NIL
Readers still hung up about Tennessee football, Nico Iamaleava but for right reasons
After sorting through my emails, I checked the calendar to make sure summer hadn’t come and gone and September was right around the corner. All my literary contributors wrote about football this week. What does that tell us? It tells us that college football has more seasons than ever, and that those seasons often overlap. […]

After sorting through my emails, I checked the calendar to make sure summer hadn’t come and gone and September was right around the corner.
All my literary contributors wrote about football this week. What does that tell us?
It tells us that college football has more seasons than ever, and that those seasons often overlap.
The regular season lasts from late August to the end of November. The postseason stretches from early December to late January. Spring practice takes up March and April. Preseason practice runs from late July to late August.
And the NIL business lasts all year long.
Glenn writes: Nico’s dad did quite a number on him. Left a successful program and good QB coach for a floundering program and less money.
There is a saying amongst stock market investors that “pigs get slaughtered.” This is what greed does for you. Forfeited in excess of 2 mil for what he has now.
Too bad for Nico, but his dad got what he deserved. Collectives and schools are going to have to put buyouts in all these NIL arrangements.
My response: I wonder what Nico will give his dad for Father’s Day next month. Maybe he can find a piggy bank at an antique store.
Vols Mark writes: In the modern NIL-fueled college football world, a quarterback isn’t a legacy — he’s a fungible biological unit. When one transfers out for a higher bidder, it’s not betrayal; it’s economics. Coaches/Fans need to stop agonizing over lost loyalty and start thinking like logistics managers: replace the departing unit with another of equal or greater efficiency.
It’s not about who left. It’s about how fast you can swap out the part and keep the machine running.
Kudos to Coach Heupel. He gets it. No panic, no pleading. Just reload and move forward.
In this new era, it’s not sentiment that wins championships. It’s adaptation.
My response: Kudos to you for injecting fungible biological unit into my column. That inspired me to watch a video on the “Fungal Life Cycle and caused me to reflect on how long I have had a fungus on my right little toe.
Also, congrats for using a semicolon properly.
Don writes: Why give Derek Dooley a pass when writing about the poor production from Butch Jones and Jeremy Pruitt?
My first Neyland Stadium game was Vols and Vanderbilt in 1951. Got bitten and have stayed loyal to UT for 75 years.
My response: I apologize for not trashing one of Tennessee’s former coaches. Dooley’s record – three consecutive losing seasons – speaks for itself.
But your email gives me an idea for a future column: Ranking the worst games of Tennessee’s worst stories.
Coming soon.
Parker writes: Enjoyed your articles on ranking Coach Heupel after four seasons and Coach Barnes’ recruiting success. What stood out to me was just how great General Neyland was as a coach and how amazing the turnaround Josh Heupel has brought to the Tennessee football program.
My response: Neyland didn’t just win at a high level. He won in four different decades.
He won his first game in 1926 and his last in 1952. And no matter how much the game changed during that time, he kept winning.
Neyland went 8-1 in his first season and 8-2-1 in his last.
James writes: There were some who said TN did not deserve to be in the playoffs. I just looked at Boise State‘s 2024 schedule. Other than an early game with Oregon (L) and a playoff blowout loss against Penn State, they played no one.
The Mountain West Conference is a joke. Only two teams won more than eight games, and seven of the 12 had losing records.
If running backs Ashton Jeanty (Boise State) and Dylan Sampson (Tennessee) had switched teams, their totals would have been much different. The playoffs need a major revision.
My response: Tennessee did belong in the playoffs. But it didn’t belong on the same field with Ohio State. Few teams did.
Your disdain for the Mountain West Conference is noted.
I thought about forwarding your email to MWC commissioner Gloria Nevarez in hope of a rebuttal but decided to clean out a closet rather than search for her email address.
John Adams is a senior columnist. He may be reached at 865-342-6284 or john.adams@knoxnews.com. Follow him at: twitter.com/johnadamskns.
