NIL
Texas Tech NIL collective founder Cody Campbell to co
Texas Tech board chairman Cody Campbell will serve as the co-chair of President Donald Trump’s college sports commission alongside Nick Saban, On3’s Pete Nakos reported. Campbell founded the Texas Tech-focused NIL collective, The Matador Club. Campbell was a co-founder of The Matador Club in February 2022 and was the main financial source of Texas Tech’s […]


Texas Tech board chairman Cody Campbell will serve as the co-chair of President Donald Trump’s college sports commission alongside Nick Saban, On3’s Pete Nakos reported. Campbell founded the Texas Tech-focused NIL collective, The Matador Club.
Campbell was a co-founder of The Matador Club in February 2022 and was the main financial source of Texas Tech’s top-ranked transfer portal class this cycle. He also sold his company, Double Eagle, to Diamondback Energy for $4.1 billion in cash and stock in February. Campbell took over as chairman of the Texas Tech Board of Regents on April 14.
On3 confirmed Saban would be a co-chair of the commission, which Yahoo Sports first reported Wednesday, and the other would be a prominent college athletics booster. Campbell will fill that spot, working alongside Saban.
The commission on college sports is expected to “deeply examine the unwieldy landscape of college sports, including the frequency of player movement in the transfer portal, the unregulated booster compensation paid to athletes, the debate of college athlete employment, the application of Title IX to school revenue-share payments and, even, conference membership makeup and conference television contracts,” according to Yahoo Sports. It is expected to be a months-long endeavor.
Where Cody Campbell stands on key issues
Nick Saban has been outspoken about the need for regulation and national legislation when it comes to NIL and the current college athletics landscape. Cody Campbell also shared ideas for changes, notably with regard to media rights – starting with an amendment to the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961.
“College sports, unlike pro sports, does not have the right to pool its media rights together and act as a single seller to the media companies,” Campbell said last month on SiriusXM College Sports Radio. “Because of that, the conferences compete with one another for media deals. That dynamic has caused them to get less money per viewer than the pro sports do. The NBA has about half as many viewers as college football, but they get twice as much money than college football does, which is crazy. And it’s all because of this legal setup that we have. That needs to change. So everybody needs to come together, pool their media rights and do a single, big media deal that will give college football more control and give college football more money. So expand the pie.
“And then, I think through that, you do some kind of more fair revenue-distribution system with respect to the media rights. Colleges, places like Alabama, like the University of Texas, like Oklahoma – who have big followings, who have big stadiums, who have big licensing deals – they’re still going to have a huge economic advantage. But a New Mexico or a Wyoming or a Toledo will still be able to sustain an athletic department under a system like that.”
Campbell also pointed out expanding conferences, including some such as the Big Ten and ACC which span coast-to-coast. He said it’s a product of the current media rights setup under the Sports Broadcasting Act, which is why he further called for a reorganization.
“I think that we need to rethink the way that we organize our conferences,” Campbell said. “And again, because of the way that they have to do our media deals, these conferences are encouraged to have a school or schools in every single time zone because they want to have games at different times of the day.
“So we have these transcontinental conferences that make absolutely no sense. They cost too much money for travel, they’re too disruptive to the student-athletes – especially in the non-revenue sports again – and I think we need to reorganize and rethink just the way that we do college sports in general.”
More on Donald Trump’s college sports commission
President Donald Trump is also reportedly considering an executive order which would create more scrutiny around NIL, according to the Wall Street Journal. That news came down after the president and Saban met ahead of last week’s commencement address at Alabama.
News of President Donald Trump’s plan to consider an executive order and form a commission – which is expected to have Nick Saban and Cody Campbell as co-chairs – come with the backdrop of the House v. NCAA settlement, which continues to go through the final approval process. Attorneys filed an updated brief Wednesday evening that sought to address Judge Claudia Wilken’s concerns about roster limits, and the plan would create a grandfather provision for athletes who lost their spots. A decision on final approval is expected in the coming weeks.
However, plaintiffs’ attorney Steve Berman called out Saban and Trump’s discussions as the settlement seeks final approval. Legal experts say an executive order could create more problems, and Berman called for the conversations to cease while both sides work toward final approval for the House v. NCAA settlement.
NIL
ESPN predicts Michigan basketball’s Yaxel Lendeborg’s draft status following combine
With the NBA Draft Combine in the books, Michigan fans are waiting word on what UAB transfer Yaxel Lendeborg is going to do. Will he come to Ann Arbor for a year and play under Dusty May, or will he stay in the draft and live out his dreams? June 15 is the deadline, and […]

