Oklahoma
Amidst a Changing Landscape, Oklahoma’s Porter Moser is Adjusting on the Fly
DUNCAN, OK — Faculty basketball is in a precarious place.
The arrival of the switch portal and Title, Picture and Likeness inside the identical few years has rocked the game to its core.
Gamers, lastly attending to capitalize off their price, are benefiting from their newfound freedom of motion.
And whereas it’s a particular profit to the well-being of gamers throughout the nation, the double whammy of the portal and NIL taking up has made life lots tougher on coaches like Oklahoma’s Porter Moser.
“I believe all people thought it was time for the student-athletes to capitalize on (their title, picture and likeness),” Moser stated final Thursday forward of the OU Coaches Caravan cease in Duncan, OK. “I believe that’s the nice factor.”
Sadly for Moser and non-blue blood head coaches throughout the nation, the chance of dropping a key participant to the portal can probably set a staff again farther than in soccer merely as a result of smaller roster measurement and variety of gamers on the ground at one time.
Colleges like Miami have pounced on the unsure atmosphere, which has accelerated the need for a standardized algorithm throughout the nation.
“All people was apprehensive about what the guardrails had been going to be, after which there have been no guardrails,” Moser stated. “Then it opened up, now they’re making an attempt to take a step again. Like something, we’ll determine it out, navigate by it.
“It’s undoubtedly difficult, little question about that. It’s actual. It’s right here, and we’ve to learn to navigate it one of the best we are able to.”
Just lately, the NCAA introduced a primary salvo of NIL pointers, however in actuality there may be pessimism that these up to date guidelines can have a lot of an impression.
After handing all of the governance of NIL guidelines over to particular person states, the NCAA got here in and reaffirmed that boosters should not alleged to have any function within the recruitment of gamers.
In fact, boosters have at all times been barred from being actively concerned in recruitment, however these guidelines appeared to have been pushed by the wayside over the primary 10 months of the brand new period of NIL.
After which there’s the issue of tampering, the place different faculties and boosters recruit gamers who should not within the switch portal on the time of first contact.
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With NIL brokers now formally concerned within the recruiting course of, Moser stated the Sooners have needed to be conscious of each issue when pursuing a recruit to assist guarantee his gamers are much less prone to be the goal of tampering.
“There’s quite a lot of voices in the whole lot,” Moser stated. “… Lots of people are calling it the pre-portal.
“… Now greater than ever we have talked concerning the recruiting course of is to recruit the influencers in (the choice making course of). Such as you received to be cognizant of the folks which can be in (the participant’s) ear, as a result of these youngsters making these selections. However I believe the youngsters have a problem today of how many individuals are of their ears.”
Moser and his teaching employees have develop into nicely acquainted with the portal recruiting course of at this level.
Upon touchdown the job in Norman, Moser needed to cobble collectively a big portion of his roster by way of the switch portal final 12 months.
Now one 12 months into the job, he’s having to exchange the likes of Elijah Harkless, Umoja Gibson, Akol Mawein, Rick Issanza and Alston Mason, who’ve all entered their names into the switch portal since Oklahoma’s season-ending loss to St. Bonaventure.
In flip, Moser landed George Washington switch Joe Bamisile on scholarship out of the portal, and Wofford switch Sam Godwin as a walk-on.
The Sooners additionally added Luke Northweather, the Missouri Excessive College Gatorade Participant of the Yr, to his their freshman class.
However nonetheless, extra adjustments want to come back to assist degree the taking part in area in school basketball, and Moser simply hopes these answerable for the foundations guarantee there are skilled voices within the room to assist information and future rule adjustments.
“I believe all coaches will inform you in our conferences and the whole lot… there’s quite a lot of committees,” Moser stated. “There’s at all times — you would like you had a coach within the room with a voice. We are the ones residing by this and you will see generally guidelines over the past many years, within the room there’s not a coach’s voice.
“… These subsequent couple years, the panorama goes to be very fascinating of the place issues go. And also you hope that there is some folks within the room that is been residing it from the coaches facet that is within the room serving to with that enter and people selections.”
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Oklahoma
‘It’s Time To Fix This:' Oklahoma United Pushes For Open Primaries In State Elections
Just over half of Oklahomans voted in the presidential election trailing only Hawaii for the lowest voter turnout nationwide. Oklahoma United wants to amend the state constitution opening state primaries to everyone.
Many independent voters behind this petition said they feel they don’t have a say in their community until it’s too late.
They want their government to represent everyone, and they said Oklahoma has to change its tune.
“We are all here today to support improving our democracy,” A.J. Griffin, chief executive officer of the Potts Family Foundation.
Oklahoma United filed a petition on behalf of several independent voters. U.S. Coast Guard veteran Anthony Stobbe said he feels left out in primary elections.
“Over half of military service members don’t affiliate with a political party,” Stobbe said. “The current system we have in place says to me that your political opinions don’t matter.”
Oklahoma Republicans only allow registered GOP voters to vote in their primaries. News 9 Political Analyst Scott Mitchell said closed primaries silence diverse voices.
“The numbers are down,” said Mitchell, referring to Oklahoma’s chronically low voter turnout. “If you’ve got a small minority deciding all of the issues, that’s not a healthy democracy.”
The spokesperson for the Vote Yes 835 campaign Alex Weintz said politicians don’t have to work for people’s vote.
“We’ve made these November races all but meaningless,” Weintz said. “A Democrat in a heavily Democratic area or a Republican in a heavily Republican area is just cruising to victory.”
Gov. Kevin Stitt posted to X saying, “Open primaries are a hard no in Oklahoma.”
Lt Gov. Matt Pinnell said in a statement:
“At best, the push to mandate open primaries is a solution in search of a problem, and at worst, it is a thinly veiled attempt to weaken Republican voters in choosing the nominees to represent our Party. As a former Republican state party chairman and State Party Director at the RNC, I would hope the current primary structure would incentivize independents and conservative Democrats to register as Republicans and help choose our party’s nominees.”
Mitchell said most state Republicans will oppose the idea of open primaries because the current rules overwhelmingly benefit GOP candidates.
“They’re doing just fine with the results,” said Mitchell, regarding the legislature’s GOP supermajority.
However, Stobbe believes democracy is at stake, and he said it’s time for Oklahomans to face the music.
“It’s time to fix this,” Stobbe said. “It shifts the decision about who will represent the people closer to all of the people.”
Oklahoma United submitted the initial petition to the secretary of state.
Once approved they have 90 days to gather nearly 173,000 signatures and get them certified to get the question on the ballot.
Advocates for this measure hope to get the question on the table for the November general election in 2026.
Oklahoma
Shawnee Heights baseball star signs NLI to Oklahoma State
TOPEKA, Kan. (WIBW) – Shawnee Heights baseball standout Deacon Pomeroy made it official with Oklahoma State baseball on Monday, signing his National Letter of Intent at the high school.
Pomeroy has been committed to the Cowboys for over a year, and told 13 Sports that finally signing his NLI took a big weight off his shoulders.
As one of the top recruits in the state, he’s racked up his fair share of accolades in his high school career.
The catcher and power hitter is the reigning 5A Player of the Year, UKC Player of the Year, and a 1st Team All-State Selection.
He believes Oklahoma State is a program that will help him reach his ultimate goal, making it to the MLB.
“It really felt like family,” Pomeroy said about his visit to Stillwater. “That seemed what they really intended for us to be. They took very good care of us, and honestly they have very top notch facilities. So it’s kind of a no-brainer at that point.“
For now, he’s excited to enjoy his final year of high school baseball with the Thunderbirds.
“It’s that last bit of kind of feeling like this is for fun. Like just go out here and have fun with the boys and just go play,” he said.
Pomeroy can also be found hitting the court with the boys basketball team this winter.
Copyright 2024 WIBW. All rights reserved.
Oklahoma
Education secretary hopeful demands students watch video of him praying for Trump
Oklahoma’s chief school officer and Trump administration education secretary hopeful is now demanding that students in the state watch a video of him praying for Donald Trump.
In an email circulated to Oklahoma public school superintendents last week, Ryan Walters ordered them to play the video to “all kids that are enrolled” in their districts as well as to the students’ parents.
Walters wrote that it was “a dangerous time for this country” and that students “rights and freedoms regarding religious liberties are continuously under assault,” the Oklahoman reported.
In the bizarre video, Walters announced a new office in the state called “the Office of Religious Liberty and Patriotism.”
“For too long in this country we’ve seen the radical left attack individuals’ religious liberty in our schools. We will not tolerate that in Oklahoma. Your religious Liberties will be protected,” Walters said, before bowing his head in a prayer for Trump.
“I pray for our leaders to make the right decisions. I pray in particular for President Donald Trump and his team as they continue to bring about change to the country,” he said.
When grilled by CNN’s Pam Brown about what gives him the authority to demand schools play the video to their students, Walters accused Brown of pushing a “left-wing narrative” and maintained that Trump “has a clear mandate.”
“He wants prayer back in school. He wants radical leftism out of the classroom. He wants our kids to be patriotic,” he said. “He wants parents back in charge with school choice. We’re enacting upon that agenda here in Oklahoma.”
Several school districts in Oklahoma said they have no intention of showing the video, the Oklahoman reported.
The office of the state’s Republican attorney general, Genter Drummond, also weighed in and said that Walters cannot mandate schools to play the video.
“There is no statutory authority for the state schools superintendent to require all students to watch a specific video,” Phil Bacharach, a spokesman for the state attorney general’s office, told the newspaper.
“Not only is this edict unenforceable, it is contrary to parents’ rights, local control and individual free-exercise rights.”
Walters, who ordered schools to incorporate the Bible into classrooms and backs Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy’s pledge to scrap the federal Department of Education, is thought to currently be in the running to be named Trump’s new education secretary.
In June, he notified all Oklahoma state schools to “immediately” incorporate the Bible into classroom curriculum, drawing immediate outrage and threats of lawsuits.
“Effective immediately, all Oklahoma schools are required to incorporate the Bible, which includes the Ten Commandments, as an instructional support into the curriculum” in grades five through 12, according to the notice from the Republican school superintendent.
“The Bible is one of the most historically significant books and a cornerstone of Western civilization, along with the Ten Commandments,” the notice reads.
At a press conference at the time, Walters said that every school in the state “will have a Bible in the classroom,” and that every teacher “will be teaching from the Bible in the classroom.”
The move, which led to him being sued by more than 30 educators and parents, propeled him into the national spotlight.
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