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NIL

Duke is a basketball school. So why is it paying a transfer QB top-tier money?

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Reports last December of Duke awarding a two-year, $8 million NIL deal to a transfer quarterback elicited two obvious reactions: 1) Duke has that kind of money? And 2) It’s giving it to … a football player?!

“We have aspirations to play at the highest level possible, and that’s counter, maybe, to what people have always thought of with Duke football,” said Greg Pritchard, a former Duke defensive lineman and co-founder of the football program’s NIL collective. “So it was very purposeful for us to go after the best quarterback that we could possibly get.”

Once Tulane’s Darian Mensah entered the transfer portal, Duke’s staff evaluated him and rated Mensah as “significantly higher than any other quarterback that was available,” said its chief football strategy officer, Binuk Kodituwakku.

So Pritchard quickly mobilized donors and got a deal done within days.

But landing the prized quarterback is one thing. As Kodituwakku said last week, “A big thing about Duke donors is they want to see a return on investment.”

Those donors likely had mixed reactions last weekend when Mensah, a third-year sophomore, faced his first big test, against No. 11 Illinois. He was an impressive 23-of-34 for 334 yards and two touchdowns, but he also had three turnovers. His team had five on the day. The Blue Devils hung in for three quarters before losing 45-19 at home.

“Darian played very well, but he’s a developing player that’s going to learn some lessons on ball security today,” head coach Manny Diaz said afterward. “He showed with our offense today, against a really, really good defense, that we’ve got some really dangerous weapons.”

Next up for Duke: A trip Saturday to Mensah’s former school, Tulane.

In the still-nascent name, image and likeness era, the players who receive the most highly publicized deals inevitably garner a higher level of scrutiny. See former Tennessee quarterback Nico Iamaleava, now at UCLA, who signed a four-year, $8 million contract in high school and garnered considerable backlash for leaving the Vols last spring after his representatives reportedly asked for more money. Or former Georgia quarterback Carson Beck, now at Miami, whose stolen Mercedes and Lamborghini became a national headline.

In this case, though, most college football fans had never heard of Mensah prior to him landing at Duke. And many still haven’t.

Just 13 months ago, the two-star recruit out of San Luis Obispo, Calif., was still a third-string backup for an AAC school. He ultimately won Tulane’s starting job in preseason camp and went on to lead the Green Wave to a conference championship game. He finished as the nation’s sixth-rated passer while averaging 9.5 yards per attempt, tied with No. 1 draft pick Cam Ward and Ohio State’s Will Howard for third nationally.

Two weeks into the 2024 season, he signed with an agent who set out to make him the highest-paid player in the country. Now, the 20-year-old has his own house, bought a Mercedes for himself and a Dodge Charger for his mom and started a foundation to help young athletes in his hometown.

“It all happened so fast,” he said, “I didn’t really get to sit back and realize how life-changing NIL could be.”

All he’s expected to do is elevate the profile of a traditionally mid-level Power 4 program long overshadowed by its basketball counterparts.


Darian Mensah (10) will square off against his former team this Saturday when Duke plays Tulane. (Kevin Jairaj / Imagn Images)

About that $8 million deal, first reported by CBS. Two people involved in the negotiations said that figure is accurate. Others involved in the negotiations said it is not. Kodituwakku, who manages Duke’s contract negotiations, did not offer specifics but said, “The number’s not as high as what’s been said, and it’s very incentive-laden.”

But even if Mensah earns closer to $3 million, it would put him in an exclusive club with Miami’s Beck, Michigan’s Bryce Underwood, Oklahoma’s John Mateer and Penn State’s Drew Allar. (Texas’ Arch Manning may be making more from endorsements.)

But unlike Mensah, those other quarterbacks all play for college football blue bloods.

Duke has at least been respectable for some time. Beginning in 2012, Duke reached six bowl games in seven seasons under longtime coach David Cutcliffe before a three-year down period led to his ouster. His replacement, Mike Elko, led Duke to a nine-win season in 2022 and 8-5 the next, before leaving for Texas A&M. In December 2023, athletic director Nina King hired Diaz, once head coach at Miami, who led the Blue Devils to their second nine-win season in three years and a trip to the Gator Bowl, its first January bowl game in 30 years.

