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Kansas State University

MANHATTAN, Kan. – The eyes of the college football world will be on Kansas State as the Wildcats kick off the 2025 college football season with the Aer Lingus College Football Classic against Iowa State kicking off at 11 a.m. (CT), 5 p.m. (GMT) and be televised by ESPN, the network announced Tuesday during the […]

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MANHATTAN, Kan. – The eyes of the college football world will be on Kansas State as the Wildcats kick off the 2025 college football season with the Aer Lingus College Football Classic against Iowa State kicking off at 11 a.m. (CT), 5 p.m. (GMT) and be televised by ESPN, the network announced Tuesday during the Disney Ad Sales Upfront.
 
This is the first time since 2010 against UCLA that K-State will open its season on ESPN. This is just the second time in the 129-year history of the program that the Wildcats will play abroad (1992 in Tokyo, Japan vs. Nebraska).
 
The Wildcats and Cyclones are meeting on a neutral-site field for just the third time in the 108-game series. Kansas State took both games of a two-game series at Arrowhead Stadium in 2009 and 2010.
 
Game times for Kansas State’s non-conference games in 2025 will be announced in the coming weeks.

 



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Mandel’s Mailbag: How many teams can win college football’s wide-open national title race?

Ladies and gentlemen — we did it! The last mailbag before the first game week of the 2025 season is comprised entirely of questions about the 2025 season. It was nice working with you, House settlement, NIL clearinghouse and CFP format debates, but your services are no longer needed here. When was the race to […]

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Ladies and gentlemen — we did it! The last mailbag before the first game week of the 2025 season is comprised entirely of questions about the 2025 season.

It was nice working with you, House settlement, NIL clearinghouse and CFP format debates, but your services are no longer needed here.

When was the race to the national championship this wide-open? For my entire viewing life (decades), I don’t recall more than a few teams having a realistic chance at the title. This year I count 10ish? — Anonymous

On the weekly Mailbag submission form, I always ask readers to include their city. It hadn’t occurred to me that I also need to say, please include your name.

You’re absolutely right about this feeling like an unusually wide-open field — beginning right at the top of this week’s preseason AP poll. No. 1 Texas (25 first-place votes) and No. 2 Penn State (23) are separated by just five points, the tightest margin since 1998. Meanwhile, six teams earned first-place votes — those two, plus Ohio State (11), Clemson (four), Georgia (one) and Oregon (one). That’s the most since 2016, when there were seven.

I’m surprised that 2016 would be an analog because that was smack-dab in the middle of the six-year Alabama/Clemson hegemony over the sport (LSU in 2019 excluded.) Those teams had in fact played in the national title game just the year before. But Alabama’s QB situation was murky (remember Blake Barnett?) and Dabo Swinney’s dynasty was just getting started. The Tide got 33 first-place votes, the Tigers 16, and then Baker Mayfield/Oklahoma (four), Jimbo Fisher/FSU team (five), Leonard Fournette/LSU (one), Urban Meyer/Ohio State (one) and Jim Harbaugh/Michigan (one) split the rest of the votes.

My 2016 season predictions are mercifully scrubbed from the Internet (I think), but that field would have felt much stronger than this one. Alabama was still a machine and most people’s default No. 1 every year. I don’t think anyone is suggesting Steve Sarkisian’s Texas program inspires that level of confidence yet. And even I, as someone who’s been on the Penn State bandwagon since January, do so holding my nose.

In the 11-year history of the CFP, no team from outside the preseason top 6 has won the championship. And yet, my list of teams that could pull it off runs 10 deep: Texas, Penn State, Ohio State, Clemson, Georgia, Notre Dame, Oregon, Alabama, LSU and Texas A&M, a dark horse that ranks fourth in Bud Elliott’s Blue-Chip Ratio (82 percent).

A few of those teams will inevitably miss the Playoff altogether, and none of them are without question marks. But talent-wise, the gap between No. 1 Texas and No. 9 LSU, if it even exists, is a fraction of what it was in 2016 between No. 1 Alabama and … No. 9 Tennessee.

