NIL
Top 10 most expensive college football game day experiences for 2025
With inflation and rising food costs still impacting everyday Americans, the price of attending college football games isn’t always front of mind for even the most diehard sports fans. Still, as Oddspedia’s recent survey unveils, costs are going up everywhere, including across the college football landscape.
Part of those rising prices can be attributed to college programs fully embracing revenue-sharing with its college athletes, especially when it comes to college football, with the House v. NCAA settlement. Now that Power Four schools can provide as much as $20.5 million to student-athletes, the price of doing business is trickling down to fans far and wide.
In an effort to measure those costs for college football fans, Oddspedia surveyed all the top programs to determine the most expensive and cheapest game day experiences, which they identified as the cost of two tickets, two beers, two sodas, two hot dogs and parking. And while overall ticket prices saw a slight 2.7% decrease from 2024, the cost of everything else went up, including a 18.7% increase in parking fees.
And as evident by Oddspedia’s Top 10 most expensive college game day experiences, the SEC continues to reign supreme, even if it hasn’t won a College Football Playoff national championship since 2022.
Home: Folsom Field (Boulder, Colo.) | 2024 rank: No. 4
The Deion Sanders effect is real … and costly. With the sport’s most expensive ticket price at $228 for two people, Colorado is college football’s richest game day experience entering Year 3 under Coach Prime. This increase comes despite its two biggest stars — reigning Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter and star quarterback Shedeur Sanders — gone to the NFL. Now it’s officially Coach Prime’s show in Boulder.

Home: Bryant-Denny Stadium (Tuscaloosa, Ala.) | 2024 rank: No. 9
Nick Saban has been gone for more than 18 months, but a trip to Tuscaloosa on Fall Saturdays will still cost the average Alabama fan a pretty penny. It’s now Year 2 of the Kalen DeBoer era, and while he’ll be breaking in a new QB1, 18-year-old sophomore WR Ryan Williams is a SportsCenter Top 10 play waiting to happen. The only issue is watching him make those plays in person will run you $220 for two tickets.
Home: Darrell K. Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium (Austin, Texas) | 2024 rank: No. 6
Everything is bigger in Texas, including the price of attending games at DKR. The Longhorns are finally unleashing 2023 No. 1 overall recruit Arch Manning on the masses as its QB1 in 2025, and the nephew of former NFL QBs Peyton and Eli Manning is already drawing major Heisman hype. And, while parking in Austin remains its own endeavor at $50, two tickets to DKR will cost the average Longhorns fan $212.
Home: Notre Dame Stadium (Notre Dame, Ind.) | 2024 rank: tied at No. 7
The Fighting Irish won 13 straight games last season before ultimately succumbing to reigning champion Ohio State in the College Football Playoff national title game. Entering Year 4 under Marcus Freeman, the former assistant-turned-head coach clearly has something working at Notre Dame. While the Irish will be breaking in a new QB1 this season, star RB Jeremiyah Love is a big play waiting to happen.

Home: Sanford Stadium (Athens, Ga.) | 2024 rank: tied at No. 15
Attending games Between the Hedges just got a lot more expensive. Georgia rounds out the Top 5 with the second-highest year-over-year increase among the Top 10, due in large part to the country’s third-most expensive game ticket at $218 for two people. To help make the cost of attending games in Sanford Stadium go down easier, UGA lowered the cost of two hot dogs to $6 for CFB’s second-cheapest ‘dogs.
Home: Rose Bowl (Pasadena, Calif.) | 2024 rank: No. 1
Playing inside the home of The Granddaddy of Them All comes with a hefty price tag for Bruins fans, still tipping north of three bills for the total in-person experience. But after featuring the sports’ most expensive ticket last year, as well as significant increases from others in the Top 10 combined with a small 4.9-percent price drop in 2025, UCLA’s game day experience became slightly more affordable.
Home: Williams-Brice Stadium (Columbia, S.C.) | 2024 rank: tied at No. 7
The Gamecocks finally appeared to breakout in Year 4 under Shane Beamer, closing out the regular season on a six-game win streak to make a serious Playoff push. But with uber-talened, dual-threat QB LaNorris Sellers back for his second season as QB1, South Carolina enters 2025 as a serious SEC contender with Playoff aspirations. It’ll just cost fans $186 for two tickets to watch him in-person.

Home: Kyle Field (College Station, Texas) | 2024 rank: No. 5
The cost to attend games inside the swaying Kyle Field stands doesn’t come cheap, but the experience is unlike any in college football, especially when combined with the infamous Yell Leaders and the famed 12th Man. Also helping matters is the nominal 4.1-percent year-over-year cost increase, which was the lowest increase among the Top 10. Still, tickets for two will cost $218, in addition to $40 for parking.
Home: Kenan Memorial Stadium (Chapel Hill, N.C.) | 2024 rank: tied at No. 56
The Bill Belichick era is here in Chapel Hill, and it’s going to be a costly one. After a season away from coaching following five decades in the NFL, Belichick lands in college for the first time in his illustrious career. And while much of the offseason talk around North Carolina had nothing to do with football, Belichick’s $10 million/year salary comes with a steep 36-percent increase in the game day experience.
Home: David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium (Lawrence, Kan.) | 2024 rank: No. 23
Much like UNC, Kansas is still widely considered a basketball school. But that doesn’t mean Jayhawks fans get a discount for attending football games at David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium. Two tickets to games will run fans $200, a steep price for a team that’s only won more than six games once in the last 16 seasons when it went 9-4 in 2023, Lance Leipold‘s third season at the helm.
Top 10 cheapest CFB game day experiences for 2025
100. Western Kentucky Hilltoppers — $84 (-69%) | 2024 rank: 75
99. Arkansas State Red Wolves — $86 (+18.6%) | 2024 rank: 95
98. Ohio Bobcats — $100 (+2%) | 2024 rank: 97
97. North Texas Mean Green — $106 (+13.2%) | 2024 rank: 98
96. Northern Illinois Huskies — $107 (+21.5%) | 2024 rank: 100
95. Marshall Thundering Herd — $110 (-45.5%) | 2024 rank: tied at 63
94. Wake Forest Demon Deacons — $114 (-49.1%) | 2024 rank: 58
93. Miami (Ohio) RedHawks — $119 (-10.1%) | 2024 rank: tied at 82
92. Jacksonville State Gamecocks — $120 (+18.3%) | 2024 rank: 96
91. Toledo Rockets — $121 (-3.3%) | 2024 rank: 86
91. Tulane Green Wave — $121 (-1.2%) | 2024 rank: 88
NIL
Florida coach Jon Sumrall donates $100,000 to Tulane’s NIL fund
Florida’s newly hired head coach, Jon Sumrall, has made it clear he intends to leave the Tulane program in a better place than he found it.
After two seasons with the Green Wave, Sumrall is headed to Gainesville, though not before helping lead the program through the remainder of the 2025 season, with Tulane set to take on No. 6-seeded Ole Miss Saturday in Oxford in the College Football Playoff’s first round.
Along with continuing to coach his team, unlike former Rebels head coach Lane Kiffin, who’s now in Baton Rouge at LSU, Sumrall chose not to poach commits from Tulane ahead of Early Signing Day.
“I Zoomed with my signees or my commits at Tulane, and I told them to sign at Tulane because I’m not trying to poach their class,” Sumrall said at his introductory press conference in Gainesville. “I want those guys to go play there.”
Now, Sumrall has taken another step in ensuring the Green Wave remain competitive after he’s no longer in New Orleans.
Sumrall has donated $100,000 to the Green Wave Talent Fund in support of newly promoted head coach Will Hall.