Diaz’s first big catch in the transfer portal was Texas quarterback Maalik Murphy, for whom the collective paid around $1 million. It was more than 10 times what his predecessor, Riley Leonard, was making before leaving for a seven-figure deal at Notre Dame.

Murphy, now at Oregon State, had a respectable 2024 season, throwing for nearly 3,000 yards. But the staff felt his lack of mobility limited the offense. It quietly began scouting for an upgrade.

Kodituwakku, a native of Australia who previously managed the salary cap for an Australian Football League club, and John Garrett, general manager of player personnel, oversee Duke’s roster acquisition. Garrett handles scouting. Kodituwakku handles the numbers. He utilizes a database with advanced stats on thousands of college players to identify potential fits and assess their dollar value.

“We’re trying to put in systems and processes that will help us A) stretch our resources and B) minimize the chance of making poor decisions,” said Kodituwakku. “We’re always going to be a developmental program, so we’ve got to hit on our portal acquisitions at a higher rate than other schools.”

Mensah first began catching attention in the Green Wave’s second game of the season, when they nearly upset No. 17 Kansas State. He threw for 342 yards (and had two turnovers) and appeared to throw a touchdown that tied the score with 17 seconds left, which got wiped out by an offensive pass interference penalty on his receiver.

Noah Reisenfeld, an agent at Young Money APAA Sports, got an early tip on Mensah through a connection at Tulane and swooped in after the K-State game to sign him. Reisenfeld, 25, garnered backlash last January for claiming “pretty much every NIL agency charges (college athletes) 20 percent,” compared with 3-to-5 percent for pro contracts, due to the smaller value of most college deals.

He speaks with similar candor about his pursuit last year of a lucrative Power 4 deal for Mensah, who became the top-ranked player in the portal in The Athletic upon his Dec. 8 announcement. (His position would, like others’, move as more players entered the portal.)

Mensah committed to Duke three days later, suggesting the Blue Devils were his only suitor. Reisenfeld disputes that.

“As quiet as it was publicly, it was louder than a lot of people probably think,” he said. “The only schools that I did not speak to were Texas, Washington and Clemson,” all of whom had established quarterbacks returning. “I had conversations with everyone else under the sun.”

Two sources involved with Mensah’s recruitment said that Auburn had interest, before landing Oklahoma’s Jackson Arnold. One of those sources and another source with knowledge of Mensah’s recruitment said UCLA pursued him as well. But the options thinned once Reisenfeld made it known the ambitious price tag he was seeking for his client.

Duke was undeterred.

Diaz and Kodituwakku were told they’d be receiving the first of three visits by Mensah, and prepared a presentation highlighting both how he’d fit into their offense and their plan to surround him with new weapons. At Tulane, Mensah had led a run-oriented offense with a lot of play-action passing, whereas Diaz and Brewer’s scheme is heavier on run-pass options, progressions and vertical passing.

“The fact that they pushed the ball vertically down the field was a big one for me,” said Mensah. “And in this offense, the quarterback has all the control. That’s something that I really wanted.”

He promptly committed to Duke without taking other visits. (No other visits had yet been scheduled.)

Mensah picking Duke continued an NIL-era trend of high-profile recruits and transfers choosing less “obvious” programs. Diaz cites as an example last year’s top-two Heisman finishers. Travis Hunter, the No. 1 player in the Class of 2022, became the No. 2 NFL draft pick after playing for Jackson State and Colorado. Ashton Jeanty turned down lucrative offers from major programs to remain at Boise State for his last season and became the No. 6 pick.

Or college basketball, where Rutgers last year landed Dylan Harper and Ace Bailey, who both became top-five NBA draft picks, and where the top-ranked 2025 player, AJ Dybantsa, signed with BYU for a deal reported to be as much as $7 million.

“In the past, you had to go to a small handful of schools as a player to have a brand, and that’s not the case anymore,” said Diaz. “Kids don’t believe that they have to go to the blue blood schools to achieve what they want to achieve.”

The news on Dec. 11 that Duke had landed the touted quarterback came as a surprise to many. A couple of weeks later came reports of the two-year, $8 million figure that shocked the sport. Landing Mensah served notice that Duke is no longer content to be known as a basketball school.

