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Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger reports “the House Rules Committee has posted an announcement for a meeting Monday to discuss the SCORE Act – a procedural step in the college sports bill reaching the House floor, which is expected as early as next Wednesday. It is believed to have the votes to pass the House.” (link, link - full text); Dellenger adds the SCORE Act “will be met with resistance in the US Senate.” (link)
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Texas attorney general Ken Paxton has dispatched a three-page letter to the seven power conference schools within the Lone Star State urging them not to sign the College Sports Commission’s participation agreement – “a document that binds the 68 power league programs together under new enforcement rules, most notably requiring them to waive their right to sue over infractions decisions” and “only enforceable if all members of the Big Ten, Big 12, SEC and ACC sign.” Per Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger, Paxton writes he’s “‘gravely concerned’ about the implications of the agreement and ‘urges’ Texas universities to decline signing. He identifies several reasons that schools should not sign the document, including the requirement to waive legal action, the CSC’s over-extension of authority to penalize programs without a legitimate option for appeal and the concept of schools acquiescing to ‘unnamed policies.’ Perhaps most notably, Paxton targets the agreement’s notion of arbitration. The agreement provides schools an avenue of arbitration in exchange for not filing legal challenges against the College Sports Commission. However, … Texas public universities are prohibited by state law from agreeing to arbitration.” Paxton: “CSC clearly seeks to coerce compliance with its rules and limit a (school’s) means of redress if dissatisfaction arises for any reason.” According to Dellenger, Paxton also sent a separate letter to attorneys general in states with lower league programs. Full text from both letters. (link, link)
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Colorado projects a balanced FY25 budget with the department expecting to report $141,069,019 in total revenue offset by the same amount in total expenses. Institutional support from the CU Boulder campus and the President’s office is expected to be lower YoY by about $2M at around $24M for FY25. CU Athletics is also expected to meet the $20.5M revenue share cap outlined by the House Settlement, which includes $600K in additional scholarships to student-athletes. These added expenditures will appear in the FY26 NCAA Financial Report. As a result, preliminary budget projections highlight a department deficit of $27M, which will be offset in part by $4M in additional ticket revenue due to seven home football games in the 2025 season, $6.8M additional revenue generated by concerts and other outside events, and $500K due to the first increase in student athletic fees since 1994. The department is aggressively working on sponsorship agreements and the deficit will not be offset by tuition, funds for academic initiatives or by funds from the government. The department will also continue to explore ways in which to cut expenses, however it will not cut sports nor cut any resources for student-athletes, including academics, nutrition, and psychological health and performance. (link)
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The Men's and Women's Basketball Oversight Committees have proposed that the notification-of-transfer windows open for 15 days starting after the conclusion of the 2026 Men's and Women's Final Fours. Under the proposals, which need DI Cabinet approval and would go into effect in April 2026, the DI women's basketball notification-of-transfer window would open April 6-20, while the men's would open April 7-21. The committees also proposed an alteration to when student-athletes can request to enter the NCAA Transfer Portal after a coaching change. Once a school announces a new head coach hire, there will be a five-day period for the new coaching staff and current players to meet. After that five-day period, student-athletes would have a 15-day window to notify their school to enter the Transfer Portal. If a new head coach isn't hired within 30 days of the previous coach's departure, student-athletes would have a 15-day window to enter the Transfer Portal beginning the 31st day. However, if a coaching change is made after Jan. 1, student-athletes would have to wait until the notification-of-transfer window opens in April. (link)
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Florida Baseball HC Kevin O’Sullivan was identified in October by a state child-welfare investigator as the subject of verbal abuse allegations made by one of his teenage children, per The Independent Florida Alligator’s Garrett Shanley, who notes “records show that the state Department of Children and Families planned to remove the child from O’Sullivan’s home on Oct. 16 — six days before UF announced that O’Sullivan … was taking an indefinite leave of absence to address ‘personal and family issues.’ … The six-page law enforcement report details separate interactions among O’Sullivan, his family and authorities over two days, from Oct. 14 to Oct. 15. [Elin] Garavuso, the child-welfare investigator, said the state agency would remove the teen from O’Sullivan’s home ‘for the time being’ on Oct. 16 and place the child with O’Sullivan’s ex-wife, who lives nearby. It is unclear whether the removal ultimately occurred. After each meeting, authorities wrote they found no evidence of a crime — citing an absence of violence during interviews; a lack of visible marks on the teen accuser, who was wearing long pants and a sweatshirt; and that the teen’s sibling contradicted statements from the children’s mother, who told deputies O’Sullivan had ‘threatened the kids’ and ‘put hands on kids’ within the previous two weeks. … A lawyer for O’Sullivan sent a cease-and-desist letter to The Alligator late Tuesday, demanding the student-run newspaper refrain from ‘publishing any article regarding any report of the abuse of a minor child.’ … The status of the state’s investigations — including whether they have been completed or whether O’Sullivan has been exonerated — are unknown.” More. (link)
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Football Files…
➤ Colorado State is hiring UConn Football HC Jim Mora to lead the Rams’ program. (link)
➤ Tennessee Tech Football HC Bobby Wilder inks a new five-year contract that could keep him in Cookeville through 2030. (link)
➤ North Texas will receive a buyout of $2.3M from Oklahoma State following the Cowboys’ hiring of UNT Football HC Eric Morris, per the Denton Record-Chronicle’s Brett Vito. (link)
➤ USF CEO of Athletics Rob Higgins on reports linking Bulls Football HC Alex Golesh with the Arkansas HC job, remarks: “Since Saturday’s game, Coach Golesh has been presented with outside opportunities that he has been transparent about with us. We are respectful and supportive of Coach and his family in their decision making process. We’ll remain in constant communication. Bulls Nation, rest assured, we are ultra prepared for every scenario that could unfold in the coming hours/days. Our commitment and investment has never been higher and we’re also laser focused on being great stewards of our resources. Most importantly, the future of USF Football has never been more bright! Go Bulls!” (link)
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People & Places…
➤ Southern intends to move on from Dennis Shields, who has held the roles of President and main campus Chancellor since July 2022, with SU Board of Supervisors members expected to select an Interim President to take over on Jan. 1. A search committee will then be formed in early 2026 to find his replacement, with the process expected to take five to six months. (link, link)
➤ Butler names Colorado Rapids (MLS) AC Ian Sarachan as its next Men’s Soccer HC. (link)
➤ Utah Valley elevates AHC Michael Chesler to serve as the Wolverines’ new Men’s Soccer HC. (link)
➤ Baylor signs Women’s Soccer HC Michelle Lenard to a contract extension after four seasons in charge. (link)
➤ Central Michigan Field Hockey HC Jennifer Johnstone’s contract won’t be renewed after four campaigns at the helm. (link)
➤ Indiana State Women’s Volleyball HC Ashlee Pritchard resigns after four years with the program. (link)
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Is North Dakota State Football HC Tim Polasek’s new contract a sign of bigger things to come? That’s the query posed by Inforum’s Mike McFeely, who while admitting entering conspiracy theory territory, writes: “I was told Polasek turned down an FBS job earlier Tuesday. Which one, I don’t know. But, if true, the fact he turned down an FBS job to sign a long-term contract with an FCS school is all by its lonesome extremely interesting and conspiracy worthy. … The other juicy nugget is the number of hot and heavy rumors flying around the past several days about NDSU and the Mountain West Conference playing footsie again. This happens every once in a while, so absorb it all with a massive grain of salt. I’ve had zero success getting any information from anybody. But for what it’s worth, there are some specific details to the latest round of gossip. So when the Polasek news broke, my first thought — and I mean the first — was that NDSU has something cooking with an FBS move. Why would an FCS head coach with aspirations to be an FBS coach turn down an FBS job and sign a new contract to stay at an FCS school … unless there was something else on the horizon? … it doesn’t make sense from either end — NDSU’s or Polasek’s — to do what happened Tuesday unless there’s a bigger picture at play.” More. (link)
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With Florida State, Wisconsin, Maryland and Baylor deciding to retain their Football HCs for 2026, The Athletic’s Chris Vannini observes the coaching contract landscape might be starting to change in real-time as “schools outside the richest tier are finally showing there is a limit to how much they’re willing to commit to pay to start over with a new coach.” Vannini: “The theme here is money and a desire not to spend it to fire someone right now. … These coaches will get more time to get it right. The richest of schools (LSU, Penn State, etc.) will continue to spend whatever it takes, agents say, but other schools are trying to figure out how to be more fiscally responsible and not lock themselves into a coach they may sour on. One option could be shorter contracts with more money up front. … Driving this approach is the need to find as much money as possible for players.” One coaching agent: “I think assistant salaries will be suppressed and the personnel (staff) bubble will burst. Schools are going to get smarter about the length and take protection on the back end, because there’s so much parity. That’s what’s been going on in FCS for years. They’re not giving out long deals.” More. (link)
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Triple Crown Sports announces the National Invitational Volleyball Championship (NIVC) won’t be held in 2025. TCS Director of Volleyball Jared Rudiger: “Triple Crown and our NIVC committee have elected to pause the NIVC for 2025 to reevaluate the landscape of the college volleyball market along with the college sports space. Given the ever-changing budgets, NIL, and requirements universities are working their way through for their student-athletes, this pause allows us to assess how we can best serve the sport moving forward. We will reevaluate for 2026 and have better clarity as we head into the summer of 2026 on what the vision is for the NIVC next fall.” (link)
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The latest College Football Playoff rankings were released last night and Ohio State remains at the top, followed by Indiana, Texas A&M, Georgia, Texas Tech, Oregon, Ole Miss, Oklahoma, Notre Dame, Alabama, BYU, Miami (FL), Utah, Vanderbilt & Michigan to round out the Top 15. (link); In a projected bracket, Ohio State would play the winner of (8) Oklahoma and (9) Notre Dame, Indiana would play the winner of (7) Ole Miss and (10) Alabama, Texas A&M would play the winner of (6) Oregon and (11) Miami (FL), and Georgia would play the winner of (5) Texas Tech and (12) Tulane. (link)
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Arkansas AD/CFP Selection Committee Chair Hunter Yurachek was asked whether Tulane could possibly be jumped even if they win out and responded: “We don't try to predict what's going to happen in future games. Tulane is in a really good position at No. 24. They are the highest-ranked Group of 6 team. I know they have a game to close out the season and most likely the American Conference Championship Game, and I think as long as Tulane takes care of their business, they would be in good shape. Again, we don't look for it as a committee. We just rank each week based on the previous week's results.” Yurachek on whether Ole Miss will be “penalized” should HC Lane Kiffin leave and not coach the team: “We'll take care of that when it happens. I mean, we don't look ahead. It is the loss of a player, loss of a key coach is in the principles of how we rank the teams. But again, we don't have a data point for Ole Miss without their head coach.” Full media Q&A. (link)
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Yahoo’s Dan Wolken contends the SEC and Big Ten are so far apart on a College Football Playoff structure that it’s hard to predict whether one side will prevail or a compromise will be struck. Furthermore, Wolken notes: “But by now, one thing should be clear to both sides: The current 12-team playoff, as well-intentioned as it might be, was designed for the college football landscape as it was before the last round of conference realignment.” Wolken submits that the CFP has effectively become a “10-team playoff” with weak first-round games at the expense of potentially stronger 10-2 teams. One culprit is elimination of divisions in bloated leagues, which has produced unbalanced schedules, complex tiebreakers and scenarios where teams like Duke (6-5), Arizona State (8-3) or others could play for championships. “Just consider this year in the SEC. Texas A&M is 11-0 and is an excellent team, but… has dodged Georgia, Ole Miss, Alabama and Oklahoma. Georgia, by contrast, played Tennessee, Alabama, Ole Miss and Texas. It’s not Texas A&M’s fault, but there is simply no equity between those two schedules.” Wolken goes on to question whether the highest ranked teams would even want to play in conference championship games, noting that first-round byes didn’t help last year’s participants and that a loss could unfairly penalize teams forced into an extra game. More from Wolken. (link)
