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Cal Baseball

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Cal Baseball

Welcoming Five New Faces to California! While it is easier to loom over the departures of big names to the program, it is still important as fans and writers to highlight those who believe in what can be built in the weird city called Berkeley, and while five incoming players may seem small for an ACC baseball team: it is important to note that Cal has the No. 56 overall incoming class for 2025 out of 300 DI baseball programs (via PerfectGame), and the No. 44 class for 2026 – all with incoming recruits within the state of California.

Mike Neu and the Cal staff are bringing in five players from DI programs, with the JUCO players expected to be announced at a later date, as JUCO athletes are not required to enter the NCAA transfer portal. They can enroll as transfer students at UC Berkeley without the portal by having direct contact with the school/program during their transfer enrollment. The five players that the California Golden Bears will be welcoming to Berkeley are:

Andre Modugno, INF/OF/P: Alabama. Modugno is an incoming Sophomore right-handed pitcher from Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, and a graduate from IMG Academy who appeared in one lone plate appearance for the Crimson Tide in his freshman season, where he drew a walk in the bottom of the 8th of a 19-3 win against Bradley University. Modugno was the No. 1 overall recruit in the class of 2024 out of the state of New Jersey and the No. 2 overall 3B in the nation, with a national ranking at 30th overall (via PerfectGame).

Andre Modugno with the Alabama Crimson Tide (via DIBaseball on X)

Modugno stands at 6’5” and 215lbs with an exit velocity of over 105 mph, and a fastball velocity that tops out at 97 mph. A promising signing for the Golden Bears as starting 3B Cade Campbell enters his Senior year, and Cal’s middle infield currently lacks power and athleticism with the departures of Advincula and Moutzouridis.

Tristan Head, INF: Georgetown. Tristan Head is coming off a Sophomore year of mixed usage with Georgetown, where he started in 30 out of the 56 games for the Hoyas due to a hamate bone injury, as they went 16-40 with only three conference game wins all season. Head began his college baseball career at the University of Virginia, where he was named to the ACC Honor Roll as a freshman in 2024 before transferring north to Georgetown. In his Sophomore season, he batted .277, had a .349 OBP, hit 4 home runs, 26 RBIs, and 6 doubles in 112 at-bats while stealing 8 bases and only being caught twice.

Tristan Head (via GUHoyas.com)

Originally from Clarendon Hills, Illinois, Head graduated from high school in the 2023 recruitment class out of Jupiter, Florida, where he attended The Benjamin School in Palm Beach Gardens. He committed to UVA as the No. 22 shortstop in the state and the 172nd in the nation (via PerfectGame). Head joins the California Golden Bears baseball squad as a Junior with two years of eligibility remaining.

Josh Hanson, IF/OF: USC. A homecoming for Hanson, as the San Francisco native redshirted his freshman year at Southern California and announced his commitment to Cal on June 20th via X. A San Francisco Seagull during his offseason summer woodbat league days, Hanson was the No. 6 ranked outfielder in the state of California in his graduating class (2024) and the No. 32 nationally. At 6’1” and 205 lbs, Hanson graduated from IMG Academy in Florida with Modugno, where he played four seasons of varsity baseball and had a slash line of .396/.539/.669 (AVG, OBP, & Slugging%) in his Junior and Senior years.

(video footage from the SF Seagulls Director of Advanced Scouting, @ransom_lew on x)

With Seth Gwynn graduating after the 2025 season, Hanson could see a prominent role in his R-Freshmen season with the Golden Bears at center field, as his summer with the Seagulls was packed with dominance at the plate, as he put up a .348 AVG and .483 OBP in 58 plate appearances.

Gannon Snyder, INF/OF: Wichita State. Gannon Snyder started in 27 games for the Shockers in his Sophomore season, where he put up a .252/.325/.387 slashline in 39 games and 111 at-bats. He regressed slightly from his true freshman season, where in 10 starts and 25 games, he had a .343 AVG with a .415 OBP. A solid defender with the ability to play anywhere, Snyder was the No. 2-ranked 3B out of the state of Missouri in the high school class of 2023 and ranked No. 57 nationally.

