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

NIL

Breaking down the early chatter on the Florida coaching search

Published

on


presented by toyotapresented by toyota

The  University of Florida’s search for a new football coach is well underway following the dismissal of Billy Napier last Sunday.

The hire will be Florida’s fifth full time football coach since 2010 and Scott Stricklin’s third as Florida athletic director, defying the historical trend suggesting most Power 4 athletic directors get only 2 bites at the football coaching apple and bucking the prediction of many, including this author, who suggested that Stricklin’s fate at Florida may be tied to Napier’s success as Florida’s football coach.

Instead, Stricklin, one of the most gifted fundraisers in collegiate athletics, signed an extension this past spring. The Stricklin extension provides stability to the Florida athletics program, even at a time when the university as a whole grapples with leadership challenges. Earlier this year, the University of Florida hired an interim president, Donald Landry, after the eminently qualified Dr. Santa Ono, the former President of the University of Michigan, was rejected for political reasons. Compounding UF’s leadership vacuum, the university’s 2 top graduate programs, the law and medical schools, each have interim leadership. Stricklin offers rare stability, and after his basketball hire, Todd Golden, won the school’s third basketball national championship this April, UF had public-facing reasons to retain Stricklin beyond the steady fundraising and stable leadership the Florida athletic director has offered behind closed doors during an era of change at Florida.

Stricklin’s new job security has allowed him to move more nimbly, with a long overdue athletic department administration overhaul underway and a necessary Swamp stadium renovation on the horizon. Stricklin’s stable athletic program also offers a transparent rebuke to the understandable but misguided criticism that Florida is not a desirable job because the university is in tumult.

While there are certainly long-term leadership decisions to be made at Florida, the athletic department is on firm footing, with an arsenal of resources at its disposal.

 Still, the best way to fundraise and promote long-term stability is to win games.

Florida hasn’t won a SEC or national championship since 2008 and has never appeared in the College Football Playoff in any format. Only 3 Florida teams have won 11 or more games since 2008, and only 1 team (2019) has managed that feat since 2012, when the last of Urban Meyer’s recruits helped Will Muschamp to an 11-2 season and Sugar Bowl appearance. Things have gone from middling and mediocre to worse this decade, with Florida’s 30-27 record since 2020 their worst half-decade mark for the program since the late 1970s.

Put plainly, the Gators have spent the better part of a decade and a half lost in the swampy wilderness, occasionally peaking their heads out of the tall grass to compete for SEC Championships under Jim McElwain and Dan Mullen, but never consistently managing to return to the national relevance the program became accustomed to from the 1980s through the Meyer era (2005-2010).

Stricklin rightly pointed out that unlike past administrations, where coaches failed, at least in part, due to a lack of administrative commitment to football and a willed refusal to engage in the resource wars that helped Alabama, Georgia, and Clemson build southern behemoths over the past 2 decades, there has “never been a time” when “as many financial resources and as much commitment has gone into making Gator football” elite. From a strong NIL infrastructure to world class facilities, Florida offered Napier everything he needed to compete. He failed, but the program is better positioned to compete now than it was when he arrived, and whoever Florida hires will walk into a situation where, at least from a foundational standpoint, winning big and winning quickly is possible.

Florida does have to navigate costs.

Florida’s 2025 roster wasn’t cheap, and Napier’s buyout approaches $21 million dollars. Speaking to the media this week, Stricklin acknowledged that the financial burden “is not insignificant.” Stricklin cautioned, however, against any narrative suggesting Florida won’t spend what is necessary to compete.

“We all want to be competitive, whether it is NIL, whether it’s coaching salaries,” Stricklin said. “We’re all responding to what the market dictates. We could sit here and talk high and mighty about we’re going to draw the line, and it would probably impact the pool of candidates you have depending on how strict you draw the line. We’re going to try to be as smart as we can with our resources and make the best possible decision. But we’re also going to be very competitive.”

Nonetheless, paying Napier’s huge buyout may limit what Florida is willing to pay to buyout another coach it might otherwise pursue aggressively. A good example of this is Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman, an obvious candidate for any job but one whose buyout is reportedly in the 8-figure range.

