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Men’s College Basketball Adds Challenge, but No Quarters—Yet

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2025 College Football Predictions: Picking Power 4 Conference Champions

RJ Young FOX Sports National College Football Analyst Michael Cohen College Football and College Basketball Writer It’s prediction season, and we’re calling our shots. As the kickoff to the 2025 college football season inches closer, the debates continue to pick up steam. Is Ohio State set to own the Big Ten this season, or is […]

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It’s prediction season, and we’re calling our shots.

As the kickoff to the 2025 college football season inches closer, the debates continue to pick up steam. Is Ohio State set to own the Big Ten this season, or is Penn State finally ready to take the next step? Is it title or bust for Arch Manning and Texas, or will Georgia rule the SEC once again?

From coast to coast, fan bases are brimming with confidence — and in some cases, delusion — as teams reload, rebuild, or reassert themselves in the chase for a conference crown.

So, before the new season gets underway, our staff is making their conference championship picks. Who’s going to run the table? Who’s destined to disappoint? And which teams are flying under the radar with a shot to crash the championship party?

FOX Sports college football writers Michael Cohen and RJ Young give their predictions for the conference championship game and winners from each Power 4 conference.

1. Who will play in the 2025 Big Ten Football Championship Game and who will win?

RJ Young: Ohio State vs. Michigan

This is Big Ten title game I want. This is the Big Ten title game I believe most neutral fans want too. When the Big Ten separated into divisions, one of the consequences was that Ohio State and Michigan would never meet in the Big Ten Championship. Now that the league has moved away from that model and added four more members, there’s a chance for the Buckeyes and Wolverines to play back-to-back games and even meet in the College Football Playoff national championship game.

A meeting of these two in a championship atmosphere, on a neutral field, has never happened. And it would be the Big Ten’s first chance to have its last two — and the sport’s last two — national champions meet in a game that will once again be for bragging rights, but also add another layer to the most important rivalry in the history of the conference.

But can both programs keep up their end? If Ohio State does in fact reload and Michigan was a QB away, I don’t see why not.

Winner: Ohio State

Michael Cohen: Ohio State vs. Penn State

In a year when many of the potential Big Ten contenders will be introducing new starting quarterbacks — a group that includes defending national champion Ohio State — it certainly feels like the established presence of veteran signal-caller Drew Allar can give Penn State an inside track to winning the conference championship game for the first time since 2016. 

Convincing Allar to remain in school for his senior season was the banner moment in an offseason that will be remembered for head coach James Franklin’s impressive retention efforts. Tailbacks Nicholas Singleton and Kaytron Allen, edge rusher Dani Dennis-Sutton and defensive tackle Zane Durant, all of whom were core members of the Nittany Lions’ lauded 2022 recruiting class, bypassed the NFL Draft for one more shot at bringing a trophy or two back to Penn State. That kind of mass movement is in keeping with the blueprint successfully carried out by Michigan and Ohio State the last two seasons en route to winning it all. Franklin’s aggressive acquisition of former Ohio State defensive coordinator Jim Knowles, who is now the highest paid coordinator in the country at north of $3 million per year, is also worth noting. 

Drew Allar will look to finally get Penn State over the hump in 2025. (Photo by Gregory Fisher/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The difference between the Buckeyes and their other new-quarterback brethren is the caliber of player that will be surrounding either Julian Sayin or Lincoln Kienholz, regardless of who wins the job. Head coach Ryan Day and his staff have assembled a roster built on four consecutive recruiting classes ranked among the top five in the country, according to 247Sports, which should give them enough blue-chip talent to assuage the learning curve of either signal-caller. A second consecutive transfer portal class that ranked among the top six in average prospect score infused the roster with even more talent, headlined by former Purdue tight end Max Klare and former North Carolina edge rusher Beau Atkinson.  

