Connect with us

NIL

The College Football Transfer Portal is Moving, but to When?

The NCAA created a big mess by opening up a can of worms with little to no advanced planning. The four-letter “non-profit” threw its constituents a bone by giving them the transfer portal and NIL. It turned into an avalanche of lawsuits that threaten the entity’s existence. You cannot put the toothpaste back into the […]

Published

on


The NCAA created a big mess by opening up a can of worms with little to no advanced planning. The four-letter “non-profit” threw its constituents a bone by giving them the transfer portal and NIL. It turned into an avalanche of lawsuits that threaten the entity’s existence.

You cannot put the toothpaste back into the tube, but you can spread that toothpaste out more evenly over a couple of brushes. Right now, the sport of college football has an entire tube of toothpaste on the brush for the month of December.

After the Super Bowl, the NFL has free agency in March, followed by the draft in late April. College football ends its regular season. Less than a week later, it holds its draft (Early Signing Period), then begins its one-month free agency period (transfer portal), most of which is wrapped up before the postseason concludes.

It’s a damn mess.

The calendar is unsustainable. The powers that be tried to alleviate strain on college football coaches by moving up the Early Signing Period to the first Wednesday in December. It removed in-home visits from the recruiting process, but gave coaches more time to specifically focus on securing visits and landing players from the transfer portal.

This year’s transfer portal opened on Monday, Dec. 9. There was also a second window following spring practice. Both are subject to change and there is growing momentum around the sport to make it happen.

Transfer Portal Potential Changes

Earlier this year at the AFCA Convention, coaches lobbied to eliminate the spring transfer portal window. I think most would agree that the sport can still operate successfully with just one transfer portal window. The biggest question is when will the transfer portal open and who will make that decision? Kirby Smart has some thoughts.

“I think it’d be a great question to ask some people, but my opinion is the implementation committee, which comes from the settlement,” Smart said from the SEC spring meetings in Destin. “Appointed [10] ADs, two from each Power conference, who hear the conference’s perspective. And ultimately, those [10] ADs – which are appointed coming off the settlement – will have to make a lot of implementation decisions that are not part of the settlement. The ‘nuggets,’ let’s call it. Here’s the settlement, and then the nuggets are going to come from these [10] ADs.”

Kentucky’s Mitch Barnhart would be among the ten who would make that decision. Smart made a case for opening up the transfer portal in January.

January makes sense on the football calendar, only interfering with a few teams still playing in the CFP, but it interferes with the academic calendar. Unless schools make changes, there isn’t enough time to transfer schools before spring semesters begin.

Greg Sankey made it clear that SEC coaches want the transfer portal in January. Big Ten coaches are lobbying for March or April, and there’s one more proposal.

A May transfer portal date has been kicked around by some administrators. It makes the most logical sense in this humble blogger’s opinion. It’s the only vacant month on the calendar, and it would give the sport a nice kick in the news cycle during an otherwise dull time, right before the start of the official college football new year at spring meetings. However, coaches don’t want their future players working out at other schools in the spring. They want them on campus ASAP.

Changes are coming to the transfer portal, and like so many changes in college football, there are no easy answers.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

NIL

Virginia Tech football’s 2025 College Football Playoff odds are mind-blowing

Entering the 2024 season, it was the first season with the new 12-team College Football Playoff, something that increased by eight from the previous years. One team that was a national darling as a dark horse for the new 12-team CFP going into last season was Virginia Tech. It was a very doable thing for […]

Published

on


Entering the 2024 season, it was the first season with the new 12-team College Football Playoff, something that increased by eight from the previous years. One team that was a national darling as a dark horse for the new 12-team CFP going into last season was Virginia Tech.

It was a very doable thing for Brent Pry’s team with a favorable schedule and a ton of retention from the 2023 season. In the end, Virginia Tech had things go south in Week 1 at Vanderbilt, and it spiraled into a 6-6 season, which ended with a Duke’s Mayo Bowl loss to Minnesota.

In April, the disappointing season was a confirmed swing and a miss when the Hokies had five players drafted in the NFL Draft in Green Bay, then a handful more signed undrafted free agent contracts with teams. Now entering a season with a ton of questions after some major roster turnover and coaching changes, anything is possible when the dust settles. However, with so many questions entering the season, the Hokies’ 2025 CFP chances from ESPN’s FPI are somewhat eye-opening.

Virginia Tech football’s 2025 College Football Playoff odds are surprisingly high

ESPN released its preseason Football Power Index (FPI), and Virginia Tech’s odds are higher than you would think. The Hokies’ odds to make the CFP are 12.5%, which, for a team with a lot more questions than answers, is high.

There is no question that the Hokies have some talent returning on both sides of the ball, but if they are going to come anywhere close to these odds, they will need quarterback Kyron Drones to return to the form he had in 2023, and he must remain healthy. Then, as Greg McElroy said, winning one-score games under Pry is a must.

If all of that happens, Virginia Tech could be a very interesting team this season, and unlike last season, they could sneak up on some teams. The CFP might be a reach, but a bowl game is not out of the question. Raise your hand if you saw them having a 12.5% chance of playing in the CFP?



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

A&M AD Trev Alberts gives insight on Texas A&M’s plan for the NIL Era

The House settlement judgment brought some clarity to NIL and revenue sharing, while simultaneously opening a brand-new can of worms that has led to several lawsuits in its wake. Still, it’s a positive step toward establishing a more level playing field across the board. Texas A&M Athletic Director Trev Alberts took time to discuss the […]

Published

on


The House settlement judgment brought some clarity to NIL and revenue sharing, while simultaneously opening a brand-new can of worms that has led to several lawsuits in its wake. Still, it’s a positive step toward establishing a more level playing field across the board.

Texas A&M Athletic Director Trev Alberts took time to discuss the school’s plans for navigating this new landscape in college sports. He sees opportunities to capitalize on revenue options to keep Texas A&M competitive within the Power Five conferences.

One of the biggest questions: How did they decide which sports would be included in revenue sharing?

“Part of that decision-making was in concert with our increase in scholarship, so we didn’t look at the investments into individual sports, just from rev share. Some of the sports who didn’t get rev share are obviously getting massive increases in scholarship investment….”

“….we just try to look at what sports are we driving revenue in. We need to maintain the current revenue, and how do we accelerate and advance it? So difficult decisions and those can be adjusted and altered in the future, but that’s how we chose to start can”

Alberts also touched on how the university plans to modernize without losing the traditions that make Texas A&M one of the most unique programs in college sports.

“…..I’m going to push hard on the modernization, I’m going to push hard on thinking differently, because I think if we don’t, we won’t have the business success that we need to ultimately fund the support of our programs to win.”

Even with the House settlement establishing a few guardrails, there’s a long way to go. Alberts hopes federal lawmakers will step in to create clear, enforceable rules that everyone can follow—so schools can focus less on litigation and more on supporting student-athletes.

 “…we all got into this to help young people, and we’ve spent all of our time playing defense to lawsuits, and that needs to end. It’s not in the best interest. College athletics is worth saving. It’s really important to the fabric of America, we’re better than this, and it’s time for leaders to lead.”

College athletics is slowly emerging from the chaos of the NIL era with early signs of a more unified regulatory structure. But the road ahead is still long.

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Jarrett Johnson on X: @whosnextsports1.





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Fisher Selected for College Baseball Hall of Fame Induction

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. — The College Baseball Foundation, in collaboration with the College Baseball Hall of Fame, announced Monday (June 23) that former University of Michigan coach and Hall of Honor member Ray Fisher will be inducted as a member of its 2025 class. The 18th induction class will be honored at the 2026 Night […]

Published

on


OVERLAND PARK, Kan. — The College Baseball Foundation, in collaboration with the College Baseball Hall of Fame, announced Monday (June 23) that former University of Michigan coach and Hall of Honor member Ray Fisher will be inducted as a member of its 2025 class.

The 18th induction class will be honored at the 2026 Night of Champions in Overland Park, Kansas, on Feb. 12.

Fisher took over for Carl Lundgren in 1921 and coached the Wolverines for 38 seasons until 1958, when he retired. He holds the Michigan record for overall wins, with 616 total victories — more than 150 ahead of the next closest coach. Fisher guided Michigan to 15 Big Ten titles, one NCAA berth and one national championship.

His accomplishments culminated in 1953, when he led Michigan to a 21-9 record — just the ninth 20-win season in program history. The Wolverines captured their second straight Big Ten title and defeated Ohio in back-to-back games to win the District title. At the College World Series, U-M beat Stanford, Boston College and Texas on consecutive days before dropping a rematch to the Longhorns, setting up a one-game title showdown. Michigan prevailed 7-5 on June 17, 1953, for its first national title.

Fisher’s 38-season tenure is tied for 32nd all-time in NCAA Division I baseball history. He received multiple honors after retiring, including induction into the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame in 1959 and selection to the second-ever Michigan Hall of Honor class, joining Fielding Yost.

Fisher will become the sixth Wolverine inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame, tying Michigan for fifth all-time with Southern University for most inductees from one school. Casey Close was the most recent Wolverine to join the Hall in 2022. Jim Abbott, Barry Larkin and George Sisler are enshrined for their playing accomplishments, while U-M’s final inductee is Branch Rickey, who recommended Fisher for the Michigan job and coached the Wolverines from 1910-13.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Oregon Coach Dan Lanning Opens Up On NFL Jobs, Commitment to Ducks

If a premium coaching job opens up, Oregon Ducks coach Dan Lanning is almost always instantly mentioned as a potential candidate. The 39-year-old Lanning is a rising star with the resume to back up his ambition, as Lanning leads all college head coaches with 25 wins and a 89.3 winning percentage since 2023.  A winning […]

Published

on


If a premium coaching job opens up, Oregon Ducks coach Dan Lanning is almost always instantly mentioned as a potential candidate. The 39-year-old Lanning is a rising star with the resume to back up his ambition, as Lanning leads all college head coaches with 25 wins and a 89.3 winning percentage since 2023. 

A winning coach with a superb culture, a coach like Lanning is in demand. 

Oregon Ducks Coach Dan Lanning On NFL Jobs: ‘I’m Not Going Anywhere’

Oregon Ducks Coach Dan Lanning On NFL Jobs: ‘I’m Not Going Anywhere’ / Jake Bunn, Oregon Ducks on SI

Does it feel like a compliment to have substantial interest? In an exclusive interview with Oregon Ducks on SI reporter Bri Amaranthus, Lanning discusses other jobs, the NFL and his future plans.

“I’m not going anywhere. So I don’t spend a lot of time on ‘what ifs.’ I think it speaks to what we’ve done here as a program and what we’ve been able to build,” Lanning told Amaranthus. “It’s a really special place. But to know that I’m really comfortable exactly where I’m at and where we’re going to be, is just as important to me.”

“(Oregon) made a commitment to me. They gave me an opportunity here that no one else gave me that opportunity. They gave me a chance to be the head coach here, and that’s something I want to see through,” Lanning continued.

Oregon Ducks' Dan Lanning On NIL, Transfer Portal: 'We Aren't Always Highest Bidder'

Oregon Ducks’ Dan Lanning On NIL, Transfer Portal: ‘We Aren’t Always Highest Bidder’ / Oregon Ducks on SI

Even though Lanning has reiterated that he has zero plans to leave Eugene, there is a panic that runs through the Willamette Valley when a great football job comes available. When legendary coach Nick Saban retired from Alabama in 2022, Lanning was among the names mentioned as a potential replacement. As Ducks fans tracked flight logs to Tuscaloosa, Lanning halted the rumor and doubled down on his commitment to Oregon. 

Did Lanning ever want to coach in the NFL?

“I used to have dreams and aspirations of coaching in the NFL,” Lanning continued. “And then I feel like I’ve fallen in love with really the players that I get to build relationships with here. The year round involvement that it takes in a program, the people that I get to work with in a place where we can really push the envelope. For me, this is it. This checks every box.” 

“I think at some point, if you’re always looking at what’s next, what next, sometimes you miss the opportunity to smell the roses and see what exists right in front of you,” Lanning said.

As the coaching carousel spins and spins, the question will inevitably be asked again. In which case, Lanning has a simple answer. 

“Yeah, we don’t have to answer it again,” Lanning said.

Lanning’s calm confidence is a breath of fresh air for a fan base that has some trust issues. 

Oregon coach Mike Bellotti, left, and Jonathan Stewart celebrate the Ducks win over Michigan at the end of the game in 2007.

Oregon coach Mike Bellotti, left, and Jonathan Stewart celebrate the Ducks win over Michigan at the end of the game in 2007. / Chris Pietsch/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Ducks fans have flashbacks of considerable coaching turnover after Chip Kelly took over for Mike Bellotti in 2008. Following Bellotti, the winningest coach in Oregon history, the Ducks head coaches include Kelly (who left for the NFL in 2012,) Mark Helfrich (2013-2016,) Willie Taggart (who left for ‘dream school’ Florida State after one season) and Mario Cristobal (who left for Alma Mater Miami in 2021.)

Taggart and Cristobal’s departures were particularly shocking.

Oregon Ducks head coach Dan Lanning celebrates Saturday, Dec. 7, 2024, during the Big Ten Championship game between the Orego

Oregon Ducks head coach Dan Lanning celebrates Saturday, Dec. 7, 2024, during the Big Ten Championship game between the Oregon Ducks and the Penn State Nittany Lions at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. The Ducks defeated the Nittany Lions, 45-37. / Grace Smith/Indianapolis Star / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

MORE: 5-Star Recruit Richard Wesley Commits To Texas Longhorns, Former Oregon Ducks Pledge

MORE: Oregon Ducks 5-Star Recruiting Target Immanuel Iheanacho Moving Commitment Date?

MORE: Oregon Ducks, Penn State Nittany Lions Ticket Prices Soaring

Some could argue that four head coaches over a 12-year span could be considered par for the course, but for Oregon’s fan base, it created anxiety after cheering on Bellotti (1995-2008) and Rich Brooks (1977-1994) for so many years. 

The bigger picture is Lanning’s reliability is paying dividends on the recruiting trail and in the transfer portal. The top talent in the country doesn’t have to worry that the coach is going to leave for another gig if they pick the Ducks. In an ever-changing college football landscape of Name, Image, Likeness (NIL) Lanning’s stability and transparency is a major weapon. Oregon scored a top-5 recruiting class and transfer portal class in 2025.

With a perfect 7-0 home record in 2024, Oregon is now 19-1 under Lanning in Autzen Stadium. Since taking over ahead of the 2022 season, Lanning has led the Ducks to a 35-6 record. Lanning’s 35 wins are the most by any Oregon head coach through his first 40 games, and are second-most among active head coaches since 2022 behind only Georgia’s Kirby Smart (39).

“I want to leave here as the winningest coach in Oregon football history” Lanning told Amaranthus. “Mike Belotti has 116 wins, I got a lot of work to do.”

The goal is written on his mirror. With 35 Oregon victories under his belt, only 81 wins to go. Lanning’s plan is in Eugene, where the grass is (damn) green.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Between the Columns for Monday, June 23

It’s Monday morning, so it’s time for me to let you all know what’s been on my mind for the past week. We’ve got a couple more updates around the sport that I think are important to talk about. 1. Wisconsin is suing Miami. That’s an interesting thing to type. But more importantly, the University […]

Published

on

Between the Columns for Monday, June 23

It’s Monday morning, so it’s time for me to let you all know what’s been on my mind for the past week. We’ve got a couple more updates around the sport that I think are important to talk about.

1. Wisconsin is suing Miami.

That’s an interesting thing to type.

But more importantly, the University of Wisconsin and its NIL collective are suing the University of Miami for tampering. We’ve heard a lot of coaches complain about tampering the past few years as the transfer portal has gotten ever more active each season, but nobody has ever done anything about it.

But now the Badgers have decided rising sophomore defensive back Xavier Lucas is the guy to make this a big issue about.

For some context, Lucas was a four-star corner in the class of 2024, we had him rated as the No. 45 cornerback in the country coming out of Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

He played in all 12 Wisconsin games last year, making 18 tackles, a sack and an interception.

He transferred during the winter portal, but there were issues with his transfer because he claimed the Wisconsin staff refused to file the proper paperwork to enter his name in the portal.

I guess we know why now.

Wisconsin claimed a Miami staffer and “prominent alumnus” met with Lucas at a relative’s home in Florida and offered him money to transfer, which was shortly after Lucas had apparently signed a two-year contract with the Badgers’ NIL collective in December.

So the argument is Miami sent a staffer to offer money to knowingly break the contract.

Definitely tampering.

The question isn’t whether tampering has been happening. It has.

There have been reports from baseball coaches whose team’s are in the College World Series that their players are receiving texts and calls from other coaches while they’re still playing to get them to transfer. Same with softball, same with both men’s and women’s basketball. Football was happening through bowl prep. That’s one of the major reasons why there’s been talk about moving the portal windows after the postseason in each sport.

We all knew tampering was happening.

But, finally, we’re going to find out if it’s actually against the rules.

2. The timing is fascinating to me.

Continue Reading

NIL

LSU Baseball Player’s NIL Deal With Crocs Turns Heads

LSU Baseball Player’s NIL Deal With Crocs Turns Heads originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Some athletes wear lucky socks. Jake Brown? He wears Crocs. And now, the LSU Tigers star has turned his off-field fashion statement into a full-fledged NIL win by partnering with Crocs in a move that has fans buzzing and teammates styling. […]

Published

on


LSU Baseball Player’s NIL Deal With Crocs Turns Heads originally appeared on Athlon Sports.

Some athletes wear lucky socks. Jake Brown? He wears Crocs. And now, the LSU Tigers star has turned his off-field fashion statement into a full-fledged NIL win by partnering with Crocs in a move that has fans buzzing and teammates styling.

Advertisement

The deal didn’t start with an agent or a contract, it started with Brown’s love for quirky, customized Crocs, from Star Wars-themed Jibbitz to Pizza Planet prints. After Brown mentioned his passion for the iconic slip-ons in an interview during the Tigers’ 2025 College World Series run, Crocs came calling.

“They reached out and they said, ‘Hey, we’re looking forward to sending you a little bit of stuff. Just send us your address,’” Brown told Hurrdat Sports.

“They messaged back right away saying, ‘We actually want to hook up all the guys… we can overnight ship them to the hotel.’ I was like, ‘Absolutely. Yes. Please do that.’”

What followed was pure NIL magic. LSU’s team strolled into Game 1 of the CWS final against Coastal Carolina decked out in fresh Crocs, with Brown at the center of it all. His message to the team group chat, “Everyone send me your Croc size.”

Advertisement

The Tigers went on to win 1-0, led by a dominant shutout from pitcher Kade Anderson, who struck out 10 across nine innings. Confidence? Style? Luck? Whatever it was, it worked.

“I didn’t think they thought it was going to happen,” Anderson said. “In about five minutes, the group chat just, boom, boom, boom. It was blowing up.”

A few days later, LSU clinched its second national title in three years with a 5-3 win in the Men’s College World Series finals. Brown may not have thrown the final pitch, but his NIL savvy helped unify a locker room and earned him one of the most unique deals in college baseball.

The Crocs origin story? Even better.

Advertisement

Brown used some of his NIL cash to grab themed pairs and design ideas for a custom LSU-inspired version.

“I have Pizza Planet-Toy Story Crocs that I bought with per diem money thanks to Champ Artigues, our baseball ops guy… I love my Crocs,” he said.

© Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

© Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

He even pitched Crocs a Louisiana-style collab: gator and pelican Jibbitz, purple and gold themes, and of course, a Tiger or two.

In a crowded NIL landscape where logos and car deals often dominate the headlines, Jake Brown’s Crocs moment feels fresh, authentic, and fun. It’s a reminder that NIL isn’t just about the money. Sometimes, it’s about the magic of being seen, being yourself, and sharing it with your team.

Advertisement

So, what’s next?

If Crocs and Brown roll out that LSU-themed pair, fans, and maybe future recruits will be lining up to walk in his shoes.

Related: Oregon QB Turns NIL Into Detroit Dreams

Related: NIL Struggles Far From Over After NCAA’s House Settlement

This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 23, 2025, where it first appeared.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending