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Softball Falls in Heartbreaking Series Finale at Yale, 8

Next Game: at Lehigh 3/19/2025 | 3:30 PM Mar. 19 (Wed) / 3:30 PM at Lehigh History The Red and Blue came up huge in the second inning. Alexis Youngren worked a walk in her first at-bat, advancing to second on a groundout by Megan Huang. Yale went to their bullpen, but Bauerle was hit by […]

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Softball Falls in Heartbreaking Series Finale at Yale, 8


Lehigh

Next Game:
at Lehigh
3/19/2025 | 3:30 PM

Mar. 19 (Wed) / 3:30 PM

at Lehigh

History

The Red and Blue came up huge in the second inning. Alexis Youngren worked a walk in her first at-bat, advancing to second on a groundout by Megan Huang. Yale went to their bullpen, but Bauerle was hit by a pitch to take first. Montgomery got hit by a pitch next, loading the bases for Rachel Riley. She worked a walk, bringing in Youngren and keeping the bases loaded for freshman Gigi Ganje. Ganje let loose a perfect swing, sending the ball over the fence in left-center field for her first collegiate home run and her first career grand slam. Greeted by her teammates at the plate, she was ambushed with helmet taps and hugs, the score now 7-1 in the Quakers’ favor. The Bulldogs made another pitching change, stopping the bleeding and ending the top of the inning. The Elis tacked on two runs in their half of the inning, relief pitcher Morgan Sullivan able to keep them at bay. Penn held their lead, 7-3 at the end of the second.Up Next
The Quakers will travel to Bethlehem, Pa. on Wednesday to play a standalone against Lehigh before traveling to Columbia this weekend.Yale loaded up the bases in the sixth inning with no outs, Lauren Perren sending a sacrifice fly to right field to bring home the fourth run for the Elis. Bases loaded again, Isabella Fortini hit a double to tie the game at seven and clear the bases. Taking the lead on a wild pitch, the sixth inning ended with the Bulldogs up, 8-7.For the latest on Penn Softball, follow @Penn_Softball on X and Instagram, and on the web at PennAthletics.com.#FightOnPennPHILADELPHIA— The University of Pennsylvania softball team closed out their weekend series at Yale earlier this afternoon, falling just short of breaking up the weekend sweep.Final: Yale 8, Penn 7
Penn took an early lead, getting on the board in the first inning with a triple down the right field line from Jade Montgomery to score Madison Bauerle. Rachel Riley came up next, sending a single to center field to bring Montgomery home. Yale cut the lead in half in the bottom of the inning, the Quakers still ahead 2-1 at the end of the first.Yale moves to 3-0 in conference play and 11-10 on the year, while Penn closes the weekend with a 1-16 record.

The score would hold for most of the game, both teams deadlocked, battling inning after inning. Freshman Sullivan had an outstanding performance, allowing just one run after taking the circle with runners on base in the second inning. Pitching 3.1 innings for the Quakers, she held her own after making appearances in both games yesterday, throwing 48 pitches this afternoon before being replaced by Kelly Zybura.

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EAC announces 2025 Volleyball Camps and new Online Registration Guide

Eastern Arizona College (EAC) is excited to announce its 2025 Volleyball Camp lineup, welcoming young athletes of all levels to enhance their skills with expert coaching from EAC’s volleyball staff. This year’s camps will be held at the Guitteau Gymnasium and include sessions for elementary, junior high, and high school students. To streamline the registration […]

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Eastern Arizona College (EAC) is excited to announce its 2025 Volleyball Camp lineup, welcoming young athletes of all levels to enhance their skills with expert coaching from EAC’s volleyball staff. This year’s camps will be held at the Guitteau Gymnasium and include sessions for elementary, junior high, and high school students.

To streamline the registration experience, EAC has introduced a new online system via Transact Cashnet, enabling families to register multiple participants in a single order.

