NIL
Week in 1,000 Words
Nevada Sports Net columnist Chris Murray is known to be a bit wordy, so we’re giving him 1,000 words (but no more than that) every Friday to share his thoughts from the week that was in the world of sports. * STEVE ALFORD APPROACHED the podium where Alex Meruelo was standing inside Lawlor Events Center […]


Nevada Sports Net columnist Chris Murray is known to be a bit wordy, so we’re giving him 1,000 words (but no more than that) every Friday to share his thoughts from the week that was in the world of sports.
* STEVE ALFORD APPROACHED the podium where Alex Meruelo was standing inside Lawlor Events Center this week to add his thoughts on the proposed Grand Sierra Resort Arena where his Nevada basketball team would play. Alford said the Wolf Pack needed the facility “desperately,” adding it was a case of survival for Nevada athletics as it tries to keep up in the increasingly expensive game of college athletics. Alford said he’s been in constant conversation about the facility project with Meruelo, the GSR’s owner. “I’ve had a crazy amount of talks with him and he’s about undefeated, he’s about national championships; I love that,” Alford said as the 50 people in attendance laughed. “That’s all true,” Meruelo chimed in.
* THE EXPECTATIONS WEREN’T set quite so high by university president Brian Sandoval, who speaking a couple minute earlier, said the Final Four was a goal, perhaps half-jokingly. Obviously, this trio, plus the others who spoke, were selling the vision and the potential. They had to aim high painting that vision. Nevada basketball has had great teams before but never gotten past the Sweet 16, the level it reached in 2004 and again in 2018. Since Alford took over six years ago, the Wolf Pack has twice reached the NCAA Tournament but not advanced, March being a painful month for Nevada fans during his tenure thus far. Could a new state-of-the-art $435 million arena change that?
* NEVADA MEN’S BASKETBALL has settled in as a good-but-not-championship-level Mountain West program post-Eric Musselman, going 113-75 overall and 61-48 in league under Alford with two 20-win seasons in six years. It’s harder now than ever before to win at the mid-major level with unprecedented transfers and unlimited name, image and likeness payments. If you have a great basketball player at a school like Nevada enjoy him for one season because that’s how long you’ll have him. Mid-major schools like Nevada need something that separates it. This arena, if built, could be a much needed spark for the program, which the Wolf Pack and this community have poured more money and emotional investment into than any other.
* THE DILEMMA — and there’s always a dilemma — is the public-money request. GSR Arena will only be built, the resort has said, if it gets $68 million in tax-increment financing toward phase one’s $786 million price tag (the arena alone is estimated at $435 million). That’s a 9 percent public subsidy of the total cost. That’s a reasonable ask when looking at the funding models of other arena/stadium builds in Nevada. Of course, Meruelo is a billionaire who a year ago this month sold his NHL team back to the league for $1 billion. Would I like to see him use that money to build this arena with no public money? Yes. Does it pencil out for Reno if he does get that TIF funding? Almost certainly. We’ll see if that handout is approved May 7.
* ASSUMING IT IS and the arena is built, Nevada basketball could become a West Coast juggernaut again like it was under Trent Johnson/Mark Fox and again under Musselman. And it’s not just because of the arena. Meruelo was one of the Wolf Pack’s early investors in NIL and remains so, helping to bankroll Nevada basketball’s player salaries (let’s be real, that’s what NIL is). If the team played on his property, that NIL money should only increase. He’d want a great team playing in a great arena and be wise to pay for such a team if he’s asking for undefeated national championship seasons. Imagine what could happen if he and a couple other boosters funded a $5 million-per-year roster. The Final Four doesn’t seem as outlandish.
* MERUELO SAID DURING that meeting with Wolf Pack boosters this week that basketball was his “first love,” and he did once try and buy the Atlanta Hawks before that deal fell apart, which has been the story of his life at the big-league professional level. With the Coyotes now sold, Meruelo could go all-in from a sports perspective on the Wolf Pack as well as his American Hockey League team, currently in Tucson and slated to move to Reno if GSR Arena is built. Meruelo could put his full sports focus, financially and emotionally, on the Wolf Pack. While I’m not saying that will happen, one big-time donor can push a program a far distance if so inclined.