The six-figure gift to the Green Wave Talent Fund, Tulane’s associated NIL collective, will aid Tulane’s ability to recruit, retain, and develop collegiate athletes.
“Tulane University and New Orleans are special to me and my family. Ginny and I are honored to support the Green Wave Talent Fund because we believe in the vision of Tulane Athletics and want to contribute to the continued success of its student-athletes. The future is incredibly bright, and we are excited for Will Hall and his family to be part of it,” Sumrall said. “Coach Hall possesses a keen understanding of Tulane University and its football program, along with a passion that greatly benefits the Green Wave. As a leader, he cares deeply about helping others reach their full potential and is dedicated to equipping them to achieve that goal in every way possible. He has our family’s full support, and we wish him nothing but success as he leads Tulane Football!”
It’s not the first time the Sumrall family has looked to invest in Tulane’s continued success; In 2024, they joined the Olive & Blue Society through a recurring philanthropic commitment to Tulane Athletics.
Sumrall’s high regard for the program is clear, and he’s taken another step to ensure the program won’t experience a significant decline now that he’s no longer leading the program.
“We are grateful to Jon and Ginny for this incredible gift,” David Harris, the Ben Weiner Director of Athletics Chair, said in a statement. “Their leadership and generosity will have a direct and lasting impact on our student-athletes as we continue to grow and elevate Tulane Athletics.”
NIL
Brendan Sorsby, DJ Lagway could be Tennessee football quarterback picks
Updated Dec. 15, 2025, 12:57 p.m. CT
Tennessee football coach Josh Heupel hasn’t announced that the Vols are in the transfer market for a 2026 quarterback, but there are strong indicators.
UT starter Joey Aguilar has exhausted his eligibility unless there’s movement in Diego Pavia lawsuit challenging the NCAA eligibility rules. Time is running out on that possibility.
Redshirt freshman Jake Merklinger is expected to enter the transfer portal, but he hasn’t announced his plans. Freshman George MacIntyre was a lauded recruit, but he barely played for the Vols this season. Five-star freshman Faizon Brandon will enroll in January, but starting a true freshman could be risky in the ultra-competitive SEC with College Football Playoff bids on the line.

If Aguilar can’t return and Merklinger enters the portal, Tennessee will need a transfer quarterback to fill at least a three-person position group. The question is whether the Vols would add a surefire starter or a optional starter to compete with MacIntyre and Brandon.
These quarterbacks have announced they’ll enter the portal when it opens Jan. 2 and could be options for the Vols.
Brendan Sorsby (Cincinatti)
Brendan Sorsby was a three-star recruit in the 2022 class, who has overachieved to become a productive dual-threat college quarterback. He spent two seasons at Indiana, including a redshirt year, and the past two seasons at Cincinnati’s starter.
In his college career, Sorsby has passed for 7,208 yards, 60 TDs and 18 interceptions. And he has rushed for 1,305 yards and 22 TDs. He has tossed more than one interception in only three of his 35 career games.
In the 2025 season at Cincinnati, Sorsby passed for 2,800 yards, 27 TDs and five interceptions. He ranked second in the Big 12 in passer rating. And he rushed for 580 yards and nine TDs.

Sorsby makes a lot of sense for Tennessee. He’s an accurate passer who rarely throws interceptions, and he can run the ball. Last summer, Sorsby told ESPN’s Greg McElroy that Tennessee’s Neyland Stadium is where he’d love to play a game because he watched a couple of games there as a kid.
He is reportedly exploring his NFL draft stock, but a sizable NIL payout likely could keep him in college. He has one season of eligibility remaining.
DJ Lagway (Florida)
DJ Lagway was a five-star recruit and the No. 2 quarterback in the 2024 class, according to 247Sports Composite. At Florida, he displayed flashes of elite talent but also inconsistency, a rash of turnovers and tendency for injuries.
