NIL
Super Regionals Upsets, Surprises & Stars: Day One Reactions
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(Photo by Zac BonDurant/Getty Images)
Day One of Super Regionals is in the books and Friday reminded us of what makes June so captivating.
Some national seeds flexed. A mid-majors proved, again, that it belong on this stage. A heavyweight showdown in Corvallis gave us a wild comeback and one of the postseason’s best moments so far. And while the baseball world buzzed, the entire landscape of college athletics shifted in a way that’s going to impact the sport for years to come.
We’ll dive into all of it here—the upsets, statement wins, stars of the day and what Friday’s off-the-field news means for the future of college baseball.
North Carolina Opens with Statement Win
Every postseason bracket delivers a dose of cruelty—whether through brutal travel, unfavorable matchups or bad timing against a red-hot opponent. Few teams drew a tougher hand this year than Arizona, which opened super regionals thousands of miles from home in front of a frenzied North Carolina crowd and against a Tar Heel team that could go all the way.
The matchup looked daunting on paper and proved even more so on the field.
The Tar Heels unloaded on the Wildcats for an emphatic 18-2 win in Friday’s opener, making clear they have no intention of missing their shot at Omaha.
This is as complete a team as remains in the field. Every North Carolina starter reached base in the rout, with eight collecting hits and four launching home runs. On the mound, righthander Jake Knapp continued his dominant postseason run, matching a school record with his 14th win, a mark that had stood since 1978.
With a rested and effective bullpen and an offense now fully firing after entering the tournament with some lingering questions, North Carolina suddenly looks like a national title threat.
With two chances to close the series, the Tar Heels will aim for an encore on Saturday and a return trip to college baseball’s biggest stage.
Coastal Continues Winning Streak to Open Supers
Friday’s opening slate didn’t deliver much in the way of true upsets. North Carolina’s blowout win went to script, and while Florida State fell to a talented Oregon State club, that result was well within expectation. If any outcome bordered on surprise, it was Coastal Carolina knocking off Auburn—though in truth, this was no upset at all.
In Baseball America’s view, the Chanticleers are simply performing to their standard.
Coastal has looked like an Omaha-caliber team for weeks, and Friday’s 7-6, extra-innings victory only underscored that. Coastal jumped out to an early lead but had to weather Auburn’s surge, as the Tigers erased a five-run deficit to force extras. There, Blake Barthol’s pair of spectacular defensive plays at second base and a catcher Caleb Bodine’s second solo home run of the game sealed it.
The Chants entered the postseason with the nation’s premier pitching staff, a unit capable of shutting down any lineup in the country. What was less certain was whether their offense would consistently match that level and that question looks answered now.
As we noted back in April, if Coastal could pair its elite arms with steady run production, it had the ingredients to contend for a title. One win from Omaha, it’s all coming together.
Don’t Doubt the Beavers
Oregon State hasn’t clinched a College World Series berth just yet—two losses in the next two days would still end its run—but after Friday night’s comeback, I’m ready to eat some crow.
Before the postseason, I questioned whether Oregon State had the résumé to warrant a top-eight national seed. I had Coastal Carolina pegged for that No. 8 spot and picked the Beavers comfortably as a host, but not much more. Then they powered through their regional, and despite that, I still picked Florida State to win the Corvallis Super.
Clearly, doubting this Oregon State team is a mistake.
For most of Game 1, it looked like Florida State would prove me right.
Joey Volini spun 6.2 strong innings, allowing one run with eight strikeouts, and Joe Charles dominated in relief—until he didn’t. Needing one final out in the ninth, Charles gave up three runs, capped by a clutch, two-strike, two-out game-tying single from Jacob Krieg. Oregon State walked it off in the 10th.
There’s no other way to say it: this Beavers team is gritty, talented and hard to kill. Friday night proved as much. They’ve earned full respect—and could be Omaha-bound very soon.
Louisville Secures Pivotal Game 1 Win, Miami Saves Ace
Louisville left little doubt in Friday’s Super Regional opener, dispatching Miami 8-1 in a game that turned lopsided after a brief early battle. The Hurricanes trimmed the lead to 2-1 in the top of the third, but from there, the Cardinals took full control, clicking in all phases and never letting up.
Jake Munroe was the offensive star, launching two home runs and driving in five runs to pace the lineup. On the mound, Patrick Forbes was reasonably sharp, striking out nine over 5.2 innings to set the tone.
It was as balanced and businesslike a performance as Louisville could have asked for, putting it one win from Omaha.
Now, all eyes turn to how Miami responds. Despite the lopsided result, this isn’t a mismatch on paper and the Hurricanes made a strategic choice that could loom large. By holding ace Griffin Hugus for Saturday’s elimination game, Miami preserved its best arm for when it matters most. The gamble didn’t flip Game 1, but it gives the Hurricanes a fighting chance to extend the series.
It’s also a fascinating case study in modern postseason pitching strategy, which we explored in more depth here.
Player of the Day
There were several worthy candidates for Friday’s top individual honor. Blake Barthol nearly earned it after a pair of jaw-dropping defensive plays, including a game-ending double play that sealed Coastal Carolina’s extra-innings win. Jake Knapp was in the conversation too—his ability to pitch deep into games is gold this late in the postseason, and he delivered again in North Carolina’s blowout victory.
But in the end, Jacob Krieg takes the crown. No player provided a bigger, more dramatic moment than the one Krieg produced in Corvallis.
Here’s the scene: Oregon State trailed Florida State 4-1 entering the bottom of the ninth. A bases-loaded wild pitch trimmed the gap to two. Then, with runners on second and third and two outs, Krieg—the Beavers’ nine-hole hitter—worked the count to 2-2 then lined the ball to left, driving in both runs to tie the game and ignite the home crowd. The Beavers would walk it off an inning later.
Krieg finished 2-for-4 with a double and two RBI, but it’s that ninth-inning swing that earns him this honor. On a night with limited drama, no moment loomed larger.
Big News For College Sports
Let’s zoom out for a minute to close, because the scope of this last topic is massive: college athletics changed forever last night.
While we were all locked into baseball, Judge Claudia Wilken of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California officially approved the landmark $2.8 billion House vs. NCAA settlement.
So what does that actually mean?
In short, schools can now start paying athletes directly through a new revenue-sharing model. Most power-conference schools will divide up about $20.8 million a year, with the majority earmarked for football. But how that money gets allocated is up to each school.
On top of that, NIL deals are still allowed—and likely still necessary for schools that want to go above and beyond. But there’s a new wrinkle: any NIL deal worth more than $600 now has to be reviewed and approved by the new College Sports Commission, led by former MLB exec Bryan Seeley. And here’s a key date—any new NIL deals signed after midnight on June 7 will fall under that review process, which is rumored to be more unkind to booster-driven contracts compared to sponsorship-type deals with companies.
For baseball specifically, the impact is huge.
The sport’s outdated 11.7 scholarship limit will phase out, with teams soon able to fund up to 34 full scholarships. Most power programs are expected to start in the 22-plus range and build from there.
It’ll take time for all of this to fully kick in. But make no mistake—college sports will never be the same.
NIL
Nick Saban goes on long rant about state of college sports: ‘I got it figured out, nobody will listen’
Nick Saban went on a lengthy rant about the state of college sports, claiming he had all the answers. But, the former Alabama coach said “nobody will listen” to his solutions.
“I got it figured out. Nobody will listen,” Saban said on The Pat McAfee Show. “So, you know, what are you going to do? I mean, we got to have, you know, some kind of antitrust exemption. You got to get the political parties together on it. I think the college people have to get over the fact that, you know, a graduate student can be a graduate assistant, get paid, is not an employee. So players don’t have to be employees. And these graduate students have representation. You call it a union if you want, but it’s restricted on what they can negotiate for.
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“They can’t say, you know, I have a lab that takes 10 hours and I’m going to go on strike, so we only have to go six hours. Can’t do that. You do the same thing in football. Put some restrictions and determine what you can and can’t negotiate. Shouldn’t be anything that has anything to do with athletic development. We already have those restrictions, 20 hours a week, whatever it is, that practice time. So there is a way to do this that satisfies both parties, that gives cover to both groups, so that we can move forward.”
Saban even referred to how he was criticized for his opinions on the state of college athletics at this time. That’s despite college football being more popular than ever, but it’s not without its flaws.
“And you know, I got killed in the Wall Street Journal for saying things like, college football is messed up,” Saban said. “But the thing about it is, everybody just looks at … the playoffs have created tremendous interest in college football. There’s a whole bunch of teams now that have a chance to get in the playoffs. There’s more interest than ever, higher TV ratings and all that. But the underbelly underneath that is not really good. It’s not really good for the development of players. It’s not really good for all the sports that we try to sponsor in college.”
Nick Saban has hot opinion about state of college athletics
“I mean, and I think we got to decide that we want to be, you know, a professional developmental league,” Saban continued. “Or are we really going to have college athletes who go get an education and develop value for their future as they’re playing and making money? I want them to make money. I think they should make money, but there should be some restrictions on how they go about doing it.”