No quarterback in college football will have a better collection of receivers than what the Buckeyes possess in Jeremiah Smith, Carnell Tate, Brandon Inniss and Mylan Graham, not to mention Klare, the No. 1 tight end in the transfer portal. And no defense in college football will have a better combination of athleticism, talent and high-end production in the back seven than Ohio State, which is anchored by arguably the nation’s best player in safety Caleb Downs. That should be more than enough to get them to Lucas Oil Stadium in December despite losing both coordinators and a school record-tying 14 players to the NFL Draft. 

Winner: Penn State

2. Who will play in the 2025 Big 12 Football Championship Game and who will win?

Michael Cohen: Arizona State vs. Utah

The Big Ten and the SEC might be college football’s best leagues, especially in a new era where money talks more than ever before, but it’s hard to argue against the Big 12 being the sport’s most exciting league. In a conference where parity always reigns supreme, the Big 12 has produced five different champions in the last five years: Arizona State in 2024, Texas in 2023, Kansas State in 2022, Baylor in 2021 and Oklahoma in 2020. And for the second consecutive season, the Big 12 has seven different teams with 10:1 odds or better to win the league. It’s anyone’s guess who will finish on top come December, especially after last year’s winner — the Sun Devils — entered the 2024 campaign picked dead last in the conference’s preseason media poll.

The safest pick, if those words can even be uttered, is for Arizona State to repeat as league champion after reaching the College Football Playoff for the first time in school history. The Sun Devils bring back more returning starters (16) than anyone else in the conference and have at least seven such players on each side of the ball. None are more important than All-Big 12 quarterback Sam Leavitt, the former Michigan State transfer who blossomed from nowhere into one of the most effective dual-threat players in the country. Leavitt, who was modestly ranked as the No. 28 quarterback in the 2024 transfer portal rankings, wound up throwing for 2,885 yards and 24 touchdowns while also rushing for 443 yards and five additional scores. He played his best football late in the season with 17 total touchdowns and only two interceptions over the final seven games. The challenge for Leavitt and for Arizona State as a whole will be replacing first-team All-American tailback Cam Skattebo, who accounted for more than 2,300 scrimmage yards and 24 total touchdowns last season.

The far riskier selection is Utah, fresh off its first losing season since 2013 and only the third losing campaign under head coach Kyle Whittingham, who is entering his 21st season at the helm. An exciting 4-0 start to 2024 quickly bottomed out when starting quarterback Cam Rising was unable to return from a finger injury that eventually prompted him to retire. Utah dropped seven of its final eight games as the offense plummeted to 102nd in scoring at 23.6 points per game and 115th overall at 329.8 yards per game. Such a deflating conclusion prompted Whittingham to squash any thoughts he had about retirement and return for what he believes will be a much better season in 2025. 

With that renewed focus came plenty of changes, namely the decision by offensive coordinator Andy Ludwig to step down after six seasons. Whittingham replaced him with former Syracuse and New Mexico offensive coordinator Jason Beck, who brought highly productive quarterback Devon Dampier with him. A first-team All-Mountain West selection last fall, Dampier led the conference with 327.8 yards per game and 31 total touchdowns, 19 of which came on the ground as he eclipsed 1,100 rushing yards. The run-pass threat of Dampier should inject the offense with new life while Beck identifies replacements for the team’s leading rusher and three leading receivers from 2024. 

Winner: Arizona State

RJ Young: Iowa State vs. Kansas State

Farmageddon! While the Wildcats and Cyclones have played each other every year since 1917, they’ve only been championship-caliber teams simultaneously over the last five years. And this year, the two most underrated coaches in the Big 12 have outstanding QBs in Iowa State’s Rocco Becht and Kansas State’s Avery Johnson to lead them into a year when there isn’t a team on either program’s schedule it can’t beat — including each other on August 23.

Matt Campbell has helped Iowa State reach new levels, but he has yet to win a Big 12 title. (Photo by David K Purdy/Getty Images)

In his first season as a starter, Johnson set the program record for passing TDs (25) while passing for 2,712 yards and rushing for 605 yards alongside seven rushing scores. He’s one of just four QBs to pass for 2,700 yards and rush for 600 yards in the Power 4 last year. Becht, who threw for 3,823 yards with 33 TDs, will be on the short list of players who can make a play for the league’s best offensive player in 2025.