Lagway completed 62% of his passes for 4,179 yards, 28 TDs and 23 interceptions over two seasons with the Gators. And he rushed for 237 yards and one TD. In the 2025 season, Lagway passed for 2,264 yards, 16 TDs and 14 interceptions, which led the SEC.
Lagway would be an intriguing project if Heupel can tap into his talent and reduce his interceptions. He has two seasons of eligibility remaining.

Dylan Raiola (Nebraska)
Dylan Raiola was a five-star recruit and the No. 3 rated quarterback in the 2024 class. He has spent the last two seasons at Nebraska. In November, he suffered a season-ending broken fibula, so any team picking him up must consider that.
Raiola has completed 69% of his passes for 4,819 yards, 31 TDs and 17 interceptions over two seasons. In the 2025 season, he completed 72% of his passes for 2,000 yards, 18 TDs and six interceptions.
Raiola has two seasons of eligibility. He is a five-star talent who appeared to turn the corner as an accurate, productive passer this season.

Kenny Minchey (Notre Dame)
Kenny Minchey, a native of Hendersonville, Tennessee, was a four-star recruit in the 2023 class out of Pope John Paul II. He signed with Notre Dame after initially committing to Pittsburgh.
Minchey showed promise at Notre Dame, but he was squeezed out of competitions for the starting job. In three seasons (including a redshirt year), he completed 23 of 29 passes for 212 yards. And he rushed for 96 yards and two TDs.
Minchey has played only 10 games and never started. He has two seasons of eligibility remaining. If Tennessee added him from the portal, he would not arrive as the surefire starter. Instead, he would compete with MacIntyre and Brandon for the starting job and round out the quarterback group.
Adam Sparks is the Tennessee football beat reporter. Emailadam.sparks@knoxnews.com. X, formerly known as Twitter@AdamSparks. Support strong local journalism by subscribing at knoxnews.com/subscribe.
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NIL
Jon Sumrall donating $100,000 to Tulane’s NIL fund
Dec. 15, 2025, 12:33 p.m. ET
Whenever Tulane’s run in the College Football Playoff comes to an end, so too will Jon Sumrall’s time at the school, with the second-year Green Wave coach headed to Florida.
Before he departs, though, he’ll be leaving something behind for his soon-to-be-former employer.
Sumrall and his wife, Ginny, are making a $100,000 donation to the Green Wave Talent Fund, a university initiative to expand NIL opportunities for Tulane athletes, the school announced on Monday, Dec. 15.
In two seasons with the Green Wave, Sumrall went 20-7, including an 11-2 mark this year that helped them win the American Conference and earn a spot in the playoff, where they’ll take on Ole Miss in the first round on Saturday, Dec. 20.
Though he was hired away by Florida late last month, he’ll be coaching Tulane throughout the playoff. That transition has been aided by the Green Wave hiring one of Sumrall’s assistants, pass game coordinator Will Hall, as his successor.
“Tulane University and New Orleans are special to me and my family,” Sumrall said in a statement. “Ginny and I are honored to support the Green Wave Talent Fund because we believe in the vision of Tulane Athletics and want to contribute to the continued success of its student-athletes. The future is incredibly bright, and we are excited for Will Hall and his family to be part of it.
“Coach Hall possesses a keen understanding of Tulane University and its football program, along with a passion that greatly benefits the Green Wave. As a leader, he cares deeply about helping others reach their full potential and is dedicated to equipping them to achieve that goal in every way possible. He has our family’s full support, and we wish him nothing but success as he leads Tulane Football!”
The money could be useful for Tulane, which has excelled under Sumrall despite losing talented players to bigger programs with more NIL resources. After the 2024 season, the Green Wave lost starting quarterback Darian Mensah and leading rusher Makhi Hughes to Duke and Oregon, respectively, with Mensah signing a deal worth a reported $8 million.
Since accepting the position at Florida, Sumrall has joked about balancing two FBS head-coaching jobs at once. His profile photo on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, is a picture of him in half Florida attire and half Tulane attire. In a post last week, he wrote that “I’ve got 2 Phones, 2 Jobs & 2 hours of sleep.”