Gannon Snyder rounding 3B to score (via GoShockers.com)

He was a four-year varsity starter at Parkway West High School, where he was also named to the All-Conference and All-District teams three times in his career. Snyder also spent three seasons as a starter on the football team as a quarterback, linebacker, and safety.

Garrett Mackowiak, LHP: Georgia Southern. Wesley Chapel, Florida, native and P27 Academy alumn Garret Mackowiak announced his commitment to California via X on July 15th. Mackowiak saw limited usage in his Sophomore season with the Georgia Southern Eagles, as he went from 23 appearances and 18.1 IP in 2024, to 7.0 IP in 7 appearances in 2025. Nonetheless, in those 7.0 innings pitched, Mackowiak faced 29 batters and allowed a BAA of just .174 with an ERA of 3.86.

Garrett Mackowiak (via GSEagles.com)

Mackowiak was the No. 19-ranked LHP in the Florida high school class of 2023 and ranked No. 124 nationally. His father is former MLB player Rob Mackowiak, who played 9 seasons with the Pirates, White Sox, Padres, and Nationals.

“The portal giveth, and the portal taketh away”: The California Golden Bears baseball program was not spared from the devastating blows of the modern NCAA transfer portal. After Cal football saw 37 players depart from the team during the offseason, including East Bay household names like Jadyn Ott, Fernando Mendoza, and Jack Endries, the latter two of whom had 0 Power 5 offers out of high school- and the basketball programs saw departures from big name players such as Andrej Stojakovic, Jeremiah Wilkinson, and Marta Suarez.

Cal Baseball will head into the 2026 season without marquee names such as Jarren Advincula, PJ Moutzouridis, and Dominic Smaldino, as part of the 16 players who have left Berkeley, either through transfer portal exits or graduation as seniors. Here is the updated list of where each former Cal player has committed to since entering the portal:

Jarren Advincula, 2B: Georgia Tech. After putting up a career .334 batting average for the Golden Bears, Advincula was one of the most sought-after second basemen in the transfer portal this summer. Rumors spread back in early June that Advincula was headed to Knoxville, TN, to join Tony Vitello and the Volunteers, but Georgia Tech ended up landing him even after the retirement of longtime head coach Danny Hall. GT’s new head coach, James Ramsey, took over for Hall after the Yellow Jackets lost in the 2025 Oxford Regional and immediately made a splash by landing one of the top players on the West Coast over last season’s national champions and SEC powerhouse.

Jarren Advincula against NC State (via CalBears.com)

Advincula is from the Bay Area and played high school ball out of Archbishop Mitty in San Jose before committing to the Golden Bears in 2023. He was originally committed to the CSUF Titans and San Diego State before flipping to Cal, which was his only Power 5 offer out of high school. He leaves Berkeley with a first-team All-Pac-12 selection in his freshman season and a second-team All-ACC selection in 2025 as a sophomore.

PJ Moutzouridis, SS: Arizona State. PJ Moutzouridis entered the portal not long after Advincula, and while his offense took a step back in 2025 for his sophomore season, he finished the year strong and made the All-ACC Championship team after hitting .462 (6-13, 3 R, 2 2B, 5 RBI, 2 BB, 3 SB) in three games against Miami, Wake Forest, and Georgia Tech.

Moutzouridis rounding second on a home run against the Utes in 2024 (via CalBears.com)

Originally committed to Cal Poly, the Willow Glen native and Valley Christian alum flipped to Cal and started all 110 regular-season games for the Bears at shortstop before announcing his departure from the program. Moutzouridis announced on June 26th via Instagram that he had committed to Arizona State University to play under Willie Bloomquist after the Sun Devils went 36-24 in their inaugural Big 12 season.

Dominic Smaldino, 1B: Arizona State. After leading the team with 46 RBIs this season, Dominic Smaldino entered the transfer portal on June 18th. Smaldino began his career at JSerra Catholic High School in San Juan Capistrano before committing to Cal in September of 2021 and signing in November of 2022. Smaldino had no other D1 offers out of high school and is transferring to his mother’s alma mater, Arizona State University, along with Moutzouridis. He will join the Sun Devils as a Junior.

