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MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Authorities on Monday asked the public to provide surveillance footage and sought details from eyewitnesses as they investigate the fatal shooting of an Ole Miss freshman football player in a Memphis neighborhood after a pool party.

Corey Adams, an 18-year-old defensive lineman from New Orleans, was found with a gunshot wound inside a vehicle at an intersection in the Memphis suburb of Cordova on Saturday night, said Anthony Buckner, chief deputy of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office. Adams died at the location of the shooting.

Four other men, who suffered gunshot wounds that were not life-threatening, arrived at nearby hospitals in personal vehicles. Three of them had been released from the hospital as of Monday afternoon, Buckner said.

The shooting happened after a pool party attended by about 100 people, including Adams, Buckner said during a news conference. About 40 rifle and pistol casings were found at the shooting scene.

No arrests have been made. Buckner asked members of the public who might have information useful to investigators, including surveillance footage from video cameras at neighbors’ homes, to come forward.

“We have far more questions right now than we have answers,” Buckner said. “We know people saw something or heard something.”

Adams, who played at Edna Carr High School in New Orleans, is listed on the Ole Miss football website as a 6-foot-4, 235-pound defensive end. He had been one of the top defensive lineman recruits in the country.

Adams’ mother, who spoke at the news conference but declined to be named for fear of retribution, said Adams was a loving son and brother who had hopes of playing in the NFL. Adams had time off from practice and went to Memphis to enjoy himself, she said.

Memphis is about 85 miles north of Oxford, Mississippi, where Ole Miss is located.

The Edna Karr Cougars wrote in a Facebook post that “words can’t describe this type of pain.”

“Corey Adams was more than a football player! He was a friend, brother, son, student, and all around great young man,” the team’s post read. “We never question God but this is one we just don’t understand.”

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Petitti letter: Michigan sign-stealing penalties have gone far enough

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Petitti letter: Michigan sign-stealing penalties have gone far enough

Give Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti credit for this: He will advocate for what he believes is best for one of the league’s teams. That’s true even if that same program previously unleashed an avalanche of headline-grabbing public accusations and animosity on him.

In this case, it’s Michigan football, which at the height of the 2023 advanced scouting/sign-stealing scandal hit Petitti with a blistering legal filing, claims of personal bias and choruses of boos and negative social media posts from fans.

Regardless, Petitti has sent a letter to the NCAA Committee on Infractions arguing that Michigan deserved no further punishment in a case focusing on the actions of former staffer Connor Stalions.

The letter was read at an early June infractions committee hearing in Indianapolis, multiple sources told ESPN. The NCAA has charged Michigan with 11 rule violations, six of them Level 1, which is classified as the most serious. The committee has yet to hand down a ruling, but one is expected before the 2025 season. It does not have to follow or even consider Petitti’s opinion.

The Big Ten confirmed to ESPN that Petitti sent the letter and said he would have attended in person but was recovering at the time from hip replacement surgery. The NCAA and Michigan are prohibited from commenting on a pending case. Petitti declined comment through a league spokesperson.

Petitti argued, sources said, that the Big Ten itself had already sufficiently punished the Michigan program when it suspended then-coach Jim Harbaugh for the final three games of the 2023 regular season: at Penn State, at Maryland and at home against Ohio State.

Even without Harbaugh, Michigan won all three en route to capturing the national championship.

The NCAA might still hit the Wolverines with penalties ranging from vacating past victories, a postseason ban, the suspension of coaches, a monetary fine or other measures.

Michigan, as ESPN previously reported, has proposed suspending current coach Sherrone Moore for the third and fourth game of the 2025 season for deleting a thread of text messages with Stalions as the scandal broke. Moore was the team’s offensive coordinator at the time. The NCAA was able to retrieve the texts, and Moore was not charged with having any knowledge of Stalions’ actions.

The NCAA could also punish individuals, including Harbaugh (now the coach of the Los Angeles Chargers), Stalions and others. Petitti’s letter did not address that, according to sources.

The concept of a league commissioner standing up for one of his conference’s teams is not unusual. The business of any conference is aided by its programs avoiding NCAA sanctions that might affect its ability to field competitive teams.

Petitti’s position is notable in this situation because of the extremely contentious relationship between him and Michigan when allegations first broke of Stalions sending friends and family to scout future Wolverine opponents and film sideline coaching signals.

Petitti, in a Nov. 10, 2023, letter to Michigan athletics director Warde Manual, laid out the Harbaugh suspension by arguing that “the integrity of competition is the backbone of any sports conference or league.” He noted that “taking immediate action is appropriate and necessary.”

Michigan, to put it lightly, disagreed.

The school vehemently fought back, arguing that due process had not been followed, the case lacked conclusive evidence, and there was no proof that Harbaugh had knowledge of Stalions’ activities.

The university even sought an emergency temporary restraining order in Washtenaw (Michigan) County Court against the Big Ten to let Harbaugh keep coaching.

In a fiery court filing, the school claimed the Big Ten’s actions “were fraudulent, unlawful, unethical, unjustified, and per se wrongful, and were done with malice.” It further claimed the league was causing irreparable damage to the reputations of Harbaugh and the university, declaring the suspension a “flagrant breach of fundamental fairness.”

The school eventually backed down and withdrew the restraining order request, but the rift between the team and the commissioner remained as Harbaugh was benched.

The suspension became a rallying cry for Michigan players as they continued their 15-0 season. Petitti chose to not attend the Ohio State-Michigan game in Ann Arbor that season, even though it was one of the biggest games in league history. The Big Ten said Petitti was never scheduled to attend the game.

A week later, at the Big Ten title game, Michigan fans lustily booed Petitti when he presented the championship trophy to injured Wolverines player Zak Zinter (notably, not Harbaugh, despite having completed his suspension by then).

All of that appears to be behind the commissioner. To Petitti, making Michigan overcome a three-game stretch without its head coach was apparently enough of a penalty. He noted in his initial 2023 decision that the suspension was not about Harbaugh but was a way to hit the program as a whole.

“We impose this disciplinary action even though the Conference has not yet received any information indicating that Head Football Coach Harbaugh was aware of the impermissible nature of the sign-stealing scheme,” Petitti wrote. “This is not a sanction of Coach Harbaugh. It is a sanction against the University.”

He also allowed that “additional disciplinary actions may be necessary or appropriate if [the NCAA or Big Ten] receives additional information concerning the scope and knowledge of, or participation in, the impermissible scheme.”

That Petitti is now suggesting that Michigan has paid its penance suggests no such additional information has emerged.

Apparently, bygones are now bygones, even B1G ones.

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Sources: Ex-BYU QB Retzlaff to transfer to Tulane

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Sources: Ex-BYU QB Retzlaff to transfer to Tulane

Former BYU quarterback Jake Retzlaff has verbally committed to transfer to Tulane, sources told ESPN.

The school has spent more than a week doing background on Retzlaff, per sources, including having the university’s Title IX office vet the transfer. He’s expected to enroll soon as a walk-on, per sources, and compete for the starting job in training camp in the upcoming weeks.

Retzlaff’s departure from BYU came following his formal withdrawal from the school on July 11 in the wake of BYU’s planned seven-game suspension of him for violating the school’s honor code.

That BYU suspension arose after Retzlaff was accused in a lawsuit in May of this year of raping a woman in 2023. Retzlaff denied “each and every allegation” in a response and was never charged legally.

The lawsuit ended up being dismissed on June 30, with the parties jointly agreeing to dismiss with prejudice. Retzlaff’s response included an admission of premarital sex, which is a violation of the BYU honor code, which led to the BYU suspension.

