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ESPN ranks Top 10 transfers to watch in 2025 college football season

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ESPN ranks Top 10 transfers to watch in 2025 college football season

The NCAA Transfer Portal was as active as ever this offseason with over 4,000 entries, 2,400 of those having since committed elsewhere, over the pair of windows in the winter and spring. Now, 100 days out from kickoff, ESPN has rated the can’t-miss ones who will now be playing for new teams in the fall.

ESPN previewed the next season in college football in 2025 with an article including ten separate editions of different Top 10s ahead of Week 0. That included one by Max Olson of the Top 10 transfers to watch this season.

Each of the first four are quarterbacks, including one who was also on this list for consideration for The Heisman Trophy. There’s then a trio of wide receivers, an offensive tackle, a linebacker, and a tight end among the 10 on the list.

All of the 10 are also rated within the Top 35, per the latest update to On3’s Industry Ranking of 2025’s Top Transfer Portal Players. Six of them are in the Top 10, four being in the top five, in the transfer rating from On3.

With that, here’s the Top 10 transfers to see in ’25 per Olson at ESPN:

Mateer, coming off of his first season as a starter for Washington State, tops this list and is third at On3, as far as transfers for 2025. That’s with him being “one of the more dynamic quarterbacks in the country,” considering what he showed as a dual-threat in Pullman.

Mateer posted over 330 yards of offense per game, efficiently too, with 64.6% completion on good passing numbers while also rushing at 4.6 yards per attempt, and had 44 touchdowns total for a Top 10 offense for Wazzu. He’ll now try to bring that same production to Norman, following OC Ben Arbuckle, to create some “much-needed swagger to the Sooners’ offense”.

QB Darian Mensah
Matthew Hinton | Imagn Images

Mensah was “absolutely coveted” as a mid-major quarterback making the move up to a power conference after his debut season playing for Tulane. That puts him second on this list for ESPN while he’s at No. 32 overall, as the No. 6 QB, for On3.

Mensah completed 65.9% of his throws for 2,723 yards, 22 touchdowns, and six interceptions for the Green Wave, who posted a Top 20 offense. He’ll look to continue that development now in Durham in replacing Maalik Murphy, who had his own great season as a transfer quarterback for the program last season.

The Hoosiers had a great transfer at quarterback last season as well, with Kurtis Rourke coming in from Ohio to lead the nation’s second-best offense and take them to the College Football Playoff. Now, in replacing him with Mendoza from California, at No. 3 for ESPN and No. 20 for On3, IU “couldn’t have found a better (quarterback)”.

Mendoza, with 19 starts for the Golden Bears, averaged 66.5% completion for 2,356 yards, 15 touchdowns, and eight interceptions through two seasons playing, with improvement from his redshirt freshman to his redshirt sophomore years, in Berkeley. He will follow Rourke now in keeping that quarterback play up in Bloomington.

Miami had such a great transfer quarterback last year that he went on to be the No. 1 pick in the 2025 NFL Draft. The Hurricanes now bring in another player, as part of a top five portal class, who was previously projected as a top draft pick in Beck, who’s at No. 4 for ESPN but is No. 1 overall in the ratings by On3.

Beck had an up and then down career at Georgia with high highs in his first season as the Bulldogs’ starter, before having some more lows in his second, including a season-ending injury in the SEC Championship. In returning to college and transferring to Coral Gables, though, he’s “ready to step in as Cam Ward’s successor and prove he’s a first-round talent”.

Eric Singleton Jr. (Photo by Auburn Athletics)
(Auburn Athletics)

The first non-quarterback, at No. 4 for both ESPN and On3, is Singleton. That’s after being an all-around weapon the past two seasons for Georgia Tech.

Singleton, through his time with the Yellow Jackets, averaged 52 receptions for 734 yards while catching nine touchdowns overall, ran for 131 yards and a score this past season, and returned 11 kicks for 241 yards on special teams. His “blazing speed and excellent route running” are now coming to The Plains as part of an improving offense for the Tigers.

The Ducks have brought in 11 transfers, six being in the Top 100, in a top five portal class according to On3. Still, of them all, World is the highest-rated one, at No. 6 for ESPN and No. 5 by On3, and “is the one who has pro scouts buzzing”.

World was the next non-quarterback on the list as the top tackle in the portal after starting the past two seasons for Nevada, including not allowing a sack last season for the Wolfpack. He’ll now try to do the same thing in Eugene in further solidifying their line as one of the top transfers in their class.

The Bulldogs had their issues at wide receiver last season, being among the most drops in the country despite having a solid passing offense. They’ve since addressed that with three pickups in the portal at that position, namely one of the better weapons in the sport in Branch, at No. 7 for ESPN and No. 8 for On3.

Branch, while at USC, caught 78 passes for 823 yards, at 10.6 yards per catch, and three touchdowns, with his usage at receiver from being a freshman to a sophomore taking away from him being one of the best returners in the nation as a freshman. The ‘Dawgs will “have a lot of fun finding different ways” to use that now with him as “an explosive playmaker” in Athens.

Texas Tech LB David Bailey
Nathan Giese | Avalanche-Journal | USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Texas Tech Red Raiders have the No. 1 class in the portal per On3’s 2025 Team Transfer Portal Rankings. The highest-rated of those commitments coming to Lubbock is Bailey, at No. 8 for ESPN and who rounds out the Top-10 at On3 after being one of the top transfers of the entire spring.

Through three seasons at Stanford, Bailey posted 111 tackles, 14.5 sacks, and seven forced fumbles, with seven of the sacks and five of the forced fumbles coming in his last season with the Cardinal. Pairing him now with four other additions at edge rusher or defensive line should “give Texas Tech one of the most talented (on)es in the country”.

LSU also reloaded at receiver with a trio of additions. Some, including On3, have Barion Brown (Kentucky) as the highest rated of them, but ESPN went with Anderson here at No. 9 with On3 having him at No. 19.

Injuries limited him, along with the rest of the Sooners’ receivers, last year, with just one game played as a sophomore after Anderson caught 38 passes for 798 yards and 10 touchdowns as a redshirt freshman. He could get back to that, assuming he’s healthy, after transferring in conference in now being a target for QB Garrett Nussmeier in Baton Rouge.

The Buckeyes are most known for their top receivers in the passing game. They’ve had some reliable tight ends as part of it, though, with Klare, at No. 10 here for ESPN and No. 14 for On3, coming in to try to be the next one in Columbus.

Klare will also be an inter-conference transfer after a breakout season for Purdue in catching 51 passes for 685 yards and four scores as the leading receiver by far for the Boilermakers. Alongside WRs Jeremiah Smith, Carnell Tate, and Brandon Inniss in the corps, Klare “could end up being a sneaky great addition” as “a dependable target” to whoever ends up as their starting quarterback.

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Why Georgia hasn’t slipped amid college football’s changes — it starts with Kirby Smart

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Kirby Smart’s first college coaching stop was at tiny Valdosta State back in 2000. The team’s strength and conditioning coach was Michael Doscher, who was asked two decades later what Smart was like then, which may have foretold what he would become. Doscher thought for a couple beats, then answered.

“He was humble,” Doscher said.

Valdosta State was a budding cradle of future big-time head coaches — Hal Mumme, Mike Leach, Dana Holgorsen, Will Muschamp — and they all had some “it factor” about them. And for the 22-year-old Smart, fresh off an All-SEC playing career, it was the way he carried himself.

“Kirby was a little more personable about it, more friendly and had that way about him,” Doscher said.

Maybe it’s hard to consider the current Smart — the 10th-year Georgia coach who rants and rails on the sideline, who has six national title rings as a head coach and defensive coordinator — as humble. Yet, it’s also a bit of the secret sauce.

It was for Nick Saban, the man who hired Smart away from Valdosta State and into his vortex, and is now off the stage — essentially replaced by Smart as the accepted best coach in the sport. And while they’re not the same person or coach, the reason they got to the top and stayed there may be the same: The flexibility to adjust when the world around them changes.

Saban, the defensive mastermind and offensive traditionalist, adjusted late in his career to the up-tempo, passing revolution. Smart made the same adjustment, but also to changes in the sport: unlimited transferring, paying players, the flattening of the talent pool such that the Georgias and Alabamas can’t hoard talent like the old days.

Eleven months ago, Smart’s program seemed to be falling back to the pack. The Dawgs were soundly beaten by Notre Dame in the quarterfinals of the College Football Playoff, ending a season that had an SEC championship, but also three losses and more close calls. When it ended, Smart declined to make any changes to his coaching staff, to the concern of many in Georgia’s fan base.

And a month into this season, Georgia suffered its first home loss in six years and needed the help of a missed field goal to win at Tennessee. The Dawgs didn’t look like a great team anymore.

Now here they are: SEC champions again. Playing their best ball going into the Playoff, one of three betting co-favorites to win the national title. The Playoff could always re-ignite questions. However, right now, entering Thursday’s Sugar Bowl tilt against Ole Miss, Georgia as an elite program seems inevitable, for a simple reason: The head coach knows what he’s doing.

Staff management

Some saw it as stubbornness. Smart saw it as stability.

Georgia was coming off a rough offensive season in 2024, especially in blocking. Quarterback Carson Beck regressed, receivers dropped passes and there was almost no running game. That was despite three offensive linemen being good enough to be drafted in the first three rounds of the NFL Draft.

And yet Smart opted to bring back offensive line coach Stacy Searals and offensive coordinator Mike Bobo, who was Smart’s college teammate and close friend. To the critics, Smart was allowing personal relationships to cloud his professional thinking. To Smart, he was counting on two veteran coaches with longer track records.

“We’ve built our program around retention,” Smart said in the spring. “I think we’ve got the most stable, not only staff, but stable organization in all of college football. I think that’s what we’ve hung our hat on, is we have stability. We have retention. We have a great foundation. We’re built to last.”

And built, it turns out, to validate Smart’s gamble.

Gunner Stockton and the Georgia offense have soared this season, validating Kirby Smart’s bet on continuity. (Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)

Georgia’s offense may be the reason it made the Playoff, winning early-season shootouts against Tennessee (44-41) and Ole Miss (43-35). New quarterback Gunner Stockton ended up seventh in the Heisman Trophy voting. The running game was a strength. Bobo was named a finalist for the Broyles Award, which goes to the nation’s top assistant.

The defense was realistically the bigger worry until late in the season, when the old Georgia defense showed up again, smothering Texas, Georgia Tech and Alabama.

Still, it goes further than that: Georgia’s special teams have always been an underrated strength, and Smart has put Kirk Benedict in charge of that for several years.

And off the field, the longtime guiding force remains Scott Sinclair, who has been the strength and conditioning coordinator throughout Smart’s tenure. The two are wrapping up their 10th season together.

“This league will chew you up and spit you out,” Smart said, mentioning how other teams have player and coaching turnover, while his program is among the best at retention. “I take a lot of pride in that, and I think that’s one of our weapons.”

Smart in charge (still, with help)

Georgia’s talent advantage isn’t what it was in the pre-2021 days, when unlimited transferring and NIL arrived. The Bulldogs no longer can stow blue-chip recruits on their bench for a few years, then unleash them as starters. It has been a hit to the team’s depth, and occasionally left weak spots on the field.

The program, nonetheless, has also managed it well enough that it still has plenty of talent. Georgia signed 21 of its 24 starters in the SEC championship in one of its past four recruiting classes, all of which ranked in the top three nationally.

And when the program badly needed a difference-making receiver, it got him via the transfer portal. USC’s Zachariah Branch has become such a focal point of the offense that with 73 catches, he’s four away from setting Georgia’s single-season record.

In an age when many programs are hiring a general manager, Georgia already has one: Smart. He has always been the de facto GM, the one in charge of roster procurement. There isn’t a person in charge of it who reports to Smart. There is a football chief of staff — Mark Robinson — and director of player personnel — Will Myers. Still, as the portal and NIL became prominent, Georgia didn’t have to expand its personnel staff. It was already pretty robust.

“We’ve got a lot of people in charge of roster management, including myself, including our football office staff (who) are involved,” Smart said. “Our operations slash player development, player personnel staff, everybody gets involved in that.”

This was what Saban did: He revolutionized college football coaching at Alabama in the late 2000s by hiring analysts, which critics pilloried as staff-bloating, but it was Saban who wanted extra eyes on his team and extra hands in recruiting. Saban was not arrogant enough to think he could do everything.

That’s the formula for Smart in this era: Lots of eyes, ears and mouths involved, then he makes the final call.