NIL
Cowboys Climb Into Top Five At NCAA Championship
Round 3 Results CARLSBAD, Calif. – For the second day in a row, Oklahoma State’s men’s golf team improved its position at the NCAA Championship after posting a 291 on Sunday during the third round of action at Omni La Costa Resort and Spa. The second-ranked Cowboys moved into a tie for fifth place at 869, […]

CARLSBAD, Calif. –
For the second day in a row, Oklahoma State’s men’s golf team improved its position at the NCAA Championship after posting a 291 on Sunday during the third round of action at Omni La Costa Resort and Spa.
The second-ranked Cowboys moved into a tie for fifth place at 869, 5-over par, with Texas at the par-72, 7,480-yard layout. The 30-team field will be trimmed in half tomorrow after a playoff to determine the No. 15 spot between Georgia Tech and Wake Forest.
Tomorrow’s fourth round will determine the eight teams who will advance to the tournament’s match play bracket to determine the national champion.
Preston Stout continued his impressive play, moving into a tie for fourth place at 211 after signing his second consecutive 70. The sophomore went out in 2-under 34 with birdies at the first and seventh. He would move to 3-under on the day with a birdie at the 10th. After posting bogeys at the 12th and 14th before closing with his fourth birdie at the 18th.
Stout will begin play tomorrow six shots off the pace of leader Michael La Sasso of Ole Miss. He will be looking to become the program’s 10th individual NCAA champion.
Sophomore Ethan Fang posted his low round of the event, a 71, to move up eight spots into a tie for 36th place at 219.
Sophomores Gaven Lane and Eric Lee finished the day tied for 46th place at 220 after posting rounds of 76 and 75, respectively.
Freshman Filip Fahlberg-Johnsson carded his third consecutive 75 to stand at 225 and tied for 86th place.
The Cowboys will begin their final round tomorrow at 1:25 p.m. (CST) and will be grouped with Florida and Texas.
Live scoring for the event is available at scoreboard.clippd.com and Golf Channel coverage will begin at 5 p.m. (CST).
NIL
Cowboys Climb Into Top Five At NCAA Championship
Round 3 Results CARLSBAD, Calif. – For the second day in a row, Oklahoma State’s men’s golf team improved its position at the NCAA Championship after posting a 291 on Sunday during the third round of action at Omni La Costa Resort and Spa. The second-ranked Cowboys moved into a tie for fifth place at 869, […]


CARLSBAD, Calif. –
For the second day in a row, Oklahoma State’s men’s golf team improved its position at the NCAA Championship after posting a 291 on Sunday during the third round of action at Omni La Costa Resort and Spa.
The second-ranked Cowboys moved into a tie for fifth place at 869, 5-over par, with Texas at the par-72, 7,480-yard layout. The 30-team field will be trimmed in half tomorrow after a playoff to determine the No. 15 spot between Georgia Tech and Wake Forest.
Tomorrow’s fourth round will determine the eight teams who will advance to the tournament’s match play bracket to determine the national champion.
Preston Stout continued his impressive play, moving into a tie for fourth place at 211 after signing his second consecutive 70. The sophomore went out in 2-under 34 with birdies at the first and seventh. He would move to 3-under on the day with a birdie at the 10th. After posting bogeys at the 12th and 14th before closing with his fourth birdie at the 18th.
Stout will begin play tomorrow six shots off the pace of leader Michael La Sasso of Ole Miss. He will be looking to become the program’s 10th individual NCAA champion.
Sophomore Ethan Fang posted his low round of the event, a 71, to move up eight spots into a tie for 36th place at 219.
Sophomores Gaven Lane and Eric Lee finished the day tied for 46th place at 220 after posting rounds of 76 and 75, respectively.
Freshman Filip Fahlberg-Johnsson carded his third consecutive 75 to stand at 225 and tied for 86th place.
The Cowboys will begin their final round tomorrow at 1:25 p.m. (CST) and will be grouped with Florida and Texas.
Live scoring for the event is available at scoreboard.clippd.com and Golf Channel coverage will begin at 5 p.m. (CST).