That outlines the foundation and terrain facing Stricklin and the Florida search committee in the weeks to come.

This week, Saturday Down South spoke with multiple industry and program sources for a glimpse at Florida’s coaching search. What follows is our reporting on names discussed as potential replacements for Napier as well as potential drawbacks and obstacles to each candidate. The list of candidates is based only on information gathered by Saturday Down South, and not necessarily exclusive. Multiple sources confirmed that Florida has vetted or will vet each of the candidates discussed below. Multiple sources also confirmed that it is unlikely Florida will make any hire quickly. While no timetable for the hire is set, it seems possible, if not likely, that Florida will not announce a new football coach until early December. The coaches discussed are listed in alphabetical order.

Eli Drinkwitz, Missouri

Record at Mizzou: 44-25

Record vs. Ranked Opponents at Mizzou: 7-15

Pros: Drinkwitz is an outstanding roster construction coach built for the NIL era. He’s recruited better than any Missouri coach since the Tigers joined the SEC, inking 2 classes ranked in the top 20 in the country. He has recruited talented hotbed St. Louis beautifully, keeping 5-star Luther Burden at home in 2022, and he’s excelled in the transfer portal, landing big time talents like Ahmad Hardy, the SEC’s leading rusher, defensive tackle Chris McLellan and Zion Young, 2 of the SEC’s most disruptive defensive linemen, and quarterback Beau Pribula who all leaders on this season’s team, to name a few.

Drinkwitz also appears immune to the ego-driven choices that cost Napier dearly at Florida.

Drinkwitz is a remarkable 27-6 since 2023, when he gave up play calling and turned his offense over to Kirby Moore, who was on staff already but has thrived as Missouri’s play caller. Drinkwitz is 5-4 against ranked foes since 2023. Bizarrely, some Florida fans have claimed Drinkwitz is a product of Moore’s success. This is a weird argument given a huge criticism of Napier was he wouldn’t hire competent coordinators. It also falls flat given that Drinkwitz has also proven adept at hiring outstanding defensive coordinators, from Blake Baker (who left for LSU to become the highest paid DC in America in 2024) to current DC Corey Battoon, who currently guides a defense ranked 5th nationally in total defense and 6th in success rate.

Drinkwitz is also a proven quarterbacks coach who has gotten the most out of his talent at the position dating back to his first job at Appalachian State.

If Florida hands a gifted CEO the reins and that leader gets the most out of DJ Lagway, who any hire will push to retain, look out.

Cons: The record against ranked opponents leaves something to be desired and Florida fans, at least the loud ones on X and other social media platforms, don’t seem to like Drinkwitz’s personality. Is there something to the “nerdy Spurrier” wisecracks and Luke Skywalker costumes that rubs folks the wrong way? Perhaps. But Twitter isn’t real life, and to borrow from Todd Golden, who found his team name-dropped in a Drake song this offseason, “People love you when you win.”

More concerning should be the fact that Drinkwitz certainly plays games at the margins, especially offensively. The Tigers average over 2 yards per play less in SEC play than nonconference play offensively in 2025, and as a result, Missouri plays a ton of close football games. Drinkwitz is 11-2 in games decided by 1 touchdown or less since 2023, the best mark in the SEC in close games. What happens when and if the games at the margins start to flip to the other team?

Brent Key, Georgia Tech

Record at Georgia Tech: 25-16

Record vs. Ranked Opponents at Georgia Tech: 7-6.

Pros: Where do we begin? Key has taken a program that won 4 games in the 2 seasons prior to him becoming head coach and turned it into a College Football Playoff contender in less than 4 full seasons. He’s done it with a team that has just 12 “blue-chip” (4 or 5 star) players and ranks 39th in the 247Sports talent composite. For perspective, Florida has a record of 3-4 in 2025 with 52 blue chips. The Gators rank 12th in the talent composite. In other words, Key gets everything out of what he has.

