Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

NIL

Anonymous coaches impressed, talk Clemson Football before 2025 season.

It’s that time of year again when anonymous coaches speak up about the foes in their conference. It’s one of the few instances where fans can see candid opinions, and a few ACC coaches had a few things to say about Clemson football heading into 2025. The consensus is generally positive, highlighting the Tigers’ culture […]

Published

on

Anonymous coaches impressed, talk Clemson Football before 2025 season.

It’s that time of year again when anonymous coaches speak up about the foes in their conference. It’s one of the few instances where fans can see candid opinions, and a few ACC coaches had a few things to say about Clemson football heading into 2025.

The consensus is generally positive, highlighting the Tigers’ culture under Dabo Swinney, transfer portal/NIL interest, and quarterback Klubnik’s potential to excel in year two under Garret Riley. But each coach had their own takes.

Advertisement

Two think the key to Clemson’s success next season rests on Klubnik’s shoulders.

Anonymous ACC coaches talk shop about Clemson

“How good is Cade [Klubnik], really? His ceiling defines their limit as a program. You should see a big jump as [Garrett] Riley’s playbook expands with him,” said one ACC coach.

From 2023 to 2024, Klubnik saw a significant jump in his production. In Riley’s first season as offensive coordinator, the third-year QB went from 2,844 yards passing on 454 attempts to 3,639 yards on 486. The impact was felt even more on the scoreboard. He threw 36 touchdowns in 2024 compared to 19 the year before.

Advertisement

The significant increase in the passing game coincided with the emergence of his running game. Klubnik’s legs got him out of a sticky situation more than once last year, but his downhill running also increased. Klubnik rushed for 182 yards in 2023 but racked up 463 last season with six fewer attempts.

“They’re playing the game in NIL now, but they need a big season from the quarterback to be the old Clemson that charges through the league,” echoed another coach, this time adding a little about Clemson’s new approach to NIL. However, another says the Tigers are trending up despite their stance on NIL.

“This is the year we find out if Dabo [Swinney] and his culture can survive in the new era of this game. Two years ago, we put on the tape, and it felt like, wow, their best days are behind them because of the shift in personnel and the stance against NIL. You saw it right away, especially at position groups like receiver where they used to dominate. Now they’re getting better; you’re seeing more talent than the last couple years.”

The culture has stayed steady through the ups and downs of the last few years, and nearly everyone projected to play significant minutes in 2025 developed in the system. So, the ‘more talent’ the coaches are seeing has been in Clemson the whole time, growing over the years.

Advertisement

The offense under Riley improved in 2024, but the Tigers’ defense was one of the worst in recent memory under Wes Goodwin. Now that Penn State’s former defensive coordinator Tom Allen is on campus, Clemson is poised to turn that around.

“Defensively, they’ve improved by bringing in [Tom] Allen because he knows how to coach high-end talent and be disruptive.”

This article originally appeared on Clemson Wire: Clemson football impress anonymous coaches ahead of 2025 season

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

NIL

Roethlisberger Concerned College NIL Is ‘Taking The Love Of The Game Away’

Ben Roethlisberger expresses concern about the impact of college NIL (Name, Image, Likeness) deals on the love of the game, suggesting that financial incentives may diminish genuine passion among players. While he acknowledges the benefits, such as improved financial literacy and the ability for players to support their families, he worries that the emphasis on […]

Published

on


Ben Roethlisberger expresses concern about the impact of college NIL (Name, Image, Likeness) deals on the love of the game, suggesting that financial incentives may diminish genuine passion among players. While he acknowledges the benefits, such as improved financial literacy and the ability for players to support their families, he worries that the emphasis on money could lead teams to prefer less talented but more motivated players. He reflects on historical sentiments about amateurism in college sports and suggests the need for guardrails in the evolving NIL landscape to protect players and maintain the essence of competition.

By the Numbers

  • Highly touted OT recruit Felix Ojo secured a three-year deal worth $5.1 million with Texas Tech.
  • The NIL model is generating significant earnings for college athletes that were previously kept under the table.