While the Big 12 figures to be just as tough this year as it was last year — with four teams finishing tied for first place — that tiebreaker win between the two could lead to this matchup never occurring in the postseason. But their trajectories lead me to believe they could be the last two standing at the end of the Big 12 season.

Winner: Iowa State

3. Who will play in the 2025 SEC Football Championship Game and who will win?

RJ Young: Texas vs. Georgia

Alabama took a step back. Texas took another step forward. With the Longhorns’ appearance in the SEC Championship Game and the College Football Playoff, they proved they belong at the top of the SEC conversation. Entering the Arch Manning era on the Forty Acres, Texas is the unanimous No. 1 team in the country. While that might change over the course of the season, the only game the Longhorns will play this season where they might be an underdog is at Georgia, where the Bulldogs have been undefeated since October 2019.

With a new QB in Gunnar Stockton, Georgia will have a little growing up to do. But Kirby Smart’s program has been one that is perennially there at the end when it comes time to not just discuss who might win the SEC title, but who might win the national title. They’ve been there. They’ve done that. In the CFP era, they are a known commodity in the upper echelon of the postseason, and Texas is chasing what Georgia has won twice since 2021 — the national title.

Winner: Texas

Michael Cohen: Texas vs. Alabama

To some extent, nearly everything about Texas’ season hinges on the performance of quarterback Arch Manning, the highly touted first-year starter with NFL royalty in his bloodlines. His grandfather, Archie Manning, was a two-time Pro Bowler with the New Orleans Saints. His uncles, Peyton Manning and Eli Manning, combined to win four Super Bowls and five MVPs. Even his father, Cooper Manning, the only wideout in the family, was committed to Ole Miss before he was diagnosed with spinal stenosis and swiftly ended his playing career. Arch Manning was the No. 1 overall prospect in the 2023 recruiting class but spent the last two seasons developing behind starter Quinn Ewers, who guided the Longhorns to back-to-back College Football Playoff semifinals. If Arch Manning is as good as everyone believes him to be, then Texas should be squarely in the mix for both an SEC Championship and a national championship alike. 

But even if he’s not quite that good, if the otherworldly expectations associated with his family name prove a touch too lofty, Arch Manning will still receive plenty of help from a Texas defense that should be among the best in the country. The Longhorns return seven starters and defensive coordinator Pete Kwiatkowski from a group that finished third nationally in both scoring (15.3 points per game) and yards per game (283.4) last season. There could be upwards of three All-Americans on that side of the ball alone in edge rusher Colin Simmons, linebacker Anthony Hill Jr. and safety Michael Taaffe. 

Arch Manning and the Longhorns received the No. 1 overall ranking in the first AP Top 25 poll (Photo by CFP/Getty Images)

For Alabama, meanwhile, there is plenty of pressure on second-year head coach Kalen DeBoer after he only won nine games in 2024 and fell short against Michigan in the ReliaQuest Bowl, snapping the program’s streak of 16 consecutive seasons with at least 10 victories. But there are reasons to believe a Crimson Tide offense that slipped to 56th nationally in passing and 47th nationally in rushing can rebound this fall, even after losing starting quarterback Jalen Milroe to the NFL. The first is DeBoer’s reunion with offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb, who spent last season in the same role with the Seattle Seahawks. Grubb was DeBoer’s sidekick and playcaller at Washington when the Huskies reached the national championship game in 2023 — shortly before DeBoer accepted the job at Alabama — and the two have worked together for nearly 20 years at various locales. That kind of synergy for the Crimson Tide’s offensive braintrust shouldn’t be overlooked. 

The second reason for optimism is that DeBoer and Grubb will be tutoring a new starting quarterback in Ty Simpson, who is anything but new to college football. Simpson was a highly regarded five-star prospect in the 2022 recruiting cycle who waited his turn behind NFL-bound quarterbacks Bryce Young and Milroe. He’s entering his fourth year at Alabama and should bring plenty of maturity to the Crimson Tide’s offense despite his lack of starting experience. That he’ll be throwing to one of the best young wideouts in college football in teenage phenom Ryan Williams (48 catches, 865 yards, 8 TDs as a freshman in 2024) certainly doesn’t hurt.