NIL
Let This Bull Run
Why NCAA should stand for “Not Competent At All” after latest ruling on Louisville basketball center Aly Khalifa. The NCAA is a funny organization – and when I say “funny,” I don’t mean ‘Richard-Pryor-in-a-red-suit-talking-about-prison-on-the-Sunset-Strip-in-1982’ funny. No…the NCAA is more ‘how-a-landfill-next-to-a-dog-food-factory-on-a-sweltering-hot-day-following-a-flash-flood-smells’ funny. In a decision that is as bewildering as it is aggravating, the governing body […]


Why NCAA should stand for “Not Competent At All” after latest ruling on Louisville basketball center Aly Khalifa.
The NCAA is a funny organization – and when I say “funny,” I don’t mean ‘Richard-Pryor-in-a-red-suit-talking-about-prison-on-the-Sunset-Strip-in-1982’ funny. No…the NCAA is more ‘how-a-landfill-next-to-a-dog-food-factory-on-a-sweltering-hot-day-following-a-flash-flood-smells’ funny. In a decision that is as bewildering as it is aggravating, the governing body of college athletics denied Louisville basketball center Aly Khalifa’s request for an extension of his five-year eligibility clock.
That request would have allowed him to participate in a fourth season following last year’s knee surgery that caused him to miss the season. The consensus reaction of the basketball world has been shock, disappointment, and outrage: this ruling, like a hot, wet city dump, stinks.
Khalifa, a 6-foot-11 center from Egypt who cut his basketball teeth in Australia, had high hopes for next season. His skill set, as a five who can shoot the three and distribute the ball with the prowess of an elite guard, is as dynamic as it is rare amongst men of his stature. Add to that the fact the Khalifa shed fifty pounds following his surgery rehabilitation and practiced in Kelsey’s system for most of 2025, and the stage was effectively set for Aly to shine as a potential starter for Louisville basketball.
The NCAA, however, seeks to close the curtains, turn off the spot lights, and get the Cards’ resurgent center off center stage.
And nobody understands why.
Also relevant: Kasean Pryor makes Card a National Title contender
Aly Khalifa’s path to Pat Kelsey
Khalifa’s college career looks like this in a nutshell: Aly spent his freshman year in Charlotte, where he redshirted in 2020-21. He was then an on-court 49er for two seasons before transferring to BYU, where he played under current Kentucky coach Mark Pope in 2023-24.
He became a Cardinal last year, but never clocked a minute of game-time basketball in Louisville basketball red. Instead, he spent the first half of the season mending his knee, then practiced with the team from January, on.
Do the math: that’s three years of on-court college basketball. What’s more, Khalifa’s redshirt season in Charlotte fell during the COVID year, which has been universally written off do to the viral shutdown’s effect on the season, for everyone…
Everyone, except Aly Khalifa, it would seem.
Smells like bullshirt to me
In an era during which the landscape of college basketball has been completely transformed by NIL money and the transfer portal, players are seeking more extra eligibility than ever. More often than not, they get it.
Gonzaga’s Khalif Battle, for example, played games in six different college seasons. Battle was granted extensions because two of his seasons were cut short by injury, limiting him to seven and eleven games in them, respectively. How on Earth is it then possible that the NCAA permitted Battle’s extensions because multiple seasons were ended because of injury, while simultaneously denying Khalifa, whose seasons-in-question never even began?
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If the NCAA is trying to assert its authority in an age when it is becoming increasingly irrelevant, the hypocrisy of this decision only further subverts the Association’s validity.
Grabbing the bull by the horns
Khalifa has lawyered up, filing an appeal that most experts believe he should win. At face value, there is no reason he is not cleared to play. His first season at Charlotte shouldn’t be an issue for multiple reasons: either because he redshirted, or because of COVID. If that were the issue, then the NCAA should have notified Louisville basketball long before May of 2025.
I’m aware that the redshirt paperwork doesn’t get filed until after the season, which is problematic in and of itself: take a look at the current predicament. Still, the fact that Khalifa was even allowed to transfer to Louisville should have made his eligibility waiver a mere formality: his intention to have knee surgery and sit out was made public and tied to his decision to transfer from BYU.
As the transfer was approved, the waiver should have followed, because without the waiver the transfer had no point.
Khalifa is a big deal… no bull
With or without Khalifa, Pat Kelsey has the Cards loaded for next season. But if Khalifa’s appeal is denied, things could get dicey for the Cards in the front court should anything else go awry.
