NIL
College football teams on the move

College football may be a sport dominated by blue blood powers, but the programs atop the sport can still change in an instant, especially in the transfer portal era.
Think about the 2024 College Football Playoff.
That 12-team bracket included Arizona State and Indiana, both of which won just three games the prior season.
Then there’s the teams that did not participate. Defending champion Michigan? It won just seven regular season games. The national runners up, Washington, dropped from 14 wins to six. And let’s not forget 2023 ACC champion Florida State, which went from 13 regular season wins to TWO the following season.
Rosters turn over quickly in college football, which means teams can see their records vary wildly from year to year based on who they lose and how they recruit.
Look at what it’s been like to be a Northwestern fan since 2018:
2018: 9-5
2019: 3-9
2020: 7-2
2021: 3-9
2022: 1-11
2023: 8-5
2024: 4-8
That leads us to potential risers and fallers entering 2025. Using our insider knowledge of programs, returning production numbers and some common sense, CBS Sports is projecting this upcoming season’s big risers (a two-plus win jump) and fallers (two or more losses) from each Power Four conference.
All win totals via FanDuel Sportsbook.
Rise: Florida State Seminoles
2024 Record: 2-10
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 7.5 wins
It would be a historic anomaly (and a failure) if Florida State didn’t win four games this season. The Seminoles have only won three or fewer games seven times in 72 seasons as a program.
Florida State will look much different this season. The roster has turned over with just six returning starters, 46 new roster additions (23 transfers, 23 high school enrollees) and two new coordinators (offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn, defensive coordinator Tony White). That’s drastic change for head coach Mike Norvell, who had led the program to 23 combined wins over the prior two seasons.
There’s two ways to think of Florida State’s schedule. First, the top-end games are very difficult. Home tilts against Miami and Alabama. Road trips to Clemson and Florida. The Seminoles would be lucky to escape with one or two wins in that four-game gauntlet. Everything else? It’s very approachable with only one remaining game against a team (Pitt) that earned seven-plus wins last season.
Florida State is going to be a very specific test for opposing defenses with Malzahn calling the plays and run-first QB Tommy Castellanos operating the system. That’s something that should give the Seminoles a reasonably high floor from week to week, especially when you consider their roster still meets the blue-chip ratio cutoff.
I feel very comfortable projecting Florida State to reach a bowl in 2025. Yes, tripling its win total! As for that over/under … I think seven wins is a realistic target.
2024 Record: 10-3
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 5.5
The Orange may have the most difficult conference schedule in the ACC. They visit Clemson, SMU, Georgia Tech and Miami. Those are arguably the four best teams in the league entering 2025, and it’s not like Syracuse gets softballs at home. Duke, Pittsburgh, North Carolina and Boston College are all on deck, four teams that enter the season with bowl expectations or better.
Then there’s the nonconference portion of the slate, which opens with Tennessee and finishes with a road trip to Notre Dame in late November.
Throw in the fact Syracuse brings back just seven starters and that the team’s potential starting quarterback, Steve Angeli, wasn’t even with the team in spring practice, and it feels like a tall ask for Syracuse to make a bowl, let alone sniff double-digit wins again this season.
2024 Record: 8-5
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 8.5
This is a bet on a talent. With the nation’s No. 2 transfer portal class, Texas Tech is the most talented on-paper team in the Big 12. Remember, the margins in the Big 12 are tighter than any other league. No team in the conference ranked better than No. 28 in the 247Sports Team Talent Composite a season ago. But 12 of them ranked between 30th and 60th. There’s no talent juggernaut, which is how you end up with Arizona State and Iowa State in the title game despite being picked 16th and sixth respectively in the preseason.
But thanks to 10-plus-million dollar transfer class, the Red Raiders stand alone atop the league from a talent and depth perspective.
