NIL
Trump considers executive order regarding payments to college athletes
Trump’s review of the matter comes in the wake of a conversation he had with former Alabama football coach Nick Saban earlier this week. Trump says he will revoke tax-exempt status for Harvard University The Trump administration has threatened to freeze $2 billion in federal funding after not agreeing to a list of demands from […]

Trump’s review of the matter comes in the wake of a conversation he had with former Alabama football coach Nick Saban earlier this week.

Trump says he will revoke tax-exempt status for Harvard University
The Trump administration has threatened to freeze $2 billion in federal funding after not agreeing to a list of demands from the administration.
- Sen. Richard Blumenthal, amid talks with Sen. Ted Cruz for bill, says Trump “has no power to attempt to rule by decree — especially to give handouts to the NCAA.”
WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump is giving “serious consideration” to signing an executive order that would address payments to college athletes, a person familiar with the matter confirmed to USA TODAY on May 2.
The person requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the matter.
Trump’s review of the matter comes in the wake of a conversation he had with former University of Alabama football coach Nick Saban on May 1, when Trump was in Tuscaloosa to speak at the university’s commencement ceremonies.
The order could potentially add oversight to name, image and likeness, or NIL, that has exploded across college athletics with few regulations, although how the order would address NIL was not immediately clear.
The Wall Street Journal first reported Trump’s consideration of the action, which would add to the more than 140 executive orders Trump has signed in his first 102 days, spanning a range of issues.
Saban has been critical of the current state of college sports, including at a roundtable event in Washington that was hosted by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, in March 2024 as part of Cruz’s ongoing efforts to craft college-sports legislation that can pass Congress.
Saban said at the time that athletes’ “personal development” was being hindered by the combination of virtually unregulated opportunities for athletes to make money from NIL and their ability to transfer multiple times in their college careers. He also called for “rules that create some kind of competitive balance, which right now we don’t have in college athletics. It’s whoever wants to pay the most money, raise the most money, buy the most players is going to have the best opportunity to win. I don’t think that’s the spirit of college athletics.”
U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Alabama, said he had a “great conversation” with Trump on Air Force One about “the importance of establishing national standards for NIL” during the president’s trip to his state.
“College football is the heart and soul of America ‒ but it’s in danger if we don’t level the playing field,” said Tuberville, a former football coach at Auburn University and other schools.
Trump’s potential entry into this area comes as lawyers for the plaintiffs, the NCAA and the Power Five conferences have been trying to revise one aspect of the proposed settlement of three athlete-compensation antitrust cases that U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken has said she is otherwise prepared to give final approval.
Under the arrangement, $2.8 billion in damages would be paid to current and former athletes — and their lawyers — over 10 years, and Division I schools would be able to start paying athletes directly for use of their NIL, subject to a per-school cap that would increase over time and be based on a percentage of certain athletics revenues. Athletes would continue to be allowed to have NIL deals with non-school entities, but any deals worth $600 or more would be subject to greater scrutiny than they are now.
While the proposed settlement would solve some problems for the NCAA and its conferences and schools, they have continued to lobby Congress for legislation that would, among other things, enshrine in federal law athletes’ NIL rights, preempt dozens of state laws that have been passed in connection with athletes’ NIL rights and give the NCAA a measure of legal protection against antitrust actions. This is where Trump could step in.
Trump instructed White House aides to begin studying what an order would look like, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., on the night of May 2, said in a statement to USA TODAY of Trump’s potential involvement: “College sports reform can only happen through Congressional legislation based on bipartisan negotiations that put college athletes first. The President is welcome to support Senate negotiations, but he has no power to attempt to rule by decree — especially to give handouts to the NCAA over the blood, sweat, and tears of players.”
One of the lead lawyers for the plaintiffs in the ongoing antitrust case, Steve Berman, in a statement to USA TODAY, blasted the prospect of Trump’s involvement in any way that would limit athletes.
“The president says he is the greatest business person ever,” Berman wrote. “Why would he do anything to limit the business deals students are negotiating for their NIL. He has been a benefit of the free market why not these young athletes[.]
“As for Saban what a hypocrite. He has been an opponent of NIL from the start while he made tens of millions off the backs of these athletes. Even [J]ustice Kavanaugh, one of (Trump’s) appointed judges, stated in his [A]lston decision that this was wrong.
