Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

NIL

Tyran Stokes Could Reshape Gonzaga's Identity in the NIL Era

Published

on

Tyran Stokes Could Reshape Gonzaga's Identity in the NIL Era

When reports surfaced that Tyran Stokes, the No. 1 recruit in the class of 2026, is expected to take an official visit to Gonzaga, the college basketball world took notice. Since the recent House settlement and the legalization of direct revenue sharing, schools without football programs (and without sprawling athletic departments) are newly positioned to compete for elite talent that had in the last five years or so been reserved for schools with a large enough donor base to pay for their services. The revenue-sharing model directs more institutional support to athletes across all sports, giving basketball-first programs like Gonzaga the financial firepower to recruit top-tier players without competing against football for resources.

This is a program that has landed five-stars, developed lottery picks, and earned No. 1 seeds in the past. But the economics of the NIL made it increasingly difficult of late for basketball-first schools to operate in the same recruiting tier as revenue-heavy powerhouses. Stokes’ interest (and that of other top recruits currently being courted by the Zags) suggests that Gonzaga’s development model now has the economic allure to attract players previously boxed out and earmarked for Power-5 schools.

Advertisement

So, How Good Is He Really?

Well, he’s the top recruit in the country for very good reason. Physically, he’s built like a tank, six-foot-eight, somewhere between 235-245 lbs., seven-foot wingspan, and an explosive vertical leap. He certainly doesn’t look it, but the dude must be built out of cannonballs and moon rocks. Imagine if Michael Ajayi somehow put on 20 lbs of muscle. That’s Stokes. Offensively, he’s a downhill playmaker who finishes through contact, rebounds aggressively, and finds teammates in space. He averaged 21 points, 9.3 rebounds, and nearly 4 assists last season for Notre Dame High School in California. He then followed that up with a starring role for Team USA, where he became the first player in U19 history to record a triple-double and averaged 12.2 points in just 18 minutes per game. His EYBL numbers back it up too—20 points, 8.3 boards, and top-ten scoring across the entire circuit. Every level he touches, he produces.

Defensively, Stokes is versatile, handsy, and aggressive. He moves well laterally for his size, can wall up against slashers, and switches comfortably across positions. His energy rarely drops, and his rebounding is elite for a wing. If you’re a coach, you can plug him into almost any system. If you’re a scout, you’re watching the jumper. That’s the one real question left. He shot just over 30% from three last season, and his free-throw numbers (mid-60s) suggest the touch isn’t all the way there. But the mechanics are clean, the volume is increasing, and the upside as a league-average shooter is very real.

Still, what makes this visit to Spokane so significant isn’t just the talent on tape. It’s who’s calling. Besides Gonzaga, Stokes has already been courted by Kansas, Kentucky, Oregon, USC, and Louisville (his hometown). He’s seen Allen Fieldhouse. He’s visited Rupp. He’s played for Tommy Lloyd on Team USA (and if you like playing for Tommy, wait til you play for his mentor and all-time great basketball mind Mark Few).

Advertisement

These are destination programs that usually close on players like Stokes. So why is Gonzaga still on the list?

The answer starts with fit. And it ends with what the program has quietly become: a landing spot for elite players who see Spokane as the most direct pathway to the NBA. And with the program’s pending move to the Pac-12 and a rapidly shifting NIL structure post–House settlement, the gap between Spokane and the so-called Blue Bloods is closing faster than anyone expected.

Why Stokes Fits Gonzaga

Few prospects in recent memory would arrive to Gonzaga with the physical readiness, big game experience, and upside that Stokes already possesses. In terms of size he’s just fine pounds and a couple inches shy of Graham Ike, but he’s lethal in transition and facilitates floor spacing from the wing. His unique blend of force and feel would instantly thrive within Gonzaga’s high-IQ, movement-based offense, especially with a veteran floor-marshal like Braeden Smith running point.

Advertisement

In terms of development opportunities for Stokes, Gonzaga gets players to the pros, yes, but more importantly, it equips them with the coachability, versatility, and physical tools necessary to keep them around in the league. It’s why NBA GMs now view Gonzaga in the same light as Kentucky and Duke–a professional finishing school that develops character, professionalism, and a team-first mindset in tandem with athletic performance.

For a player with Stokes’ ceiling—and the national attention that comes with it—Gonzaga offers something rare: a grounded, basketball-first community that treats their players as more than their market value. It’s a place where the pressure to succeed is met with support, where expectations are matched by belief, and where becoming a pro begins with becoming the kind of person who can handle it.