Ryan Tayman, C: Cal Poly. Tayman saw a lot of action for the Golden Bears in his sophomore season, as the 6’3” catcher started in 33 games (playing in 39) with 17 behind the plate, 14 at DH, and two in left field. Tayman allowed only one passed ball in his appearances at catcher while also hitting 5 home runs, 9 RBIs, batting .274, and striking out only 35 times in 124 ABs. Tayman committed to the Bears on July 27th, 2021, from Arroyo Grande High School, and announced his return home to San Luis Obispo County via his Instagram on June 13th.

Tayman against Virginia, where he went 6-13 with 6 RBIs over the 3-game series (via CalBears.com)

Logan Piper, P: San Diego. Logan Piper graduated from UC Berkeley in two years after transferring from Sacramento City College and announced his commitment to the University of San Diego via Instagram on June 7th. Piper pitched in 42 games for the Golden Bears in his career, where he went 3-0 with a 5.28 ERA. He made one start in that span and struck out 43 batters on 44.1 innings pitched. Piper is listed as a current Junior on D1Baseball, meaning he would have two seasons of eligibility remaining (senior and grad year).

Logan Piper striking out his 4th batter in 2.2 innings against CSU Bakersfield (via @CalBaseball on X)

Nico Button, C: San Diego. Nico Button played in 43 games for the Golden Bears, starting in 25 and putting up a .253 AVG with 1 HR, 13 RBIs, and 24 career hits. Button’s role on the team was heavily diminished with Alex Birge behind the plate for the 2025 season, as Button saw only 5 appearances and 1 start on Senior Day after posting back-to-back seasons with 19 games played (2023 – 2024). The San Mateo and Junipero Serra alum was hitless in his 6 at-bats this season and announced his commitment to the University of San Diego via his Instagram and Twitter bios after entering the transfer portal when the regular season concluded in May. Button enters the portal after his senior year and will have one year remaining as a graduate transfer at USD.

Elijah Clayton, INF: Campbell. From Oaks Christian High School in Westlake Village, Freshman infielder Elijah Clayton came to Berkeley as the No. 4-ranked SS in the state of California for the class of 2024 (PerfectGame), and No. 44 overall. Clayton saw 13 plate appearances in 21 games (starting in three), where he batted .167, scored 9 runs, and stole 6 bases without being caught. Rather than potentially backfilling the departures of Moutzouridis and Advincula in the middle infield, the son of former Major Leaguer Royce Clayton announced his commitment to Campbell University through On The Clock on X and will join the Fighting Camels for his sophomore season.

Joey Donnelly, UT: Fordham. Joey Donnelly saw only two at-bats in his Redshirt-Junior year at Cal last season, striking out against Clemson and flying out to center field against San Jose State before entering the transfer portal as a graduate student and announcing his commitment to Fordham University on his social media accounts. Donnelly finished his career in Berkeley with a .179 AVG, 1 home run, and 3 RBIs. At De La Salle High School, he batted .324 with three home runs, 18 RBIs, and 35 runs scored as a senior in 2021, with a .505 on-base percentage.

Matthew Thomas, OF: CSUN. In two seasons with the Golden Bears, Matthew Thomas saw 23 starts in 44 appearances, where he batted .136 with 5 home runs and 11 RBIs. In his sophomore season, he only hit one home run, which came against Santa Clara in early March, and he did not see any playing time during the final 21 games of the season. Thomas announced his transfer commitment to the California State University, Northridge Matadors on July 22nd via X.

Matthew Thomas rounding the bases for his lone home run of the 2025 season against Santa Clara in March (via @CalBaseball on X)

Jake Guardiancic, P: Pepperdine. Guardiancic came to UC Berkeley after splitting his underclass years at San Joaquin Delta College and Los Medanos College. In two seasons for the Golden Bears, Guardiancic appeared in 23 games out of the bullpen, where he posted a 5.94 ERA, went 1-0, and struck out 14 batters over 16.2 innings. He pitched 7.2 innings in 7 appearances during his Senior year at Cal, before announcing his commitment to Pepperdine as a graduate transfer via Instagram.

