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ACC spring overreactions

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ACC spring overreactions

College Football Playoff National Championship - Alabama versus Clemson
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Spring practice is in the books across college football, and now that the spring transfer portal window has closed we can take a look at each team with a refreshed idea of what has happened and what to expect moving forward. With more than 100 days until the opening kickoff of the year, there will be plenty of time for sensible, level-headed analysis regarding each team’s potential and expectations. 

But this is not that time. 

No, this is the time for overreacting. With no more practice updates or roster changes for at least three months this is a penalty-free time to go way over the top with reactions to what has transpired since the end of last season. We have gone through each of the 17 ACC teams to find one talking point worthy of an overreaction, sometimes focusing on coaching changes or the transfer portal, but in some cases taking stock of where a team is positioned in terms of the conference or national picture. 

The Eagles are better off without Thomas Castellanos: Bill O’Brien decided to move on from the multi-year starter at quarterback nine games into the year, naming Grayson James the starter for the conclusion of the season. Castellanos followed that up by announcing his intentions to move on, and he landed at Florida State in the winter portal window. 

O’Brien took over late in the offseason calendar as a result of Jeff Hafley’s exit to the NFL in late January, so to not only guide the team to a 7-6 debut but do so with awkward timing and a midseason quarterback change was impressive. If O’Brien is locked in on James as QB1, that’s the move that must give Boston College the best chance to succeed in 2025. 

Cal

Remain calm! Everything is going as planned! Justin Wilcox addressed some staff needs in the offseason by adding former Boise State and Auburn coach Bryan Harsin as offensive coordinator and former Hawaii and Washington State coach Nick Rolovich as a senior offensive assistant. 

The school also brought on Ron Rivera as the general manager of the football program. That collection of star power could suggest that the Bears have big things cooking in Berkeley, but there’s been off-field drama with program mega-boosters wanting the organization flow chart to run through Rivera. 

The spring transfer portal window brought further doubt to the idea of a breakout season. Star running back Jaydn Ott and Jaivian Thomas, the leading rusher from 2024, were among the nearly two dozen Cal players to hit the transfer portal after spring practice. Rivera has indicated confidence in some of the new faces that fans will gravitate towards in their absence, but between the winter and spring portal windows, we’ve got a roster overhaul that will put Cal’s braintrust to the test when it comes to getting all the right pieces in place for the upcoming season.  

Dabo is recharged for a run at his third ring: There hasn’t been this much certified hype around an upcoming Clemson football season since Trevor Lawrence was on campus. Part of that buzz is Cade Klubnik’s finish to last season, but he’s far from the only advantage the Tigers have going into 2025. This is a team that could see as many as a half-dozen players taken in the early rounds of the 2026 NFL Draft. Klubnik is among those stars in the spotlight, but so too are defensive linemen like T.J. Parker and Peter Woods

Yes — when Clemson was winning national titles, it did so with dynamic quarterback play, but it was also also elite up front on defense. Throw in the offseason addition of Tom Allen as defensive coordinator, and it’s easy to see why folks are fired up to see this team run down the hill in 2025. 

Best team in the state is flying under the radar: Manny Diaz went 3-0 against the in-state ACC foes last season, and even with some significant losses from last year’s nine-win team, the Blue Devils are expected to be in the top-half of the conference standings again in 2025. Duke has one of the splashier quarterback portal additions in the conference with Darian Mensah coming over from Tulane, and his commitment speaks to the investment the football program is getting when it comes to building a competitive roster. 

There are important pieces to replace, especially at wide receiver, if Duke is going to match last year’s win total. Butetween internal development and new additions, the expectation is that the Blue Devils will be well-positioned to defend that state championship against North Carolina, NC State and Wake Forest

Florida State

The Seminoles have a path back to ACC title contention: Wholesale changes to the depth chart and coaching staff have taken Mike Norvell back to a rebuilding status for the second time in Tallahassee. But the success of 2023 and the lessons learned from 2024 should make the climb a bit easier as he looks to guide Florida State back to ACC title contention. The marriage of new quarterback Thomas Castellanos and new offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn seems like a fit in terms of style, and new defensive coordinator Tony White should shore up a group that performed well below expectations a season ago.

