Former NC State RB Hollywood Smothers’ commitment to Alabama did not last long. He’s flipped to Texas.
NIL
Charles Barkley Has Harsh Words for Auburn Tigers on NIL
Not all former college basketball stars are fans of the current state of college sports when it comes to name, image, and likeness.
NBA TV analyst Charles Barkley can be added to that list. While he’s a fervent supporter of his alma mater, the Auburn Tigers men’s basketball team, he certainly won’t be contributing to their name, image, and likeness funds.
Barkley spoke about his love for Auburn in an appearance on a podcast with Outkick.com, but he balked at the notion of giving money to his college team.
“I’d do anything for Auburn, within reason,” Barkley said. “But I’m not gonna give Auburn millions of dollars so we can be good in football or basketball. That doesn’t help my life in any capacity. And let me tell you something: Black and broke does not work in any state. Guam, the District of Columbia, and all 50 states. I never want to be poor and Black. That does not work.”
Barkley elaborated that he would prefer to give his money to HBCU programs and support charitable efforts in his hometown—sending funds to those he believes need it.
“I just gave $10 million dollars to HBCU’s, that stuff is way more important to me,” Barkley said. “I just gave a couple of million dollars to ‘Blight‘, in my hometown of Birmingham, to tear down old houses and rebuild houses. That stuff is way more important to me than joining the cesspool that is college athletics. We’re such a sh–ty country, Dan. We’ve ruined college athletics, and I don’t wanna even get in that cesspool.”
That seems to be a consensus opinion, particularly of former college stars who didn’t traverse the NIL landscape and who have watched their college basketball teams get blown up by the season in the transfer portal.
“This notion that you have to come up with tens of millions of dollars to pay kids to play basketball and have them be free agents every year and transfer to another school and get more money every year. Like, we don’t even get to do that in the NBA. Can you imagine if players in the NBA got to be a free agent every year?”
Barkley clarified that he’s not opposed to players being paid for NIL, but that there’s no return on investment at all for those giving to multimillion players who may only be there for one season.
Barkley spoke about both the immediate problems and the bigger picture when it comes to asking fans and alumni to donate to NIL funds.
They may not last that long on the field or court. Off it, there are larger causes to give money to than the pockets of star college athletes.
NIL
2,300-yard transfer QB strongly linked to three major college football programs
Three elite college football programs are battling for one of the most productive quarterbacks in the transfer portal. A redshirt freshman signal-caller has emerged as a primary target for several major schools as the offseason quarterback carousel continues to spin.
The 6-foot, 186-pound dual-threat passer is coming off a breakout season at the FCS level and is now looking to make a jump to the Power Four, according to reporting from On3’s Pete Nakos and Steve Wiltfong.
One SEC head coach quickly pivoted to this rising talent after a previous target from Washington opted to remain in Seattle for the 2026 season. The program has been aggressive in its pursuit, hosting the quarterback for a visit that began on Wednesday and concludes this weekend.
The Radford, Virginia native also visited a Big Ten contender earlier in the week, creating a high-stakes recruiting battle between two heavy hitters.
The decision comes at a critical time for all schools involved as they look to solidify their rosters for the 2026 campaign. The prospect brings a dynamic skill set that has clearly intrigued coaches at the highest level. He accounted for nearly 3,000 yards of total offense last season, proving he can stress defenses with both his arm and his legs.
Landen Clark transfer news updates, visit schedule
Elon quarterback Landen Clark’s production suggests he is ready for a bigger stage. The redshirt freshman threw for 2,321 yards and 18 touchdowns while adding another 614 yards and 11 scores on the ground. His ability to create plays was on full display against Western Carolina, when he passed for 305 yards and two touchdowns.
Those traits appeal to offensive-minded coaches like LSU’s Lane Kiffin, who is looking to add explosive playmakers to his quarterback room.
It wouldn’t be the first time Kiffin plucked a big-time quarterback talent from a little-known school, just as he did ahead of this season when landing Trinidad Chambliss from Division II Ferris State.

Michigan is also making a strong push under new leadership. The Wolverines are looking to stabilize their offense following the departure of Sherrone Moore and the arrival of Kyle Whittingham.
Clark’s visit to Ann Arbor gave him a chance to see how he would fit into their revamped system. Meanwhile, James Madison remains in the mix as a program that can offer immediate playing time closer to home.
Named a Third Team Freshman All-American by Phil Steele, Clark is expected to announce his decision by Sunday evening.