Volleyball Camp Dates and Details

  • Elementary Camp (Grades K–5)
    Dates: July 17–18, 2025
    Times: Thursday 2–4 p.m. & 6–7:30 p.m.; Friday 9–11:30 a.m. & 1:30–3:30 p.m.
    Cost: $75
  • Junior High Camp (Grades 6–8)
    Dates: July 7–9, 2025
    Times: Monday–Tuesday 9–11 a.m. & 1:30–4 p.m.; Wednesday 9–11:30 a.m.
    Cost: $90
  • High School Camp (Grades 9–12)
    Dates: July 14–17, 2025
    Commuter Cost: $100
    Resident Cost: $270
    Schedule:
    • Freshmen/Sophomores: 8–10 a.m., 2–3:30 p.m., 7–8:30 p.m. (Mon–Wed); 8–10 a.m. (Thu)
    • Juniors/Seniors: 10 a.m.–Noon, 3:30–5 p.m., 8:30–10 p.m. (Mon–Wed); 10 a.m.–Noon (Thu)

Resident campers will stay in Wesley Taylor Dorms and must bring their own bedding, toiletries, water bottles, and snacks. Dorm supervision and camp guidelines will be in place to ensure a safe and enjoyable experience.

New Multi-Order Online Registration Now Available

EAC has simplified the registration process for families enrolling more than one child. The new Transact Cashnet interface allows users to:

  • Select a camp and fill out participant information.
  • Add multiple registrations to one cart.
  • Review all selections before final checkout.

A step-by-step visual guide is available on the EAC ticketing page to walk families through the multi-camper registration process.

To register, visit commerce.cashnet.com/eactic or scan the QR code found on the camp flyer.

For additional information, contact EAC Volleyball Coach Shari Kay at (928) 428-8410 or email shari.kay@eac.edu.

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Warner Palaestra Pool – Saint John’s University Athletics

The home of Johnnie aquatics lies in the Warner Palaestra Pool. The pool was built as part of the original Warner Palaestra Athletic Complex in 1973. The Warner Palaestra Pool includes a regulation sized, eight-lane, 25-yard pool, one-meter and three-meter spring boards and a five-meter platform. Johnnie swimmers and divers have been a vital part […]

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The home of Johnnie aquatics lies in the Warner Palaestra Pool. The pool was built as part of the original Warner Palaestra Athletic Complex in 1973. The Warner Palaestra Pool includes a regulation sized, eight-lane, 25-yard pool, one-meter and three-meter spring boards and a five-meter platform. Johnnie swimmers and divers have been a vital part to the success of Saint John’s Athletics and continue to be. Since 1978, Saint John’s has had 178 All Americans and two individual national champions (1991 – John Deters in the 1-meter dive, 1999 – Matt Zelen in the 50-yard freestyle).

The Warner Palaestra Pool is also open to club sport and general student use during the course of the academic year. Saint John’s Water Polo has seen significant success in the Warner Palaestra Pool in recent years.

Swimming Pool (within the Warner Palaestra Building) Spring Semester Hours

(*Subject to change based on lifeguard availability, will post signage on pool door & website.)

Sunday: Noon-2 p.m.
Monday-Friday: 11 a.m.-Noon; 8-10 p.m.
Saturday: Closed

  • Swipe card access is required during all building hours through DOOR 1 ONLY. 
  • Closed when students are on breaks. 

 

Questions regarding lifeguard availability/pool hours contact Ben Gill at 320-363-3352 or bgill@csbsju.edu)

Rentals and scheduling: Please click HERE to complete the SJU Athletics Facility Rental-Inquiry/Requests Form.

For additional information, please contact our Facilities and Game Day Operations Coordinator at sjuathletics@csbsju.edu or call 320-363-3296).