It helps that Texas Tech’s nonconference schedule is friendly with a trio of home games against Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Kent State and Oregon State. The Big 12 draw is difficult with trips to against Utah, Arizona State and Kansas State. But again, this is a bet on talent above all else. Texas Tech should have the best defensive line in the league, one of the best o-lines, a ton of skill talent and one of the league’s most experienced passers in Behren Morton. It’s a formula built to win during what is an all-in season.
Anything less than a trip to Arlington and a double-digit win total would fail to meet expectations.
2024 Record: 11-2
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 6.5
It was always going to be tough for BYU to follow up its 11-win campaign. Not only did the Cougars lose 12 starters off that team — including eight from a top 21 defense — but BYU was incredibly fortunate last year in one-score games. The Cougars won four games in 2024 by one score or fewer, including a borderline miracle in their win over Oklahoma State.
Then came the sudden departure of starting quarterback Jake Retzlaff in the face of a suspension for breaking the school’s honor code. That change makes BYU’s already perilous path to nine wins more difficult.
It’s not like the schedule is easy. The Cougars travel to Colorado, Iowa State and Texas Tech in conference play in addition to home games against TCU and Utah. There’s also a tricky Week 2 visit to East Carolina.
The Cougars had some encouraging transfer additions. But a transfer class ranked No. 82 nationally doesn’t seem like it’ll scale the gap between departing production and the nine-win barrier the program much reach to make this a moot exercise.
Rise: Washington Huskies
2024 Record: 6-7
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 7.5
Yes, the Huskies followed up a 14-1 season with just six wins a season ago. But context is important when considering what Jedd Fisch inherited from Kalen DeBoer. The 2024 Huskies returned just two starters. It was a total rebuild. Six wins, including over USC and Michigan, was a respectable Year 1 effort given that level of turnover.
There’s plenty of new faces at Washington once again in 2025. Only six starters return, but those around Seattle remain bullish. Much of that hype centers around new starting QB Demond Williams, who was brilliant (944 yards, 8 TDs, 1 INT, 78.1 CMP%) in limited action last season. Williams is one of the most athletic quarterbacks in college football. He’s expected to bring a dynamic rushing element to the Huskies offense the program lacked last season with Will Rogers under center.
While the defense returns only two players who started a season ago, they are important pieces in edge Isaiah Ward and cornerback Ephesians Prysock. It also helps Fisch brought in a pair of all-conference transfers from Arizona in linebacker Jacob Manu and cornerback Tacario Davis.
The Big Ten schedule isn’t easy, but it could be worse. The Huskies draw both Ohio State and Oregon at home, and they have some reasonable road trips outside of flight to Ann Arbor.
This is among the riskier calls on this list. But I’m a believer in what the Huskies can be this season with Williams. Washington’s staff is excellent schematically and there’s plenty of talent. This team hits at least eight wins.
Tumble: Indiana Hoosiers
2024 Record: 11-2
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 8.5
Indiana is the obvious answer here, right? The Hoosiers have only won 10-plus games once in their 127-year history. And that happened last year! So don’t think of this as a bet against Curt Cignetti and the Hoosiers’ roster. I like the way they’re built, and the schedule sets up nicely (more on that in a second). But this is a bet on history. Indiana’s never won 10-plus games in back-to-back seasons. It’s only won nine-plus games three times. Another run like that would be an almost unexplainable anomaly.
It should be said, the Hoosiers have a very friendly schedule. This is their nonconference slate: Old Dominion, Kennesaw State and Indiana State. They also avoid Ohio State and Michigan. But when you dive in there are still difficult games on deck. Indiana will travel to Iowa, Oregon and Penn State. It will host Illinois, Wisconsin and UCLA.
There’s a path for Indiana to get to nine wins this year. That feels very possible given Cignetti’s history — he’s 130-37 in his career for a reason — but 10? That’d mean pulling an upset on the road and maintaining their torrid 2024 pace with only eight returning starters and a much more difficult schedule.