With the NBA Draft Combine in the books, Michigan fans are waiting word on what UAB transfer Yaxel Lendeborg is going to do. Will he come to Ann Arbor for a year and play under Dusty May, or will he stay in the draft and live out his dreams? June 15 is the deadline, and this could play out until then, but Lendeborg had a great combine according to plenty of scouts, and in ESPN’s post-combine mock draft, Lendeborg is a first-round pick.
ESPN has Lendeborg being selected by the Brooklyn Nets with the 26th pick. Last year with UAB, the big man averaged 17.7 points and nearly 12 rebounds per game. He showed off his range from deep and his athleticism during the NBA Draft Combine. But with a big NIL deal on the table from Michigan, the top-ranked transfer has a lot to think about.
“Lendeborg faced one of the highest-profile, stay-or-go decisions among prospects at the combine, measuring quite well and turning in a solid, if not spectacular, showing in scrimmages, with Michigan coach Dusty May and members of his staff in Chicago to support him,” wrote Woo. “NBA teams are aware Lendeborg has a multimillion-dollar NIL package to attend Michigan next season, and it wasn’t clear by the end of the week as to whether he had done enough to secure the type of guarantee that might keep him in the draft.
“He was highly productive last season at UAB and will step into a huge role with the Wolverines as the ostensible replacement for Wolf, giving him an opportunity to improve his draft stock if he withdraws now.”
If Lendeborg goes to Michigan next season, the Wolverines could be on the cusp of competing for a national title with one of the most skilled bigs in college basketball.
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NIL
College Baseball Rankings: D1Baseball releases updated Top 25 at conclusion of regular season
What a wild ride this regular season has been across college baseball. This weekend’s games brought the end of it, and D1Baseball has updated its top 25 rankings as we shift focus to conference tournaments and postseason action. 12 teams entered Saturday facing a rubber game with the series on the line in a 1-1 […]

What a wild ride this regular season has been across college baseball. This weekend’s games brought the end of it, and D1Baseball has updated its top 25 rankings as we shift focus to conference tournaments and postseason action.
12 teams entered Saturday facing a rubber game with the series on the line in a 1-1 deadlock. Of course, the weekend was moved up a day to Thursday through Saturday due to conference tournaments beginning early in the next week. Eight teams were already 2-0 with a series win coming out of Friday, while five were down 0-2 with a series loss.
We didn’t have quite as many top 25 series this weekend as we have in past weeks, though that didn’t take away from the excitement. Just four ranked matchups headlined this weekend slate; No. 4 North Carolina at No. 2 Florida State, No. 17 Tennessee at No. 8 Arkansas, No. 18 Alabama at No. 23 Florida, and No. 19 Southern Miss at No. 22 Troy.
There’s still a lot to play for over the next week as teams try to fight their way into the NCAA Tournament. For now, though, D1Baseball’s latest top 25 rankings show that there’s still a lot up for grabs with plenty of movement.
Previous Ranking: No. 1
Weekly Record: 2-1
Overall Record: 42-13 (19-11 in SEC)
LSU was D1Baseball’s new top-ranked team in their top 25 this week, but the week started off on the wrong note for the Tigers. They lost 6-5 against South Carolina in Thursday’s series opener, before winning 8-1 on Friday to set up a Saturday rubber game with the series on the line. There, LSU won 7-3 to secure the series victory.