The Tide beat Butch Jones’ Vols 49-10 that season. Though Tennessee did go on to become both “Champions of Life” and champions of the Music City Bowl.

Stew: With both the AP and coaches’ preseason polls now out, it’s time for my annual question. Which top-10 team is most likely to finish unranked, and which unranked team is most likely to finish in the Top 10? — Nicholas R.

Thank you, Nicholas. The preseason would not be complete until I got asked this question.

Whoever I say for the first one, their fans are going to be furious. No one believes their preseason top-10 team could possibly finish the season unranked. But according to my colleague/AP poll aficionado Ralph Russo, it happens to an average of 1.7 teams per season. That includes two of last year’s preseason top-10 teams, No. 9 Michigan (8-5) and … No. 10 Florida State (2-10).

My leading candidate this season: No. 7 Oregon. Folks are placing a whole lot of confidence in QB Dante Moore, presumably because he was a five-star recruit, despite watching him struggle mightily as a true freshman starter for UCLA in 2023. We assume he’ll be better. But what if he’s not?

I realize it’s probably not smart to bet against Dan Lanning, who’s 35-6 through three seasons. I have little doubt Tulane transfer RB Makhi Hughes will be a star. But Lanning is banking heavily on several other transfers — offensive linemen Isaiah World (Nevada) and Emmanuel Pregnon (USC) and defensive tackle Bear Alexander (USC) — who have garnered considerable hype but are no sure things.


Dante Moore will lead the Ducks from under center in his junior season. (Soobum Im / Getty Images)

As for unranked to the top 10, I looked to the Big 12 to find someone who could be this year’s Arizona State. And that someone could be Utah. After three straight double-digit win seasons (not counting 2020), Kyle Whittingham’s team slipped to 8-5 and 5-7 the past two seasons. It felt like the Utes were in purgatory forever waiting on quarterback Cam Rising to be healthy. But former New Mexico OC Jason Beck and his star QB, Devon Dampier, have the ability to completely reinvent that offense. If Morgan Scalley fields his usual reliable defense, the Utes could challenge for the Big 12 title.

No. 17 Kansas State vs. No. 22 Iowa State in Dublin is the first Week 0 game between ranked opponents since 2000. It’s also potentially significant for the Big 12 title race. Yet it doesn’t feel like there has been much national attention on that game, with previews already looking ahead to Week 1 games like Texas at Ohio State. Is there a reason that game is under-the-radar nationally? — Aaron M.

We didn’t call it Week 0 back then, but you’re bringing back some great memories of those high-profile Kickoff/Pigskin/Eddie Robinson Classics.

The last “big” Week 0 game I remember was in 2004, No. 1 USC vs. Virginia Tech in Washington, D.C., when Reggie Bush caught three touchdown passes. Those games all went kaput the next year when the NCAA went to a permanent 12-game schedule, and Week 0 did not return until Cal-Hawaii in Australia in 2016, which helps explain the long drought.

To be blunt, the reason it’s flying under the radar is because it’s not a Big Ten or SEC game. K-State and Iowa State are good programs, but they are not big national brands. Outside of Colorado, there aren’t any in the Big 12 right now. I know in my head I’ve been thinking ahead to No. 1 Texas vs. No. 3 Ohio State myself. But come kickoff on Aug. 23, I’d imagine most college football fans will come to the realization that, wow, there’s a really good game on today.

In fact, I could have easily seen myself picking this to be the Big 12 championship matchup, but it’s tough to see that happening when one of the two is already going to be 0-1 in league play. The loser basically has no margin for error the rest of the way, especially if the two schools end up in a tiebreaker situation.

And if you’re a CFP aspirant from the Big 12, you’d better win your conference.

So needless to say, this is not Northwestern-Nebraska. Iowa State-K-State is legit high stakes. Tune in.

I need help. Penn State hasn’t had a preseason ranking or expectations this high in over a quarter-century. How do Alabama/Georgia/Ohio State fans handle this pressure regularly?! —  Connor from Philly

It’s not the expectations they struggle with; it’s the accompanying despair when they’re not met.

