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Texas Tech Red Raiders – Official Athletics Website

OKLAHOMA CITY, Oklahoma – Texas Tech (43-12) shut out the No. 8 seed Baylor Bears (27-27) 4-0 on Thursday in the quarterfinal round of the Big 12 Championship at Devon Park. NiJaree Canady allowed just one hit as Tech’s offense came through in the fifth inning to secure the win.   The Red Raiders recorded […]

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OKLAHOMA CITY, Oklahoma – Texas Tech (43-12) shut out the No. 8 seed Baylor Bears (27-27) 4-0 on Thursday in the quarterfinal round of the Big 12 Championship at Devon Park. NiJaree Canady allowed just one hit as Tech’s offense came through in the fifth inning to secure the win.
 
The Red Raiders recorded their 20th win in the Big 12 Championship and their first shutout win since 2017 when they shutout Iowa State.
 
Canady improved to 24-5 on the year as she rode a perfect game into the sixth inning before giving up a hit. The Big 12 Pitcher of the Year finished her 6.2 innings of work with 13 strikeouts – seven of which were consecutive, striking out the side twice in the second and third innings.
 
Mihyia Davis had a little-league home run in the fifth inning after reaching on a single and then coming all the way home on an error by the Bears’ outfield.
 
How it happened:
Canady immediately proved why she was the Big 12 Pitcher of the Year as she struck out eight of the first 10 batters she faced and struck out the side in the second and third innings. The junior finished with 13 strikeouts and held a perfect game going into the sixth inning.
 
Neither team had it easy on offense as Baylor’s Lillie Walker was having an impressive game of her own, getting Tech to pop out and not allowing much solid contact.
 
That changed in the fourth inning when Alexa Langeliers picked up Tech’s first hit of the day on a single into left field. Nothing came of that hit, but solid contact from Langeliers followed by a hard-hit line drive by Alana Johnson gave the Red Raider bats some confidence.
 
That confidence carried over the fifth inning after Canady drew a lead-off walk and Makayla Garcia came in to run for her. Logan Halleman followed that at-bat as a pinch hitter and executed a perfect bunt single that got runners at first and second with no outs.
 
Freshman Hailey Toney then delivered her team-leading fifth sac bunt of the season to push runners over to second and third which brought up Demi Elder who drove in a run on a fielder’s choice with some help from a Baylor error.
 
With runners on the corners, Davis smoked a ball into right field for an RBI single but would then come all the way home to score as the Baylor defender couldn’t corral the ball and let it roll all the way to wall allowing Elder to score from first followed shortly after by Davis to put Tech up 4-0.
 
Baylor loaded the bases in their half of the seventh inning, but Canady shutdown any chances of a comeback to advance Tech to the semifinals to take on No. 5 seed Arizona State.
 
UP NEXT: The Red Raiders will take on the No. 5 seeded Sun Devils at 3 p.m. tomorrow for a spot in the Big 12 Championship game.
 



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Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder lock up spot in Western Conference Finals

For the first time in nearly 10 years, the Oklahoma City Thunder will return to the Western Conference Finals — and they can thank MVP favorite Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for getting them there. Behind 35 points from Gilgeous-Alexander, the top-seeded Thunder took it to the four-seeded Denver Nuggets in Sunday’s Game 7, cruising in the second […]

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For the first time in nearly 10 years, the Oklahoma City Thunder will return to the Western Conference Finals — and they can thank MVP favorite Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for getting them there.

Behind 35 points from Gilgeous-Alexander, the top-seeded Thunder took it to the four-seeded Denver Nuggets in Sunday’s Game 7, cruising in the second half to a dominant 125-93 victory at home. The Nuggets sprinted out to the early lead before OKC’s offense found a rhythm going into halftime. The Thunder led by as many as 43 points in the fourth quarter after trailing by as many as 11 points in the first.

With the win, SGA advances to the first Conference Finals appearance of his seven-year career. Alongside fellow Wildcat guard Cason Wallace, they’ll lead the Thunder into the next round against Julius Randle, Rob Dillingham, and the Minnesota Timberwolves. That series begins on Tuesday night in OKC. Even with only two teams remaining in the Western Conference, we’ve still got four Kentucky guys roaming the floor, three of them playing significant minutes (sorry, Dillingham).

