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Reece Potter knew he would commit the second Kentucky called: “It’s a dream come true.”

Miami (OH) transfer Reece Potter didn’t know what to expect when he entered the portal in late March — but he certainly didn’t expect things to unfold the way they did in April, then early May. His phone wouldn’t stop ringing, hearing from programs and coaches he never would have imagined would be prioritizing him […]

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Miami (OH) transfer Reece Potter didn’t know what to expect when he entered the portal in late March — but he certainly didn’t expect things to unfold the way they did in April, then early May. His phone wouldn’t stop ringing, hearing from programs and coaches he never would have imagined would be prioritizing him after two seasons in the MAC.

Among them? North Carolina, Washington, Louisville and UConn.

“It was really crazy. The phone was always ringing with different people talking to you, trying to give their pitch on why you should go to their school,” he told KSR. “It was crazy. It was really cool hearing from all these schools, the Hubert Davises and Dan Hurleys — I mean, it’s just wild. There were some people that I grew up watching and you watch on TV every day. It’s wild for those people — you get that call and it says ‘Maybe: Hubert Davis’ or however it was marked. It’s wild for sure, it was fun.”

Then the text messages and phone calls came in. At that point, it was over.

“Once Kentucky called me, it was like, ‘It’s time, I’m done talking to these people. Let’s get to the business,’” Potter said.

As a Lexington, the opportunity to return home and play for the winningest tradition in college basketball history was too much to pass up. Sure, other schools offered more playing time (and maybe more cash), but Kentucky was selling something money can’t buy.

The process wasn’t immediate, though. He knew immediately he wanted to wear the blue and white, but his parents wanted him to take a deep breath and think through the decision, not committing out of emotion.

“When Kentucky called me, it was a dream come true, but I still had to make the best decision for myself,” he told KSR. “Always in the back of my mind it was like, ‘You’ve got to go there. You have to go there.’ But my parents were very supportive, they were like, ‘Just take your time, just kind of see what’s all out there.’

“Once they contacted me, I took a week to settle down a little bit. Right away, I was like, ‘Yeah, yeah, I’m going there. I’m going there.’ My dad was like, ‘Relax, relax. I know that’s your dream school, but just take a week for yourself. Really understand what that would mean for you, if that’s the decision you want.’”

Then a week went by and he was just as excited then as he was when the process started, confirming what he knew from day one: Kentucky was home.

“So after that week, I kind of got down to contacting the other schools, like, ‘What’s the deal here?’ I always knew I was going here, so it was easy after that,” Potter said. “I called my parents, I was like, ‘I’m going there.’ They were like, ‘Yeah, we always knew you were gonna do that, but we just wanted you to make the best decision for yourself.’ So I’m glad it’s over, and I’m glad to be able to be a part of this.”

How is he feeling a little over a week following his commitment, the dust now settled ahead of move-in to open June?

“The decision was a dream come true, for sure. All of the hecticness is out of the way, so now, I’m able to relax and kind of just enjoy this decision I was able to make,” he continued. “It’s setting in, for sure. It’s still a dream come true. I

“‘m just waiting to put on the jersey for the first time and be able to walk out to Rupp Arena. That’s going to be the biggest thing.”

Once a kid watching Kentucky as a fan, he now gets to represent his hometown as a Wildcat himself. Quite the dream come true.



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WCWS Game 3 score, highlights

The winner-take-all Women’s College World Series final is underway at Oklahoma City’s Devon Park as the Texas Longhorns takes on the Texas Tech Red Raiders for the NCAA college softball national championship. The teams have split the first two games in the best of three series, so it all comes down to tonight. Texas won Game 1 on when Texas catcher Reese […]

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The winner-take-all Women’s College World Series final is underway at Oklahoma City’s Devon Park as the Texas Longhorns takes on the Texas Tech Red Raiders for the NCAA college softball national championship. The teams have split the first two games in the best of three series, so it all comes down to tonight.

Texas won Game 1 on when Texas catcher Reese Atwood hit the fourth pitch of an intentional walk attempt.

The Red Raiders took Game 2 thanks to some sloppy pitching and fielding by the Longhorns.