Before he was a head coach, Key earned a reputation as an elite offensive line coach and one of the nation’s top recruiters. His offensive lines have been nominated for the Joe Moore Award (best offensive line) 4 times, including this season. He was named the nation’s No. 1 recruiter by 247Sports in 2020 and ranked No. 2 on 2 other occasions. He’s been a finalist for the Broyles Award, honoring the nation’s top assistant coach, on a preposterous 5 occasions, including 3 times at UCF, where he helped the Knights go unbeaten, helping build the roster that eventually (after Key had left for Alabama) made Scott Frost rich and Danny White a national champion (wink, wink). Key won a legitimate national title at Alabama as a top lieutenant for Nick Saban.

Key has recruited the state of Florida, grew up in SEC country, and has seen the operation of a SEC behemoth from the inside. One of the most respected coaches in the sport, Florida could give him resources he’ll simply never have at Georgia Tech. And oh, by the way, Key understands the Georgia rivalry, which he has played in and coached in at Georgia Tech, and he won’t be bothered competing against Kirby Smart.

Cons: Key’s offense isn’t flashy and the name won’t inspire the more casual element of the fan base. More vital? Key is building something special at his alma mater. He won’t ever have Florida style resources in Atlanta, but playing in the ACC, he is set up to consistently compete to make College Football Playoffs and eventually have a statue built of his likeness outside Bobby Dodd Stadium. Why enter the fishbowl furnace of the Florida job when you can win plenty at home in Atlanta? Plus, while his ceiling might be higher at Florida, if you are in the Playoff constantly at Georgia Tech, perhaps he can breakthrough? He’s already competed with Kirby better than Napier ever did at Florida, despite a talent deficit. Given Key’s allegiances to Georgia Tech, Florida would also likely have to overpay substantially here. For all these reasons, this hire seems unlikely, but it makes too much sense not to explore.

Lane Kiffin, Ole Miss

Record at Ole Miss: 50-19

Record at Ole Miss vs. Ranked Opponents: 9-10

Pros: Lane is the People’s Champion. Florida fans have been clamoring for Kiffin for months and he’s candidate 1 in the eyes of 2 prominent boosters who spoke with SDS as well. Part of the Lane love is the cult of personality, to be sure. Kiffin is playful on social media, has a high-flying offense, isn’t afraid to take a jab at a conference foe, and wins with swagger. Florida fans, desperate for the joyous bravado of the Spurrier era, see an intellectual heir in Kiffin.

Kiffin’s football track record is strong, too. He’s an offensive mastermind who revolutionized Nick Saban’s offense at Alabama, allowing the Crimson Tide to compete and win national championships while playing a more modern offense than what Saban originally brought to Tuscaloosa. He’s also won at levels unprecedented at Ole Miss in the modern, post-integration SEC. A savvy roster builder who has excelled in the transfer portal, Kiffin is also a quarterback whisperer. That means that if he is hired and he can keep DJ Lagway on campus, Florida could win quickly in 2025.

What’s more, Kiffin has embraced his role as a CEO, hiring Pete Golding, one of the best football minds in the sport, to coach his defense, a change that elevated his program in Oxford from competitive to Playoff contenders.

Cons: Kiffin has established roots in Oxford. His family is happy, he’s built a consistent winner, and Keith Carter is one of the best in the business at getting his hires what they need to succeed.

From a football standpoint, Kiffin has won plenty but nothing of substance beyond New Year’s Six bowl games and 2 conference titles at Florida Atlantic. He’s not nearly as good a recruiter as Key and he’s at best equal to Drinkwitz on that front, and he’s rarely seemed motivated to improve in that area, despite the fact that recruiting, even in the world of the portal and NIL, remains the lifeblood of the sport. Florida has hired offensive geniuses who succeeded in Mississippi before. The world of NIL and an expanded College Football Playoff make the comparison with Mullen imperfect, but if Kiffin is Mullen 2.0, will Florida fans be satisfied?

