NIL
West Texas boom

WEST TEXAS — Cody Campbell signed some of his earliest land acquisitions on the hood of work trucks at drilling sites across the Permian Basin.
A three-year starter along the offensive line at Texas Tech from 2001-04, Campbell didn’t have the backing of a major investor when he went out prospecting. It was just him and John Sellers, a former teammate at Canyon High School and Texas Tech. The pair of Canyon Eagles fittingly named their startup Double Eagle Energy. And at the beginning, the risks seemed crazy for the former real estate agents looking for a new trade after the housing market collapsed in 2008.
When the market went down, Double Eagle decided to pounce. They scoured the Permian Basin, putting every cent they had into searching for leases. As opposed to the big boys who outsource such tasks, Campbell and Sellers mined through land registers themselves to buy mineral rights. There were no guarantees that any would hit it big. Hell, they were closer to bankruptcy than billionaire status.
“We were the underdog,” Campbell said. “And we had to find out a way to squeeze out some success amid titans, among huge companies.”
In one legendary story, they bought a landowner a first-class ticket to London by spending $9,800 on a $10,000 credit card as a form of payment to extend a lease. It took until the final hour before the option expired before Double Eagle managed to find a buyer. The seven-figure deal helped keep the company barely above water.
Then, the timing hit just right. Oil prices crashed, allowing Double Eagle to buy up massive swaths of land. Technology advanced, allowing drillers to get a great quantity of oil with less expense, supercharging the margins. Earlier this year, Campbell and Sellers made one of its biggest deals ever, selling for more than $4 billion of cash and stock.
Campbell has spent his whole life looking for investments. His latest brings him back home. A fourth-generation Red Raider, Campbell’s great-grandfather was part of the first ever class at Texas Tech in 1925. His dad and brother played sports there. In April, he was named Chairman of the Board of Regents, giving him a formal leadership role with the school.
But 20 years after he left Tech for the Indianapolis Colts, football is still everything to him. He has been in the ear of President Donald Trump and was set to co-chair a Presidential Commission. He has spent more time, money and effort helping Texas Tech football than almost anyone. And in college football’s Wild West era, he once again saw opportunity.
“College sports are a business more than they’ve ever been before,” Campbell said. “And I think it does require a business mindset in order to be effective. Every dollar you spend, every move you make, has to be thought about as an investment.”
Last season, after a frustrating loss to Colorado, a fan jeered at him on social media, asking him to “buy us an O-line.” Campbell responded simply: “I will.”
Little did we know, that plan was put into motion months earlier. It’s not enough to improve a football team. It’s a roadmap to showcase an entire region.
I. The Landman’s Plan
Giant windmills start to appear as you drive up Highway 84 towards Lubbock from Dallas. There’s motion on the horizon, and then you’re surrounded by whirling turbines dotting the plateaus.
A cracked sign points to the Fluvanna Renewable Energy Project. Beyond is a lone rusted oil pump jack, slowly pulling black gold from the ground. But the creak of the jack is overpowered by the rustle of the whirling blades. Energy is king out here, and it doesn’t matter how you find it.
Lubbock is called the Hub City. Its centralized location at the floor of the Panhandle connects all the parts of West Texas. Down south is the Midland Basin, which remains one of the most fertile oil deposits in the world. North is the Panhandle, filled with cattle and ranchers. West is the gateway to the trails of the American Southwest, while east leads to the shining economic powerhouse of the Metroplex.
At the center of the spoke lies Texas Tech. Founded in 1923, it has become one of the most important institutions in the region. It produces most of the lawyers, doctors and businessmen that fill West Texas. The university’s research arm has been critical to growth in the energy, agricultural and weather sectors.
The central location means Lubbock is transient, ready to follow the winds of change. And the winds were blowing on college football.
Texas Tech Athletics
It was July 2024. Campbell called a meeting with football coach Joey McGuire, general manager James Blanchard and a select few other administrators in athletic director Kirby Hocutt’s private conference room. There, he laid out his big idea.
Paying players is legal, and there’s no cap. After the season, de facto free agency will open. There’s no guarantee this world will last forever. When players enter the transfer portal, we should be ready to pounce.
The goal was to finish with a top-five transfer class and supercharge the roster in time for the Big 12 race. With Campbell leading a cadre of megaboosters — including Sellers, Gary Petersen and Dustin Womble — money was no object.
“It was just analysis of the legal situation and the business situation,” Campbell said. “That’s what we do every day at work, find opportunities to gain competitive advantages. I saw it as no different than a business deal.”
Texas Tech once became the story of college football because of its innovation, when Campbell’s former coach Mike Leach turned pea shooter-armed quarterbacks into household names.
At least 11 former players and assistants under Leach went on to become FBS head coaches. A decade later, Patrick Mahomes revolutionized the brand and now sits as the best quarterback in the NFL. But for all the towering legends, success has been sparse.
Campbell was an offensive lineman under Leach and started in three straight bowl victories. The program reached its top ranking in nearly 30 years. He got a taste of success.
Seeing wide-open spaces on the horizon, the landman wanted more.
Campbell’s foresight ended up being a premonition. On July 1, 2025, revenue sharing will begin after the House v. NCAA lawsuit was formally settled. The era of a fully uncapped college athletics roster is potentially over. The offseason was a last gasp. And with it, 2025 becomes a truly once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for investment. This could be the oil boom all over again, but this time at Campbell’s alma mater. Or, the credit card could finally find itself maxed out.
“It’s a moment in time and an opportunity that may not exist again in the next decade,” Hocutt said. “It’s an opportunity to go all in.”
II. The Wildcatting Scout
In a previous life, Blanchard assembled fire hydrants while doing amateur scouting message boards. He’d put them together, from screwing on nuts and bolts to painting them red, and was paid six figures. Maybe that gave Blanchard his trademark attention to detail.
Joey McGuire made him his first hire when he got the Texas Tech job after he proved himself in the Baylor scouting office. In the years since, he’s become one of the most sought-after GMs in the sport, most notably turning down an offer from Marcus Freeman at Notre Dame.
