Morning Edition |
October 14, 2025 |
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James Franklin’s dismissal from Penn State seemed costly—but there’s a twist. The terms of his contract could work in the university’s favor, reducing or even eliminating the buyout if Franklin lands another position.
—Amanda Christovich, Eric Fisher, Colin Salao, and David Rumsey
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After abruptly firing James Franklin on Sunday, Penn State owes the former head football coach close to $50 million in buyout money. It’s among the largest buyouts in the history of college sports.
But if Franklin gets a new job soon, that number could significantly diminish. In fact, Penn State may not owe him anything at all.
Franklin and Penn State could have negotiated a settlement after his firing, but the terms of his 2021 contract extension, obtained by Front Office Sports, read: “Should Coach obtain such applicable employment prior to the date this Contract would otherwise have expired, the University’s obligation to make payments to Coach … will be offset by the total compensation earned by Coach from such applicable new position through the end of the otherwise unexpired term of this agreement.”
In other words, whatever new salary he receives from his next job will offset what Penn State owes him in a buyout. And Franklin is obligated to search for a new job, according to the deal. That language, known as “duty to mitigate,” states: “Once terminated, Coach is obligated to diligently search for and make a good faith effort to obtain another position appropriate for his skill set (i.e., coaching, scouting and broadcasting only) and to provide the university upon request with evidence that he is seeking such employment.” Franklin is also required “to make good faith efforts to obtain the maximum reasonable salary” at his new job.
Some of the terms of Franklin’s buyout were previously reported by On3.
Franklin’s buyout consists of his base salary of $500,000 per year, additional compensation of $6.5 million per year, and $1 million per year life insurance policy coverage between now and the end of the 2031 season, when his deal would have expired, according to the contract. That amounts to about $48 million.
He’s also owed the rest of that money for this year, bringing the total number to somewhere between $48 million and $50 million.
But if Franklin gets a new job between now and the end of the contract—whether in coaching or broadcasting—his new salary will offset the buyout. In other words, Penn State will have to pay him only the difference between his new salary and the amount of the buyout. If he gets another salary worth more than the terms of the buyout, Penn State owes him nothing. Franklin may even have to reimburse them if payments have already been made, the contract says.
If the Nittany Lions aren’t so lucky, they’ll have to cough up tens of millions in cash—and it’s unclear at this point how they will fund the buyout amid a $700 million renovation of Beaver Stadium.
One report suggested Adidas, the program’s incoming apparel sponsor, would help bankroll the buyout. Penn State vehemently denied this in a statement to FOS. A payout from a Big Ten private-capital deal involving a California pension fund could potentially help fund any potential buyout as well.
Athletic director Patrick Kraft declined to comment on specifics during a press conference Monday. “This is an athletics issue, this is not the institution’s issue,” he said. “We in athletics are covering all the costs.”
While it’s unclear where Franklin will land, there are currently plenty of openings across the Power 4. In the past month, Arkansas, Oklahoma State, UCLA, and Virginia Tech have all fired their head coaches.
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Jerome Miron-Imagn Images
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One of the more overlooked components of the NBA’s new set of domestic media deals has led to a reconstruction of the league’s NBA TV and NBA app.
As the $77 billion in rights agreements with Amazon, ESPN, and NBC begin, the league has redeveloped two of its core in-house platforms between the television network and mobile app. The NBA reassumed full operational control of NBA TV and the app after 17 years, when those assets were not included in the revised deal the league struck with TNT Sports parent Warner Bros. Discovery.
After WBD did not keep live game rights in the U.S., setting off a legal battle, an eventual settlement with the league included a new agreement focused instead on highlights and international game rights. That deal, however, still contained some discord, as WBD was not able to come to an agreement with the NBA on continuing the prior model for NBA TV and the app.
“We were unable to agree on a path forward that recognized the value of our expertise, quality content, and operational excellence that our fans and partners have come to expect from TNT Sports,” network chairman and CEO Luis Silberwasser wrote in a company memo about those platforms.
Key elements of NBA TV and the app in the revised structure include:
- The creation of The Association, a new daily flagship program on the two platforms. The show will include news, highlights, and analysis, and it will “guide fans to the must-watch action across the league.” That program, based in a Los Angeles studio, will essentially replace the prior NBA Gametime Live.
- A nonexclusive live game package of 60 games, consisting of contests not part of the other national rights deals, or also shown regionally in the competing teams’ home markets.
- Heightened coverage of international basketball, including Australia’s National Basketball League, France’s Ligue Nationale de Basket, Germany’s Basketball Bundesliga, Spain’s Liga ACB, the Chinese Basketball Association, and the Korean Basketball League.
- A collection of top NBA podcasts and other creator-driven content.
The NBA, meanwhile, has also taken over operations of its out-of-market game package, NBA League Pass. The service carries a base price of $109.99 for the season, and $159.99 for the premium-level tier, equal to pricing from last season in the final year of the TNT Sports operation. NBA League Pass is also now being sold through Amazon’s Prime Video Channels as part of their agreement, and that product, along with NBA.com and the NBA app, are running on Amazon Web Services technology.
The 2025–26 NBA regular season will begin Oct. 21.
