NIL
Quinn Ewers Was Chasing An NFL Dream, While Others Wanted Him To Chase NIL Bag
Who are we to judge a player like Quinn Ewers for his decision to pass up millions in NIL money for an opportunity to live out a dream of playing in the NFL? I found myself asking this question over the weekend, as we watched players being taken in the NFL Draft. Social media, which […]

Who are we to judge a player like Quinn Ewers for his decision to pass up millions in NIL money for an opportunity to live out a dream of playing in the NFL?
I found myself asking this question over the weekend, as we watched players being taken in the NFL Draft. Social media, which is not real life, were in a constant uproar as Ewers sat in what looked like a taxidermy office, watching other players hear their names called over the course of seven rounds.
Up until his name was finally called in the seventh round, with the Miami Dolphins taking a chance on the Texas quarterback, the questions about whether Quinn Ewers should have stayed in college for another season to collect loads of cash through an NIL deal were running rampant.
But, we were missing the point with the former Texas Longhorns gunslinger.
For the past two years, Quinn Ewers has dealt with more than some quarterbacks deal with during their entire tenure at one school. Oh yea, some people forget about the fact that Ewers led Texas to back-to-back college football playoff appearances, while Arch Manning sat on the sidelines waiting for his opportunity to take over the coveted position.
Would Quinn Ewers Have Upped His Draft Stock Next Season?
While Quinn Ewers would have easily made over $5 million if he had entered the transfer portal, and not declared for the NFL Draft, the Texas quarterback was done playing college football. It wasn’t as if he was receiving bad advice from his agents or coaching staff. Ewers knew he could be sitting for a while at home, waiting on that phone call from an NFL team wanting to take a chance on a quarterback who has battled through multiple injuries over the last two seasons.
Sure, Ewers could have returned for another season of college football. But would it have actually helped his draft stock? What more could he have done this upcoming season? It’s not as if teams were harping on his injuries that he overcame during his time at Texas.

ARLINGTON, TEXAS – JANUARY 10: Arch Manning #16 and Quinn Ewers #3 of the Texas Longhorns prior to the Goodyear Cotton Bowl against the Ohio State Buckeyes at AT&T Stadium on January 10, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by CFP/Getty Images)
Would he have succeeded at Notre Dame this year, or any other top-tier program looking to bring in a veteran quarterback? That question will be left unanswered. But, do we actually think he will go in the first few rounds next year? I highly doubt it, though others will obviously disagree.
Here’s a look at the quarterbacks who will be eligible for the 2026 NFL Draft.
- Drew Allar
- Arch Manning
- LaNorris Sellers
- Garrett Nussmeir
- Sam Leavitt
- Dante Moore
- Cade Klubnik
- Carson Beck
Ok, so we want to argue that Ewers would’ve gone before 70% of those guys listed? If you didn’t notice from this years NFL Draft, teams are not looking for projects. There looking for guys who can come in immediately and compete. Besides Cam Ward, Jaxson Dart and Shedeur Sanders, are there quarterbacks that were taken in this year’s draft that could compete for a starting job to open the 2025 season?
The answer is no, unless a team found lighting in a bottle.
Quinn Ewers Was Ready To Live Out A Dream, Not Chase The Money
For all the stuff that we give players for entering the transfer portal and chasing money for another season of college football, Quinn Ewers decided it was time to move on. Why are we bashing the young man for wanting to achieve a dream, and not going to the highest bidder in the collegiate ranks?
At the end of the day, this was his choice. It’s not up to us to decide what’s best for a player. He’ll have to live with the decision, and he seems pretty content with the choice to move on to the professional ranks.
Miami Dolphins general manager Chris Grier mentioned that Ewers had respect from his teammates, while also discussing his competitiveness on the field.
“Mike [McDaniel] and I. We met him the year before at the Texas workout, and we spent some time,” Grier mentioned about Ewers during his press conference. “We talked to coach [Steve] Sarkisian about him, and ‘Sark’ really likes him and was high [on him] and was talking about him playing through the injuries this year, which affected his play a little bit. But he talked about his toughness, his mental toughness, the pushing through with the injury, the expectations, all the pressure with [Arch] Manning there coming in, and so he loved his competitiveness and how he plays and how his teammates respond to him.
“So, he was someone that we always had an eye on looking at, and the opportunity at that point in the draft just made sense for us to pull the pick.”

