NIL
The stat Texas needs to improve to win a national title
We are in the thick of the offseason, but that does not slow speculation on the 2025 college football season and beyond. You, the listeners of Andy and Ari On3, have questions, and I am here to answer them. From Joe:How much credit does Steve Sarkisian get in college football for the work he’s done […]

We are in the thick of the offseason, but that does not slow speculation on the 2025 college football season and beyond. You, the listeners of Andy and Ari On3, have questions, and I am here to answer them.
From Joe:
How much credit does Steve Sarkisian get in college football for the work he’s done at Texas?
From Steve in San Antonio:
No this is not an Arch Manning question. You’re welcome. Maybe it’s just me but I’ve been surprised by Sark being labeled the offensive genius/guru with all of the very obvious and serious red zone and goal line issues they’ve had. Since Sark has had them relevant, regardless of who they are playing, the offense marches up and down the field but once they hit the red zone or goal line, they come to a screeching halt and issues ensue ( I won’t mention Ohio State or Red River 2023).
I don’t know that Sark has gotten the appropriate heat for these deficiencies and had they just been average inside the 20, Texas could have a natty right now.
How does he fix these issues if they’ve plagued Texas multiple seasons with all that high-end talent?
Why has the media overlooked it when it’s of the utmost importance and many in your line of work are picking them to win it all this season? You can’t win it all if you can’t score a TD when you have to.
Steve’s question will help us answer Joe’s question. Because Sarkisian has fixed the most pressing issues Texas had when he got the job in 2021, we now can nitpick him on things like red zone percentage.
In other words, Sark repaired the cracks in the foundation and rebuilt the frame of the house. Now we’re arguing about light fixtures.
This is, of course, huge progress for Texas. And Sarkisian and his staff deserve most of the credit.
The most important repair they made was turning Texas into a program that developed talent again. In the tail end of the Mack Brown era and through the Charlie Strong and Tom Herman eras, the Longhorns simply did not turn the highly touted recruits they signed into NFL players with any regularity. Teams that can’t do that don’t tend to win championships, and they’re susceptible to losses to teams that — on paper — are less talented.
From 2011 to 2022, Texas produced two first-round draft picks (safety Kenny Vaccaro in 2013 and defensive tackle Malcom Brown in 2015). In 2016 and 2017, the Longhorns had just one player drafted. In 2022, they didn’t have a single player drafted.
Before the Sarkisian era, the last Texas offensive player drafted in the first round was Vince Young in 2006. The last first-round offensive lineman was Mike Williams in 2002.
Since Sark took over, Texas has produced six first-rounders (tailback Bijan Robinson in 2023, defensive tackle Byron Murphy and receiver Xavier Worthy in 2024 and offensive tackle Kelvin Banks, DB Jahdae Barron and receiver Matthew Golden in 2025). The Longhorns have had 23 players taken in the past two drafts, and it’s possible they touch double digits again in 2026.
Those are the kind of numbers Nick Saban produced at Alabama and Urban Meyer produced at Ohio State and Kirby Smart produces at Georgia. It’ll win you a lot of games.
Sarkisian has re-opened the Texas NFL production factory. His athletic director, Chris Del Conte, has gotten donors who couldn’t seem to stay on the same page in previous eras to pull in the same direction since the dawn of NIL. Texas has the big-picture issues taken care of.
Now let’s talk about the red zone.
Steve isn’t wrong. Texas was bad in the red zone last season. It’s not just an anecdotal memory of the toss play that Ohio State safety Caleb Downs blew up near the goal line in a one-possession Cotton Bowl semifinal in the fourth quarter. Texas ranked 101st in the nation in red zone scoring percentage at 79.7.
That’s the bad news. The more promising news is that Texas tied with Indiana for second in the nation in red zone trips last season with 69. The difference is the Hoosiers turned 92.8 percent of those trips into points. Indiana scored 55 red zone touchdowns, which led the nation and was seven more than second-place Penn State, which played three more games than the Hoosiers did. Texas, meanwhile, scored 44 red zone touchdowns in 16 games.
