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Northwestern and NIL monetization is up next for Penn Charter’s Jake West

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LONG BEACH, Calif. — Penn Charter guard Jake West loves to put on a show.

He‘s already set to play Big Ten basketball, having signed with Northwestern. He has proved himself in the Philadelphia area that a Plymouth Meeting kid can play with toughness at a high level in the Catholic League with Archbishop Carroll, for the last two seasons in the Inter-Ac, and in AAU on the Nike EYBL circuit.

So when West was selected to participate in the Ballislife All-American Game, he flew out to Southern California to take part in festivities and ensure he didn‘t miss a chance to go up against some of the top players in the country he hadn‘t faced yet.

“I know every gym I go into I’ve got to put on a show because I have a brand and I have a name, so I have to go out there and show people,” West said Saturday. “That’s not hard for me because I’ve been doing that all my life. I know how good I am. I know how much hard work and confidence I have in myself, so going into every gym, I know to just play with that chip on my shoulder and prove to people I’m a great basketball player also.”

West is well aware that when he steps on the court, even on the West Coast, there‘s a decent chance the competition and the crowd have an idea of who he is from social media. Considering his 1.6 million followers on TikTok, they might have already seen him dance on the platform.

It’s the basketball court — not on social media — where the show takes place, though, according to West.

“I’m not just one-dimensional,” he said. “My personality and just being myself, I think people like that a lot. Just going out there and just having that basketball side but also having social media, so it’s multidimensional.

“That’s how I grew my social media. It wasn‘t really anything like trying to buy followers or anything like that. It just came authentic and original. It started as a joke. Me and my friends were messing around and one of my videos popped off. Kind of just ran with it. … I think that’s why people like me a lot because it’s not putting on a show.”

» READ MORE: TikTok basketball star Jake West has more than 1 million followers. He showed heart at a playground event.

West’s social media following is what has enabled him as a high school athlete to land a name, image, and likeness deal with Passes, a subscription-based platform that enables creators to monetize their fan followings. In announcing the partnership last month, Passes called West a “rising basketball and TikTok star.”

Passes launched partnerships last year with the University of Texas’ NIL collective and the University of Michigan to provide a platform for athletes to monetize fan engagement. Quarterback Quinn Ewers and new Eagles safety Andrew Mukuba, recent NFL draft picks out of Texas, listed monthly subscription prices of $25 and $5, respectively, for fans to gain access to their behind-the-scenes content.

West said Passes reached out to his agent with the entrepreneurial concept that he liked. The platform allows him to do more than just sell autographed basketballs. His Passes page charges $7.99 per month for content that includes breakdowns of his basketball moves and film, and images of his personal life. For $9.99 per month, there is unlimited direct messaging with West, whose page informs fans that it’s the only platform where he‘ll respond to DMs. Fans can also unlock content images and videos à la carte — his prom photos cost $5.

West’s TikTok account links to his Passes page as does his Instagram, which has 256,000 followers. “Out here in LA living my best life,” he posted on Instagram Stories on Friday with a link to his Passes page and an image of himself holding a bag that read “VIRAL” on the side.

“I post a lot on social media [across TikTok, Instagram, and X], but I don‘t post everything I do because I like to have a little bit of privacy,” West said. “Being able to just show certain people, giving them a kind of taste of how I came up and what I do now, I think that’s pretty cool that people see behind the scenes who I am.

“Maybe I’ll post something on social media where it’s just a selfie. But they’ll be able to see stuff [on Passes] that I don‘t usually post. It’s just giving people another door for them to see [through].”

In the Hall of Champions gym at Long Beach City College, West met with fans who posed for pictures with him and also showcased his skills among top players. The Ballislife All-American Game also featured Audenried star Shayla Smith in the girls’ division, as she recently became the top scorer in Philadelphia high school basketball history. The game two years ago brought together future Sixers teammates Justin Edwards, a top-ranked recruit coming out of Imhotep Charter, and Jared McCain.

McCain, who had about 2 million TikTok followers then and has more than doubled that amount since becoming a standout Duke and Sixers player, has been in touch with West via social media and provided advice. According to West, McCain sets a good example of “keeping the main thing the main thing.”

There was a time when the negative comments that come with social media stardom could get West down. He indicated that playing in basketball showcases helps him overcome it. At the Mamba League Invitational in Los Angeles last year in celebration of Kobe Bryant’s birthday, the public address announcer noticeably kept endearingly referring to West as Home Alone. Ballislife posted about it then. Eight months later, the basketball media company made West the first player named to its All-American Game roster with an Instagram clip of West’s fancy dribbling and pass at the Mamba event as an example of something fans “don‘t want to miss.”

