
College Basketball Crown scores big with viewers as Nebraska wins 1st tournament
The Nebraska Cornhuskers took home the title in the College Basketball Crown on Sunday night and FOX Sports said Tuesday the tournament scored big with viewers.
The Crown's final between Nebraska and UCF garnered 822,000 viewers and was the most-watched non-NCAA Tournament college basketball final of the year, according to FOX Sports. Viewership was up 62% versus the NIT championship.
Nebraska defeated UCF, 77-66. The Cornhuskers claimed $300,000 in name, image and likeness money for its program as well. It was Nebraska's first postseason championship since the team won the NIT in 1996.
"We didn't get the goal that we wanted for playing in the NCAA Tournament," Nebraska coach Fred Hoiberg said after the game. "But we made the most of it and came out here focused and stayed together as a group and played some pretty darn good basketball this week.
"Hopefully it will give us some momentum heading into next season, and I think the experience of playing in a postseason event will help everybody that will be back on our roster next year."
Nebraska defeated Boise State and UCF topped Villanova in the Crown's semifinals.
FOX Sports said the semifinals drew in an average of 706,000 viewers, which was up 145% over the NIT's semifinals this year. It was the most-watched non-NCAA Tournament postseason semifinals of the year.
Nebraska received the first wearable trophy of its kind.
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New York Times
41 minutes ago
- New York Times
UNLV's next step in the desert: Become the next G5 giant, or watch its big bets go awry?
LAS VEGAS — On a good day, when he gets lucky enough to hit more green lights than red, Erick Harper can make it from his parking spot outside of his office at the Thomas & Mack Center to the tunnel of Allegiant Stadium in about 15 minutes. It's a 3.3-mile drive from the edge of UNLV's sprawling campus to the bright lights of the $2 billion NFL stadium — built to welcome the Las Vegas Raiders — where the Rebels also play their home games. Advertisement 'There's no reason we can't get 40,000 to 60,000 people to come to UNLV football games on a regular basis,' said the UNLV athletic director entering his fourth year at the university. Build yourself into a marketable winner in college athletics, and fans will follow. Even in the city in the desert that offers anything and everything, Harper believes that UNLV is on the doorstep of transforming into one of Sin City's most talked-about attractions. It's the same talking point bandied about in recent years: University leadership believes the Rebels can carve out a spot in the hearts of Vegas sports fans and visitors alike. The Rebels have come within one game of hoisting a Mountain West Conference title in consecutive seasons but have come up short against the crown jewel of the Group of 5, Boise State. The required next step is making the hypothetical a reality. There's a ceremonial 2024 Mountain West title game floor mat inside Harper's office that serves as a reminder of just how close UNLV has been. UNLV, long a floor mat itself in football, had its two best consecutive seasons in football history in 2023 and '24, winning 20 total games. A win over the Broncos likely would've meant a berth in the 12-team College Football Playoff that debuted last season. Former coach Barry Odom took the job at Purdue two days after the Mountain West title game loss. Less than a week later, Harper stunned the college football universe and hired former Florida and Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen. 'I'm taking over a team that was one half away from the College Football Playoff,' Mullen said. 'There's a lot in place already here that we just have to build on.' In March, Harper fired men's basketball coach Kevin Kruger after four years in charge and replaced him with former Memphis and Georgia Tech coach Josh Pastner, who was named ACC Coach of the Year in 2017. Like Mullen, Pastner spent recent years as an analyst at ESPN. Outside the Thomas & Mack Center, a massive new banner of Pastner is plastered on the glass windows as a sell to the UNLV fan base that better days are ahead on the hardwood, too. Advertisement Once a lightning rod of college hoops under legendary coach Jerry Tarkanian, the Rebels have failed to qualify consistently for the men's NCAA Tournament since the early 1990s. Their last appearance was 2013, the longest dry spell in program history. Harper says all the pieces are in place for UNLV to make its move among the elite contenders outside the power conferences. Now comes the hardest part: Proving you're worth the price of admission year-in and year-out. UNLV averaged over 32,000 fans at home football games in 2024, a jump of nearly 10,000 from the 2023 average of over 23,600 per home game. It's there inside the stadium, just a few minutes' jaunt away from the radiant glitz and glam of The Strip, where Harper dares to dream. Such an uptick might not make the stadium look packed yet on TV, but it's proof of concept that in Vegas, winners become a draw. 