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Penn State head coach James Franklin put the issue of name, image, and likeness in blunt terms. Celebrating another successful recruiting class in December, the topic remained of utmost significance to the Nittany Lions in their pursuit of the nation’s best football players. Pleased to be taking NIL seriously, he acknowledged the program’s need to […]

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Penn State head coach James Franklin put the issue of name, image, and likeness in blunt terms. Celebrating another successful recruiting class in December, the topic remained of utmost significance to the Nittany Lions in their pursuit of the nation’s best football players.

Pleased to be taking NIL seriously, he acknowledged the program’s need to continue along that path.

“I think our guys have done a good job being aggressive. We haven’t really changed our overall philosophy. But the reality is, NIL is a factor now, and if you’re not able to offer similar opportunities that other schools are, it’s going to make it challenging,” Franklin told Penn State’s Brian Tripp. “So we’ve been aggressive there and trying to close the gap. We still have some work to do. I think that’s the reality of it. 

“But, at the end of the day, we’re still offering an opportunity to get a world class education, play big-time football, and then we need to make sure that we’re able to offer similar opportunities to every other program in the country that we’re competing with.”

“We Are… in Philly” event sells out

Thursday evening, that progress of that work is again coming into focus with the “We Are… in Philly” event to be held at the Union League of Philadelphia. Happy Valley United, the NIL collective supporting Penn State athletics, followed last year’s inaugural offering with the same format – a VIP reception from 6-7 p.m. followed by a three-hour evening event hosted by Franklin, with dozens of special guests including Saquon Barkley, current coaching staffers, and other notable former players. 

Along with a venue change, HVU announced this week that the event has already delivered an improvement on last year’s results. Selling out the event, the Penn State fan and business community’s reception has been encouraging to Rachael Pritzker, organizer of this year’s event.

“It has been an absolute dream working alongside Penn State Football, Happy Valley United and the Michael Ann and Saquon Barkley Hope Foundation to produce this year’s event. To sell out this event in only our second year is a testament to the support for Penn State Football in Philadelphia, and the community we are building here to support our student athletes,” Pritzker said in a statement provided to Blue White Illustrated. “It’s going to be an incredible and impactful night!”

Online auction accompanies event

In addition to the on-site reception to support the Penn State football program in its NIL endeavors, an online auction is also up and running through Friday night. 

Among the items up for bid are Penn State memorabilia and a variety of sports experience opportunities. 

Experiences include tickets to Penn State’s national signing day event in December, NFL Pro Day in March, Players Championship VIP tickets, and the Nittany Lions’ annual kick-off retreat with the football coaching staff. Memorabilia includes a signed Saquon Barkley jersey, a Franlkin-signed football, autographed Barkley sneakers, and more. 

Attendance at Thursday night’s event isn’t required for auction bidding.


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NIL

Candace Parker Tag Teams With adidas To Mentor Female Student

It’s Time To Celebrate As AfroTech previously told you, adidas pledged to welcome 50,000 student-athletes to join its network and become paid affiliates. Now, the vision is becoming a reality because adidas has signed its first group of 15 student-athletes, which includes Izzy Redmond, Erin Moss, Jameese Joseph, among others. The announcement was made during […]

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Candace Parker Tag Teams With adidas To Mentor Female Student

It’s Time To Celebrate

As AfroTech previously told you, adidas pledged to welcome 50,000 student-athletes to join its network and become paid affiliates. Now, the vision is becoming a reality because adidas has signed its first group of 15 student-athletes, which includes Izzy Redmond, Erin Moss, Jameese Joseph, among others.

The announcement was made during the celebration of the 50th anniversary of Title IX.

“As a leading global sports brand, we’re focused on creating long-term equity in sport. That means both investing in the next generation of athletes today and also supporting them in the future,” said Rupert Campbell, president of adidas North America, in a statement. “We welcome this group of powerful student-athletes to the adidas family and look forward to working alongside them to define what is possible for the future of sport.”