Returning Players/Uncommitted (as of August 13th, 2025 & subject to change):

Max Murray, P/OF: Returning to Cal (via me… I reached out to him!) Murray redshirted his freshman year and will be returning to Cal for the 2026 season.

Ryan Limerick, IF/OF: Uncommitted. Incoming Junior.

Kaden Taque, P: Uncommitted. Incoming Junior.

Jake Lavin, OF/C: Uncommitted. Incoming Sophomore.

Lucas Alaniz, P: Graduated & Uncommitted. Entered Portal w/ Graduate Year Eligibility.

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College Football Transfer Quarterback Market Could Reach $5 Million This Offseason

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As programs across the country begin to settle into the NIL and revenue-sharing era of college athletics, it’s clear that the annual pay of key positions on the field is starting to take shape.

That’s especially true, of course, at the quarterback position, where ESPN’s Pete Thamel says that the annual pay in the transfer portal could approach all-time highs at the top of the market.

“I made some calls today, guys. Sources told me that the tip top of this quarterback market financially could reach $5 million for one season,” Thamel said in a College GameDay hit on Friday night.

Thamel mentioned where some of the biggest names on the market are trending, including Cincinnati quarterback Brendan Sorsby, TCU’s Josh Hoover and Nebraska’s Dylan Raiola.

“Sorsby’s been linked early to Texas Tech. Dylan Raiola there’s some smoke to Louisville, although maybe a playoff team jumps in late there. There’s been some early links between Indiana and Hoover, assuming that [Fernando] Mendoza goes pro.”

Thamel emphasized that supply and demand for the most important position on the field is driving prices up to historically high levels.

It’ll be interesting to see where the top players eventually land.

More College Football on Sports Illustrated





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Wisconsin’s new $104.5 million Under Armour deal could help launch athletics into NIL-era

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The University of Wisconsin-Madison and Under Armour agreed to a 10-year, $104.5 million apparel relations extension on Nov. 24, retaining UA as the Badgers’ exclusive outfitter and injecting new funding into NIL.

The partnership with Under Armour first started in 2015 with the Badgers men’s basketball run to the Final Four. In the decade since, Athletic Director Chris McIntosh considers Under Armour one of the university’s “most valued partners.” 

In the recent history of Wisconsin football, the Badgers have struggled to compete with other Big Ten foes during the NIL era of college athletics. Since NIL was implemented into college sports in 2021, Wisconsin Football has experienced difficulties with gathering the funds necessary to recruit high-end talent. 

Under Armour’s sponsorship aims to help the Badgers further adapt to the NIL era of college football, including the transfer portal by giving the Badgers the ability to acquire great talent throughout the rest of the country. The contract contains a “starting sum of $175,000 annually”, that will continue to rise, to reward NIL contracts to Badger athletes. Under Armour is not only providing the Badgers with NIL, but they are also providing brand and business opportunities for UW athletes. 

In order to achieve success in the modern college football landscape, programs have to devote more monetary rewards than just scholarships to athletes. For example, the defending national champion Ohio State Buckeyes spent around $20 million in NIL on their program

In comparison to the Buckeyes, Wisconsin’s football budget is significantly less. After another abysmal football season and ranking towards the bottom of the Big Ten in NIL funds, this renewed contract with Under Armour will help catapult Wisconsin into the top half of the conference in NIL funds. 

Under Armour sponsors other notable football programs like Notre Dame and Texas Tech. These two football powerhouses — who finished the regular season  in the mix for the College Football Playoff — have seen direct benefits, such as new apparel, more flexibility, and better morale within their respective programs from their sponsorships with Under Armour. 