'If you look at the history of the Mountain West, we were the league of BYU, Utah, TCU,' said Mountain West commissioner Gloria Nevarez. 'Schools come here and really rise to the top if they really put their minds to it and invest. I do think there's a lot of opportunity going forward.' But for its grandiose ambition and recent success in football, UNLV is saddled with significant debt in the athletic department, estimated to be in the range of $25-30 million. And as college realignment in athletics continues to swirl, UNLV is one of many universities with options and massive decisions on the horizon. 'We definitely want to be in the upper echelon of the G5, but also we have to be the best we can possibly be,' Harper said. 'The same challenge of getting there with every institution in the country is always going to be financial. That's just the matter of the business. To weather the storm, the best way to generate more revenue is to win, and win at a high level consistently.' One of those big choices came last fall, when UNLV opted to stay in the Mountain West rather than join a rebuilding Pac-12 with Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State, San Diego State and Utah State. On Sunday, those five departing members officially filed their intent to leave the Mountain West, meeting a deadline to avoid doubling their exit fees, a person involved in the decision told The Athletic. Advertisement UNLV, which was thought to still be a potential Pac-12 target, stood pat. That would seem to fully rule the Rebels out of becoming the eighth football-playing member of the Pac-12, which must still add one more school by next summer. Asked in April whether UNLV was still committed to remaining in the Mountain West, Harper said yes. What kept the Rebels in the Mountain West was a hefty payday from the $150 million in exit fees and poaching fees to come from the Pac-12. Forty-nine percent of the first $61 million will be split between UNLV and Air Force, according to a copy of the conference's memorandum of understanding obtained by The Athletic. Another $21 million would be split the same way. That money is needed. In a Nevada Board of Regents meeting in March, Harper and other UNLV administrators were challenged by several regents regarding the financial state of the athletic department. Regent Joe Arrascada asked Harper whether he's transparent with current and prospective donors about the department being in an estimated $30 million hole, and how he planned to fulfill Mullen's five-year, $17.5 million deal. Harper responded that the school had the funds to pay the first two years of Mullen's contract, then watched national reports fixate on that answer as an implication that the school had promised Mullen more than it could afford to pay over the final three years. Harper shoulders the blame for not being more direct in his explanation, saying he has 'zero fear' the athletic department will have trouble fulfilling any coaching contracts on the books. 'We work with the generated dollars, we work with state and institutional support and we work through our endowments,' he said. 'Our salaries and payroll for all coaches and staff is generated through revenues on an annual basis. What was missed is the fact I said, 'and we also generate ticket sales, donor contributions, multimedia rights partners with Learfield, all those self-generated revenues that pay for salaries.'' The school also received a $3 million buyout when Odom left for Purdue. Harper said UNLV has surpassed $2.5 million in revenue sales for the upcoming football season, compared to $1.8 million last spring. He said over 1,000 new season ticket holders joined the fold and that the season ticket holder count was over 5,000. In that March meeting with the regents, Arrascada told Harper, 'Impressive numbers, but fans are fickle. One bad season, those numbers can plummet.' UNLV's financial challenges made its decision to stay put during this round of realignment more logical. Along with the influx of additional funds, that new Mountain West deal allows its members to leave the league for a Power 4 conference at no cost. So rather than pay potentially upward of $18 million to join a still-unsettled Pac-12 situation, UNLV stayed put to get some much-needed cash. People in the Pac-12 and Mountain West believe UNLV is instead hoping for a future Big 12 invitation. Advertisement 'We all know conference realignment has not ended. It will not stop,' Harper said. 'So where we land is the fact there is no buyout for UNLV out of the Mountain West, to be able to have your opportunity to have free agency and always be able to position UNLV in the best possible space for its growth as an institution. We're one of the top markets that's not in a (Autonomy/Power 4) conference right now.' The Pac-12 and some departing Mountain West schools have sued the league over the exit fees UNLV and the MW leftovers are in line to receive, and the sides are currently in mediation, but Harper did not sound too concerned about the final numbers. 'If I was an attorney or judge, I could probably give you a better answer,' he said. 'I don't know. Do I think the numbers will be where they were reported? Should be somewhere in that neighborhood.' To sweeten UNLV's Mountain West decision further, the conference agreed to continue to hold its basketball tournaments at UNLV and plans to move its headquarters from Colorado Springs to a new home base: Las Vegas. Like so many Sin City transplants, Mike Palm found himself hooked by one Vegas show in particular: Mountain West basketball. Palm, who grew up a sports fan in the Midwest and was once a middle school teacher in Iowa before rising up the gaming industry ranks, could not get enough of hoops at the Thomas & Mack Center. Kawhi Leonard was introducing himself to America at San Diego State. Jimmer Fredette was shooting it from the logo for BYU. Palm, the VP of operations for Circa, The D and Golden Gate Casinos in downtown Vegas, said for so long UNLV football was a local afterthought. Until Odom arrived. The city was in the midst of a sports revolution, with the Raiders arriving after the Vegas Golden Knights of the NHL and Las Vegas Aces of the WNBA. And UNLV football was suddenly something worth talking about. Palm knows a thing or two about the topic du jour as a regular on Las Vegas sports radio. And when Vegas became the epicenter of the name, image and likeness messiness last September, Palm attempted to get involved. Advertisement Before UNLV went on to compete for a second consecutive conference title, its former starting quarterback, Matthew Sluka, announced he was leaving the program amid a dispute over funds he said were promised to him but not delivered by the school's NIL collective. The Rebels were 3-0 and coming off a 23-20 win at Kansas. Sluka's exit was a flashpoint in college athletics — a starting quarterback leaving his team in the middle of a season with tremendous promise. Palm, on behalf of Circa Sports CEO Derek Stevens, offered to pay Sluka $100,000 during the dispute. By the time the public offer was made, officials at UNLV informed Palm that there would be no negotiating with Sluka. In January, the former UNLV quarterback announced he was signing with James Madison. That's the singularity of Vegas in $100,000 nutshell. Stevens, a casino owner who isn't a UNLV alumnus, offered to help keep the Rebels' start red-hot. Palm, who said he's gone to several UNLV games the last two years, said the home game atmospheres are more vibrant than Raiders games. He said Mullen's hiring quickly negated the deflation around town after Odom left for Purdue. But Palm said he's realistic about what challenges still lie ahead. Harper said this spring he has not yet mapped out how UNLV will share revenue with players if the House v. NCAA settlement is passed as expected sometime this summer. He did confirm that the majority will go to football. In conversations with his peers in athletic departments around the country, he's heard some plan to invest anywhere from 50 to 75 percent of their allotment into the biggest money-driving sport in college athletics. 'Obviously Dan's going to need financial support to help them get to the next level,' Palm said. 'And he's going to have to win, and he's going to have to win pretty early.' And with the Athletics on track to move to Las Vegas after leaving Oakland, the already-crowded sports marketplace around the shimmering lights of this town will only be harder to punch through. Advertisement 'Great pro towns don't tend to be great college towns,' Palm said. 'The more this becomes a pro sports town, I'm not sure this doesn't hurt the prospects of UNLV.' Mullen vows that if UNLV plays an attractive style of football and can still contend for a CFP appearance, harnessing the aura of Vegas to get those 40,000 to 60,000 inside Allegiant Stadium won't be hard. 'When you come on our campus and you go to the stadium we play in, you are around this environment, you feel like you're at a major program,' Mullen said. 'You go to recruit and kids are looking out here at The Strip and they go, 'There's a lot of opportunities for me in this town that didn't use to be available that, in today's world, is all legal.'' Harper said the attraction of Vegas under coaches like Mullen and Pastner will be too good to pass up for some athletes. Here, you can get decent seats to a UFC event and fist-bump a bloodied fighter after a victory. Or you can have Kenny Chesney saunter through the halls of your $35 million football facility to work out while he's in town for a series of shows at The Sphere. 'Nobody else can have what we have on a regular basis,' Harper said. The stakes are high, which is one of the many reasons Mullen said he took the job. A good football season doesn't move the needle locally or nationally like a great one. A great season gets you in the College Football Playoff, which could be a landscape-altering achievement for a university that would see immediate financial benefits and an athletic department still waiting to earn its long-desired close-up.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Broncos' Sean Payton Speaks Out On JK Dobbins' Team Visit
Broncos' Sean Payton Speaks Out On JK Dobbins' Team Visit originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Despite using their second round pick to select UCF running back, RJ Harvey, there is still a feeling that the Denver Broncos' RB room could use some reinforcements. Advertisement Jaleel McLaughlin, Audric Estime and Tyler Badie are all nice complementary, auxiliary pieces, but none feel like they can be part of a hard-hitting, one-two punch with Harvey. So it makes sense that the team planned a visit with free agent, and ex Charger and Raven, JK Dobbins on Thursday. And head coach, Sean Payton, had some complementary words to say about the former AFC West rival, per Mike Klis. 'Another good football player that we've seen firsthand." Payton said to the media on Thursday, "I've seen for a while the importance of that position group. We really like the group right now we're working with, it's just another opportunity to possibly bring in another good football player to help us win.' JK Dobbins, Baltimore RavensPaul Rutherford-Imagn Image Dobbins is not necessarily an earth-shatteringly big name, but he is certainly an excellent back who would undoubtedly be on a roster right now as the RB1 - or high end 2 - if it were not for consistent injuries that have threaten to derail his otherwise potential-filled career. Advertisement Even though the former second round pick missed four games in 2024, he still managed 905 rushing yards and 9 touchdowns, with an additional 153 receiving yards off of 32 receptions. Of the backs still left unsigned in the NFL, Dobbins has arguably the best case for being a true, quality starting back in the league - and could be an excellent mentor and teammate for Harvey over the next season or two. That is, if he does end up signing with the Broncos. Related: Broncos' Talanoa Hufanga Breaks Silence on Playing Alongside Patrick Surtain II This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 6, 2025, where it first appeared.


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Tennessee-Arkansas Fayetteville Super Regional to feature 13 MLB top 200 prospects
Tennessee-Arkansas Fayetteville Super Regional to feature 13 MLB top 200 prospects No. 14 national seed Tennessee (46-13) and No. 3 national seed Arkansas (46-17) are set to face off in the NCAA Tournament Fayetteville Super Regional at Baum-Walker Stadium in Fayetteville, Arkansas. First pitch for Game 1 is scheduled for 5 p.m. EDT on Saturday. Game 2 is slated for 3 p.m. EDT on Sunday. Tennessee and Arkansas will play a third game on Monday if necessary. The Vols and Razorbacks already played a three-game series at Baum-Walker Stadium to end the regular season. Arkansas won the final two games to win the series, 2-1. More: How to watch NCAA Tournament baseball super regionals: Times, TV channels The Fayetteville Super Regional will feature 13 MLB top 200 prospects in the 2025 draft class. Each of the super regional's 13 MLB prospects are listed below in the order of their ranking. 2025 Fayetteville Super Regional top 200 MLB prospects Liam Doyle Team: Tennessee Position: Left-handed pitcher Overall rank: No. 9 Position rank: No. 3 Gavin Kilen Team: Tennessee Position: Second base Overall rank: No. 17 Position rank: No. 2 Wehiwa Aloy Team: Arkansas Position: Shortstop Overall rank: No. 22 Position rank: No. 9 Andrew Fischer Team: Tennessee Position: First base, third base Overall rank: No. 29 First base rank: No. 1 Third base rank: No. 4 Zach Root Team: Arkansas Position: Left-handed pitcher Overall rank: No. 43 Position rank: No. 6 Gage Wood Team: Arkansas Position: Right-handed pitcher Overall rank: No. 50 Position rank: No. 11 Charles Davalan Team: Arkansas Position: Outfield Overall rank: No. 55 Position rank: No. 16 Dean Curley Team: Tennessee Position: Infield Overall rank: No. 58 Marcus Phillips Team: Tennessee Position: Right-handed pitcher Overall rank: No. 65 Position rank: No. 12 AJ Russell Team: Tennessee Position: Right-handed pitcher Overall rank: No. 69 Position rank: No. 14 Tanner Franklin Team: Tennessee Position: Right-handed pitcher Overall rank: No. 119 Position rank: No. 30 Nate Snead Team: Tennessee Position: Right-handed pitcher Overall rank: No. 143 Position rank: No. 42 Brent Iredale Team: Arkansas Position: Third base Overall rank: No. 168 Position rank: No. 15 Follow Vols Wire on Facebook and X (formerly Twitter).