Quinn Ewers lived out his dream of playing college football, and took a chance on the NFL Draft Via: Trey Wallace
For all the talk from fans about how the college game has turned into just chasing the bag, Quinn Ewers decided to chase his dream. He accomplished things in college football that some quarterbacks can only dream of.
At the end of the day, he wanted to move on. So, who are we to critique his decision? It might work out for Quinn Ewers in the NFL, down the road after learning how to be a professional quarterback. If it doesn’t, then that’s an outcome that Ewers will be able to live with.
The former Longhorn helped lead his favorite team to the college football playoff, helped Steve Sarkisian rebuild the Texas program and made a good amount of money doing it.
Quinn Ewers did it the right way, and now he gets an opportunity to chase another dream. Looking back, he made a decision that was best for him, which is all that matters.
NIL
Pay to Play: College Baseball and the NCAA’s New Economy of Visibility
About 6 minutes reading time. Reginald Armstrong | Aug 12th, 2025 10:55pm EDT Apparently, a judge—Claudia Wilken—has ruled that NCAA Division I universities can now be legitimate modern-day Robin Hoods and pay “student” athletes. On June 6, 2025, she approved the House v. NCAA settlement—a federal court decision that fundamentally reshapes the NCAA’s amateurism model. […]

Reginald Armstrong | Aug 12th, 2025 10:55pm EDT

Apparently, a judge—Claudia Wilken—has ruled that NCAA Division I universities can now be legitimate modern-day Robin Hoods and pay “student” athletes. On June 6, 2025, she approved the House v. NCAA settlement—a federal court decision that fundamentally reshapes the NCAA’s amateurism model.
No more scholarship caps. A new structure for revenue-sharing. And perhaps most notably: the creation of a Name, Image, and Likeness clearinghouse for NIL deals exceeding $600—for transparency, of course.
As an additional development in the House v. NCAA settlement, attorneys have now agreed to allow NIL collectives to exceed the proposed $20.5 million revenue-sharing cap—provided deals meet a loosely defined “fair market value” threshold. This adjustment effectively softens the cap and reopens the door for high-dollar NIL arrangements, particularly among power programs with deep-pocketed boosters.
The payout? $20.5 million per school annually. How that sum gets divvied up remains unclear—I haven’t drilled down into the particulars. But let’s not kid ourselves: the lion’s share will likely be funneled toward college football and men’s basketball.
Still—college baseball is stirring. With the 2025 College World Series freshly concluded and the transfer portal buzzing like a switchboard, this offseason isn’t idle—it’s ideological. NIL valuations, roster reshuffles, and coaching chess moves now rival the MLB draft in drama. LSU, Arkansas, and Texas A&M are stacking talent like hedge funds stack assets. We’ve entered an era where a pitcher’s arm comes attached to a media strategy.
Just look at the decisions being made now—
Dylan Loy
A lefty who pitched in Tennessee’s CWS finals and SEC title game, Loy opted to transfer to Georgia Tech rather than go pro—likely weighing brand development and NIL upside against draft uncertainty.
Gavin Kash

#image_title
One of college baseball’s top sluggers with 41 career home runs, Kash remains unsigned, evaluating portal offers with six-figure NIL implications.
Brady Neal
LSU’s promising catcher, entered the portal post-surgery and has since committed to Alabama. His stat line (.276/.408/.578 with 9 HRs) suggests future draft appeal—but his decision to stay collegiate ensures medical recovery, visibility, and a fresh start under Alabama’s rebuild.
Zach Root