State of Play

  • NIL deals have blurred the lines between amateur and professional sports, changing recruitment dynamics.
  • Players are entering the NFL with previous financial experience from NIL, altering team drafting strategies.

What’s Next

Moving forward, the college football landscape may see increased regulations to manage NIL deals and protect both players and institutions. As this situation evolves, it will be critical to maintain a balance between financial opportunities and preserving the competitive integrity of the sport.

Bottom Line

Roethlisberger’s insights highlight a crucial tension in modern college athletics: the need for compensation versus the preservation of passion for the sport. Stakeholders must consider how to navigate these changes without compromising the essence of college football.





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Georgia offensive lineman Jahzare Jackson arrested on drug-related charges

A Georgia football player is facing charges after he was arrested on Wednesday. Sophomore offensive lineman Jahzare Jackson was charged with felony possession of marijuana of more than one ounce, according to a report from the Athens Banner-Herald. Marc Weiszer of the Banner-Herald reports that Jahzare Jackson now faces an additional three drug-related charges. In […]

Published

on


A Georgia football player is facing charges after he was arrested on Wednesday. Sophomore offensive lineman Jahzare Jackson was charged with felony possession of marijuana of more than one ounce, according to a report from the Athens Banner-Herald.

Marc Weiszer of the Banner-Herald reports that Jahzare Jackson now faces an additional three drug-related charges. In addition to the charge above, he also faces possession and use of drug-related objects, possession of marijuana less than an ounce and holding or supporting a wireless device with any part of his body. All three of those charges are misdemeanors.

Jackson was booked into the Clarke County Jail on Wednesday evening just before midnight and spent roughly four and a half hours there. He was released on bonds totaling $5,030, per the Banner-Herald.

Jahzare Jackson is not the first Georgia player to run afoul of the law this offseason. In March, receiver Nitro Tuggle and offensive lineman Marques Easley were suspended following traffic-related infractions.

Meanwhile, a current Georgia commitment is facing charges related to an alleged domestic battery. That news broke on Saturday.

Seven Cloud arrested on domestic battery charge

Jahzare Jackson was the second player or commitment in as many days to make headlines for a recent legal issue. Georgia JUCO commit Seven Cloud is facing charges regarding domestic battery that stem from an April incident in Butler County. The defensive lineman appeared in front of a judge on Monday, July 14, where he was formally charged.

According to the Butler County Times Gazette, Judge Chad Crum found probable cause to charge Cloud and ruled him to have no contact with the victim moving forward. It is a Class B misdemeanor and he will be back in court on Sept. 22.

The report states that the incident occurred on April 20. The Butler County Sheriff’s office was called to the scene of an altercation between Cloud and his significant other. He was arrested and subsequently bonded out. Police allege that Cloud “did knowingly cause physical contact with another person, in a rude, angry or insulting manner.”

This is not the first incident where the police have been involved with Cloud and his significant other. On March 27, Cloud was charged with disorderly conduct after allegedly destroying her cell phone. That is also classified as a misdemeanor and both charges came from the BCC Department of Public Safety.

While Cloud has not yet joined the Georgia program, Jahzare Jackson played in every game last season. He was expected to compete for a backup job on the offensive line this fall.

On3’s Barkley Truax also contributed to this report.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Letters

The impressive financial gymnastics Taylor Jacobs, who oversees name, image and likeness, and her team executed to enable LSU to be financially competitive in paying their athletes to play gives a literal definition to winning at all costs. There are liabilities associated with pay to play that should be considered. Amateurism in college and high […]

Published

on

Letters

The impressive financial gymnastics Taylor Jacobs, who oversees name, image and likeness, and her team executed to enable LSU to be financially competitive in paying their athletes to play gives a literal definition to winning at all costs.

There are liabilities associated with pay to play that should be considered. Amateurism in college and high school sports no longer exists. Excelling at sports used to be about fulling a dream to be the best through hard work and sacrifice and to experience the sheer joy of accomplishment. Now, competing is complicated by a paycheck.