Months before the portal opened, Blanchard’s staff created a massive recruiting board of potential transfer targets. Many of them would never pan out, or would leave for the NFL. It didn’t matter; it was all about being prepared. Other programs would have to go through a chain of command. Not Texas Tech.
“Our work is already done,” Blanchard said. “We could just get him on campus, we already know what he is, what we’re looking for and what we want to do with him.”
At the same time, Blanchard evaluated the roster. Bringing back veteran quarterback Behren Morton and star linebacker Jacob Rodriguez meant high-dollar positions could be avoided. But while watching the Philadelphia Eagles bulldoze their way to the Super Bowl with elite trench talent, Blanchard knew where he wanted to spend his money.
The rise of the college sports GM: As the game goes professional, only the head coach may have more power
Dennis Dodd
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While blue-blood programs scattered looking for overpriced quarterbacks and receivers, Texas Tech perfected its pitch to the big men. Howard Sampson, for example, had a strong relationship with former coach Mack Brown at North Carolina. McGuire, as a former Texas high school coach, remains close with Brown. They FaceTimed on his visit and Sampson, the No. 14 player in the portal, locked in his commitment.
On Dec. 16, 2024, Georgia Tech edge rusher Romello Height entered the transfer portal. Texas Tech reached out to his agent early. Within days, Height was on campus. Immediately, he was blown away by the thoroughness and honesty of the presentation. He didn’t want to go anywhere else. He canceled the rest of his visits and committed on Dec. 19.
“Like why not?” Height said. “You’ve got everything you need. You’ve got a great coaching staff. You’ve got players who want the same things as you. Like man, everything is here. Everything is here.”
There’s also one more ace up the sleeve that Texas Tech deployed. The Womble Football Center, a $242 million facility, just opened in 2025. It features a massive weight room, elite nutrition services and state of the art recovery tools. It also has a barbershop, two player lounges and more places to relax. Defensive coordinator Shiel Wood dubbed it the “Football Resort.” As more money goes directly to players and moves away from facilities, competing with it will only get harder for rivals. The timing was impeccable.
The pitches worked well, maybe better than expected. McGuire takes official visitors out to a steakhouse in Lubbock called Las Brisas, a local favorite. He usually orders a filet mignon with a peppercorn crust, cooked medium with mashed potatoes and asparagus, which he calls one of the best steaks of his life.
During one stretch in December, McGuire ate out there so much with recruits — every day for more than two weeks — that he had to mix it up with the tortilla crusted chicken penne. Even for a native Texan, there’s only so much red meat one man can eat.
“I mean we’re bringing in people and we had a plan of, this is the number that we need,” McGuire said. “But then we turn around and you’re like, well we can’t not take this guy. It just makes us so much better.”
Texas Tech Athletics
Five transfers turned to 10. Ten turned to 20. These are players that major programs wanted, including 13 blue-chips. What the hell was going on in Lubbock?
Perhaps the biggest flex for Texas Tech was its final piece. Stanford edge transfer David Bailey entered the portal in March after coach Troy Taylor was fired. Because of the timing, every program in the country fought for his services. A Los Angeles native who played in the Bay Area, Bailey was ultimately convinced to take a trip to Lubbock.
Bailey graduated with a degree from Stanford, so his education was set. It was time for a masters in NFL development. An offer of more than $2 million, sources tell CBS Sports’ Chris Hummer, got his attention. Getting into the Football Resort and seeing the high-powered transfers that found everything they needed in Lubbock convinced him to shut it down.
“I told everybody that asked, what I wanted in a transfer was to take my football skills to the next level,” Bailey said. “I wasn’t really aware at all of what they were doing recruiting defensive talent to the roster. When I found out about that, that’s what really sparked my interest.”
So instead of Texas or UCLA, his other two finalists, Bailey opted to sign with Texas Tech. His addition pushed the recruiting class to No. 1. Heads turned towards West Texas.
III. The Ringleader
Kirby Hocutt wishes he saved the voicemail. Joey McGuire, then an assistant at Baylor, had gotten hold of his number. The two sides had yet to make real contact or hold a formal interview.
“I’m not going to be able to live with myself if I don’t make this phone call,” Hocutt recalls McGuire saying. “I just want you to know, you need to hire me as your head football coach.”
It was a brash, bold call for a coach who was coaching high schoolers only five years prior. He had never called plays at the collegiate level and was regarded as more of a recruiter. His only collegiate experience came at Baylor, and it was limited. Turning also-ran Cedar Hill High School into a three-time state champion means something in this state, but enough to hire a power conference football coach?
But in the moments after that message, Hocutt’s phone rang off the hook. High school coaches from around the state reached out vouching for McGuire. They said the Texas High School Coaches Association — of which McGuire is a Hall of Honor member — would all but guarantee that he had success at Texas Tech.
“I’ve never seen anything quite like it,” Hocutt said.
Hocutt ultimately took the shot and hired McGuire. Texas Tech’s previous coach, Matt Wells, got into hot water at a radio show when he struggled to name what he loved about Lubbock. On Day 1, McGuire was the opposite. He saw a West Texas community that needed a cheerleader, and was ready to step in.
“I’m a unicorn in coaching,” McGuire said at his opening press conference. “I have now been at four places: I was at Crowley for four years, I was at Cedar Hill for 20, I was at Baylor for five, and I will die here at Texas Tech.”
Texas Tech Athletics
Three years into the job, McGuire has not backed down from those comments. He wants to spend the rest of his life in Lubbock. A rival team recently showed a potential recruit a video that seemed to claim McGuire was looking to leave. McGuire laughed when the recruit called. Of course he’s not going anywhere. He crawled over glass to get this job. It’s got everything he needs.
“I think he understands when he has a good thing,” Blanchard said. “A lot of football coaches on the college side, their mindset is always elevate, elevate, next step, next step. He was at Cedar Hill for a long time and had a lot of success, but he was the guy who sat back and built.”