“It doesn‘t really get to me anymore because I know how much hard work I put in,” West said of online negativity. “I’m going to school for free at one of the best schools in the country. Knowing that I have that self-confidence, I’m just staying on my path and not letting distractions get to me.”

Northwestern, which noted West’s TikTok following on his bio when announcing his signing in November, was excited to recruit a player that coach Chris Collins said has “great speed and quickness and shooting touch, while creating for others.”

West, who said he enjoyed the community feel at Penn Charter while becoming an all-state player, said he has built a relationship with Collins’ father, Basketball Hall of Famer Doug Collins, adding that they’ve had lunch a couple of times. Paul Romanczuk, Doug’s son-in-law and Chris’ brother-in-law, happens to coach basketball for Inter-Ac rival Malvern Prep.

“It just fit me really well — the family, the culture, the team,” West said of Northwestern. “I think the big thing is just the way they say they play with a chip on their shoulder. I think that just resonates with me as a player, just always going into the gym with that chip on my shoulder.

“The ball’s going to stop bouncing at one point, so for me to say I have a degree from Northwestern is a pretty good achievement.”

» READ MORE: Penn Charter’s Jake West relishes his role as a clutch shooter: ‘I know how confident I am’

What’s in store for West and his followers while he‘s a Northwestern player in the NIL era?

“Obviously you’ve got to keep the main thing the main thing — basketball,” West said. “Keep showing up, keep playing well, and that NIL stuff will follow.

“Just my brand, just continue to be myself, whether it’s posting once a week or five times a week. Whatever flows.”





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President Trump appears to take jab at Michigan football while talking about NIL

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. – The Michigan Wolverines football program has been in the news lately following the recent firing and arrest of former head coach Sherrone Moore.

Moore’s incident spread nationally, giving the University of Michigan unwanted press.

For some, the best time to kick a person is when they are down, as President Donald Trump appeared to take a jab at the football program while discussing NIL.

Trump strongly criticized name, image, and likeness (NIL) deals in college sports, calling the current state a “disaster.”

He criticized the large sums paid to college athletes, particularly in football, saying colleges cannot afford to pay quarterbacks millions of dollars straight out of high school.

“You can’t pay a quarterback $14 million to come out of high school. They don’t even know if he’s going to be a very good player,” Trump said.

The high school athlete Trump was allegedly talking about was true freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood.

When Michigan landed the Belleville native, it was reported that he would garner north of $10 million to don the maize and blue.

Trump described the NIL as “horrible for the Olympics” and “actually horrible for the players,” emphasizing that the financial model is unsustainable.

“They were training grounds for the Olympics,” Trump said. “A lot of these sports that were training so well would win gold medals because of it. Those sports don’t exist because they’re putting all their money into football.”

Trump continued: “The most successful colleges are losing money,” Trump said. “It’s a disaster for sports.”

He also warned that basketball and other sports are being affected as colleges funnel money into football.

“They will not be able to stop it,” Trump said. “If we give a guard $7 million, we’re going to win the national championship. But colleges cannot afford to pay those kinds of salaries.”

Trump suggested that a strong salary cap is necessary to prevent colleges from financially wiping themselves out.

“Something ought to be done. I’m willing to put the federal government behind it,” Trump said. “If it’s not done fast, you’re going to wipe out colleges, including ones that do well in football.”

Trump concluded by emphasizing the financial danger colleges face if the NIL system continues unchecked.

“Colleges cannot afford to play this game. It’s a very bad thing that’s happening,” Trump said.

Bryce Underwood

Underwood and the men in maize are gearing up for the Cheez-It Citrus Bowl, where they will take on the Texas Longhorns in Orlando, Florida, on New Year’s Eve at 3 p.m.

Michigan finished the regular season with a 9-3 record, but Underwood, who was named the fourth true freshman in program history to start at quarterback, struggled at times.

Underwood had 2,229 passing yards, nine touchdowns, and six interceptions during his first year as the starter.

He was expected to be the day-one starter since he flopped from LSU and committed to Michigan, but it was expected to be some growing pains as he got used to the college game.

Michigan relied on the rushing attack of Justice Haynes, Jordan Marshall, and Bryson Kuzdzal throughout the season.