Texas wins National Championship

Top of the seventh inning: Texas needed an obstruction call reversed and gave up another run on a third UT error, but Kavan stayed steady and pitched the Longhorns to the national title. Final Score: Texas 10, Texas Tech 4

Tech holds off mercy rule

Bottom of the sixth inning: The Longhorns got two runners in scoring position, but Tech pitcher Samantha Lincoln struck out the final two batters to shut down the inning. The scoreless scoreless bottom of the sixth means Tech will not be run ruled in the championship game. Score: Texas 10, Texas Tech 3

Kavan works around another error

Top of the sixth inning: Despite another error, Texas ace Teagan Kavan was able to hold the Red Raiders scoreless in the sixth inning. If Texas scores a run in the bottom of the inning, the game will end on the run rule. Score: Texas 10, Texas Tech 3

No Run Rule in Bottom of the 5th

Bottom of the fifth inning: If Texas had scored a run, giving the Longhorns an eight run lead, the game would have ended on a run rule. The run rule or “mercy rule” activates if a team leads by eight runs or more after five innings. But UT went down in order thanks to a Red Raiders double play. Score: Texas 10, Texas Tech 3

Tech scores three

Top of the fifth inning: A Scott throwing error and four hits plates three runs for the Red Raiders. None of the runs were earned so Kavan continues to have a 0.00 ERA in the WCWS. Score: Texas 10, Texas Tech 3

Grand Slam give Horns big lead

Bottom of the fourth inning: Texas’ Mia Scott smashed a grand slam to center field off Tech pitcher Chloe Riassetto to give the Longhorns a 10-run lead. Tech changed to pitcher Samantha Lincoln after the big hit. Score: Texas 10, Texas Tech 0

Kavan works around baserunner

Top of the fourth inning: Texas Tech’s Hailey Toney drove a leadoff single to right field. But Texas ace Teagan Kavan shut the Red Raider offense down and got out of the inning. Score: Texas 6, Texas Tech 0

Back-to-back doubles plates another Texas run

Bottom of the third inning: Reese Atwood and Katie Stewart hit consecutive doubles to start the inning. Atwood scored on Stewart’s hit. Score: Texas 6, Texas Tech 0

Another scoreless inning from Kavan

Top of the third inning: It was another 1-2-3 inning from Texas ace Teagan Kavan in the third inning. Score: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0

Canady taken out of game

Bottom of the second inning: For the first time at the WCWS, NiJaree Canady is not pitching for the Red Raiders. After getting tagged for five runs in the first inning, Tech coach Gerry Glascopulled the star pitcher and put in Chloe Riassetto. Riassetto worked around one hit for a scoreless inning. Score: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0

1-2-3 for Kavan

Top of the second inning: Texas ace Teagan Kavan pitches a perfect inning in the second. Score: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0

Longhorns get to Tech ace Canady

Bottom of the first inning: With runners on first and second and one out, Texas catcher Reese Atwood singled through the right side to score Kayden Henry. Next, Katie Stewart drove in another run on a single. Finally, Leighann Goode drove a three-run home run to center off Canady. It was Goode’s fourth home run of the postseason and the 10th of the season. Score: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0

Teagan Kavan fires scoreless first inning

Top of the first inning: Teagan Kavan tosses a scoreless first inning, working around a two-out hit batter. Lauren Allred forced a 13-pitch at bat before being hit by a pitch. But Kavan induced a groundball by Alana Johnson to get out of the inning. Score: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0

Texas vs. Texas Tech Staring Pitchers

Texas Tech Red Raiders: NiJaree Canady – 1-1 in 2025 WCWS Championship Series

Canady has thrown every pitch for the Red Raiders in the Super Regionals and WCWS. The Topeka, Kansas native signed a $1 million dollar NIL deal to transfer to Lubbock from Stanford, who she had led to the WCWS in back-to-back seasons.

Texas Longhorns: Teagan Kavan – 1-0 in 2025 WCWS Championship Series

Kavan has been stellar for the Longhorns, starting games one and two and pitching the final three innings in game three. She hasn’t given up a run since the first inning of the OU game and has struck out 12 batters. The West Des Moines, Iowa native lost her grandmother the morning of the Oklahoma game.

Follow us on X (formerly Twitter) at @LonghornsWire.



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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott Signs New NIL Bill Into Law

Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill into law on Thursday morning that will dramatically alter NIL regulations in the Lone Star State, and the Texas Longhorns best take notice. According to Nick Schultz of On3, HB126 will allow colleges to directly pay athletes, putting Texas in line with the recent House v. NCAA settlement. It […]

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Gov. Greg Abbott signed a bill into law on Thursday morning that will dramatically alter NIL regulations in the Lone Star State, and the Texas Longhorns best take notice.

According to Nick Schultz of On3, HB126 will allow colleges to directly pay athletes, putting Texas in line with the recent House v. NCAA settlement. It will also allow high school athletes age 17 or over to sign NIL deals, whereas only collegiate athletes could previously.