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USF’s Board of Trustees yesterday approved an internal loan to athletics of up to $22.5M including a $16M increase in student-athlete revenue sharing payments for the 2026–27 fiscal year. That increase allows the Bulls to reach the $20.5M national cap for next fiscal year. The loan will be funded through investment gains and will not use student fees. Bulls CEO of Athletics Rob Higgins: “This isn’t an industry that’s changing by the day. It’s changing by the hour. I can promise you we are positioned really well for this, but it takes investment.” (link); Higgins also announces the Bulls have partnered with Professional Bull Riders to bring a live bull to Saturday night’s home football game against Rice. “Can’t wait to see how this goes & then we can determine what may be possible for our new on-campus stadium in 2027.” (link)
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To date, Memphis has raised more than $35M toward the $50M Fred Smith Family Match to support renovations to Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium. (link)
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South Carolina AD Jeremiah Donati confirms Football HC Shane Beamer will return for the 2026 season. (link)
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Indiana State AD Nathan Christensen assessed fall sports as winter season approaches and reaffirmed support for Football HC Curt Mallory, whose contract runs through 2027, after a 3–9 season. He praised Mallory’s off-field approach and team GPA but was blunt about expectations: “At the end of the day we want to win more games.” Christensen notes ISU faced one of the nation’s toughest FCS slates with seven playoff teams plus trips to Montana and Indiana, saying, “The schedule wasn’t to our benefit,” and emphasized evaluating “who we are a part of” amid national realignment and FCS-level changes. Christensen repeatedly stressed the department’s broader brand goals, calling the Missouri Valley “a top-10 conference” and underscoring that “basketball serves our drink here at Indiana State University.” So far, ISU is averaging more than 5,000 fans in Hulman Center for hoops, and Christensen believes ISU can be a “national powerhouse among the mid-majors” in basketball and baseball. His overarching mandate: “I want to make sure our student athletes are great citizens and we put the university in a positive light and we win championships.” (link)
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After guaranteeing $1M in NIL money to each of its participating teams during its debut year, the Players Era Festival “has subtly massaged its messaging around its promised payouts” for this year’s renewal, “saying it ‘will feature over $20M in guaranteed sponsor NIL activities’ for the teams participating in both its men’s and women’s tourneys,” according to Sportico’s Daniel Libit, who adds: “Yet the old marketing stuck, and the million-dollar-per-team meme continues to reverberate, echoed uncritically in recent media reports from ESPN, The Athletic and Sports Illustrated, among others. In reality, some teams are likely to emerge from this week’s MTE with far less than seven-figures in NIL money. And their commitments behind some deals appear far more extensive than what has been made public. Consider the agreements that UNLV and the Friends of UNLV NIL Collective – previously run by Blueprint Sports – signed in June, which Sportico obtained through a public records request. Under the deal, Players Era committed to providing $800K in NIL compensation to the collective, not $1M. The remaining $200K comes in a separate ‘event participation agreement’ paid directly to the university, which a school spokesperson said will be used to cover the program’s buyout for the Maui Invitational.” Also from Libit: “Per the agreements executed in June, UNLV agreed to buy 1,500 tickets to the event…at a total cost of $202,500. The school can resell the tickets at any price but is responsible for absorbing any losses. Those ticketing requirements are mirrored in at least one of the other school’s contracts reviewed by Sportico.” More. (link)
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People & Places…
➤ Dartmouth has hired Fordham Senior Assoc. AD/Senior Director of Athletics Development Jerry Hubshman Jr. as Senior Assoc. AD for Development. (link)
➤ Wichita State Senior Assoc. AD for Business Operations/CFO Kent Hegenauer has left the department, according to CollegeAD. (link)
➤ Hero Sports’ KC Smurthwaite reports newly named Oklahoma State Football HC Eric Morris owes North Texas $1.17M — “calculated at 60% of his monthly base salary for the 26 months remaining on his deal (thru Jan. 31, 2028).” (link)
➤ Merrimack has named alumna/Saint Anselm (DII) HC Jill Gagnon as Softball HC. (link)
➤ This morning’s Coaches.wire shows coaching staff movement in 24 sports this week. (link)
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Former Tennessee Men’s Basketball student-athlete Zakai Zeigler is continuing his lawsuit against the NCAA, attempting to recoup what he says are millions of dollars in NIL payments he would have earned by being permitted to play another season for the Vols instead of overseas, per the Knoxville News Sentinel’s Tyler Whetstone. While the complaint fails to outline the damage amount Zeigler is seeking, his original filing cited analysis from Spyre Sports Group claiming he could have earned up to $4M if eligible for the 2025-26 campaign. Whetstone: “In denying his request, U.S. District Court Judge Katherine Crytzer wrote Zeigler failed to show the Four-Seasons Rule ‘produces substantial anticompetitive effects in the market.’ So Zeigler's legal team scrapped that argument and focused instead on how they say the Four-Seasons Rule violates the Sherman Antitrust Act and a similar state law because it is an unlawful restraint on the market. The filing makes no mention of Zeigler’s eligibility and doesn't mention any attempt by him to return to college basketball, a move that would be unprecedented and likely to meet stiff resistance from the NCAA. The NCAA argued in its filing that Zeigler's case doesn't stand on the merits and even if it did, the claims would be moot because of the June 2025 settlement of a series of antitrust cases that ushered in direct pay from schools to athletes. The joint filing by Zeigler's legal team and the NCAA laid out discovery rules and set a May 2027 trial date.” (link)
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Sportico’s Anthony Crupi observes that the SEC is lapping the field in TV interest this fall, with Alabama leading all programs at an average 8.14M viewers per nationally televised game, followed by Georgia (7.35M), Tennessee (7.03M), Texas (7.01M), Oklahoma (6.64M) and LSU (6.42M). Overall, the top six and 11 of the top 15 most-watched teams come from the SEC. Ohio State is the top non-SEC draw at 5.49M per game, while unbeaten Indiana and Oregon have yet to crack the top-20 ratings list despite appearing to be on a collision course with the College Football Playoff. Crupi notes ABC has aired nine of the 10 most-watched games so far (Texas-Ohio State on Fox leads at 16.62M), with NBC’s top game Oregon-Penn State (8.5M), ESPN’s TCU-North Carolina (6.07M) and CBS’s Indiana-Oregon (5.59M) pacing those networks. Crupi adds that a CFP bracket heavy on SEC brands (and likely including Ohio State, Indiana, Oregon and Notre Dame) would be a “shot in the arm” for ESPN and its partners, as college football TV outlets have already booked an estimated $860M in ad revenue this season, up roughly $24M year over year. (link)
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ESPN’s College GameDay averaged 2.7M viewers last Saturday, up 9% over Week 13 in 2024, and 3.5M in the final hour. The full show peaked at 3.8M viewers, and the Pat McAfee Show’s top stream brought in 1.4M viewers. (link)
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Vanderbilt shares a look at its Times Square billboard promoting its NYC campus and billing itself as New York’s SEC team. (link)
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Netflix has mounted an aggressive, behind-the-scenes lobbying campaign with Warner Bros. Discovery’s board and federal regulators, a move the New York Post’s Charles Gasparino reports is eroding Paramount Skydance’s early lead in the bidding war for WBD’s studio and HBO Max. Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos, Gasparino adds, is personally working to convince both the Trump administration and WBD leadership that a Netflix–WBD deal wouldn’t trigger major antitrust obstacles, citing a legal theory of “category ambiguity” that claims streaming platforms aren’t subject to traditional market-concentration rules because users consume competitive video content across YouTube and social media. (link)
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