Read more on College Football HQ
NIL
Texas Proves It Is NOT NIL Broke By Shoving Alabama In A Locker

Texas has the financial resources to sign any college football player it wants. The Longhorns are making a statement by spending millions of dollars in NIL money to help build the roster around Arch Manning.
It also proves they are not broke.
Two of the biggest moves in the transfer portal directly contradict a recent narrative surrounding the college football program in Austin. There is plenty of cash!
Texas will not overpay for unproven contributors.
The University of Texas have seen 23 outgoing players enter the transfer portal this cycle. That is a little bit less than 25% of the 105-player roster.
NIL money is the driving force behind a large number of these departures.
Many Longhorns players are going to the financial administrators with requests for a pay raise, or threatening to enter the transfer portal based on their projected roles rather than proven on-field performance. Players and agents view the program as flush with cash so they want their piece of the pie. That initially created a lot of tension because Steve Sarkisian and his staff are unwilling to overpay for backups and/or unproven contributors. Their demands are unrealistic.
Some fans of college football, especially those who root for rival programs, learned of this targeted approach by Texas and used it as a reason to point and laugh. They thought the Longhorns didn’t have enough money to pay their players after flaunting their money for recruits with a fleet of Lamborghinis.
That is far from the truth, as we learned on Sunday.
Alabama didn’t offer enough NIL money for Cam Coleman or Hollywood Smothers.
This whole narrative about Texas being broke largely stemmed from Christian Clark. The rising sophomore running back initially announced his decision to enter the transfer portal after getting 55 carries for the Longhorns in 2025. He may or may not return to Austin.
Either way, Texas will now split the bulk of carries between Raleek Brown and Hollywood Smothers. Clark is an afterthought. If he decides to leave, good riddance.
Smothers was the top-ranked running back in the transfer portal. The former four-star recruit ran for 939 yards and six touchdowns on 160 carries at N.C. State last season.
Smothers initially committed to Alabama last week. He later flipped to Texas on Sunday.
The Longhorns shoved the Crimson Tide into a locker. They offered him more money.
Smothers’ decision was announced just a few minutes after Cam Coleman. Coleman was the second-ranked wide receiver in the recruiting Class of 2024 as a five-star prospect. He caught 93 passes for 1,306 yards and 13 touchdowns in two years at Auburn. He committed to Texas on Sunday.
Coleman initially chose Auburn over Alabama out of high school. The Crimson Tide felt good about its chances of getting him in the boat the second time around. And then the Longhorns shoved them into a locker. It was a huge get for Arch Manning.
All of this goes to say that, no, Texas is not broke. Steve Sarkisian is choosing to spend his money on proven talent instead of guys that have not yet seen the field.
It actually sounds like Alabama is the one that doesn’t want to spend big money…
NIL
Longtime UCLA football lineman Siale Taupaki transfers to Penn State
Jan. 10, 2026, 2:40 p.m. PT
D’Anton Lynn and Ikaika Malloe added another familiar face to the Penn State defense by signing veteran defensive tackle Siale Taupaki on Thursday. It’s the second UCLA Bruin defender Penn State has added on their defensive line, along with Keanu Williams.
Taupaki has seen the college football game evolve, as he pre-dates the NIL era. Taupaki got to UCLA in 2019, starting as a defensive lineman, converting to the offensive line, and now has returned to the defensive side of the ball.
Lynn and Malloe have both coached the UCLA defense in recent years, now the two coaches are joining forces again at Penn State under head coach Matt Campbell. With adding the pair of experienced defenders in Taupaki and Williams, gives the Nittany Lions some built-in experience under Lynn’s defensive philosophy.
Over his seven seasons and 40 games (seven as an offensive lineman) as a UCLA Bruin, Taupaki recorded 38 tackles, two sacks and recovered one fumble. Nittany Lion Wire writer Christopher Sheppard has more on Taupaki and his fit with UCLA.
“Taupaki may have one of the craziest stories in all of college football, starting his career in 2019 as a redshirt. 2020 saw him play seven games, meaning an extra year of eligibility earned due to COVID. However, the next two years saw him only appear in two games, both in 2022. That earned him yet another redshirt season, although it is unclear when he received it,” Sheppard wrote. “Taupaki is now the 27th addition to a loaded Penn State transfer portal class and is now the sixth non-former Iowa State signee. He joins a group of D-line transfers that includes former teammate Keanu Williams, Oklahoma State transfer Armstrong Nnodim, Iowa State transfer Alijah Carnell, and just recently, Utah defensive tackle Dallas Vakalahi.”
