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2026 NCAA Tournament Predictions: Way-too-early Bracketology projections for 68, 72, 76-team fields

After the final set of NBA Draft withdrawals became official, the picture of college basketball’s 2025-26 season became much more clear. With NIL drawing a large amount of talent back for an extra season, the top of this season’s bracketology contenders could be loaded. The NCAA uses the NET Rankings – an analytic algorithm which ranks every […]

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After the final set of NBA Draft withdrawals became official, the picture of college basketball’s 2025-26 season became much more clear. With NIL drawing a large amount of talent back for an extra season, the top of this season’s bracketology contenders could be loaded.

The NCAA uses the NET Rankings – an analytic algorithm which ranks every team in college basketball by splitting wins and losses into four categories (known as quadrants) – to help the selection committee build the 68-or-more-team bracket in March. In the absence of those numbers for next season, bracketology must rely on preseason projections of how each team will perform with their incoming transfers and recruits.

Another wrinkle in the offseason is the NCAA’s pursuit of tournament expansion, with 68, 72 and 76-team formats all on the table in 2026. Here is a way-too-early look at the 2026 NCAA Tournament field based on what we know.

Bracketology

Projected 1-line: Purdue, Houston, Duke, Florida
Last four byes: Iowa, Clemson, St. Mary’s, Oregon
In if Field of 68: Vanderbilt, Virginia, USC, Kansas State
In if Field of 72: LSU, Maryland, Cincinnati, Miami
In if Field of 76: Georgia, Butler, SMU, Ohio State

First Four (Dayton)

16 Norfolk State (MEAC) vs. 16 Southern (SWAC)
16 CCSU (NEC) vs. 16 Merrimack (MAAC)
11 Vanderbilt vs. 11 USC
11 Virginia vs. 11 Kansas State

Midwest (Chicago)

St. Louis
1 Purdue (Big Ten) vs. 16 CCSU/Merrimack
8 Gonzaga (WCC) vs. 9 Ole Miss
Portland
5 Arizona vs. 12 Yale (Ivy)
4 UConn vs. 13 Akron (MAC)
Philadelphia
6 Wisconsin vs. 11 Virginia/Kansas State
3 Tennessee vs. 14 McNeese (Southland)
Buffalo
7 Texas A&M vs. 10 Clemson
2 St. John’s (Big East) vs. 15 Vermont (AEC)

1-seed Purdue

Purdue coach Matt Painter
Purdue coach Matt Painter (Chad Krockover)

Purdue again brings back a wealth of returning talent, including multiple All-Big Ten selections from the past season. Head coach Matt Painter complements what he had with a pair of big-time transfer portal players and an intriguing international prospect.

2-seed St. John’s

St. John's HC Rick Pitino
© Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Under Rick Pitino, there is no question that St. John’s will continue to invest big in the roster, which got multiple top-end additions which promise to pay off big-time this year. How those players mesh with each other and the returning talent will set the tone.

West (San Jose)

Tampa
1 Florida (SEC) vs. 16 Colgate (Patriot)
8 Marquette vs. 9 Oklahoma
San Diego
5 Illinois vs. 12 UC Irvine (Big West)
4 Kansas vs. 13 Murray State (MVC)
Buffalo
6 Creighton vs. 11 Vanderbilt/USC
3 Iowa State vs. 14 James Madison (SBC)
Greenville
7 Indiana vs. 10 St. Mary’s
2 Auburn vs. 15 Oakland (Horizon)

1-seed Florida

Todd Golden, Florida Basketball | Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images
Todd Golden, Florida Basketball | Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images

Fresh off a national championship, Todd Golden promises to get a large portion of his frontcourt back this season. While they lose a lot at guard, they restocked in the transfer portal with multiple big splashes and got depth in a pair of Top 50 recruits on the way.

2-seed Auburn

bruce-pearl-auburn-basketball (2)
Bruce Pearl (Photo by Auburn Athletics)

Auburn had to overhaul its veteran roster which made a deep NCAA Tournament run last season, and did so through the transfer portal. Bruce Pearl complemented some high-profile moves with a combination of Junior College players and incoming freshmen.