I’d ask Georgia fans in particular how they managed those 40 years of letdowns between Herschel Walker and Stetson Bennett. Though I assume the answer is a lot of liquor.

Stewart, who is your SEC dark horse? What I mean by dark horse is a team that no one else is picking for the CFP? — Franklin R.

I may have given this away in the national champions answer earlier, but it’s Texas A&M. I’m sure someone is picking the Aggies to make the CFP, but they were picked to finish eighth in the SEC at conference media days last month. Not only that, 11 schools got at least one vote to win the championship, a list that included Vanderbilt and Auburn, but not Texas A&M.

Which seems odd, seeing as Mike Elko’s team went into the season-ending Texas game last year with a chance to clinch a spot in the championship and led the SEC in scoring (29.4 points) in conference games.

Even though it finished 8-5, A&M overachieved in Elko’s first season. I expect the Aggies to take a notable jump this season. They boast the highest returning production (71 percent) in the SEC, per ESPN’s Bill Connelly’s rankings. Marcel Reed seems to get overlooked in the SEC’s deep QB lineup, but the dual-threat sophomore has a chance to be special. He made eight starts last season and seemed to be learning on the fly. He was great against Florida, LSU and Auburn, while taking his lumps against South Carolina, Texas and in the bowl game against USC (those two interceptions).

If Reed becomes a more consistent passer, look out, because the Aggies could run it down people’s throats. Le’Veon Moss, Amari Daniels and Rueben Owens, a 2023 SEC All-Freshman pick who missed the entire 2024 regular season, are all back, as are four starters up front.

But any CFP prediction requires faith that Elko and DC Jay Bateman will get the defense shored up. The D-line, in particular, has a lot to prove after losing Shemar Stewart, Nic Scourton and Shemar Turner, all who went in the first two rounds of the draft.

We’ll learn a lot about the Aggies when they visit Notre Dame in Week 3. It’s tough to see a CFP path if they get blown out in that one. In conference play, they visit LSU and Texas but get Florida and South Carolina at home and miss Georgia and Alabama altogether. All in all, manageable.

Just saw the headline on The Athletic, “Submit a question for Stewart Mandel’s College Football Playoff.” Congrats on purchasing the naming rights to the Playoff!  — Brad P.

Just trying to keep it out of Tony Petitti’s hands.

(No, it was a brain fart.)

What three teams have the best shot from the Group of 5 of making the Playoff? — Jim S.

Jim has become the Mailbag’s resident G5 zealot, asking a new question like this every week. I do like a good G5 question, but I have to spread the love around, Jim.

First, the obvious one: Boise State. Obviously, it will be a much different team without Ashton Jeanty, but we got a brief glimpse last year of then-true freshman Sire Gaines, Jeanty’s heir apparent, when he gained 110 yards on 12 carries — one of them a 38-yard touchdown — in the Broncos’ season-opener at Georgia Southern. He ended up redshirting following an ankle injury.

Quarterback Maddux Madsen did not get enough credit for his role on last year’s CFP team. Receiver Latrell Caples and tight end Matt Lauter were great, and there’s a lot of buzz around former Texas A&M transfer receiver Chris Marshall. The defense brings back a lot. But remember, Boise made its reputation largely off taking Oregon to the wire in Week 2, before the Ducks figured out their offensive line. This year’s equivalent is an Oct. 4 trip to what could be a highly polished Notre Dame team.


Maddux Madsen returns to the Broncos after helping last year’s team reach the CFP. (Joe Rondone  / USA Today Network)

Next up: Whoever wins the AAC will be in the mix. Despite a lot of depth-chart turnover, my best bet is Tulane. Jon Sumrall is a fantastic coach, for one, and he solidified the QB spot by landing BYU transfer Jake Retzlaff. The Green Wave’s offense won’t be as explosive as it has been the past few seasons, but the defense could be outstanding. And they get three chances to prove themselves against P4 competition with Northwestern and Duke at home and Ole Miss on the road.