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Jerome Miron-Imagn Images
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After a six-year absence, the NBA returned to China over the weekend, sparking a new beginning for the league and one of its largest international markets.
The Suns and Nets played two games on Friday and Sunday, drawing a total of 22,634 fans for two sellouts at The Venetian Arena in Macao. The league is set to play eight more games over the next four years in Macao, which is a special administrative region of China.
Mavericks owner Patrick Dumont told the South China Morning Post that his team will face the Rockets next year. Dumont is the president and COO of Las Vegas Sands, which owns The Venetian.
However, there may also be games in mainland China over that same period.
Before tip-off of the NBA China games Friday, NBA commissioner Adam Silver announced a new “transformational partnership” with the Chinese Basketball League (CBA). The announcement focuses on player development in China, including opportunities for China’s men’s and women’s national teams to train in the U.S. and compete in the NBA Summer League and WNBA preseason.
He also said that there could be additional games in “other parts of China concurrent with our Macao arrangement.” The Trail Blazers are an obvious candidate for a China-based game after the team drafted Hansen Yang with the No. 16 pick in June. The Celtics may also be a candidate following their recent $6.1 billion sale to a consortium led by William Chisholm.
That group included Mario Ho Yau-kwan, the son of the late Macao businessman Stanley Ho Hung-sun.
The NBA had not played games since October 2019, about a week after then-Rockets GM Daryl Morey tweeted in support of anti-government protestors in Hong Kong. The backlash in China led to the removal of games on TV, particularly of Houston, one of the most popular franchises in the country following Yao Ming’s eight seasons with the team.
Is the WNBA Next?
Women’s basketball is also a focus of the NBA and CBA partnership, and Silver said WNBA games could also be held in China down the line. He admitted, however, that the league will first need to come to terms on a different CBA—the collective bargaining agreement.
“We have to get through a new collective bargaining agreement with our players. But once we do, there’s so much interest in women’s basketball here, I think we’d love to bring a WNBA game to Macao or to mainland China,” Silver said.
There have been several Chinese WNBA players in recent years, including former New York Liberty center Han Xu and Washington Mystics wing Li Meng. Dallas Wings center Li Yueru is the lone active player.
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Tiger Woods was not expected to be competitive at the highest level of professional golf in 2026, but his latest back surgery does have ramifications for the business of several other major entities in the sport.
Woods, 49, announced Saturday that he had lumbar disc replacement surgery Friday in his L4/5 lumbar spine for lower back symptoms. “After experiencing pain and lack of mobility in my back, I consulted with doctors and surgeons to have tests taken,” he posted on social media. “The scans determined that I had a collapsed disk in L4/5, disc fragments and a compromised spinal canal. I opted to have my disc replaced yesterday, and I already know I made a good decision for my health and my back.”
It marks the seventh back surgery in 11 years for the 15-time major champion, and the second significant procedure this year, following surgery to repair a torn Achilles tendon in March.
Woods did not give a timetable for a return to the golf course. In recent years, when healthy, he has played two low-stakes PGA Tour events in December: the limited-field Hero World Challenge that he hosts in the Bahamas, and the PNC Championship (which uses a parent-child format) with his son Charlie.
TGL Uncertainty
The biggest endeavor Woods could have on the sideline as his back recovers is Season 2 of TGL, the tech-infused indoor team golf league he cofounded and launched with Rory McIlroy last year.
Woods is the front man and co-owner of Jupiter Links Golf Club, which plays its season opener Jan. 13 (which will be 95 days post–back surgery for Woods). Last January, the TGL debut of Woods drew the league’s highest TV audience of the entire season, including the playoffs, with 1 million viewers on ESPN.
It’s a bit of déjà vu for TGL, as the playing status of Woods was uncertain in the lead-up to the league’s launch, as he recovered from another back procedure—that one a microdecompression surgery of the lumbar spine—in September 2024.
One More Ride?
After Woods turns 50 on Dec. 30, he will be eligible to compete on the PGA Tour Champions circuit, which features golf legends in their senior years still competing past their professional prime.
Woods would be the biggest star by far for the 50-plus tour, which typically plays two to three events each month, year-round. In August, four-time major champion Ernie Els told The Palm Beach Post that he hopes Woods plays on the PGA Tour Champions. “I’ve said, please come play,” Els said. “And I think it can only be beneficial to him.”
Woods has not confirmed that he would attempt to play, even if healthy, though.
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- Jaguars defensive end Josh Hines-Allen brought his 8-year-old son, a leukemia survivor, to serve as honorary captain ahead of the Jacksonville game Sunday. Take a look.
- Kobe Bryant’s daughter Natalia served as the creative director for the Lakers’ preseason hype video that had several tributes to her father. Watch it here.
- After leading the Las Vegas Aces to their third WNBA championship in four years, A’ja Wilson hugged her boyfriend, NBA All-Star Bam Adebayo. Check it out.
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 | The Knicks had sought more than $10 million in damages. |
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 | The Six Kings Slam is held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
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Do you think NBA League Pass will thrive under league control?
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Monday’s result: 55% of respondents think James Franklin will land another Power 4 coaching job in 2026.
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