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Women's NCAA basketball

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Women's NCAA basketball

With the transfer portal closed and so many players already decided on their next destinations, which teams emerged from the most chaotic part of the offseason in the best shape?

Some coaches completely remade their programs with transfers. Others supplemented and targeted needs. Both approaches found their way onto this list of the top 10 winners of the transfer portal.

The biggest names who entered the portal and have picked their next schools — Ta’Niya Latson, Olivia Miles, Cotie McMahon, MiLaysia Fulwiley — had considerable influence on the rankings and where those teams landed.

Winning the transfer portal doesn’t necessarily translate into winning championships, but more than half of this year’s Sweet 16 consisted of teams that relied heavily on the play of transfers.

Which teams might find that success in 2026?

Janiah Barker, UCLA, F
Nya Robertson, SMU, G
Jersey Wolfenbarger, LSU, F

The Lady Vols added three high-end rotational players to a roster that was already set to have most of its core back. The depth and versatility Kim Caldwell has at her disposal will be even greater in 2026. Barker began her career in the SEC with two years at Texas A&M before moving on to the Bruins this season. She brings an element of power to Tennessee’s frontcourt and can be part of Caldwell’s 3-point shooting barrage. Robertson is an all-court scorer who should fit right into the Tennessee pressing system, and Wolfenbarger adds more rim protection and rebounding in a 6-foot-5 player who can run the floor.

Denim DeShields, Mississippi State, G
Desrae Kyles, Central Michigan, C
Latasha Lattimore, Virginia, F
Cotie McMahon, Ohio State, F
Jayla Murray, Wichita State, F
Kaitlin Peterson, UCF, G
Debreasha Powe, Mississippi State, G
Tianna Thompson, Georgia Tech, G

Just one month after the Rebels’ season ended in the Sweet 16 and five key players used up their eligibility, Ole Miss has been remade. Yolett McPhee-McCuin added seven players from the portal, a diversified group that should give Ole Miss another chance at a competitive SEC season and a deep NCAA tournament run. McMahon is the headliner and could pair with rising sophomore Sira Thienou to form a duo that excels on both ends of the floor. Lattimore improved dramatically in her one year at Virginia and could provide some inside scoring, while Murray and Peterson give the Rebels some perimeter offense.

Ta’Niya Latson, Florida State, G
Madina Okot, Mississippi State, C

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As good as the Gamecocks were this season in winning the SEC and reaching the NCAA championship game, they lacked in two areas: a reliable go-to scorer and an intimidating rim protector. Both of those needs were addressed in the portal. Losing MiLaysia Fulwiley stings, but Latson is not just an offensive upgrade; she is the most productive guard Dawn Staley has ever had in Columbia and led the nation in scoring in 2024-25. The 6-6 Okot showed great growth in her one year at Mississippi State and could be the kind of defensive disruptor that all of Staley’s best teams have had.

MiLaysia Fulwiley, South Carolina, G
Amiya Joyner, East Carolina, F
Kate Koval, Notre Dame, C

This ranking would have been even higher had the Tigers not also lost six players to the portal. LSU still comes out ahead, though. Fulwiley (2023) and Koval (2024) were top-15 recruits in their respective classes. With post players Sa’Myah Smith, Jersey Wolfenbarger and Aalyah Del Rosario departing, Koval will have plenty of space and minutes to live up to the billing she wasn’t able to in one year with the Irish. Fulwiley’s arrival has two benefits: She gives coach Kim Mulkey more dynamic guard play, and her departure from South Carolina weakens the depth of LSU’s chief rival. Joyner will have to adjust to SEC play but has been a proven scorer for three years in the AAC.

Kennedy Basham, Arizona State, C
Olivia Miles, Notre Dame, G
Taliyah Parker, Texas A&M, G
Veronica Sheffey, San Diego State, G
Clara Silva, Kentucky, C
Marta Suarez, California, F

The formula worked for Mark Campbell this season and he’s going for it again with another transfer portal haul. Miles gives this group a chance to match the 34-win, Elite Eight season the Horned Frogs just had. Her ball handling, passing, excellence in transition and improved shooting make her an ideal fit for Campbell’s system. At 6-3, Suarez is a big wing who is a willing shooter, and Sheffey should benefit greatly from playing with Miles. How much the 6-7 Silva improves from her backup role in one year at Kentucky will be key to TCU’s short- and long-term success.