Previous Ranking: No. 3 (+1)
Weekly Record: 2-1
Overall Record: 42-11 (22-8 in SEC)
After struggling over the past couple of weeks, Texas wanted to end the regular season on a high note. In Thursday’s series opener at Oklahoma, the Longhorns won 7-4 to start off strong. The Sooners took Friday’s game 8-6 to even the series, setting up a rubber game on Saturday. There, Texas won 9-1 in a game that was impacted by a late-inning weather delay.
Previous Ranking: No. 4 (+1)
Weekly Record: 2-1
Overall Record: 39-12 (18-11 in ACC)
The ACC was wide open entering the final weekend. North Carolina made a lot of noise, defeating No. 2 Florida State 8-3 on Thursday and 11-1 on Friday to take the series and move into first place in ACC standings. Entering Saturday’s finale, UNC wanted a sweep, but instead lost 5-4, narrowly missing out on the regular season ACC crown.
Previous Ranking: No. 5 (+1)
Weekly Record: 3-0
Overall Record: 41-13 (22-8 in Big Ten)
This weekend’s series between Oregon and Iowa had massive ramifications for the Big Ten regular season title. After the Ducks won 10-0 on Thursday and 9-6 on Friday, those two teams moved into a three-way tie alongside UCLA entering Saturday. In Saturday’s finale between the Ducks and Hawkeyes, Oregon won 13-4 and won the top seed in the Big Ten.

Previous Ranking: No. 8 (+3)
Weekly Record: 2-1
Overall Record: 43-12 (20-10 in SEC)
Arkansas was looking to strengthen their case for a top eight seed this weekend against No. 17 Tennessee. The two teams split the opening two games, with the Razorbacks losing 10-7 on Thursday before winning 8-6 on Friday. That set up a rubber game on Saturday with big D1Baseball top 25 implications, where Arkansas won 8-4 to clinch the series.
Previous Ranking: No. 2 (-4)
Weekly Record: 1-2
Overall Record: 37-13 (17-10 in ACC)
After moving up to No. 2 in D1Baseball’s top 25 entering the week, Florida State wanted to pick up a massive series win at home vs. No. 2 North Carolina. Instead, it went the other way. The Seminoles lost 8-3 on Thursday and 11-1 on Friday to drop the series. Looking to avoid the sweep in Saturday’s finale, FSU won 5-4 to at least salvage a win.
Previous Ranking: No. 7
Weekly Record: 4-0
Overall Record: 41-12-1
Oregon State defeated Portland 5-3 on Tuesday to kick off its final week of the regular season, and then hosted Long Beach State over the weekend. The Beavers won 2-1 on Thursday and 12-8 on Friday to take the series, and wanted to end with a sweep on Saturday. There, Oregon State dominated in a 13-0 victory.

Previous Ranking: No. 6 (-2)
Weekly Record: 2-2
Overall Record: 38-17 (17-13 in SEC)
Auburn’s week started with a 19-1 win over Jacksonville State on Tuesday, and they then hosted Ole Miss to conclude the regular season. The Tigers dropped both of the first two games to lose the series, falling 9-2 on Thursday and 15-11 on Friday. In Saturday’s series finale, Auburn salvaged a 13-8 win to end the series.
Previous Ranking: No. 9
Weekly Record: 3-0
Overall Record: 39-16 (19-11 in SEC)
Vanderbilt came out on top against Kentucky this weekend, but it was a fun series. On Thursday, Kentucky led late before Vanderbilt walked things off to win the opener 8-7. Friday was the same story, with the Commodores coming back to walk it off 9-8 and clinch the series. In Saturday’s finale, Vanderbilt won 5-3, coming back from down multiple runs for the third game in a row.
Previous Ranking: No. 10
Weekly Record: 2-1
Overall Record: 42-14 (18-12 in SEC)
Georgia needed to win its final series against Texas A&M to strengthen its case as a national seed. The Bulldogs won 10-6 in the series opener on Thursday, before being shut out in a 6-0 loss on Friday. In Saturday’s pivotal rubber game with the series on the line, Georgia won 7-5 to take the series, and solidify its postseason resume.
D1Baseball Top 25 Rankings: 11-25

11. Coastal Carolina
12. Southern Miss (+7)
13. UCLA (+1)
14. Clemson (+1)
15. Florida (+8)
16. Georgia Tech (NR)
17. Ole Miss (NR)
18. Dallas Baptist (+6)
19. Northeastern (+6)
20. UC Irvine (-8)
21. Tennessee (-4)
22. NC State (-9)
23. Alabama (-5)
24. TCU (NR)
25. Kansas (NR)
With four new teams featured in this week’s D1Baseball top 25 rankings, four teams had to fall out. Those teams are West Virginia (previously No. 16), Duke (previously No. 20), Louisville (previously No. 21), and Troy (previously No. 22).
NIL
2025 NCAA Softball Tournament: Super Regional matchups, schedule, TV officially set
The first stage of the NCAA Tournament has concluded, and we are one step closer to crowning a champion of college softball. Following an exciting Regional round this weekend, the Super Regionals are set. The second stage of the tournament will feature eight best of three series between Regional champions. These matchups will begin play […]