Have college athletes become mercenaries playing for the highest bidder? The money has become preeminent in discussions with players and has irrevocably changed players’ relationships with coaches and their teams. Forget about mentorship and team loyalty, just show me the money.

LSU athletes are professionals by definition. They are contract workers but could become employees if they are allowed to collectively bargain. How will that work?

Wining is a good thing except when the costs are too high.

JIM ROBERTS

St. George

Continue Reading

NIL

SEC football teams with the most cupcake routes to the College Football Playoff

Did SEC football programs learn how to schedule from last season’s CFB Playoff Selection Committee? Though few games are added less than a year out, appearances are that some SEC teams believe scheduling as many cupcakes as possible is the way to go. Recently, On3’s Pete Nakos picked 11 teams with the weakest out-of-conference (OOC) […]

Published

on


Did SEC football programs learn how to schedule from last season’s CFB Playoff Selection Committee? Though few games are added less than a year out, appearances are that some SEC teams believe scheduling as many cupcakes as possible is the way to go.

Recently, On3’s Pete Nakos picked 11 teams with the weakest out-of-conference (OOC) schedules in the 2025 season. Six of the 11 are SEC football teams. One of the six, Vanderbilt, gets a pass. Thanks to the Commodores’ SEC schedule, ESPN Analytics ranks Vanderbilt as having the nation’s second-toughest 12-game schedule. Another SEC team, Georgia, is rated as the 8th-toughest FBS schedule, with Alabama and Texas playing in Athens. Nakos included Auburn in the weakest OOC schedules, but with the Tigers not being a legit playoff contender, the weakness is not material.

Three of the other SEC teams are playoff contenders. For each of the three a big reason why is their out-of-conference schedule.

The three SEC football teams hoping to cakewalk to a Playoff at-large bid are Tennessee, Ole Miss, and Missouri. The three fanbases will loudly contend their teams are SEC championship contenders. But ESPN gives the Vols a 4.2% probability of winning the SEC. Ole Miss is at 2.8% and Missouri is at 0.6%. The realistic playoff goal for each team is a 10-2 or 9-3 season. None of them can afford to lose an out-of-conference game.

Using an Athlon ranking of the 136 FBS teams, Missouri has a greater risk than the Vols or the Rebels to lose an out-of-conference game. In Week 2, Missouri hosts a home game against No. 35-ranked Kansas. The Tigers open with FCS, Central Arkansas, and have two more catwalk games against No. 92 Louisiana and No. 135 UMass.

Tennessee opens with No. 57 Syracuse, in Atlanta, in what is almost a home game for the Vols. In addition, Tennessee plays FCS, East Tennessee State, No. 125 UAB, and No. 132 New Mexico State.

Four games into the Ole Miss season, Tulane (No. 48) plays the Rebels in Oxford. Ole Miss also plays FCS, The Citadel, No. 97 Washington State, and No. 112 Georgia State.

Ole Miss and Missouri have no road, out-of-conference games. Tennessee can’t claim one either.

SEC Football requires at least one non-SEC Power Opponent

For the record, Alabama Football also has two cupcakes: FCS Eastern Illinois and No. 116 ULM. But, the Crimson Tide plays two non-SEC Power teams in FSU (No. 42) and Wisconsin (No. 45), with the FSU game in Tallahassee.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Georgia predicted to lose 5-star RB for all the wrong reasons

July 20 marks the commitment date for five-star running back Derrek Cooper. Throughout the past few months Georgia has been one of his top teams if not the team leading in his recruitment. However, the last few days have seen multiple recruiting experts predict Cooper to Texas. There theoretically is still time for Georgia to […]

Published

on


July 20 marks the commitment date for five-star running back Derrek Cooper. Throughout the past few months Georgia has been one of his top teams if not the team leading in his recruitment. However, the last few days have seen multiple recruiting experts predict Cooper to Texas.

There theoretically is still time for Georgia to come back and win this recruitment, but that seems nearly impossible at this point. So what went wong for Georgia in this recruitment?

It’s hard to know exactly how Georgia lost this recruitment, but a few experts have hinted at the sole reason being financial.