2024 Record: 5-7
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 7.5
Let’s be blunt, if Auburn doesn’t hit the seven-win barrier, Hugh Freeze is likely out of a job. That’s the sort of pressure that’s on the Tigers. The good news for Freeze: His roster is more than good enough to win seven-plus games. If Jackson Arnold can live up to his recruiting billing as QB1, Auburn is talented enough to sneak into the SEC championship conversation.
There really are no obvious holes on Auburn’s roster. The Tigers return four o-line starters and added two four-star tackles in the portal. They’ll have one of the best wide receiver duos (Cam Coleman, Eric Singleton) in the country. The defense is led by All-American candidate Keldric Faulk on the d-line and returns four starting members of the secondary, which helped anchor a top-20 defense last year.
If Arnold can be an even top half SEC quarterback and avoid some of the red zone turnovers that crippled Payton Thorne a year ago, the Tigers should be an eight-plus win team.
If you’re scoffing at that idea, let’s remember how Auburn tumbled to five wins a season ago. Seven points to Cal. Ten against Arkansas. Six against Oklahoma. Four against Missouri. Fourteen against Alabama. The Tigers were in every game they lost. It was never a talent issue. Instead, it came down to execution in the red zone and some ill-timed turnovers.
The schedule could be worse for Auburn, too. The Tigers draw Georgia and Alabama at home. They avoid Texas. We’ll know whether Auburn can clear the seven-win barrier by October. Early road games against Baylor, Oklahoma and Texas A&M will tell the story of the season.
2024 Record: 9-4
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 7.5
Do I love betting against one of the best quarterbacks (LaNorris Sellers) and defensive players (Dylan Stewart) in college football? No. But there are just a lot of questions about the rest of the roster.
Barring a huge leap from junior Nyck Harbor, the Gamecocks lack a go-to receiver. No receiver on the roster cleared the 400-yard barrier a season ago and South Carolina did not add in the portal. Running back is a huge question with Rahsul Faison‘s status hanging up in the air. The o-line, while experienced, remains a concern coming off a season in which the unit ranked 98th nationally in PFF’s pass block metric and 105th in run blocking. Sellers and Raheim Sanders covered up a lot for that unit last year on the ground. The defense — arguably the best in the SEC last year — lost seven starters. That list of departures includes two All-Americans in EDGE Kyle Kennard and safety Nick Emmanwori.
The Gamecocks have shown an ability to recruit well and strong play in less spoken about phases of the game — special teams, turnovers — keeps them in a ton of games. But there are just a lot of concerns with the roster even with two superstars who help cover up for many deficiencies.
And the schedule isn’t easy once the Gamecocks get out of a reasonably soft early slate. LSU, Oklahoma, Alabama, Ole Miss and Texas A&M is a gauntlet that will begin Oct. 11 and not end util Nov. 15. Of course, Clemson is awaiting South Carolina at season’s end.
There are scenarios in which South Carolina sees internal development at key spots and maintains its momentum. But more likely than not this feels like a year of at least some regression.
NIL
Three Mizzou staffers following Kirby Moore to Washington State
When Kirby Moore got the Washington State head coaching job, Eli Drinkwitz knew a few members of his staff would likely be headed to Pullman soon.
“Moving forward, could lose a couple more people off our staff from analyst roles, as coach Moore finalizes and puts his staff together,” Drinkwitz said on December 16. “It shouldn’t change the dynamic of what we do at all.”
Three of those moves were reported on Wednesday morning by Chris Hummer and Matt Zenitz of CBS and 247Sports.
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The first is Tiger tight ends coach Derham Cato. Cato has coached Mizzou’s tight ends for the last three seasons. He spent six years at Washington, including an overlap with Moore when Moore was a graduate assistant for the Huskies. PowerMizzou.com had alerted subscribers to this move being likely a week ago.
The second coach is assistant offensive line coach Jack Abercrombie. Hummer and Zenitz report that Abercrombie will be the full-time offensive line coach for Moore with Washington State. Prior to his time at Mizzou, Abercrombie was on staff at VMI.