Finally, James Madison intrigues me. Quarterback Alonza Barnett was impressive last season but got hurt late, and now he’s in a fight for his job with, among others, former UNLV defector Matthew Sluka. The Dukes have two good running backs in Ayo Adeyi and George Pettaway. And unlike the typical Sun Belt school that gets blown out by a couple of SEC heavyweights, JMU, which upset North Carolina last season, is at Louisville, at Liberty and home against Washington State. That’s an ideal mix for pulling off an upset or two.

And if it ends up being someone other than these three … that will not surprise me. Most G5 teams now have very little continuity from one year to the next, with all the poaching. And their own portal adds are barely known outside of the staff’s own meeting rooms. Boise State is the one notable exception. It remains a destination school. The Broncos are in the best position outside of the P4 to become a regular CFP participant.

Stewart: It seems like the season previews for many of the preseason top-15 teams casually mention something like Team X “is replacing four offensive linemen and will have a new starting quarterback” or “will have eight new defensive starters.” Given that, do you think the preseason Top 25 should be viewed as an expectation of where teams are in Week 1, where they will be by season’s end, or a mix of the two? — Adam Z.

Every voter has a different approach. When I voted in the AP poll, back in the BCS era, I treated my preseason ballot as a starting point — like pole position in a race. It was an assessment of where the teams stand going into the season based on who they lost, who they have coming back, key freshmen/transfers, etc. How would I know who’s going to get better or who’s going to get worse over the course of the season?

Ralph, a first-time voter this year after 20 years at AP overseeing the poll, is taking a similar approach. “I did not assess schedules and project wins and losses,” he writes. “… Ranking Penn State ahead of Ohio State right now doesn’t mean I’m picking Penn State to beat Ohio State on Nov. 1. I’ll deal with that when it happens.”

To be clear: I do predictions. I’m working on my ACC, Big Ten, Big 12 and SEC predicted standings right now, to run next week. You will definitely find discrepancies between that and the last Top 25 I put out in May. That’s because I only now got in the weeds on teams’ schedules. And even when I do that, I look for possible upsets, long travel, someone playing on the road on a short week, etc.

But I don’t care how scientific one gets with their preseason ballot: This exercise is increasingly pure guesswork. Not as much at the top, where the leading programs have a baseline talent level from year to year and don’t usually experience massive roster turnover. I’m talking about the next rung or two down.

Case in point: Everyone keeps asking me how Bill Belichick is going to do in Year 1 at North Carolina, and the honest answer is, nobody knows. The Tar Heels have six returning starters total. They have a transfer quarterback, South Alabama sophomore Gio Lopez, who looked good as a freshman, but against G5 competition. Almost all of UNC’s key defensive players from last season have left, but that defense ranked 72nd nationally, so it’s possible the new guys are upgrades.

Then on top of that, when you start playing out the schedule, you see the Tar Heels are playing several teams — UCF, Syracuse, Stanford, Wake Forest — that may be even bigger mysteries than they are.

It honestly would be easier just sticking to a preseason Top 25, because you don’t have to put a predicted record next to the teams’ names. But people tend to remember when your No. 5 team goes 7-5 much more so than your 13th-place team in the Big Ten going 8-4.

Hypothetically speaking, a team goes 0-10 over its first 10 games, but just happens to play teams ranked 1 through 10. Furthermore, said team loses every game by one point. In Game 11, it beats the 11th-ranked team by 21 points. Are they the 11th-strongest team in the country? Should they be ranked No. 11? Should they be ranked at all? Should they make the 12-team CFP? — Donald B.

This makes my brain hurt. But I don’t think that school would care where it’s ranked. It would be too busy trying to hire a new coach.

(Top photo: Sam Hodde / Getty Images)





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Gophers Add Lombardo, DeBord to Softball Coaching Staff

MINNEAPOLIS – The University of Minnesota’s Softball team announced Wednesday the hiring of Stephanie Lombardo as their new Assistant Coach. “Stephanie brings experience across professional and collegiate levels, and we’re excited to welcome her to the Gopher family,” said head coach Piper Ritter. “Her player development background, passion for teaching, and calm presence will be […]

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MINNEAPOLIS – The University of Minnesota’s Softball team announced Wednesday the hiring of Stephanie Lombardo as their new Assistant Coach.