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Eastern’s 20-year enrollment decrease is part of statewide trend – The Daily Eastern News

Eastern’s enrollment has dropped 49.3% over the past 20 years, reflecting enrollment struggles at many Illinois universities. (Bryce Parker) Over the last two decades, Eastern has lost nearly half the number of students once enrolled as part of a statewide trend in public universities across Illinois. Since the 2004-05 school year, Eastern’s enrollment including off […]

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Eastern’s enrollment has dropped 49.3% over the past 20 years, reflecting enrollment struggles at many Illinois universities. (Bryce Parker)

Over the last two decades, Eastern has lost nearly half the number of students once enrolled as part of a statewide trend in public universities across Illinois.

Since the 2004-05 school year, Eastern’s enrollment including off campus students has dropped from 11,651 to 5,910, a drop of around 49% over the last 20 years.  

Eastern’s struggles to attract and retain students mirror similar enrollment declines at other directional schools in the state.  

Over the last 20 years, enrollment is down 38% at Northern Illinois University, 45% at Southern Illinois University Carbondale and 53% at Western Illinois University.  

Over the same period, enrollment at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville dropped by 12% while the number of students at Illinois State University increased slightly by around 4%.  

There are, however, two state schools that have bucked this trend: the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and the University of Illinois Chicago. 

At UIUC, enrollment has exploded to a record high of 59,238, an increase of 46% over the last two decades, and at UIC, enrollment now tops 18,500 students, a 33% increase over the last 20 years. 

One contributor to UIUC’s success is the level of funding it receives compared to other schools in the state. The adequacy funding for U of I, or the percentage of funds it has received to meet its educational needs, is 92%, according to a report by the Illinois Commission on Equitable Public University Funding 

That makes the state’s largest university also its best funded.  

Last year, Eastern hit 61% of its target funding. Of the $178,159,100 budget this year, 53% was allocated from the state.  

The funding disparities in the state create two classes of universities in Illinois: “the have and the have nots,” said John Blue, the inaugural executive director and senior diversity and inclusion officer at Eastern.  

A bitter state budget standoff nearly a decade ago, the COVID-19 pandemic and a decline in enrollment prior to both of those events all have contributed to Eastern’s enrollment getting cut in half.  

But Eastern hasn’t always been shrinking.  

Jeffrey Stowell, professor of psychology and vice chair of faculty senate, has been teaching at Eastern since 2000 and remembers when his classes reached capacity consistently.   

When Stowell first started working at Eastern, he said there were so many students in the psychology department that he and other professors discussed how to keep them from becoming psychology majors just to have enough space.  

“We couldn’t handle them all,” Stowell said. “Our classrooms were full. I would have students asking to [join the classes], and I’m like, ‘I just simply can’t do it, because there’s no physical room in the classroom.’” 

Now, Stowell said his psychology classes can hold 55 students, but only about 30 sign up.  

The beginning of EIU’s enrollment decline 

From 2006 to 2016, Eastern’s enrollment was already on a steady decline, losing nearly 5,000 students during the decade. 

This became visible on campus when the university decided to close Carman Hall, the largest dorm complex on campus that was exclusively home to freshmen. Carman has two eight-floor towers that were closed in 2013 and now is used for fire department training.  

According to a documentary on Carman Hall, Mark Hudson, the executive director of housing and dining services, said the building was shut down because it was “less than needed for demand.” 

“We opted to close it down in order to fit the main people on the core of campus so we can focus on resources on renovations and things in that area in order to save operating money as well as future investment opportunities,” Hudson said in the documentary. 

From July 1, 2015, to August 31, 2017, then Gov. Bruce Rauner (Rep.) had a budget standoff with the Democrat-controlled state legislature. As a result, Illinois did not have a complete budget, which impacted state funding in several areas, such as social service programs, state agency operations and higher education. 

During this time, Eastern experienced a decrease of 3,181 students.  

Brittany Tierney, Eastern’s director of admissions, said the drop in enrollment numbers in 2017 was directly connected to the budget crisis in the state.  

“There was no state budget for a time frame that impacted universities,” Tierney said. “That impacted all state entities whenever there is no state budget.” 