Rhett Lashlee, SMU

Record at SMU: 34-14

Record at SMU vs. Ranked Opponents: 3-5

Pros: Lashlee has marshaled excellent resources (SMU has a ton of money!) and utilized it to take a program to the College Football Playoff in Year 1 in a Power 4 conference. The Mustangs were blown out by Penn State, 38-10, but they played in a Playoff game, something the University of Florida has never done. Lashlee doesn’t call his own plays, but his scheme has succeeded at multiple stops, earning him a Broyles Award nod while the offensive coordinator at Auburn under Gus Malzahn. While his 2025 offense is middling (55th in total offense, 51st in success rate), his team ranked 27th in total offense and 25th in success rate in their Playoff season and finished in the top 20 nationally in 2022 and 2023.

Cons: This hire won’t move the fan base or the national needle. Lashlee is 0-3 in bowl and Playoff games, has just 3 wins over ranked foes as a head coach, and he’s never signed a recruiting class ranked in the top 30. Sources told Saturday Down South that Florida was impressed with Lashlee last season, but there’s a sense, at least among those sources, that the Gators interest here has waned.

Lashlee also may feel that competing at SMU, where he only has to reckon with ACC competition and has rich NIL resources and a terrific recruiting base, is a better place for him to build his coaching résumé before he takes on a job at a pressure cooker program like Florida.

Neil BlackmonNeil Blackmon

Neil Blackmon covers SEC football and basketball for SaturdayDownSouth.com. An attorney, he is also a member of the Football and Basketball Writers Associations of America. He also coaches basketball.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

NIL

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

Published

on


Indiana’s rise from perennial Big Ten bottom feeders into national title contenders has been one of college football’s most compelling stories in 2025.

Under second-year head coach Curt Cignetti, the Hoosiers finished the regular season undefeated at 13-0, captured the program’s first Big Ten title since 1967, and earned the No. 1 seed in the College Football Playoff.

Quarterback Fernando Mendoza capped the breakthrough season by winning the school’s first-ever Heisman Trophy, throwing for 2,980 yards with 33 touchdown passes and a 71.5% completion rate that helped propel Indiana into national contention.

That success now intersects with a separate transfer-cycle storyline: North Texas quarterback Drew Mestemaker, the FBS passing leader (4,129 yards, 31 touchdowns, 70.2% completion rate), is likely to enter the transfer portal when the window opens in January.

On a December 19 episode of “College Football Insiders,” CBS Sports’ Chris Hummer connected the dots.

“He can be somebody you can build your program around for multiple years,” Hummer said. “I’ve heard the same about Indiana. I think they do have a significant interest in Drew Mestemaker, and I think he would be a really good fit for their system.”

North Texas Mean Green quarterback Drew Mestemaker.

North Texas Mean Green quarterback Drew Mestemaker (17) throws a pass against Army | Danny Wild-Imagn Images

Mestemaker is a former walk-on who emerged as the nation’s passing leader this season as a redshirt freshman, posting multiple 300-yard performances and a 608-yard outing in North Texas’ 54–20 win over Charlotte, a game that set single-game passing yardage records for both the school and the American Athletic Conference.

His breakout year earned him the Burlsworth Trophy, American Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year honors, and first-team All-American recognition.

There are clear reasons the fit is being discussed publicly.

Indiana has demonstrated a clear willingness to use transfers to accelerate competitiveness, most notably with Kurtis Rourke’s arrival as a graduate transfer in 2024, followed by Mendoza’s move from Cal.

Both quarterbacks produced elite statistical seasons that propelled the Hoosiers to winning campaigns.

If Mendoza ultimately declares for the 2026 NFL Draft, which is widely expected, Indiana would need either an internal successor or a portal option who can step in at Power-5 level speed. 

Mestemaker’s profile checks several boxes: production, track record under a pro-style system, and remaining eligibility.

Read More at College Football HQ

  • SEC program listed as highest-valued college football team with $1.4 billion valuation

  • Major college football head coach denies receiving offer for Michigan job

  • $5 million quarterback market predicted amid transfer portal frenzy

  • ESPN silent after celebrity guest picker misses College GameDay



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Adam Breneman Highlights Why College Football Will Fail Under Greg Sankey’s Leadership Amid Transfer Portal, NIL Issues

Published

on


Former Penn State tight end Adam Breneman, on the Will Ventures podcast, revealed his true feelings on the current landscape of college football and the implications of the decisions made by some leaders in the game.