James Scott became an Ole Miss Rebel after Kasean Pryor declared his intent to return and the Cards acquired Sananda Fru: playing time could have been scarce for Scott with Pryor, Fru, and Khalifa all competing (I would have liked to see him stay and elevate his game, though). But Pryor is coming off a torn ACL, and Fru is a freshman from Germany, untested by American elite talent.
Without Scott and Khalifa, the roster that seemed to be bursting at the seams with talent when the portal opened now seems an injury away from having some quite literally sizable gaps to fill.
Kentucky coach Mark Pope said that Khalifa changed the very way he thought about the game of basketball. Any player that can profoundly impact the way an experienced college player and coach like Pope sees the game would surely have a remarkable impact within it.
And Pope coached a Khalifa who was fifty pounds heavier and struggling with a bad knee.
Let this bull run
Hopefully, the NCAA will do the right thing. But in denying Aly’s waiver, and allowing things to enter the legal realm, the NCAA risks setting a new precedent for player eligibility if they lose in court. Make no mistake: if Aly wins, and my God I pray he does, there will be further lawsuits for more eligibility by other players. It is this precedent, and nothing at all to do with the validity of Aly’s claim, that makes me wary of the upcoming face-off in court. But I, quite honestly, couldn’t care less about the implications for the NCAA, or NCAA in general, for that matter. I just want to see what Aly can do in the eye of the storm of talent Kelsey has coming to Louisville.
All things considered, Aly Khalifa is a Master’s level immigrant student who has played in only three seasons of college basketball. If anybody deserves another year of eligibility, it’s Aly. Unfortunately, though, if Louisville’s past dealings with the NCAA have showed us anything, it’s that it rarely gives the Cards what they deserve, and takes things from them that they have earned.
NIL
Tennessee Boss Says Only One Way to Solve Revenue Sharing, NIL Issues
The House vs. NCAA settlement is still waiting approval, but one prominent athletic director isn’t sure it’s going to solve the problem. U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken hasn’t ruled on the final proposed settlement. That could come next week. If approved, it will usher in a new world of college athletics, that includes revenue-sharing with […]

The House vs. NCAA settlement is still waiting approval, but one prominent athletic director isn’t sure it’s going to solve the problem.
U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken hasn’t ruled on the final proposed settlement. That could come next week. If approved, it will usher in a new world of college athletics, that includes revenue-sharing with student athletes.
It’s a geography Tennessee athletic director Danny White has been navigating for nearly a year. As part of a power conference, he and the Vols are required to opt into the settlement and pay as much as $20.5 million in direct money to student-athletes in 2025-26 — if House is approved.
It’s a lot to keep up with, White admits — but he believes there is a real solution that few seem prepared to discuss.
In a one-on-one conversation with Tennessee chancellor Donde Plowman, White talked about the issues of dealing with all of this on a day-to-day basis.
“My job is to lead the University of Tennessee, but we also have a national issue in college sports that’s a real problem,” White said. “I talk about like the Tennessee hat versus the college sports hat and I’ve been probably wearing the Tennessee hat a lot more recently, thinking about just what’s our opportunity to be competitively excellent in this new world. But it’s a real issue and we could go on and on about what we need.”
Tennessee has already implemented new initiatives to increase revenue, even though it is in the SEC and it receives television payouts that are among the biggest in college sports. The House settlement may usher in a new age of college sports, but White isn’t sure it’s going to solve every issue.
In fact, he believes there is only one way to truly solve the issues that came up in the House settlement and level the playing field for everyone.
“I’ll say it. We’ve got a camera on this, but I don’t really care at this point,” he said. “Collective bargaining is the only issue, the only solution, it’s the only way we’re going to get there.”
The House settlement does not include collective bargaining.
The House v. NCAA settlement is a combination of three different cases brought by current and former student-athletes. It will allow for $2.75 billion in damages will be paid to thousands of college athletes over 10 years as part of restitution for their inability to access things like Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) opportunities.
The new settlement won’t prohibit student-athletes from leveraging NIL, but they will need to report any deals valued at $600 or more.
The settlement also caps scholarships and, in some cases, expands them for certain sports through roster limits.
NIL
Texas Tech softball to face Ole Miss in Women’s College World Series first
Texas Tech softball’s Gerry Glasco on Super Regional vs. Florida State Texas Tech softball’s Gerry Glasco on Super Regional vs. Florida State The field for the 2025 Women’s College World Series is set and the Texas Tech softball team knows its path toward the national championship. Texas Tech was the first team to punch its […]


Texas Tech softball’s Gerry Glasco on Super Regional vs. Florida State
Texas Tech softball’s Gerry Glasco on Super Regional vs. Florida State
The field for the 2025 Women’s College World Series is set and the Texas Tech softball team knows its path toward the national championship.
Texas Tech was the first team to punch its ticket to Oklahoma City, sweeping Florida State in the Super Regionals with the series concluding Friday afternoon. The Red Raiders had to wait for the final possible game of the weekend to find out their opponent.
Ole Miss will be first up for Texas Tech with the game set for 6 p.m. Thursday in a game that will air on ESPN2. The Rebels pulled off another upset by taking out 4th-seeded Arkansas 7-4 in the third game of their Super Regional series.
Like Texas Tech, Ole Miss will be making its first appearance in the WCWS in program history. Those two are joined by Big Ten teams Oregon and UCLA on their side of the bracket. The Ducks and Bruins will square off in the final game of opening day.
Other teams to make the WCWS field include Oklahoma, Texas, Florida and Tennessee.
NIL
‘Our Sport’s in a Great Place’ — USC’s Lincoln Riley Defends College Football’s Future Amid Chaos
College football is changing fast. Transfer portal madness, NIL deals and conference moves are shaking up everything fans know. But USC coach Lincoln Riley isn’t worried about where the sport is headed. Riley sees opportunity where others see problems. While critics worry about college football becoming unrecognizable, the Trojans coach believes the changes are actually […]

College football is changing fast. Transfer portal madness, NIL deals and conference moves are shaking up everything fans know. But USC coach Lincoln Riley isn’t worried about where the sport is headed.
Riley sees opportunity where others see problems. While critics worry about college football becoming unrecognizable, the Trojans coach believes the changes are actually making things better for fans and players alike.

Lincoln Riley Urges Fans to Embrace Change and Focus on College Football’s Bright Future
Riley gets why fans are upset about losing traditional rivalries and regional matchups. He grew up watching Texas football and the Big 12, so he understands the emotional connection to the old ways.
“I understand because I possess some of the same feelings, right? Like you said, we grew up, you know, Texas football, you know, the Big 12 Conference” Riley said. “It was more of a regional game.”
But Riley thinks fans need to move forward instead of looking backward. “It’s a new era. There are some changes that we’ve all just got to accept because it’s just part of it right now” he explained.
The USC coach sees new possibilities emerging from all the chaos. “But I think any door that closes well there’s also a new really exciting door that’s getting opened” Riley said.
Riley pointed to exciting new matchups that weren’t possible before, like USC playing Michigan in the Big Ten. These games create fresh storylines and rivalries that could become just as meaningful as the old ones.
His optimism is notable given USC’s recent struggles. The Trojans went 7-6 in 2024, their first Big Ten season, which was disappointing after high expectations. Riley’s overall record at USC is 25-14 across three seasons.
When asked if college football’s rapid changes concern him, Riley was direct “It really doesn’t. I mean if you love college football then are you going to scroll on your TV past, you know, USC-Ohio State, you know, like at the end, No, no, you’re not.”
Riley defended the sport’s current direction by focusing on what matters most which is great games. “Our sport’s in a great place, and I think anybody that thinks anything other than that — I know there’s a lot going on with scheduling. I know everybody’s got an opinion on NIL, rev share, and the settlement. I get it.” Riley said.
KEEP READING: ‘That’s What Gets Lost About The USC Teams’—USC’s 2025 Ceiling? Coaches Say It Hangs on One Thing
“But despite all that we still have one of the greatest products in the greatest sport in the world. Let’s don’t forget that” he added.
Riley’s message is simple, stop worrying about what college football used to be and start enjoying what it’s becoming. While others complain about change, he’s embracing the new opportunities and encouraging fans to do the same.
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