However, money aside, Saban said the biggest issue is the transfer portal. NIL can be tweaked, but player movement has to be fixed. He even likened it to the biggest issues in basketball and has coaching legends hitting him up!
“And the movement is as big an issue, to me, a bigger issue than even the money,” Saban said. “I mean, everybody being able to transfer all the time. I mean, that’s not a good thing. Now, we even got a basketball player going to Baylor after he played in the NBA. I mean, you heard me say this before: we are going to have a quarterback gets drafted by the New York Giants. He’s gonna be playing for Penn State. I mean, what about that? Calipari and Izzo are blowing me up. I’m not even a basketball guy.”
NIL
Three Reasons Why USC Is A Top Transfer Portal Destination
The USC Trojans will be active in the transfer portal this upcoming offseason as they try to find complimentary pieces to their returning core of starters.
Combining the resources at their disposal and players that are returning for the Trojans, here are three reasons why USC will be a destination program for the top players in the transfer portal.
Quarterback Jayden Maiava And The Trojans’ Pass Attack

On the offensive side of the ball, wide receiver is arguably USC’s biggest need.
Their stars from this season, Makai Lemon and Ja’Kobi Lane, have already announced their intention to enter the 2026 NFL Draft. Prince Strachan and DJ Jordan made their plans known that they will hop into the transfer portal when it opens on Jan. 2. Jaden Richardson is out of eligibility.
That’s at least five scholarship wide receivers that the Trojans will have to replace. Granted, they did sign six recruits from the 2026 class.
Enter USC quarterback Jayden Maiava. The Trojans’ gunslinger re-signed and will come back for his senior year as he looks to raise his draft stock and lead the program to their first College Football Playoff appearance under Lincoln Riley. He played a big part in helping Makai Lemon win the 2025 Biletnikoff Award.
Not only can playing with a quarterback like Maiava be enticing, but being able to play in Riley’s scheme is also a big bonus.
Under Riley, the Trojans have produced three NFL wide receivers in Tahj Washington, Jordan Addison, and Brendan Rice. The latter two transferred in to play for Riley in his inaugural season in 2022. More receivers in the portal can look to Addison and Rice as prime examples of what Riley can do in terms of getting players out to the next level.
Defense On The Rise

Although USC defensive coordinator D’Anton Lynn is reportedly heading to Penn State in the same position, the Trojans’ defense is trending in the right direction heading into 2026.
With plenty of solid returning pieces like linebacker Desman Stephens II, defensive lineman Jahkeem Stewart, and cornerback Marcelles Williams, the Trojans can be selective with who they decide to bring in.
Considering nearly every position group along the defense has a transfer that has made an impact for the Trojans, they show that they know how to make the most of their newcomers.
That’s why USC could be a program to watch when it comes to top defensive transfer portal additions.
MORE: What TCU Is Saying About USC’s Offense Before Alamo Bowl
MORE: USC Trojans Defensive Back Clarifies Injury Status Ahead Of Alamo Bowl
MORE: USC Trojans Breakout Candidates Following NFL Draft, Transfer Portal Departures
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NIL Resources

The Trojans are losing a lot of firepower to the upcoming draft with Lemon, Lane, and safety Kamari Ramsey being a few of the draft entries from USC.
The loss of the talented trio is offset by the fact that their absences clears up some NIL funds potentially to be used in the transfer portal.
USC won’t be in the market for a hefty transfer portal class. And if they opt for quality of quantity, it will cost them a pretty penny. But if the Trojans have shown anything, it’s that their resources are vast and abundant.
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NIL
One-on-one with Nixa High School football star Jackson Cantwell and agent Drew Roesenhaus
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The Ozarks Sports Zone’s Danielle King sat down with Cantwell and his agent Drew Rosenhaus to discuss his recruitment and managing NIL.
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NIL
San Diego State EDGE Ryan Henderson plans to enter NCAA transfer portal
According to On3’s Pete Nakos, San Diego State EDGE Ryan Henderson plans to enter the NCAA transfer portal. Henderson just finished his fourth season with the program, putting up the best campaign of his career. He now goes onto the open market in what should be his final season of eligibility.
Henderson did not play for the Aztecs during the 2022 season as a true freshman, opting for a redshirt. Since then, he has taken the field in 33 games, three of which were starts. Forty-five tackles have followed, adding 12.5 tackles for a loss, and 10.5 sacks. You can even add a forced fumble and fumble recovery in there.
There is no doubt about which season was Henderson’s best, though. San Diego State saw him break out this past fall with nine tackles for a loss and seven sacks. Five of those sacks were in Mountain West play, with the other two coming in nonconference vs. Cal and Northern Illinois.