Breneman, on his podcast appearance, highlighted how no one’s actually in charge of college football, whilst also strongly advocating for a college football commissioner.

“No one’s actually in charge of college football. We need a college football commissioner”, Breneman stated on the podcast.

Despite college football not having a designated commissioner, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey is one of the most powerful college football figures and is often touted to be in charge of college football as a whole.

Breneman further revealed that Sankey is also in charge of other sports like golf, diving, lacrosse, and men’s & women’s basketball, stating that college football needs a commissioner who will make decisions for the betterment of college football, implying that it’s tough to do that while you have other things on your plate.

“Greg Sankey is also in charge of golf and swimming and diving and men’s basketball and women’s basketball and lacrosse has to make the best decisions for those sports as well. No one’s actually in charge of college football”, Breneman highlighted.

“We need a college football commissioner who actually is in charge of college football and can make decisions for college football because what’s best for college football is not what’s best for men’s basketball”, he further elaborated.

The former ASU tight end coach’s comments come on the backdrop of college football going through a turbulent period as far as player transfers, NIL issues, and the overall backlash the playoff committee is facing as far as the selection of the 2025 playoff teams is concerned.

PFSN College Football Playoff Predictor
Dive into Try out PFSN’s FREE college football playoff predictor, where you can simulate every 2025-26 NFL season game and see who wins the National Championship!

Greg Sankey Pushes for Expansion to a 16-Team College Football Playoff

Sankey recently appeared on The Rich Eisen Show this December, emphasizing the need to adopt a 16-team playoff format, potentially moving away from the current 12-team format, while also keeping in mind other conferences and their playoff qualification, which was a point of contention amongst analysts and fans alike.

Meanwhile, the college football portal, which is set to officially open in January 2026, has already seen a record number of entries, with the likes of star QBs like DJ Lagway and Dylan Raiola entering, potentially fueled by NIL incentives.

 

Read More:

College Sports Network has you covered with the latest news, analysis, insights, and trending stories in college footballmen’s college basketballwomen’s college basketball, and college baseball!





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Major college football program loses 15 players to transfer portal

Published

on


USC defensive tackle Devan Thompkins, a 6-5, 290-pound veteran who started 12 games in 2025, announced his intention to enter the NCAA transfer portal on December 17. 

Thompkins finished the 2025 season with 31 combined tackles (18 solo), three sacks, two pass breakups, and a forced fumble; across three seasons at USC, he compiled 56 total tackles (32 solo), 4.5 sacks, and five pass breakups.

Those figures made him one of the more productive interior linemen on a unit that struggled at times but improved to finish ranked and bowl-eligible.

USC closed the 2025 regular season 9–3 (7–2 Big Ten) and will face TCU in the Valero Alamo Bowl on December 30, a season that left the program ranked inside the top 25 (No. 16) but short of College Football Playoff contention.

The Trojans’ record and bowl bid reflect progress under head coach Lincoln Riley while also exposing lingering gaps across the roster.

Those gaps have since been amplified, as Thompkins’ departure brings USC’s total number of players set to test the transfer market to 15.

Southern California Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley.

Los Angeles, California, USA; Southern California Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley watches game action against the Northwestern Wildcats during the second half at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. | Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

The list of known departures is sizable and spread across position groups. 

According to 247Sports, the 15 players who have announced portal entries include: WR DJ Jordan, RB Bryan Jackson, CB Braylon Conley, DE Gus Cordova, OL Makai Saina, S Steve Miller, LB Matai Tagoa‘i, DL Carlon Jones, S Anthony Beavers Jr., OL Micah Banuelos, LB Garrison Madden, RB Harry Dalton, WR Prince Strachan, TE Walker Lyons, and Thompkins.

That grouping hits starters across the trenches, secondary, and skill positions — areas that will require immediate replacements via the portal, incoming freshmen, and retained depth.

After a successful five-year run at Oklahoma from 2017 to 2021, Riley took over as USC’s head coach in November 2021 and has delivered steady results built on quarterback development, high-powered offenses, and aggressive recruiting, highlighted by USC securing the No. 1-ranked 2026 recruiting class.