* THIS IS WHY I’ve argued NIL is not a death sentence for college athletics or mid-majors. Fans of those schools are upset because they continually lose players. But don’t blame the players for wanting to maximize their market value. Blame the schools for not being able to produce the revenue to keep players. Schools that tap into that revenue can become really good, really fast. The dream, if you’re a Nevada basketball fan, is this arena is built and there’s a billionaire backer attached who will do what it takes and is incentivized to achieve a Final Four dream. Will this all happen? We don’t know. But the combination of the arena and an NIL benefactor is tantalizing.
* THE WOLF PACK’S who’s who was at this week’s gathering at Lawlor Events Center with athletic director Stephanie Rempe calling the arena a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” Sandoval saying of the arena’s potential “this bus stops once” and Alford adding it would push the basketball program and university to another level. With Final Four dreams, this arena not being built would be a crushing blow to the Wolf Pack athletic department. Its construction wouldn’t guarantee anything in future competitiveness, but it not being built would be the same-old, same-old, and Nevada can’t afford that.
Columnist Chris Murray provides insight on Northern Nevada sports. Contact him at crmurray@sbgtv.com or follow him on Twitter @ByChrisMurray.
NIL
SDSU SOCCER RELEASES 2025 SCHEDULE
Story Links BROOKINGS, S.D. — The South Dakota State soccer team has completed its 2025 schedule and will embark on its 26th season as a program this fall. The Jackrabbits make their return to the pitch after a 2024 season that saw SDSU earn its second consecutive Summit League tournament championship […]

BROOKINGS, S.D. — The South Dakota State soccer team has completed its 2025 schedule and will embark on its 26th season as a program this fall. The Jackrabbits make their return to the pitch after a 2024 season that saw SDSU earn its second consecutive Summit League tournament championship and its 15th overall conference title.
SDSU’s first three team public showings take place in Brookings at Fishback Soccer Park. The Jackrabbits take part in their annual Blue vs. Yellow Scrimmage on July 31. They follow it with a pair of exhibition matches, starting with an Aug. 5 meeting against Nebraska that kicks off at 6 p.m. The Jacks’ last exhibition sees the Yellow and Blue host Iowa Lakes Community College at 7 p.m. on Aug. 8.
The Jackrabbits officially begin their 2025 season with a two-match road trip to take on Missouri (Aug. 14) and Kansas (Aug. 17).
SDSU’s home opener sees the Jacks host Southwest Minnesota State at Fishback Soccer Park on Aug. 22.
The Jacks head to the Aloha State for the first time since 2021. South Dakota State is slated to play three contests in Hawaii at the Waipi’o Soccer Complex. The Jacks will play host Hawaii Pacific (Aug. 25) followed by matches against Cal Baptist (Aug. 28) and Northern Arizona (Aug. 31).
South Dakota State opens September by playing six of its next seven contests at Fishback Soccer Park.
The Jackrabbits host matches against Oregon State (Sept. 7), Northern Colorado (Sept. 14) and Wyoming (Sept. 18). SDSU’s lone away game sees the Jackrabbits travel to Des Moines, Iowa, to take on Drake on Sept. 10.
SDSU’s eight-match Summit League slate begins on Sept. 25 by facing St. Thomas in Brookings. The Jackrabbits host North Dakota (Oct. 2) and North Dakota State (Oct. 5) before traveling to Denver to play the Pioneers on Oct. 9.
The Jackrabbits will host their Senior Day match versus Omaha on Oct. 12.
State’s final three games of the regular season take place on the road. SDSU is scheduled to play South Dakota, as part of the Interstate Series presented by First Interstate Bank, on Oct. 18 in Vermillion. The Jackrabbits then travel further south to play at Kansas City (Oct. 23) and Oral Roberts (Oct. 26).
The 2025 Summit League Championship tournament is slated to run from Nov. 1-9. Home sites for the three rounds of competition are to be determined based on regular season standings.
-GoJacks.com-
NIL
Greg Sankey answers when vote will happen on College Football Playoff expansion
SEC commissioner Greg Sankey gave a bit of a tease as to when the vote will happen for the College Football Playoff expansion. 14 and 16 team brackets are on the table for potential expansion, beginning as early as the 2026-27 season. How the model will look is anyone’s guess. Team selection process is paramount […]

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey gave a bit of a tease as to when the vote will happen for the College Football Playoff expansion. 14 and 16 team brackets are on the table for potential expansion, beginning as early as the 2026-27 season.