Why Gonzaga Can Now Compete for Stokes

Under the new revenue-sharing model, Division I schools can allocate up to $20.5 million per year to athletes. At football-first schools, that sum gets carved up across sprawling rosters, athletic departments, and compliance operations. But Gonzaga operates with single-sport precision. That gives Gonzaga the ability to direct a larger share of available revenue toward a smaller number of players, with fewer trade-offs and no internal competition for resources.

Advertisement

In practical terms, that means a player like Tyran Stokes could command more direct, structured compensation at Gonzaga than at any other school currently recruiting him. His visits have included Louisville, Kansas, Kentucky, Oregon, and USC—all high-major programs with football obligations that absorb a meaningful share of institutional funding. Gonzaga stands alone in that group: the only school without a football program, and therefore the only one capable of consolidating its revenue-sharing resources entirely around men’s basketball. That distinction is vital in an era where compensation is legal and expected, Stokes’s potential commitment to Gonzaga would quite literally be proof of concept that the new revenue-sharing model can preserve parity across conferences in the NIL era.

Final Thoughts

Tyran Stokes is a program-shaping talent—physically imposing, instinctually polished, and already equipped with the poise and processing speed that translate to the next level. His recruitment reflects that. But Gonzaga offers more than opportunity. With no football program, a unified donor base, and a basketball identity that has produced durable, high-character professionals, the program now occupies a rare position in the post-House era: fully resourced, culturally grounded, and built around player development in its fullest sense. Somehow, Gonzaga can not only compete for players like Stokes, it might have the strongest pitch for his eventual commitment. Stokes would be Gonzaga’s second No. 1 overall recruit, joining a short lineage that begins and ends with Chet Holmgren—and we’ve already seen how well that trajectory holds up in the league. Gonzaga can give Stokes the platform to rise, the community to stay grounded, and the space to grow into everything his future already promises.

Although Kentucky seems to be gaining ground as the frontrunner for Stokes’ commitment, the stink of the Calipari era still clings to Rupp like cheap cologne: loud, sweaty, and impossible to ignore. Mark Pope has done his best to exorcise the place, but no amount of holy water or leadership-summit charisma can scrub out a decade of ego, turnover, and early tournament flameouts. For most college hoops fans, the Wildcats still play the villain, and his potential commitment to Kentucky could feel to Louisville fans in his own hometown like seeing the pride of their city held up as proof that the University of Kentucky still runs the state.

Advertisement

Under the House settlement, Kentucky and Louisville’s NIL revenue will be divided across every varsity sport. That includes massive football programs with constant overhead and endless booster expectations. At Gonzaga, the entire athletic department is built around the long-standing success of its basketball program alone. The money should be substantial, the exposure is guaranteed, and the NBA outcomes are proven. For a player like Stokes, the choice should be a clear one.

More from slipperstillfits.com:

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

NIL

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

Published

on


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.





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Oregon’s Linebacker Depth Takes A Hit With Latest Transfer Portal Entry

Published

on


The Oregon Ducks took a hit to their linebacker depth with Kamar Mothudi entering the transfer portal the day after Oregon’s season-ending Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl loss according to 247Sports’ Matt Zenitz.

Mothudi appeared in six games this past season and recorded four tackles. He is the first Oregon linebacker to enter the transfer portal.

High Expectations, Low Production

Oregon Ducks dan lanning schedule Dante moore Kamar Mothudi Recruiting NIL Transfer Portal Big Ten College Football Playoff

Jan 9, 2026; Atlanta, GA, USA; Oregon Ducks head coach Dan Lanning on the field prior to the 2025 Peach Bowl and semifinal game of the College Football Playoff against the Indiana Hoosiers at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Mothudi came to Oregon as apart of their 2024 recruiting class. Listed as the No. 13 linebacker and No. 145 player in the country according to 247Sports’ rankings, Mothudi came into Eugene with big expecations as he was the top-ranked linebacker in the Ducks’ 2024 class. However, he never really found his footing in the Ducks’ linebackers.

After appearing in only one game as true freshman, the 2025 Big Ten Championship game, Mothudi was still buried on the depth chart as a redshirt freshman. He played mainly in blowout wins for Oregon and made his last appearance in the Nov. 22 win over USC.