The current exodus provides the latest test for Riley as USC works to build toward a stronger Big Ten finish in 2026.

Read More at College Football HQ

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

  • College football quarterback enters transfer portal after 4,000-yard season

  • No. 1 ranked transfer portal player predicted to join College Football Playoff team

  • SEC program listed as highest-valued college football team with $1.4 billion valuation



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Joey McGuire Compares Oregon to Texas Tech Amid Increased NIL Spending

Published

on


Texas Tech Red Raiders coach Joey McGuire spoke to the media ahead of the Orange Bowl against the Oregon Ducks, and McGuire was quite complimentary of Oregon coach Dan Lanning and the Ducks program. Much has been made about Texas Tech’s increased spending in the name, image, and likeness (NIL) era of college football, and similarities between the Red Raiders and the Ducks have come up ahead of their College Football Playoff matchup.

Powered in part by Nike co-founder and philanthropist Phil Knight, Oregon’s rise in the college football world has been a unique one. On the other hand, Texas Tech’s NIL collective is led by billionaire booster Cody Campbell, whose investment into the Red Raiders program has helped the team climb up the ranks.

What Joey McGuire Said About Oregon and Texas Tech

McGuire was asked to compare Oregon’s rise to Texas Tech’s, and the Red Raiders coach gave a thoughtful answer:

“First, they’ve done a good job of hiring coaches, and Dan (Lanning) was a slam dunk. Second, you know, they made it cool to be an Oregon Duck,” McGuire said. “I mean, they’ve got every uniform known to man, and players love that. So I think we’re really fortunate with Adidas, our partnership with Adidas and Patrick Mahomes, that we’re doing the same thing. We’ve got some some great looks.”

Texas Tech Red Raiders Joey McGuire college football playoff oregon ducks dan lanning phil knight NIL booster cody campbell

Dec 6, 2025; Arlington, TX, USA; Texas Tech Red Raiders head coach Joey McGuire celebrates with the Big 12 Championship trophy after the game against the BYU Cougars at AT&T Stadium. | Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

“And then, they have a great booster in Phil Knight that really said, ‘Hey, we’re going to go win at the highest level, and there’s no excuses whenever it comes to finance.’ You know, you turn around, and I think that we’ve shown that we’re doing that, and I think we’re really comparable,” McGuire continued.

“We’ve got guys that have really stepped up and done a great job. I kind of call them the big five whenever you talk about Cody and John and Mike, Dusty, and Gary. I mean, those guys have, along with everybody else in Red Raider Nation, but those guys really led the charge. And so whenever you’re talking, we’re kind of comparable on and off the field in this team. They’ve just done it for a little bit longer and that’s what we’re trying to do,” McGuire continued.

Oregon Ducks Nike co-founder Phil Knight world headquarters Beaverton Dante Moore Dan Lanning Shoe Duck Elliott Hill

Nike co-founder Phil Knight | Nike

Oregon Ducks’ Sustained Success

As mentioned by McGuire, Oregon has been on the cutting edge of college football uniforms as well as facilities, thanks in part to the program’s relationship with Knight and Nike. In the NIL era, fans often mistake how often Nike is involved in recruiting other than the brand power that Oregon has. Still, Ducks quarterback Dante Moore and wide receiver Dakorien Moore have NIL deals with Nike.

MORE: Oregon Ducks vs. Texas Tech Playoff Betting Odds Make A Clear Statement

MORE: Oregon Loses Two More Players to Transfer Portal Amid College Football Playoff Run

MORE: Dan Lanning’s Frustration Could Ignite Oregon vs. Texas Tech

SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER HERE!

Under the leadership of Oregon coach Dan Lanning, Oregon has had success on the recruiting trail and in the transfer portal, bringing in top prospects like Moore and Moore. Other contributors on the Ducks’ current roster came through the portal, including safety Dillon Thieneman, defensive lineman Bear Alexander, and offensive linemen Alex Harkey, Emmanuel Pregnon, and Isaiah World.

