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Roster limits, revenue sharing and new NIL rules are announced by NCAA

The NCAA makes changes to its roster limits, NIL guidelines and revenue sharing with players On Friday night, the NCAA got news that its hearing in the House vs. NCAA suit had been resolved, with a significant amount of changes heading across college sports as On3 reports. It detailed the biggest change was revenue sharing […]

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The NCAA makes changes to its roster limits, NIL guidelines and revenue sharing with players

On Friday night, the NCAA got news that its hearing in the House vs. NCAA suit had been resolved, with a significant amount of changes heading across college sports as On3 reports.

It detailed the biggest change was revenue sharing with the players, sharing up to $20.5 million, with football most likely getting 75% of the cut, and men’s basketball next at 15%. Women’s basketball will get around 5% and the rest will be split with the other sports.

As for program spending, each major school will have around $14 million this coming season. It will be very interesting to see how this is handled across the nation. There is some backpay that the NCAA will have to make as well, a whopping $2.776 billion over the next 10-years as the report states.

As for Name, Image and Likeness, any deal worth more than $600 has to go through the clearinghouse, and if rejected that school and athlete could face ineligibility or the university a fine. On3 mentioned that “Deloitte officials reportedly shared that 70% of past deals from NIL collectives would have been denied,” so big changes are coming with how the players get compensated.

Not only that On3 says that roster limits will be imposed, with football being allowed 105 members, basketball rosters at 15, soccer having 28, softball at 25 and volleyball at 18. Notre Dame football head coach Marcus Freeman has prepared for this, as surely the rest of the program’s have done the same in South Bend.

It will definitely change the path of college sports, and we will see if this is the right decision.



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Urban Meyer shares comical response after being approached to fill a college GM role this off season

No role in college football has become more important in the past 12 months than the General Manager position. While the GM position has been around for several years now, the evolution of NIL, revenue sharing, and the transfer portal have quickly made it a post where experience is key, so much so that we’ve […]

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No role in college football has become more important in the past 12 months than the General Manager position.

While the GM position has been around for several years now, the evolution of NIL, revenue sharing, and the transfer portal have quickly made it a post where experience is key, so much so that we’ve profiled some of the high profile pursuits of guys like Texas Tech’s James Blanchard by Notre Dame for their opening, and more recently Louisville poaching top Kentucky assistant Vince Marrow to the vital off-field role.

With a premium on experience, it’s only logical that former head coaches who have successfully built championship rosters would be high on a team’s short list for the position.

One of those coaches fitting that mold is Urban Meyer, who shared this past week during a podcast where they welcomed first-year Oklahoma GM Jim Nagy onto the show that he was brought in by an unnamed program to talk about filling their GM role.

“I don’t know if I even told Rob and Mark this, but I had a school come see me this year and ask if I wanted to be the GM, and a couple other phone calls,”  

“You start to think, ‘OK, they actually came to see me,’ so I said, ‘Yeah, I’ll meet and I’ll sit down with you guys.’”

When Urban asked about the job description for the role, it was a full and immediate stop for the coaching veteran and 2025 College Football Hall of Famer.

“I said, ‘OK, what is the job description?’ They said, ‘Well, basically you meet with all the agents of the 17 and 18-year-olds, and I thought, ‘I’d rather step on a rusty nail and pull it out myself.’”

Safe to say Meyer is comfortable with his spot on Fox’s Big Noon Kickoff show for the foreseeable future.

Hear Meyer’s story, as well from more on Nagy on the GM role in Normal in the clip.



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Mike Young, Virginia Tech Embrace Global…

In an offseason full of movement across the college basketball landscape, Virginia Tech head coach Mike Young didn’t just dive into the transfer portal — he went across the ocean. The headline addition is Neoklis “Neo” Avdalas, a 6’8 guard/wing from Greece who flirted with the NBA Draft before ultimately committing to the Hokies in […]

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In an offseason full of movement across the college basketball landscape, Virginia Tech head coach Mike Young didn’t just dive into the transfer portal — he went across the ocean.

The headline addition is Neoklis “Neo” Avdalas, a 6’8 guard/wing from Greece who flirted with the NBA Draft before ultimately committing to the Hokies in June. But he’s not the only international piece in the program as the Hokies also added German C Antonio Dorn. With the additions of Avdalas and Dorn, Young and his staff are making it clear: international recruiting is no longer a side project in Blacksburg — it’s a focal point.

And Mike Young is very happy to add both of these players to his team, especially the potential 2026 NBA first round pick Avdalas.

“Thank God we got him,” Young said of Avdalas. “We needed to get him, and we’re fortunate enough to do so.”

Avdalas first appeared on Virginia Tech’s radar back in early April, and that is thanks to a connection between assistant coach Chester Frazier and NBA agent Alex Saratsis, who represents stars like Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bam Adebayo.



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Buzz Williams on how good his Maryland basketball team looks, NIL and running out of underwear

It’s been a “whirlwind spring and early summer for Buzz Williams. He abruptly moved from Texas to Maryland, built a new roster, hired a staff and swung back to Texas to renew his wedding vows with his wife. “It was a memorable deal. I’d never been to a vow renewal. I hadn’t, to be transparent, […]

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It’s been a “whirlwind spring and early summer for Buzz Williams. He abruptly moved from Texas to Maryland, built a new roster, hired a staff and swung back to Texas to renew his wedding vows with his wife.

“It was a memorable deal. I’d never been to a vow renewal. I hadn’t, to be transparent, I’d never even heard of the word,” he told Jon Rothstein (more from the interview here). “I just didn’t know that in year 25, 50 days before the vow renewal, I would move halfway across the country. So the timing of when we moved and when our children moved, and all of the different pieces that come in a transition, kind of centered around the vow renewal. But I would have never thought anything would have transpired in my career the way that it has. I was a junior college manager. I was an NAIA manager and from a town that still doesn’t have a stoplight. So all of this has been way more than I could have ever even dreamed.

“I wouldn’t have believed one syllable of that. I’ve been blessed way more than I deserve, not only professionally but personally.

Maryland Basketball Scoop: Who’s the Terps’ top NBA prospect and who could be the next one?

Rothstein asked Williams how good his Maryland team might be next season.

“I kind of go back and forth, you know? I think some of it, John—I don’t know if we’re great. Because we played six teams in the Big Ten last year at Texas A&M, so I have some familiarity. But in truth, that’s the depth of knowledge that I’m comfortable with competitively speaking, and I haven’t studied enough since I’ve been here on Big Ten because we’ve been trying to put together our roster. Do I think we’re great? I don’t know. I would say I don’t think we’re bad, but I don’t know if that means that we’re great.”

More below from Williams on NIL, running out of underwear and more:



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Systems Theory, not superstition, can bring Arkansas baseball a title

Although several inexplicable blunders in the bottom of the ninth inning against the LSU Tigers (53-15, 19-11 SEC), the eventual winner of the 2025 College World Series, caused the Arkansas Razorbacks (50-15, 20-10 SEC) to miss another opportunity to win the college baseball national championship, they and Razorback Nation should feel proud of what the […]

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Although several inexplicable blunders in the bottom of the ninth inning against the LSU Tigers (53-15, 19-11 SEC), the eventual winner of the 2025 College World Series, caused the Arkansas Razorbacks (50-15, 20-10 SEC) to miss another opportunity to win the college baseball national championship, they and Razorback Nation should feel proud of what the team accomplished and that Arkansas has one of the five most elite college baseball programs in the nation.  

While Razorback fans were heartbroken after another legitimate chance to win a college baseball national championship slipped away, they weren’t more devastated than the players after the loss against LSU. The reality is it’s difficult to win a national championship at any institution, regardless of the sport. Certain teams in specific sports have, of course, experienced more success than most others in winning national championships. However, again, it’s never a metaphorical stroll in the park for any team in any sport to win it all.   

While the players and coaches genuinely comprehend how challenging it is for the Diamond Hogs to be one of the best teams in the nation and a real contender for a national championship each season, even if such an effort falls short, many in Razorback Nation must learn to appreciate how special this reality is. The players wish to win a College World Series for the state, university, and Dave Van Horn more than any fan, analyst, or journalist. They’re not complacent with simply being an elite team; they want to win multiple national championships.

For the Razorbacks to win a College World Series under Van Horn, it will take everyone in Razorback Nation, including fans and the Arkansas media, playing a role in helping those national championships to materialize. The Hogs don’t suffer from a curse, for such discourse is a distraction at best, one that allows fans who believe that Arkansas sports are cursed to sleep better at night when the Hogs disappoint them, especially in the most significant moments.

Believing that the Razorbacks are cursed permits one to overlook the larger forces and issues at play in the epic letdowns that have caused them to focus on such nonsense, which is ultimately an unproductive form of self-medication.

Recognizing how unserious discussions about a Razorbacks curse are, this article identifies root causes of those forces and issues that can be verified by evidence and dismisses the laughable notion of such a curse, which raises spiritual, theological, and metaphysical questions that lack any authentic relationship to any of the misfortunes Arkansas Razorbacks athletics have experienced. Also, this article offers measures that can be taken to support the Diamond Hogs in winning a College World Series under Van Horn.  

Hunter Yurachek must employ systems theory for Arkansas baseball

When assessing the success or failure of a college team, many fans immediately look at the coaches and players. While they ultimately play the most crucial roles in the success or failure of a team, the athletic director is not only the most foundational person in affecting a team’s outcomes, but also the most vital individual in determining the overall outcomes of the entire athletic program. Hunter Yurachek, the director of athletics at the University of Arkansas, has made some decisions that have thrilled Hogs fans and some that have enraged them.

Regardless of how fans feel about Yurachek, most of the current teams at Arkansas are nationally competitive. However, he receives his most vocal criticism about the way he handles the football team. Of the big three sports programs—football, basketball, and baseball—it’s the football program that disappoints fans the most, especially considering that Arkansas’ baseball and basketball teams are elite. The last time the Razorbacks won a national championship in one of these three programs was in 1994 when Nolan Richardson was the head basketball coach.  

Understandably, therefore, Razorback Nation is eager for another national championship from the big three sports programs. The football and basketball teams have produced national championships. However, although the Diamond Hogs have been elite under Van Horn, they’re the only one of three Arkansas programs yet to win a national championship. Yurachek can play an instrumental role in changing this reality. To achieve this feat, he will need to use systems theory to guide his administrative approach toward the entire athletics program.

Although Yurachek earned a master’s degree in sports administration from the University of Richmond, he lacks a discernible guiding framework, such as systems theory, to support his administrative practice. The present writer graduated from the top-ranked higher education administration program in the nation, with a specialization in college athletic administration.

In such a graduate program, which is similar to Yurachek’s, one learns how essential it is to ground one’s work in an established framework. Systems theory is a common framework taught in sports administration graduate programs. Adopting such an approach has a long history of success, as reflected in published empirical research.

Systems theory directs an executive leader to assess how each part (such as a player) in a system (the entire team or the entire Arkansas Razorbacks athletic program) is working toward achieving the desired goals and outcomes of the system. If Yurachek had applied this approach, he would have learned essential lessons about each sport and provided adequate responses to the wisdom of those lessons.

For example, when Van Horn’s teams seem to lose focus each season at specific points, systems theory informs Yurachek to invest in people and technology to aid the coaching staff in keeping the players focused, giving them data and analytics about how a loss of focus has historically harmed them, including what the unfocused team looks like qualitatively and quantitatively.

Dave Van Horn must focus Arkansas baseball to win College World Series

Although Van Horn needs more human and technological support to help his team sustain its focus throughout the season, as previously mentioned, he must make this one of his highest priorities throughout the entire season. Without his robust and unwavering personal commitment to such focus, he will not win a College World Series before he retires.

When the team wins notable games, he must lead it in maintaining the proper balance, never allowing such wins to cause it to think more highly of itself than it should. Van Horn must ensure those wins don’t distract the team from the need to continue improving. The Hogs must never become complacent.

Even though many Razorback fans may not want to hear it, one of Van Horn’s greatest weaknesses is keeping his team metaphorically hungry for an entire season. Every team, at some point, loses this hunger. Unfortunately for Hogs fans, when Arkansas’ intensity diminishes, it’s always at the most inopportune times.

His team never recovers from losses in intensity. If Van Horn wishes to win that elusive national championship, he will commit to centering his team on focus. The Razorbacks don’t need him to make excuses for them when they lose intensity; they need him to prevent it from occurring in the first place.

Remy Cofield is crucial to Arkansas baseball winning a College World Series

Yurachek made an excellent decision in hiring Remy Cofield as deputy athletics director and general manager. In the athletic department’s announcement of Cofield’s hiring, Kevin Trainor noted that Cofield “will oversee the strategic allocation of department and affiliate resources to support Razorback head coaches in the acquisition and retention of championship-caliber athletic talent. He will lead player contract negotiations and collaborate with head coaches, recruiting coordinators and administrative staff in implementing each program’s strategic vision.”

Trainor’s statements about Cofield’s duties are good news for Arkansas fans, given that they resonate with systems theory, as previously delineated. Yurachek must permit Cofield to use his knowledge and experience to produce the best outcomes for Razorbacks athletics, which, of course, includes the Diamond Hogs. Yurachek shouldn’t micromanage someone with Cofield’s experience and record of accomplishments.

Although recruiting has been strong with Nate Thompson as recruiting coordinator, Van Horn and Thompson must recognize that recruitment needs to improve even more and should respond to lessons learned. For example, Arkansas needs to target ace pitchers like LSU’s Kade Anderson and Tennessee’s Liam Doyle when recruiting. Those types of pitchers can come to Arkansas and make it difficult for teams to win a series, including a series in the College World Series, against the Hogs.

Also, the Hogs need a more balanced approach in recruiting as it relates to their offense. They need more excellent hitters, those who can consistently generate singles and doubles, which will help them overcome their struggles with leaving runners on base. It’s not wise to have a lineup full of batters swing for the fences each time they come to the plate. Arkansas athletics must empower Cofield with the necessary funds to extend offers these recruits cannot refuse. Such targeted recruiting will lead Van Horn to at least one national championship.

Final Thoughts

Razorbacks athletics is strong. Therefore, Razorback Nation should uplift the university’s athletics. When Arkansas fans are on social media, they must recognize that recruits, including their parents, read and listen to what fans say. What fans communicate through social media platforms conveys vital information to them about the Hogs’ culture, whether or not it’s an accurate picture. If Arkansas fans want the best players to choose to join the Razorback family, they must play their part and promote Razorback athletics in a positive light.

Again, put an end to the unproductive talk about Arkansas sports being cursed. Instead, show recruits, their parents, and the nation why they should join Razorback Nation. More robust fan support can aid Arkansas baseball recruiting in landing the next player crucial to Van Horn securing his first national championship.





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Would you rather

Major changes have altered the college football landscape over the past few seasons, including the expansion of the College Football Playoff and the addition of the transfer portal. For coaches and players, the two don’t fit together well. For the universities involved, the academic calendar, getting kids enrolled in classes and making sure they’re on […]

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Would you rather

Major changes have altered the college football landscape over the past few seasons, including the expansion of the College Football Playoff and the addition of the transfer portal. For coaches and players, the two don’t fit together well. For the universities involved, the academic calendar, getting kids enrolled in classes and making sure they’re on campus in time is another piece to the puzzle.

For everyone, including fans, the National Championship getting pushed back even later in January doesn’t seem appealing either. So when it comes to the changes in the sport, would you rather change the transfer portal window or get the Championship game closer to Jan. 1?

Option #1: Have the CFP end on (or at least close to) Jan. 1 each year

With the expansion of the postseason, holding the National Championship on Jan. 1 seems less and less likely. But with this upcoming season’s National Championship scheduled for Jan. 19, 2026, and subsequent titles also expected in late January, it feels like an issue that needs to be addressed. The national titles during the BCS and four-team CFP eras were played about a week sooner.

It was tough to believe the season still wasn’t over by that point this past season. While it’s only one sample size, the National Championship TV ratings declined year-over-year. It was still the most-watched of the 12-team playoff games, but these are things that will likely be looked at over a few years. We talk about the amount of money influencing the sport, and ratings for the postseason seem like a surefire thing to factor into the decision-making.

Option #2: Change the transfer portal windows

The transfer portal opens at two different times for football — in December while the season is still going on, and again a few months later in the spring. When it comes to the transfer portal window, the biggest critics are almost always the coaches. For many, they’d like to see the portal open after the season. The thought of trying to keep a team together while playing for a National Championship isn’t ideal.

There have been suggestions, even from the NCAA, that they could get rid of one of the windows and open it up at a different time when the season is over. However, the windows aren’t unique to college football, and every sport is dealing with the same issues. It’s not like transferring is an easy process either — you have to navigate admissions and look at which credits will transfer.

I understand the problems coaches have with the transfer portal, but I think changes to the schedule are more valuable for the sport overall

I’m going to start by saying I don’t have a ton of sympathy for coaches complaining about balancing multiple responsibilities during the playoffs. It might not be easy to game plan for a playoff game while also having conversations with players about what they’re going to do after the season, but I don’t think that’s the most important thing to tackle here.

Others disagree and see the portal as a world without rules that’s ruining the sport, but I think it’s one more thing that puts a little more control with the players instead of the institutions. I’m personally okay with that going untouched for the next few years.

The powers that be need to look seriously at the length of the season and reconsider the date for the National Championship. The current calendar extends way too late. I love college football, but I don’t think a longer, drawn-out season improves the sport. The separation that used to happen between the end of college football and the Super Bowl added some differentiation. With many traditions seemingly down the drain at this point, can we please just do something for tradition’s sake and have the title game played closer to New Year’s Day?

What are your thoughts? Would you rather move up the National Championship or change the transfer portal? Let us know in the comments below!

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Buzz Williams on how good his Maryland basketball team looks, NIL and running out of underwear

It’s been a “whirlwind spring and early summer for Buzz Williams. He abruptly moved from Texas to Maryland, built a new roster, hired a staff and swung back to Texas to renew his wedding vows with his wife. “It was a memorable deal. I’d never been to a vow renewal. I hadn’t, to be transparent, […]

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Buzz Williams on how good his Maryland basketball team looks, NIL and running out of underwear

It’s been a “whirlwind spring and early summer for Buzz Williams. He abruptly moved from Texas to Maryland, built a new roster, hired a staff and swung back to Texas to renew his wedding vows with his wife.

“It was a memorable deal. I’d never been to a vow renewal. I hadn’t, to be transparent, I’d never even heard of the word,” he told Jon Rothstein (more from the interview here). “I just didn’t know that in year 25, 50 days before the vow renewal, I would move halfway across the country. So the timing of when we moved and when our children moved, and all of the different pieces that come in a transition, kind of centered around the vow renewal. But I would have never thought anything would have transpired in my career the way that it has. I was a junior college manager. I was an NAIA manager and from a town that still doesn’t have a stoplight. So all of this has been way more than I could have ever even dreamed.

“I wouldn’t have believed one syllable of that. I’ve been blessed way more than I deserve, not only professionally but personally.

Maryland Basketball Scoop: Who’s the Terps’ top NBA prospect and who could be the next one?

Rothstein asked Williams how good his Maryland team might be next season.

“I kind of go back and forth, you know? I think some of it, John—I don’t know if we’re great. Because we played six teams in the Big Ten last year at Texas A&M, so I have some familiarity. But in truth, that’s the depth of knowledge that I’m comfortable with competitively speaking, and I haven’t studied enough since I’ve been here on Big Ten because we’ve been trying to put together our roster. Do I think we’re great? I don’t know. I would say I don’t think we’re bad, but I don’t know if that means that we’re great.”

More below from Williams on NIL, running out of underwear and more:

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