“Trump should talk to coach (Jim) Harbaugh who is a fan of the burgeoning NIL market and not a fan of the system of coach exploitation that Saban benefited from[.]”
Berman was referencing Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s concurring opinion to the Supreme Court’s unanimous ruling in the Alston vs. NCAA antitrust case in which the high court ended the association’s limits on education-related benefits athletes can receive for playing college sports. Kavanaugh heavily criticized the NCAA’s limits on athletes’ compensation, writing, among other things: “The NCAA’s business model would be flatly illegal in almost any other industry in America.”
Harbaugh, now with the NFL’s Los Angeles Chargers, repeatedly advocated for greater compensation for college athletes during his nine seasons as the University of Michigan’s football coach.
NIL
EA Sports to debut College Football 26 trailer Thursday
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (WBRC) – The college football season doesn’t start until Aug. 23 when Kansas State and Iowa State kick off in Dublin, but fans of the EA Sports video game series won’t have to wait that long. It was revealed Tuesday that Alabama’s Ryan Williams and Ohio State’s Jeremiah Smith are the cover athletes […]

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (WBRC) – The college football season doesn’t start until Aug. 23 when Kansas State and Iowa State kick off in Dublin, but fans of the EA Sports video game series won’t have to wait that long.
It was revealed Tuesday that Alabama’s Ryan Williams and Ohio State’s Jeremiah Smith are the cover athletes for College Football 26 and now Electronic Arts is ready to show off more of the game.
The full reveal is set to be released Thursday on EA Sports College YouTube channel Thursday morning.
The preview image released on Facebook promises another exciting update to this year’s game.
College Football 25, the first game since 2013’s NCAA Football 14, did not include true-to-life head coaches, despite including player’s names and likenesses for the first time ever thanks to NIL in college athletics.
Wednesday, EA Sports released the first image of Ohio State head coach Ryan Day, marking an inclusion.
Meanwhile, the cover of the deluxe edition of College Football 26 shows Day, Georgia’s Kirby Smart, and Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman.
EA Sports College Football 26 releases on Xbox Series S|X and PlayStation 5 on July 10 with fans who preorder the deluxe edition getting access three days sooner.
Get news alerts in the Apple App Store and Google Play Store or subscribe to our email newsletter here.
Copyright 2025 WBRC. All rights reserved.
NIL
Liberty softball transfer portal tracker 2025
The transfer portal for softball opened May 18 and will remain open until June 16, providing a window for players to enter the portal during this time period. Liberty softball has been very active in the portal in recent years and are expected to be once again as head coach Dot Richardson and the Lady […]

The transfer portal for softball opened May 18 and will remain open until June 16, providing a window for players to enter the portal during this time period. Liberty softball has been very active in the portal in recent years and are expected to be once again as head coach Dot Richardson and the Lady Flames look to build off the program’s first ever Super Regional appearance.
This page will track which Liberty players enter the transfer portal and which players in the portal decide to transfer to the Flames. It will be updated for each addition to either category.
TRANSFERRING TO LIBERTY
TBD
TRANSFERRING FROM LIBERTY
5/27/25: 2B Brooke Wildes
Wildes redshirted in 2024, her first season with the Lady Flames. This past spring, she played in two games and was 0 for 1 at the plate.
5/26/25: P Tyler Oubre
Oubre transferred to Liberty from Louisiana prior to the 2024 season. She appeared in 12 games with 5 starts during her first season on the Mountain, going 2-2 with a 3.73 ERA with one complete game shutout and one save. She had 13 walks and 14 strikeouts in 35.2 innings. This past spring, Oubre had 9 appearances with 4 starts. She posted a 2-0 record with a 2.45 ERA while walking 14 and striking out 17 in 20 innings pitched.
5/26/25: C Madi Bachman
The younger sister of Liberty pitcher Paige Bachman, Madi transferred to Liberty after spending the fall of 2023 at UTEP. From Fredericksburg, Virginia, Bachman redshirted in 2024 and did not record any stats in 2025 for the Flames.
5/21/25: IF Kerissa Howell
In 2024, Howell played in two games while making one start at third base, going 1 for 4 at the plate. In 2025, she did not record any stats.