“Stephanie brings experience across professional and collegiate levels, and we’re excited to welcome her to the Gopher family,” said head coach Piper Ritter. “Her player development background, passion for teaching, and calm presence will be an incredible asset to our program.”

Lombardo joins the Gophers after serving as a development coach for the Greensboro Grasshoppers, the High-A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Grasshoppers currently sit atop the South Atlantic League with a 71–30 record.

Prior to her time in Greensboro, Lombardo worked as a development coach and operations assistant with the Pirates’ Single-A affiliate, the Bradenton Marauders. She also served as a coaching and operations assistant for the FCL Pirates in 2023.

Lombardo’s international coaching resume includes stops in Boca Chica, Dominican Republic with the Dominican Instructional League, and in Barranquilla, Colombia, where she served as an infield coach for Los Caimanes de Barranquilla.

Her coaching career began at Eastern Kentucky University as a graduate assistant, where she helped guide EKU to its first Ohio Valley Conference Championship and NCAA Regional appearance since 2004. A former standout at the University of Wisconsin, Lombardo returned to her alma mater as a volunteer assistant coach.

As a player, Lombardo was a four-time Big Ten Scholar-Athlete, a Big Ten Distinguished Scholar (2019), and a two-time NFCA Academic All-American (2018, 2019). She earned her bachelor’s degree in Economics and Retailing & Consumer Behavior from Wisconsin and later completed her master’s in Exercise and Sport Science at EKU.

The Gophers also announced the addition of Morgan DeBord as the program’s new Director of Operations.

“Morgan understands our program from the inside and brings a detailed, driven mindset to everything she does,” said Coach Ritter. “She’s a competitor, a leader, and we’re thrilled to bring her back to Dinkytown.”

DeBord returns to Minnesota after competing in the Athletes Unlimited Softball League, where she hit .333 with four hits in 12 at-bats over nine games.

She previously played her graduate season for the Gophers in 2023, earning Second Team All-Big Ten, Big Ten All-Defensive Team, CSC Academic All-District, and NFCA Great Lakes All-Region Second Team honors. She started all 53 games that season, batting .359 with 145 at-bats.

A native of Hillsboro, Ore., DeBord spent her first four collegiate seasons at Loyola Marymount, where she was a First Team All-WCC selection in 2023 and Second Team All-WCC in 2022.

Academically, DeBord was a WCC All-Academic First Team honoree in 2022 and earned Honorable Mention in 2021 and 2023. She holds a bachelor’s of science in Health and Human Sciences with a minor in Health and Society, and a master’s in Sports Management from the University of Minnesota.



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Big 12 5-star Texas Tech commit shares bold national championship take

Big 12 5-star Texas Tech commit shares bold national championship take originally appeared on The Sporting News Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire’s recruiting momentum continues to surge, fueled partly by the program’s robust name, image, and likeness (NIL) backing from billionaire alumnus Cody Campbell. Advertisement That combination helped the Red Raiders land 6-foot-6, 275-pound offensive […]

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Big 12 5-star Texas Tech commit shares bold national championship take originally appeared on The Sporting News

Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire’s recruiting momentum continues to surge, fueled partly by the program’s robust name, image, and likeness (NIL) backing from billionaire alumnus Cody Campbell.

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That combination helped the Red Raiders land 6-foot-6, 275-pound offensive lineman Felix Ojo. The five-star prospect, ranked No. 5 overall and the No. 1 offensive tackle in the class of 2026, is Texas Tech’s first-ever top-20 pledge — by a wide margin.

ESPN reported that Ojo’s agent, Derrick Shelby, said the commit signed a fully guaranteed three-year, $5.1 million NIL deal.

Cody Campbell is a central Texas Tech booster and co-founder of The Matador Club, the school’s central NIL collective. The group has committed over $55 million in NIL contracts for Texas Tech athletes for the 2025 season—the largest in the NCAA.

Joey McGuire has been vocal about eliminating conference bias in CFP selection, insisting that all Power Five champions deserve access and that the current system unfairly disadvantages leagues like the Big 12.