In four years as a head coach, Sumrall is 43-11. Prior to Tulane, he spent two years at Troy, where he went 23-4 and won a pair of Sun Belt championships. At Florida, he’ll take over a struggling program that has finished with a losing record in four of the past five seasons.
NIL
Georgia Sues Former Linebacker in NIL Case That Could Set Precedent
The University of Georgia Athletic Association (UGAA)’s NIL lawsuit against former linebacker Damon Wilson II, who transferred to Missouri earlier this year, could become a standard type of litigation as more and more athletes sign NIL deals with one school and then transfer to another.
The specific legal dispute is straightforward: UGAA claims that Wilson, 20, breached his NIL contract with Classic City Collective (CCC)—a Georgia-aligned former NIL collective—and failed to pay a liquidated damages provision that was triggered upon breach.
A four-star recruit from Venice High School (Fla.), Wilson played for the Bulldogs in the 2023 and 2024 seasons and, while on the Tigers in 2025, earned second-team All-SEC recognition as he amassed nine sacks—tied for third-best in the SEC.
According to litigation records at Athens-Clarke County (Ga.) Superior Court, Wilson signed a 13-month, $500,000 NIL deal with CCC on Dec. 21, 2024. The deal runs from Dec. 1, 2024, to Jan. 31, 2026 and was contingent on Wilson being enrolled as a student at Georgia and part of the football team. He was paid $30,000, his first monthly licensing fee payment, on Dec. 25, 2024. UGAA emphasizes that Wilson accepted this payment, meaning the contract went into effect. On Jan. 6, 2025, Wilson announced he was entering the transfer portal, a move that Georgia says constituted a breach of the NIL deal. About a week later Wilson withdrew from Georgia and began the process of transferring to Missouri. It’s unknown how much money Wilson received to transfer to Missouri.
Georgia moved to close CCC over the summer, when U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken granted final approval of the House settlement, and has partnered with Learfield on NIL matters. Relevant to the school’s dispute with Wilson, CCC assigned its Wilson contract to UGAA, meaning the athletic association has the legal right to enforce the contract.
UGAA argues that under the NIL deal’s liquidated damages clause, Wilson, as the licensor, must pay all remaining license fees that would have been payable. The remaining value, according to court filings, is $390,000.
In May, attorney Spence Johnson wrote a demand letter to Wilson on behalf of CCC. The letter told Wilson that while CCC “does not want to unnecessarily undermine your financial future,” CCC also “insists that its student athletes be accountable for promises they make.” Wilson was told he had 14 days to pay or else CCC would “pursue legal action against you based on your breaches” of the NIL deal.
In August, Johnson wrote another letter to Wilson. Johnson said that UGAA had been assigned Wilson’s NIL deal with CCC. The letter indicated Wilson didn’t pay as demanded and that the NIL deal calls for arbitration to resolve disputes. In October, UGAA, through Johnson, filed a lawsuit to compel arbitration, with the complaint stating that Wilson hasn’t responded to demand for arbitration. There is no attorney listed for Wilson and it does not appear from the court docket he has responded to the litigation.
The actual legal controversy—alleged breach of contract—is ordinary, but the circumstances are extraordinary. A university, through its athletic association, is suing a former student athlete who transferred for reneging on his NIL deal.
A lawsuit like UGAA v. Wilson would have been inconceivable five years ago, but in the new college sports world, it’s the kind of case that could become more common.
Through antitrust litigation and accompanying settlements, college athletes can now transfer without sitting out of sports for a period of time. That approach is consistent with college students in general as they can transfer schools, but typical college students aren’t signing NIL deals.
