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Texas Tech star pitcher NiJaree Canady inks another monster NIL deal

Texas Tech superstar NiJaree Canady made headlines last year when she became the first $1 million softball player. Well, she’s now done it again. Canady has signed another seven-figure NIL contract with the Texas Tech-focused NIL collective, The Matador Club, On3’s Pete Nakos confirmed. She will make at least $1.2 million in her Year 2 […]

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Texas Tech star pitcher NiJaree Canady inks another monster NIL deal

Texas Tech superstar NiJaree Canady made headlines last year when she became the first $1 million softball player. Well, she’s now done it again.

Canady has signed another seven-figure NIL contract with the Texas Tech-focused NIL collective, The Matador Club, On3’s Pete Nakos confirmed. She will make at least $1.2 million in her Year 2 deal.

The news comes as Texas Tech is currently embroiled in the Women’s College World Series Final with Texas. The Red Raiders dropped the opening game 2-1, but bounced back on Thursday night and evened the series with a 4-3 win.

Canady has made a major impact on both games, as she has pitched all 13 innings for her team. In the opener, the Topeka, KS native held the Longhorns to just four hits and two earned runs with seven strikeouts in six innings. After being tabbed with the loss, she came out the next night and was even better.

In Texas Tech‘s 4-3 win on Thursday night, Canady held Texas to six hits and two earned runs with six strikeouts. She struck out Longhorn center fielder Kayden Henry on three pitches to finish off the win.

“You wait for these once-in-a-generation athletes to bring us right to the brink and we’ve had them, but for some reason it hasn’t been player,” ESPN’s Jessica Mendoza said on the broadcast Thursday night. “You can have all kinds of theories about what it’s going to take to bring people to our sport, what will get them excited, get their attention. Right now, I’m watching all these men’s sports shows and they’re talking about softball. This is exactly what we’ve wanted. I’ve been waiting for this.”

After being named the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year in 2024 at Stanford, Canady entered the transfer portal and ended up at Texas Tech. She’s pitched a whopping 239 innings this season, where she’s held opposing batters to a .156 batting average. She boasts a 0.97 ERA with 317 strikeouts, recording one of the greatest seasons in college softball history.

Prior to NiJaree Canady’s arrival at Texas Tech this season, the Red Raiders had made the NCAA Tournament just six times in their history. They had never even advanced past a Regional. Now, with Canady at the helm, the program is just one win away from its first ever National Championship.

It’s safe to say that the amount of money that she is making, which is precisely $1,050,024 (as repeatedly said on the ESPN broadcast) this season, is worth every penny for Texas Tech.

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Softball Adds Five from Transfer Portal to 2026 Roster

ATHENS, Ga. – University of Georgia head softball coach Tony Baldwin has announced the additions of five transfer student-athletes for the 2026 season. The signees include pitchers Addisen Fisher (UCLA) and Maddie Johnson (Georgia Southern), infielders Bailey Lindemuth (Texas Tech) and Keirstin Roose (Coastal Carolina), and outfielder Delani Sullivan (Kentucky). “We are excited to welcome Addison, Bailey, […]

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Softball Adds Five from Transfer Portal to 2026 Roster

ATHENS, Ga. – University of Georgia head softball coach Tony Baldwin has announced the additions of five transfer student-athletes for the 2026 season. The signees include pitchers Addisen Fisher (UCLA) and Maddie Johnson (Georgia Southern), infielders Bailey Lindemuth (Texas Tech) and Keirstin Roose (Coastal Carolina), and outfielder Delani Sullivan (Kentucky).
 
“We are excited to welcome Addison, Bailey, Delani, Kierstin, and Maddie to our program. We believe that each will have a significant impact on our team,” Baldwin said. “Not only are they very talented, but they’re also the right ‘fit’ for our locker room, which is critical to our success. We believe that we have positively impacted our team offensively, defensively, and in the circle. With the mix of these transfers, a solid group of returners, and an exciting incoming freshman class, we will head into the fall with optimism, and we’re looking forward to getting to work.
 
“Much of the credit goes to our coaching staff and support staff. The work they put into identifying the right people, doing the homework they need to do to make sure we are bringing in the right people, and doing it in a timely fashion is critical in this new world of recruiting. I really am thankful for all the people who are invested in our program, the work they do, and the character with which they do it. Go Dawgs!”
 