And build he has. McGuire led Texas Tech to the first three-year run of consecutive winning conference records since 1996. He is the first coach to win consecutive bowl games at Texas Tech since 2007.
In all the best ways, McGuire is a high school coach. And in many of those best ways, he’s uniquely prepared for this moment. Like a high school coach, relationships are everything for McGuire. Every Wednesday, Tech’s staff takes the whole roster to breakfast and forces them to sit with a new group to learn about their teammates.
“Coach McGuire is different, man,” Height said. “His energy, the bonds he creates with his players, I’ve never seen a head coach so tight with their players. Come get in the pool, come shoot basketball on the court, come chill, just kick it, watch a game. I’m pretty sure he knows every single name on the team, walk-ons and all, because that’s just the type of coach he is.”
Last week they went to Dave and Buster’s. This week, there’s a scheduled three-point contest. His home is open to any of his players, and his wife, Debbie, is the consummate coach’s wife after 14 years as the first lady at Cedar Hill. Academic performance is through the roof. Nothing is too small for him to worry about.
“Coach McGuire does a great job of making this place feel like home,” offensive coordinator Mack Leftwich said. “I always tell people, within two days of being here, you feel like you’ve been here for 10 years.”
But more than his relationships, McGuire is a visionary. Hocutt describes him as being “all in.” And for a program that has not been pushed in a while, McGuire’s urgency was a shot in the arm. It gave Texas Tech permission to dream.
“I’m driven by trying to do things that haven’t been done somewhere and then people saying it can’t be done there,” McGuire said. “And, you know, I want to prove people wrong that, no, it can be done here.”
IV. Boomtown
For generations, the city of Lubbock used to end around 82nd Street. From there, it was cotton fields and cattle. There was one ring of highways around the city. No longer. Now at the corner of 82nd Street and Quaker, there’s a Sprout’s Farmers Market, a harbinger of a future to come.
Down the road are a golf course, health food spots and a Target. The new developments are essentially indistinguishable from the wealthier developments in Dallas or Houston, though about 30% cheaper for similar builds. Around 120th Street, the subdivisions are replaced by developer signs promising new builds popping up soon where golden waves of grain lie. Lubbock is not resting on its laurels, and Texas Tech is the public face of it.
“Our coaches at the university are phenomenal,” said John Osborne, CEO of the Lubbock Economic Development Alliance. “Every one of them is a champion for Lubbock.”
Where the old firehouse sits is now an art district, centered by the Louise Hopkins Underwood Center for the Arts gallery. Once a month, the organization organizes a First Friday Art Trail, where locals can walk along or jump on a free trolley to see all the galleries.
I asked Judy, who was manning the front desk of LHUCA, how many people showed up to these events. A few hundred?
“No, more like thousands,” she said.
Locals pointed me to brand new spots sprouting up across town, both in the old and new parts. There’s a burgeoning brewery community complemented by wineries — did you know West Texas produces grapes? There’s a tapas bar, scenic overviews, rousing live music scene and tasting menu organized by a James Beard-nominated chef.
“Go to this spot,” many said. “You wouldn’t believe you’re still in Lubbock.” It’s time to stop being surprised, though. This is the new Lubbock. You might have missed it.
Annie Rice/USATSI
Lubbock’s reputation of dust and cacti is well known, enough so that a then-TCU assistant subtweeted Texas Tech with a cactus emoji on social media a few years ago. Texas Tech fans and staff responded by adding cactus emojis to their social media handles.
“People negatively recruit this place so hard that it actually works to our benefit,” Blanchard said. “They say there’s nothing but cactuses out here, no city. When they get out here, they’re like, ‘Blanch, they lied. This place is great.'”
Lubbock rejects the idea that anyone should have to sacrifice to live there. The city is trying to serve its burgeoning young population, with an exploding number of residents under 30. Property values are cheap. New coffee shops and restaurants are competitive with major metros. There’s a thriving small business community. There are the hipster mustaches that would look right at home in Austin. It has everything you need.
The growth of Texas Tech represents a life blood for the community. In the past 20 years, the school has grown from an enrollment of 28,000 to more than 40,000. Applications are up. More graduates than ever are staying in Lubbock after graduating, especially as the economy diversifies.
“It’s not like people drive past campus every day and are reminded of us,” Campbell said. “They’re reminded when they see us on TV and having success. So for us, that athletic exposure is maybe more important than it is for most schools.”
The softball program spent a million bucks to land prized pitcher NiJaree Canaday out of the transfer portal a year ago, and will retain her services again this upcoming season for another seven-figures. The free advertising from Texas Tech’s out-nowhere-run to the Women’s College World Series Finals — with Mahomes in attendance — may spike another attendance boom.
“All the times that they make national news highlights the fact that they’re here in Lubbock, that they’re here in West Texas, and this is a great place,” Osborne said. “That makes them want to come here, and once they get to Lubbock, they realize this is a great place and they think about staying long term.”
As rents and housing prices have exploded in other major Texas metros, more Texas Tech graduates and West Texas natives are returning. The population grew 12% between the 2010 and 2020 census, and estimates say the combined statistical area cleared 400,000 last year.
Lubbock knows that it’s an underdog in this state when compared to Dallas, Houston or Austin. It knows that people view it as flyover country. But that’s why Texas Tech is so important. There’s movers and shakers in Lubbock, Texas. It’s tiring to be West Texas against the world. Texas Tech is ready to step to the mat.
“Anyone that believes that West Texas is dying, they have absolutely no idea what they’re talking about,” Hocutt said. “When you talk about the food and fuel and fiber that funds so much of this state, it’s right here in West Texas. I think it’s one of the country’s best kept secrets, but that’s what football and athletics can help us change because it doesn’t need to be a secret.”
V. All In
It’s a Tuesday night in October 2023 and Debbie McGuire, Joey’s wife, gives him a call. She’s on her way home from mahjong night and she is not happy. Texas Tech is 3-5 after flubbing two nonconference games and the train looks ready to slide off the track.
“Joey,” she says. “You gotta start winning some games. I just have got such good friends and I absolutely love living here.”