Gilgeous-Alexander was terrific all series long against Denver, but hit another gear in the final few games. He dropped 31 points in a Game 5 win and followed it up with 32 more in a Game 6 loss. But his 35 points on Sunday marked a series-high. SGA shot an efficient 12-19 from the field (3-4 3PT) to get there while adding four assists, three rebounds, and three steals to his stat line in 36 minutes played. And oh yeah, he didn’t turn the ball over once.

Wallace chipped in seven points, five assists, three rebounds, and two steals in 28 minutes off the pine for OKC. Whenever the second-year guard is on the floor, he plays winning basketball — on both ends.

But while there was a celebration to be had in the Thunder locker room after the win, there was disappointment coming from the other end of the floor. Nikola Jokic, who is expected to finish second in MVP voting behind Gilgeous-Alexander, was held in check (by his standards) in Game 7: “only” 20 points, nine rebounds, and seven assists with five turnovers.

Jokic’s co-star, Jamal Murray, struggled to his a groove offensively. The former ‘Cat finished with a series-low 13 points on 6-16 shooting (1-8 3PT). It was a so-so playoffs for Murray, who just hasn’t been able to replicate the postseason success he had in the 2020 bubble and the Nuggets’ title run in 2023.

Karl-Anthony Towns representing Kentucky in the East

The Western Conference Finals won’t be the only series with some Kentucky flavor, though. Karl-Anthony Towns and the New York Knicks will take on the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference Finals. And had Isaiah Jackson not suffered an Achilles injury early into the season for Indiana, we’d have even more Wildcats in the final two rounds.

Towns has been far from perfect through the first two series, but he’s done more than enough to contribute to New York’s wins. In the Knicks’ six Eastern Conference Semifinal games against the Boston Celtics, KAT averaged 19.8 points and 12.7 rebounds per outing while shooting 47.3 percent from the floor. His three-point shooting (3-19) and foul troubles (4.3 per game) were issues against Boston, but he can remedy that by bouncing back against the Pacers.

Game 1 between the Knicks and Pacers is set for Wednesday. Between the four remaining teams, none of them has won an NBA Finals since the 1970s.



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The Sam Bradford Problem Took Down the NFL Once, Now It’s College Football’s Crisis

College football is facing a financial reckoning, and it’s happening at breakneck speed. In just three years since introducing Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) rules in 2021, the sport has stumbled into what some call the “Sam Bradford Problem.” While the term may seem complex, the problem is familiar to football. Who are the top […]

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College football is facing a financial reckoning, and it’s happening at breakneck speed. In just three years since introducing Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) rules in 2021, the sport has stumbled into what some call the “Sam Bradford Problem.” While the term may seem complex, the problem is familiar to football.

2026 NFL Draft Player Rankings
Who are the top prospects eligible for the 2026 NFL Draft? Find out who heads up our early top 100 big board and who you should have on your watchlist.

What Is the Sam Bradford Problem?

The “Sam Bradford Problem” is a term that harkens back to the NFL’s own salary struggles in 2010. Bradford signed a staggering six-year, $78 million contract with the St. Louis Rams as a rookie, making him one of the highest-paid players in the league before he’d even taken a snap.

In 2010, Bradford’s deal with the Rams set a dangerous precedent in the NFL. Rookies, often drafted high based on potential rather than proven performance, were commanding salaries that dwarfed those of established stars who’d been grinding for years. This led to resentment in locker rooms and financial strain for teams, as massive rookie contracts ate up salary cap space.

The NFL took 90 years to confront this kind of rookie-veteran pay disparity, eventually addressing it with a rookie wage scale in the 2011 Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA). College football, however, has barreled into the same issue in a fraction of the time, and the fallout could reshape the sport as we know it.

Fast-forward to this year, and college football is grappling with a similar imbalance, but the stakes feel even higher. The landscape has shifted dramatically since the NCAA allowed athletes to profit from their name, image, and likeness in 2021.

Speaking on “The Paul Finebaum Show” recently, Georgia Bulldogs head coach Kirby Smart, one of the most successful coaches, sounded the alarm on this issue. He implied that he wants a respectful system and more pay for seniority.

“I just want to be able to have a freshman come in and not make more than a senior, and I’d like for other sports to be able to still survive. You know, we’re on the brink of probably one to two years away from a lot of schools cutting sports,” highlighting how this pay disparity disrupts team hierarchy and threatens the broader ecosystem of college sports to a great extent.