Potential Landing Spots For Mothudi

Oregon Ducks dan lanning schedule Dante moore Kamar Mothudi Recruiting NIL Transfer Portal Big Ten College Football Playoff

Oregon defensive coordinator Tosh Lupoi directs practice March 29, 2022.

Tosh Lupoi | Chris Pietsch/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK

The Los Angeles native took five official visits during his high school recruitment. Mothudi visited Oregon, Oregon State, Washington, Michigan State, and Utah.

One schoool that stands out among the rest for Mothudi is Cal. The Golden Bears hired Oregon defensive coordinator Tosh Lupoi as their head coach following the dismissal of Justin Wilcox. Lupoi is known as a tenacious recruiter and was a big reason why the Ducks’ constantly reeled in top talent, including Mothudi.

247Sports lists Lupoi as one of the primary recruiters in Mothudi’s recruitment. The two could reunite in the Bay Area next season as the Golden Bears reload their roster via the transfer portal.

UCLA has been quietly making some noise in the transfer portal. Mothudi spent his first three years of his high school career at Campbell Hall, which is 12 miles away from UCLA’s campus. The Bruins also went through a coaching change and brought in James Madison’s Bob Chesney, making them active in the portal as well. They could make a push to bring Mothudi home to close out his college career.

MORE: What Dan Lanning Said After Oregon’s Loss to Indiana

MORE: Instant Takeaways From Oregon’s Playoff Loss to Indiana

MORE: Dante Moore NFL Outlook Comes Into Focus After Peach Bowl Loss

SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER HERE!   

Ducks Will Be Okay

Oregon Ducks dan lanning schedule Dante moore Kamar Mothudi Recruiting NIL Transfer Portal Big Ten College Football Playoff

Oregon outside linebacker Nasir Wyatt celebrates a sack as the Oregon Ducks take on the Washington Huskies on Nov. 29, 2025, at Husky Stadium in Seattle, Washington. | Ben Lonergan/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Although Mothudi was a promising underclassman, his departure isn’t the end all, be all for the Ducks’ linebacker unit. With Devon Jackson, Nasir Wyatt, and Blake Purchase all set to come back next season, Oregon will have plenty of talent coming back in addition to their 2026 recruiting class signees.

Oregon 2026 signees’ Braylon Hodge and Tristan Phillips both rank as top 15 linebackers in the country according to 247Sports’ rankings.

That’s not taking into consideration the fact that Mixon and Teitum Tuioti, both starters, still have eligibility left.

The departure of Bryce Boettcher will be the biggest impact on the linebacker unit as he was a multi-year starter and a leader of the team. But if Oregon coach Dan Lanning has proven anything during his time with the Ducks, it’s that they will be ready on the defensive side of the ball. Especially with the front seven.

Recommended Articles



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Freshman All-Conference QB delivers bad news to major college football programs

Published

on


The college football transfer portal often features unproven talent looking for a second chance, but this cycle featured a rare commodity in a proven statistical leader with multiple years of eligibility remaining.

Several top-tier programs engaged in a competitive pursuit to land one of the most productive passers from the FCS level to bolster their rosters for the 2026 season.

Coaches from the ACC, Big 12 and national independent brands identified this young signal caller as a primary target to solve depth chart issues or compete for a starting job immediately. His availability sparked a significant recruiting battle that spanned multiple time zones and conferences following his breakout debut campaign.

That pursuit ended abruptly on Sunday when the highly coveted prospect announced his decision to head to the Pacific Northwest. The move sends a ripple effect through the market and forces several major programs to look elsewhere for quarterback help as the offseason moves forward.

Mercer QB Braden Atkinson commits to Oregon State over Notre Dame, Baylor

Former Mercer quarterback Braden Atkinson has committed to Oregon State. His agents at AiC Athletes confirmed the decision to On3’s Hayes Fawcett. The move is a significant recruiting victory for the Beavers and a setback for five other major programs that showed interest in the prolific passer.

Atkinson enters the Oregon State program following a historic season at the FCS level. He threw for 3,611 yards and 34 touchdowns while completing 66 percent of his passes. Those numbers helped him win the Jerry Rice Award, which is given annually to the national freshman of the year in the FCS. He also finished fifth in voting for the Walter Payton Award while leading his team to a 9-3 record and a playoff berth.