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“I think you’ve got to earn it on the field, and if you’re a conference champion, then you should be in… It’s not who the best teams are in certain conferences. It’s who the best teams are in the country. Let us do it on the field. If you win your conference, you’re in, and then find the best teams that way. I think that’s the way we should do it.” McGuire told CBS Sports.

While not as vocal as McGuire, Campbell has been credited with providing the resources and vision necessary for Texas Tech’s pursuit of Big 12 and College Football Playoff glory—positions both he and McGuire have made clear are the program’s goals.

In an interview with Red Raider Sports, Ojo praised McGuire’s vision for the program.
“I feel like Lubbock and Texas Tech is a special place, special program,” Ojo said. “What coach McGuire is building is great. In the next two to three years, we’re gonna be a national championship contender.”

For Ojo, one thing is clear. He has big expectations for his time in Lubbock.

MORE COLLEGE NEWS: 



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Fictional NIL Deals We Wish Were Real

Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) has changed college football forever—and, naturally, Notre Dame is doing it “the right way.” Press releases are polished, brand partners are wholesome, and everyone’s wearing blazers in the photos. But… deep down, we want the weird deals. The glorious, over-the-top, absolutely real-in-our-hearts endorsements that make you spit out your stadium […]

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Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) has changed college football forever—and, naturally, Notre Dame is doing it “the right way.” Press releases are polished, brand partners are wholesome, and everyone’s wearing blazers in the photos.

But… deep down, we want the weird deals. The glorious, over-the-top, absolutely real-in-our-hearts endorsements that make you spit out your stadium nachos in delight. So here’s the completely accurate list of NIL partnerships we’re hoping to see this season.

Author’s Note: I’m pressing pause on my usual Throwback Thursday series until football season kicks off—don’t worry, they’ll be back in full force once toe meets leather! In the meantime, I’m sharing some lighthearted, tongue-in-cheek posts to help us survive the long, football-less summer stretch.

This series is meant to be fun, satirical, and maybe just a little absurd. Think of it as emotional pre-season conditioning for Irish fans. Please take it with a grain of salt… and maybe a side of stadium nachos.

Marcus Freeman x Irish Spring™
Tagline: “Stay cool. Stay fresh. Stay undefeated.”
Comes with a limited-edition “Quarter-Zip Clean” scent—a fresh mix of grass, victory, and faint whiffs of opposing coaches’ fear. Bonus: a sideline-ready loofah with ND embroidery and a playbook pocket.

Offensive Line x Wonder Bread
Tagline: “Because we don’t knead anyone getting past us.”
Includes a team-authored cookbook called PanCakes & Protections: The Domer Griddle Playbook, featuring recipes for everything from pancake stacks to “Trap Block Toast.” Fans receive a free loaf with every false start (so, maybe two loaves per season).

QB1 x Ray-Bans
For those moments when you stare down the blitz, shrug it off, and still complete a 25-yard laser while looking cool enough to headline a GQ cover.
Limited-edition line includes “Pocket Presence” aviators and “Two-Minute Drill” wayfarers. Guaranteed to reduce glare and enhance swagger.

Linebackers x Petfinder
Collab name: Blitz Buddies.
Every tackle features a dog named Blitz, Tackle, or Shamu on the Jumbotron. The linebacker does a post-sack cuddle. Everyone cries. Everyone adopts. Opposing offenses get distracted by adorable pitbull puppies on the sideline.

Notre Dame Stadium Weather x REI
Not technically a player NIL, but South Bend weather has earned it.
Tagline: “Prepare for sun, sleet, judgment, and 22 mph winds—all in the first quarter.”
The package includes a four-season tent, SPF 50 sunscreen, a heated poncho, and a set of rosary beads for late-November games.

Defensive Line x Axe Body Spray
Tagline: “We bring the pressure. And the scent of impending doom.”
Every sack triggers a sideline fog machine and the sound of a distant war horn. Fans in Section 109 receive free sample bottles and optional ear plugs. Opposing QBs are now legally required to sign waivers.