How the model will look is anyone’s guess. Team selection process is paramount considering the 12-team bracket already changed the seeding for this coming season.
But Sankey reminded the good folks out there that the 12-team College Football Playoff is still in its evaluation period. If it’s any better this season, maybe it’ll give the committee and voters a better roadmap for expansion.
“The outer boundary is November 30, December 1 of this year for the ‘26 playoff,” Sankey said on The Dan Patrick Show. “Now keep in mind, when we went to 12 teams, the board said that’ll be the format for 2026, let’s start early if we can, which we obviously did, overall, in a successful way. But what was introduced immediately is, let’s go through these two years and conduct an evaluation.
“So we’re in that evaluation standpoint. A lot of talk about, really 14 or 16. I think 12 is known as it’s kind of a foundation point, but the conversation is about 14 or 16, and then how our teams selected or placed into whatever size bracket exists is the more the headline question.”
Sankey would just make it simple and go by the rankings, regardless of 12 teams or expansion. But with the amount of politicking going on, it might be hard to do so right now until there is a clear and concise selection formula.
“Well, I’ve been one who said over time, I give no allocation,” Sankey said. “So this whole five- seven thing that exists now, I just make it the 12 best teams. And I was clear on that. Now, when we get into rooms, we make political compromises, if you will, small p not like Congress, political compromises, but to achieve an outcome … We’ve spent so much time expanding and working through our own little side arguments about teams and, oh, we can’t do this. We need this. You got to protect this bowl game or that bowl game.
“We never went back to the essence of decision making, which is how our team selected as everyone relocated over the last four or five years, do the analyzes that existed and work for the four-team playoff in 2014, still have the same relevance, and we’re behind that curve in my opinion.”
NIL
The Players Era Festival Could be a Game-Changer for Gonzaga
While other top programs have spent the offseason treating the transfer portal like an all-inclusive buffet, the Zags have, as always, remained deliberate. So far, just two portal additions—Adam Miller from Arizona State and Tyon Grant-Foster from Grand Canyon—plus one high school commit, Parker Jefferson. And though it’s not yet official, Mario Saint-Supery appears all […]

While other top programs have spent the offseason treating the transfer portal like an all-inclusive buffet, the Zags have, as always, remained deliberate. So far, just two portal additions—Adam Miller from Arizona State and Tyon Grant-Foster from Grand Canyon—plus one high school commit, Parker Jefferson. And though it’s not yet official, Mario Saint-Supery appears all but locked in. While other schools have committed to full NIL-fueled rebuilds, the Zags have been a little more intentional than most.
With the Zags, fit always matters more than pedigree, and the program’s adherence to this philosophy is what’s allowed Gonzaga to stay competitive despite being a fraction of the size of just about every other top 25 program.
The Zags have always operated at an NIL disadvantage, but this November, the team will participate in something entirely new to the basketball world. The Players Era Festival is more than another early-season multi-team event like Maui or the Battle 4 Atlantis. It marks an unprecedented structural shift in how programs like Gonzaga can leverage visibility and NIL support without needing a Power Five bankroll to do it.
What Is the Players Era Festival?
The Players Era Festival is a tournament and NIL event held in Las Vegas during Thanksgiving week. It’s built to give college players meaningful NIL opportunities while generating significant college basketball hype early in the season, meaning fans can watch some high-level tournament-style basketball months before March Madness.
Launched in 2024 with eight teams and $9 million in distributed NIL money, the Players Era Festival returns in 2025 with an expanded format and a wider reach. Both the men’s and women’s tournaments will be held in Vegas, with combined NIL payouts expected to exceed $24 million. The men’s side will host 18 programs, including Alabama, Kansas, Baylor, Houston, Michigan, Auburn, and Gonzaga. For the first time, fans will get to see a big field of the best schools in the country in November, and players will have real financial gains at stake in their tournament performance.
If the Festival goes according to plan, non-conference scheduling priorities for smaller schools like Gonzaga could shift dramatically in the coming years.
The event pairs group-stage competition with bracketed play, and all participating teams receive guaranteed NIL compensation for their players, facilitated by the Festival’s partnership with TheLinkU. The model is something brand new in college basketball. NIL dollars in this case aren’t tethered to a school’s alumni base or booster culture but are instead based on team performance. Last year’s tournament winner, the Oregon Ducks, were able to leave Vegas $1.5 million richer in NIL opportunities, and this year’s will leave with significantly more than that.
This is a critical development for schools like Gonzaga. With a total undergraduate enrollment of under 6,000 and a local market that, while passionate, lacks the economic scale of major metro areas, Gonzaga operates without many of the baked-in NIL advantages enjoyed by other top-25 programs. (Of the other 24 teams on ESPN’s preseason top 25, no team has a smaller enrollment. Duke comes in slightly larger by undergrad population, and after that comes Saint John’s, which boasts an enrollment of nearly 16,000 undergrads.) The Festival offers a rare chance to compete on a highly visible national stage early in the season and with a financial floor already in place—no donor blitz or marketing scramble required. Most importantly, no waiting around for the Big Dance for Gonzaga’s players to receive the media attention typically reserved only for the end of the season.
A Hard Truth
Some fans may bristle at the idea that Gonzaga’s NIL situation could be—or has already been—a limiting factor in its recruiting pitch. But any time a school as small as Gonzaga is competing for recruits with the likes of USC (20,000+ undergrads), Kentucky (roughly 24,000), or Texas (over 40,000), the reality of a school’s alumni network and donor base needs to be faced.
By way of painful reminder: Nik Khamenia (Duke), Kingston Flemmings (Houston), and Zoom Diallo (Washington) were all high school targets the Zags pursued aggressively and missed out on. From the transfer portal, GU was reportedly in the mix for—but also missed out on—Malik Thomas (to Virginia), Donovan Dent (to UCLA), Rodney Rice (to USC), Sam Lewis (to Virginia), Andrej Stojakovic (to Illinois), Tyson Eaglestaff (to West Virginia), Silas Demary Jr. (to UConn), Brendan Hausen (to Iowa), and Jordan Ross (to Georgia). All of whom committed elsewhere, to much larger schools, with presumably more NIL money and opportunity than what was available at Gonzaga.
This obviously doesn’t mean that NIL was the biggest factor in the recruitment for these dudes, or even the decisive one, but if the portal has shown us anything in the last few years, it’s that for many, many players, money talks. Loudly.
The Equalizer
That’s what makes the Players Era Festival such a landmark opportunity for the Zags. It’s not about free money; it’s about access to opportunity tied to actual performance. For schools without the massive coffers or big-time corporate sponsors lining up at the door, it creates a foothold—a chance to let basketball speak for itself and weld performance to tangible financial benefits.
The Roster That Fits
For a team like Gonzaga, visibility can be hard to come by in the early part of the season, and although Mark Few always slates a brutal non-conference tilt for his team, by January, much of the national media attention understandably shifts toward the Power Five schools and Blue Bloods. An 81–50 blowout over Portland is a hoot to tune in for if you’re a Zag fan, but it’s not exactly “Must-See TV” for the rest of the college basketball viewing world. The massive media market available to schools in the SEC, for example, is simply not something the Zags have ever been able to compete with, and the Players Era Tournament levels that playing early on and in a highly competitive field, if even just a little bit.
For the first time ever, Gonzaga has an NIL event tailored to reward their winning edge despite the school’s size and scale. Rolling into Vegas and winning the Players Era Festival against schools who have spent this portal cycle doing Scrooge McDuck backstrokes through their endless piles of NIL cash would be just about the most Mark Few thing of the NIL era.
Still Gonzaga
That’s precisely what’s made the last 25 years of Bulldog basketball one of the most compelling stories in all of sports. The fact that a school this size has been able to sustain this level of success in this changing financial landscape is, frankly, astonishing. The Players Era Festival offers another opportunity to prove to recruits that Big Money does not equal Big Wins while still directing some of that Big Money right into the pockets of its players.
Gonzaga’s alumni network and available local business partnerships may be dwarfed by those of other schools; no other program in the country also has two former players—Chet Holmgren (OKC) and Andrew Nembhard (Indiana)—playing starting minutes in this year’s NBA Finals. No massive media market. No pay-for-play cloak-and-dagger “brand partnerships.” Just structure, development, and results. The only other school with players on both NBA Finals rosters is Kentucky—a university that graduates about as many students each year as Gonzaga even enrolls. That comparison says a lot about just how far above its weight class Gonzaga has been punching.
