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NIL

Ex-Tennessee football player, On3 employee amid money scams

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Former Tennessee football player Grant Frerking went from a walk-on and supposed millionaire CEO to a fired employee of a sports media company who is embroiled in financial scams and legal issues.

On June 11, Knox News published an extensive investigative report that uncovered Frerking’s financial mess, how he got there amid allegations of conning customers, and how he tried to get out from under it by asking former Vols athletes for loans.

Frerking did not immediately return multiple requests by Knox News for comment.

Here’s what you need to know about Frerking and his eye-opening situation.

Grant Frerking gained fame as football player CEO, Paul Finebaum guest

Frerking, 26, was a Vols walk-on from 2017 to 2022. He gained attention unusual for a player because of his claimed business successes as the former CEO and founder of Metro Straw, an Atlanta-based ground cover company that expanded across the Southeast.

Frerking founded Metro Straw as a budding 15-year-old entrepreneur and later managed it from afar while playing football at UT.

The Athletic documented Frerking’s success in a November 2018 story. He drew additional media attention because of his unique combination as a football player and businessman. That led to numerous TV appearances on “The Paul Finebaum Show” on SEC Network, where he talked about name, image and likeness issues, among other topics.

On3 cut ties with Frerking amid allegations of misconduct

After graduating from UT in 2021, Frerking worked for On3, a Nashville-based sports media company.

Frerking held a role related to On3’s NIL valuations, promotions and sponsorships. He served as president of On3’s NIL University and director of athlete network development. He was also a point person for On3’s major events that focused on NIL, tax education and wealth management with celebrity speakers such as gymnast Livvy Dunne, ESPN commentator Kirk Herbstreit and chief marketing officers for Fortune 100 brands.

But Frerking was no longer an employee as of June 2025, just as allegations of misconduct began to surface.

“On3 is aware of allegations concerning a former employee, whose employment ended on May 27, 2025,” the company said in a statement provided to USA TODAY Network. “On3 has a zero tolerance policy for blatant violations of its internal standards and values, and takes allegations of criminal misconduct especially seriously. An internal investigation into the allegations is ongoing. On3 has no further comment at this time.”

Customers say Frerking scammed them for money

Frerking founded Metro Straw, a ground cover company, when he was 15. He left the company in July 2021, according to his LinkedIn account.

But customers told Knox News that Frerking continued contacting them on behalf of Metro Straw, acting as a representative of the company and making unmet promises in exchange for money as recently as mid-May.

“Grant Frerking is a lying unscrupulous SOB,” said Doug Proctor, a Georgia man who told Knox News he was scammed by Frerking as a Metro Straw customer. “All the time he bills himself as a star football player at Tennessee as well as a gifted businessman. What a phony! He needs to be exposed.”

Metro Straw customers told Knox News similar stories. They would reach out to Metro Straw to purchase pine straw. They would be contacted directly by Frerking, not by Metro Straw, with an enticing deal. He would collect money, often get their credit card numbers and then continue charging them without ever delivering pine straw.

If customers complained enough, Frerking would sometimes refund a portion of their money, but never all of it.

Frerking’s former company warned customers of his scams

Metro Straw was so uncomfortable with Frerking’s business practices that the company posted a warning this spring about him on its website. Customers who paid him but never received product said he told them he worked for Metro Straw.

The message said: “Metro Straw and former owner Grant Frerking have parted ways for 2 years. Metro Straw does not associate with Grant Frerking in any way.” Metro Straw did not immediately return numerous phone calls or email from Knox News on June 11.

Customers told Knox News that they contacted Metro Straw directly and were told there was no record of the orders supposedly facilitated by Frerking. Scathing reviews on Yelp and Better Business Bureau described the alleged scams by Frerking and labeled him “the most unscrupulous liar.”

Frerking was taken to court over unpaid bills in Nashville

Frerking has been evicted from two Nashville apartments this year, according to court records, and owed $16,387 in unpaid rent in the upscale neighborhood The Gulch.

In May, a Davidson County judge signed off on an eviction order after determining Frerking owed almost $8,200 to the leasing company for the Prima at Paseo South Gulch Apartments. In January and March, a Davidson County judge found in two separate rulings that Frerking owed more than $8,000 to Harlowe, a boutique Gulch apartment complex.

In total, 12 civil claims were filed against Frerking in Davidson County since 2023, court records show, including 10 by the same landlord. Nine claims were dismissed without prejudice, meaning they could be filed again. And they often were a few months later for unpaid rent.

Frerking didn’t repay loans from former Tennessee athletes

Frerking sought loans from his former teammates and other Vols athletes, multiple sources with direct knowledge of the situation told Knox News. The sources requested to not be named in Knox News’ reporting. One source told Knox News he loaned money to Frerking two years ago and has not been paid back.

Frerking continued to run in circles around UT athletics following his graduation and became a fixture on the Vols’ sideline. He joined the Tennessee Fund’s Shareholders Society as a donor in 2022. UT has since removed the announcement of Frerking’s involvement, but that group requires a minimum pledge of $25,000 over five years.

Frerking was a board member for Volunteer Legacy, a nonprofit organization within the framework of NIL started in late 2022 by Spyre Sports, the collective that pays UT athletes for their NIL rights. Spyre CEO/co-founder James Clawson told Knox News that Frerking was never an employee of Spyre. Board members of any organization are not involved in the day-to-day operations.

Currently, Frerking does not have any obvious ties to the UT athletic department beyond being a former student-athlete and donor. UT declined to disclose the extent of his financial donations.

He attended UT baseball’s national championship in 2024 in Omaha, Nebraska, and he posted pictures on social media showing himself smoking a cigar with football coach Josh Heupel following UT’s win over Alabama in 2024.

Frerking held a birthday party at Neyland Stadium in 2023, according to social media pictures.

Adam Sparks is the Tennessee football beat reporter. Email adam.sparks@knoxnews.com. X, formerly known as Twitter@AdamSparks. Support strong local journalism by subscribing at knoxnews.com/subscribe.

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Ty Simpson Reportedly Getting NIL Contract Offers After NFL Draft Decision, New Rumors on Alabama QB

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Ty Simpson has declared for the 2026 NFL Draft, but that hasn’t curbed college football programs from trying to get the Alabama quarterback on their roster.

According to AL.com’s Nick Kelly, Simpson has been offered “a deal that could total $6.5 million” from one program, while three SEC teams have offered “at least $4 million and more.”

Simpson was the No. 26 overall player and No. 4 quarterback in the class of 2022, according to 247Sports’ composite rankings. He’s a bit of a rare breed in today’s college football landscape in the fact that he waited three years at Alabama before becoming the starter, rather than transferring somewhere else.

Simpson played behind Bryce Young in 2022 and Jalen Milroe in 2023 and 2024 before eventually landing the starting job in 2025. While he had a few shaky outings, he was one of the best quarterbacks in the SEC this year, throwing for 3,567 yards, 28 touchdowns and five interceptions

His final game with the Crimson Tide came in the College Football Playoff quarterfinal against Indiana, where he threw for just 67 yards in a 38-3 blowout loss.

Bleacher Report’s NFL Scouting Department considers Simpson to be the No. 30 overall player and the No. 3 quarterback in this year’s draft class. In the latest mock draft from B/R, Simpson is projected to land with the Los Angeles Rams with the No. 13 pick.

While Simpson is widely projected to be a first-round pick, the NFL combine should give him a good idea of where he might land in April. Assuming he’s a consensus first-round pick, it’s hard to imagine Simpson will return to the collegiate level.

If he isn’t so confident about going in the first round, perhaps he’ll take one of the lucrative NIL offers he’s reportedly received.



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Tennessee football offered Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson $4 million

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Jan. 11, 2026Updated Jan. 12, 2026, 1:12 a.m. ET



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Ty Simpson “not wavering” on decision to turn pro amid NIL bidding war

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Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson announced last week that he was leaving school early to enter the NFL draft. But that hasn’t stopped other college programs from offering him lucrative NIL deals.

What started out in the $4 million range has reached in excess of $6 million, a source with knowledge of the situation told Bama247.

But that same source said the offers were unsolicited and that Simpson “hasn’t wavered” in his decision to enter the NFL draft. The expectation is he will not change his mind before the Wednesday deadline for underclassmen to declare.

Al.com was first to report the unrelenting interest in Simpson as the draft deadline approaches.

Simpson went 11-4 in his lone season as the starter, leading Alabama to the College Football Playoff and a come-from-behind victory at Oklahoma in the first round. But his season ended on a sour note as he threw for only 67 yards and no touchdowns in a 38-3 loss to Indiana in the Rose Bowl that saw him sidelined for much of the second half with a rib injury.

Simpson, who was named a team captain in the summer, finished the season with 3,567 passing yards, 28 passing touchdowns and five interceptions. He also ran for 93 yards and two scores.

Recent NFL mock drafts have had Simpson ranked among the top three quarterbacks — behind Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza and Oregon’s Dante Moore — and a borderline first-round pick.

Alabama 2026 NFL draft decision tracker: Who will stay in school or enter draft?

With Simpson gone, Mack and Russell are the two most experienced quarterbacks on the roster. The two were listed as co-backups this season with Mack having a 62-to-36 edge in total offensive snap over Russell.

Both Mack and Russell resigned with Alabama last week.



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The Ohio State football program is in Transfer Portal crisis thanks to Ross Bjork

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When Ohio State made the decision to hire Ross Bjork as athletic director once Gene Smith stepped down, a large reason was that he was supposed to be an expert in the NIL space. Bjork touted his ability to galvanize donors and pay the athletes what they rightly deserved.

The end of his tenure at Texas A&M did see the football program spend a lot of money on recruits. It backfired spectacularly. Jimbo Fisher did not coach the team well, and Bjork had to fire him and pay him around $77 million to not coach the program.

Since coming to Columbus, Bjork has used the opposite approach. He has been borderline stingy at every corner when it comes to NIL for the Ohio State football program. Instead of helping the Buckeyes, he is actively sinking the ship just a year after winning a national title.

Ross Bjork is actively hurting the Ohio State football program

30 players have entered the Transfer Portal from this year’s version of the Ohio State Buckeyes. That is by far the most since the portal became a widely used thing. What’s even worse is that Bjork has refused to pay enough to bring enough players in to replace those guys leaving.

There have been several instances of the Buckeyes losing out on talented portal players because they did not use their NIL money correctly. Bjork seems to think that the College Sports Commission is actually going to be able to enforce any sort of cap when it comes to revenue sharing.

No other high-major program is operating under those assumptions. In fact, most of Ohio State’s competitors keep reloading in the portal. Indiana is arguably passing the Buckeyes when it comes to finding talented older players in the portal, and that’s why they are playing for a national title.

Bjork was a questionable hire when he was brought in. The shine has worn off from the 2024 national championship, and more people are realizing that the title was won in spite of him, not because of him. Ryan Day needs to start putting his foot down when it comes to the football program.



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No. 1 portal WR Cam Coleman commits to Texas

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After some marquee portal losses, the Texas Longhorns needed to add elite talent to the wide receiver room and did just that with the addition of Auburn Tigers transfer Cam Coleman over the Alabama Crimson Tide, Texas A&M Aggies, and Texas Tech Red Raiders.

Coleman is one of the crown jewels of the portal class, the No. 4 player overall and the No. 1 wide receiver and five spots ahead of the next-best offensive player — former Alabama wide receiver Isaiah Horton. The elite wideout made the most of his second recruiting cycle, but traveled to Austin first before trips to College Station, Lubbock, and Tuscaloosa. He’s ranked as a five-star portal prospect after arriving at Auburn two years ago as a five-star high school prospect, the second-ranked wide receiver behind Ohio State’s Jeremiah Smith.

In two years at Auburn, the 6’3, 200-pound wideout emerged as one of the nation’s most explosive targets despite the Tigers struggling to find consistency at quarterback. In two seasons, he accounted for 1,306 yards and 13 touchdowns catching passes from Peyton Thorne, Jackson Arnold, and Ashton Daniels. The hope for both Texas fans and Coleman is that putting him with a quarterback who specializes in the deep ball, like Arch Manning, will both open up the Texas offense and set him up for a one-year springboard on the Forty Acres.

This plan has worked wonders for Texas in previous years, with Matthew Golden and Adonai Mitchell putting up big numbers in Burnt Orange and hearing their names called early in the NFL Draft.

Texas was likely heading to the portal in the offseason regardless, but the departures of DeAndre Moore and Parker Livingstone made it a true necessity for the Longhorns. The Longhorns have bolstered the skill position talent on offense with the additions of Coleman and former Arizona State running back Raleek Brown.



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Legend posts Transfer Portal message that Ohio State football fans needed to see

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As more and more Ohio State football players enter the Transfer Portal, the Buckeyes continue to let prospects go by without adding them to the roster. Despite several high-profile visits, the Buckeyes have only brought in five players from the portal to offset the 30 they’ve lost.

Ross Bjork should receive the majority of the blame. His failure to use NIL effectively, while every other major program seems to be able to, is a massive problem. Of course, there is something to be said for the change in mindset for some of the college football players these days.

Former Ohio State running back Maurice Clarett had his own gripes with the NCAA. He tried to challenge the NFL rule so that he could enter the NFL after his freshman season. Ultimately, that failed. Regardless, he gave his take on the portal situation.

Maurice Clarett explains why Ohio State football players are transferring

From Clarett’s perspective, he believes that college kids are just looking around to capture the most money possible.

Clarett isn’t wrong that Ohio State certainly props up other kids who aren’t at the top of the depth chart. The cache of being at an elite program for a year helps them get more NIL money from a lower-level school, allowing them to maximize their earning potential.

That’s still no excuse for what is happening with the Ohio State Buckeyes. There is no reason that they should have this many players exiting the program and so few coming in. Ryan Day needs to get Bjork’s expectations in line for how the NIL game is played.

If that doesn’t happen, Ohio State is going to start to fall behind very quickly. Other programs have risen, and old powers are using NIL to get back to the top, as well. The Buckeyes need to fix their approach before it is too late and they fall too far behind.





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