The message was clear: This is a great thing, stop screwing it up.
Joey reassured her that he was trying his best, but it ended up being a turning point. The Red Raiders went on to go 4-1 in their final five games and finished with a second straight winning record. The pressure silenced. Mahjong night was safe. This year, things are different.
At Texas Tech, there have never been such expectations. And with the new capped era starting on July 1, it comes with an expiration date. The 2025-26 school year is an experiment, an investment property. It will either deliver or fail. And there will be no excuses if it fails.
“I see Texas Tech as a stock and this is the equivalent of getting Bitcoin when it was 13 cents, or Tesla or Apple at their IPO,” Blanchard said. “I think Cody Campbell sees that, he’s so forward thinking.”
Sure, but history is also littered with failed startups built on hubris. Pets.com was supposed to revolutionize ecommerce. Instead, it was a total disaster. Texas A&M’s expensive No. 1 recruiting class in 2022 has become a perpetual punchline in the state, and led to the firing of Jimbo Fisher. Bitcoin and Tesla stock have seen calmer days. The modern world is built on chaos.
West Texans know better than most the boom-or-bust cycle of the energy markets. When the wells dry up or demand sags, the economy of place collapses. Filet mignon dinners become dried beans, and not everyone survives it. But that’s why striking during the boom times is so important.
Each of the last two years, Texas Tech’s expectations have fallen with a thud. No one cares about winning seasons when you claim, like McGuire has, that the Big 12 runs through Lubbock.
“If there’s not big expectations, you’ve got to be on a different planet,” McGuire said. “You’ve got to be blind and not see everything that was done. Like come on, let’s be Captain Obvious here and say there’s some really big expectations. Why try to push that down or guard yourself?”
Texas Tech Athletics
After reeling in the No. 2 transfer class in the nation, the Red Raiders are tied for best odds to win the Big 12 title with four other teams, according to BetMGM. Texas Tech has not won an outright conference championship since 1955 in the Border Conference, and never even played for the Big 12 title. And with a one-year uncapped window, there’s no room for error. This is their shot.
“I’d be lying if I said I don’t feel the pressure,” Bailey said with a laugh. “But I feel like you can’t let that get to your head. You have to take it day by day, checking the boxes and showing what you can control.”
Texas Tech’s strategy — which as one college basketball coach assistant described nonverbally by scratching his thumb and index finger together, the universal symbol for moola — has led to some massive wins, too. Men’s basketball star JT Toppin won Big 12 Player of the Year after transferring from New Mexico. Despite being mocked as a first-round NBA talent, Toppin wanted to return. He felt he had more to work on. NIL gave him that opportunity.
Toppin signed a deal nearing $4 million, per CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander, to return to Texas Tech. Returning also meant he could help recruit five blue-chip transfers to join him on a breakout Red Raiders squad that lost in the Elite Eight to eventual champion Florida.
“It changes our families lives,” Toppin said. “It changes our lives and it just makes us more motivated to play the sport because we know our family’s good. Now we just get to go out and play. It just makes everything more stress free, and that’s just an amazing feeling.”
In 2006, Cedar Hill had zero playoff wins in program history. McGuire helped lead them to an unlikely state championship. From that moment on, it set the tone. Cedar Hill was a place for champions. His run from there was almost unmatched. And as Leftwich pointed out, it was in McGuire’s fourth season at Cedar Hill that set everything up. McGuire is entering his fourth season at Texas Tech.
That’s the goal. That’s the opportunity Texas Tech has. If the Red Raiders make it to Arlington and reach the College Football Playoff, everything changes. The stature of the program changes.
“You can’t negatively recruit against us facility-wise,” McGuire said. “We’re revenue sharing at the highest level. So now we need to go do something that hasn’t been done. We need to be in the mix. We need to go play at AT&T Stadium and then you check that box off and then you create what we did at Cedar Hill where you have a chance to win every year.”
Mess up this season and everyone is on the hot seat. The honeymoon is over. It’s a once in a lifetime opportunity to outflank even the top programs in college football.
It’s scary, Blanchard acknowledges it. But the high school football coach, the fire hydrant assemblyman, the washed-up NFL lineman from Canyon… none of them were supposed to be here anyway. Why not go out swinging?
“With risk comes reward, and I don’t know any reward that didn’t come with great risk,” Blanchard said. “I would rather be risky and put all the chips in and see what happens than live as a pessimist and wonder, what if? Man, let’s go out shooting. Let’s blaze our guns and see what happens. There won’t be a lot of excuses if what we have isn’t very successful.”
VI. Homeward Bound
I pulled up to Evie Mae’s in Wolfforth, just outside of Lubbock, as it opened on Tuesday morning. It was my final destination before getting on the road back to Dallas. It’s an old-school Texas barbecue stop, the kind that closes on Mondays to reset and sets hours only based on when it sells out.
Locals have long claimed the spot was one of the best barbecue joints in Texas. In 2025, it was finally rewarded with a top 10 selection by Texas Monthly, the pinnacle of the craft. Finally, the big whigs saw what was happening out here in West Texas.
“It’s about damn time,” a patron chuckled.
I ordered a two-meat plate to go—after a quick taste of rib and brisket that proved Evie Mae’s deserved all the accolades. By the register, a hand-lettered sign pointed to a cooler of loose Miller Lite and Michelob: “Free beer. Be cool.”
Shehan Jeyarajah/CBS Sports
I skipped the beer, grabbed my bag, and hit the road. Daylight makes pulling out of Lubbock a lot easier.
About an hour east, traffic came to a halt on Highway 82. Three semis eased into a wind farm, each hauling a 170-foot turbine blade. The next Texas Tech billionaire, I thought, will trade oil for wind.
While we idled, I dug into my takeout — brisket first, then creamed corn — before realizing I’d forgotten a fork. No matter, I had everything I needed.
So I ate with my fingers on the dusty shoulder of the road. No fork, no napkin, just West Texas, barbecue, and the future turning in the distance.
NIL
Matt Rhule Addresses Dylan Raiola, NIL Investment and the Portal Era
Matt Rhule sounded comfortable, confident, and in control during his interview Wednesday night with the Husker Radio Network ahead of Nebraska’s bowl matchup against Utah.
At times relaxed, “Just Matt,” as he put it when the hat turned backward, Rhule covered a wide range of topics that collectively outlined where the program stands and where it’s headed over the coming months.
From his former starting quarterback and the transfer portal to staff changes and Nebraska’s evolving financial status, Rhule touched on nearly everything Husker fans want to know during an offseason filled with uncertainty.
With that in mind, here’s what Rhule said about the state of his program heading into his fourth offseason in Lincoln.
Sources: Nebraska quarterback Dylan Raiola intends to enter the NCAA transfer portal. He’s a true sophomore who has two years of eligibility remaining. He threw for 18 touchdowns, 2000 yards and completed 72.4% of his passes this year. pic.twitter.com/Frt7QgFN57
— Pete Thamel (@PeteThamel) December 15, 2025
Dylan Raiola, the portal era, and Nebraska’s quarterback outlook
Making his first public comments on the subject since the news broke on Dec. 15, Rhule didn’t shy away from addressing Dylan Raiola’s decision to enter the transfer portal. Instead, the Huskers’ head coach framed it as a reality of modern college football.
“I think all of our fans, all of our staff, we all just have to embrace it,” Rhule said. “We’re in the portal era. The portal will giveth and the portal will taketh away. It’s just the new normal.”
Raiola’s impact on the program wasn’t dismissed. As the first five-star quarterback to commit to Nebraska, Rhule said, he helped shift national perception around the program.

“He was the first five-star to come here and signal to everybody, ‘Hey, it’s cool to come to Nebraska,’” Rhule said. “And I think you’ve seen some players follow suit.”
Since then, December of 2023 to be exact, the Huskers have been able to sign two other five-star recruits. Williams Nwaneri (No. 6 overall recruit) was ranked one spot higher in the 2024 class than Raiola and eventually joined the Huskers’ roster via the transfer portal prior to the 2025 season. And on Dec. 5 of this year, Danny Odem (No. 31 overall recruit) signed his letter of intent to join the Huskers’ roster in 2026.
While acknowledging Raiola’s desire for a fresh start, Rhule also emphasized Nebraska’s preparedness moving forward.
“If he needs a fresh start, I’m going to pray that he finds the right place and has success,” Rhule said. “With that being said, there’s a lot of great quarterbacks out there and a lot of guys want to play at Nebraska.”

Following his comments on Raiola, Rhule made it a point to publicly reinforce his belief in the quarterback currently on Nebraska’s roster, TJ Lateef.
“We have a great quarterback in Lateef,” Rhule said. “I don’t think there’s a guy on our roster that doesn’t believe TJ is a starting quarterback.”
While praising Lateef’s mindset and approach, the head coach noted that his first-year player has embraced responsibility rather than shying away.
“TJ has no confidence issues and he doesn’t make excuses,” Rhule said. “He doesn’t blame other people. He knows he can be our starting quarterback, and he’s going to do a great job against Utah. He’s going to win a lot of games for us at the University of Nebraska.”
Doubling down.
Nebraska will face Utah in the 2025 @LasVegasBowl.
🎲ℹ️ https://t.co/6KjRTnx3ms pic.twitter.com/ifFIDYHnec
— Nebraska Football (@HuskerFootball) December 7, 2025
While a vote of confidence may be exactly what his new signal-caller needs, Rhule also reiterated the importance of depth at the position, particularly in today’s college football landscape.
“We’ll have great quarterbacks in that room,” Rhule said. “You need more than one. People want to play for Dana Holgorsen. They want to play for Glenn Thomas.”
If one thing over the offseason is true, Rhule isn’t interested in keeping his program at the status quo. He wants the players on his roster to have the ability to develop into the players they want to be, and he’s putting new coaches in place to do just that.

Single portal window, financial outlook, and Nebraska’s changing staff
While the transfer portal remains a major tool, Rhule emphasized that Nebraska’s approach, now and always, will be to develop players first. And amid changes to the portal window, it has allowed the coaching staff to spend more time focused on player development.
“Historically, in December you’re on the road recruiting,” Rhule said. “But now, we’re all able to be out there and we are focused. We’re focused on getting our team better.”
With a roster like Nebraska’s, currently featuring 91 scholarship players listed as underclassmen, development is exactly what his program needs. And now, with a new-and-improved recruiting schedule in his advantage, the Huskers’ head coach is using his time to help his younger guys take the next step.

Rhule also noted that much of Nebraska’s roster is made up of players the current staff recruited but have yet to be given their opportunity.
“I believe they’re good players,” Rhule said. “We were a part of recruiting them. They’re our guys. Before we start looking to the portal, we want to make sure we get a real evaluation of our guys and what role they can fill.”
As encouraging as that should be, and is, the head coach made it clear his comment doesn’t mean Nebraska will shy away from portal additions come January.
“We’re going to do both,” Rhule said. “We want guys to burst onto the scene the way Emmett Johnson did. But we also want to go out and get players in the portal that can help us.”
He finished out the topic by saying, “Our job is to put together the most competitive team full of great players. Guys can’t be afraid of that.”

Perhaps the most interesting portion of Rhule’s interview centered on Nebraska’s financial standing entering the upcoming offseason. To this point in time, the Husker fan base has been told their favorite program is competitive, but after speaking with Rhule, the Huskers Radio Network was able to discover that 2026 will be vastly improved.
“This will be the first year that we’re at the higher end of the market,” Rhule said. “We might not be where Texas and Texas A&M are, but we’re right there. We’re right below that.”
For context, both of the aforementioned schools have been able to compete at the highest level of college football in recent years. Both programs have or will compete in the College Football Playoff, and don’t appear to be handicapped financially in any way.

Rhule credited athletic director Troy Dannen for positioning Nebraska to compete financially, both in retaining talent and adding impact players.
“For every player that leaves and goes and has four or five sacks, we don’t want to lose those guys,” Rhule said. “We want to keep the players that can help us.”
But from Rhule’s perspective, it isn’t just Dannen that helps the Huskers compete for the nation’s top talent. He also highlighted Nebraska’s fan base as a unique advantage in the NIL space, particularly through local business partnerships and “true NIL” opportunities beyond revenue sharing.
“It’s a differentiator for us,” Rhule said. “It’ll help us in the portal. But make no mistake — having money does not mean you’re going to have a good team. But if you don’t have money, it’s pretty hard to have a good team.”
The head coach finished his comments bluntly, without offering an excuse. “There is no in between,” Rhule added. “Either we do this to be successful, or we don’t, and we become a Group of Four team.”

The other aspect of having a competitive team is having competent coaches on the staff. Following changes made after the regular season, Rhule described the transition as an opportunity for fresh evaluation across his roster.
“They’re getting a fresh look at these guys,” Rhule said, plainly. After additions were made, the head coach made it known how big an opportunity securing a sixth win in 2025 gave the Huskers to further assess needs moving forward.
With the dismissal of former defensive line coach Terry Bradden, Rhule himself has taken over defensive line duties, embracing a hands-on role during bowl prep. Nebraska defensive lineman Riley Van Poppel was also rewarded with a Blackshirt ahead of the matchup with Utah after playing in every contest this season and earning two starts.

Rhule praised new defensive coordinator Rob Aurich for his ability to lead and develop players. He even suggested the new leader of the defense has taught him some new tricks.
“It doesn’t matter the scheme,” Rhule said. “It matters that your players know the scheme and can adapt.” With recent comments from interim defensive coordinator Phil Snow suggesting the Huskers struggled knowing responsibilities in 2025, Rhule’s comments offered confidence that under Aurich, that won’t be the case.
On new offensive line coach Geep Wade, Rhule emphasized physicality and confidence as key traits he wants to see moving forward. Something the Huskers’ head coach saw from Wade’s former units on tape.
“I want them playing with a level of violence and physicality that only comes from confidence,” Rhule said. With just two of Nebraska’s starting offensive linemen set to return, Wade will have the ability, either by financially obtaining the players needed or by developing them, to kickstart the mindset change.

Quick Hits
- On Nebraska continuing to work on its current roster ahead of the January transfer portal window, Rhule said the focus right now is on retention. “At this time right now, we’re doing a lot of work with our current roster in terms of re-signing guys to contracts and signing guys up for next year.”
- On young running backs Mekhi Nelson and Isaiah Mozee potentially stepping into larger roles, Rhule said the belief inside the program is already there. “If you asked every guy on our team what they think about Mekhi Nelson and Isaiah Mozee, I think they’d say it’s kind of like a ticking time bomb. They’ve been waiting for their opportunity to explode.”
- On what makes new defensive coordinator Rob Aurich a good man for the job at Nebraska, Rhule said, he’s got characteristics similar to Tony White. “Because he’s had two huge defensive turnarounds as a first-year coordinator. That to me is the ultimate- It’s what Tony White did when he got here.”
- On what being more competitive financially will do for his program, Rhule said they will not be handicapped. “We spent two and a half years trying to reestablish the foundation of the program. Make no mistake, it was rocky. And I can turn my attention now more to football.”
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NIL
Memphis HC Penny Hardaway: I ‘Fined’ Aaron Bradshaw NIL Money to Motivate Him
How do you get somebody’s attention? Well, one way to get a college basketball player’s attention is by taking away their NIL money, like Memphis Tigers head coach Penny Hardaway did with junior forward Aaron Bradshaw.
“Aaron Bradshaw has played for some great coaching staffs, but they haven’t figured out how to motivate him, so Penny Hardaway found a way to motivate Aaron Bradshaw. He started taking his NIL money away,” it was revealed on the broadcast of the Tigers’ Wednesday night loss to the Vanderbilt Commodores.
“He said, ‘I fined him for showing up late. I fined him for violating our dress code. Three grand here, three grand there. Guess who started to show up early? Guess who started to put the effort in?’ … He [Hardaway] takes that fine money and puts it back in the bucket and has some guys further down the roster reaping the cash benefit of those fines.”
Message received.
Memphis is the third stop for Bradshaw in his collegiate career, with the former five-star recruit spending his freshman season at Kentucky (2023-24) and sophomore season at Ohio State (2024-25). Through nine games this season, six of which he has started, Bradshaw is averaging a career-high 7.1 points and 2.9 rebounds in 15.4 minutes per game, while shooting 50.0% from the field.
Hardaway, who starred at Memphis for two seasons as a player (1991-92, 1992-93), is in his eighth season as the Tigers’ head coach, with Memphis a combined 166-74 under him since the 2018-19 season, highlighted by two American Tournament titles and three NCAA Tournament appearances. However, Memphis is off to a 4-6 start this season, with three of its six losses being against ranked opponents in Purdue, Louisville and Vanderbilt.
Maybe if Hardaway takes away the entire team’s NIL dough, Memphis will run the table in conference play?
MORE COLLEGE HOOPS: Last Night in College Basketball: No. 13 Vanderbilt Passed OT Test vs. Memphis
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NIL
Joel Klatt can’t stand NIL re-signing announcements
Joel Klatt has had it with college football’s latest social media phenomenon.
In the wake of USC quarterback Jayden Maiava’s re-signing announcement, racking up nearly five million impressions on X, Fox’s lead college football analyst didn’t hold back his frustration with what’s become a growing trend across the sport.
Jayden Maiava has re-signed with the USC Trojans. pic.twitter.com/jLI0S6hPKh
— USC Football ✌️ (@uscfb) December 16, 2025
“I can’t with the re-signing of players, I’m sorry,” Klatt said.
“I can’t with the re-signing of players, I’m sorry.”@joelklatt shares his thoughts on the issues in college football, specifically surrounding “re-signing” and player representation. Do you agree? pic.twitter.com/lCFw3FfMUW
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) December 17, 2025
USC’s social media account posted Maiava’s re-signing announcement on Dec. 16, followed by a flurry of similar posts for other Trojans players. Tobias Raymond, Chasen Johnson, Romero Ison, Jahkeem Stewart, and Kendarius Reddick all got the graphic treatment announcing they were staying with the program.
Tobias Raymond has re-signed with the USC Trojans. pic.twitter.com/OYAWhIup4Y
— USC Football ✌️ (@uscfb) December 17, 2025
Chasen Johnson has re-signed with the USC Trojans. pic.twitter.com/J56Jb7ZpD9
— USC Football ✌️ (@uscfb) December 17, 2025
Romero Ison has re-signed with the USC Trojans. pic.twitter.com/pA11LlvOAx
— USC Football ✌️ (@uscfb) December 17, 2025
Jahkeem Stewart has re-signed with the USC Trojans. pic.twitter.com/nr76iwVxRj
— USC Football ✌️ (@uscfb) December 17, 2025
Kendarius Reddick has re-signed with the USC Trojans. pic.twitter.com/dc88qAVLsu
— USC Football ✌️ (@uscfb) December 17, 2025
But for Klatt, these announcements feel fundamentally different from how free agency works in professional sports.
“I started seeing some of these announcements on social media, guys would text me these announcements, and this is going to sound like I’m picking on guys,” Klatt said. “This is not their fault, but like Malik Washington, Waymond Jordan, LaNorris Sellers, there’s all these stories about like, ‘Oh, they’re re-signing. They’re working on a deal to stay.’ And I’m like, I don’t want to hear that. I don’t want to see it. You mean, wait, was he about to leave?”
Joel Klatt isn’t blaming the players. But in the NFL, fans know when a guy is a free agent and can walk. So when he re-signs, it makes sense. In college, a player is already on the team, already getting NIL money, and then announces he’s re-signing? It just makes fans wonder what they missed.
“This is so different than in the National Football League when your favorite team has a player that you love that you know is a free agent, and then they re-sign him, and you’re like, ‘Nice!’” Klatt contiuned. “That feels a lot different than like I’m a fan of a college team and I just think that this player who’s committed to this school, who’s at this school, who has more eligibility left, and is making a large sum of money through NIL, and then all of a sudden he’s like, ‘I’m re-signing.’ It’s like, ‘I didn’t know you thought about leaving.’”
But Klatt’s real issue isn’t the social media pageantry. It’s what’s happening behind the scenes.
“I don’t think that this is good for players, either, I really don’t. And let me tell you why: these contracts can be binding, and they can be loose, but it all depends on how they’re negotiated because there’s not a formality to the process,” Klatt explained. “So, the schools can kind of do whatever they want to do. They’re making their own rules, and then there’s some representation out there that is representing college players, and they want to play by their own rules.”
The lack of regulation in college athlete representation is a real problem. Unlike NFL players who are represented by NFLPA-certified agents, college athletes can hire essentially anyone to negotiate their NIL deals. There’s no registration requirement, no oversight, no baseline standard.
And according to Klatt, some of these representatives have no idea what they’re doing.
“And some of the representatives, by the way, are not very sophisticated. Guess why? Because they’re not representing a client that’s part of an association or a union, so they don’t have to register,” he added. “So the players can hire whomever. It can be like Uncle Eddie. We don’t know who these representatives are. That’s not to say that all of them are bad, but there are some that certainly don’t know what they’re doing. So, there are players because of that, that are signing contracts that they don’t even really know what they’re signing.”
Despite all his complaints about NIL representation and re-signing announcements, Joel Klatt still believes in college football.
“I remain very optimistic about our sport,” Klatt said. “I really do. I think college football’s in a great spot. I think that it can get better, but that doesn’t mean I’m blind to the problems.”
But his optimism won’t stop the re-signing trend. Schools will keep celebrating players who decide to stay, and fans will keep wondering if they were ever really thinking about leaving. It’s just part of college football now.
NIL
Texas Tech Linked to $2.4 Million College Football Transfer Quarterback
The Texas Tech Red Raiders defeated the BYU Cougars 34-7 in the Big 12 Championship Game. It secured them the No. 4 seed and a first-round bye in the College Football Playoff. They’ll play either the No. 12 seed James Madison Dukes or No. 5 seed Oregon Ducks in the Orange Bowl.
While Texas Tech strives for its first national championship in program history, it’s never too early to look into the future. The Red Raiders will face several major changes after the 2025 season, including from quarterback, Behren Morton. He’s using his final year of eligibility, while ESPN’s Matt Miller gives him a fifth-round grade in the 2026 NFL Draft.
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The transfer portal doesn’t officially open until Jan. 2, but On3 reports that over 800 players are already set to enter. With Morton set to leave, Texas Tech could find his replacement in the portal.
Texas Tech Red Raiders head coach Joey McGuire.James Snook-Imagn Images
In an article, On3’s Pete Nakos, links the Red Raiders to Cincinnati Bearcats transfer quarterback Brendan Sorsby.
“Viewed as one of the most experienced quarterbacks in the transfer portal, Texas Tech is the school to watch early on for Brendan Sorsby,” Nakos wrote. “He’s also expected to evaluate the NFL draft, and Indiana and Tennessee are other schools to know.”
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This season, Sorsby has completed 207 of 336 passes for 2,800 yards, 27 touchdowns, five interceptions and a 155.1 passer rating. He’s also rushed for 580 yards and nine touchdowns on 100 carries.
Sorsby is going to be highly sought after, with Rivals placing him as the third-ranked player in the transfer portal. His On3 NIL valuation of $2.4 million is tied for the 10th-highest in college football.
However, that may not be a problem for Texas Tech, which had the top-ranked transfer portal class in 2025. After bringing in 21 players, the Red Raiders had an adjusted NIL value of $7.6 million.
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As the official transfer portal period approaches, Texas Tech’s quarterback situation will be one to watch. With Morton playing his final year of eligibility, the Red Raiders could already be exploring other options.
The Red Raiders will play in the Orange Bowl at noon ET Jan. 1 on ESPN and the ESPN app.
Related: Texas A&M QB Marcel Reed Shares NIL Update Before College Football Playoff
This story was originally published by Athlon Sports on Dec 18, 2025, where it first appeared in the College Football section. Add Athlon Sports as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
NIL
Anonymous coach names biggest fraud in the College Football Playoff
There’s always plenty of argument about who belongs and doesn’t belong in the College Football Playoff, and that was certainly the case this season, especially given the debates around that final spot coming between Notre Dame and Miami.
But looking over the 2025 bracket, it’s one of the most recognizable SEC programs that is getting the biggest criticism from those in the coaching business.
Asked to name the biggest fraud in this year’s College Football Playoff, it wasn’t one of the Group of Five teams that got the most attention, but none other than Ole Miss, which made the field on the back of a historic season.
Ole Miss, a fraud?
That’s according to one FBS coach, who doesn’t believe the Rebels have a good case.
“They’ve had so many distractions with Lane Kiffin leaving, and Oklahoma is probably their only good win this year,” an unnamed Group of Five head coach said of the Rebels heading into the College Football Playoff, according to The Athletic.
Whoever it was who said it, he apparently wasn’t alone. Far from it.
Taking a vote from more than two dozen anonymous coaches heading into the playoff, the publication found that to be, if not a consensus opinion, then something like it.
Ole Miss won out among the various playoff teams with 29 percent of respondents saying it was the most fraudulent team in the College Football Playoff this season.
A wild year for Ole Miss
Picking on the Rebels for not being playoff-worthy sounds counter-intuitive, given the unprecedentedly good season they’ve had on the field.
For the first time ever, Ole Miss completed an 11-win regular season and qualified for its first College Football Playoff berth.
Then came the drama. The head coach who brought them that success became the biggest name in what emerged as college football’s most hectic coaching carousel.
Lane Kiffin was named as the leading target for two other SEC programs and ultimately departed the Rebels for conference rival LSU after winning the Egg Bowl game.
Coach highlights Rebels’ schedule
The concern around Ole Miss’ perceived quality of schedule doesn’t seem like a concern at first glance.
It played three teams that made the College Football Playoff, beating both Oklahoma and Tulane, and losing a closely-fought matchup on the road against SEC champion Georgia.
Otherwise, the Rebels beat lesser SEC opponents like Kentucky, South Carolina, Florida, and Arkansas.
The win against then-No. 4 LSU doesn’t look as good as it did at the time, given the Tigers’ fall from grace that led to Brian Kelly’s ouster.
There was no universe in which an 11-1 Ole Miss was being left out of the College Football Playoff. Whether it truly belongs will be decided on the field, which can be said for any team in the bracket.
But the Rebels weren’t alone
Not far behind in the fraud poll were two surprising names. Big 12 champion Texas Tech and SEC runner-up Alabama were both decried as playoff frauds with 17 percent of the vote each.
Texas Tech being included is truly puzzling, given the quality of its defense, but those asked expressed concern for the offense, in particular quarterback Behren Morton.
In second place was “no answer,” as 21 percent of those asked didn’t provide any hints as to who they thought were frauds.
Group of Five selection James Madison received 8 percent of the vote as a perceived fraud, while Oregon and Oklahoma each got 4 percent.
Alabama not getting respect
One defensive coordinator from the SEC and a defensive assistant from the Big Ten took issue with the Crimson Tide being included among the dozen playoff teams this year.
“Alabama should have, like, five losses this year. They shouldn’t be there,” the SEC defensive coordinator said.
And the Big Ten coach added: “I’ve watched them. They’re not that good this year. I didn’t see enough from them to get this chance.”
(Athletic)
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NIL
P.J. Fleck reveals Gophers’ mindset and strategy in NIL contract negotiations
There are hundreds of conversations happening behind closed doors of college football programs across the country right now. Between player-contract negotiations, coaching staff turnover and transfer portal decisions, the sport has transformed into the wild west.
Minnesota has already seen 13 of its own players announce their intentions to enter the transfer portal when it officially opens next month. They’ve also had notable players such as Drake Lindsey, Jalen Smith and Maverick Baranowski reveal their plans to return next season.
“I don’t think anything in elementary education taught you how to negotiate contracts in college. Even as you look at the past of you being a head football coach, everything you’ve gained experience on — and then you get into this world of new college athletics — and unless you’re a head coach that backs away and says, ‘Hey, I am just gonna coach football.’ You have to be so in line with your chief of staff, your GM, director of player personnel… You have to talk more than you ever have, and have meetings more than you ever had,” P.J. Fleck said.
“I don’t think the general public actually truly knows what college football truly looks like.”
Really insightful stuff from P.J. Fleck today on how the Gophers re-negotiate contracts. Worth the listen. 👇
— Tony Liebert (@TonyLiebert) December 17, 2025
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Minnesota has seen notable players like Bucky Irving, Phillip Daniels, and Athan Kaliakmanis enter the transfer portal over the years, but it’s routinely among the best programs in the country at retaining players. For example, past and present Gophers stars Justin Walley, Tyler Nubin, and Darius Taylor have turned down more lucrative offers to stay at Minnesota.
“It’s just a new era of college athletics, and we’ve embraced it. I think Gerrit Chernoff and his staff do an amazing job. Our retention rate, as of right now, is really, really high. Everybody does it on their own time frame. That’s one thing I’ve learned,” Fleck said.
“Everybody has representation. Everybody has their own view of not necessarily what they’re worth, and what they want to be able to get out of that, and what they value, and you respect that.”
Many fans and traditionalists are frustrated by what college sports have become, but it’s the new reality. It’s essentially one-year contracts for every player on your team, and they’re able to re-negotiate every offseason, with no salary cap or clear market. Fleck has historically had boundaries with the amount of information he shares about the inner workings of his Gophers’ program, but he shared a legitimate inside look on Wednesday.
The Gophers are currently in the stage of the offseason where they’re re-recruiting the entire roster. We likely won’t know the details or specifics of the contracts, but it was interesting to hear Fleck peel back the curtain.
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