Arkansas pitcher Zach Root (33) throws a pitch against Washington State during an NCAA baseball game on Friday, Feb. 14, 2025, in Fayetteville, Ark. (AP Photo/Michael Woods)
East Carolina’s lefty ace, transferred to Arkansas after injury rather than jump into the 2025 draft—presumably to reset valuation through performance and pitch under the spotlight of SEC competition.
Jason Torres
Miami’s injured first baseman committed to Alabama—choosing legacy rebuild over uncertain draft slotting.
Conner O’Neal
A senior catcher drafted in the 9th round by the Dodgers, O’Neal received a paltry $2,500 signing bonus. Meanwhile, unsigned collegians are fielding NIL deals at ten to forty times that. It’s a reversal of the path once considered inevitable.
These aren’t isolated cases. They’re proof points. College isn’t just a stop on the way to the majors—it’s a strategic platform, and sometimes, the more prosperous one.
That in turn reawakens the longstanding tension around Title IX, as questions of equitable access and compensation intersect with economic realities. Revenue sports will drive the bulk of distribution. But fairness? That depends on who’s holding the purse—and the mic.
Even Dabo Swinney, Clemson’s Head Football coach and a symbol of collegiate consistency, recently dismissed the playoff structure as doomed to “blow up in five years.” His frustration didn’t end there—it echoed the silent groan of coaches and traditionalists who see NIL, the portal, and the new power dynamics as a departure from collegiate soul, not an evolution.
And I get it. I’ve long believed that athletes—true student-athletes—deserved stipends. Even a slice of their NIL. But now? Now we’re staring down a landscape where kids not old enough to legally toast a win in some states will earn more than seasoned professionals—teachers, lawyers, even broadcasters. When that level of income arrives before the diploma, it alters incentives and confuses identity.
The most troubling part? Athletes may now weigh whether to go pro at all. The path to prosperity for many was the draft. Suiting up at the highest level wasn’t just a dream—it was survival strategy. But now, campus can be more lucrative than rookie ball. College isn’t just a proving ground—it’s become a platform. And increasingly, a destination.
I still miss the voices of Keith Jackson and Chris Schenkel. I miss when athletes stayed four years on balance, honoring the name on the front of the uniform as much as the one on the back. When a college athlete’s story began at freshman orientation and didn’t end until graduation caps flew.
As a lifelong USC Trojan supporter since 1973, I remember when the band struck up “Conquest,” the cardinal-and-gold pageantry unfolded, and Saturdays felt like sacred ritual—rooted in rhythm, pride, and continuity. The culture wasn’t curated—it was lived.
Today? Athletes hop universities like we change socks. Only now, they’re paid—legally, openly, and no longer through booster laundering.
You might call this progress. You might call it overdue. But let’s not pretend there hasn’t been a cost.
Something rooted. Something rhythmic. Something undeniably collegiate has been quietly traded for something transactional.
And as college baseball recalibrates—with expanded rosters, NIL money chasing exit velocity and ERA, and players weighing pro dreams against collegiate branding—we stand at a threshold. If the game still wants heart, it will need storytellers, not just scouts. If it wants culture, it must frame the moments that echo—beyond bat speed and box scores.
We’ve entered the age of visibility economics. The question now is: What will we show—and what will we remember?
NIL
Bill Belichick era begins at UNC :: WRALSportsFan.com
Here with WRL sports executive producer Pat Welter, Mark Bergen, it’s double duty. WRL Triangle 2 and the WREL daily download. Pat, football season is days away. And the three triangle teams UNC, Duke, NC State, a ton of storylines. So I thought, what better way to preview the season than to do a draft […]
NIL
In-house collective, intellectual property, and asset protection
The “BBNIL Suite” is now officially the in-house collective for University of Kentucky athletics. Now run by JMI, this new agency will help athlete secure third-party NIL deals in addition to the rev-share payments that will be made by school. Kentucky has officially become one of the few schools to move a collective in-house. This […]

The “BBNIL Suite” is now officially the in-house collective for University of Kentucky athletics. Now run by JMI, this new agency will help athlete secure third-party NIL deals in addition to the rev-share payments that will be made by school. Kentucky has officially become one of the few schools to move a collective in-house.
This group’s top priority will be to negotiate deals, build athlete brands, and ensure every deal passes through the newly established NIL Go clearinghouse. Kentucky is moving everything under one roof and attempting to protect the brand.
“It gives us an opportunity so that our partners are somewhat protected, Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart said on Tuesday. “The intellectual property, institutional property; it’s really important that if people want to use our marks, use our facilities for part of their endorsement property, that’s part of the deal. You come to the University of Kentucky and you’re part of our family and you get to use our things, but also that’s part of the relationship. There’s a responsibility and a right that comes with that.”
Subscribe to the KSR YouTube Channel for press conferences, interviews, original shows, fan features, and exclusive content.
This new collective will replace Club Blue as the official collective for Kentucky athletics. However, it will not be the only avenue for athletes to try and broker NIL deals. Barnhart says that UK players can try and get deals elsewhere but it will be tricky. The UK brand will not be available if they leave the BBNIL umbrella.
“Under the rules, they can still provide NIL opportunities. They would have to go through the range of compensation in NIL Go nationally like everybody else. We think that now if they do that, they probably wouldn’t have the IP rights and those kind of things. So we’re hopeful that as we go, we can sort of keep folks focused on what has been sort of our pathway forward. We have the financial responsibility in this new world that we’ve gotta take care of,” Barnhart said. “We gotta make sure that we protect both the folks that are in the program in terms of the sponsors as well as protect our student-athletes.”
“If a couple athletes decide to go off and do their own thing, it sort of hurts the entire team. The team is stronger together in everything you do. On the field and off the field. On the court and off the court. Your marketing value and those kind of things are better if you can do those things together. There’s lots of examples of that.”
Barnhart also specifically mentioned that BBNIL would strike some individual deals when needed, but to use the Kentucky brand, athletes will need to work directly with JMI. This is important because collectives are not going away anytime soon. The SCORE Act is a bill that codifies the House settlement and will provide national framework for NIL enforcement. This would give college athletics antitrust protection and could legitimately enforce “valid business purpose” rules upon booster-drive third-party collectives. However, it needs to pass first. Schools need collectives and rev-share payments to fund programs.
The athletic department is eliminating its successful third-party collective and handing the keys over to JMI in this historic deal. UK is all-in on this new NIL venture as the school adjusts to the rev-share era.
NIL
Preseason AP Poll: First Top 25 revealed ahead of 2025 College Football Season
The preseason AP Poll is here as the top 25 rankings were revealed ahead of the 2025 college football season. It’s time to gear up for the regular season. There are plenty of national championship contenders near the top of the AP Poll. This could very well be a wide open college football season. Without […]

The preseason AP Poll is here as the top 25 rankings were revealed ahead of the 2025 college football season. It’s time to gear up for the regular season.
There are plenty of national championship contenders near the top of the AP Poll. This could very well be a wide open college football season.
Without further ado, let’s dive into the AP Poll Top 25 ahead of kickoff. We start at the top!
Texas is geared up to win a national title this season with what they have at their disposal. Arch Manning steps in at quarterback and, arguably, he’ll be the most responsible.
Steve Sarkisian has led this program to the CFP semifinals twice but it’s time to take the next step. They’re all in to become kings of the college football world.

Penn State is running it back, similar to what Big Ten foe Ohio State did last season. Drew Allar leads the charge at QB and is aided by RBs Nick Singleton and Kaytron Allen.
On defense, Dani Dennis-Sutton headlines an elite defensive unit, as they’ll collectively replace Abdul Carter. The Nittany Lions are on the short list of national title contenders.
Ohio State comes in as the defending national champions but can they win back to back? Georgia did it recently of course, but the Buckeyes have to replace their QB.
Even with someone new like Julian Sayin under center, WR Jeremiah Smith can make him look like a superstar. On defense, DB Caleb Downs is back and captains a very solid defense, despite the unit losing NFL-talent to last year’s draft.
Dabo Swinney and Clemson returned to a large national spotlight last season with their most successful year in a few seasons. Winning the ACC and returning to the CFP was just the first step.
As far as how the AP Poll sees them, this will be a very competitive team that could climb its way to national title contender. QB Cade Klubnik is the de facto leader, but there are first round picks, potentially, on defense with Peter Woods and TJ Parker on the defensive line.

Georgia comes into the season, perhaps, more under the radar than in recent seasons. The AP Poll has them high up considering this team just won the SEC and had the No. 2 seed.
Kirby Smart is arguably the best coach in college football, so thinking this team’s time at the top is done would be foolish. But a lot hinges on Gunner Stockton at QB. Good thing he has new WR Zachariah Branch (USC transfer).
Marcus Freeman and Notre Dame nearly won it all last year. If that was the case, maybe this team could’ve been No. 1 in the AP Poll!
Still, RB Jeremiyah Love is back, and he’s a Heisman contender. The defense is veteran-heavy as well. They added DB transfer DeVonta Smith (Alabama).
Oregon had a massive opportunity to make a run for a national title last year, but were picked off by Ohio State in the CFP quarterfinals. Still, the Ducks went 13-0 and won the Big Ten.
Now how do you follow that up? Dan Lanning ushers in a new quarterback in Dante Moore, keeps attacking the recruiting trail and transfer portal and hopes it all breaks right. The AP Poll is a bit of a believer.

Year 1 for Kalen DeBoer and Alabama didn’t go as planned, not making the playoff and losing to Michigan in a bowl game. Still, DeBoer’s coaching prowess and development can’t be understated.
Ty Simpson is the expected QB and he has an all-star at WR in Ryan Williams to throw to. The defense is loaded with stars such as LT Overton. They’re back to SEC contender and have a chance to make a run in the CFP.
LSU gets preseason respect from the AP Poll and now it’s time to prove their worth. Brian Kelly goes into Year 4 with the Tigers and the CFP has to be the requirement right?
Garrett Nussmeier is back at QB and is firmly in the Heisman Trophy race. Harold Perkins, should he return to form, could be one of the best linebackers in the country.
Miami fell short last season with some missed opportunities to get to the ACC title game. To be fair, they had a little bit of Lady Luck on their side as well.
Carson Beck transferred in to replace Cam Ward at QB. That’ll be the biggest spotlight in Coral Gables this season. Mario Cristobal has a lot of talent at his disposal and the College Football Playoff should be the minimum.
Preseason AP Poll: First Top 25 revealed
11. Arizona State
12. Illinois
13. South Carolina
14. Michigan
15. Florida
16. SMU
17. Kansas State
18. Oklahoma
19. Texas A&M
20. Indiana
21. Ole Miss
22. Iowa State
23. Texas Tech
24. Tennessee
25. Boise State
Others receiving votes: BYU 156, Utah 144, Baylor 132, Louisville 90, Southern Cal 64, Georgia Tech 63, Missouri 33, Tulane 23, Nebraska 23, UNLV 21, Toledo 13, Auburn 10, James Madison 9, Memphis 9, Florida St. 8, Duke 6, Liberty 5, Navy 5, Iowa 5, TCU 4, Pittsburgh 3, Army 2, Colorado 1, Louisiana-Lafayette 1.
NIL
Middle, high school athletes can now get NIL deals in West Virginia
NIL
College Football Playoff Predictions: Projecting 12-team field using 2025 Preseason AP Poll
The latest College Football Playoff predictions are here, utilizing the AP Poll Top 25 Preseason Rankings. The 12-team field is projected based on the five-highest ranked conference champs and the highest ranked teams in general. The top four seeds, which are given byes in the first round, no longer automatically go to conference champs. It’s […]

The latest College Football Playoff predictions are here, utilizing the AP Poll Top 25 Preseason Rankings. The 12-team field is projected based on the five-highest ranked conference champs and the highest ranked teams in general.
The top four seeds, which are given byes in the first round, no longer automatically go to conference champs. It’s simply a straight ranking. That was a huge point of change from decision-makers ahead of the 2025 season.
Without making it more complicated, let’s dive into the projected field based on the AP Poll. Check it out below, as anticipation continues to rise for what should be an awesome season of college football this year.
1. Texas (SEC Champion)
Texas is the projected No. 1 team in the Playoff. As the SEC Champion, the Longhorns are likely 12-1 or 13-0 by season’s end.
If that’s the case, everything breaks right for Texas and Arch Manning is as good as advertised. It’ll be a well-earned first round bye for the Longhorns.
2. Penn State (Big Ten Champion)

Penn State will rise above and become Big Ten champions, according to these AP Poll projections. Breaking through the glass ceiling, they’ll get a bye week this time around in the CFP.
The Nittany Lions will run it back with Drew Allar, Nick Singleton, Kaytron Allen, Dani Dennis-Sutton and more. This team is certainly talented enough to win the entire thing, after making it to the Semifinals last season.
The defending national champions are slotted in the No. 3 spot. W while they’re not champions in the Big Ten, Ohio State would get a bye in the CFP based on the poll. The Buckeyes remain among the best.
Jeremiah Smith and Caleb Downs give the program two of the best overall players in college football. Julian Sayin is expected to step in at QB and based on Ryan Day’s track record, it might be a seamless transition.
4. Clemson (ACC Champion)
Clemson is projected to win the ACC for the second straight year and will make the CFP again. The Tigers will receive the final bye this time around, after once again clinching their spot as the champion of their conference.
Cade Klubnik is back under center this fall, and Clemson might have two first round picks on the defensive line. TJ Parker and Peter Woods will certainly wreak havoc this year.