In a new era of collegiate athletics, the Badgers have found themselves trailing not just the Big Ten, but most Power-4 programs throughout the country as well. While their sponsorship with Under Armour doesn’t fix everything, it is definitely a step in the right direction for the future of Wisconsin Athletics. 

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No. 1 transfer portal quarterback predicted to join major college football program

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The NCAA transfer portal will feature hundreds of players across all levels of college football in the 2026 offseason.

Prominent quarterbacks have begun to declare their intent to enter the transfer portal in the weeks before it opens. DJ Lagway, Josh Hoover, Rocco Becht and Dylan Raiola are among the Power Four quarterbacks who will be at a new school in 2026.

One of the first Power Four quarterbacks that decided to enter the transfer portal was Arizona State quarterback Sam Leavitt. He will have two seasons of eligibility at his next school.

One program linked to Leavitt when he enters the portal is Oregon. Leavitt is from West Linn, Oregon, just south of Portland and an hour and a half drive from Eugene by interstate highway.

Oregon has not started a quarterback that it recruited from high school for an entire season since Justin Herbert in 2019. Bo Nix, Dillon Gabriel and Dante Moore (transferred back) all came to the Ducks via the transfer portal.

The 6-foot-2, 205-pounder began his college football career at Michigan State in 2023. He played in a maximum of four games to keep his redshirt for the Spartans, passing for 139 yards, two touchdowns and two interceptions on 15-of-23 passing.

Sam Leavitt throws the ball in Arizona State's game against Houston.

Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Sam Leavitt (10) | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Leavitt transferred to Arizona State in the 2024 offseason. He started every game for the Sun Devils while accumulating 2,885 passing yards, 24 touchdowns and six interceptions while rushing for 443 yards and five touchdowns en route to their Big 12 Championship victory and subsequent College Football Playoff appearance.

The Big 12 named Leavitt its Freshman of the Year and Second-Team All-Big 12 for his heroics. The conference also named him as its Newcomer of the Week on multiple occasions. He finished 2024 with the most passing yards by a freshman in a season in Arizona State history.

Leavitt’s 2025 season was cut to just seven games due to injuries. He passed for 1,626 yards, 10 touchdowns and three interceptions while rushing for 306 yards and five touchdowns.

The Sun Devils will not start Leavitt in their bowl as he has declared his intent to leave. Arizona State (8-4, 6-3) will face ACC champion Duke (8-5, 6-2) in the Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl in El Paso, Texas on Dec. 31 (3 p.m. EST, CBS).

The NCAA transfer portal will officially open for all college football players looking for new destinations on Jan. 2, 2026. The portal will stay open until Jan. 16, 2026.



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This college football team is creatively approaching NIL like NFL free agency

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The way college football operates in the NIL/revenue-sharing era has moved a lot closer to the NFL model, and one high-profile program is acknowledging that in a very public way.

USC has been announcing on social media that players have “re-signed” with the program, essentially acknowledging that all college football players are free agents each year now, thanks to the transfer portal and the ability to chase better compensation elsewhere.

A big one for the Trojans this week was quarterback Jayden Maiava’s decision to return to USC rather than pursue the NFL draft this year or a bigger payday from another school, but USC has publicized the return of more than two dozen players in this way — from starters to little-used freshmen and even its kicker.

Coach Lincoln Riley was asked about this new approach for his program.

“I think that’s something that should be celebrated. In this day and age, it’s almost more like an NFL team. Like, it’s an accomplishment to be welcomed back, and then on top of that, when you do have that option, it’s something that should be celebrated by a school or a program that somebody wants to continue on what’s being built or what they’ve already started at that place,” Riley said.

“… It’s changed so much on all accounts. It’s changed a lot for the players. It’s obviously changed a lot for us.”

USC overhauled its player personnel/recruiting department a year ago by hiring general manager Chad Bowden away from Notre Dame and building a new staff for him. Bowden has a reputation for thinking outside the box, so this was likely an idea that he and his staff came up with for the Trojans.

College football analyst Adam Breneman chimed in with his thoughts on USC’s “creative” approach to roster management.

