High school golfer Happy Gilmore (no, really) officially signs with Ball State

Safe to say, Chubbs is proud. 

Bloomington South senior Happy Gilmore was destined to have success on a golf course.

Yes, that’s his real name. And on Wednesday, he signed his National Letter of Intent to play Division I college golf at Ball State.

His real first name is Landon, but he started going by “Happy” as a nickname when he was about 6 and started playing in golf tournaments.

As a junior, Gilmore finished T-7 at the Indiana high school boys golf state tournament in June, shooting even par over 36 holes at Prairie View Golf Club. He won his regional the week before at Country Oaks in Montgomery.

Rumors are even Shooter McGavin is worried about when Happy gets to the Tour.

Safe to say, Chubbs is proud.

Michigan State football: Notable quotes from Mel Tucker following the start of the early signing period

Notable quotes from Mel Tucker following the start of the early signing period

It was a big day for the Michigan State football program on Wednesday, as Mel Tucker and his staff were able to lock in all of their committed players during the early signing period, but they were also able to land some high profile transfers.

After things started to settle down, Mel Tucker spoke to the media about the happenings of the day, where the program stands, and a few other important topics, and you can see check out the notable comments from that press conference below.

Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan state news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Andrew Brewster on Twitter @IAmBrewster.

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Early Signing Period: 5 names Alabama fans should know

5 names that Alabama fans should be watching when early signing day arrives on Wednesday.

Bowl season is underway but maybe the biggest headline across the sport of college football this week is the early signing period has nearly arrived. On Wednesday some of the nation’s top talent will begin signing their national letters of intent with their school of choice.

Currently, [autotag]Nick Saban[/autotag] and the Crimson Tide have the top-ranked class in the country, according to most recruiting services, and should have a strong Wednesday.

Alabama has 25 commitments heading into the week with several high-level prospects still on the board and within reach for the Crimson Tide.

Here are the top five names that Alabama fans should be watching come Wednesday:

Alabama could land another Louisiana kid on Friday in Kendrick Law

Can Alabama land another coveted prospect from the Bayou State?

Nick Saban and Alabama are no strangers to the state of Louisiana. In his time at Alabama, Saban and snagged several of the top prospects from the Bayou State.

Landon Collins’ commitment certainly brings back a lot of good memories.

In the class of 2022 alone, Saban and his staff have reeled in two of the top 10 players already from Louisiana.

They may not be done yet.

Today at 3:00 p.m. CT, four-star athlete Kendrick Law will be making his official announcement and signing his letter of intent.

Law is a superior athlete posting a 10.48 in the 100-meter as a junior.

Some consider Alabama the favorite, but you can’t count out the in-state school in LSUTexas and Florida State have also made a hard push to sign the athletic Law.

Let’s see if Nick Saban and Alabama can pull off another recruiting surprise.

Stay tuned to Roll Tide Wire for all the latest on the Crimson Tide!

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Stacey Blackwood on Twitter @Blackwood89

SIGNED: Coveted EDGE defender Jihaad Campbell inks with Tide

Alabama signs coveted EDGE defender in Jihaad Campbell

Will Anderson Jr., Dallas Turner, and Drew Sanders will all be back for Alabama in 2022. But that hasn’t stopped Nick Saban and company from going all-in on some of the nation’s top EDGE defenders.

Moments ago coveted EDGE prospect Jihaad Campbell pledged his commitment to the Tide and officially signed with Alabama.

Campbell is a four-star prospect who finished his high school career at the notorious IMG Academy.

Stay up to date with Alabama’s 2022 class with Roll Tide Wire’s ‘Early Signing Day Tracker.’

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Stacey Blackwood on Twitter @Blackwood89.

NCAA Council recommends name, image, likeness policies should be up to schools in states without law

Ten states have laws or seen governors issue executive orders that will allow athletes to make money from their NIL.

The NCAA Division I Council on Monday recommended that the association temporarily “suspend amateurism rules” related to athletes’ ability to make money from their name, image and likeness, the association announced.

The Council is the division’s day-to-day policy-making group. Its recommendation now goes to the Division I Board of Directors, a panel comprising mainly college presidents that is the division’s top rules-making committee. The board is scheduled to meet Wednesday.

Monday’s action came with 10 states having passed laws or seen governors issue executive order that will allow athletes to make money from their name, image and likeness (NIL), beginning Thursday or whenever their schools choose. Bills with Thursday effective dates are on the desks of governors in four other states. Altogether, more than 15 states could have NIL laws in effect by Sept. 1.

Under the plan suggested Monday, schools in states that have passed laws related to name, image and likeness (NIL), would be “responsible for determining whether” athletes’ NIL activities “are consistent with state law,” an NCAA statement said.

In states without an NIL law, athletes would be able to engage in NIL activities without violating NCAA rules that so far have heavily limited those activities, which include having endorsement deals, leveraging social media for pay, and making money from coaching or signing autographs.

‘Adopt their own policies’

Schools in states without NIL laws and/or their conferences “may choose to adopt their own policies” regarding NIL activities, the NCAA statement said. However, the policy would leave intact the association’s “commitment to avoid pay-for-play and improper inducements tied to choosing to attend a particular school,” the statement said.

This setup would remain in place “until federal legislation or new NCAA rules are adopted,” the statement said.

In choosing this path, the Council rejected another proposal that — while largely similar — also included the proviso that schools’ NIL policies not allow payments from “any booster, or any person or entity acting on behalf” of the school.

This indicates that the Council was concerned that virtually any restriction in a temporary policy would draw a legal challenge based on the Supreme Court’s ruling last week in the Alston antitrust case. The court unanimously decided that the NCAA’s rules on athlete compensation are subject to detailed antitrust analysis, and such an analysis showed that the association’s limits on education-related benefits for athletes violate the law.

“We don’t have a lot of options on this — the Alston decision came down,” Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference commissioner Rich Ensor said Monday afternoon. While not a member of the Council, Ensor is an attorney. He also is well connected with the thinking of commissioners of other mid-major conferences, and he said nearly all segments of Division I are “pretty well unified on this.”

He added: “This should be an interesting period we are entering into.”

Follow Steve Berkowitz on Twitter @ByBerkowitz

Opendorse says Spencer Rattler is worth $769,300 in potential yearly NLI earnings

The conversation about name, image and likeness has ramped up. And with that, so have athlete marketing firms. Spencer Rattler is worth …

The name, image and likeness conversation for NCAA student-athletes ramped up throughout the coronavirus pandemic. As the NCAA took a harder look, so did marketing firms.

It started around the NFL Draft when one marketing firm floated the idea that Trevor Lawrence could make near $500,000 based on his social media following and influence. That micro conversation about college football’s biggest star turned into a macro conversation on Wednesday.

Opendorse, an athlete marketing firm founded by two former college football players, released data on selected college athletes. The internet burned down as Texas’ Sam Ehlinger had the biggest potential earnings despite less social media following than those listed below him.

Opendorse co-founder and CEO Blake Lawrence took to Twitter after criticism of the released data. The formula in which Opendorse uses isn’t media value—the regular centralized data marketing firms typically use that takes a handful of variables to come up with a value to give to potential advertisement suitors for a social media post or live advertisement.

Lawrence, in a response to one of my tweets, says, “… it is based on the actual amount that professional athletes (with similar following, engagement rate, etc.) get paid for promoted posts, based on 10+ years of primary transaction data captured through Opendorse.”

After the pushback, he shared data for three of Oklahoma’s prominent student-athletes. Lawrence says expected starting quarterback Spencer Rattler is worth $769,300 in potential earnings per year.

How media value and potential earnings is found remains to be in the eye of the beholder. A big conversation taking place for the NLI rights of student-athletes is a centralized system for media value so that there is not a major discrepancy in how the data will be presented to student-athletes.

Regardless, the commonality rings the same—these prominent student-athletes are worth a ton of money.

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