State Rep. Brandon Creighton sponsored the bill, with the state House and Senate both signing it on Sunday. The law is effective immediately following Abbott’s signing.

Texas Longhorns athletic director Chris Del Conte makes his way into the stadium of an NCAA college football game.

Texas Longhorns athletic director Chris Del Conte makes his way into the stadium of an NCAA college football game. / Ricardo B. Brazziell/American-Statesman / USA TODAY NETWORK

“Unless a prospective student athlete younger than 17 years of age is enrolled at an institution of higher education, an individual, corporate entity, or other organization, including an institution to which this section applies, may not enter into an arrangement relating to the athlete’s name, image, or likeness with the athlete or with an individual related to the athlete by consanguinity or affinity,” the law states.

Under the House v. NCAA settlement, schools will be able to pay athletes up to $20.5 million starting in 2025-26, the first school year of a 10-year agreement. Schools will also be able to participate in revenue sharing.

To help offset the extra costs, Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte said the school will raise football season ticket prices by an extra $13 per game. He announced the change during his annual town hall back in February.

“I’m going to alter the season ticket price … to help defray the cost of what we’re doing,” Del Conte said. “I’m doing this, y’all, because I’m trying to maintain the very best athletic program in the country.

“I hope that you think the value we provide you on game day with all the things that we’re doing – whether it’s Bevo’s Blvd., the concert, everything that we do – we’re trying to create incredible value to say thank you. But more importantly, for you to understand what we’re trying to do.”

More recently, head football coach Steve Sarkisian dispelled a rumor that the Longhorns were spending $40 million on their roster.

“What’s frustrating on that was it was a little bit of irresponsible reporting,” Sarkisian said. “It was one anonymous source saying that that’s what our roster was. I wish I had $40 million on our roster. We’d probably be a little bit better team than we are.”



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House v. NCAA settlement allows schools to directly pay athletes

Judge Claudia Wilken approved a settlement in House v. NCAA on Friday night. Following that decision, schools will be permitted to pay student-athletes directly beginning on July 1. While name, image and likeness, or NIL, has allowed for compensation to college athletes for the last four years, this will change how the compensation works. ESPN’s […]

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NiJaree Canady makes history with record-breaking $1M NIL deal at Texas Tech | Sports

NiJaree Canady, a 22-year-old African American softball phenom, has become the first college softball player to sign a Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deal worth more than $1 million, a historic moment in collegiate sports. The former Stanford ace transferred to Texas Tech, where she secured a groundbreaking $1,050,024 one-year contract through the Matador Club, […]

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NiJaree Canady, a 22-year-old African American softball phenom, has become the first college softball player to sign a Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deal worth more than $1 million, a historic moment in collegiate sports. The former Stanford ace transferred to Texas Tech, where she secured a groundbreaking $1,050,024 one-year contract through the Matador Club, an NIL collective affiliated with the university. The deal includes a $1 million direct payment, $50,000 for living expenses, and an additional $24 in honor of her jersey number. According to BlackNews.com, Canady, who was named the 2024 USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year, entered the transfer portal shortly before Texas Tech hired Coach Gerry Glasco. He acted quickly to bring her to Lubbock—with backing from NFL quarterback and Red Raider alum Patrick Mahomes—and offered her not just a starting role but an expanded opportunity to develop her offensive skills. “The coaching staff and their vision were a major reason I made this decision,” Canady told ESPN. She described her transition from Stanford’s Palo Alto campus to West Texas as smooth, noting that the environment reminds her more of her hometown of Topeka, Kansas.

USA Today noted that Canady’s impact on the field was immediate and unmatched. Despite suffering a minor injury, she helped lead Texas Tech to its first Big 12 regular-season and conference titles, finishing the season with a 26-5 record and a nation-leading ERA of 0.86. She also threw a two-hit shutout with 10 strikeouts to deliver the program’s first-ever win at the Women’s College World Series. Coach Glasco called Canady the best pitcher he’s ever coached and said he believes she can lead Texas Tech to a national championship. Her resume is as stacked as her fastball is deadly. In addition to her 2024 USA Softball Player of the Year honor, Canady received the Honda Sport Award, was a two-time Women’s College World Series All-Tournament Team selection and dominated at Stanford with a 41-10 record and a 0.67 ERA over two seasons. She also represented Team USA in the 2024 Japan All-Star Series.

Before college, Canady was a standout at Topeka High School, where she was a two-time Kansas Gatorade Player of the Year and led her team to back-to-back state championships. She graduated in 2022 and was ranked as the No. 11 softball recruit in the nation by Extra Innings Softball. Off the field, she’s equally grounded—an academic All-American who enjoys reading and spending time with her dog. She is the daughter of Bruce and Katherine Canady, and her brother Bruce Jr. plays football at Cal. Canady’s NIL deal not only sets a new benchmark for college softball but also signals a shift in opportunities for Black female athletes in a space that other demographics have long dominated. “She’s changing the game—literally and financially,” Coach Glasco said.



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Focus on NiJaree Canady’s NIL deal ‘insulting’ to Texas Tech softball star

Why Texas Tech, Texas will win 2025 WCWS It’s a Lone Star State Women’s College World Series this year, and reporter Jenni Carlson breaks down one reason Texas Tech will win and one reason Texas will win the WCWS. Glasco argued that the focus on Canady’s compensation overshadows her athletic achievements and perpetuates gender inequality […]

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  • Glasco argued that the focus on Canady’s compensation overshadows her athletic achievements and perpetuates gender inequality in sports.
  • He emphasized the significant value Canady brought to the team, exceeding the financial investment of her NIL deal.
  • Glasco advocated for clearer rules and guidelines surrounding NIL deals in the future.

OKLAHOMA CITY — Even after the Texas Tech softball team’s season came to a bitter end in the finals of the Women’s College World Series, Gerry Glasco had to be asked about NiJaree Canady’s name, image and likeness deal.

Since Canady’s arrival last July, she and her head coach have fielded question after question about the nature of the agreement with The Matador Club — most from national outlets who dropped in on the Red Raiders throughout the season — what it means for Canady, the player, and Glasco, the leader of the Red Raiders. By the end of Friday night’s press conference following the 10-4 loss to Texas in a winner-take-all game for the national championship, Glasco had had enough.

Glasco gave it a second before answering the question from a national outlet’s reporter. He began by saying he was in no way, shape or form the right person to be talking about NIL. He did, however, have a few thoughts on the focus — even 11 months after it became public knowledge — on Canady’s deal.

“Why is it different for a female athlete to be paid $1 million than a male football player getting three million or four million, or a male basketball player?” Glasco rhetorically asked. “I think that’s an interesting question.”

Glasco took Canady’s situation and compared it to that of the Ohio State football team, which was known to have paid a hefty amount for it’s national championship-winning team. While NIL might be mentioned in discussions about the Buckeyes, it rarely appears on TV broadcasts, he said.

Canady and the Red Raiders were not afforded that luxury. Each time Texas Tech made it onto ESPN, the bulk of the talking points — after Canady’s talent — were those about the NIL deal that brought her to Lubbock.

“Personally, I’m thrilled for NiJa,” Glasco said, adding that he loves the idea of any athlete being able to capitalize on themselves, leaving school without years of student loans to pay off. “I found it almost insulting to her at times when I listen to broadcasts, how much they talk about it.

“Like I said, I don’t hear it when we talk about… when we watch a men’s basketball game or a men’s football game. And to me, that’s not right. That shouldn’t be that way.”

The Texas Tech head coach pointed out something he reiterated before the WCWS began: Canady’s deal may be big and historic, but the return on investment might be the highest in the short history of NIL.

“The value of NiJa Canady to our program is, I think, it’s unbelievable,” Glasco said. “I’m no expert, or somebody could do an in-depth study, but I have no doubt it would exceed a million dollars of value.”

The Matador Club seems to agree with Glasco. The Tech NIL collective signed Canady to another lucrative deal that was reported Friday before the championship game.

Glasco sees this is an opportunity for everybody to learn and grow from.

“I think that our sport, I’m thrilled for the athletes that are getting to take advantage,” Glasco said. “I also think that we have to use great caution. It’s a new policy. It’s a new. … I don’t know what the right word (is), but it’s a new situation and obviously a lot of rules and guidelines need to be used or set, established in the coming years.”



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Texas Tech’s first Women’s College World Series appearance fueled by NIL and the transfer portal

OKLAHOMA CITY — After pitching only one inning in the biggest game in Texas Tech softball history, pitcher NiJaree Canady watched the remainder of the game from the dugout. Canady, who started every game of the Women’s College World Series for the Red Raiders finally hit her wall.  “I think the amount of innings got […]

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OKLAHOMA CITY — After pitching only one inning in the biggest game in Texas Tech softball history, pitcher NiJaree Canady watched the remainder of the game from the dugout. Canady, who started every game of the Women’s College World Series for the Red Raiders finally hit her wall. 

“I think the amount of innings got to her,” Texas Tech coach Gerry Glasco told the media postgame. The former Louisiana Tech head coach put his ace in the circle for 240 of the Red Raiders’ 410 innings pitched. 

Any why wouldn’t he?

Canady completed her junior campaign with a 1.11 earned run average and over 300 strikeouts. The Red Raiders right-hander more than earned her second $1 million NIL contract before the opening pitch of the winner-take-all Game 3 at Devon Park here Friday night.

Her headline-grabbing NIL deals and dominance on the diamond made her the most talked about softball player in recent memory. Unfortunately for Texas Tech, the highest-paid pitcher in NCAA softball is indeed still human. After six complete games and 34 innings pitched in nine days, Canady’s velocity and pitch placement noticeably declined against Texas. 

Those are the hard facts in dissecting the Texas’ 10-4 victory that gave the Longhorns the school’s first softball championship. However, some see the 2025 Women’s College World Series battle as offering something more lasting for both programs and the sport at large. 

“Honestly, it just gets bigger and bigger, and I feel like more eyes are on the sport,” Canady said Friday night. “Of course, that comes with, like, positives and negatives. There’s always, like, negative attention that comes with it. But I feel … [we’re] just growing the sport, and just giving younger girls something look up to, it means a lot.”

The first two games of the championship series each reached a record 2.1 million viewers. The cumulative attendance at Devon Park reached 119,778, a tournament record. Friday’s game saw a record crowd of 12,269. 

Record NIL money. Record attendance. Record viewership. It can leave one feeling like Texas Tech’s Canady is on the path to becoming the Caitlin Clark of NCAA softball. 

“If Caitlin Clark would have entered the transfer portal after her sophomore year, where would the bidding war have ended up, knowing what you know now?” OpenDorse CEO Blake Lawrence told The Athletic last July. “The bet here is that the rise of women’s sports, the rise of softball viewership, and a once-in-a-generation talent like Caitlin Clark is on the market. The $1 million payment could be justified.”

The quote aged well. A year later and Texas Tech competed in their first NCAA championship series. The trophy may have evaded the Red Raiders in their debut, but Canady and her teammates expressed no regrets. 

“Yes, this year wasn’t how we wanted it to go. It’s not how we wanted it to end,” Canady said, “but to be able to go, to have a team that didn’t even make it to a regional the year before, come to the final, to push a third game in a national championship series, I feel like that means a lot.”

However, as the junior alluded to, with more money often comes more problems — or, perhaps more awareness of existing problems. 

Although Glasco has said multiple times Canady’s skill and her impact on the program is worth at least $1 million, he doesn’t shy away from the hard truth about gender inequity in how NIL deals are discussed. 

“I think it’s interesting. You watch an Ohio State in the men’s football game, national championship game, you don’t hear any announcers talking about NIL,” the coach said. “I found it almost insulting to her at times when I listen to broadcast, how much they talk about it, because … I don’t hear it when we talk about, when we watch a men’s basketball game or a men’s football game, and, to me, that that’s not right.” 

However, will these inequities, or the ability of a softball program to offer a $1 million dollar NIL deal, soon be a thing of the past? As Texas and Texas Tech prepared for Game 3 of the 2025 WCWS, a federal judge made her final ruling on the House vs. NCAA lawsuit.

House v. NCAA settlement approved: Landmark decision opens door for revenue sharing in college athletics

Brandon Marcello

House v. NCAA settlement approved: Landmark decision opens door for revenue sharing in college athletics

As part of the $2.8 billion settlement, beginning July 1, schools will have $20.5 million in payments to divvy out across their men’s and women’s athletic programs. 

Should the suggested back-payment formula be used, 90% of the fund will be allocated to football and men’s basketball. Women’s basketball would receive 5% of the pool and all other sports, including softball, would spilt the remaining 5%. 

Between the Wild West-era of NIL and the increasing transfer portal traffic, college rosters are constantly changing. As more money comes into sports like softball, coaches must strike a balance between cultivating young athletes and leaders with recruiting superstars who can accelerate the championship window. 

What is that balance?

“That’s the great unknown right now,” Texas coach Mike White told CBS Sports Friday night. “Like the athletic director [Chris] Del Conte said, it’s, like, coming up, sailing out in a flat world and coming off the edge … In some respects, it’s great that these athletes are able to kind of earn a living now, or get paid for what they do, and that’s awesome. But it’s also hard to compete.” 

Even while competing in his eighth WCWS championship, White and his staff had eyes on the transfer portal, because that’s what is required to compete in 2025. Austin may have the title, but there’s no denying that there’s also a good deal of momentum some 375 miles away in Lubbock.

All signs point to the rising senior returning to Texas Tech. The question now is whether Canady and Glasco can build on The NiJa Effect?





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