NIL
Robby Porco put NIL offer up as a joke, but hopes to put the chill on opposing hitters now
MORGANTOWN — Chances are, you may have heard of Robby Porco more for his free-handed approach to NIL rather than his results on the mound. The WVU pitcher has gone viral after what may be the best Name Image and Likeness (NIL) opportunity offered in all of college athletics. You can hang out with him […]


MORGANTOWN — Chances are, you may have heard of Robby Porco more for his free-handed approach to NIL rather than his results on the mound.
The WVU pitcher has gone viral after what may be the best Name Image and Likeness (NIL) opportunity offered in all of college athletics.
You can hang out with him for just a dollar.
“A lot of people have been texting me about my NIL,” he says with a smile. “A lot of people have been lighting me up.”
Porco is one of 399 WVU athletes who have opted into the school’s NIL platform “The Mountaineer Exchange.”
On the website, one can set up a punting lesson with WVU punter Oliver Straw for $80 or receive a TikTok post from WVU volleyball player Cassidy Tanton for $200, among others.
Porco just wants to hang out — under the offer he adds, “I can come chill” — and will do so for $1.00.
“We were sitting in a meeting with an influencer and I was bored,” Porco said. “I went on and made a listing. It was actually about a year and a half ago, so I forgot about it. It popped back up recently. It’s funny.”
To this point, Porco said there have been no takers. If you’re interested, just don’t make any requests for his presence at the moment, because he may be a little busy.
The 23rd-ranked Mountaineers (40-12) are in Arlington, Texas this week and are the top seed in the Big 12 tournament.
WVU has a first-round bye and won’t play until Thursday, against either Cincinnati or Texas Tech.
Just like Porco’s NIL offer “popped back up recently,” so, too, has Porco’s pitching prospects.
The junior from Warrington, Pa. came into the season penciled in as one of the Mountaineers’ top starters.
WVU head coach Steve Sabins called him, “projectable as a draft prospect as just about anyone on our team,” to start the season.
Much of that thought went into two years of potential finally developing into reality, at least that was the hope.
Porco stands 6-foot-8 and has been throwing 95, 96 and 97 mph fastballs since his freshman season.
Control was the problem and then injuries set in last season, and Porco just never seemed to be the right fit.
His control was still a problem earlier this season and Porco was moved to the bullpen after three starts.
Until a recent relief appearance against Kansas at the end of the regular season, Porco hadn’t been called on since April 2, a span of 25 games.
“It’s always been a mental struggle for me,” he admits. “Just getting out there and feeling comfortable can feel hard sometimes. Things can speed up on you.”
That relief appearance against the Jayhawks was one of the few bright sports WVU had in the entire series.
Kansas swept all three games, sending WVU to the Big 12 tournament on a four-game losing streak and having lost eight of its last 11 games.
But Porco went four innings, gave up just one hit, no runs and struck out five.
“Starting off, I would have liked to have been able to help my team a little more,” Porco said. “Since then, I’ve been staying steady, just trying to get back into my groove. You try to keep it not like being a roller coaster, because then you can’t be consistent.”
He said he’s hopefully found ways to slow down the game and be more focused on the mound, which would be good news for the Mountaineers, who are in desperate need of another potential starter heading into the postseason.
It’s quite possible his imposing frame could be used in a variety of pitching situations beginning in the Big 12 tournament.
It’s also possible Porco is finally living up to his potential, even if that meant not having a role for the bulk of the season.
“For him to get his opportunity and do what he did was massive,” Sabins said. “It’s a challenge for the players. They basically have to make the decision of do they want to work while they wait or do they want to go backwards?
“Guys go back and forth. You can either work and be prepared and get better or not work and get worse and sabotage yourself.”
And don’t expect inflation to take over Porco’s NIL offer, even though his popularity may be going through the roof.
“No, I can’t jack up my prices now,” he said.