The final Mizzou to Washington State move is a front office move. Brad Larrondo, who has served as the CEO of Every True Tiger Brands, which is Missouri’s third-part partner for name, image and likeness deals. In his role, Larrondo helps Mizzou athletes line up NIL deals and also negotiates NIL and revenue sharing contracts for Mizzou football and men’s basketball players. Larrondo came to Missouri as Drinkwitz’s Director of Football External Relations and Recruiting in March of 2023. Prior to that, he had been the Chief of Staff at Auburn.
Larrondo had spent the previous 28 years in the athletic administration at Boise State, which is just 300 miles from Pullman. He still has family in Boise and sources told PowerMizzou.com the move to Washington State is heavily based in family reasons.
Larrondo’s position is technically not a University or a football program hire. However, the position works very closely with both and whoever replaces him will do so with influence and blessing from both of those entities. Missouri plays Virginia in the Taxslayer Gator Bowl on Saturday night. Any personnel moves or replacements will almost certainly not come until after that game.
NIL
Missouri Damon Wilson files countersuit against Georgia in NIL case
Updated Dec. 24, 2025, 11:28 a.m. ET
Missouri football defensive end Damon Wilson has sued Georgia athletics, a move that counters a Georgia lawsuit filed against Wilson earlier this year and intensifies what was already a novel and likely first-of-its-kind case over an NIL contract dispute.
A 42-page document reviewed by the Columbia Daily Tribune was filed in Boone County on Tuesday.
Georgia is attempting to take Wilson into arbitration and is seeking $390,000 in liquidated damages from the star edge rusher, who transferred to the Tigers in January 2025, over what the university views as an unfulfilled contract with the Bulldogs’ former NIL collective, Classic City Collective.
In response, escalating what was already an attempt at a potentially precedent-setting case, Wilson’s attorneys allege his former team “falsely (told) at least three programs” unnamed Power Four teams that “Wilson would be subject to a $1.2 million buyout.”
The suit also alleges Georgia violated a confidentiality provision in Wilson’s term sheet, which was provided as part of the UGA lawsuit in a public court filing.
Wilson’s suit argues he also was urged to sign the term sheet without legal counsel, and that Georgia did not “immediately submit his name to the transfer portal” but instead “launched an all-out offensive to convince Wilson to remain at Georgia.”
Also of note: The suit argues the term sheet Wilson signed states it would “be used to create a legally binding document” and therefore is not enforceable in its current format, and that he was urged to “seek legal counsel” before the agreement was finalized.
If the document is determined not to be finalized, it is quite likely Wilson will not owe Georgia the $390,000 it seeks.
Per The Athletic, Wilson is seeking “a ‘fair and reasonable amount of damages’ for the ‘financial and reputational harm he has suffered’ along with legal fees” from Georgia.
“Georgia appears intent on making an example of someone, they just picked the wrong person,” Jeff Jensen, one of Wilson’s attorneys, said to the Columbia Daily Tribune. “Damon never had a contract with them. I don’t see how Georgia thinks intimidation and litigation will help their recruitment efforts — maybe players could bring lawyers with them to practice.”
Multiple Missouri representatives, including a team spokesperson and athletic director Laird Veatch, have declined to comment on Wilson’s lawsuit. The Georgia lawsuit is not against the University of Missouri; it is only against Wilson.
“This matter involves pending litigation, and we have no comment at this time,” Georgia spokesperson Steven Drummond told USA TODAY on Tuesday. “We refer you to our previous statement.”
The previous Georgia statement in question: “When the University of Georgia Athletic Association enters binding agreements with student-athletes, we honor our commitments and expect student-athletes to do the same.”
Georgia has argued Wilson signed a contract — a common practice in the NIL era — with what was then Georgia’s main, but now-shuttered, NIL and marketing arm, Classic City Collective, in December 2024.
That collective has since shut down, as Georgia has partnered with Learfield to negotiate and facilitate NIL deals in the revenue-sharing era.