East (Washington DC)

Oklahoma City
1 Houston (Big 12) vs. 16 SEMO (OVC)
8 Missouri vs. 9 NC State
San Diego
5 Louisville vs. 12 Grand Canyon (WAC)
4 Texas Tech vs. 13 Charleston (CAA)
Philadelphia
6 Texas vs. 11 St. Bonaventure (A10)
3 Michigan vs. 14 Lipscomb (ASUN)
Tampa
7 North Carolina vs. 10 Oregon
2 Alabama vs. 15 North Dakota State (Summit)

1-seed Houston

WATCH Houston Kelvin Sampson attempt to follow officials to locker room following Alabama loss video
David Becker/Getty Images

Houston brings a solid combination of retuning production and incoming talent which centers on the No. 1 recruiting class in the On3 Industry Rankings. With head coach Kelvin Sampson running the defense, the offensive upside of these players could make something special.

2-seed Alabama

Alabama coach Nate Oats
Alabama coach Nate Oats (Ken Blaze / Imagn Images)

Alabama overhauls the core of its team with multiple starts aging out of college basketball, but gets a big boost with the surprise decision of Labaron Philon to return for a sophomore campaign. Under Nate Oats, a new group of transfers and highly-ranked freshmen look ready to contend again.

South (Houston)

Greenville
1 Duke (ACC) vs. 16 Norfolk State/Southern
8 SDSU (MWC) vs. 9 Mississippi State
Portland
5 BYU vs. 12 Liberty (CUSA)
4 Michigan State vs. 13 High Point (Big South)
Oklahoma City
6 Arizona vs. 11 Memphis (AAC)
3 Arkansas vs. 14 Furman (SoCon)
St. Louis
7 Baylor vs. 10 Iowa
2 Kentucky vs. 15 Northern Colorado (Big Sky)

1-seed Duke

duke-head-coach-jon-scheyer-shares-message-to-players-ahead-final-possesion-win-over-clemson
Rob Kinnan-USA TODAY Sports

Duke has a clear plan under head coach Jon Scheyer to surround talented freshmen with a specific mold of veterans from the transfer portal. That vision is clear again with top-ranked prospects helped by returning talent and role players who bring length and defensive intensity.

2-seed Kentucky

Mar 28, 2025; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Kentucky Wildcats head coach Mark Pope reacts in the second half during a Midwest Regional semifinal of the 2025 NCAA tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images
Mar 28, 2025; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Kentucky Wildcats head coach Mark Pope reacts in the second half during a Midwest Regional semifinal of the 2025 NCAA tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

Kentucky enters Year Two under Mark Pope with high hopes that he can combine the culture of last season’s team with the influx of incoming talent. Multiple Top 50 freshmen round out a group of returning production and high-end transfer portal prospects.



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WVU athletics launch NIL initiative Gold & Blue Enterprises

West Virginia running back Jahiem White (1) against Arizona in the first half during an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024, in Tucson, Ariz. College sports are rapidly evolving, and recently, it took another step to the professional level after a judge in California settled on a revenue-sharing agreement between the NCAA and […]

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West Virginia running back Jahiem White (1) against Arizona in the first half during an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024, in Tucson, Ariz.

College sports are rapidly evolving, and recently, it took another step to the professional level after a judge in California settled on a revenue-sharing agreement between the NCAA and players. Now, athletes are allowed to play directly for schools up to about $20 million a year on top of the NIL money. The NIL money is now regulated under the new CEO of the College Sports Commission, Bryan Seeley.

West Virginia and AD Wren Baker released a statement on the new ruling and stated West Virginia planned “for this day for a long time to best position our department for long-term success,” and they weren’t joking around.

Wednesday morning, West Virginia athletics announced the creation of Gold & Blue Enterprises, which is an initiative to “enhance the Mountaineers’ competitive edge,” according to a press release.

The program’s main features are to create a comprehensive NIL support, collaborate with strategic partners, build an innovative business structure, and dedicate leadership and governance.