Kicker x Local Cupcake Shop
Why shouldn’t someone named Liam O’Foot get paid in frosting for every 40-yard bomb through the uprights?
New signature flavor: Pressure Point Peppermint—with just a hint of ice for clutch kicks in November.

Bonus Deal: Walk-On Backup x Community Theater
Catch him in Guys and Dolls the night before Homecoming. He’s got range—on and off the field. His NIL perks include comp tickets for the O-Line (they take up two rows) and a prop fedora he insists on wearing under his helmet.

Look, NIL is here to stay.
So let’s dream big, stay loyal, and one day—one glorious day—see an ND player holding a giant foam shillelagh in a Velveeta commercial yelling, “STAY GOLD, BABY.” Because that’s the future we deserve.



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Rashul Faison Has Patiently Awaited NCAA's Decision To Play For South Carolina

Now that we are fully engulfed in lawsuits pertaining to the eligibility status of college athletes across different sports, one would think that a decision would not take upwards of eight months to make. But, for South Carolina running back Rahsul Faison, the wait continues, with the season set to begin in two weeks.  His […]

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Rashul Faison Has Patiently Awaited NCAA's Decision To Play For South Carolina


Now that we are fully engulfed in lawsuits pertaining to the eligibility status of college athletes across different sports, one would think that a decision would not take upwards of eight months to make. But, for South Carolina running back Rahsul Faison, the wait continues, with the season set to begin in two weeks. 

His path to the Gameocks practice field had been one filled with four different stops along the way, though head coach Shane Beamer understood the risk when he recruited him from Utah State during the winter transfer portal period. 

Right now, there are multiple cases on courtroom dockets waiting to be argued over the eligibility of athletes looking for an additional season to play. Ever since Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia was granted an injunction that allowed him to play for the Commodores this season, multiple athletes have chosen to take the risk of transferring to another school for an opportunity. 

Unfortunately, there are plenty of athletes like Faison waiting for their case to be heard, or the NCAA to make a decision on their specific case. At least in his specific situation, the transfer running back from Utah State has been able to practice with the Gamecocks, after receiving a waiver that would allow him to. 

In May, Faison hired noted sports attorney Darren Heitner to represent him through this waiver process with the NCAA. 

For Rashul, he’s technically been a college student since 2018. After graduating from high school in 2018, the running back decided to enroll at Marshall, though he never played a down for the Thundering Herd. From there, he enrolled in Lackawanna College in 2020, but once again did not play football, taking online courses instead. 

It was at that point in 2021 that Faison decided to attend Snow College, which is located in Utah. After not seeing the field that season, he finally got his opportunity to show off his skillset in 2022, which led to an offer from Utah State. 

After waiting for his chance to show off his athleticism on the field, he rushed for 1,109 yards and eight touchdowns last season, finally breaking through on the field, which would obviously open up doors for him to make some real NIL money in the transfer portal. But unfortunately, this is where the risk factor kicked in, knowing that it wasn’t an absolute given that he would be awarded an additional year of eligibility if he were to transfer. 

At this point, you’ve seen how this has played out across college athletics, with the threats of lawsuits against the NCAA that could lead to them ultimately having to see a player gain another year through the court system, and not the waiver system. 

And while there have been plenty of athletes that have made the tough decision to transfer without a guaranteed future, Faison chose South Carolina as the place where he wanted to put a stamp on his college career. I mean, given what we’ve seen with judicial decisions, the thought of Faison being granted another year seemed plausible. Multiple years at the junior college level, a stop at Marshall, though he never touched the field, and then two seasons at Utah State. 

NCAA Now Has All The Information Needed To Make Decision On Rashul Faison

The problem with today’s reality in college athletics is that you cannot get a firm decision without having to wait a substantial amount of time, mainly due to the overwhelming number of cases the NCAA has on their desk. But, this is not some sort of sympathy piece for the organization. 

Even though he has only played three seasons of actual football over the past five years, his NCAA clock had technically expired. Following the Diego Pavia decision, the NCAA issued new guidance to former junior college athletes, essentially giving them a blanket waiver for the upcoming season. 

But, here we are, still waiting to see if Rashul Faison will be granted his additional year, just over two weeks away from the start of the college football season. 