Yarden Garzon, Indiana, G
Gracie Merkle, Penn State, C
Oluchi Okananwa, Duke, G

Since the advent of the transfer portal, no coach has consistently used it to remake her teams as quickly as Brenda Frese. She loses program mainstay Shyanne Sellers to the draft and immediately gets Garzon. Merkle enters the program just as Allie Kubek elects to leave. Sarah Te-Biasu has one successful season with the Terps from VCU and then in comes Okananwa to fill that spot. Garzon’s size at 6-3, plus her point guard and shooting skills, will make her the centerpiece of a Maryland offense that might be even better than the one that was just the second-highest scoring team in the Big Ten.

Faith Acker, Tarleton State, C
Achol Akot, UCF, F
Tyla Heard, Oral Roberts, G
Haleigh Timmer, South Dakota State, G
Amari Whiting, BYU, G

The Cowgirls were one of the season’s surprise teams in 2024-25, but Jacie Hoyt was left with some holes to fill. She did just that in the portal. Whiting and Timmer should fit well with Micah Gray and Stailee Heard in what is now a deep and talented backcourt, and Heard now also gets to play with her younger sister Tyla. Akot provides some missing size as well as a familiarity with the Big 12. All but Timmer in this group have multiple years of eligibility remaining.

Ella Brow, SMU, G
Yuting Deng, Auburn, G
Kiersten Johnson, Oklahoma, F
Kiera Pemberton, North Dakota, F
Taliah Scott, Auburn, G

Scott made the jump from Auburn to Baylor early in the transfer portal window and the Bears will be her third team in three years. If healthy, Scott is the firepower that Baylor needs after four of the Bears’ top five scorers graduated. Nicki Collen added another Auburn guard in Deng who might be the wild card to Baylor’s entire offseason. Deng showed flashes of brilliance as the Tigers’ point guard, but she played only 12 games after joining the team at midseason. Pemberton, one of the Summit League’s best players as a sophomore, is an unheralded but important portal acquisition and rounds out a complete rebuild of Baylor’s backcourt.

Skylar Jones, Arizona, G
Reyna Scott, Oklahoma, G
Laura Ziegler, Saint Joseph’s, F

Landing Ziegler elevated the Cardinals into this top 10. She is the inside scorer that Jeff Walz hasn’t had the past few seasons. The ACC will provide new challenges, but her production should eventually get near the level that produced 20 double-doubles with the Hawks this season. Jones should help offset the loss of leading scorer Jayda Curry. Scott will get more opportunity than was likely to come at Oklahoma and adds backcourt depth behind Imari Berry at the point and Tajianna Roberts on the wing.

Anaya Brown, Tennessee-Martin, F
Grace Hall, Penn State, F
Jzaniya Harriel, Stanford, G
Elise Hill, Tulsa, G
Sahnya Jah, Arizona, G
Zahra King, California, G
Paulina Paris, Arizona, G
Mailien Rolf, Arizona, G
Tyi Skinner, Arizona State, G
Ayanna Thompson, Ole Miss, F

SMU decided it needed to make some changes to better compete in the ACC and brought in Adia Barnes from Arizona to take over the program. And then she made changes of her own. No program gained more (10 players) and lost more (nine players) in the portal than the Mustangs. The result is a completely new team. Barnes will have former Wildcats in Jah, Paris and Rolf to lean on early next season. Harriel and King have spent a year in the ACC and can help teammates such as Brown, who led UT Martin in scoring and rebounding, and Hill adjust to the new surroundings.

Honorable mention: Illinois Fighting Illini, Virginia Cavaliers, Miami Hurricanes

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

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Cincinnati closed the 2025 season at 7–5 (5–4 Big 12) and will face Navy in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl on January 2, marking the Bearcats’ first bowl appearance since joining the Big 12 and since head coach Scott Satterfield took over in 2023.