Jose Garcia, director of strategic communications at the Illinois Board of Higher Education, said enrollment at Eastern and other Illinois public universities has also been affected by COVID-19 pandemic. Eastern’s enrollment numbers from 2019 to 2023 were consistent, with 6,226 students in 2019 and 6,353 in 2023.  

In the spring of 2023, university professors went on strike for six days. Tierney said Eastern was projected to have a good year with their enrollment numbers, but she said the EIU-UPI strike interrupted the projection.  

“We lost a lot of students through that process,” Tierney said.  

Eastern’s enrollment has dropped from 6,357 in 2023 to 5,910 last fall.  

Jennifer Stringfellow disagrees with Tierney’s statement. Stringfellow was the president of EIU University Professionals of Illinois during the strike, the labor union that represents the 450 workers who went on strike.  

“I don’t really buy that,” Stringfellow said. “I mean I’m not saying that there’s no impact, but I don’t believe that people aren’t coming here because they’re concerned that we might go on strike again, or that we went on strike and they didn’t like the strike.” 

During 2024, the Free Application for Federal Student Aid experienced several delays and errors which interrupted the college enrollment for millions of families across the nation. Students who attend smaller state schools, such as Eastern, are more likely to seek out financial aid.  

“We were down quite a bit in terms of students that had committed to come to Eastern, like 30% at one point,” Tierney said. “We ended up being down, in terms of first year incoming students, 4%.” 

Trying to hit funding targets 

Eastern is still trying to catch up from the funding it lost 10 years ago in the state budget fight, said Blue.  

“That’s what led to the impasse, was the governor not budgeting, taking so much money out of the budget for state institutions,” Blue said. “It’s important that the state actually supports, financially supports the institutions.” 

Each year, the Illinois Board of Higher Education calculates the cost for each state school to provide an equitable education based on each university’s needs and programs. That number is referred to as the education “adequacy target.” 

The other 12 state schools averaged about 55% of the funding they need to reach their funding target.  

Some universities rely more on state funding to reach their target than others. Smaller schools like Eastern are more reliant on the state than the University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign because they don’t receive as much money from other sources.  

Overall, the state estimates the funding target for all public universities at $4.47 billion, but those schools receive just $3 billion, according to the 2024 report. Medical schools were not included in state funding figures. 

Relying solely on state funding would put EIU at just under 30% funded. Only relying on the state would alter the way students are taught, Blue said. To prevent this, Blue said he seeks out grants from sponsors and donors. 

“It would affect the type of education we can offer, which in turn affects the type of graduates we can pump into the Illinois economy, which also affects the economy as a whole because if you don’t have people that are properly trained at a certain field, now you are lacking in that field,” Blue said. “It’s a whole trickle down effect.” 

To improve enrollment numbers and funding, Gov. J.B. Pritzker is working to remove barriers and even out what schools receive from the state, said Garcia, the board of higher education spokesperson.  

Government funding, including federal student aid, can play a major role in the way a university is run. It also can affect enrollment. Last year, Pritzker signed a $2.6 billion higher education budget, an increase of nearly $76 million from the previous fiscal year, or 3%.  

For the 2025 fiscal year, Eastern has a total budget of $178,159,100 in total spending money for the current fiscal year which was a 3.1% increase from the previous fiscal year, of which nearly $8 million comes from the state.

Rebuilding enrollment at Eastern 

One of the ways that Eastern is attempting to improve enrollment is by offering grants to its students.  

Along with other state schools, Eastern can offer state AIM HIGH Grants, which covers an Illinois student’s entire tuition if they are eligible. If students receive it once and continue to maintain eligibility, they will receive a renewal grant, which covers the full cost of tuition and fees for students taking 15 credit hours.  

Eastern also offers the EIU Promise grant to first time undergraduate students. The grant covers a student’s tuition and fees, if the gross household income is $80,000 or below annually and if other requirements are met.  