According to sources, the holdup in the decision being made was not the fault of South Carolina, but Faison was waiting for additional information from a school he had previously attended, with the NCAA now receiving all the information needed in the past week to make their final decision. 

While the goalposts continue to be moved regarding NIL, third-party collectives, eligibility, transfer portal windows and roster spots, it’s time for a decision to be made. It’s been long enough, and the clock is ticking, with an uncertain future for Rashul Faison. 

Maybe, just maybe, the NCAA can go ahead and grant him an additional year of football. Or call it a reset of his eligibility clock. No matter how they frame it, these athletes shouldn’t have to wait until right before kickoff for a decision. And, if other schools were dragging their feet during this process, I would imagine that wouldn’t go unnoticed either. 

If we’re going to change the rules, issue waivers for some, but deny others. Can we at least do this in a timely manner? 

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Joel Klatt calls out hypocrisy around John Mateer's sports gambling controversy

On Monday night, Oklahoma quarterback John Mateer became the center of controversy after screenshots of an apparent Venmo transaction from him titled “sports gambling” were uncovered and posted to social media. But according to Fox college football analyst Joel Klatt, the outrage surrounding the situation is far greater than it should be compared to other […]

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Joel Klatt calls out hypocrisy around John Mateer's sports gambling controversy

On Monday night, Oklahoma quarterback John Mateer became the center of controversy after screenshots of an apparent Venmo transaction from him titled “sports gambling” were uncovered and posted to social media. But according to Fox college football analyst Joel Klatt, the outrage surrounding the situation is far greater than it should be compared to other key issues around the sport.

The screenshots of the transactions show that Mateer, who was a freshman at Washington State at the time of the transitions in 2022, sent several payments to a man named Richard Roaten on November 20, 2022. One of was titled “Sports gambling” and the other was titled “Sports gambling (UCLA vs USC).” Additionally, three days later, Rotten sent a payment to Mateer titled “Ultra sports gambling Fifa World Cup.”

The Oklahoma athletic department is aware of the allegations against Mateer, which Mateer also addressed publicly in a statement on social media on Tuesday, claiming that the past descriptions of the Venmo transactions was simply an “inside joke” between he and his friends and that he has “never bet on sports.”

“The allegations that I once participated in sports gambling are false,” wrote Mateer in his statement. “My previous Venmo descriptions did not accurately portray the transactions in question but were instead inside jokes between me and my friends. I have never bet on sports. I understand the seriousness of the matter, but recognize that, taken out of context, those Venmo descriptions suggest otherwise. I can assure my teammates, coaches, and officials at the NCAA that I have not engaged in any sports gambling.”

Obviously, this revelation will likely spark a full-fledged investigation from the NCAA into John Mateer and any potential involvement in sports gambling considering the NCAA has strict rules prohibiting student athletes from placing wagers on sports.

Interestingly, Joel Klatt had a bit of a different reaction to these screenshots as the vast majority of fans or media members around the sport. Instead of questioning whether Mateer did or did not place sports bets, Klatt largely absolved him of any blame either way, explaining how he believes it is far from the biggest concern in the landscape of college football.

In particular, Joel Klatt called the current landscape of college football a “lawless free for all” due to the lack of regulations in the transfer portal and NIL within college sports.

“So let me get this straight,” wrote Klatt. “We are gonna turn CFB into a lawless free for all with large sums of money flowing to players who can be free agents twice a year. But then gasp about three Venmo descriptions from 2022??? WHAT ARE WE DOING?!?!?”

One could argue that Klatt’s argument here is an apples to oranges comparison. It’s fairly obvious as to why regulations are in place on athletes placing sports bets, as it could jeopardize the integrity of the game as we have seen recently in the MLB and the NBA. So if John Mateer did indeed place bets on a college football game, whether he was involved in the game or not, there should be some sort of repercussions.

However, given the fact that there have been numerous media members around college football who have consistently aired their own grievances about the problems with the transfer portal in the NIL era of the sport, it is certainly fair to question whether more of the outrage about Mateer should be directed elsewhere.

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