Henderson played high school football at North Las Vegas (NV) Canyon Springs, where he was a three-star prospect. He was the No. 1,289 overall recruit in the 2022 cycle, according to the Rivals Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies.
A few other Mountain West schools came after Henderson during his recruitment. Arizona, then a member of the Pac-12, extended an offer during his senior season. However, he stuck with San Diego State and signed with the Aztecs.
Fast forward to the present and Henderson is on the move for the first time in his career. Finding productive pass rushers can be a chore at times for teams. Henderson can pull up what he accomplished in 2025 to prove he is someone to watch moving forward.
To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire. The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.
More on San Diego State, 2025 season under Sean Lewis
This was year No. 2 of San Diego State under head coach Sean Lewis. An incredible turnaround took place, flipping the record’s numbers year-over-year. After the Aztecs finished 3-9 last season, they went 9-3 in 2025.
A spot in the New Mexico Bowl was earned, facing a near-College Football Playoff team in North Texas. However, San Diego State did find itself on the losing end.
NIL
Utah Star DE John Henry-Daley Enters Transfer Portal After Breakout 2025 Season
Yikes. Morgan Scalley and the Utah Utes just lost one of the best players in the Big 12 Conference to the transfer portal, and that leaves a massive hole on the defensive side of the ball.
Sophomore defensive end John Henry-Daley announced his intention to transfer away from Utah after an incredible 2025 season with the Utes.
In 2025, Henry Daley posted 48 total tackles, 11.5 sacks, and two forced fumbles. His sack total finished second in the league overall, trailing only Texas Tech’s David Bailey, who finished with 13.5. Unfortunately for the Utes, his season was cut short in the second-to-last week of the year against Kansas State, when he suffered a season-ending lower-body injury.
Now, for Utah, the questions start to spiral. Is it a fit issue? New coaching issue? NIL money? The possibilities are endless. Utah is fresh off a 10-2 campaign and finished well inside the Top 25 at No. 15. For John Henry-Daley to hit the portal after as dominant a season as he had, something is strange.
One theory and team to watch would be the Michigan Wolverines, who recently hired Kyle Whittingham. Michigan is known for putting pass rushers into the NFL, has an incredible NIL base, and is one of the nation’s top programs, even if it has struggled since the departure of Jim Harbaugh.
No matter which way it shakes out, losing one of the league’s premium pass rushers is a brutal blow. Even when things are going well, the transfer portal can change things in an instant.

NIL
Dante Moore responds to Troy Aikman’s NIL donation comments
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Dante Moore wanted to clear things up regarding Troy Aikman’s remarks about an NIL donation the pro football Hall of Famer made a player at UCLA.
During an interview on the Sports Media podcast with Richard Deitsch earlier this month, Aikman said he is “done with NIL” after not receiving any gratitude for a “sizable check” he donated to UCLA for a player who later transferred.
“I gave money to a kid, I won’t mention who,” Aikman told Deitsch. “I’ve done it one time at UCLA, never met the young man. He was there a year, he left after the year. I wrote a sizable check, and he went to another school. I didn’t even get so much as a thank you note. So, it’s one of those deals, to where I’m done with NIL. I want to see UCLA be successful, but I’m done with it.”
Though Aikman did not name Moore, many assumed it was the former five-star recruit, who transferred from UCLA to Oregon after his freshman year.
The Los Angeles Times reported UCLA’s collective, Men of Westwood, did not disclose donor information to players receiving NIL deals and that Aikman was thanked by then-coach Chip Kelly and athletic director Martin Jarmond.
Moore said he has never spoken to Aikman, but expressed gratitude to the former UCLA and Dallas Cowboys legend if he was who Aikman was referring to.
“If he sent it to me, I didn’t know it was him,” Moore said. “I didn’t see it. When it comes to people thinking it’s me, of course, everybody’s going to think it’s me. It’s quarterback-to-quarterback. I don’t want that false narrative being put out there that I didn’t say thank you. I didn’t hear nothing from him. I didn’t see nothing from him. So, if he sent it, thank you, but I don’t know what he’s talking about.”
No. 4 Texas Tech (12-1) vs. No. 5 Oregon (12-1)
- When: Thursday, January 1
- Time: 9 a.m. PT
- Where: Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, Fla.
- TV: ESPN and ABC
- Stream: You can watch this game on DIRECTV (free trial) or with Sling (a Sling day pass to watch this game and more is just $4.99). Streaming broadcasts for this game will be available on these streaming services locally in Oregon and Washington, but may not be available outside of the Pacific Northwest, depending on your location.
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