Texas Tech Red Raiders Joey McGuire college football playoff oregon ducks dan lanning phil knight NIL booster cody campbell

Oregon coach Dan Lanning, left, and James Madison coach Bob Chesney meet at midfield before the CFP game at Autzen Stadium in Eugene Dec. 20, 2025. | Chris Pietsch/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

While financial stability and resources are paramount in the current era of college football, Lanning has also created a culture at Oregon that is seemingly built to last. After the Ducks’ dominant win over James Madison in the first round of the CFP, Lanning and his team were quick to acknowledge that they can play better.

Oregon and Texas Tech will kickoff from Miami, Florida, in the Orange Bowl at 9 a.m. PT on New Year’s Day.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

65-year-old college football coach surges as candidate to replace Sherrone Moore at Michigan

Published

on


The last of the Power Four college football head coaching openings remains available at Michigan.

The Wolverines decided to part ways with head coach Sherrone Moore on Dec. 10 due to inappropriate relations with a staffer. Michigan had its sights set on Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer, Arizona State head coach Kenny Dillingham and Washington head coach Jedd Fisch.

Though nothing was made official, Fisch was the first to bow out of the race. Alabama’s College Football Playoff victory over Oklahoma eliminated DeBoer from the conversation, and Dillingham inked an extension with Arizona State on Saturday.

With all of those candidates off the board, one who has emerged in the next round is current Wolverines interim Biff Poggi. The interim said he had been interviewed for the job on multiple occasions this offseason.

Poggi began his college football coaching career as an assistant with stops at Brown, Temple and the Citadel in the late 1980s. He coached at his high school alma mater, The Gilman School, as an offensive coordinator and offensive line coach from 1988 to 1995. He spent the next 20 seasons as Gilman’s head coach before returning to the college ranks.

The now 65-year-old spent two prior stints with the Wolverines under Jim Harbaugh. He worked as an analyst with the 2016 team and served as Michigan’s associate head coach in 2021 and 2022.

Poggi was hired away from Michigan to succeed Will Healy as Charlotte’s next head coach in the 2023 offseason. The 49ers were 3-9 in Poggi’s first year at the helm, tying for eleventh place in the American Athletic Conference.

After a 3-7 start to the 2024 season, Charlotte decided to part ways with Poggi. The 49ers hired Tim Albin as his replacement for 2025.

This will not be the first time Poggi has served as the Wolverines’ interim head coach. He was the interim for Michigan’s games against Central Michigan and Nebraska.

The Wolverines accepted an invitation to the Citrus Bowl at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida. No. 18 Michigan (9-3, 7-2) will face No. 13 Texas (9-3, 6-2) on Dec. 31 (3 p.m. EST, ABC).

Biff Poggi at the 2025 Michigan spring football game.

Michigan associate head coach Biff Poggi watches a play during the first half of the spring game | Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Bob Chesney’s Immediate To-Do List at UCLA

Published

on


Get 50% off a BRO annual subscription!! Join the No. 1 independent source on UCLA sports and recruiting with one of our best offers!! Get unmatched insider Bruin coverage of UCLA football as it begins the Bob Chesney era for the equivalent of 16 cents a day, $1.10 a week, $5 a month and billed at just $60 for the entire year!! There is no promo code required for this offer, just HIT THIS LINK now, and you’ll be good to go!! Offer ends Monday, January 5th at 9 p.m!!

Bob Chesney was hired at UCLA at the beginning of December, with the official announcement released Dec. 6th.

He spent two whirlwind days — Dec. 8th-10th — in Westwood for his introductory press conference and a few other media moments. 

He then spent most of his time back in Harrisonburg, Virginia, preparing his James Madison team to face Oregon in the first round of the College Football Playoffs. 

On Saturday, the Dukes lost, valiantly, to Oregon, 51–34.  That ended the JMU season and Chesney’s coaching tenure there.

And the Bob Chesney era at UCLA begins. 

Of course, the coach was doing UCLA-related things for the past three weeks, but now he’ll be fully focused and engaged as UCLA’s new coach.

What to do, what to do?



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending