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SBJ Live recap

If you have seen new facilities pop up in your area where people can recreationally play pickleball, golf, soccer, basketball or more, you are likely witnessing Social Sports marketing in play. What are Social Sports? “Social Sports are organized group-based board experiences that really focus on community building and community connections in addition to of […]

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SBJ Live recap

If you have seen new facilities pop up in your area where people can recreationally play pickleball, golf, soccer, basketball or more, you are likely witnessing Social Sports marketing in play.

What are Social Sports?

“Social Sports are organized group-based board experiences that really focus on community building and community connections in addition to of course the competition that you find in sports” Break Sports Founder Trisha Goyal said.

Goyal joined Unrivaled Commissioner Micky Lawler and Open Venture Capital Founder & Managing Partner Kim Nixon in Wednesday’s SBJ Live session, “Engaging Consumers Through Social Sports: A New Brand Strategy,” moderated by SBJ’s Dan Kaufman.

Here are three takeaways from the session:

Exploring new avenues

While many athletic activities the common person may participate in have traditionally been purely exercise-based, Nixon said that casual consumers are also becoming drawn to organized, competitive sports.

“We’re seeing a transition from Social Fitness into Social Sport,” Nixon explained. “That’s because there’s more access to sport post your collegiate years.”

Goyal pointed to how professional sports can influence Social Sports participation.

“Pro Sports is one of the things that really inspires people to want to even get into a Social Sport organized activity,” Goyal said.

Lawler shared her own experience managing a three-on-three basketball league, and how that can present basketball in a more inviting way, particularly to women.

“Three-on-three lends itself to create much more spacing [on the court] and deliver a better product,” Lawler said. “This is a way to present basketball excellence.”

She added that women “had to be part of a high school team or a church league or another social league” to play basketball, but Unrivaled has helped invite a more casual style of play for women.

Meeting consumers where they are

Goyal noted how Social Sports can be advantageous for brands looking to connect with consumers.

“There’s already a rise in general in sports and investment in sports paired with also a rise and investment in experiential marketing and in person marketing,” Goyal said. “Social Sports kind of sit at that intersection that enables brands to reach real consumers in meaningful more deeper ways than just digital advertising.”

Adding accessibility

While the subject of DEI has been a hot button topic lately, Nixon believes the “I” in the acronym — Inclusion — can be a central piece in how amateurs participate in sports.

“That ‘I’ has grown to include having conversations about differing abilities and access to sport in school,” Nixon said. “There are a couple of great startups that I’ve had conversations with that are focused on making sure that there’s more opportunity for fitness and sport for disabled children at school.”

Goyal added to this point, saying, “Social Sports is really great for those who have a disability or an impairment. … Pickleball has been one that we have seen a pick-up with.”

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John Calipari suggests college basketball adopt baseball format

Speaking on the Golic & Golic program on the FanDuel Sports Network on Wednesday, Arkansas coach John Calipari suggested a potential radical change for the sport. Only after noting, though, that he doesn’t think the sport’s postseason should change. If it did, though, he has a preferred model for it. And it isn’t expanding the […]

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Speaking on the Golic & Golic program on the FanDuel Sports Network on Wednesday, Arkansas coach John Calipari suggested a potential radical change for the sport. Only after noting, though, that he doesn’t think the sport’s postseason should change.

If it did, though, he has a preferred model for it. And it isn’t expanding the NCAA Tournament by eight teams, or 12 teams, or doubling the field size, etc.

“The tournament is so good, why would you change it?” Calipari said. “And if you wanted to change it, maybe, the baseball model. The first weekend, someone’s got to win three games, and after that, you move on, you play, and then you move on, you have the Elite Eight, and that’s the one. The baseball model is unbelievable in Omaha.”

Baseball’s model works to prevent teams from being one-and-done. It’s a double-elimination format throughout.

First, teams are grouped in a four-team regional. After a double-elimination round of action, one team emerges victorious. With 16 regions, that leaves 16 teams.

The teams then funnel into the Super Regionals, where the remaining baseball teams play a best-of-three series for the right to advance to the College World Series. In Omaha, then, it turns into an eight-team field with dual four-team, double-elimination brackets.

The final two teams standing then vie for the national title in a best-of-three series. Could basketball employ a similar model?

“Maybe that would be something, but I — adding more teams? Why?” Calipari said. “The ratings have never been higher.”

One thing the Arkansas coach does see happening in the current landscape — expansion or not — is more power coalescing toward the top. It’s not unheard of for the Final Four in basketball to have all No. 1 seeds. And soon it might be even more common.

“Now, to have — the last time four No. 1s did it, it was North Carolina, Kansas, us — I was at Memphis at the time — and there was one other, UCLA,” Calipari said. “But that’s going to be more so with NIL and the transfer (portal). The haves will have way more than the have-nots. But — so maybe the baseball model. But I don’t know why you change anything, but I wouldn’t add more teams.”

It seems a stretch. It’s worth noting that for a team that loses its first game of a regional in baseball, it then has to win four straight games to advance to the Super Regional round. That would be hard to engineer in basketball; it’s simply a lot of games.

In any case, it makes for a fun thought experiment. But as Calipari said, the tournament right now is pretty close to perfect … why mess with it?



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Female athletes appeal landmark NCAA settlement, claiming it violates Title IX

Eight female athletes filed an appeal Wednesday of a landmark NCAA antitrust settlement, arguing that women would not receive their fair share of $2.7 billion in back pay for athletes who were barred from making money off their name, image and likeness. U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken approved the settlement last week, clearing the way […]

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Eight female athletes filed an appeal Wednesday of a landmark NCAA antitrust settlement, arguing that women would not receive their fair share of $2.7 billion in back pay for athletes who were barred from making money off their name, image and likeness.

U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken approved the settlement last week, clearing the way for direct payments from universities to athletes and the end of the NCAA’s amateurism model.

The athletes who appealed the settlement competed in soccer, volleyball and track. They are: Kacie Breeding of Vanderbilt; Lexi Drumm, Emma Appleman, Emmie Wannemacher, Riley Hass, Savannah Baron and Elizabeth Arnold of the College of Charleston; and Kate Johnson of Virginia. They have standing to appeal because they previously filed objections to the proposed settlement.

Ashlyn Hare, one of the attorneys representing the athletes, said in a statement that the settlement violates Title IX, the federal law that bans sex-based discrimination in education.

“We support a settlement of the case, but not an inaccurate one that violates federal law. The calculation of past damages is based on an error that ignores Title IX and deprives female athletes of $1.1 billion,” Hare said. “Paying out the money as proposed would be a massive error that would cause irreparable harm to women’s sports.”

The House settlement figures to financially benefit football and basketball stars at the biggest schools, who are likely to receive a big chunk of the $20.5 million per year that colleges are permitted to share with athletes over the next year. Some athletes in other sports that don’t make money for their schools could lose their partial scholarships or see their roster spots cut.

“This is a football and basketball damages settlement with no real benefit to female athletes,” Hare said. “Congress has expressly rejected efforts to exempt revenue-generating sports like football and basketball from Title IX’s antidiscrimination mandate. The NCAA agreed with us. Our argument on appeal is the exact same argument the conferences and NCAA made prior to settling the case.”

The appeal was filed by the law firm Hutchinson Black and Cook of Boulder, Colorado, and was first reported by Front Office Sports. It would be heard by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.

Reporting by The Associated Press.

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Colleges can pay athletes; what's next for NIL and the NCAA?

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From celebrity general manager to traditional riser, 4 types of college football GMs

Not every college football program has a general manager. It’s not clear whether some necessarily want one, either. And the responsibilities of the role vary dramatically from school to school. But make no mistake, it’s a job that carries a lot of power and a job that is in high demand. “They see that it […]

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Not every college football program has a general manager. It’s not clear whether some necessarily want one, either. And the responsibilities of the role vary dramatically from school to school.

But make no mistake, it’s a job that carries a lot of power and a job that is in high demand.

“They see that it is, at the end of the day, the most important title in the building outside of the head coach,” said a Power 4 personnel director who, like others in this story, was granted anonymity so he could speak candidly. “I think a lot of people are enamored with that.”

The combination of the transfer portal and name, image and likeness has turned roster maintenance into an everyday exercise as opposed to one that needs to be addressed seasonally. And as of last Friday, schools can pay student-athletes directly. As a result, running a college football program is an all-encompassing (and overwhelming) task that has increased the need for general managers.

On a national scale, the general manager role is still evolving and largely undefined, but its potential for influence is great and only growing. Who other than a head coach is interacting with donors and alums, the administration, the coaching staff, the current roster, agents, and high school players and their families?

“It’s like what head coaches in college football have been forever,” a second Power 4 personnel director said. “Head coaches have always been the CEO, and now, because of this whole new world, GMs are starting to become that.”

We’re starting to see some general managers’ visions take shape this month as programs continue to rack up commitments. And we’ll get a more complete picture once the transfer portal window opens in December. As general managers and their roles grow in importance, here’s a look at the four types we’re starting to see across the sport.

The celebrity GMs

If you’ve followed college sports closely over the past year, you’ve probably seen some of the headlines. Stephen Curry accepted the role of assistant general manager for the Davidson men’s basketball program. Likewise for Trae Young at Oklahoma. Shaquille O’Neal is the general manager at Sacramento State, where his son Shaqir is a rising senior.

Hiring high-profile names for these positions isn’t limited to basketball. It’s happening in college football, too. Andrew Luck was hired as Stanford’s general manager last fall. Ron Rivera assumed the same role at Stanford’s rival, Cal, in March. On a smaller scale, Las Vegas Raiders edge rusher Maxx Crosby was hired as the assistant GM at Eastern Michigan.

Naturally, it raises questions when a program hires someone who hasn’t spent time recently in the college football world or hasn’t been exposed to the nuances of the transfer portal and roster building.

“At the end of the day, are you getting the most out of that position?” the first P4 personnel director said.

The second P4 personnel director added: “If they haven’t been in the space … then you get really concerned about, ‘OK, it sounds good, but can they really function in a college football program?’”

But celebrity hires do bring some positives to the table. They provide a boost for alumni and donor relations, which is critical for raising money. These high-profile figures often generate some excitement in recruiting, too. And there’s a respect they carry in the football building based on past accomplishments. Luck and Rivera were All-Americans at their alma maters, and both played in the NFL.

Though some of the hires might seem more like figureheads, that does not seem to be the case with Luck and Rivera. Luck reports directly to Stanford’s president, Jonathan Levin, and is involved in every facet of the program daily. It was his decision to fire coach Troy Taylor after an investigation into complaints from athletic department employees over the coach’s hostile behavior.

Rivera serves as a conduit between Cal football and the administration to help ensure the program gets the necessary resources and staff help.

Those two are very involved. We’ll see whether more schools go down this path in the future.

“Andrew Luck is a celebrity GM hire who feels like he has a day-to-day responsibility,” one Group of 5 general manager said. “He’s got his job carved out, and there’s value in that. It’s got to be more than a social media push because if it’s a social media push, then it’s a waste of time.”

The NFL hires

College football and the NFL have traditionally been very different worlds — almost different sports. But as the former becomes more professionalized, they’re starting to resemble each other more and more each day.

That’s why we’ve seen some programs go the NFL route to fill their general manager vacancies. Notre Dame recently hired Mike Martin, who was the director of scouting advancement for the Detroit Lions. Nebraska hired Pat Stewart, who was the New England Patriots director of pro personnel for the past two years. North Carolina hired former NFL exec Michael Lombardi, a Bill Belichick confidant, as its GM. And Oklahoma hired Jim Nagy, who was most recently the executive director of the Senior Bowl and held various scouting roles in the NFL for nearly 20 years.

The pros of these hires are obvious. These men have been around organizations that have had to operate within the confines of a salary cap and build rosters with finances in mind. They know contracts — and how they affect a locker room — and how to handle negotiations. And they’ve been exposed to thinking at the highest levels of the sport.

That gives them an advantage in some aspects. But there are those in the college personnel space who are skeptical, to put it mildly, about the transition from the NFL to college.

In the NFL, so much time is spent on evaluation. If you draft a player, the chances of his turning you down are zero. In college football, you’re focused on not only recruiting good players but also players who are good fits for your program and players you can realistically sign.

“At this level, it’s probably 25 percent evaluation and 75 percent, can you recruit to your team?” the second P4 personnel director said.

There are obvious similarities with the actual football part of the job, but there are so many extracurriculars in the college space.

“It’s those other things that you probably don’t think that much about that are actually high-impact areas — donor engagement, university relationships and politics, calendar timeline,” said a Power 4 administrator who recently took part in a search for a GM. “Unless you’re in there, even if you’re not experienced in all these different areas, until you’re able to do that, I think it’s eye-opening.”

In college football, you can’t just be an evaluator as a general manager. You can’t just be a recruiter, either. General managers have to be able to adapt and wear so many different hats.

The transition for these NFL hires will be watched closely across the college football personnel landscape.

The traditional college football risers

It would be a mistake to believe the personnel strategies that worked five years ago in college football will work in this ever-changing climate.