And the program made good on its promise to upgrade his supporting cast. Receivers Cooper Barkate (Harvard) and Andrel Anthony (Oklahoma) already have a combined 17 catches for 314 yards through two games. Now, the Blue Devils have to go out and prove all that money was well spent.

“Obviously, (Duke football) is not as big as basketball,” Mensah said last week, “but I think I’m here to change it.”

The Athletic’s Sam Khan contributed reporting.

(Top photo: Lance King / Getty Images)



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NIL

Damon Wilson ll files countersuit against UGA, claims NIL contract non-binding

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Georgia Bulldogs

Wilson’s lawsuit states that UGA’s attempt to collect the $390K lump sum was a ‘strong-arm tactic.’

Damon Wilson II played 417 defensive snaps for UGA during the 2024-25 season. He transferred to Missouri. (Jason Getz / AJC)

Damon Wilson II played 417 defensive snaps for UGA during the 2024-25 season. He transferred to Missouri. (Jason Getz / AJC)

Damon Wilson ll, who transferred from Georgia to Missouri, is suing the University of Georgia Athletic Association and the Classic City Collective claiming the term sheet he signed to remain with the program is not a legally binding agreement.

The 42-page lawsuit, acquired by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution after it was filed in the circuit court of Boone County, Mo. on Tuesday, seeks to grant Wilson relief from UGA seeking a $390,000 lump sum it claims Wilson owes by contract and hold defendants liable for “damages sufficient to compensate him for the financial and reputational harm” suffered.

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Mike Griffith

Mike is in his 10th season covering SEC and Georgia athletics for AJC-DawgNation and has 25 years of CFB experience. Mike is a Heisman Trophy voter and former Football Writers President who was named the National FWAA Beat Writer of the Year in January, 2018.



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$2.5 million QB linked to unexpected college football program

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A multitude of college football players are set to look for a new home for the 2026 college football season.

In the weeks before the NCAA transfer portal opens, quarterbacks across college football have expressed their desire to explore new destinations. These quarterbacks include DJ Lagway of Florida, Sam Leavitt of Arizona State, Josh Hoover of TCU and Brendan Sorsby of Cincinnati.

One intriguing name in the portal quarterback is former Nebraska signal caller Dylan Raiola. He will enter the transfer portal with two seasons of eligibility remaining.

Raiola is expected to command around $2.5 million in NIL compensation from whatever school he lands at.

One school that has entered the sweepstakes for Raiola is Louisville. Steve Wiltfong of On3 mentioned the possibility of Raiola joining the Cardinals in a recent edition of “Wiltfong Whiparound.”

Nebraska Cornhuskers quarterback Dylan Raiola

Nebraska Cornhuskers quarterback Dylan Raiola (15) runs off after scoring a touchdown against USC | Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

“They can be a program to keep an eye on for Dylan Raiola,” Wiltfong said.

In the three seasons Jeff Brohm has coached at his alma mater, Louisville has not started a quarterback it recruited from high school.

Former Purdue and California quarterback Jack Plummer transferred to Louisville and started for the Cardinals in 2023. The Cardinals acquired a former Oregon and Texas Tech quarterback from the portal to be their starter in 2024. Brohm brought in former USC quarterback Miller Moss to be the Cardinals’ starter in 2025.

The 6-foot-3, 230-pounder arrived at Nebraska as a freshman in 2024 as one of the highest-rated recruits in the country. Raiola started all 13 games for the Cornhuskers and set a program record for passing yards by a freshman with 2,819 yards to go along with 13 touchdown passes and 11 interceptions.

He guided Nebraska to its first bowl win since 2015 with a defeat of Boston College (20-15) in the Bad Boy Mowers Pinstripe Bowl.

A broken fibula cut Raiola’s 2025 season short after nine games in early November. He passed for 2,000 yards, 18 touchdowns and six interceptions in his abridged season with the Cornhuskers.

Nebraska (7-5, 4-5) will face No. 15 Utah (10-2, 7-2) in the SRS Distribution Las Vegas Bowl on Dec. 31 to end the season (3:30 p.m. EST, ESPN).



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$1.6 million QB linked to College Football Playoff program

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Miami finished the regular season 11–2 and earned a berth in the expanded College Football Playoff, advancing with a 10–3 first-round win over No. 7 Texas A&M.