The Bulldogs fall to Texas in the SEC Championship this time around. They’ll just miss out on the final bye in the CFP, it seems, but remain a dangerous squad.
A lot hinges on QB Gunner Stockton this season, but it helps that WR Zachariah Branch is in the fold. The defense should be able to reload and be excellent under Kirby Smart.
With the CFP adjustments, Notre Dame could actually play itself into a top four seed and a first round bye. But for now, the AP Poll had them at No. 6, so they’ll host a first round game once again.
Marcus Freeman led this team to the national championship last year, and he could do it again this time around. They bring it a lot back, including Heisman contender Jeremiyah Love at running back.
Oregon will return to the Playoff for the second straight year under Dan Lanning. They’ll be on the outside looking in though, as far as the top of the Big Ten is concerned. The good news is, since the Ducks are No. 7 in these rankings, they’ll host a first round game in Eugene.
Dante Moore takes over at quarterback after sitting a year to develop. He’ll be the biggest key to Oregon’s success in 2025. We’ll see if he can reach the heights Dillon Gabriel took them to last season.

The Crimson Tide will return to the CFP, and get there for the first time under Kalen DeBoer. All is right in Tuscaloosa. The pressure is on, but DeBoer has the talent and the mettle to handle it.
Quarterback Ty Simpson is expected to step in and operate the offense with superstar wide receiver Ryan Williams being his top target. A revamped defense should help the Tide more often than not in 2025. Based on projections, they’ll host a first round game.
LSU will finally make the CFP under Brian Kelly, but they’ll have to go on the road in the first round. Still, they’ll be in the tournament, based on the projections via the AP Poll, and a dangerous draw for any opponent.
Quarterback Garrett Nussmeier will be in the Heisman conversation, and he’ll likely be the biggest reason why this team is great. Don’t underestimate a resurgent season from linebacker Harold Perkins, as well.
The Hurricanes were Playoff bound last year, until they went 1-2 down the stretch. Mario Cristobal brings back a talented squad in 2025, along with a new star at quarterback, with a motivation to make things right.
Carson Beck takes over at the position after coming over from Georgia and the defense should be a strong suit this season. Based on the projections, Miami will be the ACC runner-ups.

The Sun Devils will return to the Playoff as Big 12 champions once again. However, they won’t get a first-round bye this time around, based on the AP Poll rankings.
Sam Leavitt returns at QB, giving ASU one of the better ones in the country. Kenny Dillingham, if he’s not already, is a rising superstar of a head coach. We’ll see how far he can take his team in 2025.
12. Boise State (Mountain West Champion)
The Broncos are back in the CFP, but will get the last seed considering they’ll be the lowest ranked conference champ and outside the top 12 overall. Boise State will still make two straight Playoffs, which is an awesome accomplishment.
Before their move to the PAC 12 next year, the program is looking to finish their final season in the MWC on top of the college football world. However, based on these rankings, they’ll have to head to Georgia in the first round, so it won’t be easy for Boise State.
Playoff Bracket
First Round Byes: No. 1 Texas, No. 2 Penn State, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 4 Clemson
No. 12 Boise State at No. 5 Georgia
No. 11 Arizona State at No. 6 Notre Dame
No. 10 Miami at No. 7 Oregon
No. 9 LSU at No. 8 Alabama
First Four Out: Illinois, South Carolina, Michigan, Florida
Next Four Out: SMU, Kansas State, Oklahoma, Texas A&M
— On3’s Nick Kosko contribited to this article.
-
Technology2 weeks ago
Ally Runs New Game Plan in WNBA All-Star Rookie Debut
-
Health2 weeks ago
The Women Driving A New Era In U.S. Ski & Snowboard
-
High School Sports3 weeks ago
100 days to men's college basketball
-
NIL2 weeks ago
ESPN Announces 'dont wait run fast' by mgk as New College Football Anthem for 2025
-
College Sports3 weeks ago
BYU Basketball Adds Aleksej Kostic to 2025
-
College Sports2 weeks ago
City rows to sporting destination goal on boats of new complexes & old strengths
-
Health3 weeks ago
Trump administration investigates Oregon's transgender athlete policies
-
Rec Sports7 days ago
Swimming & Diving Comments on the Rules – 2025-26
-
Sports2 weeks ago
Ntekpere honored as Second Team Academic All-American | APG State News
-
Technology1 week ago
Amid Sports Chaos, ‘Known’ Data and Outcomes Help Agency Win