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NIL

TOC Mailbag – Edition 1

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Hello TOC,

We would like to start off by thanking Izzo4POTUS for his contribution to this first edition of the TOC Mailbag. He is the only one who sent us questions. Now that you all see we are really doing this, please send your queries to theonlycolorseditors@gmail.com.

Now let’s get to I4P’s questions.

Izzo said: “We pay players – a lot more than most of you know and a lot less than what’s going on out there.” Most of us would really like to know what we pay in NIL and how it compares to other teams. Are we competitive or, like we fear, way behind the top teams? This also applies to football.

I think this is very difficult to find out exactly as NIL is not YET a centralized system. It is supposed to be if and when the House Settlement is finalized. We wrote about this earlier this month. Approval, however, appears to now be contingent on some sort of resolution on roster limits that were proposed as part of the settlement.

In addition to where, exactly, MSU stands in the NIL realm, other questions that we posed in the article earlier this month include:

  • Will the proposed NIL regulation system actually work if and when House is approved?
  • Will there actually be an enforcement mechanism and how much will teams test it?

As far as basketball NIL, CBS Sports released a list of supposed teams with $10 million and $8 million NIL budgets (MSU not listed in either):

~ $10 million: Arkansas, BYU, Duke, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisville, Michigan, North Carolina, St. John’s, Texas Tech

~ $8 million includes but is not exclusive to: Auburn, UConn, Florida, Houston, Kansas, Kansas State, Miami, Purdue, Tennessee, Texas, UCLA, USC, Villanova, Virginia

However, former Spartan Tre Holloman and hockey Captain Red Savage apparently made some top 10 list of NIL earners in February. Holloman made the list again in March and was joined by Jase Richardson.

Our best guess for basketball: while Michigan State is not in the top tier of NIL programs listed above and Izzo had to do “more with less” to get to the Elite 8 this year, MSU is not necessarily lagging way behind either.

Is there any plan of succession for basketball? Izzo is 70 and a phenomenal coach but as far as I can see he has no one in his coaching tree that I would want to take over the program. A lot of us are concerned MSU will fall off drastically in basketball like we have fallen off in football once Izzo retires.

A former athletic director once told me that any well-prepared AD is going to have a list of coaches stored somewhere in case they suddenly need to make a change. This applies to all sports, not just the marquee ones. Alan Haller was prepared earlier this year and quickly brought Kristen Kelsay back to East Lansing to coach the Volleyball team. He also had Jonathan Smith in place the day after the Spartans’ football season ended in 2023.

This case is pretty unique though, given Izzo’s long and remarkable tenure. Perhaps the second biggest question here, after “Who will replace Izzo?” is “How much influence will Izzo have in the decision?” Izzo did mention in a College Hoops Today podcast last year that he would consult with Spartan greats like Draymond Green, Mateen Cleaves, Steve Smith, and Magic Johnson regarding future program leadership, indicating that he will play a role in this decision.

There is no way of knowing, or at least we couldn’t find any evidence of, Izzo and Haller discussing a succession plan. However, it may be reasonable to assume that the most important thing to Izzo is maintaining the culture the program has developed over 30 years and Izzo might think that an internal hire, or someone from his coaching tree, is best equipped to do that.

Brian had an extensive article on Izzo’s coaching tree in December. We can’t run through the pros and cons of all the possibilities here but these might be among the most prominent names with ties to Izzo:

  • Tom Crean. The 59 year old made a Final Four at Marquette in 2003 and later won two Big Ten championships at Indiana. He also went to three Sweet 16’s with the Hoosiers but ended his tenure in Bloomington with an 18-16 record in 2016. Crean spent four years at Georgia but was unable to gain much traction there. He’s been out of coaching since 2022 after a 6-26 year with the Bulldogs.
  • Dwayne Stephens. The former Spartan player was on Izzo’s bench from 2003-2022 before taking over as the head coach at Western Michigan. So far, Stephens has managed a 32-63 (.337) record with the Broncos.
  • Doug Wojcik. Wojcik, 61, is in his second stint as an assistant with Izzo. He was named the 2024-2025 Big Ten assistant coach of the year. Wojcik went 140-92 as head coach at Tulsa from 2005-2012.
  • Mark Montgomery. The former Spartan player coached with Izzo from 2002-2011 and 2021-2024. He just completed his first year as head coach at Detroit Mercy with an 8-24 record. Montgomery went 124-170 (.422) as head coach at Northern Illinois from 2011-2021.
  • Stan Heath. Heath was an assistant at MSU from 1996-2001. He’s the current head coach at Eastern Michigan where he just completed his fourth year with a 16-16 record (9-9 in the MAC). Overall, Heath is 255-285 (.472) as a college head coach. His best year was his first year as a head coach when he led Kent State to the 2003 Elite 8.
  • Drew Valentine. Valentine, 33, has been the head coach at Loyola Chicago since 2021 where he has an 83-51 record. He was a Loyola assistant in 2017 when the Ramblers went on a historic run to the Final Four. Valentine was born in Lansing, played at Oakland, and was a GA at MSU for two seasons when his brother, Denzel, played for the Spartans.

NCAA Basketball: Atlantic 10 Conference Tournament Semifinal-Loyola Chicago vs VCU

Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

  • Saddi Washington. Washington, 49, just completed his first year on the MSU bench. He has no head coaching experience but does have a solid track record as a recruiter and big man developer. Jaxon Kohler, Carson Cooper, and Szymon Zapala all saw improvements in Washington’s first year on staff. Washington was an assistant at Oakland and Michigan prior to coming to MSU.

Michigan State v Northwestern

Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images

If Michigan State does decide to look beyond Izzo’s tree, that list might include Central Michigan head coach Andy Bronkema and Ohio State’s Jake Diebler.

Bronkema just took over at Central Michigan and has yet to coach a Division 1 game. He led Ferris State to a Division 2 national championship in 2018 and produced a .725 winning percentage over 12 years at Ferris. Bronkema’s background is somewhat similar to that of MSU women’s coach Robyn Fralick, who won a D2 national championship prior to moving to Bowling Green and then MSU.

Diebler, 38, was named interim head coach at OSU near the end of the 2024 season and went 6-2 in that capacity, which included a win over MSU. The Buckeyes went 17-15 this season (9-11 in conference) and missed the NCAA tournament.

Another name that’s come up, possibly because he ties to Michigan is Alabama’s Nate Oats. He has a nearly .700 winning percentage with the Tide, a 13-8 NCAA tournament record and took Alabama to the 2024 Final Four. Oats also coached at Romulus High for 11 seasons and won over 80% of his games. But there may be reasons to stay away from Oats as well.

Regardless of who succeeds Izzo’s, history shows mixed results when trying to follow a legend. Indiana has struggled to live up to the high standard of Bob Knight. More recently, Villanova has struggled post Jay Wright. However, Jon Scheyer seems to be doing just fine as Coach K’s successor at Duke. Matt Painter has had success at Purdue post Gene Keady. And, most importantly, Izzo has done pretty well following up Jud Heathcote.

Unfortunately, we just have a lot of speculation at this point. Izzo hasn’t indicated any sort of imminent end to his career and there do not seem to be any (publicly known) succession plans. So, let’s close with three educated guesses. Or at least hopefully they are educated.

  1. Izzo’s successor won’t be anyone on this list.
  2. If he is on this list, let’s go with Saddi Washington. It’s hard to see MSU going with someone with no head coaching experience and there may not be time for Washington to go someplace else to be a head coach for a while and then come back to MSU. However, there were a lot of reasons for MSU’s improvement this year, Jase Richardson of course among them, but Washington was also new to the team and probably had a hand in this resurgence. Maybe he takes on an increased role in the coming years to prepare for taking over. If not Washington, it seems reasonable to think Drew Valentine may be a strong contender.
  3. With what Izzo has done with the program, unless it is someone like Mark Few at Gonzaga or Scott Drew from Baylor, who still not be enough to please everyone, it may be tough for Haller to convince the fanbase that he got the right guy.

What has Nightingale done to turn the hockey program around so quickly from an after thought to the top ranked team for a lot of last year? Is he just a great coach or do we have more hockey NIL than most other programs?