But Underwood, who completed 179 of 293 passes, also used his legs, carrying the ball 74 times for 323 yards and five touchdowns.

He seemed to find a top target in fellow true freshman wide receiver Andrew Marsh, who broke out this season as well.

But with the new weapons coming in, in the class of 2026, alongside some transfer portal guys, Michigan, along with their new head coach, should take the next step next season.

Copyright 2025 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.



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Oregon State Announces Termination of Blueprint Sports Deal

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Oregon State University and NIL consulting firm Blueprint Sports have “mutually agreed” to terminate their partnership, two-and-a-half months after a Sportico report on the deal’s terms sparked a wave of backlash from Beavers fans. The effective date of the termination was Dec. 8.

In a statement Monday, an OSU spokesperson said Blueprint would retain a $280,000 management fee the school had already paid for 2025-26, but will cease making payments going forward. The school had previously agreed to pay management fees of $287,500 and $285,225 for the next two academic years.

Blueprint Sports, in turn, has agreed to transfer to the university all net proceeds it collected in its brief tenure serving as OSU’s NIL deal-sourcing facilitator, including 100% of net revenue from memberships and subscriptions it sold. That money will now be routed to the university’s revenue-sharing account, according to the university.

In response to a follow-up question from Sportico, an OSU spokesperson said gross proceeds of NIL funds “may be subject” to a 1.25% contract administration fee provided for in the agreement.

Blueprint CEO Rob Sine did not respond to a text message seeking comment.

The termination will also effectively dismantle the OSU-affiliated Dam Nation Collective, which Blueprint had paid six-figures to acquire as part of the broader arrangement. According to OSU, Dam Nation Collective no longer has any official affiliation with the university.

Monday’s announcement brings an end to one of the more fraught partnerships of the NIL era. Blueprint Sports, which had previously served as an operator and owner of dozens of NIL collectives, has sought to pivot in the post-House v. NCAA era by positioning itself as an on-the-ground consultant.

Sine, who previously worked as an executive at IMG, is attempting to implement a business model familiar in the college multimedia rights arena—where external consultancies establish operations within athletic departments.

In return for its services, Blueprint charged a fee designed to cover the cost of dedicated staffers, along with a share of the NIL revenue it helped generate or processed. The revenue-sharing aspect, first reported by Sportico, became the central point of dispute in Corvallis.

Under the agreement, Blueprint was slated to receive a fundraising bonus equal to the 75% of the NIL revenues it generated between $750,000 and $1.15 million. The school spokesperson confirmed that because the minimum threshold of $750,000 was not reached this year, Blueprint would not receive that bonus.

In May, Blueprint signed Maryland as its first consulting client. Sine later told Sportico the firm’s financial arrangements with the Terrapins were similar to those with Oregon State, although Maryland—at Blueprint’s beckoning—has declined to publicly disclose those details, even in response to open records requests. 

Oregon State, which had no previous affiliation with Blueprint, became its second consulting client in August, facilitated in part by the prior connection between OSU executive deputy athletic director Brent Blaylock and the company.

Blaylock previously worked as senior associate athletic director at Arizona, whose primary football collective, Desert Takeover, is operated by Blueprint.

At Oregon State, Blaylock served as the university’s primary point of contact for the Blueprint partnership and, ultimately, became its fall guy, resigning from his post in late October. Even after leaving, he continued to attract scrutiny and suspicion about whether he stood to personally benefit from the arrangement. Last week, the university wrapped up an internal investigation—initiated after an OSU fan podcast raised concerns—into personal LLCs owned by Blaylock and their connection to the Blueprint partnership. The school concluded there was none.

Although sports journalist John Canzano reported in late October that Blueprint and Oregon State were parting ways, neither the school nor company publicly confirmed as much until this week. Last month, Sportico sent a records request to OSU seeking any termination agreements or other documents that would modify the original Blueprint deal; the university said it anticipated providing responsive documents by Wednesday.

While Oregon State now appears set to move forward without an in-house NIL consultant, it remains to be seen whether Blueprint will continue on the same path or pivot again. Last week, the company posted job openings in Texas for a “manager/director of fan engagement & experiences” and a “client services & operations manager,” though the listings did not specify any particular university. 



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How do College Football Playoff teams compare financially? The gap can be tens of millions

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This year’s College Football Playoff reflects the adage that you get what you pay for.

The 12-team field includes the four teams with the largest football budgets, the nation’s two highest-paid coaches and three of the four highest-paid general managers. It also sets up a potential quarterfinal matchup where one head coach makes more than his competitor’s entire recent football budget.

A few standard financial disclaimers: Different programs run their numbers differently. Budgets change yearly, and some figures are murky or missing, especially regarding private schools and NIL. Even with those caveats, we can still get a broad sense of how the 12 CFP contenders stack up against one another financially.

The first-round Texas A&M-Miami game looks even bigger through this lens, doesn’t it?

Texas Tech’s figure is the lowest of the Power 4 teams here but about average in the Big 12; 11 of the conference’s members spent in the $30 million to $40 million range that year.

The gap between Alabama and Tulane is large, but maybe not this large. We’ll make our wonky explanation as brief as possible: We’re using the U.S. Department of Education database because it’s the only tool that includes every public and private school (except service academies). However, reporting lags behind, so the most complete numbers are from 2023-24. Alabama’s figures were exceptionally high that year, and Tulane’s figures were exceptionally low.

Fortunately, the Green Wave and Crimson Tide have both posted more recent federal reports. Alabama reported $78.5 million in expenses in 2024-25. Tulane reported $22.7 million, which was still behind South Florida ($33.4 million) in the American Conference.

Again, Tulane’s figure is abnormally low and ahead of only Kennesaw State ($8.3 million) nationally. But the Green Wave’s most recent report listed football revenue at $24 million. Ohio State’s football income is also much larger ($160.5 million in its latest report).

The No. 1 program was Texas at just north of $200 million. I’m sure that’ll make the Longhorns feel great knowing the Aggies are in the first round. Another rivalry aspect: Indiana ranked one spot below Purdue ($61.6 million).

Half the field ranked in the top 14 nationally in football revenue. That’s about the same as the numbers we ran last year, when six of the participants were in the top 11.

What CFP teams paid their coach

*Yes, we know Kiffin is no longer coaching the Rebels. 

Source: USA Today’s coaching database for the 2025 season

Because Tulane is a private school, its coaching salaries are not public. But Jon Sumrall’s Green Wave salary is believed to be in the $3 million range. That would put him near the top of the Group of 5, somewhere between UNLV’s Dan Mullen ($3.5 million) and South Florida’s Alex Golesh ($2.5 million). Sumrall’s base salary at his new Florida job is $7.45 million.

Kiffin’s Ole Miss replacement, Pete Golding, is set to earn $6.8 million for his first year.

Of the nine coaches who earned more than $10 million this year, four made the CFP. The five who didn’t: USC’s Lincoln Riley, Clemson’s Dabo Swinney, Texas’ Steve Sarkisian, LSU’s Brian Kelly and North Carolina’s Bill Belichick. Curt Cignetti and Mike Elko will join that tier with the new contracts they landed this season. Cignetti’s salary almost doubled from last year ($4.25 million), but he still seems like a bargain.

Joey McGuire and Bob Chesney were also great deals. McGuire’s salary was 10th in the Big 12 and about half what Colorado paid Deion Sanders (just under $9 million). Chesney was second to last in the Sun Belt, ahead of only Louisiana-Monroe’s Bryant Vincent.

Apples-to-apples comparisons of general managers are trickier because of how quickly front offices are evolving, plus their different titles and strategies. But 13 programs pay their general managers at least $500,000, according to USA Today’s database. Five of them are in the Playoff: Ohio State, Oregon, Alabama, Oklahoma and Texas Tech.

What we know about how much they pay players

After schools could start legally paying players directly on July 1, The Athletic submitted public records requests for revenue-sharing budgets and payrolls to more than 70 public schools. Oklahoma and Ohio State are among those that still have not responded. Records in some places, like Georgia and Oregon, are shielded by state laws. Texas A&M’s denial also cited an exemption against releasing information that “would harm its interests by providing an advantage to a competitor … or in a particular ongoing competitive situation.”

We can, however, offer a few concrete numbers.

James Madison’s revenue-sharing budget is a little more than $1 million, according to its payroll data. That figure is split among 34 players (whose names were redacted). Two players are making $65,000, and four are making $7,500 each. Four men’s basketball players were set to make more than the highest-paid football player.

Texas Tech’s roster cost about $25 million, general manager James Blanchard told The Athletic in the preseason. About $12 million went to 21 transfers. An internal document obtained through a public records request provides more insight. From July 2024 through May 2025, the Red Raiders’ NIL budget in football was $13.5 million. That’s up from $3.4 million the year before.

