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Yolett McPhee-McCuin and the Ole Miss Rebels have dominated the NCAA Transfer Portal this offseason with near double-digit newcomers signed to the program. After a Sweet 16 run in the NCAA Tournament, the Rebels attacked the free agent market with multiple immediate impact pieces heading to Oxford. Now, the program has been labeled as an […]

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The Buzz

Yolett McPhee-McCuin and the Ole Miss Rebels have dominated the NCAA Transfer Portal this offseason with near double-digit newcomers signed to the program.

After a Sweet 16 run in the NCAA Tournament, the Rebels attacked the free agent market with multiple immediate impact pieces heading to Oxford.

Now, the program has been labeled as an offseason winner, according to ESPN, with Ole Miss bringing in one of the top portal hauls in the nation.

Who’s set to make their way to Oxford this offseason?

No. 1: Latasha Lattimore – Virginia

“Tash is a dynamic human being and talent,” said Coach Yo. “She committed to Coach Quentin Hillsman out of high school and it’s really cool to see them reunite! I’ve always loved her game and I’m excited to mentor her in the last stage of her collegiate career!”

As a redshirt senior at Virginia, Lattimore was a standout performer for the Cavaliers, averaging a near double-double with 14.3 points and a team-leading 8.2 rebounds per game. Additionally, Lattimore will be a vital defender in the paint for the Rebels, as she tallied an impressive 69 total blocks this season, which ranks 18th-best in the nation.

No. 2: Jayla Murray – Wichita State

The past two seasons, Murray has been a highly touted student-athlete at Wichita State, earning a spot on the 2024-25 AAC All Conference Second Team.

As a redshirt junior, Murray was the Shockers’ leading scorer and rebounder, averaging 12.4 points and 5.3 rebounds per game. The St. Louis, Missouri, native finished in double figures 22 times, notched two 20-point performances and two double-doubles.

Throughout her entire career at Wichita State, Murray saw minutes in 62 games, earning a starting spot in 49 of those contests.

No. 3: Kaitlin Peterson – UCF

The Rebels landed a commitment from UCF star Kaitlin Peterson last week after going public with a decision. The program is yet to announce the talented transfer as a signee.

The 5-foot-9 senior is coming off of a stellar 2024-25 campaign after averaging 21.4 points per game on the season.

No. 4: Tianna Thompson – Georgia Tech

Thompson comes to Ole Miss after spending a year at Georgia Tech, where she appeared in 21 games as a true freshman.

The Atlanta, Georgia, native provided a spark in multiple games for the Yellow Jackets, including their matchup against Florida State, scoring a career-high 19 points, going 8-of-11 from the field, including three 3-pointers. 

No. 5: Debrasha Powe – Mississippi State

“Debreasha represents all what’s right about the state of Mississippi,” said McPhee-McCuin. “She’s a leader, a person of great faith, and has phenomenal support from her family and people in the state.

Starting in all but one of the 99 career games she has appeared in, Powe averages 8.51 points.

No. 6: Desrae Kyles – Central Michigan

“Desrae’s addition will be an important piece to this puzzle,” said McPhee-McCuin. “Her size, length and personality are incredible. There are truly no ceilings to her potential and I am excited and grateful that she is apart of our family here at Ole Miss!”

Appearing in 13 games as a true freshman, Kyles averaged 3.3 points and 3.1 rebounds per game, while shooting 52.8% from the field.

The 6-5 center notched multiple notable games for Chippewas, scoring a season-high seven points against Cleveland State and a season-high seven rebounds against Buffalo. Kyles did not compete as a sophomore, electing to redshirt the 2024-25 season.

No. 7: Denim DeShields – Mississippi State

It’s another impactful addition for the Rebels heading into the 2025-26 season after DeShields started in all 34 games played for the Bulldogs last year.

The talented 5-foot-5 guard averaged 27.1 minutes per game for Mississippi State during the 2025-26 season with averages of 5.7 points, 3.2 assists, 1.7 rebounds and 1.2 steals per game.

Before making her way to the Southeastern Conference, DeShields spent two seasons with the UAB Blazers.