No one is mentioning Florida State as a title contender now, but a quick glance at the ACC schedule shows just two games (Clemson, Miami) where the Seminoles will need to play above their talent level to win. If Florida State can knock off one of those rivals and run table against their other six conference foes, it could be in the hunt for a spot in Charlotte at the end of the year.  

The Yellow Jackets have the ACC’s best QB depth: Haynes King’s return to guaranteed another season of dynamic and gritty quarterback play for the Yellow Jackets, but it also sets up the offense to have a true transition season. Backup Aaron Philo could see his workload increase in his second year with the program. And while it’s not always the case, both King and Philo spent the spring engaged in what seems to be healthy competition. They sat together to answer questions after the spring game and are focused on being prepared for whatever they are called to do when the season arrives. 

There are other ACC teams that could see a big step back if QB1 has to miss time, but Georgia Tech not only has a good option if it has to go to QB2, but could utilize both players to help their chances for success in key situations.   

Season of major parity for college football in 2025? Deep contender field looks to break glass ceiling

Chris Hummer

Season of major parity for college football in 2025? Deep contender field looks to break glass ceiling

Miller Moss can play his way into a Tyler Shough-like draft spot: The debut of Miller Moss for most college football fans was stepping in for Caleb Williams in a bowl game and leading USC to victory with a record-setting six passing touchdowns. The opponent in that game was Louisville, and clearly the staff did not forget that game; Moss was recruited to join the Cardinals in the winter portal window. 

Now, Moss hopes that his time with Jeff Brohm can do what it did for Tyler Shough and boost his stock in the eyes of the NFL community. Louisville’s offense under Brohm has sent each quarterback to the NFL — Jack Plummer went undrafted before being signed by the Carolina Panthers — and each quarterback threw for at least 3,000 yards and 21 touchdowns before moving on to the pros. This is an offense that can highlight some of Moss’ best skills and, hopefully, limit the turnover issues that contributed to him getting replaced in Los Angeles.      

Miami

No ACC team will be better in the trenches: It’s not a lazy narrative if its backed up by results: the way Miami has recruited and developed the lines of scrimmage under Mario Cristobal backs up everything about the assumptions of how the former Hurricane wanted to build his version of the title-winning program. Miami has potential first-round picks on both the offensive (Francis Mauigoa) and defense (Reuben Bain) lines, along with depth that continues to get reinforced with nearly every high school recruiting class and transfer portal window. 

Winning the ACC — which is absolutely the goal in 2025 — will require a healthy Carson Beck and defensive improvements in the wake of a coordinator change, but Miami will be able to overwhelm many of its conference opponents thanks to being bigger, stronger and better in the trenches.  

North Carolina

Bill Belichick does seem to have a type: No, we aren’t talking about that, this is a football type. The total roster overhaul in Chapel Hill has been largely overlooked in the conversation around Belichick’s first season as a college coach, but to look at the portal is to acknowledge that the staff seems to be backing up a stated effort to make the team bigger in 2025. General Manager Michael Lombardi has talked about building a team that’s good in the “middle of the field” and finding players who are bigger and longer to win along the lines of scrimmage. 

There are 37 players who committed to UNC between the winter and spring portal windows, according to 247Sports. Fifteen heck in at 6-foot-4 or taller, while nine of them are at least 300 pounds. Belichick is not breaking any new ground with this measurement-forward approach to roster construction, but it at least shows some connection between what the statements and the actions of this new staff that could give us an idea of what, you know, the actual football team will look like in 2025.  

NC State

Coaching changes can be a net positive: After two years of mixed results, Dave Doeren moved on from Robert Anae as offensive coordinator and promoted quarterbacks coach Kurt Roper. That could be a significant and positive change for NC State as it keeps some continuity for emerging star quarterback CJ Bailey while allowing a different vision to take over the offense as a whole. 

And while Tony Gibson was a standout defensive coordinator that helped establish an identity and develop multiple NFL Draft picks across his six seasons with the program, last year’s defense saw a significant step back in performance. It’s possible that a hard reset — something that can come with the outside hire of D.J. Eliot — is just what the group needs to get back to the program standard. 