The comprehensive NIL support is supposed to create services that help student athletes grow their brand to maximize their NIL potential and help with education. WVU already has some NIL collectives, like the Country Roads Trust, but this is the university’s collective. This goes hand in hand with the strategic partners part, which connects student athletes with agencies to make endorsement opportunities.

The innovative business is vague, but it’s said Gold & Blue Enterprises is operating with a “private-sector approach,” supporting the long-term sustainability of WVU sports.

A dedicated leadership and governance is supposed to be created too, but who will be a part of that hasn’t been announced.

This type of university NIL initiative isn’t something new. Once the ruling changed, multiple schools created something like this. Almost all schools had these types of supports created a couple of months ago when this case was brought to the courts in the early spring. In the release, it states that Gold & Blue Enterprises “draws inspiration” from other schools.

There is a dedicated site, goldandblueenterprises.com, but it’s very barebones as of now. It’s mainly a link to donate.

The timeliness of this release shows Baker’s commitment to making WVU consistently competitive and giving the coaches, who have been hired most recently under his leadership, the tools to succeed. Now, the coaches have to do their part and show it on the field/court.

“The launch of Gold & Blue Enterprises is a major breakthrough for WVU Athletics and its student-athletes,” Baker said in the release. “We are taking a hands-on approach to maximize Name, Image and Likeness opportunities for our students and develop innovative partnerships to generate the revenues we need to thrive. I want to thank everyone involved with helping to create and launch this proactive business venture that will work to keep WVU relevant and winning on the national stage. In today’s competitive NIL industry, the launch of GBE is a victory for all Mountaineers.”



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Why Wisconsin’s lawsuit against Miami brings ‘unprecedented’ moment to college football

In an unprecedented moment in college football, the University of Wisconsin and its NIL collective filed a complaint Friday against the University of Miami, alleging tortious interference. Filed Friday in a Wisconsin state circuit court, the Badgers allege that Miami poached freshman defensive back Xavier Lucas, who had signed a revenue-sharing contract with Wisconsin. It […]

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In an unprecedented moment in college football, the University of Wisconsin and its NIL collective filed a complaint Friday against the University of Miami, alleging tortious interference. Filed Friday in a Wisconsin state circuit court, the Badgers allege that Miami poached freshman defensive back Xavier Lucas, who had signed a revenue-sharing contract with Wisconsin.

It is uncharted waters in college football. In the 23-page suit, Wisconsin is seeking financial damages and a judgment that Miami’s actions “wrongfully interfere with contractual commitments.” Beyond that, however, Wisconsin is enforcing its contract with Lucas. The defensive back’s attorney, Darren Heitner, told On3 on Friday that Lucas was never compensated through the deal by Wisconsin.

Lucas is not named in the suit, instead cited as “Student Athlete A.” But Lucas publicly left Wisconsin for Miami this winter without ever entering the transfer portal. Heitner previously alleged Wisconsin of violating NCAA rules by not putting Lucas into the transfer portal after multiple requests. In the complaint filed Friday, Wisconsin alleges that a Miami staff member and alumnus met Lucas and his family at a relative’s home in Florida.

“Accordingly, at the conclusion of the 2024 season, UW-Madison and VC Connect offered, negotiated, and executed separate NIL contracts with Student-Athlete A, under which he would receive one of the most lucrative NIL financial commitments of any UW-Madison football player,” the complaint states. “Within days of contract execution, however, Miami knowingly induced Student-Athlete A to abandon his contractual commitments to Plaintiffs. As a result of Miami’s actions, Student-Athlete A abruptly left UW-Madison’s football program and enrolled at Miami, causing Plaintiffs to suffer substantial pecuniary and reputational harm.

“Miami’s actions are in direct contravention of not only the NCAA’s established anti-tampering rules—rules designed to maintain the integrity of the transfer process and ensure fair competition among member institutions—but also established contract and tort law.”

In another unprecedented situation, the Big Ten has publicly voiced its backing of Wisconsin for filing the suit, telling On3 in a statement that, “The University of Miami’s actions are irreconcilable with a sustainable college sports framework and is supportive of UW-Madison’s efforts to preserve.” Miami did not immediately respond to a request for comment from On3.

The suit will also put the NCAA transfer rules to the test. In recent years, the college football transfer portal has come under fire from coaches due to the ease with which athletes can hit free agency. Athletes have turned the portal into a payday, too, leveraging schools against each other for the highest contract offer.

But with the House v. NCAA settlement set to officially begin on July 1, revenue-sharing contracts have been drawn up by most of the Power Four in the last six months. Tampering has become prominent in the portal, but there has been minimal enforcement from the NCAA, which has been handicapped by lawsuits.

How a judge decides to rule on this lawsuit could define how the transfer portal is enforced and how revenue-sharing contracts will hold up in the courtroom. It could also prove to be a precedent-setting move if NIL contracts can keep athletes from transferring.

College athletes are currently not classified as employees and do not have collective bargaining power.

“These are the type of tampering allegations that are typically fought behind closed doors at the professional sports level based on the leagues’ collective bargaining agreement,” sports lawyer and professor Dan Lust told On3. “Here, in the absence of any type of similar mechanism at the collegiate level, this dispute is going to be fought in open court for the world to see the complex interplay of forces in and around the transfer portal. This is truly an unprecedented case and one that commands the attention of the college sports world.”



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PLEASE STOP CONFUSING NIL WITH REVENUE SHARING – Clemson Football Forum

Replies: 20 | visibility 1598 Clemson Conqueror [11260] TigerPulse: 100% 46 4 Jun 20, 2025, 12:59 PM NIL is not part of the REVENUE sharing plan that went into effect this year. The student athlete is paid an appropriate amount of money to join the team. Clemson has elected to allocate 85% of their revenue […]

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4



Jun 20, 2025, 12:59 PM


NIL is not part of the REVENUE sharing plan that went into effect this year. The student athlete is paid an appropriate amount of money to join the team. Clemson has elected to allocate 85% of their revenue sharing plan which is capped at $21M, to their football program. Meaning, each member on the team will receive a payment in some form. There are minimum requirements to satisfy the House Settlement, however some players will receive a bump from the revenue share based upon performance.

NIL on the other hand is private money from boosters which now must make public donations to the school for the purposes of recruitment and/or retention within the student body’s athletic department. NIL is being offered only to players who perform well and choose to return to Clemson to play additional seasons. NIL money is still governed somewhat by the school to my understanding and the coaching staff has a partial say in how much is offered. However, NIL is more complex than the revenue sharing plan that is actually required by the House Settlement. NO TRUE FRESHMAN FOOTBALL PLAYER AT CLEMSON HAS RECEIVED ANY NIL MONEY TO DATE.

REVENUE SHARING

This is now a requirement under the House Settlement whereas, the school must pay its athletes who are on scholarship. This has now changed the rules regarding scholarship limits and has prohibited the use of walk-ons. Meaning, now everyone is a scholarship player if they’re on the roster. This now requires the school to pay said player. It is a requirement more so based upon labor laws and not so much recruitment efforts. The reason for this is because in previous contractual clauses under scholarship offers, it prohibits said player from obtaining employment which creates financial hardships on the student athlete.

NIL

This money comes directly from booster programs or Corporations that want to use the Name, Image, or Likeness of a player. The coaches have power to offer NIL to players for either recruitment or retention. Clemson Football has chosen to use NIL expressly for retention whenever it comes their program, according to Dabo Swinney. Dabo himself has incorporated that aspect of NIL. However, the player who is on the roster does receive a paycheck from Clemson as if they’re under a contract with Clemson by way of athletic scholarship. In addition to that revenue share, they also receive a full scholarship which encompasses free food, housing, and medical care. Revenue sharing is capped, NIL on the other hand is not.

NIL is paid into the Clemson NIL department by boosters and corporations that want to support recruitment and retention. Even if a student blows through their revenue sharing money Clemson will have no recourse if they are dismissed, because it is paid from the moment they walk on to the campus and begin practice. However, the school has no recourse on recouping that money because he or she technically earned it by practicing and participating in team functions. In the future, NIL money may be recouped by way of buyout clauses because NIL is private money that is paid out to the school’s NIL program by third parties which have a vested interest in that money. Of course, that has not yet been fully established, but there is hope for that additional regulation or allowance due to players jumping from team to team to earn an easy payout without having to contribute to the success of a program. Nico Imaleava is a prime example of where a buyout clause would prevent such behavior.

HOPE THIS HELPS! GO TIGERS! BEAT THE CRAP OUT OF EVERYONE!

Re: PLEASE STOP CONFUSING NIL WITH REVENUE SHARING

1



Jun 20, 2025, 1:07 PM


All and all…it’s only $$$!

You dont really know this statement to be true

2



Jun 20, 2025, 1:26 PM


” NO TRUE FRESHMAN FOOTBALL PLAYER AT CLEMSON HAS RECEIVED ANY NIL MONEY TO DATE.”. Like you said NIL is private money; therefore it doesn’t have to be disclosed. Dabo doesn’t promise NIL money to high school kids, but that doesn’t mean someone hasn’t taken it upon themselves to pursue a kid on their own.

There is just no way it’s true

1



Jun 20, 2025, 1:56 PM


because everyone else is paying high school recruits.

We’re all doing it. There is no reason to be ashamed of it.

Re: There is just no way it’s true

1



Jun 20, 2025, 2:18 PM


Its been pretty widely reported Cade is making like 3 million this upcoming season. No idea why anyone would think our team of 4 and 5 stars are here because they enjoy the SC climate.

Re: There is just no way it’s true

1



Jun 20, 2025, 5:00 PM


Cade is not a true freshman, and his NIL was used as retention.

Re: There is just no way it’s true

2



Jun 20, 2025, 3:42 PM

[ in reply to There is just no way it’s true ]


Well technically SC gamecocks should be ashamed of it because they have nothing to show for their money.

Re: There is just no way it’s true



Jun 20, 2025, 9:59 PM

Well technically SC gamecocks should be ashamed of it because they have nothing to show for their money.

This is literally the funniest thing I’ve read all week. I’ve read this comment no less than 5 times and each time I read it, I laugh even harder than before.

Re: You dont really know this statement to be true

2



Jun 20, 2025, 1:58 PM

[ in reply to You dont really know this statement to be true ]


You can’t tell this guy anything.

There is zero chance we aren’t including NIL in our recruiting pitch.

If we were going after a bunch of guys that were Wofford or Furman caliber then maybe but we’re not.

We go after the big time guys and go head to head with the most prominent programs in the country.

These guys aren’t choosing Clemson out of just pure love for Clemson. There is absolutely NIL involved.

I don’t care what this dude or anyone else says.

Re: You dont really know this statement to be true

1



Jun 20, 2025, 5:01 PM


It’s in the pitch, but each player automatically earns close to 6 figures just by joining the team. If they perform in practice even if they redshirt and they make serious progress they will be offered some serious money for returning to play another season. It’s exactly how Dabo Swinney has openly stated his team will use NIL proceeds.

Re: You dont really know this statement to be true

1



Jun 20, 2025, 4:59 PM

[ in reply to You dont really know this statement to be true ]


Actually, Dabo Swinney has openly stated that NIL is used for retention only. Basketball, Baseball, Soccer, etc. has their own say in how they use NIL money. However, as far as Dabo Swinney is concerned, it’s reserved for retention and not recruitment. Although, based upon past performance, of portal transfers maybe some deals have been made, but not for a high school recruit.

Re: You dont really know this statement to be true



Jun 20, 2025, 7:53 PM


Yes… Dabo did say that… like 2 years ago bro.

Things have changed drastically since he made that statement. Like us losing almost half a recruiting class bc of it.

He changed his stance on that pretty quickly after seeing what happened to last years class the same way he finally gave in and brought in a handful of real transfers.

Bro we can argue til the cows come home but it won’t matter.

You’re wrong… period.

Re: You dont really know this statement to be true

1



Jun 20, 2025, 5:02 PM

[ in reply to You dont really know this statement to be true ]

” NO TRUE FRESHMAN FOOTBALL PLAYER AT CLEMSON HAS RECEIVED ANY NIL MONEY TO DATE.”. Like you said NIL is private money; therefore it doesn’t have to be disclosed. Dabo doesn’t promise NIL money to high school kids, but that doesn’t mean someone hasn’t taken it upon themselves to pursue a kid on their own.