The 2025 NFL Draft Recap: Ole Miss Sees Multiple Rebels Selected

Ole Miss Lands Commitment From Sought-After Transfer Safety

Super Bowl Champion, Ole Miss Star Wide Receiver AJ Brown Earns Prestigious Honor

Follow Zack Nagy on Twitter: @znagy20 and Ole Miss Rebels On SI: @OleMissOnSI for all coverage surrounding the Ole Miss program.

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NCAA explains multi-year player contracts with incentives and buyouts

Though overdue and underutilized, it appears athletic departments will finally include stability and consequences into name, image and likeness contracts with their players.  A lengthy Q&A crafted and distributed by the NCAA covers several aspects of the post-House settlement world, and one section relevant to this conversation addresses multi-year contracts with players, buyouts and incentives. For starters, the […]

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Though overdue and underutilized, it appears athletic departments will finally include stability and consequences into name, image and likeness contracts with their players.

 A lengthy Q&A crafted and distributed by the NCAA covers several aspects of the post-House settlement world, and one section relevant to this conversation addresses multi-year contracts with players, buyouts and incentives.

For starters, the NCAA said that contracts covering “additional payments” do count against the “benefits cap,” which is the $20.5 million limit schools are now permitted to split up among those participating in NCAA sports on campus. If a school pays a player a share of revenue and/or NIL, which is also permissible now, the amount specified for a year in the contract is counted toward the cap that year. The amount specified for any subsequent year counts toward that year.

In short, the school has to report the benefit in the year the benefit is provided. That’s important to note if and when takes its NIL operation in-house. If NIL agreements are with WVU, the payments count toward the cap. If NIL agreements are made outside of WVU, those wouldn’t count toward WVU’s cap.  

The example the NCAA provides details a two-year agreement and includes a “signing incentive.” A player is promised $50,000 “upon enrollment” as well as $100,000 on Jan. 1 of the first year and then $100,00 on Jan. 1 of the second year. The school would have to count $150,000 for the first year, because the player received the signing incentive and the annual payment. The school would count the second $100,000 annual payment for the second year. 

However, the NCAA also acknowledges the obvious, which is that players will inevitably breach the contract and transfer to another school. The NCAA presented a scenario with a $100,000 payment split into $50,000 paid at the beginning of the academic year and the remaining $50,000 paid at the end of the academic year and, most importantly, a $100,000 buyout if the player transfers.

Supposing the player transfers before the end of the academic year, the school has made just one of the $50,000 payments and counts that toward the cap. The second payment never happened, so it doesn’t count. The new school that the player transfers to then pays the original school a $100,000 buyout, and that’s one benefit of bringing NIL in-house.

If a WVU player transfers to a new school and breaches the NIL contract with WVU’s in-house setup, the player’s new school would pay WVU the buyout. However, if that transferring player breaches an NIL contract with a third party NIL and not with WVU, the new school wouldn’t owe WVU anything and would only pay the third party the buyout if that was in the NIL contract.

In the NCAA’s scenario, the new school has to count the $100,000 buyout, as well as any other payment promised and made to the player that year, toward the cap. The new school “may not increase its benefits cap allowance by $100,000 as a result of this buyout payment.”

The NCAA is also allowing contract incentives and explained a scenario for a two-year contract with a payable bonus if a player has a 3.0 GPA after the fall semester. The player is to be paid $50,000 on Jan. 1 of the first year and Jan. 2 of the second year, and both payments would count toward the cap for the respective year. If the player earns the incentive, the $5,000 counts, and if the player falls short of the GPA “the payment will be removed from the benefits cap allowance for that year.”



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Tottenham signs Mathys Tel on a permanent long-term deal until 2031

Associated Press LONDON (AP) — Tottenham has signed forward Mathys Tel to a permanent contract, the club confirmed on Sunday. The 20-year-old joined the London club on loan in February from Bayern Munich. Tottenham said Tel will sign a contract until 2031 when his current loan deal expires on June 30. He has played 20 […]

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Associated Press

LONDON (AP) — Tottenham has signed forward Mathys Tel to a permanent contract, the club confirmed on Sunday.

The 20-year-old joined the London club on loan in February from Bayern Munich.

Tottenham said Tel will sign a contract until 2031 when his current loan deal expires on June 30.

He has played 20 games in all competitions for Spurs, scoring three goals.

He is currently in Slovakia to play for France at the European Under-21 championship together with another Tottenham player, Wilson Odobert.

___

AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer




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BYU’s AJ Dybantsa Leads College Basketball In NIL Valuation

by Daniel Johnson June 15, 2025 As BYU’s first-ever five-star recruit, the expectations for Dybantsa’s freshman season are sky high. AJ Dybantsa, the number one high school player in the country and arguably the biggest college basketball signing in Brigham Young University’s history, also leads all of college basketball in NIL valuation, logging an estimated […]

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BYU, AJ Dybantsa, NIL Valuation

As BYU’s first-ever five-star recruit, the expectations for Dybantsa’s freshman season are sky high.


AJ Dybantsa, the number one high school player in the country and arguably the biggest college basketball signing in Brigham Young University’s history, also leads all of college basketball in NIL valuation, logging an estimated $4.1 million value according to Athlon Sports.

According to their reporting, his portfolio, although somewhat selective, like fellow West Coast native Juju Watkins, also contains a fair amount of groundbreaking NIL deals. The 6’9 Dybantsa is reportedly the first male basketball athlete to be sponsored by Red Bull and like Watkins, he is also signed to Nike, his deal is valued at over $4 million.

As BYU’s first ever five star recruit, the expectations for Dybantsa’s freshman season are sky high, and although he has denied rumors that he has a $7 million contract with the school, BYU has been projected to contend with the defending conference champions, the University of Houston, for the Big 12 title due in large part to his presence on the team.

Regardless of how BYU’s season goes, Dybantsa has already indicated that he is going to be a one and done player and will declare for the NBA draft at the end of his freshman year.

According to The Athletic, his rejection of the rumors of a $7 million NIL contract from BYU squares with his distaste over receiving a $1,000 grant which being awarded the Gatorade National Player of the Year entitled him to.

As he told the outlet, “Don’t take anything for granted.” Dybantsa’s father, Ace, is Congolese, and gave him a lesson on the haves and have nots on a visit to Brazzaville, the capital of the Congo. “People are less fortunate and don’t have what we have. If I continue this route, I’m going to get a lot more money than that. So, I might as well just donate (that check) back to the community.”

Dybantsa, if he pans out as the draft prospect that scouts believe he can be, will most assuredly be firmly in the haves camp, per an analysis that an anonymous NBA front office executive provided to The Athletic.

“He’s what the NBA is looking for. Wings with legitimate size that understand the game can create offense and then, in theory, can guard multiple guys,” the executive said.

Dybantsa seemed unconcerned with the exact value of his deals in January when he told the outlet that his deals more or less were executed by his father, and he just wants to hoop.

“People just gonna talk, but I (didn’t) even know how much I’m getting. They just tell my dad all of that. I’m trying to make it to the NBA, so wherever they can get me the fastest there with the best development, there’s a whole lot of pillars that come with it. Money’s going to come if I do the work, so I’m not worried about the money in a year,” Dybantsa said.

An example of his aversion to chasing a bag just to chase a bag is his NIL deal with the prep academy Utah Prep, which he chose to sign a $600,000 deal with to finish his high school career with, despite having a more lucrative offer from Florida’s more prestigious Montverde Academy.

“Montverde, we can use them as an example, I’m trying to show people you don’t have to go to a school like that to accomplish certain things,” Dybantsa said. “They’re a great school, and they’ve got the most league guys from high school. So, there’s no knock going there. But you don’t have to go to a school like that.”

He continued, “You don’t want to just sign with somebody. You want to be partners with them. There’s a lot more to an offer than just money. People only see the money part of it, but it’s not just about money. I’m not gonna change. They might. There are some people I know that become famous and change their whole personality. They want to have this lavish lifestyle, but I just stick to who I am, and I think people mess with that.”

RELATED CONTENT: Why NIL Deals Have More Brands Investing In College Athletes Over Pros, And Women Athletes’ Dominance In The Arena





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BYU's AJ Dybantsa Leads College Basketball In NIL Valuation

by Daniel Johnson June 15, 2025 As BYU’s first-ever five-star recruit, the expectations for Dybantsa’s freshman season are sky high. AJ Dybantsa, the number one high school player in the country and arguably the biggest college basketball signing in Brigham Young University’s history, also leads all of college basketball in NIL valuation, logging an estimated […]

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BYU's AJ Dybantsa Leads College Basketball In NIL Valuation

BYU, AJ Dybantsa, NIL Valuation

As BYU’s first-ever five-star recruit, the expectations for Dybantsa’s freshman season are sky high.


AJ Dybantsa, the number one high school player in the country and arguably the biggest college basketball signing in Brigham Young University’s history, also leads all of college basketball in NIL valuation, logging an estimated $4.1 million value according to Athlon Sports.

According to their reporting, his portfolio, although somewhat selective, like fellow West Coast native Juju Watkins, also contains a fair amount of groundbreaking NIL deals. The 6’9 Dybantsa is reportedly the first male basketball athlete to be sponsored by Red Bull and like Watkins, he is also signed to Nike, his deal is valued at over $4 million.

As BYU’s first ever five star recruit, the expectations for Dybantsa’s freshman season are sky high, and although he has denied rumors that he has a $7 million contract with the school, BYU has been projected to contend with the defending conference champions, the University of Houston, for the Big 12 title due in large part to his presence on the team.

Regardless of how BYU’s season goes, Dybantsa has already indicated that he is going to be a one and done player and will declare for the NBA draft at the end of his freshman year.

According to The Athletic, his rejection of the rumors of a $7 million NIL contract from BYU squares with his distaste over receiving a $1,000 grant which being awarded the Gatorade National Player of the Year entitled him to.

As he told the outlet, “Don’t take anything for granted.” Dybantsa’s father, Ace, is Congolese, and gave him a lesson on the haves and have nots on a visit to Brazzaville, the capital of the Congo. “People are less fortunate and don’t have what we have. If I continue this route, I’m going to get a lot more money than that. So, I might as well just donate (that check) back to the community.”

Dybantsa, if he pans out as the draft prospect that scouts believe he can be, will most assuredly be firmly in the haves camp, per an analysis that an anonymous NBA front office executive provided to The Athletic.

“He’s what the NBA is looking for. Wings with legitimate size that understand the game can create offense and then, in theory, can guard multiple guys,” the executive said.

Dybantsa seemed unconcerned with the exact value of his deals in January when he told the outlet that his deals more or less were executed by his father, and he just wants to hoop.

“People just gonna talk, but I (didn’t) even know how much I’m getting. They just tell my dad all of that. I’m trying to make it to the NBA, so wherever they can get me the fastest there with the best development, there’s a whole lot of pillars that come with it. Money’s going to come if I do the work, so I’m not worried about the money in a year,” Dybantsa said.

An example of his aversion to chasing a bag just to chase a bag is his NIL deal with the prep academy Utah Prep, which he chose to sign a $600,000 deal with to finish his high school career with, despite having a more lucrative offer from Florida’s more prestigious Montverde Academy.

“Montverde, we can use them as an example, I’m trying to show people you don’t have to go to a school like that to accomplish certain things,” Dybantsa said. “They’re a great school, and they’ve got the most league guys from high school. So, there’s no knock going there. But you don’t have to go to a school like that.”

He continued, “You don’t want to just sign with somebody. You want to be partners with them. There’s a lot more to an offer than just money. People only see the money part of it, but it’s not just about money. I’m not gonna change. They might. There are some people I know that become famous and change their whole personality. They want to have this lavish lifestyle, but I just stick to who I am, and I think people mess with that.”

RELATED CONTENT: Why NIL Deals Have More Brands Investing In College Athletes Over Pros, And Women Athletes’ Dominance In The Arena

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Greg Sankey shares chances that 2026 College Football Playoff will have 16 teams

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey will be among the leaders in college football meeting in Asheville next week to discuss potential changes to the College Football Playoff. This includes expansion, format changes and more. Changes have already been made to the CFP earlier this offseason, seeing its seeding format shift to a straight-seeding model in 2025. […]

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SEC commissioner Greg Sankey will be among the leaders in college football meeting in Asheville next week to discuss potential changes to the College Football Playoff. This includes expansion, format changes and more.

Changes have already been made to the CFP earlier this offseason, seeing its seeding format shift to a straight-seeding model in 2025. More changes could be on the way.

“We’re at 12,” Sankey said during an appearance on Golic and Golic on Friday on the FanDuel Sports Network. “That was actually one of the other untold stories, is that 12-team format was established for ’26 by what’s called by the President’s Group by the Board of Directors, the College Football Playoff board. And their statement was, ‘Hey, if you can start earlier, go ahead,’ and we did in ’24 with good success.

“So remember, we’ve made an iterative change to just fill the bracket based on the rankings, rather than kind of this maneuvering what happened around conference champions. So that’s an improvement for 2025.”

There has been much speculation over shifting the CFP to a 14 or 16-team model ever since the playoff’s 12-team format was approved. Sankey said this conversation is still “alive” heading into next week’s discussions.

When the SEC Spring Meetings commenced in Florida last month, Sankey sensed that the notion of more opportunities was important to the head football coaches and athletics directors in his conference. More opportunities, whether this comes in a nine-game SEC schedule, conference auto-bids into the CFP, or additional teams in the field, remain to be seen.

However, Sankey said that he can’t predict what the final outcome could be based on his single opinion of the 11 that will be in attendance. There is doubt that a conclusion will be reached, and Sankey expects each leader to bring their own concerns to the table during the meeting.

“One of the issues is to look at the selection process as conference membership has changed, as the bracket has changed, as you have more pressure points on selection issues,” Sankey explained. “The selection process really hasn’t adapted. So, looking at the criteria, how strength of schedule is analyzed, how we populate the committee.

“I think those issues are really important. And I tend more towards, now, based on a lot of in-depth conversations with our membership to like more than 12, but I think 12 is really healthy and I’m going to save my crystal ball for a moment.”



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Dave Van Horn clears up retirement rumors for post-College World Series: ‘I’m not going anywhere’

Arkansas head coach Dave Van Horn has addressed the rumors that he may retire at the end of the 2025 college baseball season. He was blunt in his response. “I’m not retiring. I’m not going anywhere,” he told Tom Shatel at the Omaha World-Herald. There was speculation that the longtime Razorbacks skipper may be heading […]

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Arkansas head coach Dave Van Horn has addressed the rumors that he may retire at the end of the 2025 college baseball season. He was blunt in his response.

“I’m not retiring. I’m not going anywhere,” he told Tom Shatel at the Omaha World-Herald.

There was speculation that the longtime Razorbacks skipper may be heading toward retirement following his 23rd season at the helm of Arkansas’ baseball program. That was before Van Horn’s team cracked the College World Series barrier for the eighth time under his guidance. It comes following consecutive seasons where Arkansas’ season ended at the Fayetteville Regional. This was the first time since 2006-07 that this had happened.

Van Horn was emotional after Arkansas’ Super Regional win against Tennessee, saying that it means a lot for this team to find its way to the CWS. He let his group know how proud he is of them for finishing the season playing at Charles Schwab Field Omaha.

“I’ve said this all year, this is a special group,” Van Horn said following the Super Regional. “These guys have fun. They get along. They’re fun to coach, they’re fun to be around. They’ve got some personality. … It would’ve been hard, for me, if this good a team didn’t get to Omaha, without winning a championship somewhere. They didn’t win a trophy, they didn’t get a ring, they didn’t get the SEC Championship, didn’t get the Tournament championship.

“If we would’ve lost this series, it would’ve been like, this is the best team that didn’t do anything. Now, it’s one of the best teams that’s ever come through here. You never know how it’s going to go from here, but they’re down to the final eight, and that’s a championship to me. That’s big.”

Despite Van Horn’s storied career in Fayetteville, he has yet to lead to Razorbacks to a national championship. As the No. 3 overall seed, Arkansas is the top-ranked team heading in Omaha. If this was going to be his last season, it would have been a strong way to end his career. Instead, it appears that Van Horn has some more coaching left in his tank.

Arkansas will open play in the College World Series against LSU on Saturday at 7:00 p.m. ET. The Razorbacks and Tigers played earlier this season in Baton Rouge, where LSU won the first two games of the series but failed to finish off the sweep. The Razorbacks are looking to avoid the upset this time around.



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