The No. 10 Hurricanes will face No. 2 Ohio State on December 31 in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic, with the winner advancing to face the victor of the No. 6 vs. No. 3 Georgia matchup in the Allstate Sugar Bowl.

With the Hurricanes set to lose starter Carson Beck after the season and the remaining depth chart made up of quarterbacks with limited in-game experience in Emory Williams and Judd Anderson, speculation has grown that Miami could pursue a proven signal caller in the transfer portal.

On December 19, Rivals’ Steve Wiltfong named NC State quarterback CJ Bailey as a potential option, despite Bailey not yet entering the transfer portal amid growing speculation that he could do so in the coming weeks.

“CJ Bailey, not in the portal, but a South Florida native. That’s a name that people bring up as a potential transfer portal option following his season and his upcoming bowl game,” Wiltfong said.

“Miami is another program that will be a major domino in the transfer portal deal.”

 NC State Wolfpack quarterback CJ Bailey.

Tampa, FL, USA; NC State Wolfpack quarterback CJ Bailey (11) throws a pass against the Memphis Tigers in the first quarter during the Gasparilla Bowl at Raymond James Stadium. | Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Bailey, a Hollywood, Florida, native, posted one of the more efficient quarterback seasons in the FBS in 2025, throwing for 3,105 yards, 25 touchdowns, and nine interceptions on 68.8 percent passing, while adding 215 rushing yards and six scores on the ground.

His 6-6, 210-pound frame and pocket mobility make him a high-upside, starter-ready option for Power Five programs.

Before arriving at NC State, Bailey starred at Chaminade-Madonna High School, where he was rated a four-star recruit and the No. 29 quarterback in the 247Sports Composite rankings for the 2024 cycle.

He held nearly a dozen scholarship offers, including Georgia Tech, Indiana, Louisville, Texas A&M, and Miami.

On3’s NIL trackers list Bailey’s current valuation at around $1.6 million, a notable asset for a program like Miami that can combine institutional NIL collectives with local South Florida opportunities.

Bailey’s hometown ties, starter-ready tape, recruiting familiarity, and Miami’s ability to offer larger third-party NIL packages and local marketing opportunities together create a plausible mutual fit for a portal move.

Read More at College Football HQ

  • Unexpected college football program among favorites for $2 million transfer QB

  • Major college football QB expected to ‘command’ up to $5 million in transfer portal

  • Major college football team reportedly does not have ‘any interest’ in $2.4 million QB

  • No. 1 college football team predicted to sign $2.1 million transfer QB



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The Clemson Insider

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ESPN personality Paul Finebaum has had plenty to say about Clemson and head coach Dabo Swinney over the course of the Tigers’ disappointing 2025 campaign.

This time, Finebaum attempted to sum up Swinney succinctly.

AL.com asked Finebaum for a single word to describe various college football coaches, including Swinney, following the 2025 regular season.

Finebaum’s word for the Tigers’ longtime head man?

“Grandpa,” Finebaum said.

Swinney, now finishing up his 18th season (and 17th full season) as Clemson’s head coach, is only 56 years old.

But of course, Finebaum’s “grandpa” description wasn’t centered around Swinney’s age. Rather, Finebaum was presumably referring to Swinney’s hesitancy to adapt to modern college football.

Finebaum has made it clear he believes Swinney’s reluctance to adapt to the changing college football landscape — specifically regarding NIL and the transfer portal — has caused his program to fall behind the times.

“It’s a very big factor, because he finally began to shift a little bit in the last year or two, but it was almost too late,” Finebaum said in late October. “And it’s really sad for me to say this, because I think everybody on this panel respects Dabo Swinney and appreciates that he has been one of the great coaches of this era, but that’s gone. It goes very quickly nowadays. And I think what’s even more irritating to that fanbase is he just keeps going to the well trying to live off of what he used to do, and unfortunately in college football, that doesn’t matter, especially if you don’t change. He did not change, and frankly, it’s too late.”

Finebaum has sounded off a lot on Swinney this year, with his team failing to live up to lofty expectations as the No. 4 team in the preseason AP Poll and a projected national title contender.