RELATED: Georgia Coach Kirby Smart Issues Stark Warning About NIL Chaos and What’s Coming Next for College Sports

Top recruits are signing NIL deals worth millions before they even step on campus, often out-earning upperclassmen who’ve put in years of work. While it is impressive to see such young talent perform well in life, our favorite players build a strong financial foundation, the lopsided pay has created frustrations and instability, to say the least.

Multiple calls have reiterated some form of control on the pay scale, and those who value loyalty have been hurt by the ever-changing landscape.

College Sports Network has you covered with the latest news, analysis, insights, and trending stories in college footballmen’s college basketballwomen’s college basketball, and college baseball!





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Texas A&M is Getting Roasted for Another Underwhelming Athletic Year

In terms of true spending power, there might not be a program in college athletics that holds more weight than Texas A&M. The Aggies are heavily backed by oil-based money moguls that can drop seven-figure checks by the athletic director’s office without batting an eye, but it has yet to get them over the hump […]

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In terms of true spending power, there might not be a program in college athletics that holds more weight than Texas A&M.

The Aggies are heavily backed by oil-based money moguls that can drop seven-figure checks by the athletic director’s office without batting an eye, but it has yet to get them over the hump in the NIL era.

A&M fans have endured 122 seasons of baseball without a national title, and despite claiming three national titles—the most recent being in 1939—the Aggies football team has never won a nationally recognized championship in its 131-year history. Basketball has never made a Final Four, or an Elite Eight for that matter, and softball, well, it has won two national titles—but not since 1987.

 

This spring, it appeared that the program’s baseball and softball teams might have a chance to end their collective drought’s but after some late-night drama on Sunday, those hopes came crashing down in yet another disappointing result.

Coming into the 2025 season, Texas A&M’s softball program was the Preseason No. 1 team in the country and the trendy pick to win a national championship. Fast forward to the end of the regular season and the Aggies are 28-25 (11-19 SEC) and will likely be headed home when the NCAA Tournament starts.

After a 47-10 regular season, the Texas A&M softball team earned the No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament and were among a short list of favorites to dethrone Oklahoma. Then, in the blink of an eye, they became the first ever No. 1 seed to fail to advance out of their own regional.



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O’Brien, Henderson and Sadura will Captain the Bulldogs in 2025-26

Story Links The University of Minnesota Duluth women’s hockey program has announced the trio that will captain the Bulldogs for the 2025-26 season.   Graduate forward Mary Kate O’Brien will wear the “C” as the captain, while senior defenseman Tova Henderson and junior forward Grace Sadura will each sport the “A” as […]

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The University of Minnesota Duluth women’s hockey program has announced the trio that will captain the Bulldogs for the 2025-26 season.

 

Graduate forward Mary Kate O’Brien will wear the “C” as the captain, while senior defenseman Tova Henderson and junior forward Grace Sadura will each sport the “A” as alternate captains.

 

O’Brien, an alternate captain last season, is coming off the most productive season of her collegiate career. The Wilbraham, Mass. native skated in all 39 games for the Bulldogs, and scored seven goals and added 18 assists – also a career best effort – for 25 points. O’Brien also added both a power play goal and a shorthanded goal, and had five games where she recorded multiple points. Currently working towards her Masters in Business Administration, O’Brien completed her undergraduate studies just two weeks ago, and graduated magna cum laude with a double major in Business Analytics and Marketing. O’Brien is a two-time AHCA Division I All-American Scholar, as well as a 2024 CSC Academic All-District honoree. She is also a three-time WCHA Scholar Athlete and WCHA All-Academic Team selection.

 

Henderson’s breakout season was crowned with a spot on the All-WCHA Second Team. A product of Richmond, B. C., Henderson compiled six goals and 14 assists for 20 points – all career best numbers. With two game-winning tallies and three power play goals, Henderson was twice named the WCHA’s Defender of the Week in 2024-25, and she owned a +20 plus/minus rating, the third highest rating on the team. Henderson was also named to Canada’s’ National Women’s Development Team as part of the Women’s Euro Hockey Tour that took place on Dec. 11-15 in Tampere, Finland.

 

Like O’Brien and Henderson, Sadura registered a collegiate-career best offensive season, scoring six goals and adding eight assists for 14 points. A AHCA Division I All-American Scholar, Sadura was named a WCHA Scholar Athlete, as well as to the WCHA All-Academic Team this past season, her first eligible season for either league honor. Sadura, who hails from Chanhassen Minn., was also a member of UMD’s Athletics Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Council this past year.

 

The Bulldogs went 22-15-2 overall this season and reached their fifth-straight NCAA Tournament Regional Final.





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Top-seed Texas A&M stunned and eliminated at home by Liberty

Click HERE to view Texas A&M’s postgame press conference. Game #58: #1 Texas A&M 14, #2 Liberty 11 (8 innings)Records: Texas A&M (48-10, 16-7), Liberty (49-13, 23-3)WP: Sydney Lessentine (6-2)LP: Paige Bachman (11-4)Box Score Game #59: #2 Liberty 6, #1 Texas A&M 5Records: Texas A&M (48-11, 16-7), Liberty (50-13, 23-3)WP: Elena Escobar (25-3)LP: Emiley Kennedy […]

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Click HERE to view Texas A&M’s postgame press conference.

Game #58: #1 Texas A&M 14, #2 Liberty 11 (8 innings)
Records: Texas A&M (48-10, 16-7), Liberty (49-13, 23-3)
WP: Sydney Lessentine (6-2)
LP: Paige Bachman (11-4)
Box Score

Game #59: #2 Liberty 6, #1 Texas A&M 5
Records: Texas A&M (48-11, 16-7), Liberty (50-13, 23-3)
WP: Elena Escobar (25-3)
LP: Emiley Kennedy (21-6)
Save: Kaylan Yoder (1)
Box Score


After a magical season that peaked with being named co-champions of the 2025 SEC Softball Tournament, No. 1 national seed Texas A&M suffered a 6-5 loss to Liberty in Game 7 of the Bryan-College Station Regional on Sunday night.

With the loss, the Aggies become the first top-seeded team to not reach a super regional since the NCAA Tournament began seeding in 2005.

Backed into a corner and needing to win two straight on Sunday, A&M fought and clawed its way out of holes in both games and played through extra innings to win 14-11 in an afternoon affair to give itself a chance.

However, a five-run sixth inning in the nightcap led to the defeat that ended the Aggies’ season.

“These kids worked their tails off all year. They earned everything that was given to them, and we also earned this loss. … It wasn’t on my bingo card, to be honest with you.”

– Texas A&M head coach Trisha Ford

“There was so much good about this season,” head coach Trisha Ford said. “It’s just hard because of how this finished.

“These kids worked their tails off all year. They earned everything that was given to them, and we also earned this loss. … It wasn’t on my bingo card, to be honest with you.”

After an emotional rollercoaster of an early game, A&M led 3-1 in the sixth and positioned itself well with just six outs away from the super regional round. But catcher Savannah Jessee’s home run tied the game and forced Ford to remove left-hander Emiley Kennedy in her last moments in Maroon.

“[Kennedy] has been huge for us,” Ford said. “She’s helped build this program. Today just wasn’t her day. That’s sometimes how it goes. We’ve all been there. Unfortunately, pitching-wise, we had a lot of arms that we just couldn’t execute when we needed to.”

Righty Grace Sparks entered the circle and gave up a single and a three-run homer to put the Aggies behind, 6-3.

Needing an answer, Allie Enright’s clutch gene showed up again at the perfect time as she smoked a solo homer 262 feet to put the Aggies within two. Senior Koko Wooley had one more special moment under the Davis lights with an RBI single to cut the deficit to one.

With senior right-hander Emily Leavitt doing her job and going three up, three down in the seventh, all the Aggies needed was one run to save the season.

One run to keep dancing.

A&M put two baserunners on with a single and a walk, but Liberty southpaw Kaylan Yoder fizzed a ball past the swinging bat of Kramer Eschete to end it.

Will Huffman, TexAgs

In three appearances this weekend, All-American left-hander Emiley Kennedy allowed 15 runs on 14 hits across just nine innings pitched.

Ecstasy for the Lady Flames. Heartbreak for the Aggies.

“I want us to be remembered by our grit,” Kennedy Powell said. “We weren’t going to go down without a fight. We fought to the very last out in any and every game we played.”

The day’s conclusion was even harder to stomach after coming back and even needing an extra inning to stave off elimination earlier in the day.

Despite her eight earned runs against the Lady Flames on Saturday, Ford stuck to her guns and started her ace.

However, “Lefty” struggled again, putting A&M in a two-run hole before Ford pulled the senior.

Right-hander Sidne Peters briefly entered, but a Rachel Roupe grand slam put the Lady Flames up 6-0 and the Aggies on the brink.

In the fourth inning, the Aggies finally looked like the team they had been all year, erasing a 6-1 deficit in a blink.

Freshman KK Dement jolted the crowd awake with a home run on the second pitch of the inning. The Aggies kept rolling with four more runs, capped by back-to-back homers from Mya Perez and Mac Barbara.

“The future is very bright,” Ford said. “KK, that kid is special. Like so good, and just a student of the game.”

A&M kept the pressure on in the fifth, with seven straight batters reaching safely to tack on three more runs and put the team in the driver’s seat with a 10-6 lead.

Ford turned to an unlikely face: freshman left-handed spinner Kate Munnerlyn to relieve.

Will Huffman, TexAgs

Texas A&M finishes 2025 with a 48-11 overall record.

The little-used rookie showed her guts and only allowed one more run into the sixth, which she ended on a strikeout with two runners aboard.

A&M added an insurance run in the seventh via a Perez single that scored Wooley, but Munnerlyn’s luck ran out as the Lady Flames tied it with three straight singles and a bases-loaded hit by pitch. Fellow freshman Sydney Lessentine entered and escaped the potential game-winning jam to force extras.

The eighth inning saw Powell single up the middle to score Enright and Eschete right before Kelsey Mathis crossed on a Wooley grounder that grew the A&M lead to an insurmountable 14-11.

Yet those good feelings were erased as the sun set on Davis Diamond and the 2025 A&M softball season.

“I’m excited for this freshman class and also who’s returning next year,” Ford said. “We have pieces, we know this. We just have to keep moving forward, the sun will come out tomorrow.”





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Former Alabama QB Trusts Nick Saban to ‘Save College Football’ on New NIL Commission

Legendary retired Alabama Crimson head coach Nick Saban’s involvement in President Donald Trump’s proposed NIL commission remains a subject of speculation. While Saban hasn’t outright said he’ll be on such a commission should it be created via an executive order, it appears he’s been working behind the scenes to address the state of college football, […]

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Legendary retired Alabama Crimson head coach Nick Saban’s involvement in President Donald Trump’s proposed NIL commission remains a subject of speculation.

While Saban hasn’t outright said he’ll be on such a commission should it be created via an executive order, it appears he’s been working behind the scenes to address the state of college football, the transfer portal, and NIL.

Many head coaches, analysts, and former players have lamented the new landscape that is dominated by multi-million NIL deals with no guardrails on expenditures nor the transfer portal.

Many have publicly praised one of the most successful college football coaches in history for his ability to transform college sports.

Former Crimson Tide quarterback A.J. McCarron, who has full faith in his college head coach, is among those who endorse Saban.

In a recent episode of “The Next Round,” McCarron fully endorsed Saban as the ideal co-chair to spearhead this new NIL commission.

He also gave a brutally candid assessment of his perspective on how college football stands today.

“I’m not a fan of college football right now,” McCarron said. “I think it’s a [expletive] show with everything, and hopefully, with Saban getting co-chairman on that board helps bring some structure to it because they need it. It hurts to think about it because I missed out on a lot of money from that sense.”

McCarron went on to joke that the backpay from the House settlement should extend back to his college years, rather than ending in 2016.

It’s frankly understandable for former players to have a bitter outlook on the state of things when they weren’t privy to these million-dollar NIL deals—particularly one like McCarron, who won three consecutive national championships quarterbacking Alabama.

McCarron is not alone in expressing the urgent need for a regulated system. Many see the current landscape as untenable.

It’s not clear how this proposed commission look like, or how it will fix NIL, especially in concert with revenue sharing.

However, it appears that Saban is taking quiet steps toward a solution, as he has met with Texas Tech billionaire booster Cody Campbell to discuss what the commission might look like and what they can do.

Campbell is a former player who started the Red Raiders NIL collective and has been said to have a key role in the star-studded transfer class.

Whatever the future for the commission might look like, there probably isn’t a better-positioned legend in the sport poised to take on the challenge like Saban.



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