basketball is playing a money game, head coach Mark Pope just went all-in.
With a smirk and a mic-drop moment, Pope claimed the Wildcats are operating on a nearly $200 million roster. Yes, you read that right — $200 million.
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“It’s close to $200 million,” Pope said during a recent press conference, flashing a grin. “We would like to win at everything, guys. Like, we really would.”
Whether hyperbole or not, the message was loud and clear: Kentucky is embracing the NIL era with open arms — and deep pockets.
Early projections estimate that the Wildcats’ 2025-26 roster could carry a combined NIL value north of $20 million. That figure alone would place Kentucky among the most lucrative programs in the country. While exact numbers remain speculative, Pope’s public stance adds weight to whispers that Big Blue Nation isn’t just aiming to compete — it’s aiming to lead.
“We want to have the highest NIL. We want to have the best players. We want to win the most games,” Pope emphasized. “This is the flagship program in the country.”
Feb 22, 2025; Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA; Kentucky Wildcats head coach Mark Pope directs his team against the Alabama Crimson Tide during the first half at Coleman Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Will McLelland-Imagn Images Will McLelland-Imagn Images
That’s more than talk. Pope, in his second year at the helm, is building a team that reflects that ambition — stacked with high-profile recruits and seasoned transfers drawn by both Kentucky’s legacy and its financial opportunities.
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With NIL reshaping the landscape of college sports, Kentucky appears poised to be a model for what elite programs can become: well-funded, player-focused, and unapologetically competitive.
“Our job is to go be the best at everything,” Pope said. “So we’re not shying away from that. Like, it’s important to us.”
As college hoops continues to adapt to a business-first model, Pope’s comments are more than a punchline — they’re a warning shot. Kentucky isn’t just playing the game; it’s rewriting the rules.
Related: Kentucky recruit makes unique decision with bold NIL power move
Related: Kentucky’s bold NIL model has incredible link to HBCU coach
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