To Steve’s point, if Texas can get to a middle-of-the-pack red zone scoring percentage, that probably adds another four or five touchdowns. That could mean the difference between a playoff exit in an earlier round and a national title.
How does Texas fix the issue? Running back play certainly seems to be a factor. When the Longhorns had Robinson in 2022, they finished 19th in red zone scoring percentage. They dropped to No. 90 the next year.
A deeper running back room this season could help. Recall that the Longhorns lost presumed starter C.J. Baxter and freshman Christian Clark to season-ending injuries in August.
Quarterback Arch Manning also will shoulder much of the responsibility. After Quinn Ewers injured his ankle late last season, Sarkisian used Manning in a QB run package. As the starter, Manning’s size and speed should make him an option for which defenses have to account near the goal line.
Red zone percentage will be a critical stat to watch for Texas this season. It’s one of the only things the Longhorns have struggled with during CFP runs the past two seasons. They’ll likely continue to rank among the national leaders in getting inside the opponent’s 20-yard line. If they start punching in a few more touchdowns, they might be unstoppable.
From Tom:
Will we ever get back to a point where power conference teams non-conference games were all against other power conference teams? (For example, Missouri’s 1976 non-conference was USC, Illinois, Ohio State, North Carolina.)
The addition of the 12th regular-season at the start of this century probably eliminates the possibility of all power-conference schedules returning. The TV networks and streaming networks paying the leagues would love a return to this, and depending on how the next iteration of the CFP is set up, we should see more power conference vs. power conference games.
And for certain schools, an all power conference schedule probably would be helpful.
Earlier this week, Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire was complaining about the perception of conferences during an interview on SiriusXM. “We’ve got to take some of the bias out of conferences – that, ‘This is a tougher conference because of this and this and this.’ Let’s fight it out on the field,” McGuire said.
He’s talking about CFP selection, and that would be fine if the conferences were equal. But they’re not. The Big 12 is demonstrably weaker at the top than the Big Ten and SEC. Texas Tech could help itself close this perception gap by playing some Big Ten and SEC teams in the non-conference. That would be fighting it out on the field.
So who is Texas Tech playing in the non-conference this season?
Arkansas Pine-Bluff, Kent State and Oregon State.
Maybe it gets better in 2026.
Nope, it’s Abilene Christian, Oregon State and Sam Houston State.
At least Texas Tech has N.C. State scheduled in 2027 alongside Arkansas Pine-Bluff and North Texas.
Slates like these will do little to help the Red Raiders. Their CFP participation likely will depend on whether they can win the Big 12 title, because they won’t have any quality non-conference wins to bolster their resume if they don’t win the league. So McGuire needs to visit with his athletic director Kirby Hocutt and get some better non-conference games scheduled.
They don’t have to schedule Ohio State and Georgia. But they do need to be trying to schedule teams like Illinois, Minnesota, Ole Miss and South Carolina. And if those teams don’t want to come to Lubbock, the Red Raiders should take a check, hit the road and, as McGuire said, “fight it out on the field.”
From John:
What are the top three books about college football that you would recommend to someone who knows nothing about CFB?
It is beach reading season, so here’s a trio of books that would be great for anyone who either loves college football or just wants to learn more about it.
The Opening Kickoff: The Tumultuous Birth of a Football Nation, Dave Revsine
Revsine isn’t just a great TV host. He dives deep into the creation of the sport. If you thought the NIL era was wild, it has nothing on the turn of the 20th century.
Meat Market: Inside the Smash-Mouth World of College Football Recruiting, Bruce Feldman
To understand college football, you need to understand recruiting. There isn’t a better book on the subject. Feldman spent a year in the early 2000s with Ed Orgeron’s Ole Miss staff, and the result is a fascinating look at how the sausage got made in that era.
The Junction Boys: How Ten Days in Hell with Bear Bryant Forged a Championship Team, Jim Dent
The story of Bear Bryant’s first preseason practice at Texas A&M is the stuff of legend, and it will get you fired up for the season (even though a coach would get put in jail for this stuff now).
My co-host Ari Wasserman also recommends Michael Rosenberg’s War As They Knew It: Woody Hayes, Bo Schembechler, and America in a Time of Unrest. This one delves into the most interesting period in the Michigan-Ohio State rivalry, and it will help you understand why that game means so much to so many people.
If you want a better window into some of the changes in college football now, I’d also recommend a book about a different kind of football. Joshua Robinson and Jonathan Clegg’s The Club: How the English Premier League Became the Wildest, Richest, Most Disruptive Force in Sports explains the dawn of the Premier League in England. And you’ll be shocked at the similarities between English soccer in 1990 and college football in 2025.
A Random Ranking
As I write this, I’m preparing to head to Tampa for a Metallica concert. Time to rank my favorite Metallica songs…
1. One
2. Master of Puppets
3. Sad But True
4. For Whom the Bell Tolls
5. Enter Sandman
6. Fade To Black
7. The Unforgiven
8. Fuel
9. Seek and Destroy
10. Nothing Else Matters
NIL
Gym Heels Abroad: Gwen Fink & Claire Stippich
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Carolina Gymnastics’ seniors Gwen Fink and Claire Stippich took their studies abroad this summer. Fink dove into eco-tourism and sustainability in Thailand while Stippich studied sustainability in business in Portugal. Fink is currently pursuing degrees in Political Science and Management and Society. The Fort Mill, S.C. native headed to Thailand for her […]

Fink is currently pursuing degrees in Political Science and Management and Society. The Fort Mill, S.C. native headed to Thailand for her first time to explore the importance of eco-tourism and maintaining sustainability. This experience combined her passion for environmental protection and academic studies in policy and law.
UNC was recently ranked no. 5 for public schools in the country in U.S. News & World Report’s 2025 Best Colleges rankings. Carolina’s academic rigor helps students prepare for opportunities such as studying abroad where they combine what they’ve learned in the classroom with real-world experiences while being immersed in various cultures. Fink explained, “UNC prepared me well for this experience, particularly through my coursework in political science. I was able to connect what I’ve learned in the classroom to real-world policy outcomes. This deepened my interest in how environmentalism and public opinion intersect in shaping effective global solutions.”
Stippich currently studies Business Administration and Marketing at Carolina and expanded on her coursework abroad this summer. The all-around gymnast traveled throughout Portugal to study sustainability in business.
From engaging with locals and fellow students to trying new foods, Portugal provided Stippich an opportunity to step outside her comfort zone and grow as a person. Ultimately, Stippich left Portugal with a greater understanding of sustainability and how she can further her career goals.
The new experiences that accompany studying abroad can be challenging to navigate, but Stippich’s time as a student-athlete at Carolina helped prepare her. The senior explained, “Being a UNC athlete taught me time management skills and the ability to adapt quickly in new situations. All these skills were essential when studying abroad to handle busy schedules and last-minute changes in plans.”
Different courses. Different parts of the world. Different cultures. Both Fink and Stippich left with greater worldviews and understanding for their respective career paths. “It made me think more about the impact I want to make in my future career,” said Stippich.
“This experience has been one of the most rewarding parts of my time at UNC. I gained a clearer understanding of how to approach global challenges with both cultural awareness and policy insight.” Fink continued, “environmental problems require global collaboration, and that lasting solutions must be built with respect for cultural differences.”
Stay up to date with Carolina Gymnastics by following the Tar Heels on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.
NIL
Some agencies troubled by NIL collectives
University mascots posse for photos before the start of day two of Big 12 NCAA college football media days in Frisco, Texas, Wednesday, July 9, 2025. (AP Photo/LM Otero) The new agency in charge of regulating name, image, likeness deals in college sports sent a letter to schools this week saying it had rejected deals […]


University mascots posse for photos before the start of day two of Big 12 NCAA college football media days in Frisco, Texas, Wednesday, July 9, 2025. (AP Photo/LM Otero)
The new agency in charge of regulating name, image, likeness deals in college sports sent a letter to schools this week 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 this 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, to help arrange some of their 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 with the help of auditing giant Deloitte and run 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,. 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.
Sports attorney Darren Heitner, who deals in NIL, said the guidance “could disproportionately burden collectives that are already committed to spending money on players for multiple years to come.”
“If a pattern of rejections results from collective deals submitted to Deloitte, it may invite legal scrutiny under antitrust principles,” he said.
On a separate track, some college sports leaders, including the NCAA, are seeking a limited form of antitrust protection from Congress.
The letter said a NIL deal 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.
NIL
5
Following the pledge by 2026 five-star wide receiver Calvin Russell lll to Syracuse football, a report earlier this week from top On3 expert Pete Nakos stated that the two-sport star may have agreed to a name, image and likeness (“NIL”) deal with the Orange valued in the multi-year, multi-million-dollar range. That’s all well and good, […]


Following the pledge by 2026 five-star wide receiver Calvin Russell lll to Syracuse football, a report earlier this week from top On3 expert Pete Nakos stated that the two-sport star may have agreed to a name, image and likeness (“NIL”) deal with the Orange valued in the multi-year, multi-million-dollar range.
That’s all well and good, and it wouldn’t surprise me if the 6-foot-5, 190-pound Russell has inked, or will sign, a lucrative NIL deal with the ‘Cuse. One thing I’ll be curious to know is the breakdown of Russell’s NIL money: Syracuse Athletics can now pay its athletes directly, while there remain three third-party NIL collectives supporting SU players.
New USC 4-star commit Boobie Feaster and new Syracuse 5-star commit Calvin Russell have agreed to multi-year deals valued in the multi-million-dollar range, @PeteNakos_ reports
Read: https://t.co/KIbzOpsUfP pic.twitter.com/kEI5nGHj2v
— On3 NIL (@On3NIL) July 9, 2025
Still, based on interviews that he’s given, and commentary from various national analysts and recruiting insiders, Russell didn’t appear to choose Syracuse football (and basketball) over Michigan, Oregon and Florida State because of NIL funds.
Some people may not believe that. It’s cool. That’s their right. But for me, why the Orange landed its highest-ranked commit in more than two decades comes down to this.
Five-star Calvin Russell lll picked the ‘Cuse for this main reason.
Syracuse football head coach Fran Brown recruited Russell harder than anyone else, and Brown has formed the strongest relationship with Russell and his family among all the teams who had been vying for this supremely talented young man.
To that end, this past Thursday, Nakos said in an interview posted to the X account of Cuse Sports Talk: “If he was really all about the money, he would’ve gone to Michigan.”
“If he was really all about the money, he would’ve gone to Michigan.”
Money talks… But @PeteNakos_ believes Fran Brown’s presence was truly a key factor in 5-star WR Calvin Russell verbally committing to Syracuse. pic.twitter.com/Z6BXza722D
— Cuse Sports Talk (@CuseSportsTalk_) July 10, 2025
I totally agree with Pete, although from what I’ve heard, Syracuse’s NIL package for Russell was competitive with Michigan and other suitors. As Nakos noted in his radio interview, though, what separated the Orange from the pack – and Russell held more than 50 scholarship offers – is his dynamic with Brown.
Now, the early national signing period for 2026 prospects won’t come until this December, so Michigan and others could try to flip the top-25 national prospect in football and versatile wing in basketball, and maybe that includes sweetening the NIL pot.
At the same time, Russell has said he’s shut his recruitment down, telling Rivals analyst Marcus Benjamin, “It’s over. I’m done. There will be nothing else going on with my recruitment. I’m done.”
Not too long ago, Russell also signed an NIL deal with athletic apparel and footwear giant Adidas. Terms of that agreement weren’t disclosed. I assume that Russell will have tons of NIL opportunities once he comes to Central New York.
However, why he decided to choose the ‘Cuse was due to Brown’s consistency in recruiting Russell, and the Orange head coach’s character, honesty, and the culture he’s building on the Hill.
I have no doubt that other five-star prospects will join Russell at Syracuse football in the future.
NIL
Katie Taylor upsets Amanda Serrano by majority decision in third matchup
On Friday night, Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano met for the third time in their respective careers. Taylor completed a clean sweep of the trilogy, defeating Serrano via majority decision to retain the undisputed super-lightweight title. The bout wasn’t nearly as hectic as the first two meetings between Serrano and Taylor. The pair started slow, […]

On Friday night, Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano met for the third time in their respective careers. Taylor completed a clean sweep of the trilogy, defeating Serrano via majority decision to retain the undisputed super-lightweight title.
The bout wasn’t nearly as hectic as the first two meetings between Serrano and Taylor. The pair started slow, feeling each other out and finding a rhythm in the fight.
As the match’s pace picked up, Serrano began to throw more volume, but Taylor often got the better of the exchanges, landing heavier blows when she connected. Nonetheless, Serrano was the aggressor for all 20 minutes of the fight, constantly pushing forward.
Despite Serrano’s pace, Taylor never seemed shaken. In the end, the judges appreciated Taylor’s calm demeanor and heavy hands, rewarding her with a victory. Though, it’s worth noting that one judge scored the fight a draw. The other two judges scored the fight 97-93 in favor of Taylor.
The fight was live-streamed on Netflix, the streaming company’s latest venture into the livestream space. The event only included women boxers, a landmark moment in boxing history.
“The goal for this all-women’s card is to put the world on notice that women’s boxing is just as entertaining as men’s and can be just as exciting, if not more,” Jake Paul, whose company Most Valuable Promotions is presenting Friday’s event, told ESPN. “This is the moment where multiple women on the card can garner a bigger audience and become superstars. They have the opportunity to be recognized by audiences outside of the normal boxing crowd and expand the fan base, just like Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese did for the WNBA.”
History of the Katie Taylor-Amanda Serrano rivalry
Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano first fought on April 30, 2022, in Madison Square Garden. The lightweight championship bout was dubbed “For History” because it was the first women’s boxing match to headline Madison Square Garden.
The fight delivered, with the pair giving fans a show they’d never forget. Both fighters went the distance, and Taylor ultimately won the fight via split decision. The bout was named Fight of the Year by Sports Illustrated and Event of the Year by The Ring.
Taylor and Serrano were set for a rematch in May 2023, but the bout was called off due to a lingering injury that Serrano was battling. Nonetheless, the rematch couldn’t be postponed forever and on Nov. 15, 2024, the two champions met again.
They were the co-feature bout to Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul, and the fight was live-streamed on Netflix. Once again, the duo delivered an all-time war that brought fans to their feet. Despite many fans believing Serrano was the better fighter in the rematch, Taylor won again, this time by unanimous decision.
With the trilogy officially complete, Katie Taylor can have the last laugh in the rivalry. Nonetheless, if the past have proven anything, Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano are always capable of making more history.
NIL
New college sports agency rejecting some NIL deals
NCAA, Sports July 12, 2025 By By EDDIE PELLS AP 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. 1

NCAA, Sports
July 12, 2025
By By EDDIE PELLS AP
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.
NIL
More Hawai'i history set to be made in 2025 MLB Draft
In 1985, University of Hawai‘i pitcher Mike Campbell was selected with the seventh overall pick of the MLB Draft by the Seattle Mariners. Later in that same draft, ‘Iolani alumnus and 6-foot-9 University of California righty Dave Masters was taken 24th overall by the Chicago Cubs. It was the first and only time two players […]


In 1985, University of Hawai‘i pitcher Mike Campbell was selected with the seventh overall pick of the MLB Draft by the Seattle Mariners. Later in that same draft, ‘Iolani alumnus and 6-foot-9 University of California righty Dave Masters was taken 24th overall by the Chicago Cubs. It was the first and only time two players with Hawai‘i ties were selected in the first round in the same MLB Draft.
Forty years later, a new type of history is set to be made regarding players from the Islands in the MLB Draft.
Saint Louis alumnus Aiva Arquette and Baldwin alum Wehiwa Aloy are both poised to become first round selections when the 2025 MLB Draft gets underway on Sunday at noon HST. The duo would become the first from Hawai‘i high schools to do so.
Arquette and Aloy both had stellar seasons in the spring, leading their respective college teams to the College World Series in June.
Following his senior season at Saint Louis, Arquette was taken in the 18th round of the 2022 MLB Draft but instead chose to play collegiately at the University of Washington. After two years with the Huskies, Arquette entered the NCAA transfer portal and transferred to Oregon State, where he slugged 19 home runs while committing just six errors as the team’s starting shortstop. All the while, his .354 batting average led the Beavers.
Aloy began his collegiate career at Sacramento State. After earning Freshman All-American honors, he entered the transfer portal and played the final two seasons of his collegiate baseball career at the University of Arkansas.
In 2025, Aloy took home the Golden Spikes Award, given annually to the country’s top amateur baseball player. He started all 65 games for the Razorbacks in 2025, hitting 21 home runs with a .350 batting average.
Although Aloy was awarded college baseball’s top individual honor, the 6-foot-5 Arquette is viewed as the slightly better pro prospect. Arquette is viewed as a Top 10 pick, while Aloy is also expected to be off the board by the time the first round ends.
The 2025 MLB Draft begins on Sunday with rounds 1-3 and wraps up on Monday with rounds 4-20 beginning at 5:30 a.m. HST. Although Arquette and Aloy are viewed as Hawai‘i’s headliners in the draft, a handful of other names remain on the radar for teams making selections.
Not far behind Arquette and Aloy as a prospect is Saint Louis shortstop and 2025 Hawai‘i Gatorade Player of the Year Bruin Agbayani. Although he signed a scholarship agreement with the University of Michigan, he is likely to get selected within the first five rounds.
Throughout various showcases and tournaments, Agbayani’s bat has proven to travel well. He turned heads in June’s MLB Combine in Arizona, stacking up hits against some of the top arms in the country.
‘Iolani senior Mana Lau Kong signed with the University of Hawai‘i, but there’s also a chance he doesn’t make it campus after being monitored by various MLB organizations.
With the increasing amount of pro scouts taking in regular season high school baseball games in Hawai‘i, the two that appeared to receive the most interest from pro scouts in 2025 were Kamehameha‘s Elai Iwanaga and Kaiser’s Bryson Toner. Iwanaga is set to play collegiately at UCLA, while Toner will play at Loyola Marymount if he does not go pro this summer.
Mililani senior shortstop Malosi Mata’afa-Alferos also received pro looks over the course of his high school career, though he is considered more likely to move on to the University of Oregon in the fall rather than turn professional.
In the local collegiate baseball scene, Hawai‘i Pacific University‘s Bronson Rivera caught the attention of scouts with his 2025 season in which he hit a program record 19 home runs while maintaining a .377 batting average.
As for the University of Hawai‘i, sophomore Itsuki Takemoto is viewed as the program’s top draft-eligible prospect. Utility player Ben Zeigler-Namoa has received pro interest dating back to his days as a junior college player at Yavapai College in Arizona, and his passion for the game has been lauded by scouts.
Matthew Miura, Jordan Donahue, Jared Quandt and Kamana Nahaku are other draft-eligible names for UH that have previously received pro interest.
For the latest news of Hawai‘i, sign up here for our free Daily Edition newsletter.
Christian Shimabuku can be reached at christian@alohastatedaily.com.
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