Leaders at Eastern have tried to increase enrollment by emphasizing how affordable it is. The average cost of tuition at Eastern is around $12,000. 

Shortly after the start of the pandemic, Eastern removed its application fee, and the university expects to keep it like that permanently, said Tierney.  

Illinois is one of the country’s top exporters of high school students to go to college in others states, taking away potential enrollment from state schools, said Stowell. 

Stowell said he thinks the university has shifted its focus on what it is and the types of programs that it can and should be offering, while being both nimble and flexible in the process.  

“I think the budget impasse and the pandemic, some as well, I think it really had a refining effect on how we work as an institution and who wants to be here at the institution,” he said.  

Eastern also is pushing to attract international students, contacting 50,000 high schools worldwide, said Andy Kabasele, Eastern’s assistant dean for international students and scholars.  

“We have seen some years where numbers have gone really up, and then some years have gone down and that depends on administration,” Kabasele said.  

In 2023, Kabasele said the international enrollment soared from 253 students to 880, which was a 350% increase. That success has taken a turn since President Donald Trump took office, and his administration began making it harder to get visas.  

This semester, around 240 international students had their visas denied, the News previously reported. Last fall, 196 visas were denied, and recently, 11 students had their visas revoked. University leaders said the drop in international students is the main reason on-campus enrollment is down nearly 10% this semester.  

International students pay the full tuition rate because they come from out of the country.   

Eastern hired Kabasele to help assist international students and provide services to retain them. Kabasele said he works with the Department of Homeland Security to make sure that the appropriate services are being provided as well as making sure students are in compliance with their visas. The country with the highest number of international students attending Eastern is India.  

Kabasele said they receive around 8,000 applications, but a lot of them are not accepted because of visa holdups. Even before Trump took office, Kabasele said students told him that getting appointments regarding their visas had been challenging, because the office was backlogged from the pandemic.  

  

Cam’ron Hardy can be reached at 581-2812 or at cahardy@eiu.edu. 



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Seven Cowichan schools represented at track and field provincials

The 2025 B.C. High School Sports provincial track and field championships took place in Langley June 5-7 and there were no shortage of athletes representing the Cowichan Valley.  Students from Frances Kelsey, Queen Margaret’s School, Ladysmith, Quamichan School, Chemainus Secondary, Brentwood College School,and Shawnigan Lake School all participated and some even brought home medals. Frances Kelsey […]

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The 2025 B.C. High School Sports provincial track and field championships took place in Langley June 5-7 and there were no shortage of athletes representing the Cowichan Valley. 

Students from Frances Kelsey, Queen Margaret’s School, Ladysmith, Quamichan School, Chemainus Secondary, Brentwood College School,and Shawnigan Lake School all participated and some even brought home medals.

Frances Kelsey

The bronze medallist last year, Kelsey Grade 12 high jumper Nova Wedmann-Kent improved her result to a silver this year in the senior girls category. Wedmann-Kent also ran the senior girls 100m and 200m races but did not qualify for the finals.

Kelsey tenth grader Charlotte Gough finished third in the junior girls 800m preliminaries and fifth overall. She also raced to fifth in the junior girls 1500m preliminaries and went on to place seventh overall — a three spot improvement over last year’s 10th place. 

Queen Margaret’s School

Jessica Tshibangu of Queen Margaret’s School placed seventh overall in the junior girls high jump and 12th in the long jump. Schoolmate Cohen Bartfai was ninth in the junior boys long jump after a second-place finish in the Grade 8 division last year.

Grade 12 jumper Mike Chen was 19th in the senior boys triple jump finals while Grade 10 thrower Elsie Jones was 27th in the junior girls shot put. 

Ethan Chen made the provincials in the senior boys high jump but did not jump.

Ladysmith Secondary

Four members of the Ladysmith track team made the provincials including William Cram, Skyla Lewis, Lila Jeffries, and Lina Anh Chay.

Cram was first in the junior boys 800m preliminaries and went on to earn the silver medal in the final. Also, after placing third in his preliminary race, Cram was sixth overall in the junior boys 400m race. 

Lila Jeffries placed 12th in the junior girls hammer throw event. 

Lina Anh Chay was 18th in the junior girls javelin final. 

Skyla Lewis was 28th overall in the junior girls 3000m race. She was 18th in the 1500m preliminary and did not advance to the 1500m final.

Brentwood College School

The lone athlete from BCS at this year’s track and field provincials was Ava Heenan. The 400m specialist participated in both the senior girls 400m dash and 400m hurdles. In the hurdles, she placed ninth in the preliminaries, just outside of a spot in the final. In the 400m dash, the Grade 11 athlete placed 21st in the preliminaries and did not advance.

Shawnigan Lake School

Grade 12 thrower Thabisa Mangena-Jellema’s top result was 11th in the senior girls discus. She also participated in the senior girls shot put event, placing 21st overall.

Quamichan School

Tate McGeachy was the lone Quamichan School representative and he placed 16th overall in the Grade 8 boys 400m dash preliminaries, missing the finals.

Chemainus Secondary

Iza Durante represented Chemainus at the provincials and placed 11th in the 400m dash preliminaries, missing the final.



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Oregon track & field legend Bill Dellinger dies at 91

What’s on the track at Hayward Field in 2025? Hayward Field will play host to a wide variety of track and field events in 2025. Bill Dellinger, one of the most influential figures in track and field, distance running and the University of Oregon’s history, died June 27 at the age of 91. Born in […]

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Bill Dellinger, one of the most influential figures in track and field, distance running and the University of Oregon’s history, died June 27 at the age of 91.

Born in 1934 in Grants Pass but raised in Springfield, Dellinger attended UO and had a prolific running career.

At Springfield High, Dellinger won the first OSAA Boys Cross Country championship in 1949.

He was a three-time Olympian and competed in the 5,000 meters in the 1956, 1960 and 1964 games.

After he wrapped up his own running career, Dellinger worked as an assistant coach under Bill Bowerman at his alma mater until the latter’s retirement in 1973.

It was during that time Dellinger coached Oregon running legend Steve Prefontaine and developed a close relationship with the star distance runner.

Dellinger was promoted to head track and field coach at Oregon after Bowerman retired and served in that role until 1998, winning five NCAA championships.

“Coach Bill Dellinger was one of the greatest coaches ever,” Rudy Chapa, a six-time All-American at UO and member of the Ducks’ 1977 national title-winning cross country team, said in a GoDucks news release. “However, for those of us lucky enough to have been coached by him, what we treasured most was the genuine friendship he gave us long after our running days were over. He gave us so much more than guidance on the track; he gave us his heart.”

“Bill was deeply loved, and he will be profoundly missed by his athletes, the Eugene-Springfield community, and the entire world of track and field,” Chapa said.

Under Dellinger’s guidance, over nearly three decades as Oregon’s cross country coach and 25 years as its track and field coach, his athletes broke 18 American records, won 12 NCAA titles and made 17 Olympic appearances.

Dellinger was the recipient of USA Track and Field’s Legend Coach Award in 2021 and was inducted in the USTFCCCA collegiate athlete Hall of Fame in 2024.

He is honored in the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame, UO Athletics Hall of Fame, Track and Field Hall of Fame for Coaching, Distance Running Hall of Fame, Drake Relays Hall of Fame and Grants Pass Hall of Fame.

Oregon’s annual cross country meet, the Bill Dellinger Invitational, is named after the legendary coach.

Alec Dietz covers University of Oregon football, volleyball, women’s basketball and baseball for The Register-Guard. You may reach him at adietz@registerguard.com and you can follow him on X @AlecDietz.





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Tennessee Tech Athletics to opt in to House settlement

Posted: Jun 27, 2025 By Thomas Corhern, TTU Sports Information COOKEVILLE, Tenn. – As the NCAA enters a new era following the House v. NCAA settlement, new Tennessee Tech Director of Athletics Casey Fox has announced that the University’s Department of Athletics will opt into the terms of the settlement starting in the 2025-26 academic […]

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Tennessee Tech Athletics to opt in to House settlement

By Thomas Corhern, TTU Sports Information

COOKEVILLE, Tenn. – As the NCAA enters a new era following the House v. NCAA settlement, new Tennessee Tech Director of Athletics Casey Fox has announced that the University’s Department of Athletics will opt into the terms of the settlement starting in the 2025-26 academic year.

“This week, we made the decision for Tennessee Tech to opt in to the NCAA settlement,” Fox said. “After carefully reviewing the final terms, we believe this choice is in the best long-term interest of our athletic department.

“The recent finalization of the roster grandfathering provision played a key role in solidifying our decision. By opting in, we position ourselves to better adapt to the evolving collegiate athletics environment, while also creating greater flexibility to leverage opportunities around Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) and potential revenue sharing.”

Fox continued, “As college athletics continue to change, we are committed to doing what’s best for our student-athletes, our programs and Tennessee Tech University.”

Tennessee Tech President Phil Oldham agreed that the move was one that benefitted the student-athlete experience.

“Amid the sweeping changes in college athletics, Tech will take advantage of this opportunity to increase our support for student-athletes,” Oldham said. “Opting into the settlement opens new conversations and allows us to leverage revenue streams to build stronger athletic programs through well-supported student-athletes.”

The House v. NCAA settlement is the culmination of three federal antitrust class action lawsuits brought against the NCAA and the Autonomy Five (A5) conferences – the Atlantic Coast, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and Southeastern Conferences. The cases allege that the NCAA’s restrictions on the monetization of name, image and likeness (NIL) payments prevented student-athletes from realizing their true market value. This included NIL revenue, broadcast rights and video games.

A settlement was reached on Oct. 7, 2024, and saw final approval on June 6, 2025. Non-defendant institutions – such as those not in the Autonomy Five conference, including Tennessee Tech – had until June 30 to declare their intent to the NCAA on whether they would choose to opt into the settlement. Tech opted in on June 27.

So what changes by opting in? Universities will be able to directly provide additional support to student-athletes in addition to the current benefits with scholarships – tuition, housing, meals, academic awards, health care, etc.

The Settlement sets a uniform internal NIL cap for all schools that choose to opt in equal to 22 percent of the NCAA Division I average media, ticket and scholarship revenue. For 2025-26, that cap for each member institution is approximately $20.5 million and will be recalculated every three years. While this will look different between the Autonomy Five and the mid-major conferences, each institution will be able to decide how to distribute the internal NIL among its sports teams and student-athletes. There is no minimum required distribution.

Internal NIL will allow the University to manage donor support holistically and in a way that allows donors to make these contributions charitably through the Tennessee Tech Athletics Association.

The Settlement also allows third-party NIL payments to student-athletes. Third-party payments from an “affiliated entity” (such as the Golden Eagle Collective) must be analyzed to meet fair market value with a legitimate business purpose. Approved third-party NIL payments will not count toward the internal NIL cap and will be reviewed by an independent clearing house (NIL Go).

One of the terms of the Settlement is that the NCAA membership, including Tech, along with the Autonomy Five conferences, will pay approximately $2.8 billion in damages over a 10-year period to a class of former student-athletes who did not have the opportunity to benefit from their name, image and likeness. These back damages will be paid regardless of opt-in or opt-out status.

The choice to opt in now to the Settlement will trigger roster limits for all NCAA-sponsored sports, but it also provides flexibility over a four-year period that opting in later would not allow. While the roster will be limited, the cap on scholarships has been removed, allowing institutions to decide how many scholarships to award up to the total number of roster sports allotted for each sport.

 Photo | Tennessee Tech Communications and Marketing

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