There’s plenty of money to be made, too, for power conference football players to switch schools. University-aligned NIL collectives can pay athletes, some of whom also stand to benefit from the injunctive relief portion of the House settlement. Participating colleges can directly pay athletes a share of up to 22% of the average power conference athletic media, ticket and sponsorship revenue, with $20.5 million pegged as the initial annual cap. There are thus three buckets of money for some college athletes: revenue share, NIL deals and athletic scholarships.
And playing in college could become something of a career depending on the ultimate trajectory of antitrust litigation brought by Vanderbilt quarterback and former JUCO transfer Diego Pavia—the runner-up for the 2025 Heisman Trophy—and other seasoned college athletes. They wish to continue playing college football past the NCAA eligibility clock, which limits eligibility to four seasons of intercollegiate competition, including JUCO and D-II play, within a five-year period.
College sports, at least football at power conference schools, resembles professional sports—except without free agency restrictions and similar player restraints found in the NFL. Those restraints are lawful because the NFL collectively bargains them with the NFL players association. They are thus protected by the non-statutory labor exemption, which reflects U.S. Supreme Court decisions that provide antitrust immunity for bargained rules relating to wages, hours and other working conditions. The non-statutory labor exemption can’t apply in college football because the athletes are, for now at least, not recognized as employees and under labor law only employees can unionize.
Unless and until college football players are recognized as employees who in turn unionize, cases like UGAA v. Wilson could happen again and again. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, it’s just a reflection of the chaotic blend of pro and amateur sports known as modern day power conference football.
NIL
Billy Napier back in Sun Belt at James Madison. It’s a changed world from Louisiana-Lafayette days
Billy Napier thrived in the Sun Belt Conference before. Now he’s back in taking over at James Madison. But it’s a very different landscape since he won big at…
HARRISONBURG, Va.(AP) — Four years ago, Billy Napier walked away from a Sun Belt Conference powerhouse he had built at Louisiana-Lafayette. It was, in part, because he wasn’t sure how that program would handle the financial challenges of new rules allowing college athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness.
Four years later, Napier is returning to the league with James Madison. And the Dukes’ ability to compete financially was one of the main drivers behind his decision to become the successor to UCLA-bound Bob Chesney.
“This place has what it takes to dominate the competition for sure,” Napier said of a program ranked No. 19 in the AP Top 25 and headed to the College Football Playoff.
Napier went 40-12 in four seasons at Louisiana-Lafayette, dominating Sun Belt competition. His Ragin’ Cajuns won the Western Division all four years he was there and claimed league championships in his final two seasons. He was twice named the league’s coach of the year.
But after posting a 12-1 record and his second Sun Belt title in 2021, Napier left for Florida.
“I stayed at Louisiana after Year 2 when we had opportunities, after Year 3 when we had opportunities,” Napier said. “And we probably, truth be known, would have stayed longer if it wasn’t for NIL. Because we know that was coming. We knew that roster was going to be tough to keep together.”
Changed landscape
Napier went 22-23 at Florida, starting this season 3-4 when he was fired in his fourth year leading the Gators.
As he surveyed the landscape, considering his future, he thought a lot about how college football had changed since he first took over at Louisiana-Lafayette in 2018. The NIL rules allowing college athletes to cash in on their fame went live in summer 2021, while this year marked the arrival of revenue sharing following the $2.8 billion House antitrust settlement.
“It’s very different,” Napier said. “Obviously (revenue sharing) is ultimately a huge difference maker at the Group of Six level. Now, you evaluate jobs relative to alignment, resources — which basically means building infrastructure and hiring a great staff — and then the rev share that allows you to compensate really good players.”
Napier said that, the transfer portal and roster limits following the House settlement have changed the game since he last coached in the Sun Belt.
“But ultimately, football’s football,” Napier said. “We’re going to need to evaluate well. Basically going to recruit a high school cycle each year. Then you’re going to recruit a portal cycle each year. Then start over.”
Those changes aren’t something Napier is thinking about in the abstract.