Mercer Bears quarterback Braden Atkinson (11)

Mercer Bears quarterback Braden Atkinson (11) threw for 3,611 yards and 34 touchdowns in his freshman season. | John Reed-Imagn Images

His entry into the portal came after Mercer head coach Mike Jacobs left for Toledo. That coaching change sparked a recruitment battle involving Notre Dame, Baylor, Syracuse, Boston College and Cal. Each program had specific reasons for pursuing the 6-foot-1 standout.

Notre Dame explored adding Atkinson to a room that features starter CJ Carr. The Fighting Irish sought experienced depth to protect against injury, but will now have to look elsewhere. Baylor viewed Atkinson as a potential solution to replace Sawyer Robertson after he leaves for the NFL Draft. Head coach Dave Aranda faces pressure to find a competent starter after a difficult 5-7 season.

The ACC also missed out on a potential starter. Boston College is losing Grayson James to graduation and Dylan Lonergan to the transfer portal. This leaves head coach Bill O’Brien with limited proven options on the roster. Syracuse hoped to add competition behind Steve Angeli but failed to close the deal.

Cal viewed Atkinson as a way to bolster the roster under Tosh Lupoi, despite the presence of Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele. The Golden Bears’ freshman starter has indicated he plans to return, but depth remains a priority.

Atkinson ultimately chose the Beavers and brings three years of eligibility to Corvallis.

Read more on College Football HQ





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

On3 CEO shares telling Alabama NIL statement after Hollywood Smothers flips to Texas

Published

on


Frequently these days, we’re reminded that the Alabama Crimson Tide is no longer, in fact, the biggest, baddest recruiting powerhouse in the country. Not with rev-share and NIL essentially serving as a salary cap-less spending spree.

Rev-share has a cap, but NIL doesn’t. Schools can only offer $20.5 million as part of the sport’s rev-share agreement that went into effect at the start of the 2025-2026 academic calendar. NIL is the supplemental cash that big-time boosters, like Cody Campbell with the Texas Tech Red Raiders and Larry Ellison with the Michigan Wolverines, pay beyond that. How every team’s payroll shakes out each season isn’t as transparent. It’s unclear what comes from the school and how much comes from the boosters. Much of it is via taxpayers, who pick up the slack in states across the South because of tax-free NIL payments to players that exist because of these states’ laws.

To that end, the Texas Longhorns have multiple high-spending boosters that can help UT win any bidding war. The Crimson Tide does not.

On3’s Shannon Terry reminded the College Football world of that in the aftermath of former NC State Wolf Pack and Oklahoma Sooners running back Hollywood Smothers flipping his commitment from Alabama to Texas on Sunday.

“Another NIL-driven move. Texas is loading up and has the resources to do it. Alabama has resources, but not at this level. ‘FU money’ is driving the game — just the facts,” Terry wrote.

The Longhorns’ booster network is powered by its top donor, TRT Holdings, the parent company of Omni Hotels and Gold’s Gym, and its owner, Robert Rowling.

Who is Alabama’s top booster?

The Crimson Tide, like Terry, said, isn’t broke. C.T. and Kelly Fitzpatrick, the founders of Vulcan Value Partners, a Birmingham-based investment firm, are financially invested in the program. Yea Alabama, the Tide’s official NIL collective, also chips in for the cause.

UAT AD Greg Byrne has gotten on Yea Alabama’s case for not doing enough spending. We’ll see if the fanbase has enough Bama in them to donate the Tide back into contention with deep-pocketed Texas schools.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

2,300-yard transfer QB strongly linked to three major college football programs

Published

on


Three elite college football programs are battling for one of the most productive quarterbacks in the transfer portal. A redshirt freshman signal-caller has emerged as a primary target for several major schools as the offseason quarterback carousel continues to spin.

The 6-foot, 186-pound dual-threat passer is coming off a breakout season at the FCS level and is now looking to make a jump to the Power Four, according to reporting from On3’s Pete Nakos and Steve Wiltfong.

One SEC head coach quickly pivoted to this rising talent after a previous target from Washington opted to remain in Seattle for the 2026 season. The program has been aggressive in its pursuit, hosting the quarterback for a visit that began on Wednesday and concludes this weekend.

The Radford, Virginia native also visited a Big Ten contender earlier in the week, creating a high-stakes recruiting battle between two heavy hitters.

The decision comes at a critical time for all schools involved as they look to solidify their rosters for the 2026 campaign. The prospect brings a dynamic skill set that has clearly intrigued coaches at the highest level. He accounted for nearly 3,000 yards of total offense last season, proving he can stress defenses with both his arm and his legs.