Winner: Texas

4. Who will play in the 2025 ACC Football Championship Game and who will win?

Michael Cohen: Clemson vs. Miami

With three teams in the top 16 of the preseason AP Poll, which was released earlier this week, the 2025 campaign is a critical one for the ACC as the conference searches for its foothold in a landscape increasingly dominated by the Big Ten and SEC. Five long years have passed since the ACC last won a College Football Playoff game on Dec. 28, 2019, and the downtrodden period since then included three consecutive seasons when the league couldn’t so much as muster a single participant. Even when the ACC has qualified for the playoff, the results in recent years weren’t much better. Clemson and partial member Notre Dame lost their semifinal matchups by 38 combined points in 2020, while the Tigers and SMU lost their first-round games by 42 combined points in December. 

The conference would be in even worse shape were it not for Clemson, which has won eight of the last 10 ACC titles and has more playoff appearances than everyone else in the league combined during that span. Head coach Dabo Swinney’s team is once again the preseason favorite to win the league after bringing back 16 starters from the group that lost to Texas. Everything revolves around star quarterback Cade Klubnik, who threw for 3,639 yards, 36 touchdowns and only six interceptions in 2024 to cement himself as one of the sport’s best players. His numbers should soar again this fall with all three leading receivers back for another year: Antonio Williams, Bryant Wesco Jr. and TJ Moore, a trio that combined for more than 2,200 yards and 21 touchdowns. Four of five starters along the offensive line return as well, including all-conference performers Blake Miller at right tackle and Walker Parks at right guard. There’s no reason to think the Tigers won’t be among the more explosive offenses in the country. 

Cade Klubnik returns to Clemson as one of the top quarterbacks in the nation. (Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images)

Based on talent alone, Miami should be the team most likely to challenge Clemson in this year’s ACC race. Head coach Mario Cristobal has paired three consecutive top-15 recruiting classes with three consecutive top-10 transfer portal classes to assemble one of the sport’s most talented rosters. The marquee addition was former Georgia quarterback Carson Beck, who reportedly signed an NIL agreement worth at least $4 million. His task of replacing Heisman trophy finalist and eventual No. 1 overall pick Cam Ward won’t be easy, especially since the Hurricanes lost every skill position starter from the highest-scoring offense in the country. 

But the biggest story surrounding Miami’s offense remains the health of Beck, who suffered a season-ending elbow injury during last year’s SEC Championship game amid what was already an up-and-down campaign. Beck threw a conference-high 12 interceptions last year — which doubled his total from the previous season — but he also played incredibly well down the stretch by tossing 11 touchdowns and zero interceptions from Week 12 onward, vaulting himself into the upper echelon of transfer quarterbacks. If Beck is healthy and effective, the Hurricanes should reach the College Football Playoff for the first time in school history regardless of whether they win the ACC. 

Winner: Clemson

RJ Young: Clemson vs. Miami

While the Hurricanes have not won a conference title in 22 years and fell one win short of competing for their first in the ACC since 2017, they’re getting closer with Mario Cristobal as head coach.

They’ve steadily improved under Cristobal, going from 5-7 in 2022 to 10-3 in 2024. With Beck behind center, the Hurricanes have yet another chance to earn entry into the CFP if Cristobal and his game-management don’t get in the way like it has in the past. It might take an ACC title for Miami fans to let go of how Cristobal’s team collapsed in the final four minutes of their loss to Syracuse last year. There needs to be a new boss in the backfield, and it’s likely to be Jordan Lyle, who averaged 7.4 yards per carry and needed just seven carries to go for 115 against Wake Forest last year.

The Hurricanes imploded against Syracuse last year, and that kept them out of the title game. I don’t think that’s likely to happen again. However, Dabo Swinney’s Clemson program has run that league almost from the moment he became head coach. Since 2011, the Tigers have won the ACC title nine times and added two CFP national titles. With Heisman-hopeful Cade Klubnik at QB and two outstanding defenders in T.J. Parker and Peter Woods helping Klubnik and the offense hold serve against class competition, there’s not just the expectation that Clemson can win the ACC title, but that the Tigers can win the national title, too.

Winner: Clemson

RJ Young is a national college football writer and analyst for FOX Sports. Follow him at @RJ_Young.

Michael Cohen covers college football and college basketball for FOX Sports. Follow him at @Michael_Cohen13.

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House settlement and NIL?

While I understand that the House settlement dictates a limit of $20.5mil (for this year beginning in 7/1/25 and increasing each year for the next 10 by $750K or so) that any school can spend on NIL for ALL of it’s sports, I am trying to understand how the heck this is going to work. […]

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While I understand that the House settlement dictates a limit of $20.5mil (for this year beginning in 7/1/25 and increasing each year for the next 10 by $750K or so) that any school can spend on NIL for ALL of it’s sports, I am trying to understand how the heck this is going to work. Players from ALL NCAA sports can receive 3rd party compensation but that compensation can not be for paying players to play for any particular program. The NCAA now has NIL-Go, a clearing house that is tasked to insure ALL non-NIL income to players is not a cloaked pay to play for a particular school and that the money for that is of reasonable market value rather than inflated to serve as a draw for players to play for any particular school. For example, Bacot had the Jimmy’s Seafood deal and that was very likely given to him to help his stay at UNC as a player, legit at the time but now it isn’t. NIL-Go would turn it down.

We all know the over $14mil number that has been splashed all over sporting head lines for over a month now that UNC spent for players to play for us this coming season. We not just talking portal guys, talking incoming recruits from the high school ranks as well, our most expensive player for the coming season is a freshman, Caleb Wilson at $3-4mil. I don’t know what programs like duke and Ky spent for their basketball player for the coming season but you can bank that it was a heck of a lot more than UNC spent, for some reason their numbers have not been splashed around by sports journalists across the country like our have been? I have heard whispers that “some” programs are nearing $26mil for just men’s basketball players for the coming season? So what about that $20.5mil cap guys? OK, so we don’t know for UNC or any other program how much of that was NIL and how much was 3rd party deals. Yet NIL-Go turned down like 1,500 of these 3rd party deals, OK so maybe those NIL deals that were agreed on PRIOR to 7/1 that NIL-Go did not have a say in can stay and maybe those 1,500 occurred BEFORE the NIL-Go had teeth. Maybe NIL-Go released that to show programs what would not fly from this point forward, OK, understandable so far, so maybe we have just the coming season to pay thru the existing deals, what about after that? Where guys like Boozer and our own Caleb Wilson got over $3mil to play for their teams are we to understand the team that gets Tyron Stokes, the top basketball player in this class is going to be able to get him for a few hundred thousand? You know that is not going to happen… You say well, they will just pay them under that table, guys $3mil is hard to hide under the table for a single player.

WE are not just talking about Basketball, the sport paying the way is football, I seem to recall that part of the agreement that got Belechick to UNC was that football would account for at least 60% of the over all NIL (again, that is capped at $20.5mil for next season, that is a little over $12mil just for football yet we spent over $14mil for basketball)? Duke just spent, what was it over $4mil for their starting QB for this coming season, 1 guy is 20% of their over all budget for ALL sports, including basketball? And I read recently Texas has said the will not follow the House ruling, if they don’t follow that ruling how can they play in the NCAA? Attorneys unite, yall gonna clean up with this one! LOL

The numbers just don’t work unless you pay players to play a fraction of what players have been getting over the last couple years, in what world has that EVER worked. WE are recruiting 2027 players right now, how do we have any clue as to how much we can pay them, their #1 question?

By the tone of posters on not just this board but between BOTH major UNC sites seems un-concerned??? I must be the guy that does not see what must be crystal clear to everyone else so I am asking for that clarity. Can YOU explain to me how this is going to work and what I have not correctly stated in this post? I am trying to understand, I am sincerely asking.



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Report: College basketball point shaving investigation nearing end, focused on ‘Southern schools’

A federal investigation into alleged point shaving and game fixing in college basketball is nearing its end, Sports Illustrated’s Pat Forde and Michael Rosenberg reported. The inquiry is focused on “Southern Schools,” according to SI. Investigators from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania conducted interviews with players suspected of influencing their […]

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A federal investigation into alleged point shaving and game fixing in college basketball is nearing its end, Sports Illustrated’s Pat Forde and Michael Rosenberg reported. The inquiry is focused on “Southern Schools,” according to SI.

Investigators from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania conducted interviews with players suspected of influencing their performances as gamblers wagered on games. SI cited a source who said, “There are going to be charges.” The same source said multiple players and programs will be involved as part of a “national scope.”

The investigation centered on a ring that was involved with Jontay Porter, the former NBA player who was banned for life for gambling in 2024, according to SI. Additionally, the office is looking into unusual wagering activity on Malik Beasley’s games during the 2023-24 season. Beasley has not been charged with any crime.

SI reported the ring charged in Porter’s case was connected to at least college basketball games over the last two seasons. Five teams had wagers flagged on their games, and the NCAA is investigating programs such as New Orleans, Eastern Michigan, Mississippi Valley State and Temple.

ESPN’s David Purdum previously reported Eastern Michigan, Mississippi Valley State and North Carolina A&T were all part of the reported betting ring. Purdum reported in the case of Eastern Michigan and North Carolina A&T, both were flagged for suspicious activity by “betting integrity monitors” for wagers regarding first-half spreads.

Eastern Michigan’s games against Wright State and Central Michigan last season came into question. In both cases, the Eagles went into the locker room behind. They came back to beat Wright State, but came up short against CMU.

Just one game was mentioned by Purdum for North Carolina A&T – Jan. 9 against Delaware. In the first-half, the line moved up to Delaware -3.5 from -2 ahead of tip while the full-game line remained at -4. The Blue Hens would go on to cover that spread, leading by six at the half.

Additionally, in 2023-24, Temple and Loyola Maryland came under review for suspicious wagering activity. Loyola Maryland played its final game of the season against Navy – a 64-48 loss in the Patriot League Tournament.

That meant the Greyhounds’ season ended with a 7-26 overall record and a 5-13 mark in conference play. One day later, head coach Tavaras Hardy announced he was stepping down, although that decision was not related to the gambling situation.

News of the Loyola Maryland situation came less than 24 hours after another emerged involving Temple. The Owls took on UAB in their penultimate regular season game. After the Blazers opened as 1.5-point favorites, though, the spread ballooned to eight or 8.5, depending on the book.

UAB went on to win the game 100-72 at Temple, and watchdog U.S. Integrity sent an alert to casinos about suspicious activity involving the game.



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On Signs 3 NCAA Distance Runners to NIL Deals

Swiss sportswear brand On continues to secure the world’s top talent across all sports. However, the runner-approved company has found a major foothold in the NCAA with long-distance runners. This week, On announced the addition of Doris Lemngole, Marion Jepngetich, and Joy Naukot to its NIL roster. The three standout track and field and cross […]

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On Signs 3 NCAA Distance Runners to NIL Deals

Swiss sportswear brand On continues to secure the world’s top talent across all sports. However, the runner-approved company has found a major foothold in the NCAA with long-distance runners.

This week, On announced the addition of Doris Lemngole, Marion Jepngetich, and Joy Naukot to its NIL roster. The three standout track and field and cross country runners from Kenya have already made their mark in the NCAA.

“We’re excited to announce that Doris, Marion, and Joy have signed NIL deals with On,” said Libby Davidson, NIL Athlete Manager at On.

“This partnership is a testament to their exceptional talent and perfectly aligns with our commitment to innovation and performance. We’re thrilled to welcome them to the On family and can’t wait to support them on their journey ahead.”

Doris Lemngole models On apparel.

Doris Lemngole for On. / On.

Doris Lemngole is a standout distance runner heading into her junior year at the University of Alabama. She won the 2024 Outdoor NCAA 3000m steeplechase title, the 2024 NCCA Cross Country title, and most recently the 2024 NCAA Indoor 5000m and outdoor 3000m steeplechase title.

The Bowerman finalist recently set a new collegiate record of 8:58.15 in the steeplechase and was named the USTFCCCA Lance Harter Collegiate National Athlete of the Year for Cross Country in 2024. Her achievements have earned her a spot on the Kenyan team for the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo.

Marion Jepngetich models On apparel.

Marion Jepngetich for On. / On.

Marion Jepngetich represents the University of New Mexico and has has made a name for herself on the NCAA circuit despite only racing on the circuit since January this year.

She is a U20 World Championship silver medalist in the 3000m. In her freshman year, she finished fourth in the 2025 NCAA Outdoor 5000m final and had two second-place finishes in the 1500m and 5000m at the Mountain West Outdoor Track and Field Championships.

Joy Naukot models On apparel.

Joy Naukot for On. / On.

Joy Naukot is a freshman at West Virginia University, majoring in sports management. She is a First Team All-American and Big 12 Women’s Newcomer of the Year.

Additionally, Naukot finished third in the NCAA Outdoor 10,000m championship. She finished second in the 3000m and 5000m at the Big 12 Championships.

Stay locked into Sports Illustrated’s Kicks On SI for all of your most important footwear news from the running world and beyond all year round.

Zendaya’s first shoe with On is out now.

PUMA unleashes two fast-paced shoes for fall.

HOKA just upgraded its flagship trail running shoes.

Running inspired The Whitaker Group x ASICS GEL-1130.

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Thomas Hammock’s passionate message for players and parents on NIL and transfer portal is going viral

Long before he led his Northern Illinois Huskies to a shocking upset of Notre Dame, Thomas Hammock was a two-time All American running back for NIU running for over 1,000 yards in both his sophomore and junior seniors. When his playing career was cut short due to a heart condition, forcing him to step away […]

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Long before he led his Northern Illinois Huskies to a shocking upset of Notre Dame, Thomas Hammock was a two-time All American running back for NIU running for over 1,000 yards in both his sophomore and junior seniors.

When his playing career was cut short due to a heart condition, forcing him to step away with a season of eligibility remaining, Hammock immediately got involved in coaching, starting as a graduate assistant at Wisconsin before going on to coach running backs at NIU and Minnesota and with the Badgers before a stint on John Harbaugh’s staff in the NFL.

In 2021, shortly after taking over at his alma mater, NIU was picked to finish last in the MAC and instead went out and won the league with a 9-5 mark. Over the next three seasons, Hammock has led the program to two bowl games and a pair of bowl wins.

Yesterday evening, at his weekly presser, Hammock was asked if he had thoughts on making the transfer portal “more fair” and his response has been making waves across social media.  By January earlier this year, the Huskies had seen 19 players enter the portal.

“To be honest with you, I love the challenge. It don’t bother me one bit, because in life you are going to make decisions – sometimes it is going to work in your favor and sometimes it is not.”

“I told our guys earlier today, yeah we lost all these guys, but let’s see who plays. It’s all good when people put on Twitter, ‘All glory to God, I’m going in the transfer portal,’ but let’s see if they play. How many of those guys are going to play? Or travel? Or get snaps?”

“I was going to tweet something the other day…a picture of me, and say I enjoyed my college experience and I didn’t get one dime, but the lessons I learned was more valuable than any money you could ever pay me. And I appreciate that, because that is long term. People are losing sight of the fact that this is short term.”

“Don’t lose focus of the long term. Get your degree. Learn valuable lessons that are going to help you in the long term of your life. That is the whole purpose. This is a transition from being a kid to being a grown up, and I hope people don’t lose focus of that. Everyone is talking about everything else other than what is the most important thing about going to college, because if you’re going to college to go get a couple dollars, you might as well go get a job. [College football] is too hard than to do it to get a couple dollars.”

“Learn the lessons that you need to learn to be successful in life for the next 40 to 50 years of your life. That’s it. I would do it again for free. FOR FREE, because of the things I learned. That is why I am standing here today, because of what I learned in college. Not because of what someone gave me.”

“That is what I would tell people, and parents need to learn that lesson too. Stop trying to live through your kids. Teach them what they need to learn to be successful. That’s what I’m teaching my kids. Not about NIL or revenue sharing…I couldn’t care less. You need to learn things in college that prepare you in life to be a father, a husband, to work, and everything else.”

“Those are the most important things.”

Hear more of Hammocks comments being applauded across social media in the clip.



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NIU coach Thomas Hammock rails against NIL, transfer portal

Brent Venables, Sam Pittman lead hot seat talk in 2025 Brent Venables, Sam Pittman and Mike Gundy lead the list of coaches under pressure in 2025. When the NCAA allowed college athletes to transfer once without the penalty of having to sit out a year, players were offered an opportunity to seek fresh starts elsewhere […]

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When the NCAA allowed college athletes to transfer once without the penalty of having to sit out a year, players were offered an opportunity to seek fresh starts elsewhere while benefitting from the kind of unrestrained mobility coaches had enjoyed for decades.

One of the effects of that change, though, has been a widening gulf between college football’s haves and have nots, with programs from the sport’s biggest, most powerful conferences routinely plucking standouts from lower-level schools that don’t have the platform or financial resources to hold on to them.

It’s a reality that has caused frustration for many, particularly those outside of the Power Four conferences.

This week, one coach gave a loud, passionate voice to those feelings.

During a news conference on August 13, Northern Illinois coach Thomas Hammock said the ability to move from program to program has led to misplaced priorities from players and their parents, who he believes increasingly don’t value some of the non-monetary benefits that college can provide.

“I enjoyed my college experience,” Hammock said. “I didn’t get one dime. But the lessons I learned were more valuable than any money you could ever pay me. I appreciate that because that’s long term. People are losing the fact this is short term…Don’t lose focus of the long term. Get your degree and learn valuable lessons that are going to help you in the long term of your life. That’s the whole purpose. This is a transition from being a kid to a grown up. I hope people don’t lose focus of that. 

“Everyone’s talking about everything else besides the most important thing of going to college. Because if you’re going to college to get a couple of dollars, you might as well go get a job. This is too hard to go get a couple of dollars. Learn the lessons that you need to learn to be successful in life for the next 40 or 50 years of your life. I would do it again for free because of the things I learned. That’s why I’m standing here today, because of what I learned in college. Not because of how much someone gave me.”

Hammock is entering his seventh season as the head coach at Northern Illinois, where he was a two-time academic All-American as a running back in the early 2000s. His Huskies teams have made bowl games in three of the past four seasons, including last season, when they went 8-5 and earned a stunning road win against eventual national runner-up Notre Dame.

That team was raided in the offseason, losing its starting quarterback, top three pass-catchers and many of its top defensive players to the portal, where many of them ended up at Power Four schools.

While Hammock said he loves the challenge of rebuilding a roster — his longer answer had come in response to a question about making the portal “more fair” — he wonders if the greener pastures players seek end up being any better than the places they just left.

“In life, you’re going to make decisions,” Hammock said. “Sometimes, it’s going to work in your favor. Sometimes, it’s not. I told our team the other day, we lost all these guys. Let’s see who plays. It’s all good when people put on Twitter ‘All glory to God, I’m going in the transfer portal.’ Let’s see if they play. How many of them guys are going to play or travel or get snaps?”

Hammock also believes some of the onus for portal decisions falls on the parents of players.

“Parents, they need to learn that lesson, too,” he said. “Stop trying to live through your kids. Teach your kids the things they need to learn to be successful. That’s what I’m telling my kids. I don’t care about no NIL or revenue sharing. I could care less. You need to learn things in college to get you prepared for life, to be a father, a husband, to work, everything else. Those are the most important things. That’s what people are missing.”





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