The first stage of the NCAA Tournament has concluded, and we are one step closer to crowning a champion of college softball. Following an exciting Regional round this weekend, the Super Regionals are set.
The second stage of the tournament will feature eight best of three series between Regional champions. These matchups will begin play on May 22 and conclude on May 26, if a game three is necessary. The winners of these two cities will meet in Oklahoma City at the 2025 Women’s College World Series later this month.
One of the biggest storylines to follow coming into the tournament is whether or not Patty Gasso and the Oklahoma Sooners can win a fifth-straight NCAA Championship. In their first-year in the SEC, they won the regular season outright and were co-SEC Tournament champions with Texas A&M after a weather delay turned into a cancellation of the conference championship game. Their road to the College World Series is not yet paved, though, and they’ll have some stiff competition if they want to achieve the ultra-rare five-peat.
2025 NCAA Softball Super Regional matchups
Eugene Super Regional: Liberty vs. No. 16 Oregon
Game 1: Friday, May 23 | 10:00 p.m. ET | ESPNU
Game 2: Saturday, May 24 | 7:00 p.m. ET
Game 3 (if necessary): Sunday, May 25 | TBD
Norman Super Regional: No. 2 Oklahoma vs. No. 15 Alabama
Game 1: Friday, May 23 | 5:00 p.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 2: Saturday, May 24 | 3:00 p.m. ET
Game 3 (if necessary): Sunday, May 25 | TBD
Gainesville Super Regional: No. 3 Florida vs. Georgia
Game 1: Friday, May 23 | 11:00 a.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 2: Saturday, May 24 | 11:00 a.m. ET
Game 3 (if necessary): Sunday, May 25 | TBD
Fayetteville Super Regional: No. 4 Arkansas vs. Ole Miss
Game 1: Friday, May 23 | 8:00 p.m. ET | ESPNU
Game 2: Saturday, May 24 | 9:00 p.m. ET
Game 3 (if necessary): Sunday, May 25 | TBD
Tallahassee Super Regional: No. 5 Florida State vs. No. 12 Texas Tech
Game 1: Thursday, May 22 | 7:00 p.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 2: Friday, May 23 | 3:00 p.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 3 (if necessary): Saturday, May 24 | TBD
Austin Super Regional: No. 6 Texas vs. No. 11 Clemson
Game 1: Thursday, May 22 | 9:00 p.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 2: Friday, May 23 | 9:00 p.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 3 (if necessary): Saturday, May 24 | TBD
Knoxville Super Regional: No. 7 Tennessee vs. Nebraska
Game 1: Friday, May 23 | 7:00 p.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 2: Saturday, May 24 | 5:00 p.m. ET
Game 3 (if necessary): Sunday, May 25 | TBD
Columbia Super Regional: No. 8 South Carolina vs. No. 9 UCLA
Game 1: Friday, May 23 | 1:00 p.m. ET | ESPN2
Game 2: Saturday, May 24 | 1:00 p.m. ET
Game 3 (if necessary): Sunday, May 25 | TBD
All times ET.
2025 Women’s College World Series
May 29 through June 5 or 6 at Devon Park in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
NIL
Tennessee passes NIL legislation
https://www.heartlandcollegesports.com/2025/05/16/state-vs-settlement-tennessees-new-nil-law-breaks-from-ncaa-agreement/ Here are the key takeaways: Tennessee schools can directly arrange and provide NIL deals to athletes unless they’re explicitly blocked by federal law or a binding court order.The NCAA can’t punish schools in Tennessee (i.e., Tennessee, Vanderbilt, or Memphis) for participating in NIL activities that are legal under state law.Athletes can’t lose eligibility over […]