5/19/25: IF Vanessa Perez
Perez redshirted at Liberty in 2024 and did not record any stats this past spring.
5/19/25: OF Mariah Bazile
Bazile redshirted in 2024, and she played in one game in 2025, walking once.
NIL
How much does NiJaree Canady make in NIL compensation at Texas Tech?
Why Texas Tech could blow up the 2025 WCWS bracket The Oklahoman’s Jenni Carlson breaks down why Texas Tech and NiJaree Canady will be the team to break the Women’s College World Series bracket this year. One year removed from leading Stanford to back-to-back Women’s College World Series appearances and winning the USA Softball Collegiate […]


Why Texas Tech could blow up the 2025 WCWS bracket
The Oklahoman’s Jenni Carlson breaks down why Texas Tech and NiJaree Canady will be the team to break the Women’s College World Series bracket this year.
One year removed from leading Stanford to back-to-back Women’s College World Series appearances and winning the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year award, NiJaree Canady has single-handedly pitched No. 12 Texas Tech to Oklahoma City while continuing to be the best pitcher in the country.
She’s also the most expensive arm in college softball.
The 6-foot junior right-hander has delivered on every dollar of her record-breaking NIL deal with Texas Tech. She has taken the Red Raiders on a historic run, leading the program into the Women’s College World Series for the first time.
Texas Tech begins its chase for its first national championship at 7 p.m. ET on Thursday, May 29 against Ole Miss at Devon Park in Oklahoma City.
Here’s what to know about Canady’s NIL situation at Texas Tech ahead of the Women’s College World Series:
How much does NiJaree Canady make at Texas Tech?
Canady signed a one-year, $1,050,024 NIL contract with Texas Tech’s NIL collective, The Matador Club, last July when she transferred to the Red Raiders from Stanford, according to ESPN.
Her contract is broken down to $1 million for Canady herself, $50K for living expenses and $24 for her jersey number.
NiJaree Canady Texas Tech NIL situation, explained
When Canady entered the transfer portal last July, it caused some shock waves throughout college softball, mainly because she excelled at Stanford and made the Women’s College World Series in back-to-back seasons with the Cardinal.
Canady choosing Texas Tech was also a bit of a shock.
The Red Raiders had just hired a new head coach in Gerry Glasco after his predecessor, Craig Snider, resigned. The sport’s biggest brands — Oklahoma, Texas and Tennessee, to name a few — were also involved in the Canady sweepstakes. But with name, image and likeness dominating all college sports, the Red Raiders had a life-altering package for Canady.
On top of Glasco, the two catalysts behind Texas Tech’s negotiation efforts with Canady were Tracy and John Sellers, former Texas Tech athletes who are two of the Red Raiders’ biggest boosters. Tracy Sellers played softball at Texas Tech from 2001-03 and made 89 starts while totaling 58 hits.
“My message was: We’re talking about Bo Jackson. We’re talking about Herschel Walker,” Glasco told ESPN on what he told the Sellers. “We’re talking about a once-in-a-generation player that’s already made a name all over America. She’s a folk hero in our sport and she’s a sophomore.”
Canady then came down to Lubbock, Texas, for a visit with the Red Raiders.
“We look at it as they deserve it just as much (as male athletes). She worked so hard to be the No. 1 pitcher in the country. … I left that meeting and thought, this is who I would love to put a lot of effort into because of who she is,” Glasco told ESPN regarding Texas Tech’s financial commitment to Canady.
So, how did the nation’s best pitcher and reigning USA Softball Collegiate Pitcher of the Year hit the open market? According to The Athletic, Canady’s family approached Stanford’s NIL collective, Lifetime Cardinal, seeking a new NIL deal for her during her freshman season.
Stanford and Lifetime Cardinal did not give a new deal to Canady that season. The NIL collective also didn’t give Canady a new NIL contract last season, when she was named the best player in college softball, until the last day the NCAA portal was open.
So, Canady hit the portal. The belief was the starting rate for Canady was in the range of $100,000-$150,000, per The Athletic.
Stanford was prepared to follow up its initial offer to Canady with a “much larger offer” that would have been “within shouting distance” of Texas Tech’s offer to Canady, per The Athletic. However, once Canady took her recruiting visit to Texas Tech, the odds of her returning to Stanford took a turn for the worse.