Along with Tulane’s vetting of the situation, Retzlaff will arrive at Tulane with a long history with coach Jon Sumrall. While the coach at Troy, Sumrall recruited Retzlaff. While Retzlaff ended up picking BYU prior to the 2023 season, the two have a yearslong relationship that included an official visit to Troy. Retzlaff, who hails from California, also is familiar with many of the current staffers at Tulane from that time.

Retzlaff’s transfer is an unconventional one in the mechanics of how it worked. Because of the timing of his decision to leave BYU, he couldn’t enter the NCAA transfer portal. (He was just short of his earning his degree.) Instead, he withdrew from school and plans to enroll at Tulane and technically will walk on to the team, per sources.

The timing of the suspension in late June and subsequent transfer led to few schools around the needing a quarterback, as it’s rare for a starter-caliber quarterback to transfer after spring practice. Because this is Retzlaff’s fifth and final season of college football, he was unable to redshirt this year and transfer in a more traditional window.

Retzlaff went 11-2 as a starter for BYU last season, throwing for 2,947 yards and 20 touchdowns. He completed 57.9% of his passes and threw 12 interceptions, establishing himself as a productive Big 12 quarterback on a strong BYU team.

He spent two seasons at junior college before transferring to BYU in 2023, starting in the final four games of the season while maintaining his redshirt for the year. He took over as the full-time starter in 2024 and was poised to be in 2025 before off-field issues diverted him from Provo.

As part of the recruitment, sources said, the Tulane staff made it clear there were no guarantees for him to start and that he would need to earn the job. Retzlaff had suitors at both the Power 4 and Group of 6 level as he made his choice, per sources.

He’ll enter a quarterback situation at Tulane that’s layered in ambiguity after the arrest and subsequent transfer of the talented TJ Finley this spring.

Tulane took Iowa transfer Brendan Sullivan in April after Finley’s issues and also has Ball State transfer Kadin Semonza and Illinois transfer Donovan Leary. Of the four players competing for the Tulane starting job, none was enrolled prior to January.

The void at that position came after Darian Mensah left for Duke after leading Tulane to the AAC title game and completing 65.9% of his passes.

Tulane went 9-5 in Sumrall’s debut season in 2024, which followed 11-win and 12-win seasons under former coach Willie Fritz. Tulane has been ranked in the top 20 in each of the past three years.

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Judge dismisses Pryor-led OSU lawsuit vs. NCAA

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Judge dismisses Pryor-led OSU lawsuit vs. NCAA

A federal judge in Ohio has dismissed a lawsuit seeking compensation for thousands of former Ohio State athletes from the NCAA.

In her ruling, Chief U.S. District Judge Sarah Morrison said former Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor filed his proposed class action against the NCAA, Ohio State, the Big Ten and others too late.

Pryor, who played for Ohio State from 2008 to ’10, sued the NCAA and other defendants in October, accusing them of violating antitrust law by barring members of the school’s sports teams from seeking to profit from the commercial use of their names, images and likenesses.

Plaintiffs generally face a four-year window to bring claims under U.S. antitrust law.

“Mr. Pryor knew the material facts underlying his antitrust claims long before the four-year limitations period had run,” Morrison said.

The NCAA in a statement welcomed the judge’s ruling and said “we are hopeful that additional copycat cases will see the same outcome.”

Ohio State and attorneys for the plaintiff did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Pryor said in the lawsuit that the NCAA and others have continued to make money from the use of his name, image and likeness through videos and other broadcasts.

Former USC running back Reggie Bush filed a similar lawsuit against the university, the NCAA and the Pac-12 in September, as a number of former Michigan stars against the NCAA and Big Ten.

Morrison ruled that Ohio State as a public school and arm of the state was immune from the lawsuit.

The NCAA this year revamped its rules over compensation for college athletes, agreeing for the first time to allow schools to pay students directly.

As part of the landmark settlement, the organization agreed to pay $2.8 billion to compensate thousands of current and former athletes since 2016 for the commercial use of their names, images and likenesses.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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