Pitt

Desmond Reid will be a household name by the end of 2025: Pitt running back Desmond Reid knows what can happen in the jump from Year 1 to Year 2 in Kade Bell’s offense. Reid’s time with the Pitt offensive coordinator goes back to Western Carolina, where he saw how the continued development of the up-tempo attack got even faster and more dangerous once the pieces in place understood the system. 

Now, he gets to be a part of another Year 2 jump. If there’s a production increase, Reid will be in the mix for the Doak Walker Award by the end of the year. Reid finished last season tied for fifth nationally averaging 154.9 all-purpose yards per game, and the only players with better all-purpose numbers (Ashton Jeanty, Cam Skattebo, Omarion Hampton, RJ Harvey) were selected in the first four rounds of the 2025 NFL Draft. Pitt has continuity at quarterback, coordinator and with its star running back, so claims for even more offensive improvement deserve our attention. 

The Mustangs did not “peak” with 2024 success: The Mustangs achieved all this success, making the ACC title game and the College Football Playoff, but they have another level that can be reached — potentially this season. SMU was three points away from a 12-0 regular season, all while undergoing an early season quarterback change and surviving some close calls in conference play. 

Once SMU starts flying around and playing with confidence it’s an avalanche, but wins against Louisville and Duke required some late-game heroics, and an eventual 10-point win against Boston College was a field goal game until the final minutes. The new kid made quite a statement with this debut, but there is an opportunity to grow into full bully with the pieces back and new portal additions for 2025.    

Frank Reich is more than a steadying presence; he can lead the Cardinal to wins: General Manager Andrew Luck and Stanford’s leadership faced a tough “what to do” decision after the firing of Troy Taylor in late March. They could have promoted an existing staff member, hoping to secure as much continuity as possible, but they knew the program was facing a massive exodus to the transfer portal as a result of the firing. 

Bringing in Reich is better for the locker room than thrusting one of Taylor’s assistants into the head coaching duties. Reich can be a shock to the system that can prevent the attitude of a lost season from the start. It’s a roster that still lost some real star power, but the hope is that Reich gets the best out of the group that remained and the season isn’t a total loss.

Profit-loss ratio from spring portal window puts Orange in a good spot: Syracuse lost its leading returning receiver in a very public manner. Trebor Pena hit the transfer portal and coach Fran Brown explained, vaguely, a differing point of view on NIL valuations. What Pena did or did not expect to get from Syracuse has not been confirmed, but his move to Penn State suggests that retention might not have been cheap. 

So what did Syracuse do? Well, if we judge the program’s spring portal activity, it seems as though Syracuse was able to allocate resources to address multiple positions in the wake of Pena’s exit. Among the group is two power-conference defensive linemen, three power-conference offensive linemen, and another quality addition to the quarterback room with Steve Angeli from Notre Dame. Syracuse might have lost some of that high-end individual skill of Pena, but they also got deeper and better at some key positions in the spring window. 

It’s bowl or bust: Year 3 had some real steps forward for coach Tony Elliott. It included the most wins (five) of his tenure, his best conference record (3-5) and his first win against a ranked opponent, taking down then-No. 18 Pitt on the road in early November. But what Elliott has yet to do is lead Virginia into a bowl game, something that the program enjoyed in three consecutive seasons under Bronco Mendenhall from 2017-19. 

Virginia clearly understands the urgency of the moment. This is not a roster that is asking fans to wait for development or be patient, something made evident by the 30 incoming transfers across both portal windows. That’s tied for the second-largest transfer class in the ACC among schools that did not have a coaching change. Among the group are some instant-impact additions like quarterback Chandler Morris. It might be an uphill battle winning enough coin-flip games against other bowl-hungry programs in the league, but if Elliott’s evaluation and portal work pays off, there’s a path to the postseason. 

With a strong NFL Draft, why didn’t the Hokies have more wins in 2024? This overreaction is tied less to what we learned on the field this spring and more to we saw from Virginia Tech the 2025 NFL Draft. The Hokies had five players selected, the most for the program since 2018 and second only to Miami among ACC schools. It was a veteran group that helped quickly restore order to a program that was lost, but ultimately the record over the last two restorative years is a cumulative 13-13. When Virginia Tech won last year, it was often overwhelming — it beat all six opponents by at least two touchdowns — but it also went 0-5 in one-score games.  