Following Clemson’s loss to Syracuse on Sept. 20 that dropped the Tigers to 1-3 for the first time ever under Swinney, Finebaum said he believed “it’s over” for Swinney at Clemson and “it’s time for him to go.” Finebaum suggested that Swinney should either leave Clemson to coach at another school, or become an analyst on TV like former coaches such as Nick Saban and Jimbo Fisher.

“I think it’s over at Clemson. Let’s quit trying to sugarcoat it,” Finebaum said. “Sometimes it’s very difficult to get it back when you’ve lost it. He lost it, he got it back, now he’s lost it again and he’s lost it badly. It’s time for him to go.”

Following a 3-5 start to this season, Clemson bounced back to finish the regular season on a four-game winning streak to go 7-5 and become bowl eligible for a 27th consecutive season.

Swinney’s Tigers are now set to take on Penn State (6-6) in the Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx on Dec. 27 (noon, ABC).    



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Why Bear Alexander and Poncho Laloulu Pass on NFL Draft is a Quiet Win for Oregon’s NIL Strategy

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For years, NIL has often been framed as college football’s necessary evil — a chaotic marketplace blamed for roster churn, tampering fears, and short-term thinking. At Oregon, however, NIL is increasingly serving a different purpose. It’s not just reshaping how the Ducks build their roster, it’s reshaping how long they can keep it together.

Since the end of the regular season, two high-profile juniors on the Oregon roster have made decisions that quietly underscore that shift. Defensive lineman Bear Alexander announced first that he would return for the 2026 season. Shortly after, offensive lineman Iapani Laloulu, better known as “Poncho,” followed suit. Both will return to Eugene for their final seasons of eligibility.

Both decisions likely don’t happen four years ago at Oregon. Here’s why.



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Major college football QB expected to ‘command’ up to $5 million in transfer portal

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The Cincinnati Bearcats looked like a potential playoff team after a 7–1 start before dropping each of their final four games to close the 2025 season at 7–5 overall and 5–4 in Big 12 play.

Despite the late slide, it was Cincinnati’s highest win total since joining the Big 12 in 2023 and the program’s best season yet under third-year head coach Scott Satterfield.

Much of that success was fueled by junior quarterback Brendan Sorsby, who has since announced his intention to enter the NCAA Transfer Portal.

In 12 appearances during the 2025 season, Sorsby completed 61.6% of his passes for 2,800 yards, 27 touchdowns, and five interceptions, while also rushing for 580 yards and nine scores, establishing himself as one of the portal’s most coveted dual-threat quarterbacks.

On Tuesday, On3’s Pete Nakos reported that Sorsby could command NIL offers approaching $5 million on the open market, a figure that would place him among the highest earners in college sports.

Cincinnati Bearcats quarterback Brendan Sorsby.

Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Cincinnati Bearcats quarterback Brendan Sorsby (2) warms up before the game against the Utah Utes at Rice-Eccles Stadium. | Rob Gray-Imagn Images

A Lake Dallas, Texas, native, Sorsby was a three-star recruit and the No. 66-ranked quarterback in the 2022 class according to 247Sports.

He received nearly a dozen scholarship offers, including from Indiana, Army, Navy, and Delaware.

Sorsby initially signed with Indiana in February 2022 and emerged as the Hoosiers’ full-time starter in 2023.

He threw for 1,587 yards, 15 touchdowns, and five interceptions while rushing for 276 yards and four scores before entering the transfer portal and transferring to Cincinnati in 2024.

On3’s NIL tracker currently lists Texas quarterback Arch Manning as the nation’s highest-valued college athlete at $5.3 million, while Sorsby is valued at approximately $2.4 million, the 12th-highest overall.

Any deal approaching $5 million would immediately place Sorsby alongside Manning at the top of the NIL market.

Early links and reporting have connected Sorsby to programs including Texas Tech, Tennessee, Oregon, Indiana (return), and other Power-Five schools.

Read More at College Football HQ

  • Major college football team reportedly does not have ‘any interest’ in $2.4 million QB

  • No. 1 college football team predicted to sign $2.1 million transfer QB

  • Major college football program loses 15 players to transfer portal

  • College Football Playoff team has ‘significant interest’ in 4,000-yard QB



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