NIL
How much is too much for a high school OT? CFB sources sound off on Jackson Cantwell’s massive Miami NIL deal
How much is too much to pay for a high school offensive lineman? That’s a question buzzing throughout college football this week on the heels of five-star offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell committing to Miami. The deal, which 247Sports previously reported could approach $2 million a year, allowed the Hurricanes to overtake Georgia for the No. 10 overall prospect in the Top247 and […]

How much is too much to pay for a high school offensive lineman? That’s a question buzzing throughout college football this week on the heels of five-star offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell committing to Miami.
The deal, which 247Sports previously reported could approach $2 million a year, allowed the Hurricanes to overtake Georgia for the No. 10 overall prospect in the Top247 and No. 1 player for the industry-generated 247Sports Composite.
It’s a splashy move that seems in line with Miami’s general strategy during the NIL era, which has seen the Hurricanes basically do whatever it takes to land top targets, including Cam Ward‘s $2 million salary and Carson Beck‘s $4 million.
“If you can pay it, do it,” said one SEC director of player personnel. “Go get that guy.”
But college football will soon no longer be in the unlimited NIL era of the sport. Once the House settlement is approved — a decision that could come anytime over the next few days — all future NIL deals more than $600 will be subject to approval from a clearinghouse that will determine whether they meet the standard of fair market value. Schools, at least on paper, will be far more limited in their spending with revenue sharing (expected to be $14 to $16 million for most Power Four football programs) making up the majority of a pseudo salary cap.
That’s the context in which many are looking at Cantwell’s massive price tag and wondering how an unproven high school tackle could be worth it.
NIL
Louisville baseball’s Bayram Hot enters NCAA transfer portal
Louisville baseball’s Bayram Hot has entered the NCAA transfer portal, On3’s Pete Nakos confirmed. Hot played one season with the Cardinals. Hot saw action in 36 games for Louisville in 2025. Across 92 at-bats, Hot averaged a .326 batting average to go with 30 hits, 22 RBIs and three home runs. 2025 was Hot’s third […]

Louisville baseball’s Bayram Hot has entered the NCAA transfer portal, On3’s Pete Nakos confirmed. Hot played one season with the Cardinals.
Hot saw action in 36 games for Louisville in 2025. Across 92 at-bats, Hot averaged a .326 batting average to go with 30 hits, 22 RBIs and three home runs.
2025 was Hot’s third season at the collegiate level, spending his first two years at Marist. There, he earned 2023 MAAC Rookie of the Year honors after finishing his true freshman season with a .382 batting average across 50 games played. Hot wasn’t a home run threat, but logged 73 hits, scoring 47 runs, 37 RBIs and 19 extra base hits.
In 2024, Hot’s batting average regressed to a career-low .278. That doesn’t mean he wasn’t productive, however. As a sophomore, he logged career highs in walks (29) and home runs (7).
Hot then transferred to Louisville, where the Cardinals finished the 2025 season with a 42-24 overall record. They reached College World Series for the sixth time in program history and the first since 2019. Their record allowed the program to surpass the 40-win threshold for the 14th time in program since Dan McDonnell came to the program 19 seasons ago. Before his arrival, Louisville baseball had never reached that win total.
Now, Hot will have one year of eligibility remaining to play for his new college baseball team. Chose Louisville over Kentucky, Mississippi State, East Carolina, Kansas, Michigan and Maryland. It’s unclear if any of these teams will pursue him in the portal this cycle. Whichever program it will be, it’ll be Hot’s third in four seasons.
The transfer portal wire provides a real-time feed of player activity, including basic player profile information, transfer portal ranking and original On3 Industry recruiting ranking, as well as NIL valuation (name, image and likeness).
To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire. The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.
NIL
Rece Davis Names $6.8 Million QB As Best In College Football
We are only two months away from the start of the 2025 college football season. Media days are on the horizon, and preview magazines are hitting the shelf, which has created plenty of chatter about who the best returning players are in college football. On a recent episode of the ‘College GameDay Podcast,’ ESPN’s Rece […]

We are only two months away from the start of the 2025 college football season. Media days are on the horizon, and preview magazines are hitting the shelf, which has created plenty of chatter about who the best returning players are in college football.
On a recent episode of the ‘College GameDay Podcast,’ ESPN’s Rece Davis discussed his top returning quarterbacks in college football going into next season.
Davis highlighted multiple notable returning stars, including LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier, Clemson’s Cade Klubnik, and South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers. Even with all the returning talent, Davis made it clear that there is one quarterback who is primed to take a massive leap in his first year as a full-time starter.