The athletes will enter into name, image, and likeness (NIL) endorsement agreements with adidas that will include brand marketing campaigns highlighting their latest apparel and footwear.

“This is just above and beyond what I even thought. Joining adidas means so much. I mean, it’s a global brand that reaches so many people, and the fact that we’re here for Title IX just shows that they have these amazing standards that I am so honored to represent here,” said Moss, who is a volleyball player and honor roll student at Georgia Tech, according to a press release. “I feel like this is the right fit for me, and I can’t wait for the future with adidas.”

Mentorship From Candace Parker

As adidas aims to set a new precedence for NIL opportunities, the company will utilize the momentum to launch equality initiatives for greater representation and opportunity in sports.

adidas is working alongside Candace Parker to mentor the new collegiate-athlete signees and help them navigate the new terrains of NIL deals.

“I have the incredible opportunity to pay it forward with the next generation of athletes,” said Candace Parker in a press release. “I am so happy to be partnered with adidas who is aligned with my commitment to developing this mentorship program which will set these extraordinary student-athletes up for greatness in sport and life.”

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Adidas Signs NIL Deals With Eight High School Basketball Recruits

According to On3’s Nick Schultz, eight athletes with locations ranging from Arizona, California, Georgia, Ohio, Texas and Washington have signed a Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals with sporting goods giant Adidas which are set to take affect during the next high school basketball season. The eight athletes now on board are rising junior guard […]

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According to On3’s Nick Schultz, eight athletes with locations ranging from Arizona, California, Georgia, Ohio, Texas and Washington have signed a Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals with sporting goods giant Adidas which are set to take affect during the next high school basketball season.

The eight athletes now on board are rising junior guard Kaleena Smith from Ontario Christian High School and rising senior Adam Oumiddoch from Overtime Elite, who have already signed their agreements with Adidas.

Top 2026 boys basketball recruits such as Grayson (Georgia) five-star shooting guard Caleb Holt, Overtime Elite five-star point guard Tay Kinney, and five-star small forward Anthony Thompson are on board. On the girls’ side, five-star power forward Oliviyah Edwards and five-star shooting guard Kate Harpring have also signed their NIL agreements with Adidas. Five-star rising junior guard Bruce Branch III, out of Perry High School in Arizona has also agreed to the deal.

The new crew of athletes are part of Adidas’ plan to support young athletes with resources, opportunities and a platform to reach their full potential. Additionally, the company is further investing in the NIL space after making multiple splashes last year.

Holt, is rated as the No. 5 ranked player in the nation, the No. 2 shooting guard, and the No. 1 overall ranked player in the state of Georgia for the Class of 2026, according to 247Sports. Holt has had heavy interest from Houston and Kentucky as well as already taken an official visit to Ole Miss.

Thompson, is rated as the No. 11 ranked player in the nation, the No. 3 small forward, and the No. 1 overall ranked player in the state of Ohio for the Class of 2026, according to 247Sports. Thompson is currently hearing from Auburn, BYU, Georgetown, Indiana, Kansas, and several others.

Branch, is rated as the No. 10 ranked player in the nation, the No. 5 small forward, and the No. 2 overall ranked player in the state of Arizona for the Class of 2027, according to 247Sports. He is currently holding offers from Arizona State, California, Fresno State, Houston, Indiana, Kansas State, Louisville, and several others.

Kinney, is rated as the No. 16 ranked player in the nation, the No. 4 point guard, and the No. 2 overall ranked player in the state of Georgia for the Class of 2026, according to 247Sports. Kinney is hearing from Alabama, Arkansas, Louisville, Oregon, Purdue, and several others.

Harpring, is rated as the No. 2 ranked player in the nation, the No. 1 point guard, and the No. 1 overall ranked player in the state of Georgia for the Class of 2026, according to 247Sports. She currently holds offers from Alabama, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Iowa, LSU, and several others.