ADDISEN FISHER | RHP | Bend, Ore. | UCLA | Bend HS
Right-handed pitcher Addisen Fisher transfers to Georgia from UCLA, where she was named a 2025 D1Softball First Team Freshman All-American, an NFCA All-West Region First Team member, a Big Ten All-Freshman Team selection, and appeared on the NFCA Freshman of the Year Top 10 list.
 
Last season, Fisher posted a 16-2 record with a. 2.59 earned run average (eighth best in the Big Ten), 1.28 WHIP, and 100 strikeouts over 113.2 innings and 32 appearances (16 starts). She notched two complete-game shutouts and allowed a .241 opponent batting average (105 hits). She opened her career with a 16-0 record before drawing her first loss, tying Amanda Freed (1999) for the best start by a Bruins’ freshman in program history. Her best outing of the year was a complete-game shutout performance at No. 5 Oregon, where she struck out three in her return to her home state (April 19). She tossed the first no-hitter of her collegiate career at Howard (March 26).
 
Fisher competed for Team USA at the WBSC U-18 World Cup Group Stage Event in Dallas, Texas, from Aug. 29-Sept. 2, 2024, finishing with a 2-0 record and 15 strikeouts over 10.0 innings in three appearances.  Fisher threw a complete-game shutout, the only Team USA pitcher to throw a complete game, with eight strikeouts in a 7-0 win over Canada to punch Team USA’s ticket to the World Cup Finals, held in 2025 (Sept. 2).
 
Fisher was a four-year letterwinner at Bend High School in Bend, Oregon, and was heralded as the top-ranked player in the 2024 signing class by Softball America, Extra Inning Softball, and Perfect Game Softball. She was named the 2024 Gatorade National Softball Player of the Year for her senior season. Additionally, Fisher was a three-time winner of the Gatorade Oregon Softball Player of the Year award (2021, 2023, 2024) and a four-time Class 5A All-State First Team honoree. She finished her high school career with a 66-3 record, 861 strikeouts, 24 no-hitters and 11 perfect games, leading Bend to the 2024 Class 5A state title her senior season, compiling a 20-2 record, 0.36 ERA, 261 strikeouts, .092 opponent batting average, 10 shutouts, five no-hitters and four perfect games over 134.2 innings.
 
Baldwin on Fisher: “Addison has all the pieces to be a front-line starter in the SEC. She throws hard, commands the ball, and has one of the best drop balls in the country. She is truly a top talent, but what really makes her special is her personality. She has a fun personality and loves to smile! Bulldog fans are going to love watching her compete this spring.”
 
MADDIE JOHNSON | RHP | Athens, Ga. | Georgia Southern | North Oconee HS
Athens native and right-handed pitcher Maddie Johnson signs to UGA from Georgia Southern, where she was tabbed a D1Softball Second Team Freshman All-American, Softball America Freshman All-American, NFCA Third Team All-South Region member, and First Team All-Sun Belt Team selection.
 
Johnson pitched 145 innings in 30 appearances and 21 starts as a freshman in 2025. She concluded the season with a conference-leading 2.03 ERA, a 12-10 record, and a pair of saves. Johnson fanned 110 batters, allowing only 39 walks. Johnson pitched a seven-inning no-hitter, Georgia Southern’s first since 2017, against Georgia Mason on Feb. 28, recording a season-high 11 strikeouts and no walks. She was named Sun Belt Pitcher of the Week twice in 2025.
 
Johnson was a four-year letter winner at North Oconee HS. She was named 2023 Region 8-AAAA Pitcher of the Year, was a four-time First Team All-Region Team member, 2023 First Team All-State, and 2021 Second Team All-State. Johnson holds the school records in career strikeouts, games pitched, consecutive shutout innings, single-season strikeouts, and strikeouts in a game. In the classroom, she was a four-year academic honor roll honoree. She played travel ball for Georgia Impact Maher and Impact Janney/Lewis.
 
Baldwin on Johnson: “Maddie is a Dawg through and through. She had success in high school locally at North Oconee High School, but really blossomed last year as a freshman. Her ability to command the ball with velocity and change speeds allowed her to have success against some of the top teams in the country, including us! We believe she still has better days ahead and are excited for those days to be in the Red and Black.”
 
BAILEY LINDEMUTH | INF | Burleson, Texas | Texas Tech | Burleson Centennial HS
Infielder Bailey Lindemuth has signed with UGA from Texas Tech. Lindemuth helped guide the Red Raiders to a Women’s College World Series championship series appearance as a true freshman in 2025.
 