The report, citing documents attached to Georgia’s legal filings, shows that Wilson signed a 14-month term sheet worth $500,000 with the Bulldogs. He was set to earn monthly payments of $30,000 through the end of the contract, as well as two $40,000 bonus payments.
Before announcing his intention to transfer in January, he reportedly was paid $30,000.
The contract states if Wilson left the team or transferred, as he ultimately did to Missouri, he would owe the collective that issued the payments a lump sum equal to the amount remaining on his deal.
The bonus payments seemingly were not included, which brings that total to the $390,000 that Georgia is now seeking in court.
Wilson was paid only a fraction of that sum, but the university argues he owes the full amount in damages. It’s unclear why Georgia is claiming it is owed the full amount in liquidated damages.
According to documents viewed by the Tribune through the Georgia courts records system, Georgia filed an “application to compel arbitration” on Oct. 17 in the Clarke County Superior Court, which includes Athens and the University of Georgia. Wilson was served with a summons to appear in court, according to documents, on Nov. 19, three days before the Tigers faced Oklahoma.
Wilson spent his freshman and sophomore seasons at Georgia. He transferred to Missouri ahead of spring camp in 2025 and has emerged as one of the top pass rushers in the SEC.
Per Pro Football Focus, Wilson generated 49 pressures on opposing quarterbacks this season, which was the second-most in the SEC behind only Colin Simmons at Texas. He’s listed at 6-4, 250 pounds and could declare for the 2026 NFL Draft, where he would likely be a Day 1 or 2 pick.
This case marks the first time a school has taken a player to court over an NIL buyout. It also looks likely to be the first time a player has filed suit against a school over NIL.
Missouri has multiple players on two-year contracts. Part of that is in the hope they do not move on after one season.
If Georgia’s arbitration case against Wilson is successful, that would be a groundbreaking ruling in college athletics that could give more weight to liquidated damages clauses in athlete contracts.
NIL
College Football Playoff team loses key starter to NCAA transfer portal
The first round of the College Football Playoff is in the books. Eight teams remain in the hunt to win it all, with Miami and Ohio State kicking off the quarterfinals slate in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl on December 31.
There were quite a few memorable games in the opening round of the playoffs, including Miami’s hard-fought victory against Texas A&M and Alabama’s wild comeback to secure a road win over Oklahoma.
The lone blowout came from Ole Miss over Tulane, winning 41-10 over the Green Wave. Both programs are in transition after their head coaches were hired away by other schools. The Green Wave, in particular, has seen some attrition since concluding its season last week.
Another Tulane Starter Enters Transfer Portal
On Wednesday afternoon, redshirt sophomore cornerback Jahiem Johnson announced his plans to move on after three seasons at Tulane, per On3’s Haye Fawcett.
Johnson developed into a productive defender for the Green Wave in 2025, starting in all 14 games. He totaled 42 tackles, 1 tackle for loss, 1 forced fumble, 9 pass deflections, and 4 interceptions. Johnson’s 9 pass deflections led the American Conference.
He deflected a pass in 6 different games and recorded a pick in 4 separate outings. In Tulane’s conference championship victory against North Texas, Johnson tied his season-high with 5 tackles, 1 pass deflection, and 1 interception.
The Louisiana native played the most snaps (834 snaps) of any player on Tulane’s defense. He was the third-highest-graded player on the unit (77.1 overall grade), per Pro Football Focus.
Johnson signed with Tulane as a three-star prospect in the 2023 class, joining the program under former head coach Willie Fritz. He redshirted as a true freshman, sticking with the Green Wave when Jon Sumrall took over.
In 2024, appeared in 14 games as a reserve, totaling 4 tackles and 2 pass deflections. Johnson’s rise this past season resulted in him earning honorable mention conference honors.
Johnson is the fifth starter to transfer from Tulane, joining defensive end Santana Hopper, linebacker Harvey Dyson, defensive tackle Tre’Von McAlpine, and running back Javin Gordon in the portal.