Regression suggests the Hokies might set for some better bounces this fall, but there is an exodus of talent that puts that theory into question. It’s a big year for QB Kyron Drones, new offensive coordinator Philip Montgomery, and especially head coach Brent Pry. If the group is ready to take advantage of some mathematically-suggested better bounces, it could be a continuation in the restoration project in Blacksburg.      

Wake Forest

Don’t be surprised if it’s a two-quarterback system to start the year: One of the primary storylines around Wake Forest for Year 1 of the Jake Dickert era is the battle between former Charlotte quarterback Deshawn Purdie and former South Carolina-Auburn-Oregon quarterback Robby Ashford. Purdie has good arm strength but the coaching staff wants him to tighten up on decision making, while Ashford’s athleticism and ability to run make him a dynamic playmaker at the position. 

Dickert did not finish spring looking to squeeze either transfer quarterback into “their offense,” but instead is still looking at how to build an offense around their respective skill sets. Fall camp will be where things get really put to the test, but this is an ACC quarterback battle that could easily bleed into the start of the season.

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No. 1 transfer portal QB clearly linked to two major college football programs

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Arizona State finished the 2025 season 8–5 (6–3 Big 12) and closed with a narrow 42–39 Sun Bowl loss to Duke, capping a year that followed the program’s breakthrough 2024 run, which included an 11–3 finish and a College Football Playoff appearance.

Head coach Kenny Dillingham returned an offense built around quarterback Sam Leavitt, who appeared in just seven games before a lingering foot/leg injury required season-ending surgery on October 31, abruptly ending his second season in Tempe.

Through those seven games, he completed 145-of-239 passes (60.7%) for 1,628 passing yards, 10 TDs, and three INTs (129.2 passer rating) and added 73 rushes for 306 yards and five rushing TDs.

Leavitt originally committed to Michigan State in 2023 as a four-star prospect and the No. 21 quarterback in the 2023 class per the 247Sports Composite, spending one season with the Spartans before transferring to Arizona State ahead of the 2024 campaign.

He quickly established himself as the Sun Devils’ starter, throwing for 2,885 yards with 24 touchdowns and six interceptions during his first full season in 2024, adding 443 rushing yards and five rushing scores.

However, Leavitt informed Arizona State of his intention to enter the transfer portal on December 15 and is widely viewed as the top quarterback expected to hit the market when the window opens, classified as a redshirt sophomore with two seasons of eligibility remaining.

On Wednesday, On3 analyst J.D. PicKell identified Oregon and LSU as the two programs generating the most “buzz” around Leavitt, framing the decision as a balance between a homecoming and scheme fit at Oregon and an SEC, development-first opportunity under Lane Kiffin at LSU.

“The intel from Pete Nakos is pointing to two horses being in the race for Sam Leavitt right now, and that’s Oregon and LSU… I personally am under the belief that Dante Moore will go back to Oregon for another season, which then points to Sam Leavitt ending up at LSU. That to me makes the most sense from a fit perspective.”

“He (Leavitt) thrived in an RPO offense at Arizona State. You don’t need to reinvent the wheel. You don’t need to go prove something drastically different and go seek out an NFL offense. Just go play against better competition in the SEC. Go play for a guy in Lane Kiffin who has specialized in bringing in transfer players and elevating them at a really high level.”

“If I’m Lane Kiffin, this is my number one guy. I am calling him as soon as the transfer portal opens for business,” PicKell added.

 LSU new head coach Lane Kiffin.

LSU head coach Lane Kiffin, left, and LSU athletic director Verge Ausberry greet each other | Matthew Hinton-Imagn Images

Leavitt is an Oregon native and would be returning to a program that runs a high-tempo, RPO/shot-yardage offense that can incorporate his dual-threat skillset, though uncertainty surrounding Dante Moore clouds an immediate starting opportunity.

Meanwhile, at LSU, Lane Kiffin has a proven track record of maximizing transfer quarterbacks, most notably Ole Miss’ Trinidad Chambliss and current NFL QB Jaxson Dart, while consistently producing pro-level film against elite SEC competition, an appealing path for Leavitt as he returns from injury seeking development and exposure.