This is a great question. It really comes down to a few things. Nightingale is an exceptional coach, strong character, good discipline and a really good human. His connections and involvement in hockey run pretty deep. He’s coached the USA National Development Team Under 17 which has clearly given him a look at incoming youth. This has aided in some of the players that have ended up at MSU. He’s now recently been named as a coach for Team USA in the World Championships. So, Nightingale being well connected and his strong coaching and development abilities are a big reason.

Hockey players are also wired different in comparison to football and basketball. Nightingale does a lot of stressing on the team and no individual is greater than the team. This is why the team comes out and stands in numeric order. He also stresses commitment and putting in the work and flat out tells players if you aren’t going to do those things, MSU is not the place for you. Having Augustine and Howard come back rather than turn pro for another season is just another testament to the team mentality.

MSU was also the first team to reach a full team partnership NIL deal with MuskOx. Every player is a part of the deal and gets in on the action. Again, stressing team, not an individual. Granted there may be more Augustine jerseys sold than others, there isn’t anyone left out without a piece of pie. It is unlikely that they are getting a lot but they do get something and whether MuskOx gets any ROI is another question. Speaking of ROI, hockey’s is much smaller than football and basketball and therefore do not eat up from other sports. This is just the first wave of something like this and MuskOx being owned by an MSU alum and hockey player themselves, it is partially to support something they love. I know I’ve seen the Instagram ad with Howard in it.

Ultimately I think Nightingale is the bigger reason but the fact that MSU has lawyers on board to negotiate NIL for hockey is something that I know other schools are playing catch up on. Once Nightingale brings a title in, really watch out. More players will want in with a chance to boost their NHL odds.


Hope you enjoyed the first edition of the TOC Mailbag. Don’t forget to email us your questions for next week at theonlycolorseditors@gmail.com.



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$2.6 million QB ranked as No. 1 transfer in college football

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Indiana capped a perfect 13–0 regular season by winning the Big Ten title, snapping a long skid against Ohio State and securing the No. 1 seed in the expanded College Football Playoff.

Under second-year head coach Curt Cignetti (24–2 at Indiana), the Hoosiers authored a program-defining season that thrust the program firmly into the national spotlight.

In his first year at Indiana after transferring from Cal, quarterback Fernando Mendoza completed 226-of-316 passes (71.5%) for 2,980 yards, 33 passing touchdowns and six interceptions, while adding 240 rushing yards and six rushing scores.

He posted the second-highest passer rating among starting quarterbacks (181.4) and ranked fifth nationally in completion rate, sweeping major awards including the Heisman Trophy, Maxwell Award, Davey O’Brien Award, AP Player of the Year, and Big Ten Offensive and Quarterback of the Year honors.

Following his historic season, On3’s Pete Nakos ranked Mendoza as the top transfer addition of the 2025 season, pointing to his immediate, program-altering impact in Indiana’s breakout campaign.

Indiana Hoosiers quarterback Fernando Mendoza.

Indiana Hoosiers quarterback Fernando Mendoza (15) | Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

A Christopher Columbus High School (Miami, FL) product, Mendoza entered the Power Five ranks as a three-star recruit and the No. 140 quarterback in the 2022 class according to 247Sports.

He steadily developed in California, highlighted by a career-best 3,004 passing yards, 16 touchdowns and six interceptions in 2024, before transferring to Indiana in December 2024.

That foundation set the stage for a 2025 breakout that elevated him into arguably the sport’s top quarterback and one of college football’s most valuable NIL assets, with an estimated valuation of $2.6 million.

Several national outlets and mock-draft models also project Mendoza as a potential top-10 pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.

As the No. 1 seed in the College Football Playoff, Indiana is scheduled to face No. 9 Alabama in the Rose Bowl quarterfinal on January 1.

A win would send the Hoosiers to the CFP semifinals (Jan. 8–9) and potentially the national championship game on Jan. 19, a run that would further solidify Mendoza’s rapid rise.

Read More at College Football HQ

  • 25-touchdown RB shares farewell note after entering college football transfer portal

  • College Football Playoff team loses All-Conference player to transfer portal

  • College football team loses three All-Americans to transfer portal

  • $2.4 million QB connected to major college football program in transfer portal



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Tom Izzo on Pro Players Getting College Eligibility: ‘Shame’ on NCAA, Coaches

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Longtime Michigan State coach Tom Izzo isn’t mincing words when it comes to the recent surge of former NBA G League players and international pros getting the green light to play college basketball around the country. 

On Christmas Eve, Baylor received a commitment from James Nnaji, the 31st overall pick in the 2023 NBA Draft. The 21-year-old Nnaji, a 7-foot center from Nigeria, was granted immediate eligibility as a midseason addition and will have four years of eligibility remaining, according to USA Today.

“I thought I’d seen the worst — then Christmas came,” Izzo said, per USA Today. “What happened just topped it. … Now we’re taking guys that were drafted in the NBA and everything? … If that’s what we’re going to, shame on the NCAA. Shame on the coaches, too, but shame on the NCAA because coaches are gonna do what they gotta do, I guess, but the NCAA is the one. 

“Those people on those committees that are making those decisions to allow something so ridiculous. … I just don’t agree with it.”

Nnaji never actually played in the NBA or the G League, but he did appear in five NBA Summer League Games for the New York Knicks in July and played professionally overseas last season in Spain and Türkiye. 

This isn’t the first time a situation like Nnaji’s has presented itself. In October, the NCAA ruled to allow guard London Johnson, 21, to join Louisville next year with two seasons of eligibility despite him having played three years in the G League.

Izzo revealed that he received a text from “a very famous, great coach” that criticized these fluid eligibility rules. “What we’ve done in the NCAA has been an absolute travesty to me,” the message read, according to USA Today.

Izzo went on to predict that, if polled, “maybe 5-10%” of D-I coaches would agree with these changes.

“If that’s the way it is, and if I have to make those adjustments, then let’s make them,” he added. “Let’s go pro if that’s the way it is, but let’s not be half you-know-what. 

“Because there’s no such thing as being half that.”

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Michigan NIL collective Champions Circle hits ground running after Kyle Whittingham hire

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The coaching search is over, but the work is just beginning. Michigan Wolverines football has a new leader in Kyle Whittingham, the 22nd head coach in program history, and he’s already hard at work in Orlando as the Maize and Blue prepare for the Dec. 31 Citrus Bowl against Texas.

Michigan’s official NIL collective, Champions Circle, has launched its ‘Membership 2.0,’ an opportunity for fans to receive “new benefits, new opportunities to engage with players and coaches and new ways to support those who wear the Maize and Blue.”

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“As Coach Whittingham takes the helm to lead the next chapter in Michigan football history, one thing is clear: success in today’s college football landscape requires support from each and every fan,” the collective shared in a press release.

By becoming a Champions Circle member, Michigan fans are “directly supporting NIL opportunities that help:

• Empower our new coach to establish the next great era of Michigan Football
• Build championship-level depth at every position
• Prevent rivals from poaching our top talent

The First 100 New Yearly Victors & Valiant Members will receive a football signed by Whittingham and freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood AND an invitation to a first-of-its-kind “Meet Coach Whittingham” webinar in 2026.

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Here are details on membership tiers for Champions Circle:

The 66-year-old Whittingham is already in Orlando connecting with Michigan staff, players and their families. The Wolverines have one game remaining but are also focused on next season.

Whittingham was introduced to Michigan fans on social media Saturday evening and will hold his introductory press conference Sunday morning at 11 o’clock from the team hotel.



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Super-sized conferences are breaking college football

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Makena Wong, Photo Editor, The University of Miami football team takes the field for its game against Bethune-Cookman University on Saturday, Sept. 6, 2025.

The dawn of NIL has forced a realignment of college conferences, putting pressure on the structure of conference championships. When you look at the Power Four football conferences (ACC, Big 10, Big 12, and SEC), each have expanded somewhere between 16 and 18 members. 

The past two seasons have demonstrated that the current conference championship format is not equipped to corral the super-sized power conferences. Deciding the top teams in the country is left to too many qualitative metrics (strength of schedule, head to head, and common opponents).

Something needs to change.

Texas A&M’s path to CFP

Looking at the SEC, Texas A&M had a historic 11-1 regular season, good for one of the best records in the nation. However it featured in-conference wins against seven out of the nine worst teams in the SEC; and every team they beat had a conference win percentage of .500 or worse.

The Aggies season would end in disappointing fashion as they lost twice in a row, against in-state rival the Texas Longhorns 27-17 and in the first round of the College Football Playoff against the Miami Hurricanes 10-3.

A&M arguably only faced three impressive teams all season (Miami, Notre Dame, Texas), and its only win of the three came in the form of a controversial one-point victory over ND in Week 2.

TAMU is one of multiple glaring examples of how massive conferences allow teams to waltz unscathed through their conferences thanks to scheduling issues.

UM Junior Running back Mark Fletcher Jr. breaks through the Texas A&M defense on Dec. 20. // Jake Sperling.

Is a return to Divisions the solution?

It would seem creating divisions within the conferences should be closely considered. This would stoke more fierce rivalries among inter-division opponents, ensuring more even matchups and a clearer cut conference championship.

Looking to the past, all of the Power Four conferences had divisions but were eliminated across  the last decade — a division format made less sense with smaller membership.

In 2024, the Big 12 (with 16 members) had a four-way tie at the top of the conference between Arizona State, Iowa State, BYU, and Colorado, who all finished with a 7-2 record. By the end Arizona State and Iowa State faced off due to tiebreakers, but many thought that BYU was more deserving than Iowa State.

This season in the ACC (with 17 members), Virginia guaranteed their spot after a 7-1 conference record, but there was a 5-way tie for second place between Duke, Miami, Georgia Tech, SMU, and Pitt. As Miami fans well know, the unranked 7-5 Duke Blue Devils were awarded the second spot over a 10-2 Miami team ranked No. 12 in the country at the time.

Applying the Divisions to the ACC

When looking at the ACC, the conference has 17 members, which forces teams to play more or less games than one another. All of this would be solved if another team joined the conference.

But let’s concentrate on how the current structure of the ACC would address this issue. There would be three main things taken into consideration: rivalries, location, and talent. It might look something like this:

ACC North: Syracuse, BC, Pitt, Louisville, VT, Virginia, Clemson and Georgia Tech

ACC South: Miami, FSU, SMU, Cal, Stanford, Duke, UNC, NC State and Wake Forest

For the divisions, it would be fair to re-evaluate every five years whether the two divisions are evenly split. Currently the competition would be tight; each division would be well balanced. 

The proposed system would also allow scheduling and travel to be much simpler; every division team plays one another, the north would have 7 conference games while the south would have 8. At the end of the season, the two representatives from each division would face-off for the championship.

As some guidelines here are the five hypothetical tiebreaker rules: 

1 – Conference Record

Conference records always take importance over every guideline but would have more weight as every team faces each other.

2 – Head to Head

Due to everyone facing off this should solve for tiebreakers except for three (or more) way ties.

3 – Overall Record

In the case of Miami – Duke the tiebreaker was Win Percentage of Conference opponents. In the context of a 7-5 record, the overall record should have more weight.

4 – National Ranking (AP poll / CFP)

Ideally the conference championship should be settled by this point but if it goes this far National Ranking should be considered in ensuring that the best teams compete for the conference championship.

Will realignment fix everything?

Fans want more entertaining matches and teams want ease of scheduling and travel.

The answer is simple — either return to smaller conferences or implement divisions to make conferences matter.

In the end, no matter the solution, it won’t be perfect. Sports fanatics will always say that there will be a better format, but the least we can do is learn from past mistakes.

Photo Credit: @CanesFootball via X // Miami Hurricanes true freshman receiver Malachi Toney breaks a tackle against Pitt on Nov. 29, 2025.



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College football team loses three All-Americans to transfer portal

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North Texas capped a program-best 12–2 season with a New Mexico Bowl win, but quickly faced major roster turnover as quarterback Drew Mestemaker, running back Caleb Hawkins, and wide receiver Wyatt Young all entered the NCAA transfer portal.

Mestemaker broke out as a redshirt freshman in 2025, leading the FBS with 4,379 passing yards and 34 touchdowns following Saturday’s 49–47 victory over San Diego State.

He began his North Texas career as a walk-on and earned conference offensive honors and national attention before deciding to test the portal.

Hawkins, the Mean Green’s freshman back, finished 2025 as one of the nation’s most productive rushers, totaling 1,434 rushing yards and leading the FBS with 25 rushing touchdowns, highlighted by a 198-yard, three-touchdown bowl performance to cap the year.

Young, meanwhile, paced UNT’s receiving corps with 1,264 yards and 10 touchdowns (ranking among the top three nationally) and earned first-team All-American and All-Conference honors.

Losing the nation’s top passer, the FBS’s most productive freshman runner, and a top-three WR in one offseason represents an immediate top-to-bottom offensive reset for North Texas. 

North Texas Mean Green quarterback Drew Mestemaker.

North Texas Mean Green quarterback Drew Mestemaker (17) scrambles out of the pocket against the Tulane Green Wave | Stephen Lew-Imagn Images

For the transfer market, all three are premium, high-demand assets — Mestemaker as a starting QB target for Power-Five teams, Hawkins as a feature back with breakout tape, and Young as a proven perimeter threat.

Mestemaker has already been linked to Oklahoma State (connection via coach Eric Morris), Indiana, Texas Tech, and Oregon, while Hawkins and Young are expected to draw attention from both Group-of-Five and Power-Five programs.

Hawkins, a three-star recruit from North Rock Creek High School (Shawnee, Oklahoma) in the 2025 class, also held offers from Emporia State and Central Oklahoma before committing to North Texas in September 2024.

Young, a three-star prospect from Katy Tompkins High School (Katy, Texas) in the 2024 class, signed with the Mean Green over offers from Rice, Arizona, Memphis, Air Force, and others.

Three top underclass producers hitting the transfer portal at once underscores how quickly the transfer era can reshape a program, leaving Group of Five teams that develop stars grappling with retention issues and the financial pressures of NIL.

Read More at College Football HQ

  • No. 1 college football team linked to 1,700-yard RB in transfer portal

  • Top 3 transfer portal landing spots for 4,000-yard quarterback Drew Mestemaker

  • College football team loses starting QB to NCAA transfer portal

  • Major college football program surges as candidate for 4,000-yard QB



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College football team loses starting QB to NCAA transfer portal

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In its first year under head coach Scott Abell, Rice finished the 2025 season 5–7 overall (2–6 in the American Conference) but still earned an Armed Forces Bowl invite, where it will face Texas State (6–6) on January 2 in Fort Worth, Texas.

Across 12 games in 2025, Jenkins completed 119 of 172 passes (69.2%) for 1,025 yards with nine touchdowns against two interceptions, while also carrying the ball 151 times for 531 yards and five scores.

That momentum may be short-lived, however, as Rivals’ Hayes Fawcett reported on Saturday that Jenkins plans to enter the NCAA transfer portal, adding another domino to an already loaded quarterback transfer market.

A Houston, Texas product who signed with Rice in February 2023, Jenkins worked his way into the program as a multi-role quarterback/athlete, appearing in limited action early in his career before being named the 2025 starter.

In his first full year as the starting quarterback, Jenkins earned American Conference All-Academic recognition.

Prior to signing with Rice, he starred at Alief Taylor (Houston), where he threw for 4,735 yards and 46 touchdowns against just six interceptions in 22 varsity games and earned All-District 23-6A honors as a junior.

Jenkins was 247Sports’ No. 93 quarterback in the 2023 class, committing to Rice over offers from Alcorn State, East Texas A&M, Jackson State, and Lamar. 

Rice Owls quarterback Chase Jenkins.

Rice Owls quarterback Chase Jenkins (4) throws the ball during the third quarter against the Houston Cougars at Rice Stadium. | Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

With a 69.1% career completion rate and proven mobility, Jenkins profiles as a strong fit for spread-option or run-oriented Group-of-Five offenses that prioritize efficiency and quarterback movement.

He could appeal to programs seeking an experienced starter while also offering value as depth at the Power-Five level, with his Texas roots strengthening his regional appeal.

Some notable programs that have reportedly shown interest in adding a quarterback through the transfer portal include Florida State, Clemson, North Texas, TCU, Virginia Tech, and Cincinnati.

Read More at College Football HQ

  • $2.4 million QB emerges as transfer portal candidate for SEC program

  • Major college football program ‘expected to hire’ 66-year-old head coach

  • College Football Playoff team loses player to transfer portal

  • College Football Playoff team loses starting QB to transfer portal





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