The Sooners’ NIL entity, 1Oklahoma, paid players $32 million in the 2024-25 fiscal year, according to OU board of regents documents from September. That figure isn’t broken down by sport.

Our best look at Tulane is from 2023. That year, the Fear the Wave Collective Group reported almost $955,000 in revenue on its federal tax returns. Its expenses were $774,000 but not itemized much beyond that.

Because most numbers aren’t public, we asked a pair of NIL agents to rank the teams based on player compensation. Both put Texas Tech, Miami and Texas A&M in their top four. Georgia and Alabama were in the bottom half of the bracket, and the last three were the same (in order): Oklahoma, Tulane and JMU.

An underDukes story

The $93 million revenue gap between first-round foes Oregon and JMU isn’t only the largest in this field. By our math, it’s the biggest disparity of any CFP matchup so far, including the four-team era.

Here’s a stunning way to contextualize it: What JMU paid its head coach and entire roster (just under $1.9 million) is less than Oregon paid its defensive coordinator, Tosh Lupoi ($2 million). Ducks head coach Dan Lanning’s $10.4 million salary is three times the Dukes’ annual football operating expenses ($3.2 million).

James Madison’s budget is competitive in the Sun Belt, but it’s not No. 1. That was Coastal Carolina ($17.3 million in football revenue).



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Transfer QB Sam Leavitt pursued by four elite college football programs

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Former Arizona State quarterback Sam Leavitt is no longer the only elite quarterback in the transfer portal. Leavitt made his intentions to leave ASU clear a few weeks ago, but over Sunday and Monday, several more top QBs have announced their intention to transfer. Now, several programs are already locking horns on the recruiting trail over these guys.

Cincinnati’s Brendan Sorsby, Florida’s DJ Lagway, and Nebraska’s Dylan Raiola all became major names to hit the transfer portal at the quarterback position over the start of this week. And as soon as news broke that those QBs would enter the portal, lists of potential desintations already came up. But after a quiet few days on the Sam Leavitt front, a new list of high-profile suitors was reported for the ASU star.

On3 posted on Monday afternoon that Pete Nakos had heard of the following list of schools as connected to Leavitt: “Among the early schools On3 is hearing about in his recruitment include Oregon, Indiana, Miami and LSU, sources tell On3,” Nakos wrote.

What’s interesting is that Leavitt’s fellow transfer quarterbacks shared somewhat similar lists of reported interest. Lagway had Miami and LSU on his list, Sorsby once attended Indiana and also had the Hoosiers on his first reported shortlist. Meanwhile, Dylan Raiola’s camp has indicated that he would love an Oregon offer.

So, already, there is some crossover between these quarterbacks — which schools are pursuing them and which schools they’re showing their own interest in. Buckle up, folks, because we are just getting started with the transfer portal and particularly the QB class.

Background, stats for Sam Leavitt

Arizona State quarterback Sam Leavitt against Texas in Peach Bowl

Arizona State quarterback Sam Leavitt against Texas in Peach Bowl | Michael Chow/The Republic / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

As for Leavitt, though, someone will be getting a tough and battle-tested leader more than capable at the power conference level. After all, Sam Leavitt did lead Arizona State to a Big 12 championship as a redshirt freshman in 2024 despite the Sun Devils being picked last place in the conference in the preseason media guide. 2025 featured a less successful follow-up season to ’24 for ASU while Leavitt unfortunately suffered a Lisfranc injury that took him out for the remainder of the season.

In 2024, Leavitt put up ,ore than 3,000 combined passing and rushing yards with 29 total touchdowns, leading Arizona State to an 11-3 record and competitive loss against Texas in a second-round loss after receiving a first round bye in the first-ever 12-team College Football Playoff. In seven starts this season, Sam Leavitt threw for 1,600 yards and 10 touchdowns.

Miami obviously had success with Carson Beck this year and is heading to the College Football Playoff. Indiana speaks for itself after the work it did in 2024 and 2025 and especially on the heels of a Fernando Mendoza Heisman. Plus, LSU offers Lane Kiffin and elite recruiting pipelines with skill players, while Oregon has perhaps the most impressive four-year run of quarterback play to boast. Those are some ELITE options for rising redshirt junior Sam Leavitt.

More on College Football HQ



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NIL shaping futures of Virginia Tech athletes

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BLACKSBURG, Va. (WDBJ) – Name, Image and Likeness, better known as NIL, has changed the college sports world since it was introduced in 2021.

But what is NIL?

In short, players can earn money from endorsements, social media, and other avenues while playing their sport.

Those players can use that money however they like, anything from paying for food outside the school cafeteria to setting up their financial futures.

These are things that until 2021 could cost a player his college eligibility and shut down an entire football program.

“I know a lot of guys working on retirement accounts right now, which is, it’s fantastic that before you even step out into the real world, if that’s where you go, you already have all this big of a foundation set up for you to move forward with life.”

Kyle Lowe began his journey at Virginia Tech in 2020 as a preferred walk on and worked his way into a scholarship, even earning the chance to wear honorary number 25 for the Hokies.

With the hard work came NIL opportunities, opportunities that would shape his future after football.

“I started out coming here not knowing what to do between a checking account and a savings account, and now I’m looking at different types of options investing wise,” He said. “I’ve had the opportunities to start investing in other aspects like mutual funds, all of these options.”

NIL did more then prepare him financially, it revealed his passion for teaching other financial literacy, inspiring him to pursue a career as a financial advisor.

“I started talking to guys in the locker room about different aspects of investing, and it kind of made me realize that this is something I really enjoy doing,” Lowe said. “I love talking to people I’m close with about investment opportunities. I love to see guys succeed financially, and that’s all stemming from NIL.”



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College football program loses 12 players to transfer portal after coaching change

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The coaching carousel and NCAA transfer portal; where worlds collide.

A record number of coaching changes across the FBS has impacted the number of players searching for new homes this offseason. The portal was going to fill up regardless, but firings and hirings around the country have sped up the process, creating some surprises along the way.

The Big Ten has been at the forefront of some major coaching decisions. Four programs in the conference (Michigan, Michigan State, Penn State, UCLA) fired their head coaches. Another job opened after Iowa State’s Matt Campbell jumped into the opening at Penn State.

In the case of the Michigan State Spartans, the program has struggled to find stability since Mark Dantonio retired following the 2019 campaign.

The Spartans are onto their third head coach in the last five years, bringing in former Northwestern head coach Pat Fitzgerald to replace the struggling Jonathan Smith.

Since moving on from Smith in late November, 12 players have announced plans to transfer from the program, including a few key names. Check out the full list below, per On3’s transfer tracker.

12 Players (And Counting) From Michigan State To Enter Transfer Portal

Name

Position

Class

Aidan Chiles

QB

Junior

Makhi Frazier

RB

Sophomore

Nick Marsh

WR

Sophomore

Gavin Broscious

OL

RS Junior

Tyler Gillison

EDGE

RS Junior

Marcellius Pulliam

LB

Junior

Darius Snow

LB

Sixth-Year Senior

Semaj Bridgeman

LB

RS Sophomore

Ade Willie

CB

Senior

Jeremiah Hughes

CB

Junior

Justin Denson Jr.

S

Sophomore

Tracy Revels

S

RS Sophomore

There are a few big losses to note for Michigan State, especially on the offensive side of the ball.

On Monday, junior quarterback Aidan Chiles became one of the latest players to depart from Michigan State. Chiles followed Smith from Oregon State and started for the majority of the last two seasons before losing his job late in 2025.

A two-time team captain, Chiles completed 192-of-323 passes for 2,415 yards with 13 touchdowns to 11 interceptions this season. He added 225 yards and 3 more scores on the ground.

Running back Makhi Frazier and wide receiver Nick Marsh are two other Spartans searching for a fresh start.

Frazier led the team in rushing this fall, accumulating 116 times for 520 yards and 2 touchdowns.

Marsh was the top pass-catcher on the Spartans, recording 59 catches for 662 yards and 6 touchdowns, earning honorable mention All-Big 10 honors. He’s totaled 1,311 yards and 9 scores in 23 games, meaning he should be a coveted option in the portal.

Fitzgerald will have his work cut out for him to rebuild Michigan State into a conference championship contender.

The Spartans have compiled a 31-37 overall record since 2020. 11 of those victories came in 2021, the only season in which Michigan State has finished with a winning record in that stretch.

Read more on College Football HQ

• College football OL with no sacks allowed enters NCAA transfer portal

• All-conference EDGE with 18 career sacks to enter college football transfer portal

• Paul Finebaum urges to cut specific programs from College Football Playoff

• Major college football program loses 15 players to transfer portal after 2025 season



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