Lindemuth played and started in all 68 games, 66 starts at third base and two in the circle. She finished with a 2-1 record and 2.55 ERA in the circle, hit .395 with 50 hits, including eight doubles and five home runs, and drove in 32 runs. She was named to the All-Big 12 First Team and All-Big 12 Freshmen Team for her performance and was named Big 12 Player of the Week on March 11.
 
She signed to Texas Tech as the 11th-ranked pitcher in the 2024 class, according to Extra Inning. She garnered several honors, including being named the 2021 District 8-5A Offensive Player of the Year, and being selected 2021 First Team All-District, the DFW Sophomore of the Year, District MVP in 2022, 2022 First Team All-District, 2022 All-Johnson County MVP, 2023 District 8-5A MVP, Fort Worth Star Telegram Area MVP, and earning TGCA All-State honors. She holds the school record for home runs, RBI, and strikeouts, and established herself as one of the best two-way players in the 2024 class. Lindemuth played travel ball for Stryker National Esparza under coach Charlie Esparza, where she hit .489 with a 1.472 on-base percentage and 34 RBI, thanks to 45 hits and 13 home runs. She was named to the District 8-5A Academic team for her work in the classroom.
 
Baldwin on Lindemuth: “Bailey is the perfect fit for our program. She is a talented infielder and a high-character individual. A full-time starter and an All-Big 12 performer as a freshman, we believe she makes our team better now while still having her best softball ahead of her. One thing for sure about Bailey is that she loves to compete, and we can’t wait to get her to Athens and get to work.”
 
KEIRSTIN ROOSE | INF | Wolcottville, Ind. | Coastal Carolina | Lakeland HS
Infielder Keirstin Roose has signed with UGA as a graduate transfer from Coastal Carolina. In her final season at CCU, Roose picked up NFCA All-South Region Second Team honors, All-Sun Belt Second Team honors, and landed a spot on the CSC Academic All-District Team. Roose helped guide the Chanticleers to the program’s first-ever Sun Belt Tournament Championship and an appearance in the NCAA Durham Regional.
 
In her CCU career, Roose played in 177 games, starting all but three in four seasons. She hit .281, scattering 145 hits, including 31 doubles, three triples, and blasting 25 home runs. She drove in 102 runs and slugged .498 with a .340 on-base percentage. In the classroom, she has been named an Easton/NFCA All-America Scholar-Athlete in 2022, 2023, and 2024.
 
Prior to her Coastal Carolina career, Roose was a multi-sport athlete at Lakeland High School. She lettered in softball, soccer, basketball, track & field, and golf. She was a finalist for the 2021 Indiana Miss Softball award. She was named the 2022 Prep Player of the Year, 2021 Indiana all-state softball team, was a three-time KPC All-Area selection, and a three-time NECC All-Conference selection. She helped lead Lakeland to a 2018 conference championship and a 2019 sectional championship. She set single-season records at Lakeland in home runs (18), batting average (.667), and RBI (44). Off the softball diamond, she was a three-time KPC All-Area selection in soccer, a two-time NECC All-Conference performer in soccer, and a two-time all-conference selection in both basketball and track & field, and was a KPC All-Area honoree once in both basketball and track & field. Roose was named the 2019 Prep Player of the Year in soccer in her sophomore season and was a three-time conference champion in soccer (2017, 2018, 2019). Additionally, she was the 2019 sectional champion in the discus throw in track & field.
 
Baldwin on Roose: “Kierstin is a grad transfer that will bring a wealth of experience to our team. She is a competitor and a go-getter. Her athleticism and power were two things that stood out physically when we started evaluating her. Adding her power bat and athleticism to our lineup will be a welcome addition. We are excited to get her to Athens.”
 
DELANI SULLIVAN | OF | Georgetown, Ky. | Kentucky | Great Crossing HS
Outfielder Delani Sullivan has signed with UGA from Kentucky. In two seasons in Lexington, Sullivan played in 95 games. She scattered 25 hits in 103 at-bats, including four doubles, a triple, and three home runs. Last season, she drove in 10 runs. She stole four bases in each season for the Wildcats. In the classroom, she was a member of the 2025 SEC Spring Academic Honor Roll and the 2023-24 SEC First Year Academic Honor Roll.
 