Sumrall was hired away from the Green Wave to be the next head coach of the Florida Gators. Considering Johnson’s breakout campaign, he may want to continue playing for a familiar face if that option is on the table.
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• College football team set to be without nearly 20 players for upcoming bowl game
NIL
Four key Gophers will be back in 2026
PHOENIX — Four important Gopher football players were part of a unique media campaign on Tuesday.
Offensive linemen Greg Johnson and Nathan Roy, and defensive backs John Nestor and Kerry Brown allowed the Gophers’ NIL collective, Dinkytown Athletes, to share news they will play in the Rate Bowl against New Mexico on Friday, and will return to Minnesota for the 2026 season.
The social media posts were “presented by Cub Foods,” and those players will be recipients of the grocer’s NIL contribution next year. Dinkytown Athletes serves as a subcontractor.
Athletics Director Mark Coyle called Cub Foods a “foundational partner” of Gopher sports.
“That is how we take the next step, with that type of involvement with NIL side of it,” Coyle told the Pioneer Press. “We are so grateful for their support.”
A few more current Gopher players are expected to join the Cub Foods campaign after the bowl game. But if players on the current roster aren’t included in this specific rollout, that doesn’t necessarily mean they are leaving the U to go into the transfer portal.
For instance, quarterback Drake Lindsey said, independently, two weeks ago that he would return to Minnesota for his redshirt sophomore season in 2026. Other current players have shared they will be back with the Gophers next year.
Meanwhile, the futures of defensive end Anthony Smith, safety Koi Perich and running back Darius Taylor have yet to be shared. Smith and Taylor said Wednesday they have not yet made decisions on their plans for 2026; both are in line to play in the bowl game at Chase Field.
“I really haven’t thought about that stuff,” Taylor said. “I’m just worried about the game. I will figure all that out after the game.”
Smith said he hasn’t ruled out entering the transfer portal. “I don’t know,” he said.
Johnson, who started all 12 regular-season games at guard, will return for his senior season next fall. The Prior Lake native played nearly 700 snaps and was Minnesota’s highest-graded starting offensive lineman in 2025 (75.3 overall mark, per Pro Football Focus).
“Being from Minnesota, I personally didn’t have any thoughts of going elsewhere,” Johnson said. “I think Drake really set the tone for the team. This is Drake’s team. He’s our leader and it’s easy to come back and want to play for a guy like that.”
Roy stepped in as the U’s left tackle during his redshirt freshman year with aplomb, playing a team-high 702 snaps with a 69.0 grade from PFF. The Mukwanago, Wis., native will be back for his redshirt sophomore year.
Nestor transferred in from the Iowa Hawkeyes last year, and the Chicago native started 10 of 12 games as Minnesota’s most-reliable corner. He had a team-high five interceptions, adding 47 tackles in 538 total snaps. He will be a senior in 2026.

Brown continued as a linchpin in Minnesota’s defense for second straight season. The safety and nickel back from Naples, Fla., was fourth on team with 55 tackles and added two interceptions in 579 snaps. He will return for his redshirt junior year.

NIL
Georgia case could determine if schools can get damages from transfers
Are top-drawer college football teams and their name, image and likeness collectives simply trying to protect themselves from willy-nilly transfers or are they bullying players to stay put with threats of lawsuits?
Adding liquidated damage fee clauses to NIL contracts became all the rage in 2025, a year that will be remembered as the first time players have been paid directly by schools. But some experts say such fees cannot be used as a cudgel to punish players that break a contract and transfer.
It’s no surprise that the issue has resulted in a lawsuit — make that two lawsuits — before the calendar flipped to 2026.
Less than a month after Georgia filed a lawsuit against defensive end Damon Wilson II to obtain $390,000 in damages because he transferred to Missouri, Wilson went to court himself, claiming Georgia is misusing the liquidated damages clause to “punish Wilson for entering the portal.”