Cincinnati rattled off seven straight wins midseason but dropped its final four games to close the regular slate before receiving the bowl invitation.

Quarterback Brendan Sorsby started 12 games for Cincinnati in 2025 and finished with 2,800 passing yards, 27 passing TDs, and five interceptions (61.6% completion, 155.15 passer rating), adding 100 carries for 580 rushing yards and nine rushing touchdowns. 

A Denton/Lake Dallas (Texas) product, Sorsby was a three-star recruit who signed with Indiana (redshirted 2022, started in 2023) before transferring to Cincinnati in 2024.

However, Sorsby notified Cincinnati and publicly confirmed on December 15 that he will test the transfer portal while awaiting an NFL draft grade.

Since then, multiple programs have reportedly shown interest, with some NIL offers rumored to approach $5 million, a figure that would rank among the highest in college football.

On3’s NIL tracker currently values Sorsby at approximately $2.4 million, placing him among the higher-valued quarterbacks in the college game.

On Friday, Fox Sports’ Laken Litman included Oregon among the programs expected to pursue a quarterback through the transfer portal and identified Sorsby as a “top quarterback from the portal,” along with Texas Tech, Indiana, and Oklahoma.

Oregon Ducks quarterback Dante Moore.

Oregon Ducks quarterback Dante Moore (5) warms up before the game against the James Madison Dukes | Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images

Oregon’s starter, Dante Moore, is widely regarded as a likely high NFL Draft selection and has not publicly committed to returning, stating that he has yet to make a final decision.

With a young and largely unproven group of quarterbacks behind him on the depth chart, speculation has been that Dan Lanning and his staff could pursue a transfer portal quarterback should Moore declare.

If Moore declares for the draft, Oregon would likely seek an experienced, pro-ready signal-caller capable of operating a tempo-based offense while sustaining recruiting and NIL momentum.

Sorsby’s size (6’3″, 235 pounds), proven starter experience, marketplace value, and dual-threat rushing ability, a trait Oregon has used successfully, would make him an immediate candidate.

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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Damon Wilson seeks denial for arbitration in NIL dispute with Georgia

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Updated Dec. 28, 2025, 1:33 p.m. ET

Former Georgia football defensive end Damon Wilson is asking an Athens-Clarke County Superior Court judge to deny Georgia athletics’ attempt to go to arbitration on what it contends is Wilson breaking an NIL contract when he entered the transfer portal.

Georgia sued Wilson, seeking $390,000 in liquidated damages after he agreed to an NIL deal with Classic City Collective and transferred weeks later. He played this season at Missouri where he was second-team All-SEC.



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Kyle Whittingham reveals if he had any hesitation on Michigan with controversy, investigation around program

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Michigan has been in hot water the past few years. In 2023, the football program was exposed for participating in an illegal sign-stealing scheme. This year, the school fired head coach Sherrone Moore after he was charged with felony third-degree home invasion and two misdemeanors.

Now, the school is thoroughly investigating its entire football program for any other signs of misconduct. Nonetheless, the program is seemingly heading in a new direction after hiring Kyle Whittingham to be its next head coach.

Whittingham is a well-respected figure in the college football community and was Utah‘s head coach from 2005-25. During his introductory press conference on Sunday, Whittingham revealed whether he hesitated to join the Wolverines due to the controversy surrounding Michigan.

“I didn’t have any hesitation. There’s some issues, missteps that are being taken care of, but the key is the players are solid,” Whittingham said. “The players here are rock-solid. None of those issues, none of those things that we’re dealing with involve the players. And to their credit, they just kept grinding and kept after it.

“I’m so impressed with that because there was a lot of distractions and a lot of adversity, I guess you can say. But, I got no doubt that everything’s going to be handled properly. We’ll see. I’m not knowledgeable enough and privy enough to exactly what’s going on in the details, but I’ve got full confidence that we’ll come out of this just fine.”

Michigan doesn’t have a talent problem. The team posted a 9-3 record in the regular season, including a 7-2 mark in conference play. The Wolverines are expected to return several key players as well, most notably quarterback Bryce Underwood.

Underwood is a freshman this season, but started in all 12 of Michigan’s regular-season games. While Underwood didn’t regularly dominate opponents, he showed promising flashes and will be pivotal to Michigan’s future success.

Kyle Whittingham isn’t allowing any administrative measures to affect his relationships with Michigan’s players. After all, he knows those relationships will be the key to a successful first year in Ann Arbor.

“My culture is going to be with the players. What I’m concerned with is the players,” Whittingham said. “I certainly know the general gist of what transpired, in this series of, I guess we’ll call them unfortunate events, but not really fazing me.

“The players are a great group of kids. They’re hungry. They got a lot of want-to in them and that’s where my focus is. I focus on coaching the team, and everything else be handled in due time and in due process.”



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Kyle Whittingham introduced as Michigan football coach

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Updated Dec. 28, 2025, 11:53 a.m. ET

Highlights from the press conference Sunday to introduce Kyle Whittingham as Michigan’s new head football coach:

➤On how someone from the outside will reset the culture: “My culture is going to be with the players.” Whittingham said he knows the “gist” of what transpired in the investigation and firing of former head coach Sherrone Moore, but says his focus is on the players and hopes the university and program will handle the rest.

➤On his conversation with starting quarterback Bryce Underwood: “Quarterbacks have to have that ‘it’ factor, and he has that ‘it’ factor.” Believes that Underwood has potential and can’t wait to work with him.



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The Clemson Insider

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CLEMSON — From time to time, we have heard Dabo Swinney say, “the proof is in the pudding.”

During Clemson’s run from 2015-’20 in the College Football Playoff, there was plenty of proof of Clemson having an elite football program. The argument was strong — 79 wins, 6 ACC Championships, 6 College Football Playoff appearances, 4 National Championship Game appearances and 2 National Championships.

However, the same argument can now be made that the Clemson Football program is no longer an elite program. And like Swinney says, “the proof is in the pudding.”

Since 2021, the Clemson Football Program has 47 wins, 2 ACC Championships and 1 CFP appearance and that is it.

Now, it is probably not fair to expect the Tigers to play for a national championship in each of the last five years like it did from 2015-’19. However, it is fair to expect the program to compete for one, and right now that is not really happening. And Dabo Swinney knows it.

You could see the look of despair on his face following Saturday’s embarrassing performance to Penn State in the Pinstripe Bowl. A game in which the Tigers did not look like a competent football team.

There was miscommunication. There was questionable play calling on both sides of the ball. There was a lack of execution. There were a lot of things that went wrong.

It was a disaster.

And yes, Clemson was playing without a lot of players, but so was Penn State, and the Nittany Lions were coached by an interim head coach, plus a staff full of coaches who were leaving for other programs after the game. And Penn State looked way more competent as a football team and program.

Do you want to know why Penn State dominated the Tigers in the second half of Saturday’s game at Yankee Stadium in New York, N.Y.? It had better depth than Clemson.

Why is that true?

Because Penn State, despite their struggles this season, has invested more in trying to build its roster through the transfer portal and NIL, way more than Clemson has at least.

And, as Swinney says, “the proof is in the pudding.”

When comparing the Clemson program in the pre-NIL-and-transfer-portal era to the current era, there is no comparison. The Tigers won 91.5 percent of their games in the previous five-year stretch. In the last five years since the transfer-portal and NIL took over college athletics, Clemson has won 70.1 percent of its games.

However, in the previous five-year stretch, when playing the top programs in college football, the Tigers were 14-4 (.778). In the last five seasons, they are 1-8 (.125), and that is the most telling part of all of this.

I can keep going. Clemson was 38-3 (.927) in ACC play from 2016-’20, and in the last five seasons, 29-11 (.723) which includes two 4-4 campaigns and two consecutive losses to Duke. If Duke had lost to Clemson in men’s basketball in consecutive games, I can promise you Jon Scheyer would be on the hot seat in Durham.

Guess what? After Saturday’s disappointing loss, which wrapped up an extremely disappointing season, the seat that Dabo Swinney has sat on for so long at Clemson is hot. If he does not get things turned around soon, it’s going to be too hot for him to sit on.



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