In high school, she was named to the Kentucky District and Regional All-Tournament Team and the First Team All-State for Kentucky in 2021. As a senior, she led the Warhawks in many offensive categories, including average (.527), at-bats (112), runs (48), hits (59), doubles (15), triples (7), and stolen bases (36).
Her sister Kennedy played for Kentucky from 2022-23.
 
Baldwin on Sullivan: “We are excited to welcome Delani to Athens. With the loss of Dallis Goodnight, the centerfield position is one we will have a lot of competition for. Delani will be right in the middle of that competition. Her speed and ability to make things happen will add a valuable piece to our offense. We believe she is just tapping into her potential and look forward to seeing that potential in the Red and Black.”
 

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Kenny Dillingham, Deion Sanders among Big 12 coaches questioning NIL, player pay reforms

Kenny Dillingham said, “I just want to know the rules” when it comes to clarification about NIL deals and revenue sharing. (Photo by Truitt Robinson/Cronkite News) FRISCO, Texas – The state of college sports could calmly be described as the Wild, Wild West, a stage for an old-fashioned duel between programs and the NCAA, with […]

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Kenny Dillingham, Deion Sanders among Big 12 coaches questioning NIL, player pay reforms


Kenny Dillingham said, “I just want to know the rules” when it comes to clarification about NIL deals and revenue sharing. (Photo by Truitt Robinson/Cronkite News)

FRISCO, Texas – The state of college sports could calmly be described as the Wild, Wild West, a stage for an old-fashioned duel between programs and the NCAA, with athletes standing somewhere in the middle.

Texas is a fitting setting for such showdowns.

Big 12 Media Days provided several opportunities for coaches in the conference to voice their displeasure with the current system and how players are paid like NFL stars. Even though power conference teams like those within the Big 12 do benefit in terms of securing more commitments from the best available players, they realize it’s an unjust and unfair system that could monopolize the sport indefinitely.

“We’re in the profession and we don’t even know the rules,” Cincinnati football coach Scott Satterfield said. “It’s difficult, and it’s ever-changing. There’s nothing that’s been stable, really, since 2020. Things have changed so much and so fast.”

Recruiting is among the biggest challenges. Though the NCAA reached a settlement in June that would give $2.8 billion for colleges to pay athletes, the NCAA is negotiating with House plaintiff lawyers to apply rules and repercussions to schools that attempt to avoid the cap in compensation packages offered to incoming players. Third-party NIL deals are being fully guaranteed, which would go against new revenue-sharing rules. Programs are also offering contracts that would be impossible to fit beneath the $20.8 million annual compensation cap.

Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham, who captured the Big 12 crown last season behind a slew of portal additions, is eager for a clear-cut direction for the sport so college football can return to what he believes are the values at its core.

“I just want to know the rules,” Dillingham said. “Tell us where the sandbox is and we’ll play in it. At the end of the day, this is a game. I know this is a business, I know this is a profession for everybody. But anybody who’s not in this to see a kid go from an 18-year-old kid to a 22-year-old man, and enter the real world, is in it for the wrong reasons.”

In a time when players can earn millions of dollars as freshmen or by entering the portal, the players a team retains for several years become the most crucial ones on the roster.

“In this new era where you have 105 kids on scholarship, it’s all about retaining the guys on your team,” Dillingham said. “If you constantly are looking for the next best thing to replace the guys on your team, then your own guys and your team should leave. Why wouldn’t they? If you’re not loyal to them, they shouldn’t be loyal to you.”

Colorado coach Deion Sanders said he wishes the new era of college football included a hard salary cap with a system to rank player salaries based on ability. (Photo by Truitt Robinson/Cronkite News)

The two-way street of loyalty and trust between players and coaching staff is occasionally the deciding factor for players being recruited with similarly hefty bags of cash. Coaches argue that it should return to the forefront of the recruiting process. That point is only emphasized by the fact that hundreds of submitted NIL deals hang in limbo while the College Sports Commission and NIL clearinghouse manage the fallout of the settlement.

Colorado coach Deion Sanders proposed a hard salary cap with a system to tier rank player salaries based on ability and overall performance.

“I wish there was a cap,” Sanders said. “The top-of-the-line guy player makes this, and if you’re not that type of guy, you know you’re not going to make that. That’s what the NFL does. The problem is you have a guy that’s not that darn good, but he could go to another school and they give him half a million dollars, and you can’t compete with that. It doesn’t make sense.”