“It’s a team effort,” Smart said. “We reorganize and restructure some things in terms of what falls under whose duty and whose aspects. But at the end of the day, I’m not ready to run off and go hire somebody that’s just going to make all the decisions for what goes on the football field. I think I’ve got to stay involved in that heavily. We’ve got the capacity and the quality of people in the areas that I think we need.”

Georgia’s 117 wins since Kirby Smart took over in 2016 are second-most in the country behind only Alabama’s 121. (Todd Kirkland / Getty Images)

Internal culture in the age of NIL and the portal

Georgia has dealt with too many bad headlines over the last few years, with a couple dozen players arrested since the January 2023 car crash that killed a player and staff member. However, Georgia people — administrators, staffers, players — put those issues in a separate category from what they see as a strong internal culture. There is a dichotomy: Players getting in legal trouble is something Smart has had to handle, adjusting his level and manner of punishment. Yet, when it comes to team-building and chemistry in the age of NIL and the portal, not much has changed.

“NIL hasn’t impacted what we’ve been doing,” said Drew Brannon, a sports psychologist who has worked with Georgia since 2018, especially starting with the 2021 national championship season. “The things we’ve built in terms of program DNA have certainly had a positive impact given the ramifications of NIL, but we haven’t done things differently due to NIL, portal, etc.”

Georgia has been practicing skull sessions — when players in small or large groups discuss personal issues or desires — since 2021. Smart has also given Brannon the floor to introduce motivational exercises, such as before the second national championship, using the Netflix and Blockbuster story.

There have been some challenges, especially last year, when players said the connection among teammates, especially on offense, wasn’t as strong. Still, there was also optimism from existing players about the returning 2025 core.

“I’ve got a lot of faith in them,” linebacker Smael Mondon said last February. “They’ve got a good leadership class, and I feel really good about it.”

That’s been borne out. The quarterback change also helped. Beck was quieter and on his own, while Stockton’s personality and playing style endeared him to teammates. Teams often feed off the personality of their quarterbacks. This year’s team pulled off comeback wins over Tennessee, Auburn, Ole Miss and Florida — and it did that last year too. This time, though, it improved as the season continued and looks much better heading into the CFP.

“We do our best to enhance our efforts each year with tweaks, but the fundamentals don’t change, and I think that has a lot to do with why our players and staff don’t flinch when they encounter challenging situations,” Brannon said. “Coach Smart does an incredible job of modeling this from the top, which is what you see in the highest-performing organizations in the world.”



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College Basketball Rankings: Coaches Poll Top 25 updated after Week 8

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The USA TODAY Sports Men’s Basketball Coaches Poll Top 25 has been refreshed following the eighth week of the season. It was a bit of a light week due to Christmas, but some showdowns still took place amid the holiday celebrations, resulting in some movement throughout the Top 25.

With conference play picking up this coming weekend, we’re getting into the nitty-gritty of the season, where the rankings will fluctuate week-in and week-out. While this past week was packed with tune-up games and not a ton of riveting action, that won’t be the case from now until April.

Regardless, the Coaches Poll Top 25 is certain to see plenty of movement. For now, here’s how things stack up after Week 8. This week’s updated rankings are below.

Michigan enjoyed a full week off and enters the week undefeated at 11–0. The Wolverines return to action with home games against McNeese State on Monday and USC on Friday.

Senior forward Yaxel Lendeborg has been the engine, stuffing the stat sheet with 15.6 points, 7.1 rebounds, and 3.8 assists per game. Michigan will look to stay perfect as conference play looms.

Arizona
Aryanna Frank-Imagn Images

Arizona rolled past Bethune 107–71 last Monday to improve to 12–0 on the season. The Wildcats host South Dakota State before traveling to Utah for a road test on Saturday.

Freshman guard Brayden Burries has emerged as a steady scorer, averaging 14.0 points per game. Arizona’s depth and tempo continue to overwhelm opponents early in the season.

Iowa State remained perfect at 12–0 after an off week. The Cyclones host Houston Christian on Monday and West Virginia on Friday.

Junior forward Milan Momcilovic leads the team at 18.3 points per game. Iowa State’s balance continues to separate it from most of the field.

UConn had the week off and remains one of the nation’s most complete teams at 12–1. The Huskies head to Xavier on Wednesday before hosting Marquette on Sunday.

Junior guard Solo Ball leads the backcourt with 15.4 points per game. This week offers a strong measuring stick against Big East competition.

Purdue
Robert Goddin-Imagn Images

Purdue stayed idle last week but remains firmly entrenched near the top of the Coaches Poll with an 11–1 record. The Boilermakers face a tricky week with a home matchup against Kent State on Monday before heading to Wisconsin on Saturday.

Senior forward Trey Kaufman-Renn continues to anchor the frontcourt, averaging a double-double at 13.9 points and 10.0 rebounds per game. Purdue’s ability to maintain consistency through a two-game week will be closely watched.

Duke remained idle last week and sits at 11–1 entering a two-game stretch. The Blue Devils host Georgia Tech on Wednesday before traveling to Florida State on Saturday.

Freshman phenom Cameron Boozer has been dominant, averaging 23.2 points and 10.0 rebounds per game. Duke will be tested defensively as ACC play intensifies.

Gonzaga extended its winning streak with a victory over Pepperdine on Sunday and sits at 13–1. The Bulldogs play three times this week, traveling to San Diego before hosting Seattle U and LMU.

Junior forward Braden Huff leads the way with 19.1 points per game. Gonzaga’s depth will be tested during the busy stretch.

Houston
John Jones-Imagn Images

Houston enters the week at 11–1 after a quiet stretch. The Cougars host Middle Tennessee State on Monday before heading to Cincinnati on Saturday.

Senior guard Emanuel Sharp continues to pace the offense with 17.9 points per game. Houston’s defensive pressure remains its calling card heading into conference play.

Michigan State enjoyed a week off and sits at 11–1 on the season. The Spartans host Cornell on Monday before traveling to Nebraska on Friday.

Senior forward Jaxon Kohler has been a force inside, averaging 13.9 points and 10.3 rebounds. Michigan State will look to sharpen its execution away from home.

BYU cruised past Eastern Washington 109–81 last Monday to improve to 12–1. The Cougars face a lone test this week with a road trip to Kansas State on Saturday.

Freshman star AJ Dybantsa has lived up to the hype, averaging 23.1 points per game. BYU’s offense remains one of the most explosive in the country.

11. Vanderbilt
12. North Carolina
13-T. Nebraska
13-T.
Louisville (+1)
15. Alabama
16. Texas Tech
17. Kansas
18. Arkansas
19. Illinois
20. Tennessee
21. Virginia
22. Florida
23. Iowa
24. Georgia
25. St. John’s

Dropped Out: No. 25 USC

Others Receiving Votes: Kentucky 35; USC 25; Utah State 14; Auburn 7; Saint Louis 6; Clemson 6; Seton Hall 5; Oklahoma State 5; Yale 4; UCLA 4; Saint Mary’s 4; LSU 3; California 2; Villanova 1; Miami (OH) 1; Indiana 1



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Petrino’s Friend Found a Workaround to Pay Taylen Green That’s Now Prohibited by NCAA

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Petrino’s Friend Found a Workaround to Pay Taylen Green That’s Now Prohibited by NCAA
photo credit: Craven Whitlow

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When Bobby Petrino returned to Arkansas after the 2023 season, his first task was finding a new quarterback.

In this era of college football, that also meant funding a new quarterback. For that, the former head coach leaned on his old friend Frank Fletcher.

The Little Rock-based businessman stepped up and footed a large chunk of the bill for Taylen Green, the talented signal caller Petrino identified to run his offense for the Razorbacks.

It hasn’t only been a transactional relationship, though. Over the last two years, Fletcher has been mindful of Green’s life after sports. Rather than simply handing the star quarterback a boatload of cash, he offered something few college athletes receive: personal relationship and mentorship.

“I had a wonderful two years with Taylen Green,” Fletcher said during Monday’s edition of Morning Mayhem on 103.7 The Buzz. “I was lucky that I happened to back a player that was that nice a kid and [had] great parents. I’ve learned a lot from him. I’m teaching him everything I know, and he wants to learn.”

Fletcher helped Green navigate the financial market by giving the QB1 homework, making him chart a series of stocks over a few months – something that could prove even more important after his subpar finish to the 2025 season likely impacted his pro prospects.