Michael Brauner is a Senior Sports Analyst and Contributing Writer for Yellowhammer News. You can follow him on Twitter @MBraunerWNSP and hear him every weekday morning from 6 to 9 a.m. on “The Opening Kickoff” on WNSP-FM 105.5, available free online.
NIL
Report: Trump creating commission on college sports to help solve NIL issue
President Donald J. Trump made national news last week when he spoke at a commencement ceremony on the campus of the University of Alabama. While his visit alone was significant, the headlines got much bigger when it was revealed that he was discussing the NIL issue with Nick Saban and potentially even considering an executive […]

President Donald J. Trump made national news last week when he spoke at a commencement ceremony on the campus of the University of Alabama.
While his visit alone was significant, the headlines got much bigger when it was revealed that he was discussing the NIL issue with Nick Saban and potentially even considering an executive order to try to put an end to the pay-for-play chaos.
RELATED: House settlement leader tells Saban and Trump to stay out of NIL dispute
Whether or not an executive order would be able to help the situation cannot be known, however, it appears that the President is now taking a different route on the matter instead.
According to a story from Ross Dellenger of Yahoo Sports, Trump is creating a commission on college sports to help look into NIL-related issues.
“Trump’s involvement, though not surprising, is a landmark moment in college athletics history — the country’s most powerful elected leader potentially shaping the future of the industry,” Dellenger wrote. “Details of the commission are for now being kept private, but the group is expected to feature college sports stakeholders, prominent businesspeople with deep connections to college football and, perhaps, even a former coach and administrator.”
While it sounds like fans will have to wait to see what the commission looks like, Dellenger did reveal the general concept of what the goal will be.
RELATED: State Rep. Joe Lovvorn files bill to make NIL earnings tax-free for college athletes
“The commission is expected to deeply examine the unwieldy landscape of college sports, including the frequency of player movement in the transfer portal, the unregulated booster compensation paid to athletes, the debate of college athlete employment, the application of Title IX to school revenue-share payments and, even, conference membership makeup and conference television contracts.”
Perhaps the most significant portion of the story is Dellenger’s confirmation that Saban himself is expected to be heavily involved in the process.
What exactly an arrangement looks like remains to be seen, but it seems to be all but confirmed that the highest powers in the country are working on the issues in college sports.
NIL
Texas Tech’s ‘million-dollar arm’ ends Oklahoma’s NCAA softball dynasty
The Oklahoma softball dynasty is over, at least for now. Monday night, June 2, Texas Tech knocked off the Sooners to reach their first championship series. In the process, they ended Oklahoma’s run of four consecutive national titles. How did Texas Tech knock off the four-time defending champs? Like all champions, Oklahoma did not go […]

The Oklahoma softball dynasty is over, at least for now. Monday night, June 2, Texas Tech knocked off the Sooners to reach their first championship series. In the process, they ended Oklahoma’s run of four consecutive national titles.
How did Texas Tech knock off the four-time defending champs?
Like all champions, Oklahoma did not go quietly. Down to their final strike in the bottom of the 7th inning, the Sooners’ number nine hitter, Abigale Dayton, hit a two-run homer to tie the game at two. It was the only mistake Texas Tech superstar pitcher NiJaree Canady made all night.
Canady’s teammates didn’t flinch. They bailed her out in the bottom of the inning with a couple of hits and a walk-off sacrifice fly to win it 3-2. Head coach Gerry Glasco’s players had their “David versus Goliath” moment.
“That’s been our motto all year, our chance at forever,” Glasco said. “We can leave a legacy at Texas Tech that will be remembered forever in the minds of the people that are able to watch this ball club. I think that we’ve done that. I think our team has left a legacy that’ll be remembered forever.”
Why is NiJaree Canady in the spotlight?
The Red Raiders leaned on their own giant to get it done. Canady earned National Player of the Year honors at Stanford last season. She made headlines in the summer of 2024 when she transferred to Texas Tech, becoming the first softball player in history to sign a $1 million name, image and likeness deal.
Unbiased. Straight Facts.TM
NiJaree Canady’s historic NIL deal came from The Matador Club, Texas Tech’s NIL collective, which offered a one-year, $1,050,024 contract.

All she’s done this season is post a 33-5 record with an ERA at 0.90. Canady has thrown every pitch for her team in this Women’s College World Series run. Canady was one strike away from holding the Sooners scoreless for the first time in 300 games, a streak that spans 6 years and counting. She was asked how they pulled it off.
“We just played for each other,” Canady said. “Honestly, I feel like a lot of people doubted us and a lot of people didn’t think we would get to this point. So, I think we just didn’t have any pressure on us. We just wanted to go out, play softball and play our game.”
Glasco said Canady’s leadership might be the ingredient that put his team over the top and relayed a conversation he had with her while recruiting the superstar to come to small-town Lubbock, Texas.
“One of the things I kept telling her,” Glasco said. “Hey, if you come to Texas Tech and you take us to the World Series, your market value in advertisements, your shelf life will be seven, eight times more than if you went to a blue blood, like a UCLA, or an Alabama or Tennessee or Oklahoma. If you come here and you take this team to the World Series, there’s no comparison.”
What’s next for Oklahoma?
Coach Glasco also made sure to put his team’s win into perspective. He compared the Sooners to another all-time great program.
“What they’ve done is historic, legendary,” Glasco said. “When I was a kid, we grew up talking about John Wooden and UCLA basketball, and I still think of John Wooden and UCLA when I think of college basketball. That’s what Patty Gasso has done and what Oklahoma’s done, great champions.”
Patty Gasso shed some tears Monday. With 14 newcomers, she very nearly coached the Sooners to their sixth straight championship series. The record run of titles may be done but Gasso, who has eight national championships since 1995, says she has never thought about coaching a dynasty.
“Losing is not fun, but losing is life,” Gasso said. “We all lose at something. It’s hard, but it’s lessons learned from it. And I think that’s probably what’s most important for me.”
The Red Raiders will meet rival Texas in the best-of-three championship series starting Wednesday, June 4, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in a rivalry referred to in college football as “The Battle For The Chancellor’s Spurs.” The Longhorns knocked Tennessee out of the tournament Tuesday, June 3. Both teams are hoping to win their first national title.
contributed to this report.
NIL
MSU Football Will Be Competitive in NIL Under New AD
Michigan State has hired Georgia Tech’s J Batt as its newest athletic director. Batt replaces Alan Haller, who held the position for four years before being let go last month. MSU was seeking an athletic director who would revitalize fundraising and modernize the athletic program’s revenue. Batt did so at GT, where he helped fundraise […]

Michigan State has hired Georgia Tech’s J Batt as its newest athletic director.
Batt replaces Alan Haller, who held the position for four years before being let go last month. MSU was seeking an athletic director who would revitalize fundraising and modernize the athletic program’s revenue.
Batt did so at GT, where he helped fundraise and improve the football and basketball programs in Atlanta. Many, including former MSU football head coach Nick Saban, have had good things to say about the Spartans’ newest athletic director.
MSU has not been competitive on or off the football field in the last few years. Whether that is because of the product on the field, a lack of competitiveness in the NIL department, or both, the hiring of Batt should shore up at least one of these issues.
NIL support and the on-field product have been a bit of a cat-and-mouse game for the Spartans in the last few seasons. The team has not won many games since 2021, which has led donors to be hesitant to give money to the program.
With an energetic, charismatic athletic director like Batt who wants to build genuine relationships with donors, Spartan football should be on the upswing.
There is no reason the Spartans should not be in the upper half of the top 25 programs in college football when it comes to funding their NIL department.
Even if the team is not pushing for a spot in the College Football Playoff, there should still be a healthy amount of money coming into the program.
With Batt now in place as the new AD, becoming one of the top NIL programs in college football is now a reality. Fans should be excited about the future of the program because of this hire.
Jonathan Smith has not blown any teams away on the recruiting trail, even if he has landed a few solid players and diamonds in the rough. With improved NIL funding because of Batt, he has many more resources at his disposal.
MSU football has had a few down years that have disappointed fans. Those days could be over because of the new man in the front office.
Remember to follow along with all your Michigan State athletics news when you follow the official Spartan Nation page on Facebook, Spartan Nation, WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE, and feel free to share your thoughts when you join our community group, Go Green Go White, as well WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE.
Don’t forget to follow us on X @MSUSpartansOnSI as well.
NIL
USC Running Back Makes Major NIL Announcement on Monday
The USC Trojans’ 2025 college football recruiting class was one of the best in the country, ranking No. 15 nationally according to On3. Headlined by five-star quarterback Husan Longstreet, they also signed the No. 1 junior college running back in the country Waymond Jordan. After winning the NJCAA D1 Football Offensive Player of the Year […]

The USC Trojans’ 2025 college football recruiting class was one of the best in the country, ranking No. 15 nationally according to On3.
Headlined by five-star quarterback Husan Longstreet, they also signed the No. 1 junior college running back in the country Waymond Jordan.
After winning the NJCAA D1 Football Offensive Player of the Year in 2024, Jordan makes his way to one of the most prestigious schools in the country to continue his football career. He ran for 1,614 rushing yards and 20 touchdowns in 12 games, both of which led the nation.
On Monday, the top-ranked running back signed a massive NIL deal, where he is officially an athlete under C4 Energy.
NIL
Florida Atlantic University Athletics
BOCA RATON, Fla. – Florida Atlantic sophomore pitchers Trey Beard and MJ Bollinger have been named to the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District Team for baseball. The program recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom. The CSC Academic All-America® program separately recognizes honorees in four […]

To be eligible for Academic All-District, student-athletes must be at least a sophomore, maintain a 3.50 or better GPA, and be an important starter or reserve.
Beard established himself as one of the best pitchers in the country in his sophomore campaign, finishing with a 7-1 record, a 3.14 ERA, and 118 strikeouts. His strikeout total ranked seventh in Division I prior to the start of NCAA Regionals. A First Team All-AAC selection, he became the first FAU pitcher since Austin Gomber in 2013 to eclipse 100 strikeouts in a season. Later this summer, he will represent USA Baseball on the Collegiate National Team. In the classroom, the native of Dunedin, Florida, holds a 3.58 GPA while majoring in business management.
Bollinger led the Owls with 11 saves, five of which required six outs or more. He finished with a 2.01 ERA in 44.2 innings. Bollinger majors in Information Systems Management and carries a 3.78 GPA.
Both players now advance to the Academic All-America ballot, which CSC members will vote on until June 17. Beard and Bollinger will hope to join former baseball Owls Chris Saxton (2004) and Nolan Schanuel (2023) as previous Academic All-Americans.
For more on the CSC Academic All-America program and to see the full Academic All-District Team visit https://academicallamerica.com/.
NIL
With nation's No. 1 recruiting class, USC 'as powerful as any program in the country' in NIL era
Despite what many have considered a lackluster past two seasons at USC under Lincoln Riley, the Trojans’ football program has been scorching hot on the recruiting trail in 2026. As June kicks off, SC’s class is almost entirely filled — with 27 prospects to be exact — and it ranks No. 1 not just in […]


Despite what many have considered a lackluster past two seasons at USC under Lincoln Riley, the Trojans’ football program has been scorching hot on the recruiting trail in 2026.
As June kicks off, SC’s class is almost entirely filled — with 27 prospects to be exact — and it ranks No. 1 not just in the Big Ten but nationally. That’s ahead of traditional powerhouses like Georgia, Ohio State, Alabama, and LSU. Whether they’ll hold onto that lead through Signing Day depends on who else they land, and who their competitors bring in. But one thing is clear: Riley and his staff are recruiting at an elite level.
And according to On3 VP of Recruiting Steve Wiltfong, there is no program more equipped to handle recruiting in the name, image and likeness era than the Trojans.
“There’s a lot of excitement around this program,” he said Monday during On3’s Wiltfong Whiparound show. “And in the NIL era, USC is as powerful as any program in the country right now.”
The most recent example of that is five-star tight end Mark Bowman, who committed to USC late last month over offers from Georgia, Texas, Ohio State, and more. The Santa Ana (Calif.) Mater Dei product has been compared to ex-UGA star Brock Bowers and is the country’s No. 1 tight end.
Trojans taking advantage of their momentum, increased NIL push
USC had been considered a top contender for him, but the ramped-up pursuit and NIL offering pushed them to the top and got Bowman to commit before he took any other official visits.
“We haven’t gotten confirmation from any USC source or from Mark Bowman, but we’re told the NIL opportunity at USC could provide Bowman an opportunity to earn $8-10 million by the time he leaves USC after three years,” WeAreSC.com publisher Scott Schrader wrote after the Trojans landed Bowman.
In addition to Bowman, they’ve landed commitments from borderline five-star Elbert Hill, top-60 prospect Keenyi Pepe and four other top-100 recruits in this class. And that doesn’t include five-star cornerback RJ Sermons, who was committed for the class of 2026 but recently reclassified up to 2025.
With their 27 current commitments, the Trojans have eclipsed — and nearly doubled — the number of blue-chip (four- and five-star) pledges that they had a year ago. And Riley and Co. are still in on some more top targets as they look to build a massive class.
What that looks like down the road in a year or two once they’ve made their way to campus will be determined then, but the Trojans are no doubt turning heads with the changes they’ve made.
“It is so different with USC now. It has changed a lot over the last year and since they made changes,” Bowman told On3’s Chad Simmons before he committed. “They have been recruiting much harder the last few months. It is every day with USC now, and that has changed things for me with them. I like what the staff is doing, their energy and they are close to home, too.”
NIL
The new playbook – thehomewoodstar.com
George French is preparing as if he is already in the big leagues. As a rising senior at Homewood High School, French aspires to one day play Division I college football. “I keep my social media professional — like I’m already a big-time player — because that’s what I want to be,” the Patriots defensive […]

George French is preparing as if he is already in the big leagues.
As a rising senior at Homewood High School, French aspires to one day play Division I college football.
“I keep my social media professional — like I’m already a big-time player — because that’s what I want to be,” the Patriots defensive back said.
But he doesn’t just talk the talk — he also attempts to walk the walk.
“In day-to-day life, you have to watch what you do and make smart decisions,” French said. “You have to watch who you surround yourself with and where you go.”
French said his coaches at Homewood have educated and encouraged players on how to best present themselves to prospective schools.
“Our coaches emphasize that if you do everything you’re supposed to do — in the classroom, in the weight room and on the football field — you’ll start to see the results,” he said. “They tell us to control what we can and let everything else fall into place.”
Controlling what one can has become even more important in today’s college athletics landscape.
“There are fewer scholarship spots,” said ESPN recruiting analyst Tom Luginbill. “Now instead of divvying up all their scholarships at the high school level, now they’re going to get 12-14 guys out of the portal. The spots have become limited.”
SHIFTING SAND
Coaches are no longer building around potential. They’re buying certainty. Between the rise of the transfer portal, the explosion of Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) dollars, and the impending House v. NCAA court settlement — which could allow direct revenue-sharing paychecks from schools to athletes — the entire scholarship model has changed.
For high school seniors, that means fewer opportunities. Unless you’re elite, the message is clear: wait your turn — or get left behind.
In place of the old system is a new billion-dollar industry in which high school prospects are still commodities — just ones with less value than they held before the money started flowing.
Not all college programs play on the same field. The Power Four conferences — the SEC, Big Ten, Big 12 and ACC — have TV deals, booster collectives and NIL opportunities.
Below them are Group of Five schools like UAB, Jacksonville State or Troy — with fewer scholarships, smaller budgets and less exposure. Then come FCS, D2 and junior colleges, where many now land by necessity.
THE PORTAL JAM
For decades, high school football was the bedrock of college recruiting. Talent rose, coaches scouted, scholarships followed and dreams materialized on National Signing Day.
That world is gone.
It started with COVID. In 2020, the NCAA granted all athletes an extra year of eligibility. That decision created a massive traffic jam. Fifth-year seniors stayed. Sixth-year players reclassified. Scholarships that would have gone to high school seniors disappeared.
Then came NIL. In July 2021, athletes could finally earn money off their name, image and likeness. But what was meant to reward marketability became a loosely disguised pay-for-play market.
“Monetary compensation is no longer based on results,” Luginbill said. “It’s not about ‘if I produce, schools will want me.’ Now, it’s ‘how much are you going to pay me to play here?’ There’s no accountability from the player’s side, and that’s not what NIL was intended for — certainly not in recruiting.”
At the same time, the transfer portal exploded. The NCAA removed the sit-out rule for first-time transfers, and a flood of player movement followed. A new reality emerged: Why recruit a high school senior you’ll have to develop when you can buy a 22-year-old with experience?
“Unless you’ve been tampered with or have significant production, you’re either transferring down or walking on somewhere,” Luginbill said. “The math doesn’t add up. There just aren’t enough roster spots. There is a false level of value that the kids place on themselves or the people around them place on them. We’re talking about thousands of kids.”
According to On3 Sports, more than 4,000 FBS football players entered the NCAA transfer portal during this cycle — and more than 1,600 are still looking for a home. In men’s basketball, 2,320 players entered the portal this spring, per Verbal Commits — a jump of more than 11 percent from last year, and nearly 2.5 times more than five years ago.
This isn’t just a revenue-sport issue. Since the NCAA eliminated its one-year sit-out rule in 2021, tens of thousands of athletes across all sports have entered the portal — many of them two, three or even four times. Each year of the NIL era has accelerated the cycle. In 2024, the NCAA opened the door to unlimited transfers.
Combine that with the backlog of COVID players, and the result is a recruiting funnel that narrows further every season. And it’s about to get even tighter, as schools prepare for revenue sharing and potential roster caps tied to the House settlement.
Coach Trent Dilfer came to UAB with a plan to build his program through high school recruiting — but that vision didn’t hold. He watched promising redshirt freshmen get poached, impact players leave mid-development and recruiting calendars shift. Now, he’s saving scholarships for older transfers. Like most coaches, he’s frustrated by the chaos and eager for structure.
“All I need is guardrails, all I need is boundaries, all I need is where it is,” Dilfer told Birmingham’s CBS 42. “I don’t care where the goal post is, just keep it stationary… Because right now this goal post is going around 360 degrees because there’s zero leadership, there’s zero boundaries, there’s zero guardrails.”
MANAGING EXPECTATIONS
But this isn’t just about numbers. It’s about expectations — and the widening gap between what kids believe they’re walking into and what actually waits.
For years, high school athletes have been surrounded by talk of NIL money, brand building and recruiting leverage. Highlight reels and camp circuits — all of it reinforcing the same narrative: play well, get noticed, get paid. But most never make it that far.
“High school kids now believe they’re entitled to compensation,” Luginbill said. “But the original intent was that if a college athlete… became a marketable commodity, they could earn income. That’s light years from what we’re
doing.”
Even for players who eventually cash in, the road usually starts somewhere less glamorous — a Group of Five school, a redshirt year, a position change, a climb.
“The transfer portal has made it harder for high schoolers to land spots at Power Four programs,” said Jim Cavale, CEO of Athletes.org. “Starting at a Group of Five school and working your way up may be the best path.”
BACK-END FALLOUT
While these dynamics affect every sport, the epicenter is football and men’s basketball — where the bulk of the money flows and the pressure to win immediately is highest.
According to research on signing day trends, once-powerhouse programs are producing fewer high-major
signees and more D2, JUCO and NAIA placements. In other sports — baseball, wrestling, lacrosse, even track — the scholarship slots are already shrinking. If roster caps go into effect, they may vanish altogether.
Whatever happens next — roster limits, direct pay, new NIL rules — the path for high school athletes is narrowing fast. And for players like French, that means more than just navigating offers. It means trying to stay in the game.
“It has been twice as hard for players in my class to earn attention, now that college coaches spend a lot of attention on portal guys,” French said. “That is why I have been preparing myself in all aspects of my life to be ready when the time comes.”
French has the tone of a player set out to prove he belongs.
“I know I need to be on the same level physically and mentally as those other guys,” he said. “That’s what drives me, and I push myself every day to reach that.”
Look for part two of The New Playbook in next month’s issue: Current college athletes from our communities reflect on navigating NIL transfers and what direct pay from schools could mean next.
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