Moments earlier, however, Sanders praised Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire for spending aggressively in the transfer portal. The Red Raiders flipped their team into a recruiting juggernaut almost overnight, spending upwards of $50 million on players, which was split into $30 million front-loaded and another $20.5 million courtesy of the revenue-share. Front-loaded contracts allowed school collectives to pay players before the enforcement of the settlement on July 1.

McGuire, whose Red Raiders figure to contend for the Big 12 title and a College Football Playoff selection this fall, said his aggression is just taking advantage of the current state of affairs, and more schools should do the same to compete with the annual contenders from the SEC and Big Ten.

Utah coach Kyle Whittingham, entering his 21st season at the helm of the Utes, echoed Sanders’ sentiment about a salary cap. He acknowledged that players are moving toward becoming official employees, though the contracts they are now signing to get paid make them employees in every way but the official title. Whittingham remains unsure of the extent to which he supports employing college athletes.

“You say, ‘college football’s not the NFL,’ but the NFL has been doing some good things for a lot of years,” Whittingham said. “We ought to take some pages from them on how to implement a salary cap and collective bargaining if it comes to that. … As distasteful as it might sound to some people, I think an NFL minor league model is the best direction to hit.”

Until new policies can be enforced at every level of college football to ensure more parity and a fair state of play, the formula for winning national championships is printed on a blank check.

“All you have to do is look at the College Football Playoff and see what those teams spent,” Sanders said. “And you’ll understand darn well why they’re in the playoffs.”

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Paul Finebaum picks USC’s Lincoln Riley as college football coach under the most pressure in 2025

Career offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Lincoln Riley emerged as one of college football’s elite once he was promoted to Oklahoma’s head coach in 2017. With Riley at the helm, the Sooners compiled a 55-10 (37-7) record, made trips to three consecutive College Football Playoffs (2017-2019) and boasted two Heisman-winning quarterbacks (Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray). Near […]

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Career offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Lincoln Riley emerged as one of college football’s elite once he was promoted to Oklahoma’s head coach in 2017. With Riley at the helm, the Sooners compiled a 55-10 (37-7) record, made trips to three consecutive College Football Playoffs (2017-2019) and boasted two Heisman-winning quarterbacks (Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray).

Near the end of his fifth season in Norman, however, it was announced prior to Oklahoma‘s 2021 Alamo Bowl matchup against Oregon that Riley would be heading west for the USC job. The program, which was once at the forefront of the college football landscape, had struggled immensely as of late. The Trojans posted a lowly 22-21 record in Clay Helton‘s final four seasons (2018-2021).

Great things were expected immediately from Riley at USC, but that just hasn’t been the case. Although quarterback Caleb Williams became the third arm to win the Heisman Trophy under Riley, the Trojans are just 26-14 (17-10) with one top-25 finish in his three seasons at the helm.

This is why ESPN college football analyst Paul Finebaum labeled Riley as the coach under the most pressure in 2025. He did so on Thursday morning’s edition of “Get Up.”

Lincoln Riley,” Finebaum said in confidence. “And you asked the question, why? Because he has simply underperformed. He had a pretty decent first year, but since then, it has been very rocky. And quite frankly, I think he would already be gone if it wasn’t for about an $80 million buyout. Even for Southern Cal, that might be too much money.”

Promising season went south fast for USC in 2024

The 2025 season will mark the second for USC in the Big Ten conference following its jump from the sinking ship that was the Pac-12. Its 2024 campaign opened strong with a 27-20 win over No. 13 LSU in the Vegas Kickoff Classic, but it went just 4-5 in Big Ten play en route to an appearance in the Las Vegas Bowl.

This offseason, Riley promoted quarterbacks coach Luke Huard to offensive coordinator following the departure of Josh Henson to Purdue. USC also returns quarterback Jayden Maiava, who will replace Miller Moss (transferred to Louisville). Maiava passed for 1,201 yards, 11 touchdowns and six interceptions in seven games last season.

Maiava shined in marquee games against Notre Dame and Texas A&M, passing for a combined 655 yards with seven touchdowns and five interceptions. However good he ends up being will be instrumental for a successful season at USC.

The Trojans open the season against Missouri State on August 30. The game is set for a 7:30 p.m. ET kick.



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The new college sports agency is rejecting some athlete NIL deals with donor-backed collectives | National

The new agency in charge of regulating name, image, likeness deals in college sports sent a letter to schools Thursday saying it had rejected deals between players and donor-backed collectives formed over the past several years to funnel money to athletes or their schools. Those arrangements hold no “valid business purpose,” the memo said, and […]

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The new agency in charge of regulating name, image, likeness deals in college sports sent a letter to schools Thursday saying it had rejected deals between players and donor-backed collectives formed over the past several years to funnel money to athletes or their schools.

Those arrangements hold no “valid business purpose,” the memo said, and don’t adhere to rules that call for outside NIL deals to be between players and companies that provide goods or services to the general public for profit.

The letter to Division I athletic directors could be the next step in shuttering today’s version of the collective, groups that are closely affiliated with schools and that, in the early days of NIL after July 2021, proved the most efficient way for schools to indirectly cut deals with players.

Since then, the landscape has changed yet again with the $2.8 billion House settlement that allows schools to pay the players directly as of July 1.

Already, collectives affiliated with Colorado, Alabama, Notre Dame, Georgia and others have announced they’re shutting down. Georgia, Ohio State and Illinois are among those that have announced plans with Learfield, a media and technology company with decades of licensing and other experience across college athletics, to help arrange NIL deals.

Outside deals between athlete and sponsor are still permitted, but any worth $600 or more have to be vetted by a clearinghouse called NIL Go that was established by the new College Sports Commission.

In its letter to the ADs, the CSC said more than 1,500 deals have been cleared since NIL Go launched on June 11, “ranging in value from three figures to seven figures.” More than 12,000 athletes and 1,100 institutional users have registered to use the system.

But the bulk of the letter explained that many deals could not be cleared because they did not conform to an NCAA rule that sets a “valid business purpose” standard for deals to be approved.

The letter explained that if a collective reaches a deal with an athlete to appear on behalf of the collective, which charges an admission fee, the standard is not met because the purpose of the event is to raise money to pay athletes, not to provide goods or services available to the general public for profit.

The same would apply to a deal an athlete makes to sell merchandise to raise money to pay that player because the purpose of “selling merchandise is to raise money to pay that student-athlete and potentially other student-athletes at a particular school or schools, which is not a valid business purpose” according to the NCAA rule.

A deal, however, could be approved if, for instance, the businesses paying the players had a broader purpose than simply acting as a collective. The letter uses a golf course or apparel company as examples.

“In other words, NIL collectives may act as marketing agencies that match student-athletes with businesses that have a valid business purpose and seek to use the student’s NIL to promote their businesses,” the letter said.

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.



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Ryan Clark takes aim at Robert Griffin III amid public spat with Angel Reese

Ryan Clark and Robert Griffin III are getting after it on social media again. The two former NFL players turned analysts rekindled their beef after some drama pertaining to the former Heisman Trophy winner and Angel Reese. It all started when Griffin III claimed to have spoken with Reese’s inner circle about her rivalry with […]

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Ryan Clark and Robert Griffin III are getting after it on social media again. The two former NFL players turned analysts rekindled their beef after some drama pertaining to the former Heisman Trophy winner and Angel Reese.

It all started when Griffin III claimed to have spoken with Reese’s inner circle about her rivalry with Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark. On X/Twitter, the Griffin III told Reese that she should “tighten” her circle instead of “trying to check” him.

“I spoke up in support of Angel Reese against racism not to start drama,” Griffin III wrote. “But I won’t let anyone twist the truth just because it’s inconvenient to them. Instead of trying to check me, just tighten up your circle.

“They calling me and saying you hate Caitlin Clark, not the other way around. I have zero interest in being the villain in anyone’s story. I just want to have fun, tell the truth and celebrate sports. But I won’t pretend or lie just to protect feelings.”

The story centered around Griffin III going after the fans who were attacking Reese for being on the cover of NBA 2K26. In the social media post, Griffin III said people in Reese’s inner circle talked to him about her relationship with Caitlin Clark, which ticked off the Chicago Sky star.

“People in Angel’s inner circle called me and told me I was right and Angel Reese has grown to hate Caitlin Clark because of the media always asking her about Caitlin and being constantly compared to her,” Griffin wrote. Reese saw the post later in the morning, and decided to go after Griffin III.