We know incoming recruits are being paid. Dabo is not entering into bidding wars but to think Clemson is getting a bunch of high-end recruits without paying the going rate is insanity.

Re: PLEASE STOP CONFUSING NIL WITH REVENUE SHARING

1



Jun 20, 2025, 3:18 PM


Too many angry letters in this post. Turn off caps lock?

Re: PLEASE STOP CONFUSING NIL WITH REVENUE SHARING

2



Jun 20, 2025, 3:47 PM


He has summoned his inner DEROBERTS

Re: PLEASE STOP CONFUSING NIL WITH REVENUE SHARING



Jun 20, 2025, 5:02 PM

He has summoned his inner DEROBERTS


TELL EM CAP-ON!

Re: PLEASE STOP CONFUSING NIL WITH REVENUE SHARING

1



Jun 20, 2025, 4:06 PM


How do you know no freshman has received NIL money? NIL could be anything from doing an ad for your small town car dealership, to the local greasy spoon, to major companies. If NIL was just simple endorsements the way it was designed to be, wouldn’t the world be a better place?

Re: PLEASE STOP CONFUSING NIL WITH REVENUE SHARING

1



Jun 20, 2025, 5:45 PM


Remember when schools had to worry about giving a recruit an extra desert or boosters giving players $100 hand shakes after a game? Ahhhh, Simple times they were!

Re: PLEASE STOP CONFUSING NIL WITH REVENUE SHARING



Jun 20, 2025, 8:04 PM


TL;DR

New rules with profit sharing will make pay for play NIL illegal and punishable. If they have a deal with Gatorade or Nike they are approved but booster paying will be illegal.

Re: PLEASE STOP CONFUSING NIL WITH REVENUE SHARING



Jun 20, 2025, 11:45 PM


No it wont! I own XYZ construction company and I can pay Fat Albert to choose Clemson and all we have to do is tell the university that Fat Albert is gonna ride on my float in the town parade next Corn Days parade. Fatty can take my money and he earned it for advertising my float.

Yall act like this new ruling is a cure, it only helps those that did not have funds for the most part. It may reduce the wild west since funds have to be more public but do they really care??

Players can still be bought, period! Tampering is not stamped out!

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The University of Wisconsin sues Miami for allegedly tampering with former Badger Xavier Lucas

MADISON – The Xavier Lucas saga is far from over. Yahoo Sports reported June 20 that the University of Wisconsin and its NIL collective, the Varsity Collective, are suing the University of Miami for what is termed tortious interference with the former Badgers cornerback who is now a part of the Miami Hurricanes football team. […]

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MADISON – The Xavier Lucas saga is far from over.

Yahoo Sports reported June 20 that the University of Wisconsin and its NIL collective, the Varsity Collective, are suing the University of Miami for what is termed tortious interference with the former Badgers cornerback who is now a part of the Miami Hurricanes football team.

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The Journal Sentinel obtained a copy of the 23-page complaint filed in Dane County Circuit Court on June 20. In the document Wisconsin provides a timeline for the NIL agreements it and the Varsity Collective reached with Lucas, offers details of how it alleges the Miami football program tampered with Lucas and allege a broader pattern of tampering in the Miami program with other student-athletes.

Wisconsin seeks damages for the financial and reputational harm it says it experienced, a declaration that Miami’s conduct with Lucas constituted tampering plus any other penalty the court deems proper.

“Now more than ever, it is imperative to protect the integrity and fundamental fairness of the game, including in connection with NIL contracts,” the complaint read. “Indeed, student-athletes’ newfound NIL rights will be rendered meaningless if third parties are allowed to induce student-athletes to abandon their contractual commitments.”

Xavier Lucas had a promising freshman season at Wisconsin

The case stems from Lucas’ controversial departure from the Badgers football program in December. The native of Pompano Beach, Florida, announced his intention to transfer Dec. 19.

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Losing Lucas was a blow to UW, which already had lost a handful of players from the secondary to the transfer portal. According to Pro Football Focus, Lucas played more snaps (203) than any freshman on the team last season. He played in all 12 games with one start and registered 18 tackles, one interception and one sack.

With the transfer portal scheduled to close Dec. 28, Lucas posted on X that the Wisconsin football program wrongfully declined to enter his name into the portal, a move that prevented other teams from contacting him without breaking NCAA rules.

In January, Lucas circumvented the transfer portal by withdrawing from Wisconsin and enrolling at Miami. He eventually joined Miami’s football team and participated in spring practice with the Hurricanes.

A few days after Lucas left UW, Wisconsin offered its side of the story. In a statement issued on Jan. 18, the university said it didn’t put Lucas’ name into the transfer portal because he signed a two-year NIL agreement Dec. 2 that it believed was still in effect and enforceable. The university also said Lucas entered into a separate agreement with Varsity Collective, which connects Badger athletes with NIL opportunities.

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Wisconsin also said in its January statement that it had credible information that indicated impermissible contact between Lucas and University of Miami personnel.

That information was detailed further in Wisconsin’s legal complaint.

MADISON, WISCONSIN - AUGUST 30: Xavier Lucas #6 of the Wisconsin Badgers intercepts a pass in the fourth quarter against the Western Michigan Broncos at Camp Randall Stadium on August 30, 2024 in Madison, Wisconsin. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images)

MADISON, WISCONSIN – AUGUST 30: Xavier Lucas #6 of the Wisconsin Badgers intercepts a pass in the fourth quarter against the Western Michigan Broncos at Camp Randall Stadium on August 30, 2024 in Madison, Wisconsin. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images)

Wisconsin outlines its allegations against Miami

The complaint provides more specific details of the allegations UW made against Miami in December, which include impermissible contact on multiple occasions with Lucas or his representatives. The complaint refers to Lucas as “Student-Athlete A” rather than using his name.

Among the allegations:

* A Miami coach and prominent alumnus visited Lucas at the Florida home of one of his relatives in December. UW says it received information about the in-home visit from a relative of Lucas on Dec. 18.

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* UW accused Miami of a broader culture of tampering, alleging that Miami went after a second player even though that player made a written commitment to another school, a commitment that was reflected in the transfer portal. The player wasn’t identified by name.

The University of Wisconsin, Big Ten issue statements

UW issued a statement. Here it is in its entirety.

“The University of Wisconsin-Madison remains committed to ensuring integrity and fundamental fairness in the evolving landscape of college athletics. After reviewing all facts and evaluating options, the university today filed a complaint in Wisconsin state court outlining our allegations against the University of Miami.

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“While we reluctantly bring this case, we stand by our position that respecting and enforcing contractual obligations is essential to maintaining a level playing field. In addition to our legal action, we will continue to be proactive to protect the interests of our student-athletes, our program and the broader collegiate athletics community. We appreciate the support of our university leadership and the Big Ten Conference. As we move forward, we will respect the court process and provide further updates only as appropriate.”

The Big  Ten Conference, which publically supported UW in January, continued to voice its support.

Here is the statement the league issued to Yahoo on June 20.

“We stand by our position that respecting and enforcing contractual obligations is essential to maintaining a level playing field,” the statement said. “In addition to our legal acton, we will continue to be proactive to protect the interests of our student-athletes, our program and the broader collegiate athletics community.”

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An email seeking comment from the University of Miami has not received a response.

This story was updated with new information.

This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Wisconsin files lawsuit against Miami over Xavier Lucas’ departure



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Wisconsin, NIL collective file joint lawsuit on Miami for tampering

The University of Wisconsin and its NIL collective VC Connect filed a joint lawsuit on Friday against the University of Miami alleging it knowingly induced one of the Badgers’ football players to abandon a lucrative name, image and likeness contract to play for the Florida team this upcoming season. Allegations of tampering rarely get to […]

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Wisconsin, NIL collective file joint lawsuit on Miami for tampering

The University of Wisconsin and its NIL collective VC Connect filed a joint lawsuit on Friday against the University of Miami alleging it knowingly induced one of the Badgers’ football players to abandon a lucrative name, image and likeness contract to play for the Florida team this upcoming season.

Allegations of tampering rarely get to this level and the 23-page lawsuit, which was filed in state court in Wisconsin and obtained by The Associated Press, is unusual. Depending on its resolution, it could have a wider impact on future NIL deals across college athletics.

The player in question in the filing is referred to only as “Student-Athlete A.” But the case summary describes facts that line up with the situation involving cornerback Xavier Lucas, who last December announced his plans to enter the transfer portal.

Shortly afterward, Darren Heitner, who has been representing Lucas, indicated that Wisconsin was refusing to put Lucas’ name in the portal and that it was hindering his ability to talk with other schools. In January, Heitner announced that Lucas would be playing for Miami this fall.

The situation is fallout from the rapid changes engulfing college athletics, specifically a combination of two things: Athletes went to court and won the ability to transfer with much more freedom and the 2021 NCAA decision clearing the way for them to strike NIL endorsement deals now worth millions of dollars. That has changed the recruiting landscape and forced the issue of contracts and signed commitments to the fore.

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Miami Facing Groundbreaking NIL Lawsuit Over Alleged Player Tampering

Miami Facing Groundbreaking NIL Lawsuit Over Alleged Player Tampering originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The ever-evolving world of college athletics, particularly NIL, may have reached a legal tipping point. The University of Miami now finds itself at the center of a groundbreaking lawsuit filed by the University of Wisconsin and its NIL collective, focused on […]

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Miami Facing Groundbreaking NIL Lawsuit Over Alleged Player Tampering originally appeared on Athlon Sports.

The ever-evolving world of college athletics, particularly NIL, may have reached a legal tipping point. The University of Miami now finds itself at the center of a groundbreaking lawsuit filed by the University of Wisconsin and its NIL collective, focused on alleged tampering involving cornerback Xavier Lucas.

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According to a report from Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger, the University of Wisconsin and its NIL collective filed a complaint in state circuit court, claiming “tortious interference” by Miami. The complaint alleges that the Hurricanes made impermissible contact with Lucas while he was still under contract with Wisconsin. This is believed to be the first legal action of its kind directly tied to NIL-era tampering.

Wisconsin cornerback Xavier Lucas (6) is shown during the first quarter of their game against South Dakota Saturday, September 7 , 2024 at Camp Randall Stadium in Madison, Wisconsin.Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wisconsin cornerback Xavier Lucas (6) is shown during the first quarter of their game against South Dakota Saturday, September 7 , 2024 at Camp Randall Stadium in Madison, Wisconsin.Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

At the heart of the case is Lucas, a South Florida native who signed a new contract with Wisconsin in December before transferring to Miami in January, without formally entering the NCAA transfer portal. The Badgers allege that Miami knowingly engaged with Lucas despite his existing agreement, which resulted in him breaching that deal and transferring.

“Miami interfered with UW-Madison’s relationship with Student-Athlete A by making impermissible contact with him and engaging in tampering,” the suit reads, with Wisconsin seeking “unspecified damages, transparency, and accountability.”

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Whether the courts agree remains to be seen. However, legal experts and college football insiders believe this case could set a precedent for how tampering is defined and enforced moving forward. For now, Lucas remains eligible to play for the Hurricanes this fall, where he’s expected to make an immediate impact on a secondary that allowed the sixth-most passing touchdowns per game in the ACC last season.

Lucas was 247Sports’ 20th overall player and first-ranked cornerback in the transfer portal this offseason. His addition was viewed as a major win for new Hurricanes defensive coordinator Corey Hetherman’s defense, and it now carries potentially significant off-field implications.

As the NIL era continues to evolve, Miami’s role in this case could shape how schools recruit, retain, and protect their athletes and navigate the legal lines surrounding NIL, player contracts, and tampering. The Hurricanes have not yet issued a public statement on the lawsuit.

Related: Rookie QB Cam Ward’s Surprising Trash Talk Highlights His Confidence at Titans OTAs

This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 20, 2025, where it first appeared.



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