He jumps right into one of the most awkward positions in the country — seeking to retain players of a CFP-bound team while their current coach presumably is hoping to take some of the Dukes’ top talent with him west to UCLA. (No. 12 seed JMU faces No. 5 Oregon on Saturday night.)
“I’m for transparency,” Napier said. “Let’s rip the Band-Aid off. Who are you taking? And who wants to go?”
Roster management
When Curt Cignetti left JMU for Indiana, he took 13 of the program’s top players with him. That group includes the Hoosiers’ leader in rushing touchdowns (Kaelon Black), its leader in receiving scores (Elijah Sarratt), its leader in pass breakups (D’Angelo Ponds) and its second-leading tackler (Aiden Fisher).
Nine former JMU players started multiple games this season for top-ranked Indiana, which beat then-No. 2 Ohio State for the Big Ten Conference title and is the top seed in the 12-team playoff.
Chesney had to rebuild JMU almost entirely from scratch. He brought in 58 new players his first season.
Athletic director Matt Roan said he and Chesney navigated the entire season with openness and honesty, starting with UCLA’s first inquiries about Chesney after Week 3. That gives him confidence that Chesney and Napier will be able to work simultaneously and professionally toward the future of both coaches’ programs.
“We were very transparent throughout,” Roan said. “The day that UCLA announced that DeShaun Foster was being removed as the head coach, they started calling. And every program in America started calling. And we would have those open, honest conversations about where things could go. We’ve been the adults in the room.”
JMU president Jim Schmidt expressed confidence the Dukes will remain successful under Napier no matter how the fight over players turns out.
“I have no doubt that we may lose some talented players to UCLA,” Schmidt said. “We certainly lost some talented players to Indiana. I believe that we will retain the right players and I believe Coach Billy will bring some great players to round that out.”
Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
NIL
Jon Sumrall donating $100,000 to Tulane’s NIL fund
So much for the whole “taking out a full-page ad in the local newspaper” move. Future-former Tulane head coach Jon Sumrall and his wife Ginny have put their money where their mouths are, as on Monday they announced a $100,000 donation to the Green Wave Talent Fund.
The donation will give new Green Wave head coach Will Hall a head start on building upon Sumrall’s success.
“Tulane University and New Orleans are special to me and my family,” said Sumrall. “Ginny and I are honored to support the Green Wave Talent Fund because we believe in the vision of Tulane Athletics and want to contribute to the continued success of its student-athletes. The future is incredibly bright, and we are excited for Will Hall and his family to be part of it.”
“Coach Hall possesses a keen understanding of Tulane University and its football program, along with a passion that greatly benefits the Green Wave. As a leader, he cares deeply about helping others reach their full potential and is dedicated to equipping them to achieve that goal in every way possible. He has our family’s full support, and we wish him nothing but success as he leads Tulane Football!”
Sumrall, of course, has accepted the head coaching position at Florida, which will officially begin at the conclusion of Tulane’s College Football Playoff run. Sumrall is 20-7 with two berths in the American Championship in his two seasons atop the program, building upon the success of Willie Fritz, who went 23-4 with two berths in the American Championship, one conference title, a Cotton Bowl win and an AP No. 9 finish in his final two seasons with the program.
Tulane is one of three programs to play in four straight conference title games (Boise State and Georgia are the others), and the Sumralls’ gift helps Hall build a team that can make it five in a row.
“We are grateful to Jon and Ginny for this incredible gift,” said AD David Harris. “Their leadership and generosity will have a direct and lasting impact on our student-athletes as we continue to grow and elevate Tulane Athletics.”
Hall was Tulane’s offensive coordinator in 2019-20 and returned to New Orleans as passing game coordinator this season. He holds a career 70-50 record as a head coach, including a 25-11 run at West Alabama from 2011-13, a 31-9 mark with two Division II semifinal trips from 2014-16 at West Georgia, and a 14-30 mark over four seasons at Southern Miss.
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