“Lying on this app when everybody know the first and last name of everybody in my circle for clout is nastyyyy work,” Reese wrote. It’s clear Reese doesn’t believe that Griffin spoke to anyone close to her about her peer in the Indiana Fever star.

That prompted the aforementioned Ryan Clark to take aim at Griffin III. He claimed the former pro quarterback was a liar and that he should just admit his mistake and move on from the situation.

“Desperation will force you to make things up!” the former NFL defensive back wrote. “It’s ok to take the L & move on some times. Lying just makes it worse.”

Alas, this is par for the course, as Ryan Clark has been a staunch defender of Reese throughout her rise to fame. In defending her and getting a shot off at someone he’s had issues with in the past in Griffin III, he killed two birds with one stone.

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Additionally, the duo has found themselves embroiled in a social media war due to a situation regarding Reese before. In May, Ryan Clark had an issue with Griffin III, claiming that Reese hated Caitlin Clark, and his explanation on the matter.

“It could be the fact that Aliyah Boston had to save Angel Reese from ending her career,” Griffin said about an incident between Clark and Reese during a Chicago Sky vs. Indiana Fever game. “After the foul, Caitlin Clark put on Angel Reese, and Angel Reese tried to hit her. But if it wasn’t for Aliyah Boston putting her arms in the way, Angel Reese would not be playing basketball anymore, because she was going to sucker punch Caitlin Clark.

“Now, you tell me a time when you’ve seen somebody get fouled on a basketball court in a professional league, where they try to almost sucker punch somebody that they were friends with, because of a hard foul?”

All told, Angel Reese, who played at LSU, is having a strong start to her WNBA career. The 23-year-old is averaging 13.3 points and 12.8 rebounds this year. In 2024, Reese finished second in Rookie of the Year voting (behind Clark) after averaging 13.6 points and 13.1 rebounds.

She’s hoping to keep the focus on her play on the court. Meanwhile, Robert Griffin III and Ryan Clark seem to love to use her to argue with each other. It seems like this rivalry is going to be an everlasting one.

— On3’s Brian Jones contributed to this article.



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College Football Has a New NIL Powerhouse and Coaches Are Calling it ‘Ridiculous’

College Football Has a New NIL Powerhouse and Coaches Are Calling it ‘Ridiculous’ originally appeared on Athlon Sports. As of July 1, schools are able to pay their athletes directly, thanks to the June 6 House v. NCAA settlement. Advertisement This monumental ruling allows schools to distribute $20.5 million however they’d like among their athletes. […]

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College Football Has a New NIL Powerhouse and Coaches Are Calling it ‘Ridiculous’ originally appeared on Athlon Sports.

As of July 1, schools are able to pay their athletes directly, thanks to the June 6 House v. NCAA settlement.

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This monumental ruling allows schools to distribute $20.5 million however they’d like among their athletes. For some programs that didn’t have the strongest NIL backing, this helps level the playing field. For those who were already spending large amounts on their roster, it only makes them stronger.

The latter would apply to programs such as the Texas Longhorns, Ohio State Buckeyes, Alabama Crimson Tide and Michigan Wolverines, among other perennial powers. However, over the past year, the Texas Tech Red Raiders have also been known to throw around some cash.

They put together the No. 1 transfer portal class in the country, and according to a report by The Athletic, are spending so much that it is frustrating other coaches.

“Ridiculous. … They’re not just outbidding, they’re outbidding (other teams) by 3X,” one coach told The Athletic. “Wild, but it will be interesting. If the players are good kids, about the right things and about winning, I think it’ll go great. If they’re about themselves, the first time adversity hits will define them.”

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Texas Tech Red Raiders head coach Joey McGuire, center, looks on.

Texas Tech Red Raiders head coach Joey McGuire, center, looks on.

One coach even went as far as to admit they were “jealous.”

The report confirmed that Texas Tech will spend $55 million in the 2025-26 season in NIL across all sports. While many may be wondering where this large influx of cash flow is coming from, the answer is quite simple. The surge in funds comes via oil tycoon Cody Campbell.

According to On3, the Texas Tech booster sold his oil and natural gas company in February for approximately $4.08 billion in cash and stock.

While this is exciting for Tech fans and threatening to those around the country, the pressure is only growing for a program that has never appeared in a Big 12 Championship Game. Only time will tell if the investment pays off, but clearly, Campbell is looking to change the trajectory of the program.

This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jul 11, 2025, where it first appeared.



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