The Red Raiders also let Canady do something she was unable to at Stanford: hit. In 55 games this season, Canady has posted a .312 batting average with a slugging percentage of .720 and an on-base percentage of .454. She has recorded 34 RBIs, 29 hits and 11 home runs.
The Red Raiders checked all the boxes for Canady while making her a $1 million arm.
NiJaree Canady stats
Canady enters the Women’s College World Series with the nation’s best ERA (0.89) in 205 innings of work. She’s struck out 279 batters and recorded a 30-5 record.
Here’s a year-by-year breakdown of Canady’s collegiate stats:
- 2023 (Stanford): 17-3 record in 33 appearances (10 complete games) with a 0.57 ERA, 218 strikeouts and four saves in 135 innings of work. She allowed 64 hits and 13 runs (11 earned runs).
- 2024 (Stanford): 24-7 record in 41 appearances (29 complete games) with a 0.73 ERA, 337 strikeouts and five saves in 230⅔ innings of work. She allowed 116 hits and 37 runs (24 earned runs).
- 2025 (Texas Tech): 30-5 record in 40 appearances (33 complete games) with a 0.89 ERA, 279 strikeouts and two saves in 205 innings of work. She’s allowed 107 hits and 37 runs (26 earned runs).
NIL
Sarkisian refutes report Texas’ roster could cost $40M
Head coach Steve Sarkisian is refuting a report that states Texas’ 2025 roster budget is between $35 million and $40 million. The reported one-time expense exceeds the $20.5-million revenue-sharing allotment that’s expected to be in place once the House vs. NCAA antitrust settlement is resolved. The looming resolution to the court case would limit the […]

Head coach Steve Sarkisian is refuting a report that states Texas’ 2025 roster budget is between $35 million and $40 million.
The reported one-time expense exceeds the $20.5-million revenue-sharing allotment that’s expected to be in place once the House vs. NCAA antitrust settlement is resolved. The looming resolution to the court case would limit the amount of funds that schools can funnel to their roster. The school’s collective, Texas One Fund, is reportedly paying out through NIL contributions but is expected to be phased out in favor of the revenue sharing and other NIL corporations.
“What’s frustrating on that is that it was a little bit of irresponsible reporting,” Sarkisian said in an interview on SiriusXM’s SEC Radio, according to KXAN’s Billy Gates. “One anonymous source said that’s what our roster was. I wish we had $40 million on our roster, we’d probably be a little bit better team than we are.”
What Sarkisian said upset him the most about the report is that he wasn’t questioned prior to the story being published.
While Sarkisian insists the totals being floated around aren’t accurate, he admitted that investing money into roster-building has become common in college football.
“The idea to think that other schools aren’t spending money to get players … it’s the state of college football. It is what it is,” he said.
Sarkisian has guided Texas to success over the past few years. The Longhorns won the Big 12 title in their final season in the conference in 2023 and appeared in the SEC championship game last year. The 51-year-old shared he’d like “another $15 million or so” to improve his roster.
Quarterback Arch Manning is expected to lead a potent offense while Anthony Hill and Colin Simmons star on the defensive side. The Longhorns will kick off next season against reigning national champion Ohio State on Aug. 30.
NIL
Quarterback Dads give college football coaches nightmares like never before, but there’s hope
Be like Jay Underwood, Quarterback Dads. The father of Michigan super freshman Bryce Underwood is one of the good ones. There are good ones despite the constant barrage of headlines about Quarterback Dads gone wild — Carl Williams (Caleb’s dad) torching his son’s employer publicly, Nic Iamaleava (Nico’s dad) bungling a good situation at Tennessee, […]

Be like Jay Underwood, Quarterback Dads.
The father of Michigan super freshman Bryce Underwood is one of the good ones. There are good ones despite the constant barrage of headlines about Quarterback Dads gone wild — Carl Williams (Caleb’s dad) torching his son’s employer publicly, Nic Iamaleava (Nico’s dad) bungling a good situation at Tennessee, Deion Sanders (Shedeur’s dad) doing whatever he did to contribute to a fringe NFL first-round talent going in the fifth round, and so on.
Those are three success stories at the glamor position of American sports, of course, which means some parental credit must be due. But some of the behaviors match that of countless Quarterback Dads whose sons’ names aren’t known, whose misdirected ambition and absence of perspective make them college football outlaws of sorts.
“Quarterback Dad” is generally not a compliment among the college coaches I talked to for this piece, some of whom have stopped recruiting quarterbacks who checked every box except: Can we tolerate his dad?
“We’re picking the dad almost as much as we’re picking the quarterback,” said a Power 4 head coach, who was granted anonymity, like others in this story, so he could speak freely on the subject. “Every person in this business has horror stories.”
The explosion of money in the game in the past few years has made things only more toxic. But I’m here to tell you there’s hope.
There’s hope, in part because, at some point, college athletics will become less chaotic. That’s probably going to require collective bargaining at some point. But it will happen, and it means player movement will slow down and compensation will be fairly determined by professionals. Less chaos in college football should mean less chaos among its various factions.
Also, at least there’s awareness of the Quarterback Dad dynamic. We’re talking about it. People are trying to make things better, including the guy who wrote the actual book on Quarterback Dads, the guy who presents Jay Underwood as a “how-to” of sorts for those with pigskin-slinging children.
Donovan Dooley is a prominent quarterbacks coach who counts Bryce Underwood among his clients, has worked with the family for years and noted in that 2022 book (written with sportswriter Teddy Greenstein and aptly titled “Quarterback Dads: Wild Tales from the Field”) that Jay had previously been “the classic Quarterback Dad, in every maddening sense.”
This included Jay’s proclamation, when Bryce was closer to elementary school than graduation, that he could “be the LeBron James of football.” Invoking the (arguable) GOAT of another sport is a classic sign of the Not-In-Touch-With-Reality Dad, and Jay’s admitted overzealousness in critiquing his son screamed Helicopter Dad. These are two of the 12 types of problematic Quarterback Dads detailed by Dooley (he lists three good types).

Bryce Underwood’s dad, Jay, has remained largely in the background and allowed his son to enjoy the spotlight of being the No. 1 recruit in the nation. (Mike Mulholland / Getty Images)
It all changed when Jay, with Dooley’s help, realized how strained his relationship with his son was getting. To save it, he needed to revert to being just a dad and take the pressure off his son.
“Total turnaround,” Dooley, whose Quarterback University is based in Detroit, said last week. “Now, Jay stays in the background a lot. Hell, I don’t even know if some of the staff at Michigan know him. It’s usually not that way when your son is a prime guy like this, but he sits back and lets Bryce do his thing.”
To that point, Underwood could not be reached to speak on the topic.
This is the kind of reform Dooley seeks to foster. Not that he’s seen enough of it. The urge to help goes back to his Detroit childhood as a future high school and college quarterback, dealing with a father he described as “crazy as hell” when it came to pushing him in football.
The book inspired an outpouring of letters and emails, Dooley said, from fathers who apologized for their behavior and from both mothers and fathers who thanked him for forcing moments of clarity with his storytelling.
But Greenstein and Dooley wrote it in the early days of the dirtiest phrase in college football coaching: “NIL and the transfer portal.” For folks in that profession, NIL, the transfer portal and the Quarterback Dad make up the unofficial unholy trinity of the sport.
“It’s heightened the anxiety around everything,” Dooley said of Quarterback Dads now having seven-figure paydays as incentive and free movement as leverage. “I mean, you’ve got dads, not long after kids get out of the womb, kids that are 5 years old, coming up with logos and slogans for social media to get attention. You’ve got dads talking dollar amount with coaches before they ever talk football or academics.”
How bad is it for some? One Power 4 coach contacted for an interview on Quarterback Dads replied: “Nah. I’m staying away from that.”
A Group of 5 head coach said he loved the topic and that it should be made into a documentary, but was fearful of telling any specific stories because “if it ever got back to me, I’d never get a quarterback again, ever.”
He did explain the difference between dealing with problematic Quarterback Dads now and five years ago.
“A dad texts, ‘Why aren’t we doing more quick game with my son? Why so much dropback game?’ S— like that,” the coach said. “Back before the portal, you text back something like, ‘Man, let’s sit down after the season and talk about this if you feel that way.’ Now? You pick up the phone immediately and talk through it. You explain why you’re doing what you’re doing, in detail.”
This isn’t necessarily all bad, the coach said, because “we really should be giving our kids more ‘whys’ in today’s game and we should be thinking about it collaboratively.”
It’s just harder to be collaborative with someone who, unlike the quarterback in question, doesn’t play the game and doesn’t know the concepts or what it takes to execute them. This can be the mark of The “We” Dad in Dooley’s book (the dad who thinks he’s also part of the team), The Stat-Hungry Dad or The Really-Not-In-Touch-With-Reality Dad. Or all three.
“Some of them, the wild, wild ones, are all 12,” Dooley said of categories that also include The Reminiscer, The Jealous Dad and The Braggin’ Dad. “Those are the ones who read the book and say, ‘I’m none of those.’ I’m like, ‘Dude, you’re all of those.’ ”
Dooley got to know the Iamaleavas on the recruiting circuit and considers Nic Iamaleava (who did not respond to a request for comment) a friend. He also considers him a cautionary tale.
As a Group of 5 assistant coach said about Nico Iamaleava’s abrupt departure from Tennessee amid reported financial conflict: “The kid’s in a perfect offensive system for him, he’s paid $2 million a year, even as a freshman to not play and redshirt, and you leave that for UCLA? That’s not the kid, that’s the people around him.”
As an outspoken expert on the topic, Dooley has also become a resource for college coaches in the past few years. This is not unlike college coaches who give frank assessments of their former players’ personalities for interested NFL personnel people. In this case, coaches hit up Dooley on what he’s observed and/or heard about various Quarterback Dads.
“I’m never going to say anything too negative,” Dooley said. “My code word is, ‘Yeah, that dad is wired a little different.’ That’s my polite way of saying, ‘S—, be ready for everything you don’t want.’”
What they want is what we all should want, which is for parents to not make life more difficult for their children by mangling experiences that should be positive and enriching.
If you’re like me and you’ve spent a lot of years as a parent around a lot of different sports, you’ve seen some ridiculous behavior from alleged adults. Economics, both in terms of the cost of higher education and the rewards possible for the tiny fraction of a fraction of elite athletes, dictates some of this.
It does not excuse completely missing the point of what both sports and parents are supposed to be.
“Sport is sacred,” Vanderbilt coach Clark Lea said. “It’s sacred because it’s a vessel of self-discovery. You learn to belong to yourself, so you can belong to something bigger. Sport is a place of belonging and community where you can gather a large body of people around one mission. That’s special, that’s sacred, but sports culture is sick right now.
“And you can experience that at any level of competition. There are a lot of parents who are focused on the performance of a child rather than the development of a child.”
This is not new.
I’ll keep unnamed the Quarterback Dad who used to call me frequently about 20 years ago, once assuring me the very bad team I covered had as much talent as Pete Carroll’s national champion USC Trojans and was poorly coached — that was very untrue, and he was very inebriated.
The late Marv Marinovich remains the standard of Quarterback Dad dysfunction, as first revealed in the 1988 Sports Illustrated story “Bred to be a Superstar” by Doug Looney about Marv’s QB son, Todd Marinovich. Marv used Eastern Bloc training methods to build him into a passing machine and essentially hijacked his childhood. Todd was a star recruit prohibited from eating fast food, a USC quarterback arrested for cocaine possession, a failed pro and now a dad speaking out on the right way to nurture kids in sports.
Plenty of Quarterback Dads care about that. Some of them fall into Dooley’s good categories — The Helpful Dad, The Hands-Off Dad, The Coach Dad. Archie Manning, who has said the 1988 SI story on Marinovich spooked him into taking special care with his boys, falls into all three.
So does Dave Henigan, said Memphis coach Ryan Silverfield. Henigan is the head coach at Ryan High School in Denton, Texas. His son Seth just wrapped up four years of starting for the Tigers. Opportunities to leave and make more money emerged. Conversations about fair compensation happened, as they should.
Development, relationships and happiness prevailed. Seth threw for more than 14,000 yards, and now he’s with the Jacksonville Jaguars as an undrafted free agent.
“Stability should matter,” Silverfield said. “And transparency. A huge part of this whole thing is both sides being transparent with each other.”
Sometimes that still results in a change in environment, and sometimes that’s the right choice. I wanted to interview one of the most impressive Quarterback Dads I’ve encountered for this story, in part because I can see how his son’s movement — a fourth school in four years starting this fall — could give a completely false impression of their outlook.
Mike Wright, now at East Carolina, just wants a chance to play after coming up short at Northwestern, Mississippi State and Vanderbilt. Big Mike Wright just wanted to support his son. Tragically, Big Mike passed away recently at age 49.
“He was an example of a dad who always functioned in support of his son, not his football player, you know what I mean?” Lea said.
“My father never played football, but he loved his kids,” Mike Wright said of an engineer who tutored athletes while a student at the University of Tennessee. “Whatever we loved to do, we made it his passion.”
I did a story on the Wrights, a delightful family of six, in 2022 before Wright embarked on his starting opportunity at Vanderbilt. I went back through the notes last week and found some Big Mike Wright quotes that didn’t make the story.
He said: “I tell my kids, ‘Put your phones down, don’t listen to the noise, don’t listen to the chatter. Have fun and play football and don’t stress out too much.’ ”
He said: “Your life is an interview and everyone around you is the interview panel. So first of all, stay humble.”
He said: “Even in high school, Mike went through adversity and it wasn’t easy. At one point, I texted his coach and said, ‘I really appreciate you, because you’re making him earn everything.’”
Hey, Quarterback Dads: Be like Big Mike.
(Top photo of Nico and Nic Iamaleava: Donald Page / Getty Images)
NIL
‘NIL money is crazy’ – 2025 Draft projected first-rounder announces shock decision over his NBA future
A projected 2025 NBA first-round pick has revealed a stunning decision over his future. The announcement was made on Tuesday, with just under a month to go until the 2025 NBA Draft. 3 UAB Blazers forward Yaxel Lendeborg holding his AAC Tournament MVP trophy in March 2024Credit: Getty 3 Lendeborg spotted during a November 2024 […]

A projected 2025 NBA first-round pick has revealed a stunning decision over his future.
The announcement was made on Tuesday, with just under a month to go until the 2025 NBA Draft.

3

3
The NCAA deadline for players to withdraw from the NBA Draft and maintain college eligibility is Wednesday at 11:59 pm ET.
So on Tuesday, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported that Yaxel Lendeborg will withdraw from the 2025 NBA Draft to spend his final collegiate season at the Michigan Wolverines.
The decision comes as a surprise, as Lendeborg was a projected first-round pick in the 2025 NBA Draft.
“While it’s been and still is a dream of mine to play in the NBA, I feel the development and growth as a player and a person I will gain at the University of Michigan will be very beneficial,” Lendeborg told ESPN.
Fans were stunned at Lendeborg’s decision to remain in college for one more season.
“Did NOT see this one coming,” one wrote.
“I am kinda shocked by this,” another commented.
“NIL money is crazy,” a third added.
Lendeborg played for the UAB Blazers from 2023 and 2025.
Last season, the 22-year-old averaged 17.7 points, 11.4 rebounds, 4.2 assists, 1.8 blocks, and 1.7 steals per game.
Lendeborg also shot 55 percent from two-point range and 36 percent from deep.
He was the AAC Tournament MVP in 2024 and received a first-team All-AAC and AAC Defensive Player of the Year nods in each of the last two campaigns.
Lendeborg was the No. 1 big man in the NCAA transfer portal and committed to coach Dusty May in April.
He was the No. 1 big man in the NCAA transfer portal and committed to coach Dusty May in April.
The 6-foot-9 Lendeborg’s draft stock was rising after his performance in the NBA Draft combine earlier this month.

3
Lendeborg was expected to be drafted between the No. 20 and No. 30 picks.
But he has the chance to be drafted earlier in the 2026 NBA Draft.
And Lendeborg will be part of a Wolverines squad that has aspirations to win the NCAA tournament next season.
Michigan appeared in the Sweet 16 of the 2024-25 NCAA tournament.
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Major League Baseball results
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Sports3 weeks ago
Hilir Henno of UC Irvine Receives AVCA Distinction of Excellence Award
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Sports3 weeks ago
Work out, don't run out