NIL
How NIL money reshaped NBA draft with fewer early entrants
Will Wade’s work building N.C. State into an immediate winner included the pursuit of an NBA draft entrant, just in case he returned to college. It wasn’t a huge risk. With all the cash flowing in college, the number of early entrants in the NBA draft has continued to shrink. This year’s draft starts Wednesday […]

Will Wade’s work building N.C. State into an immediate winner included the pursuit of an NBA draft entrant, just in case he returned to college.
It wasn’t a huge risk. With all the cash flowing in college, the number of early entrants in the NBA draft has continued to shrink. This year’s draft starts Wednesday night with its lowest total of those prospects in at least 10 years.
“Now you can play the long game a little bit more,” Wade told The Associated Press, referring to how college players can look at their futures. “Look, I can get paid the same I would get paid in the G League, the same I would get paid on a two-way (contract). Some guys are getting first-round money.”
And more money is on the way.
It has been four years since college athletes were permitted to profit off the use of their name, image and likeness (NIL), opening the door for athlete compensation that NCAA rules once forbade. July 1 marks the official start of revenue sharing, when schools can begin directly paying athletes after the $2.8 billion House antitrust settlement.
For Wade, that led to signing Texas Tech’s Darrion Williams after 247Sports’ fifth-ranked transfer withdrew from the draft.
“Basically now if you’re an early entry and you’re not a top-20, top-22 pick — where the money slots — you can pretty much make that in college,” the new Wolfpack coach said.
It’s all part of a seismic change that has rippled through college athletics since the pandemic, its impact touching the NBA. Players willing to “test the waters” in the draft before returning to school now have a lucrative option to consider against uncertain pro prospects.
And it shows in the numbers.
“With all the money that’s being thrown around in NIL, you’re having a lot less players put their names in,” Detroit Pistons president of basketball operations Trajan Langdon said. “You’re having pretty good players pulling their names out.”
Declining number of early entrants
This year’s drop is significant compared with the years before anyone had heard of COVID-19. There was a spike of college players jumping into the draft in the pandemic’s aftermath, when they were granted a free year of eligibility to temporarily make even a fourth-year senior an “early” entrant.
But those numbers had fallen as those five-year players cycled out of college basketball, and they’re now below pre-pandemic levels. That decline coincides with NIL’s July 2021 arrival, from athletes doing paid appearances or social-media endorsements to boosters forming collectives offering NIL packages amounting to de facto salaries.
As a result:
- Eighty-two players appeared on the NBA’s list of early entrants, primarily from American colleges with a smattering of other teams, down 49% from 2024 (162) and nearly 47% compared with the four-year average from 2016-19 (153.5).
- Thirty-two remained after withdrawal deadlines, down from 62 last year and an average of 72 from 2016-19.
- Adding international prospects, 109 players declared for the draft, down from 201 last year and a 205 average from 2016-19.
- And only 46 remained, down from 77 in 2024 and 83.8 per year from 2016-19.
More college players weighing options
Duke coach Jon Scheyer understands draft dynamics, both for no-doubt headliners and prospects facing less clarity. He sees college athlete compensation as a “legitimate game changer.”
“Hopefully it allows players to decide what’s truly best for their game,” Scheyer told the AP. “It allows them to analyze: ‘Am I actually ready for this or not?’ Where money doesn’t have to be the deciding factor. Because if money’s the deciding factor, that’s why you see kids not stick. The NBA’s cutthroat.”
The Blue Devils are expected to have three players selected in the first round Wednesday: presumptive No. 1 pick Cooper Flagg and top-10 prospects Kon Knueppel and Khaman Maluach. They also had players sorting through draft decisions.
Freshman Isaiah Evans — a slender wing with explosive scoring potential — withdrew instead of chasing first-round status through the draft process. Incoming transfer Cedric Coward from Washington State rapidly rose draft boards after the combine and remained in the draft.
“There’s no substituting the money you’re going to make if you’re a top-15, top-20 pick,” said Scheyer, entering Year 4 as successor to retired Hall of Famer Mike Krzyzewski. “But if you’re not solidified as a first-round pick, why risk it when you can have a solid year and a chance to go up or be in the same position the following season?”