LSU also presents a clear roster need: starter Garrett Nussmeier is expected to depart after five seasons in the program, and backup Michael Van Buren Jr. has limited game experience, creating an immediate starting opportunity for Leavitt.

As the process unfolds, Leavitt’s decision is shaping up to be a choice between immediate SEC exposure and an opportunity at LSU, or a regional and schematic fit at Oregon that could offer greater continuity.

The transfer portal window opens Friday and runs through January 16, with Leavitt rumored to command up to $5 million in NIL compensation, a valuation that would rank among the highest in college football.

Read More at College Football HQ

  • College football’s leading passer linked to two programs in transfer portal

  • First-team All-Conference college football starter enters transfer portal

  • All-Conference WR enters college football transfer portal after breakout season

  • No. 1 college football team linked to underrated prospect in transfer portal



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College Football GMs Became Must-Have in 2025

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College Football GMs Became Must-Have in 2025


































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$4 million price tag projected if college football WR makes transfer portal decision

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The finances of the transfer portal are constantly shifting and adjusting. Before the institution of the revenue sharing cap, some massive numbers circulated: Darian Mensah’s $4 million per year deal at Duke was one of the more notable deals. But even in the current portal cycle, there are potential game changers.

A pair of CBS Sports writers, Chris Hummer and John Talty, surveyed the portal world and tried to define the financial grind of acquiring new players. While Hummer and Talty ultimately defined the wide receiver position, one of the higher priced groups, at a high end value of $1 million to $2 million for a top player, they did not include one potential contingency.

Ohio State star Jeremiah Smith is widely considered the top player in college football heading into the 2026 season. For that matter, Smith was arguably the best player in 2025. Hummer and Talty spoke with one Big Ten general manager who said that Smith, were he in the portal, “could command up to $4 million for one year of his services should he transfer.”

Before any Buckeye backers lose sanity, Hummer and Talty were careful to note that the issue is hypothetical– there has been no indication that Smith is even considering entering the portal. The writers noted that the gap of approximately $2 million between Smith and the top value for a portal receiver (at this point, Auburn transfer Cam Coleman). “Smith is a cut above the rest of the sport,” they wrote.

Even in CFP defeat to Miami, Smith was indeed standing alone atop college football. After a brilliant 2024 season as a freshman, he ends 2025 with 87 receptions for 1,243 yards and 12 touchdowns. He finished the year with his sixth 100+ yard game, with a season-best 157 yards on seven catches. He will likely finish re-writing the Ohio State record book in 2026.

On3Sports ranks Smith third in college sports with a $4.2 million estimated NIL valuation. That’s more than $1 million ahead of fourth-place Carson Beck (the two players ahead of Smith are Texas QB Arch Manning and college hoops star AJ Dybantsa). On3 ranks Cam Coleman as the second-leading wide receiver in its valuation rankings at $1.8 million.

Among the massive entities that Smith has NIL deals with are Nintendo, adidas, American Eagle, and 7-Eleven. He would likely be the projected top pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, but he’s still a year young to be able to enter the Draft. Accordingly, he’s the presumptive 2027 top pick and will have a banner NIL year in college– although perhaps not as big of a year as he might have on the open market as the potential biggest transfer star ever.



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Joel Klatt reveals his take on Kyle Whittingham hire by Michigan

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FOX analyst Joel Klatt admitted the hiring of Kyle Whittingham by Michigan caught even the most plugged-in voices in college football by surprise. Still, he believes it may ultimately prove to be a program-defining move.

Speaking on The Joel Klatt Show, Klatt described the hire as both unexpected and masterful. He credited Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel for keeping the process quiet during a turbulent stretch for the program.

“This was massive, and I got to tell you, a little bit out of left field,” Klatt said. “I had not heard his name. It was very quiet. It was below the surface. Give Warde Manuel a lot of credit on this one.”

Alas, Michigan moved quickly after firing Sherrone Moore earlier this month following an investigation into an inappropriate relationship with a staff member. In Whittingham, the Wolverines landed one of the most respected and stable figures in the sport after a coaching search that came with significant challenges.

Klatt made it clear his enthusiasm for the hire goes beyond Whittingham’s on-field résumé: “I love this hire not just because I’m very fond of Kyle Whittingham and his style of coaching,” Klatt added. “But because of what Michigan was facing in this entire ordeal. There were many challenges.”

Moreover, Whittingham spent 22 seasons at Utah, becoming one of the longest-tenured head coaches in college football. Many assumed his resignation signaled retirement, but instead, he opted for a new challenge in Ann Arbor. Now, he’ll be stepping into a program just two years removed from a national championship in 2023.

Continuing, Klatt repeatedly emphasized Whittingham’s integrity and player-first approach, offering perhaps the highest praise a coach can receive: “My highest compliment that I can ever repay is that I would love my sons, if they ever played college football, to go play for Kyle Whittingham,” Klatt explained. “He’s a winner. He’s going to go to the Hall of Fame.”

At Utah, Whittingham compiled a 177–88 record, won two Pac-12 championships, posted eight double-digit win seasons and famously went 13–0 in 2008, capped by a Sugar Bowl victory over Alabama. His teams were defined by physicality, discipline and consistency. Those are traits Michigan is eager to restore.

Now, with Big Ten resources, elite recruiting infrastructure and a roster still stocked with high-level talent, Whittingham views Michigan as more than a late-career stop: “He looks at this as an opportunity to actually go out there and compete for a national championship,” Klatt concluded.

After weeks of uncertainty, Michigan found exactly what it needed, hiring a proven winner, a steady hand and a coach capable of restoring trust. All while keeping the Wolverines firmly in the national title conversation.



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FSU football announces new operations model, hires John Garrett as Deputy Athletics Director and General Manager of Player Personnel

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Florida State University Vice President and Director of Athletics Michael Alford announced the hiring of John Garrett as Deputy Athletics Director and General Manager of Player Personnel, a newly created position that will oversee all football roster construction, player evaluation, recruiting operations, and NIL integration. Garrett joins Florida State from Duke University, where he served as General Manager of Player Personnel.

Garrett will report directly to Alford and work in close partnership with head football coach Mike Norvell, aligning Florida State’s football program with an NFL-style operational model designed to maximize competitive success in the evolving college football landscape.

Garrett brings extensive experience across college football operations, player personnel, and strategic planning. He spent the last two seasons at Duke, where he helped build rosters that won 17 games and the 2025 ACC championship. He played a key role in roster management, recruiting coordination, and the integration of analytics and evaluation processes into football decision-making.

“This is a transformational step for Florida State Football,” Alford said. “The college game has fundamentally changed, and elite programs must operate with the same discipline, structure, and clarity of roles as professional organizations. John Garrett brings a proven background in roster management, player evaluation, and operational leadership that will allow our coaches to focus on coaching while ensuring we are building our roster in a smart, sustainable, and competitive way.”

Prior to his stint at Duke, Garrett played a pivotal role in FSU’s return to prominence while serving as director of scouting for offense during the 2022 and 2023 seasons at a critical moment when roster building in college football was rapidly changing. He helped bring an NFL-style evaluation approach to FSU, focusing on disciplined film study, transfer-portal assessment, and roster analysis to support smarter personnel decisions. During his first stint at FSU, the Seminoles posted a 23-4 overall record, including a perfect 13-0 regular season in 2023 that culminated in the program’s first ACC championship since 2014.

Garrett’s work emphasized identifying players who could contribute immediately, understanding positional needs and depth, and reducing risk in an increasingly competitive NIL and portal environment. Garrett’s role strengthened how the program evaluated talent and laid important groundwork for the front-office model now used across major college football programs.

Garrett was the head coach at Lafayette College from 2017-21 and also has collegiate coaching experience as the offensive coordinator at Oregon State and Richmond and wide receivers coach at Virginia. He has 18 years of experience in the NFL, spending six seasons with the Dallas Cowboys, including his last two seasons as passing game coordinator, as well as with the Cincinnati Bengals, Arizona Cardinals and Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Garrett earned his bachelor’s degree in history from Princeton in 1988. He and his wife, Honor, have four children, John Jr., Honor, Olivia and Caroline. His brother, Jason, was head coach of the Dallas Cowboys from 2010-19, and their father, Jim, spent 38 years in the NFL as a scout and assistant coach.