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Kirby Smart details major NIL issue impacting pursuit of National Championship

The NIL era has changed college football forever. Whether that’s a good or bad thing is up for debate, but in reality there are both positives and negatives from NIL taking over college football. Georgia football head coach Kirby Smart recently spoke with the media, and he detailed one reason why he thinks NIL is […]

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The NIL era has changed college football forever. Whether that’s a good or bad thing is up for debate, but in reality there are both positives and negatives from NIL taking over college football.

Georgia football head coach Kirby Smart recently spoke with the media, and he detailed one reason why he thinks NIL is a bad thing for college football.

“You could end up with some haves and have-nots out there and ultimately a team could drive prices and go buy a championship, like you’re talking about with super teams,” Smart shared via ugawire.usatoday.com.

Kirby Smart believes teams will buy championships with NIL

One of the best things about the “old” version of college football, the version before hundreds of players transferred every offseason chasing better NIL deals, was being able to watch players grow up within one program. Watching a true freshman come in and struggle during their first season before ultimately becoming one of the best players on the team as an upperclassmen was always a joy to watch.

But that happens less and less now in today’s college football world, and NIL is to blame. This is what Smart is describing in the above quote as he detailed how there are programs who have a lot of NIL money and programs that do not. So it’s quite obvious that the teams with a lot of money are going to do much better than the teams who do not.

Georgia is one of the programs that has a lot of money, but that isn’t really what bothers Smart. The thing that Smart is afraid of is a program going out and buying a championship. Instead of developing their own players, Smart thinks a school will just go out and buy all the best players across the country and win a championship that way.

Sure that will still count as a championship just as much as any other title, but it does feel a little less impressive. So hopefully changes will come to how NIL is structure so teams are unable to buy championships and have to resort to developing their own recruits like the good ole days.



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College Basketball NIL Deals Have Important Ripple Effect on NBA Draft

Pendulum swings occur in most areas of life, and the pathway from college basketball to the NBA draft is no exception. For a long time, college basketball teams struggled to build a team of contenders with players electing to go to the NBA as soon as possible out of college. With the infusion of NIL […]

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Pendulum swings occur in most areas of life, and the pathway from college basketball to the NBA draft is no exception.

For a long time, college basketball teams struggled to build a team of contenders with players electing to go to the NBA as soon as possible out of college.

With the infusion of NIL in the college sports landscape, that trend has flipped entirely, compounded by star college basketball players hitting the transfer portal.

The NCAA deadline for players to declare for the draft or return to school passed on Wednesday at 11:59 p.m., and that notion became quite clear.

College basketball insider Jeff Borzello and NBA draft insiders Jonathan Givony and Jeremy Woo collaborated on a story on ESPN.com that dove into the new landscape of college basketball.

As Givony points out, the 106 early-entrant candidates were the lowest number in a decade.

Another dozen draftable players withdrew at the deadline, compounding the issue and leaving a bare-bones second round.

From the NBA’s perspective, that’s concerning for them as they build summer league and G League rosters. However, the complete explosion of the NIL market is believed to eventually settle by those in the league.

It will lead to a group of older prospects who elected to return and exhaust their eligibility. The flip side of that for the league is more pro-ready rookies.

It will necessitate a shift in scouting philosophy, as previously, it was easy to dismiss older prospects due to their dominance over 18- and 19-year-olds.

Players were previously criticized for staying in school, but as the entire crop of prospects continues to do so, so grows the level of competition in college basketball.

As Borzello adds, the previous allure of being selected in the second round was enough to entice prospects and has dissipated with multimillion-dollar NIL deals.

It’s not just lower-round players. Multiple first-round projections are returning to their programs for deals up to $3 million. That nearly matches up to the end of the first round on the rookie scale.

“A prospect’s decision no longer hinges on hoping his draft stock is good enough to make real money in the NBA vs. playing for free while developing at the collegiate level,” Borzello writes.

With the perspective on players staying in college for three to four years changing, there’s less risk of perception for prospects to stay and possibly improve their draft stock.

That’s not only due to NIL but also the transfer portal, as they point to several first-rounders who weren’t once that, including Danny Wolf, who transferred to Yale from Michigan.

While the initial effects of NIL on the draft depth will sting for NBA teams, in a few seasons, they may come to appreciate the more pro-ready prospects they receive that have proved their dominance against valid competition.



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Texas Tech Red Raiders – Official Athletics Website

OKLAHOMA CITY, Oklahoma – The Collegiate Women Sport Awards (CWSA) announced its four finalists for the Class of 2025 Honda Sport Award for Softball on Friday. Texas Tech’s NiJaree Canady was named one of the finalists after winning the award last season and having another phenomenal season on and off the field. The Honda Sport Award […]

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OKLAHOMA CITY, Oklahoma – The Collegiate Women Sport Awards (CWSA) announced its four finalists for the Class of 2025 Honda Sport Award for Softball on Friday. Texas Tech’s NiJaree Canady was named one of the finalists after winning the award last season and having another phenomenal season on and off the field.

The Honda Sport Award is being presented for the 49th year and it recognizes the top women athletes in 12 NCAA-sanctioned sports. The award is chosen to symbolize the best of the best in their respective sport and the winner becomes a finalist for the Collegiate Woman Athlete of the Year and the 2025 Honda Cup presented on June 30.

The finalists are chosen by a panel of coaches that are members of the National Fastpitch Coaches Association and is voted on by administrators from over 1,000 NCAA institutions.

Full release here.

 



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Ball State University – Official Athletics Site

The Ball State soccer team and head coach Andy Stoots have announced the additions of Fiona Kilian, Alyssa Mella and Joy Zeeman in advance of the 2025 season.   “We are very happy to welcome Joy, Alyssa and Fiona to Ball State Soccer,” Stoots said. “They represent the soccer, experience and character qualities we were […]

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The Ball State soccer team and head coach Andy Stoots have announced the additions of Fiona Kilian, Alyssa Mella and Joy Zeeman in advance of the 2025 season.
 
“We are very happy to welcome Joy, Alyssa and Fiona to Ball State Soccer,” Stoots said. “They represent the soccer, experience and character qualities we were looking for, and I am excited to see them add to our current roster!”
 
Fiona Kilian
Levittown, N.Y. | General Douglas MacArthur HS | Temple University
 
A midfielder who played her freshman year at Xavier and sophomore and junior seasons at Temple, Kilian started in 18 out of 19 games played last year with the Owls while scoring a goal and getting two assists.
 
Academically, Kilian will major in kinesiology before pursuing a career playing professional soccer.
 
Coach Stoots on Kilian
“Fiona will add to our midfield and our team with her experience at the collegiate level. She has played over 2,600 minutes the past two seasons and has the technical qualities we were looking for to add to the midfield group.”
 
Alyssa Mella
Oakville, Canada | Thomas A. Blakelock HS | Saint Francis University
 
A forward who started in 16 of 18 matches played as a freshman in 2024 at Saint Francis, Mella scored the most goals (three) by a freshman at Saint Francis since 2018. Mella was named the Northeast Conference Rookie of the Week last year on Sept. 23 and earned two NEC Prime Performer recognitions.
 
Mella intends to major in exercise science with a physical therapy concentration at Ball State and attend either physical therapy school or medical school after graduating.
 
Coach Stoots on Mella
“Alyssa is a versatile player with an attacking mindset and ability to put service into the box. She is another player that played a ton as a freshman, and we are looking forward to her joining us in August!”
 
Joy Zeeman
Montreal, Canada | Royal West Academy | Saint Francis University
 
A defender who started in all 18 matches in her freshman season at Saint Francis, Zeeman played in all but 56 minutes in 2024 for the Red Flash back line that had its best defensive season since 2012.
 
Academically, Zeeman plans on majoring in accounting with a minor in international business at Ball State before pursuing a career as an accountant after graduation.
 
Coach Stoots on Zeeman
“Joy brings a calm presence and very solid distribution out of the back. She has played a ton of minutes as a freshman and gained valuable experience playing almost every minute last fall. We are excited for her to join us in August!”
 



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