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images
“My number one quarterback, guy who’ll have the best season for his team, put up the best numbers? Arch Manning,” Davis said. “And I know that’s what you expected, but not for the reasons.
“This is a healthy chunk of my belief in Arch Manning’s talent and a gargantuan check of my belief in Steve Sarkisian as a guy who can take quarterbacks and make them succeed beyond what their experience might indicate they would.”
Over his first two seasons, Manning has seen limited action in a reserve role but made two starts last season in relief of Quinn Ewers. He’s recorded 969 passing yards, nine passing touchdowns, and two interceptions. He added 115 yards and four scores on the ground. Manning enters next season 2-0 as a starter, with the expectations to lead Texas back to the College Football Playoff.
The expectations are not only tied to the high standard at Texas. Manning has the highest NIL valuation in college football, according to On3. He’s valued at over $6 million, which includes NIL deals with Panini America, Uber, Red Bull, and Vuori. Manning’s NIL valuation is over $2 million more than any other college athlete, with the next closest being Miami quarterback Carson Beck.
Manning signed with Texas as the No. 1 overall prospect in the 2023 recruiting class. He finished his high school career with a 34-9 record as a starter, recording over 8,500 passing yards and 115 passing touchdowns. He broke multiple school records, including the career records for passing yards, passing touchdowns, total offense, and total touchdowns.
The Arch Manning era of Texas football will begin on Aug. 30 against Ohio State. Kickoff is scheduled for 11 a.m. CT on FOX.
NIL
Ed Graney
LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics. That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions. Friends of UNILV is the collective for UNLV, one in which Paulos […]


LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics.
That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions.
Friends of UNILV is the collective for UNLV, one in which Paulos leads.
The House settlement allows athletes to be directly compensated by their schools via revenue sharing. There is a limit of $20.5 million this season, though that number has yet to be officially decided.
UNLV has opted in to terms of the settlement and will pay athletes directly. It’s unknown to what threshold the Rebels will reach when deciding how much to distribute.
Then there is the NIL money athletes can continue to receive.
NIL Go is the clearinghouse that will require any athlete to report deals more than $600. Contracts will be reviewed to guarantee they represent fair market value.
Whole new world
“I’m absolutely in favor of there being more (oversight),” Paulos said. “The unfortunate thing is there is a lot of mud in the water. Do you know how many applications there will be for anything over $600? Mind-boggling. We still don’t know what the real definition of revenue is going to be.
“It’s a new world with (the settlement) that will be in constant change. It’s like a new business model — NIL is the startup business. There will be trips and falls and mistakes, but there are a set of rules now. That’s a big step and certainly what the universities want.
“Things have gotten ridiculous with (NIL) across the country. It’s the Wild West. Hopefully, this means you will no longer have someone reach in their pocket and give a kid a million dollars for coming to their birthday party. You won’t be able to do that if you follow these new rules.”
Translation: A large percentage of previous NIL deals would not have been approved under the new system. Most of those were funded by boosters. You have a better chance at being approved via corporate sponsorships.
Which goes to the point about fair market value.
You would guess a starting quarterback at Alabama might be compensated more for a car dealership sponsorship in Tuscaloosa than one with the same deal in Provo, Utah. Even perhaps one in Las Vegas.
But the real goal is to eliminate any “pay for play” situations defined by NIL dollars. To curtail the millions often thrown at recruits to attend certain schools. The real goal is to tame the Wild West.
Here’s one fear, however: that many of the bigger deals simply won’t be reported for approval. That it will be more of a wink-wink situation between collectives and athletes.
“Look, if there’s a rule, someone out there is going to cheat it, unfortunately,” Paulos said. “But at least this is a beginning to try to control things. That’s a positive thing right now.”
Paulos said UNLV’s collective will pay the university some out of its donations while still compensating athletes via NIL deals. That there is still a Rolodex of donors willing to pay and that the collective can be a conduit between them and UNLV.
That commercial donors use such deals as business expenses when the athlete performs a service for them once cleared through NIL Go. The contract just can’t be excessive in what will be deemed fair market value or risk being rejected.
“We’ll be another fundraising arm for the university as long as it wants us,” Paulos said.
Coaches matter
The collective has taken in more money in the past four months than the past four years, Paulos said. He credits much of it to the excitement and anticipation of the football season, but also to coaches the Rebels have hired.
Lindy La Rocque reaffirmed her commitment to the women’s basketball program, ending rumors that she might be on the way out to take the head coaching job at Arizona.
Former Mississippi State and Florida coach Dan Mullen was hired to continue the historic levels football reached over the past two years under Barry Odom.
Josh Pastner, a former coach at Memphis and Georgia Tech, now leads the men’s basketball program.
It has all made for more interest in UNLV athletics and more donations to NIL efforts.
“Quite frankly, the entire university has also stepped up,” Paulos said. “We’re doing this the right way in accordance with every rule. I can tell you exactly what each kid has made over the last four years — how many hours he or she has worked and where. And we will continue to operate in this manner.”
Get those contracts ready to be approved.
It’s a whole new NIL world, is right.
©2025 Las Vegas Review-Journal. Visit reviewjournal.com.. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
NIL
Ed Graney
LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics. That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be […]


LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics.
That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions.
NIL
Ed Graney
LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics. That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be […]


LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics.
That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions.
NIL
Ed Graney
LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics. That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be […]


LAS VEGAS — Bill Paulos is happy there will be more oversight, that the House vs. NCAA settlement demands more scrutiny of name, image and likeness deals within college athletics.
That a centralized clearinghouse will be in charge of regulating any NIL transactions.
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