FSU’s New Football Operations Model

Under the new structure, Florida State Football will operate with a clear division of responsibilities between on-field coaching and off-field football operations:

• The Deputy AD/GM of Player Personnel will lead all aspects of roster construction alongside Coach Norvell, including high school recruiting strategy, transfer portal acquisition and retention, scholarship allocation, and long-term personnel planning.

• The Head Coach and coaching staff will maintain full authority over player development, game preparation, culture, and on-field performance.

• Football NIL, player evaluation, and recruiting analytics will be centralized and integrated into a single operational framework to ensure alignment, compliance, and competitive efficiency.

“John and I share a vision for building a championship program in today’s collegiate athletics structure,” Norvell said. “He was a valuable part of our staff when he was here previously, and I’m excited he will be leading this restructuring of our player personnel efforts. This new model shows our investment and will make us more efficient while enhancing player development, scouting and retention in a collaborative environment.”

Garrett is widely respected for his ability to balance competitive ambition with long-term program health.

“I am excited to return to Florida State University and to work closely with Michael Alford, Coach Norvell and the rest of the Florida State football staff,” Garrett said. “We will lead a collaborative effort to build a football team with the right kind of student-athletes that will consistently compete for championships. We will build a team that will make everyone associated with Florida State University proud to be a Seminole. Go Noles!”

The enhancement of the Deputy AD/GM of Player Personnel role and the restructuring of football operations reflect Florida State’s commitment to adapting proactively to ongoing changes in college athletics, including NIL, the transfer portal, and the increasing complexity of roster management.

“This is about putting Florida State Football in position to win, now and in the future,” Alford said. “We are investing in people, processes, and structure that give our student-athletes and coaches every opportunity to succeed.”



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$2.3 million college football QB heavily linked to struggling NFL team

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The 2026 NFL draft officially opens on April 23 in the shadows of Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

A prominent discussion around the draft is about the organizations in need of quarterbacks and which quarterbacks are expected to be selected in the first round.

Drafts like 2018 and 2021 have featured five quarterback selections in the first round. The 2022 NFL draft only featured one quarterback (Kenny Pickett) in its first round.

The 2026 NFL draft figures to split the difference. While there are franchises that need new quarterbacks, the number is limited to the ones drafting at the very top of the first round.

As for the quarterbacks who will be selected in the first round, Fernando Mendoza of Indiana and Dante Moore of Oregon are the two who have been connected with the very top of the order. Ty Simpson of Alabama has also been floated as a first-round choice, but his position is less well-known than Mendoza and Moore.

The Athletic compiled a projection of how each NFL team missing the playoffs is expected to approach the draft. The projection linked Moore with the Las Vegas Raiders.

Dante Moore throws a pass against Washington.

Oregon quarterback Dante Moore throws a pass as the Oregon Ducks take on the Washington Huskies | Ben Lonergan/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Currently, the Raiders hold the worst record in the NFL at 2-14, putting them in line for the No. 1 overall pick. However, one week remains in the 2025 NFL regular season, and with a handful of teams at 3-13, the draft order can change if the Raiders win their regular-season finale.

Unless the season has produced one of the worst records in the league, a starting quarterback is not a position NFL teams look to draft in the first round.

The last multi-year starting quarterback the Raiders drafted was Derek Carr in the 2014 NFL draft, but that was in the second round. JaMarcus Russell is the last quarterback the Raiders selected in the first round, all the way back in 2007. Before Russell, the last quarterback the Raiders drafted in the first round was Todd Marinovich in 1991.

While the trend of the Raiders drafting first-round quarterbacks is few and far between, Oregon is no stranger to having its quarterbacks selected in the first rounds of NFL drafts. Dating back to 2015, Marcus Mariota, Justin Herbert and Bo Nix have all been selected by NFL franchises in the first round of the NFL draft.

Moore began his college football journey at UCLA in 2023. He played nine games for the Bruins and passed for 1,610 yards, 11 touchdowns and nine interceptions.

When Chip Kelly left UCLA to become Ohio State’s offensive coordinator that offseason, he transferred to Oregon.

After redshirting in 2024, he became the Ducks’ starter in 2025. Ahead of the College Football Playoff quarterfinals, Moore has thrown for 3,046 yards, 28 touchdowns and eight interceptions while rushing for 196 yards and two touchdowns.



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