Here are the key takeaways:
Tennessee schools can directly arrange and provide NIL deals to athletes unless they’re explicitly blocked by federal law or a binding court order.
The NCAA can’t punish schools in Tennessee (i.e., Tennessee, Vanderbilt, or Memphis) for participating in NIL activities that are legal under state law.
Athletes can’t lose eligibility over NIL income, and their scholarships won’t be impacted by it either.
The law protects schools from lawsuits for their involvement in NIL deals and shields internal NIL records from open records requests—meaning it’ll be harder for the public to see where the money’s going.
Private colleges (like Vanderbilt) can opt out of parts of the law if they agree with the NCAA to follow its rules instead.
NIL
One-Year UNC Basketball Wing Now ‘On the Rise’ as NBA Draft Prospect
UNC basketball is likely to see only one of its 2024-25 players come off the board at the 2025 NBA Draft in Brooklyn’s Barclays Center on June 25-26. But that lone projected pick of the Tar Heel variety is promising one-and-done forward Drake Powell, who now pops up in position to potentially end the three-year […]

UNC basketball is likely to see only one of its 2024-25 players come off the board at the 2025 NBA Draft in Brooklyn’s Barclays Center on June 25-26. But that lone projected pick of the Tar Heel variety is promising one-and-done forward Drake Powell, who now pops up in position to potentially end the three-year drought in Chapel Hill when it comes to the blueblood producing a first-rounder.
ALSO READ: Hubert Davis Watches Early Tar Heel Target Dominate in Memphis
As the official UNC basketball account noted in the following post to help promote Powell’s “on the rise” tag as an intriguing early NBA Draft entrant, the mere 19-year-old from Pittsboro, N.C., finished among the top 10 across five leaderboards at last week’s NBA Draft Combine in Chicago.
His marks included both the No. 1 max vertical leap at 43 inches and standing vertical leap at 37.5 inches.
And ESPN’s first post-combine mock draft released on Monday seems to be in support of a Drake Powell stock bump, even if only to a small degree, as the site’s experts, Jonathan Givony and Jeremy Woo, moved him up one notch from last week.
They now project him to hear his name at No. 31 overall — the first pick of the second round — to the Minnesota Timberwolves (via the Utah Jazz).
What the 6-foot-5, 200-pound Powell lacks in height, he makes up for with his explosive hops. His momentum-changing athleticism and budding skillset were on display at times as a Tar Heel, albeit not consistently enough to average more than just 7.4 points and 3.4 rebounds in 25.6 minutes per game.
All in all, given his undisputed potential to eventually soar as a lockdown perimeter defender and foul-drawing slasher on the NBA stage, it wouldn’t be a surprise if the former five-star recruit and McDonald’s All-American climbs as high as the low 20s on mock drafts and big boards over the next five weeks.
Stay tuned to North Carolina Tar Heels On SI for more UNC basketball news.
NIL
Latest NCAA Baseball Rankings – Georgia Bulldogs Stay Put Ahead of SEC Tournament
The Georgia Bulldogs stayed put in the latest NCAA baseball rankings. The final weekend of the regular season wrapped up and now it is postseason play time. The Georgia Bulldogs ended their regular season on a good note as they took the series against Texas A&M by winning game three on Saturday. However, the series […]

The Georgia Bulldogs stayed put in the latest NCAA baseball rankings.
The final weekend of the regular season wrapped up and now it is postseason play time. The Georgia Bulldogs ended their regular season on a good note as they took the series against Texas A&M by winning game three on Saturday. However, the series win didn’t do anything for them in the latest rankings.
Georgia did earn the fifth seed for the SEC tournament that is this week in Hoover, Alabama. The Bulldogs will play the winner of Kentucky and Oklahoma and the winner of Georgia’s game will move on to play Vanderbilt in the quarterfinals.
While the SEC tournament provides one last shot for teams give a good final impression, all that matters is where they are seeded next Monday during the field of 64 selection show. The Dawgs are in a good spot and will likely earn a top seed which will allow them to host the regional and super regional rounds.
Last season, Georgia advanced to the super regional round and faced off against NC State, but fell one game short of making it to Omaha. This season, they will look to final punch their ticket to the College World Series.
In the latest rankings though, there isn’t much of an update for Georgia as they stayed right where they were last week.
- LSU
- Texas
- North Carolina
- Oregon
- Arkansas
- Florida State
- Oregon State
- Auburn
- Vanderbilt
- Georgia
- Coastal Carolina
- Southern Miss
- UCLA
- Clemson
- Florida
- Georgia Tech
- Ole Miss
- DBU
- Northeastern
- UC Irvine
- Tennessee
- NC State
- Alabama
- TCU
- Kansas
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