NIL
Stanford RHP Joey Volchko enters NCAA Transfer Portal with do-not-contact tag
Stanford right-handed pitcher Joey Volchko has entered the NCAA transfer portal with a “do not contact” tag, On3’s Pete Nakos has learned. He played the past two seasons for the Cardinal. Volchko was a preseason second team All-American ahead of the 2025 season and showed flashes of why. He appeared made 15 starts this past […]

Stanford right-handed pitcher Joey Volchko has entered the NCAA transfer portal with a “do not contact” tag, On3’s Pete Nakos has learned. He played the past two seasons for the Cardinal.
Volchko was a preseason second team All-American ahead of the 2025 season and showed flashes of why. He appeared made 15 starts this past year to post a 6.01 ERA with 56 strikeouts to 34 walks across 70.1 innings pitched.
As a freshman, Volchko appeared in 20 games with six starts. He had 53 strikeouts in only 42.2 innings pitched that year as he went 2-1 with a 5.70 ERA.
Prior to Stanford, Volchko played high school baseball at Redwood in Visalia, California. He was a first team member of the 2023 recruiting class according to Baseball America, which also ranked him as the No. 37 overall prospect in the country.
Additionally, Volchko is the No. 15 prospect on Baseball America’s 2026 MLB Draft board. That in mind, he should make a major impact wherever he ends up transferring to.
Stanford is coming off a 27-25 finish this past season and missed out on NCAA Tournament action. The Cardinal now face an uphill battle heading into next season without one of the best pitchers on their roster.
The Transfer Portal for NCAA Baseball
College baseball has two separate windows for players to enter the Transfer Portal. The main window is open now. That’s starting in late May, while the NCAA Tournament is underway, and it remains open for a total of 45 days. The other window that college baseball has is open for 15 days in December.
Unlike sports like football, baseball has unique challenges relating to scholarship distribution that coaches need to manage and could impact players as they transfer. With the house settlement passing, roster sizes are about to shrink.
NCAA Division I baseball teams currently get between 11 and 12 scholarships despite the rosters being more than double that size. It means players receive partial scholarships. That means that coaches need to find a way to balance those scholarships with players already on the roster and who they’re bringing in.
According to On3’s Transfer Portal College Baseball Tracker, 3,179 players have enters the portal so far. The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.
NIL
SB | Sam Buckley Checks in at #98 in the Inaugural D1Softabll Mid-Major D100 Player Rankings
Story Links MORAGA, Calif. — Due to an increasing interest in Division I Mid-Major Softball, D1Softball.com has released their first ever “D100” Mid-Major Softball player rankings following the 2025 season. Checking in on the list at #98 is a familiar face to Gael fans, sophomore third baseman Sam Buckley. Buckley was one […]

MORAGA, Calif. — Due to an increasing interest in Division I Mid-Major Softball, D1Softball.com has released their first ever “D100” Mid-Major Softball player rankings following the 2025 season. Checking in on the list at #98 is a familiar face to Gael fans, sophomore third baseman Sam Buckley. Buckley was one of just two WCC Players to make the list, joining reigning WCC Player of the Year Cairah Curran of Santa Clara, who checked in at #94.
After arguably one of the best freshmen seasons in program history in 2024, Sam Buckley’s encore performance in 2025 was all the more spectacular. The Burbank, California native set new single season records for home runs (14), runs scored (47) and RBI (41), and became just the fourth Gael in program history to finish a season with a batting average better than 0.400. Buckley led the WCC in on-base percentage (0.523), slugging percentage (0.818) and OPS (1.341), and committed just two errors at the hot corner all season.
The Gaels faced off with many players on this list, including Aaliyah Jenkins (Nevada, #4), Sophia Knight (Boise State, #12), and Makenzie Butt (Boise State, #18). There’s no question that the level of softball continues to grow at the mid-major level, and the Gaels are no exception, now back-to-back WCC champs, and looking for more in 2026, charged by Sam Buckley and company.
#GaelsRise
NIL
Ohio State’s Top Freshman is Missing From College Football 26
As the follow-up to the most successful and celebrated sports video game in American history, gamers will predictably want to jump into College Football 26 as soon as they can and explore the new features. And, in some cases, new players from a really good freshman class. Unfortunately, not all of the highly touted fresh […]

As the follow-up to the most successful and celebrated sports video game in American history, gamers will predictably want to jump into College Football 26 as soon as they can and explore the new features. And, in some cases, new players from a really good freshman class. Unfortunately, not all of the highly touted fresh faces will be present in the game. At least, not at launch. And one of them hails from one of the most prestigious colleges in the nation.
Ohio State is one of the most celebrated and decorated college football programs out there. Boasting 9 national championships, 41 conference championships, and 10 division championships, the Buckeyes are among the crème de la crème of college football. In turn, many of the country’s most talented young football players commit to Ohio State each year, as being part of such a prestigious program often leads to larger media exposure and more looks from NFL scouts. Heck, this year, the two highest-rated players in CFB 26 are Ohio State players — Jeremiah Smith and Caleb Downs.
But one of the Buckeyes’ most publicized new acquisitions won’t be in the game at launch.
Considered the 8th-best cornerback prospect in the nation out of high school, Devin Sanchez will be making his debut as a freshman this year for Ohio State. Unfortunately, he will not be present at launch in College Football 26.
While the reason for Sanchez’s omission is officially unknown, it likely comes down to the NCAA’s eligibility rules. Even if he’s one of the country’s most promising young talents, nothing is a guarantee. Therefore, until he plays a down for Ohio State, don’t expect to see him in the game.
There is hope, though. In October last year, EA provided College Football 25 with a large roster update that added over 700 NIL players to the game. So if Sanchez gets some burn between now and the fall, Ohio State fans can definitely expect to see him added to CFB 26 as well. Depending on how EA treats him, it might give OSU one of the most deadly secondaries in the game as well (they technically already have an amazing secondary, but another highly-rated corner would put them over the edge).
NIL
Top college football head coach calls for NIL reform as calls mount for change
Longtime Army head coach Jeff Monken is wary about the current state of the transfer portal as Name, Image and Likeness opportunities continues to entice college football players to search for what they believe to be greener pastures. Monken enters his 12th season at the helm after leading the Black Knights to a school-record 12 […]

Longtime Army head coach Jeff Monken is wary about the current state of the transfer portal as Name, Image and Likeness opportunities continues to entice college football players to search for what they believe to be greener pastures.
Monken enters his 12th season at the helm after leading the Black Knights to a school-record 12 wins in 2024 with the program’s first finish inside the College Football Playoff Top 25 (No. 22).
Having started his college coaching career back in 1989, Monken has been a part of the major shift in college athletics in light of the transfer portal/NIL era. He doesn’t think college football is in danger of losing its core, but the controversial new status quo needs guard rails to keep things sustainable.
“I think there’s a lot of discouragement out there about the current state of college football, and I think there’s some guard rails that need to be put in place,” Monken said on “Next Up with Adam Breneman.”
“This is a business, and we are in the entertainment business, and we’re in the business of trying to make money for a number of reasons,” he continued. “Because it helps all of us represent this institution and be the front porch for our institutions, which, to me, is is a great purpose for athletics and a great source of pride for universities. And I think it will remain that way.”
Staying at a program all three or four years is becoming more of a rarity than ever, as more than 3,400 players entered the transfer portal in the 2025 cycle, according to ESPN.
While Monken supports players taking advantage of their NIL, he doesn’t see an overall benefit in transferring multiple times.
“And that doesn’t mean a guy’s got to stay at the same school for four years,” Monken said. “But to literally be able to play at one school in the fall, transfer to another school in the spring, don’t like it there, go to another school in the fall, have one bad spring practice and leave again… A guy could play five years of college football and be at nine different schools, in the current state of affairs. I don’t think that’s healthy, because I don’t think that’s good for athletes.”
NIL
Report: Judge denies motion to dismiss NIL lawsuit against Leonard Hamilton
On Monday, a Leon County judge denied former Florida State men’s basketball head coach Leonard Hamilton‘s motion to dismiss an NIL-related lawsuit against him, per The Athletic‘s Matt Baker. In the hearing, they set a tentative trial date of August 2026. In December of last year, Darin Green Jr., Josh Nickelberry, Primo Spears, Cam’Ron Fletcher, De’Ante Green and Jalen Warley alleged Hamilton […]

On Monday, a Leon County judge denied former Florida State men’s basketball head coach Leonard Hamilton‘s motion to dismiss an NIL-related lawsuit against him, per The Athletic‘s Matt Baker. In the hearing, they set a tentative trial date of August 2026.
In December of last year, Darin Green Jr., Josh Nickelberry, Primo Spears, Cam’Ron Fletcher, De’Ante Green and Jalen Warley alleged Hamilton promised each of them $250,000 in NIL payments from the coach’s “business partners,” per the complaint. The players reportedly never received payments from Hamilton, Florida State or any other party.
The initial complaint detailed a team-wide boycott that occurred during a practice ahead of Florida State’s game against Duke on Feb. 17. The complaint also included multiple text message exchanges between players and Hamilton and players and Will Cowen, an executive with one of Florida State’s NIL collectives.
After the players walked out of the practice ahead of the Duke game, Hamilton assured the players they would be paid the following week, per the complaint. Florida State ultimately lost to Duke, 76-67. Players were worried over taxes, rent and car notes, per the complaint.
In April, The Field of 68 legal analyst Mitch Gilfillan reported that three of the six plaintiffs were no longer pursuing the lawsuit. Nonetheless, it appears the other three plaintiffs have not had a change of heart and are pushing forward.
None of the six players who were involved in the lawsuit are still on Florida State’s roster. Four of them entered the transfer portal, while two of them had no more eligibility.
Leonard Hamilton announced his resignation in February. He is the winningest head coach in program history and the fifth-winningest head coach in ACC history.
“I am deeply thankful for the tremendous support of our fans, alumni, and everyone associated with Florida State throughout my time here,” Hamilton said. “I am proud of the quality of the young men that it was my privilege to lead, for their faith in this program and in their belief in the philosophy that we tried to instill in them over the years. I have been blessed beyond words for the opportunity and the experience we’ve had here.
“My family and I truly love this place, this institution, and its people. I’m very fortunate to be able to have given this job my all with no regrets. Every head coach inherits a legacy and is obligated to leave the job better than they inherited it. I’m very proud of what we have been able to accomplish here over the last 23 seasons.”
NIL
Hour 3 – Rookie QB Coverage & NIL Money | FOX Sports Radio
LaVar and Jonas give Zach Wilson his proper credit as a Polynesian players. Cam Ward continues to get less attention than Shedeur Sanders. A big name recruit in college football continues muddy the waters of NIL payments. Plus, a familiar face at the top of the rankings, a potential blockbuster trade and more! #2pros See […]
NIL
NIL VETO
Does Texas Tech’s structuring of NIL deals hold up with the Clearinghouse? If not, do schools like Auburn shift how they use NIL for recruiting? Author: ktvb.com Published: 6:44 PM MDT July 7, 2025 Updated: 6:44 PM MDT July 7, 2025 0


Does Texas Tech’s structuring of NIL deals hold up with the Clearinghouse? If not, do schools like Auburn shift how they use NIL for recruiting?
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