“To me, USC has always been known for creativity. They’re in Los Angeles, the creative capital of the world, that’s where great things happen, and a great job here by USC’s creative department, having this idea. I think we’ll see teams around the country copy this, announcing the re-signing of players to new contracts for the upcoming season with NIL and rev-share deals,” Breneman said.

“Chad Bowden, the USC general manager, is ahead of his time. He’s innovative, he thinks forward, he’s proactive, and his staff clearly has something here, really great with announcing the re-signing of the roster at USC. What a great idea.”

USC may have indeed started something with this, as Missouri announced the return of star running back Ahmad Hardy in the same way.





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College Football Playoff is here, but sport’s soul is gone

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Amid the spectacle of the College Football Playoff’s opening weekend — and the nagging sense that we’re watching a sport we no longer love — here’s the uncomfortable question no one in power seems eager to answer:

Is college football slowly turning off the very fans who built it?

The other day on our radio show, we asked a simple poll question: “What’s your excitement level for this year’s College Football Playoff?” The result wasn’t close. The runaway winner was: “Mild at best.”

No, it wasn’t a scientific poll by any means. But it was taken in a college-football-crazed state, in a city that hosts three bowl games, from listeners who have spent decades scheduling fall Saturdays around kickoff times. These are not casuals. These are the lifers.

And they sound tired.

College football has always thrived on passion — irrational, inherited passion. We fell in love with this sport because we were loyal to our hometown or home-state schools. Because our dads and moms went there. Because our grandparents wore the colors. Because even when our teams were bad, they were ours. We believed players loved our schools the way we did. We believed coaches were stewards of something bigger than themselves.

That belief is gone.

What we’re left with now is a sport that feels increasingly transactional, untethered from its own history, and openly hostile to the idea of loyalty. The transfer portal and NIL didn’t just change college football — they rebranded it. Players are no longer student-athletes growing into men within a program; they’re year-to-year contractors shopping their services to the highest bidder. And coaches are no longer culture builders; they’re free agents with obscene contracts and super-agents who are already negotiating new deals with new teams by midseason.

Lane Kiffin didn’t even wait for the College Football Playoff selection committee to put his Ole Miss team in the 12-team field before bolting for his next big job. Think about it: the head coaches from three CFP teams will be elsewhere next season, meaning in the most important tournament in the sport that a quarter of its leaders already had one foot out the door before the playoff even started.

That’s not continuity. That’s chaos.

And the collateral damage is everywhere. Bowl games — once the measuring stick of success — are now disposable. This year alone, Notre Dame opted out because it got snubbed by the CFP committee while Kansas State and Iowa State opted out because they lost their coaches. Bowls used to mean something. They were a reward, a destination, a final chapter. Now they’re an inconvenience.

Missouri coach Eli Drinkwitz didn’t mince words when he said earlier this week: “College football is sick.” He warned that the sport is “cracking” — not metaphorically, but structurally. Rules without consequences. Participation agreements nobody honors. Tampering without punishment. Freedom without guardrails.

UCF coach Scott Frost went even further. He said the quiet part out loud: “It’s broken.” And for that honesty, he was attacked. Not because he was wrong — but because he threatened those who benefit from the disorder. Frost described a world where participation agreements are ceremonial, salary caps are fiction and booster money determines competitive balance more than coaching or development ever could.

That’s not college football. That’s the NFL without contracts, unions or rules.

Minnesota coach P.J. Fleck summed it up best: “College football does not have any of what the NFL has in place. … I don’t think the general public actually knows what it looks like when you peel back the onion.”

And that’s the point. Fans (and coaches) are finally peeling it back — and they don’t like what they see.

Conferences now stretch from coast to coast, stripping the sport of its regional soul. Rivalries that once defined generations are disappearing in favor of television windows. Which brings us to a fair question for UCF fans: With USF no longer on your schedule, who’s your big rival? Answer: You don’t have one.

A sense of place used to matter in college football. Geography mattered. Identity mattered. Tradition mattered. Now everything is optimized for TV inventory and gambling markets.