Landen Clark transfer news updates, visit schedule

Elon quarterback Landen Clark’s production suggests he is ready for a bigger stage. The redshirt freshman threw for 2,321 yards and 18 touchdowns while adding another 614 yards and 11 scores on the ground. His ability to create plays was on full display against Western Carolina, when he passed for 305 yards and two touchdowns.

Those traits appeal to offensive-minded coaches like LSU’s Lane Kiffin, who is looking to add explosive playmakers to his quarterback room.

It wouldn’t be the first time Kiffin plucked a big-time quarterback talent from a little-known school, just as he did ahead of this season when landing Trinidad Chambliss from Division II Ferris State.

Elon Phoenix quarterback Landen Clark (11)

Elon Phoenix quarterback Landen Clark (11) is quickly rising up the portal ranks after a breakout redshirt freshman season. | James Guillory-Imagn Images

Michigan is also making a strong push under new leadership. The Wolverines are looking to stabilize their offense following the departure of Sherrone Moore and the arrival of Kyle Whittingham.

Clark’s visit to Ann Arbor gave him a chance to see how he would fit into their revamped system. Meanwhile, James Madison remains in the mix as a program that can offer immediate playing time closer to home.

Named a Third Team Freshman All-American by Phil Steele, Clark is expected to announce his decision by Sunday evening.

Read more on College Football HQ



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Texas Proves It Is NOT NIL Broke By Shoving Alabama In A Locker

Published

on


Texas NIL Money Cam Coleman Hollywood Smothers Alabama Broke Cost
iStockphoto / © Jake Crandall/ Advertiser / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images — © Jerome Miron/Imagn Images — © Jaylynn Nash/Imagn Images

Texas has the financial resources to sign any college football player it wants. The Longhorns are making a statement by spending millions of dollars in NIL money to help build the roster around Arch Manning.

It also proves they are not broke.

Two of the biggest moves in the transfer portal directly contradict a recent narrative surrounding the college football program in Austin. There is plenty of cash!

Texas will not overpay for unproven contributors.

The University of Texas have seen 23 outgoing players enter the transfer portal this cycle. That is a little bit less than 25% of the 105-player roster.

NIL money is the driving force behind a large number of these departures.

Many Longhorns players are going to the financial administrators with requests for a pay raise, or threatening to enter the transfer portal based on their projected roles rather than proven on-field performance. Players and agents view the program as flush with cash so they want their piece of the pie. That initially created a lot of tension because Steve Sarkisian and his staff are unwilling to overpay for backups and/or unproven contributors. Their demands are unrealistic.

Some fans of college football, especially those who root for rival programs, learned of this targeted approach by Texas and used it as a reason to point and laugh. They thought the Longhorns didn’t have enough money to pay their players after flaunting their money for recruits with a fleet of Lamborghinis.

That is far from the truth, as we learned on Sunday.

Alabama didn’t offer enough NIL money for Cam Coleman or Hollywood Smothers.

This whole narrative about Texas being broke largely stemmed from Christian Clark. The rising sophomore running back initially announced his decision to enter the transfer portal after getting 55 carries for the Longhorns in 2025. He may or may not return to Austin.

Either way, Texas will now split the bulk of carries between Raleek Brown and Hollywood Smothers. Clark is an afterthought. If he decides to leave, good riddance.

Smothers was the top-ranked running back in the transfer portal. The former four-star recruit ran for 939 yards and six touchdowns on 160 carries at N.C. State last season.

Smothers initially committed to Alabama last week. He later flipped to Texas on Sunday.

The Longhorns shoved the Crimson Tide into a locker. They offered him more money.

Smothers’ decision was announced just a few minutes after Cam Coleman. Coleman was the second-ranked wide receiver in the recruiting Class of 2024 as a five-star prospect. He caught 93 passes for 1,306 yards and 13 touchdowns in two years at Auburn. He committed to Texas on Sunday.

Coleman initially chose Auburn over Alabama out of high school. The Crimson Tide felt good about its chances of getting him in the boat the second time around. And then the Longhorns shoved them into a locker. It was a huge get for Arch Manning.

All of this goes to say that, no, Texas is not broke. Steve Sarkisian is choosing to spend his money on proven talent instead of guys that have not yet seen the field.

It actually sounds like Alabama is the one that doesn’t want to spend big money…





Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending