Florida Gators Archives - womenssportsnow.com https://womenssportsnow.com/tag/florida-gators/ womenssportsnow.com Tue, 28 May 2024 03:31:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 214932294 SEC’s Greg Sankey says ‘there’s an opportunity here’ for college sports; let’s hope he takes it https://womenssportsnow.com/secs-greg-sankey-says-theres-an-opportunity-here-for-college-sports-lets-hope-he-takes-it/ https://womenssportsnow.com/secs-greg-sankey-says-theres-an-opportunity-here-for-college-sports-lets-hope-he-takes-it/#respond Tue, 28 May 2024 00:57:08 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/secs-greg-sankey-says-theres-an-opportunity-here-for-college-sports-lets-hope-he-takes-it/

DESTIN, Fla. — There are two Greg Sankeys. The first one sometimes will say something that reminds you he was one of the people supporting the old ways and makes you wonder if someone who supported the old system can be trusted to build the new one. The other Sankey, however, leaves hints that he […]

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DESTIN, Fla. — There are two Greg Sankeys. The first one sometimes will say something that reminds you he was one of the people supporting the old ways and makes you wonder if someone who supported the old system can be trusted to build the new one.

The other Sankey, however, leaves hints that he does get it.

In his first public appearance since the historic NCAA vs. House settlement, on the eve of the SEC’s spring meetings, both sides of the SEC commissioner were on display. Which side wins out, and how quickly, will mean a lot.

The necessary background for those who need it: The NCAA has agreed to revenue sharing, directly paying its athletes, as part of last week’s settlement agreement. But it was merely one part of the larger whack-a-mole approach in dealing with college sports issues. The chaos of the transfer portal and NIL is left unresolved. And some stakeholders — media members, lawyers, advocates, coaches and administrators speaking privately — believe having a collective bargaining agreement with the athletes is the only way to do that.

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But the first side of Sankey still sounded skeptical on Monday.

“To be in collective…

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Women’s College World Series field set: Who are the 8 teams alive for national title? https://womenssportsnow.com/womens-college-world-series-field-set-who-are-the-8-teams-alive-for-national-title/ https://womenssportsnow.com/womens-college-world-series-field-set-who-are-the-8-teams-alive-for-national-title/#respond Mon, 27 May 2024 03:34:45 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/womens-college-world-series-field-set-who-are-the-8-teams-alive-for-national-title/

The Women’s College World Series field is set with softball’s final eight teams heading to Oklahoma City, Okla., to continue the chase for a national title. The field is led by defending champion Oklahoma. The No. 2 Sooners will be joined by No. 1 Texas, No. 4 Florida, No. 5 Oklahoma State, No. 6 UCLA, […]

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The Women’s College World Series field is set with softball’s final eight teams heading to Oklahoma City, Okla., to continue the chase for a national title.

The field is led by defending champion Oklahoma. The No. 2 Sooners will be joined by No. 1 Texas, No. 4 Florida, No. 5 Oklahoma State, No. 6 UCLA, No. 8 Stanford, No. 10 Duke and No. 14 Alabama. Oklahoma has won the past three championships and five of the past seven.

The WCWS opens play on Thursday: UCLA versus Alabama (Noon); Oklahoma versus Duke (2:30 p.m.); Texas versus Stanford (7 p.m.); Florida versus Oklahoma State (9:30 p.m.). ESPN will broadcast all four games.

How did the teams get here?

Texas: The Longhorns pulled out Game 3 of their Super Regional series against rival Texas A&M on Sunday and did most of their work in that series late in games, scoring 16 of their 20 runs in the sixth inning or later. The teams combined for a Super Regional record of 39 runs.

Oklahoma: The Sooners’ dynasty continues as they punched their ticket to Oklahoma City with a 2-0 series win over No. 15 Florida State. This year marks Oklahoma’s 12th WCWS appearance since 2010.

Florida: It was a record-setting day in Gainesville, Fla.,…

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What’s on tap for SEC meetings: 4 storylines to keep an eye on in Destin, Fla. https://womenssportsnow.com/whats-on-tap-for-sec-meetings-4-storylines-to-keep-an-eye-on-in-destin-fla/ https://womenssportsnow.com/whats-on-tap-for-sec-meetings-4-storylines-to-keep-an-eye-on-in-destin-fla/#respond Sun, 26 May 2024 09:00:29 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/whats-on-tap-for-sec-meetings-4-storylines-to-keep-an-eye-on-in-destin-fla/

DESTIN, Fla. — The SEC convenes Tuesday for its annual spring meetings, and the good news for those involved is the future football schedule is not the main topic. The bad news is the future football schedule is not the main topic. Whether to go to nine conference games or stay at eight seems quaint […]

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DESTIN, Fla. — The SEC convenes Tuesday for its annual spring meetings, and the good news for those involved is the future football schedule is not the main topic.

The bad news is the future football schedule is not the main topic.

Whether to go to nine conference games or stay at eight seems quaint now compared with the heavy reality that SEC presidents, athletic directors, coaches and commissioner Greg Sankey must confront this week: revenue sharing, roster limits and other results of the settlement in the House v. NCAA case.

SEC presidents voted unanimously — at least in the final vote it was unanimous — to approve the settlement terms, which if approved will result in around 22 percent of annual revenue being paid to athletes, starting next year. It’s a landmark agreement, and the timing is good for SEC administrators, who can start to hash out what comes next in Destin.

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There are, of course, other things going in the conference: A quarterback at Georgia is suing Florida. Oklahoma and Texas officially join the league in July, and their coaches will be present in Destin for the first time. Nick Saban is no longer coaching football….

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Emerson: For the SEC, this ‘Super League’ idea isn’t super, but it still represents progress https://womenssportsnow.com/emerson-for-the-sec-this-super-league-idea-isnt-super-but-it-still-represents-progress/ https://womenssportsnow.com/emerson-for-the-sec-this-super-league-idea-isnt-super-but-it-still-represents-progress/#respond Thu, 04 Apr 2024 21:31:18 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/emerson-for-the-sec-this-super-league-idea-isnt-super-but-it-still-represents-progress/

It could be an elevator, a hallway or a corridor this weekend at one of the Final Fours, the men’s in Arizona or the women’s in Cleveland. Greg Sankey, commissioner of the SEC, has a team in each, so doubtless he will be at both. Len Perna, meanwhile, has an idea, and if he sees […]

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It could be an elevator, a hallway or a corridor this weekend at one of the Final Fours, the men’s in Arizona or the women’s in Cleveland. Greg Sankey, commissioner of the SEC, has a team in each, so doubtless he will be at both. Len Perna, meanwhile, has an idea, and if he sees Sankey he may do everything in his power to get a minute.

At most, Sankey will smile politely, nod and keep the conversation short. For now, the chances of Sankey and his conference wanting any part of Perna’s idea are about as good as the SEC giving up football as a varsity sport.

Because that’s essentially what it would be doing here.

The notion of a college football “Super League” has been percolating for a while, and one idea finally went public on Wednesday, when The Athletic reported that a number of power brokers, including the presidents at Syracuse and West Virginia and Perna, the CEO of TurnkeyZRG, were pushing for a 70-team permanent group, employing athletes as players, making its own rules and leaving non-football sports to the existing conferences, as is.

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Publicly, the reaction among SEC power brokers was crickets: Sankey and the presidents at…

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2024 NCAA Tournament Bracket Watch: North Carolina will be the fourth No. 1 seed https://womenssportsnow.com/2024-ncaa-tournament-bracket-watch-north-carolina-will-be-the-fourth-no-1-seed/ https://womenssportsnow.com/2024-ncaa-tournament-bracket-watch-north-carolina-will-be-the-fourth-no-1-seed/#respond Sat, 16 Mar 2024 12:30:38 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/2024-ncaa-tournament-bracket-watch-north-carolina-will-be-the-fourth-no-1-seed/

(Editor’s note: This is part of the Bracket Central Series, an inside look at the run-up to the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournaments, along with analysis and picks during the tournaments.) It only took until the day before Selection Sunday, but finally we can say for sure who the top eight seeds will be in […]

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(Editor’s note: This is part of the Bracket Central Series, an inside look at the run-up to the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournaments, along with analysis and picks during the tournaments.)

It only took until the day before Selection Sunday, but finally we can say for sure who the top eight seeds will be in the 2024 NCAA Tournament.

With Tennessee and Arizona losing on Saturday and North Carolina advancing to the ACC tournament, the Tar Heels will join Purdue, Houston and UConn on the top line. The only minor intrigue left there is whether Houston passes Purdue for the No. 1 overall seed.

Tennessee and Arizona will be on the No. 2 line, along with Marquette and Iowa State. The Cyclones beat Baylor to reach the Big 12 title game and have more than made up for a lackluster nonconference slate, while Marquette got to the Big East final without All-America point guard Tyler Kolek. Given the Golden Eagles’ impressive resume and insistence that Kolek will be back next week, a No. 2 seed is in order.

Clarity comes at the top, and the bubble continues to come into focus as well. Mississippi State and Texas A&M locked up spots by beating Tennessee and Kentucky, respectively. New Mexico beat Colorado State in the Mountain West semis and should be safely in. Colorado finally gets over…

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NAACP urges current, future college athletes to reconsider public Florida schools https://womenssportsnow.com/naacp-urges-current-future-college-athletes-to-reconsider-public-florida-schools/ https://womenssportsnow.com/naacp-urges-current-future-college-athletes-to-reconsider-public-florida-schools/#respond Tue, 12 Mar 2024 00:06:42 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/naacp-urges-current-future-college-athletes-to-reconsider-public-florida-schools/

In an open letter published Monday, the NAACP urged Black college athletes to “reconsider any potential decision” to attend a public university in Florida following last week’s news that the University of Florida is eliminating its Diversity and Inclusion office. The Gainesville university’s decision came in response to a law signed last year by Florida […]

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In an open letter published Monday, the NAACP urged Black college athletes to “reconsider any potential decision” to attend a public university in Florida following last week’s news that the University of Florida is eliminating its Diversity and Inclusion office.

The Gainesville university’s decision came in response to a law signed last year by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, which prohibits the state’s public universities from using state or federal dollars for diversity programs or activities. In a March 1 memo, the university announced it would eliminate 13 roles, including the chief diversity officer, and reallocate $5 million it was spending on DEI initiatives.

Monday’s letter, signed by NAACP board chairman Leon W. Russell and president and CEO Derrick Johnson, is addressed to NCAA President Charlie Baker and current and prospective college athletes. It predicts that “while the University of Florida may be the first, it won’t be the last.”

Six public Florida universities — Florida, Florida State, Central Florida, South Florida, Florida Atlantic and Florida International — compete at the FBS level.

“Florida’s rampant anti-Black policies are a direct threat to the advancement of our young people and their ability to compete in a global economy,”…

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2024 NCAA Tournament Bubble Watch: Go time for Wake Forest, St. John’s and more https://womenssportsnow.com/2024-ncaa-tournament-bubble-watch-go-time-for-wake-forest-st-johns-and-more/ https://womenssportsnow.com/2024-ncaa-tournament-bubble-watch-go-time-for-wake-forest-st-johns-and-more/#respond Mon, 11 Mar 2024 11:30:11 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/2024-ncaa-tournament-bubble-watch-go-time-for-wake-forest-st-johns-and-more/

(Editor’s note: This is part of the Bracket Central Series, an inside look at the run-up to the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournaments, along with analysis and picks during the tournaments.) Conference tournaments are here and Selection Sunday is nigh, which means Bubble Watch is in full swing. I’ll be making regular, daily updates to […]

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(Editor’s note: This is part of the Bracket Central Series, an inside look at the run-up to the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournaments, along with analysis and picks during the tournaments.)

Conference tournaments are here and Selection Sunday is nigh, which means Bubble Watch is in full swing.

I’ll be making regular, daily updates to Bubble Watch from now until the bracket is revealed, so be sure to bookmark this page and check in all week as conference tourneys heat up and the NCAA Tournament field comes into focus. As soon as relevant games in each conference wrap up, I’ll have fresh thoughts on what it means for those teams and any other bubble watchers impacted by the results.

I’m in Kansas City covering the Big 12 tournament, but I’ll do my best to update things in real time, and I’ll try to hop into the comments and answer questions as well. Even the mean ones.

An important note: an expanded “Movement” section for each conference will be refreshed as often as necessary, while the corresponding team charts will be updated each morning with accurate records, NET rankings and other metrics.

We’ll also keep track of the number of auto-qualifiers as they roll in, whether or not there are any “bid thieves” among them, and how the math is shaping up for the…

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Women’s basketball Bubble Watch: Texas A&M picks up steam, Villanova needs to fight https://womenssportsnow.com/womens-basketball-bubble-watch-texas-am-picks-up-steam-villanova-needs-to-fight/ https://womenssportsnow.com/womens-basketball-bubble-watch-texas-am-picks-up-steam-villanova-needs-to-fight/#respond Fri, 23 Feb 2024 12:00:44 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/womens-basketball-bubble-watch-texas-am-picks-up-steam-villanova-needs-to-fight/

(Editor’s note: This is part of the Bracket Central Series, an inside look at the run-up to the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournaments, along with analysis and picks during the tournaments.) Power conferences understandably dominate discussion, particularly Bubble Watch talk, this time of year. All the teams fighting in the middle, yearning for resume-supplementing wins, […]

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(Editor’s note: This is part of the Bracket Central Series, an inside look at the run-up to the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournaments, along with analysis and picks during the tournaments.)

Power conferences understandably dominate discussion, particularly Bubble Watch talk, this time of year. All the teams fighting in the middle, yearning for resume-supplementing wins, provide some of the most notable matchups and storylines.

However, it’s worth pausing and noting some of the more under-the-radar seasons in the country, especially the programs that we are trending toward hearing about in March. I can think of few teams more deserving of that mention than Marshall.

The Thundering Herd are 20-6, a standout record on its own but even more notable when recognizing this is the first time since the 2016 season they have eclipsed the 20-win mark and just the second time since they left the Southern Conference in 1997. This is West Virginia native Kim Caldwell’s first season at the helm in Huntington. She led her alma mater, DII Glenville State, for seven seasons, including a national championship in 2022. In her first foray as a head coach at the highest level of collegiate basketball, something special is brewing.

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SEC distributed $741 million to schools in 2022-23: What it means for college sports landscape https://womenssportsnow.com/sec-distributed-741-million-to-schools-in-2022-23-what-it-means-for-college-sports-landscape/ https://womenssportsnow.com/sec-distributed-741-million-to-schools-in-2022-23-what-it-means-for-college-sports-landscape/#respond Thu, 08 Feb 2024 21:02:12 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/sec-distributed-741-million-to-schools-in-2022-23-what-it-means-for-college-sports-landscape/

The SEC is closing in on being a billion-dollar conference: Revenues continued to go up in the most recent fiscal year and are expected to keep climbing amid a new TV deal, College Football Playoff expansion and the addition of Texas and Oklahoma. The SEC announced Thursday that it distributed $741 million to its 14 […]

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The SEC is closing in on being a billion-dollar conference: Revenues continued to go up in the most recent fiscal year and are expected to keep climbing amid a new TV deal, College Football Playoff expansion and the addition of Texas and Oklahoma.

The SEC announced Thursday that it distributed $741 million to its 14 schools in the 2022-23 fiscal year, meaning an average payout of $51.2 million. That’s up from the average payout of $49.9 million during the previous fiscal year.

That revenue comes mainly from television deals (CBS and ESPN up until this year),  football bowl games, the Playoff, the SEC Championship Game, the SEC men’s basketball tournament and NCAA championships.

The current fiscal year largely will feature the same sources of revenue, so the average payout may only go up slightly. But starting with the 2024-25 fiscal year, the new TV deal with ESPN will kick in, and it’s expected to be worth around $811 million. There will be the 12-team Playoff, which will pay out more in television and other revenue to all conferences. And the addition of the Longhorns and Sooners should help attendance and other revenue.

The SEC still would be short of the Big Ten, with its new $1.1 billion TV deal and addition of four schools (USC, UCLA, Oregon and Washington). But the…

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What is NIL, how has it changed college sports and why are schools under investigation? https://womenssportsnow.com/what-is-nil-how-has-it-changed-college-sports-and-why-are-schools-under-investigation/ https://womenssportsnow.com/what-is-nil-how-has-it-changed-college-sports-and-why-are-schools-under-investigation/#respond Fri, 02 Feb 2024 19:05:03 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/what-is-nil-how-has-it-changed-college-sports-and-why-are-schools-under-investigation/

You’ve seen the three letters: NIL. You’ve heard the buzz these three letters have caused around college sports, read headlines about universities filing lawsuits against the NCAA on the issue and watched commercials of athletes like LSU gymnast Livvy Dunne tumbling while wearing Vuori joggers or USC quarterback Caleb Williams drinking Dr. Pepper. But what does […]

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You’ve seen the three letters: NIL.

You’ve heard the buzz these three letters have caused around college sports, read headlines about universities filing lawsuits against the NCAA on the issue and watched commercials of athletes like LSU gymnast Livvy Dunne tumbling while wearing Vuori joggers or USC quarterback Caleb Williams drinking Dr. Pepper.

But what does NIL — “name, image and likeness” — encompass, and why is the line between what’s within the rules and what isn’t so difficult to discern?

Here’s a breakdown of the acronym that has changed college sports:

What is NIL? How’d we get to this point in college sports?

NIL stands for “name, image and likeness” and has become the universal shorthand for college athletes’ ability to become paid endorsers and monetize their success outside of their school-funded scholarships and benefits. Before July 1, 2021, college athletes were not permitted to receive profits from their name, image and likeness. Since then … a lot has happened.

That summer, in response to pressure from laws passed by state legislatures that permitted varying levels of NIL activity, the NCAA created an interim NIL policy: For schools in states with laws on the books, the state law would guide them; otherwise, schools could set their…

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