Don’t get me wrong, college football is still idiot-proof. It will march on. ESPN needs the programming. Sportsbooks need the content. Saturdays will still be filled with games, spreads and parlays. The machine will not stop.

But what happens when the true fans — the ones who stayed and cheered through the losing seasons, NCAA sanctions and decades of irrelevance — start checking out emotionally? When excitement becomes obligation? When loyalty feels foolish?

We’re already seeing the signs. Fans less invested in bowls. Fans less connected to rosters that turn over annually. Fans who no longer recognize their own conferences. Fans who watch out of habit, not hope.

This isn’t about opposing player compensation. Players deserve to be paid. It’s not about nostalgia for unpaid labor or closed systems. It’s about structure, fairness and meaning. A sport without rules isn’t freedom — it’s anarchy. And anarchy is exhausting.

College football was never supposed to be perfect. It was supposed to be personal. It was supposed to mean something beyond the scoreboard. It was supposed to connect campuses, communities and generations.

Right now, it feels like a sport in disarray where even coaches and administrators are just  hopeless spectators to its unraveling. It’s so bad that they are begging the federal government to get involved. Can you name another multi-billion-dollar business that actively seeks governmental regulation?

The scariest part isn’t that coaches like Frost and Drinkwitz are speaking up.

It’s that we longtime fans are starting to quietly nod along and wonder why we’re still watching.

Yes, the College Football Playoff arrived this weekend and it’s never been bigger.

But, sadly, the sport itself has never felt emptier.

Email me at mbianchi@orlandosentinel.com. Hit me up on social media @BianchiWrites and listen to my new radio show “Game On” every weekday from 3 to 6 p.m. on FM 96.9, AM 740 and 969TheGame.com/listen

 



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$2.1 million transfer portal QB predicted to join College Football Playoff team

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Aftter helping propel Arizona State to its first College Football Playoff run in 2024, quarterback Sam Leavitt is officially preparing to test the transfer market.

Multiple outlets report Leavitt intends to enter the portal when the window opens in January, and early lists of suitors already include Oregon, Indiana, LSU, and Miami. 

Leavitt’s 2025 season was cut short by a persistent foot injury that required surgery and ended his year after seven appearances.

Despite limited time, he finished the campaign with 1,628 passing yards, 10 touchdowns and three interceptions, and leaves Tempe with a two-year body of work that includes a 2024 breakout season (2,885 passing yards, 443 rushing yards, 29 total TDs).

ASU closed 2025 at 8–4 under coach Kenny Dillingham, going 6-3 in Big 12 play.

On Wednesday, Mike Golic Jr. weighed in on potential transfer portal destinations, explicitly linking Leavitt to Miami as a natural schematic fit.

“Sam Leavitt, to me, would be a fascinating fit at the University of Miami. We reckon Carson Beck is going to be out after this playoff run, and when I look at Sam Leavitt’s game, I think about the Miami offense they ran with Cam Ward, an offense predicated on the quarterback’s ability to drop back, create, and make plays with both his arm and his legs. That feels like a very easy comparison.”

Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Sam Leavitt.

Tempe, Arizona, USA; Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Sam Leavitt (10) against the Houston Cougars in the second half at Mountain America Stadium. | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The Hurricanes went 10-2 this season and enter the postseason with a quarterback (Beck) who posted 3,072 passing yards and 25 passing touchdowns with a 74.7% completion rate.

However, despite Beck’s productive year as the starter and Miami’s CFP berth, the senior quarterback is widely expected to move on after the season, opening a potential vacancy at one of college football’s biggest brands.

Leavitt combines a CFP start, redshirt-sophomore eligibility, mobility, and a nationally ranked NIL valuation (estimated at $2.1 million), positioning him as one of the portal’s most attractive quarterbacks.

Read More at College Football HQ

  • $2.1 million QB ranked as top quarterback in college football transfer portal

  • $87 million college football coach predicted to accept Michigan head coaching job

  • Top transfer portal QB reportedly receives ‘multiple offers’ over $4 million

  • Kirby Smart sends strong message on Nick Saban before College Football Playoff



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