Wilson’s countersuit in Boone County, Mo., says he was among a small group of Bulldog stars pressured into signing the contract Dec. 21, 2024. The lawsuit also claims that Wilson was misused as an elite pass rusher, that the Georgia defensive scheme called for him to drop back into pass coverage. Wilson, who will be a senior next fall, led Missouri with nine sacks this season.
Georgia paid Wilson $30,000, the first monthly installment of his $500,000 NIL deal, before he entered the transfer portal on Jan. 6, four days after Georgia lost to Notre Dame in a College Football Playoffs quarterfinal.
Bulldogs brass was not pleased. Wilson alleges in his lawsuit that Georgia dragged its feet in putting his name in the portal and spread misinformation to other schools about him and his contractual obligations.
“When the University of Georgia Athletic Association enters binding agreements with student-athletes, we honor our commitments and expect student-athletes to do the same,” Georgia spokesperson Steven Drummond said in a statement after the school filed the lawsuit.
Wilson’s countersuit turned that comment on its head, claiming it injured his reputation because it implies he was dishonest. He is seeking unspecified damages in addition to not owing the Bulldogs anything. Georgia’s lawsuit asked that the dispute be resolved through arbitration.
A liquidated damage fee is a predetermined amount of money written into a contract that one party pays the other for specific breaches. The fee is intended to provide a fair estimate of anticipated losses when actual damages are difficult to calculate, and cannot be used to punish one party for breaking the contract.
Wilson’s case could have far-reaching implications because it is the first that could determine whether schools can enforce liquidated damage clauses. While it could be understandable that schools want to protect themselves from players transferring soon after receiving NIL money, legal experts say liquidated damage fees might not be the proper way to do so.
NIL
Report shares why Penn State did not spend ‘a ton of time’ pursuing Kalen DeBoer, Mike Elko
Penn State‘s head coaching search may have taken longer than expected, but the Nittany Lions ultimately landed their guy — Matt Campbell from Iowa State. According to a recent report from ESPN, however, the search apparently featured a number of big-name college football candidates to replace James Franklin.
These names included Alabama‘s Kalen DeBoer, Notre Dame‘s Marcus Freeman and Texas A&M‘s Mike Elko. All surfaced as “potential candidates,” with Elko looked at as “the most realistic,” given his ties to the region.
“The whole time, we thought Elko was going to be the guy,” one SEC coach told ESPN. “Then he came off the board.”
Elko just finished an 11-2 season at Texas A&M, leading the Aggies to its first-ever College Football Playoff. His Aggies were undefeated for the first 13 weeks of the season while Penn State continued it’s head coaching search. Texas A&M went on to extend his on Nov. 15.
For DeBoer, he denied having interest in the Nittany Lions’ job. Freeman was in the middle of leading Notre Dame to a 10-game win streak to lose the season. According to another ESPN source, Penn State “never spent a ton of time on those guys knowing their current situations.”
It wasn’t until early December that Penn State announced the hire of former Iowa State head coach Matt Campbell. The hire appears to have been well-received on social media and recruits alike.
He’s bringing to Happy Valley a resume that includes a 107–70 overall as a head coach. He built the Iowa State program from the ground up after a successful stint as Toledo’s head coach. Starting with a 3-9 finish in his first year with the program, Campbell led the Cyclones to a program record five-straight bowl games.
In 2024, Iowa State had its best season yet under Campbell. Leading the Cyclones to an 11-3 record, they came up just short of the College Football Playoff after losing to Arizona State in the Big 12 Championship game. They were ranked as high as No. 9 in the AP Poll last season.
He is expected to mirror that success and then some as the Nittany Lions’ new head coach, all while competing alongside the DeBoer’s, Freeman’s and Elko’s at the forefront of college football. Campbell’s effort is already underway in Happy Valley, and the product of it will be seen next fall.
The first step — the NCAA transfer portal. Penn State was left with two signees in its 2025 recruiting class, so he’ll be focused on bolstering his roster once it opens on Jan. 2.
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