This year’s Players Era Festival won’t crown a new national champion (Oregon somehow beat Alabama in last year’s championship matchup, after all), but it could very well help reshape the perception of what schools like Gonzaga can offer their players in 2025 and beyond. The Zags will never have the booster network and alumni base of Texas, Michigan, or Florida. That’s just a simple fact. Never. But year after year, the Zags have still found a way to stay competitive.
What the Players Era Festival offers is a rare opportunity to showcase that competitive edge while connecting dudes with legit financial opportunities. It’s an NIL move that still lets the basketball speak for itself.
NIL
How Texas Tech’s Million-Dollar Transfer Changes NIL Landscape | Will Compton on Barstool Exit and New Show
Behind the pitching of its $1 million transfer NiJaree Canady, Texas Tech softball ended the powerhouse Oklahoma Sooners’ season Monday night. FOS reporter Amanda Christovich joins Baker Machado and Renee Washington on FOS Today to explain the NIL arms race and how the House v. NCAA settlement could throw a wrench in it. Plus, […]

Behind the pitching of its $1 million transfer NiJaree Canady, Texas Tech softball ended the powerhouse Oklahoma Sooners’ season Monday night. FOS reporter Amanda Christovich joins Baker Machado and Renee Washington on FOS Today to explain the NIL arms race and how the House v. NCAA settlement could throw a wrench in it.
Plus, Bussin’ With the Boys co-creator and host Will Compton explains his decision to leave Barstool for FanDuel, why it makes sense for some NFL players to retire early, and how his new podcast For the Dads came to life.
FOST also examines the importance of baseball managers and roasts the Orlando Magic’s new logo.
NIL
How Texas Tech’s Million-Dollar Transfer Changes NIL Landscape | Will Compton on Barstool Exit and New Show
How Texas Tech’s Million-Dollar Transfer Changes NIL Landscape | Will Compton on Barstool Exit and New Show – Front Office Sports […]

NIL
Million Dollar Pitching Star Makes National Impact During Texas Tech Historical Posts
The Red Raiders are making history in their debut trip to Oklahoma City for Women’s College World Series (WCWS) and NiJaree Canady is a big part of this historic run. Texas Tech is headed to the national championship series and this is the first time in WCWS history that a program has made it this […]

The Red Raiders are making history in their debut trip to Oklahoma City for Women’s College World Series (WCWS) and NiJaree Canady is a big part of this historic run.
Texas Tech is headed to the national championship series and this is the first time in WCWS history that a program has made it this far in their debut trip to OKC since the Oklahoma Sooners did it in 2000 per Brad Crawford with CBS Sports.
The team that the Red Raiders just beat to advance: the Oklahoma Sooners. The Raiders were also on a 37-game losing streak to the Sooners prior to their game Monday. They punched their ticket to the title game with a 3-2 win. By the time Canady left the pitching circle the Sooners had only five total hits.
The second Canady hit the transfer portal Texas Tech made her their main priority. She started her collegiate career with the Stanford Cardinals and she decided to pursue other programs for the rest of her career.
Texas Tech’s NIL Collective, offered her a one-year $1,050,24 contract just three days after she had entered the portal stated by Canady in an interview with Dave Wilson on ESPN. Canady also made it clear in her interview that if she didn’t believe in the program she wouldn’t have moved to Lubbock.
“I feel like people thought I heard the number and just came to Texas Tech, which wasn’t the case at all,” said Canady and she also mentioned that she took over a month to think the contract over.
Canady went into a program that had only won 31% of its conference games since the start of Big12 Conference. By the end of league play this season they were the conference champions for the first time in program history.
Canady is the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year for many reasons. With the Red Raiders she has a 30-5 record and an incredibly low 0.89 ERA as stated on the Red Raiders’ website.
Her list of accolades are lengthy including: NFCA First Team All-American (2024), PAC 12 Pitcher of the Year (2024), Women’s College World Series All-Tournament Team (2023,2024) among many, many other awards.
While there is a lot of controversy surrounding NIL contracts Canady has showed that there are positives to letting players make money off their names as she put Texas Tech Softball on the map this year. Even if they do not win the title this year this has ultimately changed the program for the better.
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