College compensation is reshaping the draft pool
Langdon, himself a former Duke first-rounder, sees that evolution too.
His Pistons made their first playoff appearance since 2019 but lack a first-round selection and own a single pick in Thursday’s second round. Fewer candidates could make the already imperfect science of drafting even trickier in this new reality.
According to the NBA’s 2024-25 rookie scale, a player drafted midway through the first round would make roughly $3.5 million in first-year salary. That figure drops to about $2.8 million at No. 20, $2.3 million at No. 25 and $2.1 million with the 30th and final first-round pick.
A minimum first-year NBA salary is roughly $1.2 million.
“These NIL packages are starting to get up to 3 to 4 to 5 to 6 million dollars,” Langdon said. “These guys are not going to put their name in to be the 25th pick, or even the 18th pick. They are going to go back to school in hopes of being a lottery pick next year.
“With that pool of players decreasing, it kind of decreases the odds of the level of player we get at No. 37, just the pure mathematics.”
Current NBA players offer insight
Indiana Pacers big man Thomas Bryant and Oklahoma City Thunder counterpart Isaiah Hartenstein, who both played in the seven-game NBA Finals that ended Sunday, illustrate Langdon’s point.
They were back-to-back second-rounders in 2017 — Bryant at No. 42, Hartenstein at 43 — pushed down a draft board featuring early-entry college players in 33 of the 41 picks before them.
Bryant played two college seasons at Indiana before stints with five NBA teams, including the Denver Nuggets’ 2023 championship squad. Would the ability to make college money have changed his journey?
“To be honest, I see it from both sides,” Bryant said. “If you’re not going to get drafted, you understand that a kid needs money to live in college and everything. So I understand where they’re coming from on that end.
“But for me, I took the chance. I bet on myself and I believed in myself, and I worked to the very end. And the thing about me is that if I went down, I was going down swinging. I hang my hat on that. For some, it might not be the same case.”
The American-born Hartenstein moved to Germany at 11 and played in Lithuania before being drafted. As he put it: “Everyone’s journey is different.”
“You should have the right people around you to kind of guide you,” said Hartenstein, a newly minted NBA champion. “I mean, I was lucky that my dad, who was a professional before, kind of guided me. Depending on your circumstances, it’s hard to turn down guaranteed money. If there’s an opportunity to get in a good situation in the NBA, you do that. But it’s a hard decision.”
College can be more of an allure
At N.C. State, Wade’s pitch to Williams included a leading role and a shot at boosting his draft stock.
The 6-foot-6 junior averaged 15.1 points with multiple big NCAA Tournament performances as the Red Raiders reached the Elite Eight, nearly beating eventual champion Florida.
“He was most likely going to be a second-round draft pick, and his package here is better than probably he would’ve gotten as a second-round pick,” Wade said. “We certainly talked about that. We went over that. We went over the math of everything. We went over the plan on how to accomplish that.”
That’s not to say it’s easy at the college level in this new landscape. Roster management is tricky, including a balancing act of maintaining financial resources to potentially land one player while risking missing out on others.
“It’s the way life works; it’s the way it should work,” Wade said. “If there’s no risk, there’s no reward. The riskiest players, in terms of waiting on the money and waiting them out, are the best players. That’s why they’re in the draft process. We’re not going to be scared of that.”
Nor should he, not with the allure of campus life these days.
AP’s Tim Reynolds and Larry Lage contributed.
Originally Published:
NIL
James Madison University – Official Athletics Site
NOTE: This is the third in a series of communications regarding JMU’s plans to successfully evolve in the new environment of college athletics. Part one immediately after the House Settlement was finalized was posted on June 10 and part two on its impact at JMU was published on June 17. Among the many changes to college […]

Among the many changes to college athletics in the evolving landscape with the settlement of the NCAA vs. House case, institutions can now provide direct financial benefits to student-athletes as part of Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) activities. Previously NIL opportunities were only available through third-party arrangements.
In order to enhance the value of athletics participation at the university, James Madison Athletics and the Duke Club are proud to announce the launch of the Student-Athlete Enhancement Fund, a groundbreaking initiative that empowers fans, alumni and donors to elevate the value of JMU student-athlete participation through NIL opportunities.
The fund positions JMU to provide direct financial benefits to student-athletes with a focus on recruiting and retaining elite talent who maximize their opportunities at the university. The Student-Athlete Enhancement Fund is a strategic investment in the future of JMU Athletics. By focusing on recruiting and retaining top-tier student-athletes, the department and its constituents will work collectively to ensure that JMU remains competitive on a national level.
“At JMU, our mission has always been to elevate the student-athlete experience — academically, athletically, and in personal and leadership development,” JMU Director of Athletics Matt Roan said. “The Student-Athlete Enhancement Fund represents our commitment to providing meaningful opportunities in this new era of college sports. We will be able to attract the very best student-athletes who match the culture and pursuit of excellence that we expect at JMU, while also providing resources to retain them to continue their careers in Harrisonburg while pursuing a degree.”
The fund will serve as a vehicle for donors and fans of JMU Athletics to contribute directly to initiatives that impact student-athletes, including revenue sharing models and NIL support structures. By doing so, the Duke Club and JMU Athletics continue to lead with innovation and integrity while reinforcing a culture of excellence.
The Student-Athlete Enhancement Fund provides an additional channel for donor giving, but it does not replace the Duke Club Annual Fund. The Annual Fund will continue to serve as the key vehicle to fund student-athlete scholarships, along with the overall department operating budget. As noted in the June 17 communication, JMU Athletics anticipates adding 15 scholarships in 2025-26 with more to come beyond that. The growth of the Annual Fund will be critical to continue addressing the rising scholarship cost for the department.
Supporters interested in contributing to the Student-Athlete Enhancement Fund or learning more about its impact can visit JMUDukeClub.com. Potential donors are also encouraged to call the Duke Club to discuss how a gift can best address their areas of interest and the department’s greatest needs.
NIL
Arkansas baseball transfer portal tracker
FAYETTEVILLE — The transfer portal for college baseball opened June 2, and Arkansas baseball was active in recruiting throughout its College World Series run and beyond. Two new additions committed while the Razorbacks were in Omaha. Athletes have until July 1 to enter the portal, and commitments will roll in throughout the summer. Arkansas had […]

FAYETTEVILLE — The transfer portal for college baseball opened June 2, and Arkansas baseball was active in recruiting throughout its College World Series run and beyond.
Two new additions committed while the Razorbacks were in Omaha.
Athletes have until July 1 to enter the portal, and commitments will roll in throughout the summer.
Arkansas had one of the top transfer classes in the country last year, bringing in nine players including all-SEC selections Kuhio Aloy, Charles Davalan, Cam Kozeal and Zach Root.
This page will be updated as players commit to the Razorbacks and opt to leave the program ahead of the fall semester.
INCOMING TRANSFERS (2)
Previous school: Vanderbilt
McElvain committed to Arkansas on June 13. The former Commodore had a 7.24 ERA and 2.16 WHIP in 27 1/3 innings pitched as a sophomore this season. He had a 2-3 record with 1 save, and struck out 45 with 28 walks and a .284 opponent batting average. His top moment of the year was May 11 in a 7-5 victory at Tennessee, when he threw 2 scoreless innings and earned his first career save to help Vanderbilt win the series.
Previous school: Little Rock
An All-American and the Ohio Valley Conference pitcher of the year in 2023, Wells committed to the Razorbacks on June 11. Wells had a 1.65 ERA that led the country in 2023, and he struck out 80 and walked 32 in 93 innings. As a senior this season, the Rogers High School alumnus started 16 games and had a 5.36 ERA and 1.49 WHIP in 87 1/3 innings pitched. Wells pitched twice against host and eventual national champion LSU at the 2025 NCAA Baton Rouge Regional. He combined to give up 6 earned runs and 11 hits in 8 1/3 innings pitched.
OUTGOING TRANSFERS (9)
RHP Lance Davis
Davis did not appear in any games for the Razorbacks as a freshman this season. The Jonesboro native was rated the No. 1 right-handed pitcher in Arkansas and No. 2 overall player in the state by Perfect Game.
INF Michael Anderson
Anderson spent one season at Arkansas after transferring from Rhode Island, where he led the Rams with 41 RBI and had a second-best 13 home runs. The junior appeared in four games for the Razorbacks in 2025, with 0 hits in 8 plate appearances.
C Elliott Peterson
Peterson was a junior college addition for Arkansas last offseason from Southeast (Neb.) Community College, where he led NJCAA Division I in batting average at .517. He did not appear in any games for the Razorbacks.
C Zane Becker
New school: Texas A&M
Becker played in 20 games as a freshman this season. He served as backup to starting catcher Ryder Helfrick, who is expected back in 2026. Becker tallied 8 hits in 31 at bats, with 6 RBI, 1 home run, 3 doubles and 5 walks.
INF Gabe Fraser
Fraser briefly served as Arkansas’ starting second baseman after a season-ending injury to Nolan Souza. The freshman started 13 games and played in 28. He suffered a back injury in late April, and Cam Kozeal took over at second. Fraser appeared in two more games, both off the bench in the postseason, after that. He batted .250 with 1 double, 1 triple and 1 home run, scoring 14 runs and totaling 12 RBI.
LHP Jackson Farrell
Farrell did not appear in any games for Arkansas as a freshman. The native of Jenks, Okla., was rated the No. 5 left-handed pitcher in Oklahoma and No. 70 nationally in the class of 2024 by Perfect Game.
RHP Ross Felder
A Springdale Har-Ber alumnus, Felder did not appear in any games as a freshman this season. He was rated the No. 5 right-handed pitcher in Arkansas and No. 287 overall in the class of 2024 by Perfect Game.
RHP Tag Andrews
New school: Little Rock
A freshman out of Maumelle, Andrews did not appear in any games in 2025. He was rated the No. 2 right-handed pitcher in Arkansas and No. 105 nationally in the class of 2024 by Perfect Game.
LHP Luke Williams
Williams did not appear in any games for Arkansas as a freshman. He was rated the No. 4 left-handed pitcher in the state of Oklahoma and No. 72 nationally by Perfect Game.
NIL
5-star QB Ryder Lyons sends clear message about NIL after unexpected BYU commitment
Five-star quarterback Ryder Lyons’ surprising commitment to BYU marks a unique win for the Cougars amid lofty NIL spending sprees in college football. Lyons (6-foot-2.5, 220 pounds) plays for Folsom (California) High School, where he ranks as the No. 4 quarterback, the top player in his state and the No. 13 overall recruit in the […]

Five-star quarterback Ryder Lyons’ surprising commitment to BYU marks a unique win for the Cougars amid lofty NIL spending sprees in college football.
Lyons (6-foot-2.5, 220 pounds) plays for Folsom (California) High School, where he ranks as the No. 4 quarterback, the top player in his state and the No. 13 overall recruit in the class of 2026, per 247Sports.
One of the top players in the country, Lyons holds a $785,000 On3 NIL valuation and has amassed over 30 scholarship offers. Some of which from major programs with plenty of backing from an NIL perspective.
Teams like USC and Oregon were previously favored to land the elite passer before he ultimately chose BYU. The Ducks even had Lyons on campus for the weekend of June 13, but that trip to the defending Big Ten champions apparently didn’t sway him from the Cougars.
It’s difficult to quantify BYU’s efforts in the NIL space, as the university is private, but the recruiting trail has always been a challenging aspect for the program. The Cougars finished 59th in the 2025 cycle after signing the nation’s No. 62 class of 2024.
Enter Lyons, whose decision to pledge to BYU makes him the highest-rated recruit for the program since 2003 and the third highest-rated recruit in school history.
And it wasn’t NIL money that drove his decision, Lyons’ revealed Tuesday during an appearance on “The Pat McAffee Show.”
