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In a federal indictment unsealed Thursday in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 20 men have been charged as part of a point-shaving scheme involving more than 39 college basketball players on 17 NCAA Division I teams, resulting in more than 29 games being fixed, per ESPN’s David Purdum. Overall, 20 of the 26 defendants played college basketball during the 2023-24 and/or 2024-25 seasons, while some have played this season. Purdum: “The scheme … began around September 2022 and initially was focused on fixing games in the Chinese Basketball Association. The group later targeted college basketball games, offering bribes to college players ranging from $10K to $30K to compromise games for betting purposes, according to the indictment.” (link). Here are more details you need to know…
➤ ESPN’s Jeff Borzello notes four current men’s basketball student-athletes, Kennesaw State’s Simeon Cottle, Eastern Michigan’s Carlos Hart, Delaware State’s Camian Shell and Texas Southern’s Oumar Koureissi, were included. Borzello adds: “The allegations against Hart, Shell & Koureissi are from previous schools. Hart when he was at New Orleans; Shell when he was at North Carolina A&T; and Koureissi when he was at Nicholls State. The incident from the indictments involving Cottle was from Kennesaw's 23-24 season.” (link)
➤ In response to today’s federal point-shaving indictment, Kennesaw State and Eastern Michigan have reportedly suspended men’s basketball student-athletes Simeon Cottle and Carlos Hart from all team activities, respectively, per Sports Illustrated’s Bryan Fischer. (link, link)
➤ NCAA President Charlie Baker has dispatched a letter to state gambling commissions reiterating the Association’s 2023 request “that state laws and regulations be amended to create a stronger framework for protection of student-athlete well-being.” In addition to eliminating gambling on individual prop bets and other high-risk prop bets such as first-half unders, the critical changes requested “include stricter accountability for bettors found to have harassed student-athletes and/or influenced betting behaviors.” Baker: “The Association has and will continue to aggressively pursue sports betting violations in college athletics using a layered integrity monitoring program that covers over 22K contests, but we still need the remaining states and regulators to eliminate threats to integrity to better protect athletes and leagues from integrity risks and predatory bettors.” Factors cited as necessitating immediate restrictions on prop-bet wagers include: harassment; solicitation of insider information; and spot-fixing. Full letter. (link)
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Some FBS schools are directing the NCAA not to share their annual athletic financial information with the College Sports Commission, per Sportico’s Eben Novy-Williams and Daniel Libit, who note that for the most recent batch of revenue and expense data covering FY25, “schools are now required to state whether they will allow the NCAA to share revenue data from the report with the CSC.” Novy Williams and Libit: “This week, Sportico began requesting copies of the latest MFRS reports from every FBS school subject to public disclosure and, as of Thursday morning, three of the five that responded—Iowa State, Bowling Green and Miami (Ohio)— stipulated that they do not want their data shared with the CSC. … It’s unclear exactly why some schools are choosing to take this route … or why it confers any sort of privacy. All three of those institutions are public, which means the documents can be obtained via open records requests. The decision for private schools, such as Notre Dame or Vanderbilt, may therefore carry a different calculus. While the move may not ultimately post a practical obstacle for the commission, it, at the very least, reinforces the perception that the CSC lacks buy-in from universities that helped set it up and help finance it, and whose actions it is supposed to referee.” Libit adds this comment from a CSC spokesperson: “MFRS data is one of many inputs that can inform deal analysis in NIL Go. Providing it is optional.” More. (link, link)
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ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips joined College.town's Daniel Gillman at the 2026 NCAA Convention to discuss the key priorities of the NCAA Board of Governors, which he currently chairs, as well as revenue pressures, the football tiebreaker and private equity as each relates to the ACC. Here are the key takeaways…
➤ On changing the ACC football tiebreaker: "That is going to change. I promise you. Breaking news, the ACC is going to change our tiebreaker. ... One is we will tie it to the CFP ranking, which only makes sense. And I have asked the other commissioners...it really would be good if we could come together across FBS and everybody have maybe the same tiebreaker or a similar tiebreaker."
➤ On the success of the new revenue distribution model: "As far as the distribution, it's an incentive. It really should be a motivator. ... What you hope happens, which I think has happened, at least initially, is that it's a motivator on campus to absolutely invest in college sports in a variety of ways – coaches, facilities, what they're doing with student-athletes. … And if you do well, you deserve to have a bigger payout than somebody maybe that didn't have as good of a year."
➤ Could private equity be on the horizon for the league? "We'll continue to look at PE to see if it makes sense into the future. But as of right now, there's nothing that the board has felt really was right for the ACC. ... My job as the commissioner of the ACC is to bring forward any and all opportunities for our board to consider in our institutions because that's exactly what we've done over the last couple years."
➤ On prop betting: "The prop betting has to stop. I mean, that's where we have the most critical issue and one that can really erode the confidence of fans about the outcome of games. And if we do that, then we've lost college sports. … So we as the caretakers of college sports need to make sure that that continues to be top of mind as we move forward and make our decisions."
➤ How about adding a conference tournament for volleyball? "It's one of those decisions where as a conference commissioner, sometimes you have 51% of the vote and sometimes you have 49%. And I say that because we've really put it in the hands of the coaches to decide. And several years ago, the coaches felt that a conference championship at that particular time would not benefit those teams that seriously had a chance to get into the NCAA tournament. ... So we'll bring that up again. ... I'm not one that's steadfast about, 'Hey, there's no way we're going to do that.'"
➤ Full interview. (link)
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U.S. Reps. Haley Stevens (D-MI) and Michael Baumgartner (R-WA) have dispatched a missive to NCAA President Charlie Baker urging the Association “to limit the emergence of private equity in college athletics,” per Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger. In their letter, the legislators are seeking answers to seven questions by Feb. 15 that include in part: “What private equity deal structures has the NCAA observed being considered or pursued by member universities or conferences?; Has the NCAA considered developing enforcement mechanisms to investigate and prevent instances of “de facto control” or unacceptable conflicts of interests at member universities?; and what risks does the NCAA assess that these arrangements pose for Title IX compliance and non-revenue sports? More. (link)
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Miami (FL) AD Dan Radakovich joined Inside ACCess and had this to say on UM’s plans for its $32M College Football Playoff windfall: “We do have to take our expenses out of that $32M. It is kind of a long way from Miami to Phoenix to Dallas to College Station, so we do have some expenses. At the end of the day, the University has invested a lot of money in our athletic program. We would have to do this multiple times to even scratch the surface of repaying their investment, but they do see this as a great return that we’ve been able to pull together. We will continue to use these dollars to make our athletic program better. I think that’s probably the best way I can say it.” (link)
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Kentucky has announced seven targeted upgrades for Kroger Field totaling $25M. The enhancements, which include new seatbacks in the upper decks, loge club infill, and a West End Zone Field Club—scaled down from an original $50M plan to $10M—aim to expand premium inventory and year-round revenue opportunities like concerts. Specifically, Kentucky Sports Radio’s Zack Geoghegan reports UK projects to generate $4M annually before debt service. Wildcats AD Mitch Barnhart emphasized the need for innovation in the revenue-sharing era, stating: "We can’t be stagnant in terms of our thoughtfulness and how we’re trying to create revenue." (link)
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New Mexico announces its nine-member AD Advisory Search Committee chaired by UNM Foundation Board member Del Archuleta. Among the group are Lobos Executive Senior Assoc. AD Amy Beggin, Women’s Golf HC Jill Trujillo, Track & Field/Cross Country HC Darren Gauson and Women’s Soccer student-athlete Kennedy Brown. Full list. (link)
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Teamworks acquires Sportlogiq, which specializes in advanced analytics and tracking data services for various sports, focusing on ice hockey, soccer, and American football. (link)
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Coaches Corner…
➤ Jacksonville State hires Marshall Women’s Volleyball AC/Recruiting Coordinator Tim Ebbecke as the Gamecocks’ new HC. (link)
➤ The Athletic’s Matt Baker provides some details on new USF Football HC Brian Hartline’s six-year contract that will see him earn $3.5M-per-year in base salary and supplemental income, while also including a total staff salary pool of $6.2M. If Hartline were to depart for another job prior to the end of the 2027 campaign, he would owe $5M. That number drops to $3M the following year. (link)
➤ Washington Football DC Ryan Walters has inked a new contract through 2027 that will pay him $2M-per-year, per On Montake’s Christian Caple, who notes Walters’ previous deal would have been worth $1.5M next season. (link)
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NCAA President Charlie Baker in his annual State of College Sports address highlighted several achievements from the past year, including increased scholarships and unprecedented direct financial benefits for student-athletes, record-breaking participation, new championships, fiscal responsibility and enhanced storytelling through media rights partners like ESPN. Baker also underscored the need for a collective response to address ongoing challenges such as eligibility-related lawsuits, sports betting and prediction markets. Here are some of the takeaways:
➤ On benefits to student-athletes: “We grew the number of opportunities for student-athletes to compete to 556,000 Association-wide, which happens to be the most ever. This marks eight consecutive years of increases. In DI, the total number of opportunities to compete grew to its highest level in 40 years. And DI is on track to continue this growth — despite cost pressures we know are wildly difficult to manage. … Student-athletes are on track to receive over $1B in new, direct financial benefits from their schools this year. Combined with scholarships and other aid, that adds up to about 50% of (Autonomous 4) revenue — going right to the young people we serve. And, on top of this, we worked together to completely reform how DI operates by doubling student-athlete votes on our boards."
➤ On the industry’s biggest challenges: "There is no better rule or quick fix that solves the problems we face — not without tremendous downside. We should all beware of those quick fixes. There's usually a middleman who stands to gain. And beware of the solution that works for only 5% of the student-athletes we serve and would come at a steep cost to the other 95%. It's our job collectively to consider the future Olympians and the future leaders we serve just the same. … The attacks on the rules are not only coming from outside the membership. It's a tiny fraction of the membership, to be sure, but they are destabilizing 100% of our athletics programs. There is no more perfect rule or bylaw that can overcome that. That's not to say we can't make progress — we have to, and we will."
➤ On the need to work with Congress: "In Congress, I believe there is common ground around the period of eligibility, academic standards, reasonable transfer policies and other bedrock principles. Through targeted intervention on only the narrowest of issues in Congress, combined with our continued internal transformations, I think we can build the system today's athletes require. Now, I have been a part of a lot of difficult efforts to craft legislation on difficult issues. Sometimes, to make progress, we have to break issues up, make incremental progress where we can, and then come back to what we can't. But we will get nowhere, regardless of the issue, if we as college sports leaders are not on the same page."
➤ On sports gambling: "We need federal guardrails to protect the integrity of the game. And, in addition to the areas mentioned previously, this need is particularly urgent as it relates to sports betting. Legalization has brought with it a host of threats to our games and to student-athletes. In response, the NCAA built the largest integrity monitoring program in the world. We educate hundreds of thousands of student-athletes about the rules and the risks of sports betting. We find and report threatening messages athletes receive online. We teamed up with Venmo because student-athletes were getting harassed by bettors with gambling debts. Our enforcement team uncovered student-athletes who manipulated their performance to win bets. We caught coaches trading inside information. We took action and banned those responsible. But the sports betting industry's response has been a shoulder shrug. … That's why today we petitioned the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to pause all college sport commodities offerings until the agency can develop the same regulations that legal sportsbooks operate under. Whether it's transfer windows or prop bets, the answer cannot be the status quo. We need one set of fair, transparent standards.”
➤ Full address. (link)
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More from NCAA President Charlie Baker on the NCAA’s petition to the CFTC: "So-called prediction markets are offering what anyone can see is unregulated betting on college games. One operator, Kalshi, made plans to start taking bets on the Transfer Portal… until we called them out, and they backed down — for now. Just as we need Congress to stabilize eligibility, we need federal regulators to stabilize this market." The NCAA is calling for a system of safeguards and detailed its willingness to work with the regulatory body to assist with developing the necessary guardrails. The critical safeguards requested include age and advertising restrictions, enhanced integrity monitoring, prop market prevention, anti-harassment measures and harm reduction resources. (link)
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A related note: Gambling is now the second fastest growing industry in the U.S. in terms of GDP growth, according to World Independent News CEO Dominic Michael Tripi, and cllct Founder Darren Rovell notes: “Gambling can’t beat health care growth because its scale driven by boomers, but it’s making a scary as hell run.” (link)
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Yahoo’s Ross Dellenger reports that deep frustration over the NCAA and College Sports Commission's inability to enforce tampering rules is driving power conference leaders to explore "conference-only" governance models, where leagues would enforce their own rules and potentially compete solely against members. Here’s what you need to know…
➤ Dellenger notes that SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey “cautions any suggestion of the long-discussed ‘breakaway’ by the SEC and other power leagues. Nobody wants to ‘rush there,’ and the SEC remains committed to a ‘national organization,’ he says. However, ‘there are limits to that,’ Sankey said. ‘The frustration level is building. I anticipate that there’s a lot of people that are saying, ‘This might not work for us.’ Those people exist well beyond the SEC’s footprint, even if they remain in the background.”
➤ One Big Ten AD tells Dellenger: “There is support among other memberships for a similar model. Each league governs itself and plays only games within the league.”
➤ Georgia President Jere Morehead also weighs in: “If the CSC is not going to enforce the House settlement, if the NCAA is not going to enforce tampering rules and if Congress is not going to pass the SCORE Act, then it leaves the SEC in a position that we have to go our own way to create some rules and a level of responsibility. We’d be able to make a much stronger argument that we are not in violation of antitrust rules because we don’t have market power." As for the current setup, one Big Ten administrator says: "We are money laundering. All we are doing right now is moving money around." (link)
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One more nugget from Sportico’s Daniel Libit and Eben Novy-Williams on Nebraska’s $7.03M FY25 Volleyball budget: “Only seven FBS programs outside of football and men’s basketball generated more than $3.2M in tickets in fiscal 2024. … That group included three baseball programs (Arkansas, Texas A&M, LSU), two women’s basketball programs (Iowa, UConn) and two men’s ice hockey teams (Minnesota, Wisconsin). … Nebraska’s $3.2M in FY25 ticket revenue also exceeded the FY24 ticket sales of 39 public FBS football programs and 71 men’s basketball teams, including at power-conference schools such as Iowa, Auburn and defending national champion Florida.” (link)
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New Mexico has officially launched its search for a new AD. UNM has retained Parker Executive Search to assist. President Garnett Stokes: “UNM Athletics is experiencing positive momentum across our programs. This search is an opportunity to identify a leader who understands today’s collegiate athletics environment and can build on that progress with integrity, accountability, and a clear focus on student-athlete success.” (link); D1.ticker has already prepared the D1.dossier for the opening in Albuquerque. Fast-track your research…time equals money! (link)
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James Moore & Co. Partner Katie Davis notes that student-athlete rev-share buyouts “feel familiar (similar to coaching buyouts) but the tax consequences are ambiguous. Even with coaches, treatment has varied by university based on risk posture and who receives the payment. Depending on structure, these arrangements can create tax and reporting gray areas not just for the athlete, but also for the institutions involved. If these payments become a recurring revenue stream across the industry, they may fuel continued scrutiny of tax exempt purpose of college athletics. Would you consider rev share buyouts to be in the ordinary course of business (similar to coaching buyouts)?” (link)
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North Carolina has received a $9M gift to support the Carolina Baseball Operating Endowment. As part of the gift, the donor has challenged fans and supporters to match the investment and grow the endowment to $25M. To date, $2.2M has been pledged toward meeting the challenge. (link)
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Illinois State has received a $500K gift from an anonymous donor to support the football program. (link)
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South Carolina shares a comprehensive video update of the progress being made on Williams-Brice Stadium’s overhaul. Take a look. (link)
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The 33rd Team, a football intelligence and tech company founded by former New York Jets and Miami Dolphins exec Mike Tannenbaum, has raised a new growth investment round, according to SBJ’s Ben Fischer, who reports: “Executives did not disclose a sum other than calling it an “eight-figure” Series B. Participating funders include Liberty Media, Bruin Sports Capital Founder/CEO George Pyne and Ohio State DC Matt Patricia, among several others. (link)
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People & Places…
➤ Utah Valley President Astrid S. Tuminez will step down, effective May 1. (link)
➤ Notre Dame has promoted Director of Football Communications Claire Cunningham to Assoc. AD for Team Communications and External Strategy. (link)
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(NEWEST!) Director, Student-Athlete Management (University of Illinois / Champaign/ Urbana, IL): Plays a vital and hands-on role in the administration, coordination, and delivery of programs and services dedicated to supporting student-athletes as a result of the House Settlement. More details HERE.
(NEWEST!) Director of Student Athlete Academic Support Services (University of Arkansas at Little Rock / Little Rock, AR): Little Rock Athletics is in search of a Director of Student Athlete Academic Support Services. This position will manage the overall coordination of all academic services of Little Rock’s athletes. More details HERE.
(NEWEST!) Associate Director, I FUND (University of Illinois / Champaign/Urbana, IL): Focus on providing a first-class philanthropic experience to fans of Illinois Athletics by leveraging digital and in-person engagement to effectively build relationships. More details HERE.
(NEWEST!) Head Men’s Soccer Coach/Physical Education & Wellness Instructor (Massachusetts Institute of Technology – MIT / Cambridge, MA): This is a full-time, 10-month appointment that will include the management and oversight of the men's soccer program. (DIII) More details HERE.
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(NEW!) Assistant Women's Soccer Coach (Murray State University / Murray, KY): Responsibilities Assist the Head Coach with managing and supervising the day to day operations of the athletic team. More details HERE.
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