If 2026 does end up being Taupaki’s final college season, it’ll take a postseason matchup for him to face UCLA as an opponent for the first time, with Penn State not on UCLA’s 2026 regular season schedule.
NIL
Transfer portal tracker: Former Auburn WR Cam Coleman commits to Texas; QB Dylan Raiola set to visit Oregon
The college football transfer portal has now entered its second week.
On Sunday, former Auburn wide receiver Cam Coleman — the top-ranked receiver in the portal — committed to transfer to Texas, choosing the Longhorns over Texas Tech and Texas A&M.
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Many quarterbacks across the country have already expressed their intentions to enter the transfer portal or announced they will be looking for a new school.
That includes Nebraska QB Dylan Raiola, who is set to visit Oregon, according to On3. Raiola’s recruitment has played out slowly and quietly so far, but could ramp up with the Ducks out of the College Football Playoff.
Oregon QB Dante Moore hasn’t made his NFL Draft decision yet. It’s plausible that Raiola could even redshirt a seasons behind Moore if he decides to go to Oregon and Moore returns to to school. Raiola has two seasons of eligibility remaining.
If Moore goes to the NFL Draft, Raiola would presumably be Oregon’s starting QB in 2026.
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Former Florida QB DJ Lagway, is reportedly still talking to other schools, according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel, even after verbally committing to Baylor on Thursday. Ole Miss is one of the schools with reported interest.
There’s more clarity with Washington QB Demond Williams, who announced he’s returning to the school two days after trying to enter the transfer portal. His return to UW ended a drama-filled couple of days.
Like Raiola, Arizona State QB Sam Leavitt is yet to make a decision. He’s visiting Miami over the weekend.
We’ll be keeping track of all the notable names who are changing schools in the space below as college football prepares for its biggest transfer frenzy yet. The transfer portal will close on Jan. 16.
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Nick Bromberg
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Yahoo Sports Staff
Former Auburn wide receiver Cam Coleman announced he has committed to transfer to the Texas Longhorns.
Coleman was the top player in On3’s transfer portal rankings and was courted by Texas Tech, Texas A&M and Alabama, in addition to the Longhorns. He caught 56 passes for 708 yards and five touchdowns with Auburn last season.
Coleman will give Texas quarterback Arch Manning another top weapon next season alongside receiver Ryan Wingo.
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Nick Bromberg
Knight is a former five-star recruit and was the No. 25 player in the class of 2025.
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Andy Backstrom
Former Nebraska quarterback Dylan Raiola is expected to visit Oregon, according to On3’s Pete Nakos.
Current Ducks quarterback Dante Moore told reporters after a Peach Bowl College Football Playoff semifinal loss Friday night that he’s still deciding between returning to Oregon and declaring for the NFL Draft.
Moore has been projected as a top-two quarterback in this year’s draft.
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Yahoo Sports Staff
Offensive tackle Lance Heard is headed to Kentucky, which will be his third difference SEC team after he previously played for LSU and Tennessee.
Heard is the No. 2 tackle in On3’s transfer portal rankings and No. 20 player overall. He’s entering his senior season after starting 23 total games at left tackle for the Vols across the last two seasons.
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Yahoo Sports Staff
Tennessee has reportedly landed former Penn State edge rusher Chaz Coleman, who is the No. 3 player on On3’s transfer portal rankings and No. 1 edge rusher.
It’s a big get for the Vols, who are getting Coleman coming off a strong freshman season in which he tallied eight tackles, three TFL, one sack, one forced fumble, and two fumble recoveries in nine games.
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Nick Bromberg
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Nick Bromberg
Johnson will play his seventh season of college football in 2026. He appeared in just five games across two seasons at North Carolina after suffering a severe leg injury in Week 1 of the 2024 season. He played in 18 games across two seasons at LSU before transferring to Texas A&M and playing in 12 games across two seasons with the Aggies.
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Nick Bromberg
Tuggle is heading back to the SEC after just one year at Purdue. He transferred to the Boilermakers after his freshman season at Georgia and was a bright spot on an otherwise abysmal Purdue team. He had 34 catches for 500 yards and four scores as a sophomore in 2025.
Now he’ll team with LaNorris Sellers after the Gamecocks QB said that he would return in 2026.
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Nick Bromberg
According to On3, Lane Kiffin flew to Knoxville on Friday night in an attempt to woo Sam Leavitt.
The former Arizona State quarterback was there on a visit to Tennessee. He left the state to visit Miami this weekend.
LSU is still looking for a transfer portal quarterback after Cincinnati’s Brendan Sorsby committed to Texas Tech and Washington’s Demond Williams Jr. said he was staying in Seattle.
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Andy Backstrom
Now that Ole Miss quarterback Trinidad Chambliss has been denied a sixth year of eligibility by the NCAA, there could be an opening under center for the Rebels.
Former Florida quarterback DJ Lagway is taking a visit to Oxford this weekend, according to On3’s Pete Nakos and Hayes Fawcett.
Lagway was previously reported to be committed to Baylor, but he hasn’t signed a deal yet and is still weighing his options, per ESPN’s Pete Thamel, who also reported Lagway’s upcoming visit to Ole Miss.
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Tarohn Finley
Alabama quarterback Austin Mack will return to the Crimson Tide next season the school’s NIL collective announced.
Mack has spent the last three seasons with head coach Kalen DeBoer and two with offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb, who was his offensive coordinator in 2023 at Washington and in 2025 at Alabama.
With Ty Simpson declaring for the draft, Mack is expected to compete with freshman quarterback Keelon Russell for the starting job next season. Russell’s return to the Tide was announced on Friday too.
Mack came in for an injured Simpson in the Rose Bowl and was 11-16 for 103 yards in Alabama’s blowout loss.
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Yahoo Sports Staff
Former Florida QB DJ Lagway was reported to be committed to Baylor, but he hasn’t signed a deal yet and is planning to take more visits, per ESPN’s Pete Thamel.
Ole Miss is reported to be interested after Trinidad Chambliss was denied an extra year of eligibility with the Rebels.
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Yahoo Sports Staff
The Buckeyes are reportedly hanging onto breakout star running back Bo Jackson, who was rumored to be mulling the transfer portal coming off a strong freshman season.
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Yahoo Sports Staff
Cornerback DJ McKinney played two years for Colorado after spending the previous two seasons with Oklahoma State. He’s tallied 135 tackles, 18 pass breakups and 4 interception across his college career.
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Tarohn Finley
Auburn transfer Cam Coleman might play for a different team in the Iron Bowl next season. Coleman is visiting Alabama on Friday, according to On3’s Pete Nakos.
Coleman had 56 catches for 708 yards and 5 touchdowns last season. Texas Tech, Texas, Texas A&M and Alabama are reportedly the strongest contenders for Coleman.
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Tarohn Finley
Utah transfer defensive lineman Jonah Lea’ea will join head coach Kyle Whittingham and edge John Henry Daley at Michigan, according to On3’s Hayes Fawcett.
Last season, Lea’ea started all 12 regular-season games and finished with 38 tackles, 1 sack and 1 forced fumble.
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Nick Bromberg
Auburn is now losing its top two receivers from 2025.
With Cam Coleman already looking for a new team, leading receiver Eric Singleton Jr. has now entered the transfer portal. Singleton had a team-high 58 catches for 534 yards and three touchdowns in 2025.
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Yahoo Sports Staff
The Wolverines will reportedly be without one of their top running backs next season as Justice Haynes plans to enter the transfer portal.
The junior only spent one year in Ann Arbor, but averaged 7.1 yards per carry while running for 857 yards and 10 TDs in 2025. He had previously spent 2 seasons with Alabama.
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Nick Bromberg
Vanderbilt’s Tre Richardson is heading north. He committed to Louisville, according to On3.
Louisville will be Richardson’s fourth school. He played a year of junior college football before spending a season in Division II before transferring to Vandy. He had 46 grabs for 806 yards and seven scores for the Commodores in 2025.
NIL
Former 5-star QB sparks transfer portal battle between two college football programs
The college football offseason received a massive jolt of energy regarding a high-profile quarterback decision. A highly touted former five-star recruit officially placed his name into the transfer portal this week to spark an immediate recruiting battle. This move creates a significant shift in the landscape for several top-tier programs looking to upgrade their roster talent immediately.
He spent his freshman campaign serving as a backup for a prominent West Coast power before opting to explore other options. The decision comes after the incumbent starter announced plans to return for another season in Los Angeles. This talented passer possesses four years of eligibility and offers immediate upside for teams in need of a dynamic playmaker to lead their offense.
Elite programs are already lining up to secure his services for the upcoming campaign. Two major conference rivals have quickly emerged as the primary contenders for his commitment.
One suitor aims to get the prospect on campus immediately, while the other navigates its own complex quarterback room situation involving potential NFL departures.
Lane Kiffin and LSU battle Oregon for Husan Longstreet
Former USC quarterback Husan Longstreet is the player at the center of this developing saga. The Corona, California, native entered the portal Thursday after playing behind Jayden Maiava during his freshman season.
Maiava intends to return to the Trojans next year, which prompted the move. Longstreet finished his brief USC tenure with 103 passing yards and one touchdown across four appearances.
LSU appears to be the aggressor in this recruitment under new head coach Lane Kiffin. The Tigers are working to get Longstreet on campus before any other program. Kiffin has a clear need at center with Garrett Nussmeier ineligible and backup Michael Van Buren transferring to USF. The head coach also has a track record of developing transfers like Jaxson Dart and Trinidad Chambliss.

Longstreet has family roots in Louisiana, which could aid the Tigers. He was also intrigued by Kiffin during his high school recruitment when the coach was at Ole Miss. Kiffin has fully embraced a villain persona this offseason by attempting to flip Washington quarterback Demond Williams days after he signed a lucrative deal. That pursuit may have burned a bridge with fellow transfer target Sam Leavitt.
Oregon remains a major threat to land the talented passer despite the aggressive push from Baton Rouge. The Ducks join LSU as teams to watch closely, according to On3.

Head coach Dan Lanning is currently awaiting an NFL Draft decision from Dante Moore while also remaining in the mix for Dylan Raiola. Oregon has successfully used the portal to sign three consecutive starting quarterbacks, including Bo Nix and Dillon Gabriel.
The decision for Longstreet could hinge on immediate playing time and offensive fit. Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein is departing to become the head coach at Kentucky which adds a variable to the Ducks’ pitch. USC will move forward with veteran Sam Huard as the primary backup to Maiava. Huard is playing for his fourth school in six years and recently threw a key pass on a fake punt against Northwestern.
Read more on College Football HQ
NIL
The unsung winner, loser of the 2025-26 college football season
Just like any other college football season, this one has had a variety of stories both good and bad, but not all of them are created equal.
Yeah, we’ve heard about guys like Indiana (the favorite to win the natty) and Penn State (who took the biggest tumble from preseason hype), but what about those with telling performances that flew under the radar, the ones that haven’t been picked apart by the media? They deserve their own shares of the spotlight, and that’s precisely what they’ll be given today.
But the plan is not to simply sit here and list everyone that’s starting their offseason on a remotely good/bad note; rather, it’s to acknowledge the team that’s had the most encouraging run and the one that’s had the most discouraging…at least among those that virtually no one’s seeming to notice. With that said, the choice for our big winner in this equation should be rather agreeable.
Winner: Wake Forest
If you know anything about Wake Forest’s history in the football space, you know that the Demon Deacons usually have to take whatever they can get, but that wasn’t the case this season, as they finished with an objectively sound record of 9-4.
For a program so underhanded to do so well in these greedy times we live in is impressive on its own, but it involving both a road win over a ranked Virginia and a convincing bowl win over an SEC team (Mississippi State)—all while under the management of a first-year head coach in Jake Dickert—sounds borderline unbelievable.
That latter win made the 2025-26 campaign just the fourth to ever see the Deacs reach the nine-win threshold, and it also guaranteeing that the SEC wouldn’t amass a winning record against the ACC didn’t exactly kill any vibes either.
Loser: Nebraska
This selection may come off as weaker, as the Nebraska Cornhuskers are far removed from the days of their mediocrity being a surprise, but to me? This season was the first where they truly felt irredeemable.
Last season’s Huskers weren’t great, but by making and winning a bowl game against a Power 4 opponent to go positive, it appeared as if a page towards relevance was at least beginning to turn. When combining that with head coach Matt Rhule’s fame for his miracle-working usually paying off in his third year with a team (which was this season), some might have argued that 2025 should’ve been a breakthrough…yet here we are.
Despite starting its 2025 slate 7-3, Nebraska entered the Las Vegas Bowl 7-5 after suffering back-to-back blowouts against a struggling, interim-led Penn State, and rival Iowa. As for how things went in Vegas, the Cornhuskers got decimated again, this time against Utah, another team that had recently lost a legendary head coach. That left them with the same 7-6 tally they put up in ‘24, quantifying the lack of improvement.
Especially when other members of the Big Ten are successfully proving their conference to now be college football’s best, few endings are as disheartening as that one was for Nebraska—and just when you thought the gods of this great sport couldn’t test Huskers fans any harder.
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