“It’s hard,” he said of his recruitment and NIL offers. “It’s hard for sure. I do have someone who handles it for me. I have an agent. I have a whole team. But it definitely makes it just confusing. I mean, you’re thrown a lot of money from a lot of different places.”
“But I think you got to obviously stay humble,” Lyons said. “Money is not the biggest part. I mean, the biggest part is making it to the NFL, because that’s where the serious money is. That’s where the long term money is.”
Lyons went on to credit his mother for pushing him to think beyond his collegiate career with sights set on the NFL.
It’s clear that the Lyons’ family feels comfortable with allowing head coach Kalani Sitake and offensive coordinator/ quarterbacks coach Aaron Roderick to develop him into a professional.
NIL
How NIL money is reshaping the NBA draft: Fewer early entrants, more college stars staying put
How NIL money is reshaping the NBA draft: Fewer early entrants, more college stars staying put – myMotherLode.com Link 0

NIL
Mormon Church Won’t Pay 5-Star QB Ryder Lyons To Play At BYU
BYU Athletics Audio By Carbonatix Ryder Lyons is likely going to get paid a lot of NIL money to play college football at BYU. Not one single dollar will come from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or through tithing. All of the agreed upon payments will be made through the university’s affiliated […]



Audio By Carbonatix
Ryder Lyons is likely going to get paid a lot of NIL money to play college football at BYU. Not one single dollar will come from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or through tithing.
All of the agreed upon payments will be made through the university’s affiliated NIL collective, which is funded entirely by the people on a voluntary basis.
Lyons, a five-star quarterback in the college football recruiting Class of 2026, ranks as the fourth-best player at his position behind Tennessee commit Faizon Brandon, Houston commit Keisean Henderson and Georgia commit Jared Curtis. He holds more than 30 offers from schools all over the country and boasts more than 230,000 followers on TikTok. His highlight tape is legit.
The entirety of Lyons’ recruitment has been documented on social media— either by him or his sister Kapri. She often posts behind-the-scenes videos from their visits to different college campuses. They most recently stopped over in Provo to check out Brigham Young University.
Ryder (tried to) cut up in the locker room while he was there.
It seems as though BYU made Ryder Lyons an offer he could not refuse because he committed to the Cougars on Tuesday morning. Oregon was likely the runner-up. It is a huge get for Kalani Sitake!
BREAKING NEWS: “I will be going to Brigham Young University..
GO COUGS” ~ @ryderly0ns #PMSLive pic.twitter.com/RsRhMyVm0Q
— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) June 24, 2025
I cannot say for certain because NIL numbers are rarely made public, but I would imagine BYU presented Lyons with a lucrative financial package. The Cougars paid out a lot of money to assemble one of the best rosters in college basketball through the transfer portal. They will also pay No. 1 overall recruit A.J. Dybantsa more than $4 million for just one season.
All of that happened after one of the university’s big money boosters vowed to spend whatever money necessary to land top talent. Paul Liljenquist serves as the CEO of Focus Services, a $500 million company based out of Utah. He made it abundantly clear that “you’re not going to outbid BYU.”
Ryder Lyons said in February that NIL can show “how much [a program] is invested in you” so money absolutely played a huge role in his commitment. As did his faith. The five-star quarterback will not play college football until 2027. He is going to take a year to serve his Mormon mission before he enrolls. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is important to him. Provo directly aligns with his values.
With that being said, the Church does not have anything to do with the financial side of Lyons’ recruitment. BYU Advancement Vice President Keith Vorkink made sure to debunk that popular narrative.
Just to be clear, because there are all sorts of strange narratives out there, I would just reiterate that there is absolutely no church or university financial support of any student-athlete agreements. Tithing will never be used to support our athletics department in any way, including revenue sharing with student-athletes.
— Keith Vorkink, via Deseret News
Ryder Lyons chose BYU because of faith. Ryder Lyons also chose BYU because of money. Those two things do not overlap. There is a separation of Church and football.
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