Ohio State’s Mark Pantoni, who has worked alongside Urban Meyer and Ryan Day, is viewed by many as the best general manager in college football. One of his strengths has been his ability to adapt. Ohio State had great rosters before NIL and great rosters early in the NIL era when the program wasn’t viewed as a big spender. Then, Ohio State decided to get aggressive financially to retain its top talent and add select transfers, and it won the national championship with a $20 million roster in 2024.

No matter the strategy, Ohio State has won at an elite level and has had great rosters.

The general managers who will succeed in this era of college football need to be not only in lockstep with the coach but also willing to anticipate changes in the sport.

“Honestly, vision is probably the most important part (of the job),” a third P4 personnel director said. “Enacting the head coach’s vision and having the foresight to be able to project not just for right now but for the future, when so many coaches and staffers are (thinking), ‘What’s going to help us today?’ — not what’s going to help us tomorrow, months and years on.”

Alabama’s Courtney Morgan, Texas Tech’s James Blanchard and USC’s Chad Bowden are among a new wave of prominent general managers to emerge over the past couple of years. And their paths to prominence could be a sign of where the position might be headed.

Except for Branchard’s one season with the Carolina Panthers, all three are essentially college lifers who have risen through the personnel ranks. Morgan was the general manager at Washington when it reached the national championship game in 2023. Bowden was the GM last year at Notre Dame for the Irish’s run to the title game. Blanchard has been the GM at Texas Tech during Joey McGuire’s three-year tenure, and the program’s spending in the transfer portal has been one of the biggest stories of the offseason.

All three have amassed enough influence that they’re viewed as working in tandem with their coaches — not necessarily for them.

“That’s really what the future of the college position is,” the G5 general manager said. “It’s not per se above or under the head coach, but it’s side by side like the NFL is.”

If they are doing their jobs well, those GMs will lighten the load for coaches and allow them to focus more on the actual football part of the job. Morgan, Blanchard and Bowden have been receiving most of the attention in this space lately, but more names will undoubtedly emerge in the future.

The staffer without the GM title who performs GM duties

Nearly 20 of the 68 Power 4 football programs do not have a traditional general manager. And there are more programs than that at the G5 level, where resources are more scarce, that don’t have GMs. That does not mean there isn’t someone in the program performing those duties.

This is where you might find a chief of staff, a director of player personnel, a director of recruiting, a director of roster management. You get the gist.

“It’s like any title in these front-office type roles,” a fourth P4 director of player personnel said. “They can all mean something different. Director of recruiting could be the one managing the roster and overseeing everything, or that’s your director of player personnel, or it’s your GM. They’re so varying and wide-ranging.”

There are programs like Georgia’s that have chosen not to hire a general manager. Kirby Smart is one of the best recruiters in the history of the sport, and he’s built a massive personnel infrastructure at Georgia. And though that staff plays a huge role in the program’s talent acquisition, it would be difficult to envision Smart giving someone the sort of control a general manager might require.

There are likely other examples of this as well.

“The head coach wants too much control of the program, and they’ve got their recruiting guy, personnel guy, but they’re still handling all that stuff,” the second P4 personnel director said.

The “controlling” coach can be successful. So can the coach who works in concert with his GM. Bottom line: There are many ways to run a personnel department in college football. And there are many titles to be claimed. What we don’t know yet, however, is what actually makes a good general manager.

(Photo of Andrew Luck: Darren Yamashita / Imagn Images)





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Belmont Braces for New NIL Era After Landmark NCAA Settlement

Belmont Vision Multimedia, Zach Watkins For months, the future of name, image and likeness in college sports rested in the hands of Judge Claudia Wilken’s approval of the House V. NCAA Settlement. On Friday, Wilken approved the multi-billion dollar settlement, effectively changing amateurism in college sports. Division I programs that opt into the settlement terms […]

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Belmont Vision Multimedia, Zach Watkins

Belmont Vision Multimedia, Zach Watkins

For months, the future of name, image and likeness in college sports rested in the hands of Judge Claudia Wilken’s approval of the House V. NCAA Settlement.

On Friday, Wilken approved the multi-billion dollar settlement, effectively changing amateurism in college sports.

Division I programs that opt into the settlement terms are now allowed to directly pay athletes via a revenue-sharing pool valued at $20.5 million starting July 1.

The settlement also allows current and former Division I athletes who competed since 2016 to receive nearly $2.8 billion in back-pay damages from the NCAA. But most of that money is expected to go to power conference football and men’s basketball players, the two highest-grossing college sports.

Now mid-major Belmont, which competes in the Missouri Valley Conference, will have to find new ways to compete in this era of NIL.

Every school is attempting to find ways to fund its athletic department.

The University of Tennessee raised its ticket prices, which it called a “talent fee.”

Other schools are running fundraising campaigns.

Most are slashing budgets, hoping to find any sliver of money that could be used towards the $20.5 million.

But Belmont is ready for whatever NIL roadblocks come its way, President Greg Jones said in a social media post.

“Approval of the House Settlement is a seminal moment in the history of college athletics. However, it underscores a range of complexities. Belmont University is distinctively well-positioned to navigate this season of change,” he said.

“We remain unwavering in our commitment to athletics, as it serves a leading role in amplifying institutional aims. From our nationally-regarded men’s and women’s basketball programs to our far-reaching academic achievement and community service, we look forward to celebrating Belmont student-athlete successes that lie ahead as an integral feature of Belmont’s mission and vision.”

Another facet of the settlement is the creations of the College Sports Commission and NIL Go.

The CSC will serve as the NCAA’s sheriff in the Wild West of NIL, ensuring that schools stay within the $20.5 million cap and doling out punishment to any violators.

NIL Go will become a clearinghouse, where athletes will be forced to submit any NIL deal over $600 for review to determine its legitimacy.

Even with these outside organizations, Belmont Athletic Director Scott Corley said Belmont is confident it can continue its success in college sports.

“Belmont has been preparing for House Settlement approval. Belmont is committed to a first-class student-athlete experience; one where every student-athlete can realize their dreams athletically and academically while growing in their personal faith” he said. “In the coming days, fans will learn more about new entities such as the College Sports Commission and NIL Go. We will grow together. Belmont will be attentive, opportunistic, and proceed with confidence.”

The final part of the settlement that Corley and Jones didn’t address is the new roster limits.

Teams can now freely hand out as many scholarships as they want if they stay within the roster limit. They can also split scholarships among players as well if they want to save money.

For basketball, the number of scholarships available went from 13 to 15.

For baseball, it went from 11.7 to 34.

For softball, it went from 12 to 25.

For volleyball, it went from 12 to 18.

And with a fraction of the budget of power conference schools, mid-major schools will have to find creative ways to compete.

This article was written by Ty Wellemeyer



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Cowboy Baseball’s Bodendorf Tabbed All-American

DALLAS – Oklahoma State pitcher Harrison Bodendorf has earned 2025 All-America honors from the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association.   Bodendorf, a junior southpaw for the Cowboys, was named to the NCBWA All-America Second Team. The honor brings OSU baseball’s total number of All-American selections to 151.   In his first season in Stillwater, Bodendorf posted […]

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DALLAS – Oklahoma State pitcher Harrison Bodendorf has earned 2025 All-America honors from the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association.
 
Bodendorf, a junior southpaw for the Cowboys, was named to the NCBWA All-America Second Team. The honor brings OSU baseball’s total number of All-American selections to 151.
 
In his first season in Stillwater, Bodendorf posted a 10-1 record and 3.30 ERA in 17 appearances, 16 of those as a starter. He was named the Big 12 Co-Newcomer of the Year and an All-Big 12 First Team performer.
 
Bodendorf’s 10 wins ranks ninth nationally and is the most by a Cowboy pitcher since 2019. He racked up 102 strikeouts in 92 2/3 innings of work, becoming the 17th different Cowboy to record 100 strikeouts in a season; he ranks fifth in the Big 12 and 36th nationally in strikeouts.
 
A native of Temecula, Calif., Bodendorf ranks second in the Big 12 in opponent batting average at .204 and third in ERA, while he comes in at fifth in the conference in strikeouts.
 
In Big 12 play, Bodendorf recorded a 6-1 record and 2.20 ERA in 11 outings, including 10 starts.
 
One of Bodendorf’s most memorable performances came when he tossed a 10-inning complete game to earn a win at Arizona as he struck out 10 and allowed only one earned run on three hits. It was the longest outing by a Big 12 pitcher since 2009, and he became just the eighth Big 12 pitcher to work 10-plus innings in a game since 2003.
 
Bodendorf is OSU’s eighth hurler to earn All-American honors in 13 seasons under pitching coach Rob Walton, who retired following the season.
 



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