Cooper trending to Texas because of NIL offer

Two recruiting insiders on Sunday hinted on social media that the reason Cooper is likely to pick Texas is because of the financial package offered to him by the Longhorns.

The first report indicating Cooper’s decision is being heavily influenced by money came from Rivals insider Geoff Ketchum. It’s important to not that Ketchum is a Texas insider with Rivals, so he likely is the most knowledgeable person at Rivals about Cooper’s recruitment.

Georgia insider Radi Nabulsi also weighed in on this recruitment by sarcastically crediting the amazing relationship Texas formed with Cooper.

Regardless of the reason, it’s unfortunate that Cooper appears to be heading to Texas instead of Athens. Blaming the loss on a massive NIL offer is an easy excuse for fans to make when losing a recruitment, but that’s just the name of the game nowadays.

Whether Georgia likes it or not, recruiting is heavily influenced by money. So if Georgia wants to win more of these recruitments, they might have to up the NIL they’re willing to offer.

At the end of the day though, Kirby Smart has shared he will not overspend for any recruit out of high school. He’d rather reward his upperclassmen financially who have earned it over multiple years at Georgia.

So far this strategy has worked at Georgia during the NIL era, and as long as UGA keeps winning on the field then losing these recruitments isn’t so bad.





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

House Settlement Provides Level NIL Playing Field in SEC, Says Arkansas Coach

Arkansas head coach Sam Pittman says a $2.8 billion antitrust settlement that went into effect this month has leveled the college football playing field in a good way. Pittman said Arkansas now has a chance to compete on more even terms with other SEC powers like Georgia, Alabama and Texas. Pittman said at SEC media […]

Published

on

House Settlement Provides Level NIL Playing Field in SEC, Says Arkansas Coach

Arkansas head coach Sam Pittman says a $2.8 billion antitrust settlement that went into effect this month has leveled the college football playing field in a good way.

Pittman said Arkansas now has a chance to compete on more even terms with other SEC powers like Georgia, Alabama and Texas. Pittman said at SEC media days that his program had previously dealt with a financial disadvantage against schools with more established name, image and likeness collectives since NIL payments began in 2022.

According to the terms of the House settlement, each school can now share up to about $20.5 million with their athletes.

“Financially, with revenue sharing, I think we are finally back on [an] even keel with everybody, which we weren’t,” said Pittman, whose team finished 7-6 in 2024. “If I was going to make an excuse, it would be financially is why we haven’t done quite as well. … But I think now with it being even, look out, the Razorbacks are coming.”

Pittman and most other coaches brought seniors and graduate players to represent their teams at SEC media days, which concluded Thursday. Pittman brought two 2021 recruits and a transfer, but Arkansas could have difficulty finding seniors next year from his original 2022 signing class because many members of that class have transferred.

Pittman, whose Razorbacks have earned bowl bids in four of his five seasons, said players have different reasons for transferring but that many were lured away from Arkansas by more attractive NIL packages at other schools. When asked about the 2022 class, Pittman said, “Here’s what it’s not because of: the way they’re treated, because of the way they’re developed, because of the way they’re taught.”

“That’s not the reason. It could be playing time. It could be finances. Probably the majority of it is finances.”

The House settlement era began on July 1.

The enforcement of the House settlement is still being worked out as the new College Sports Commission informed athletic directors in letters last week that it was rejecting payments to players from collectives created only to pay players instead of as payment for NIL.

Some seniors at SEC media days said NIL payments and the transfer portal have contributed to their decisions to complete their eligibility instead of leaving school early to pursue opportunities in the NFL.

“I would most definitely say so,” Missouri offensive lineman Connor Tollison said. “Obviously, you know, you have a chance to make some money these days. … With the transfer portal, if you don’t have [a necessarily good] opportunity at this place you’re at, you have the chance to go somewhere else and get a fresh start. 

“It wasn’t necessarily something I experienced to my college career, but I’ve seen it. You know, it works for plenty of players. So yeah, I think it’s good for the players.”

When asked if NIL makes it easier for players to complete their eligibility, Kentucky coach Mark Stoops, coming off a 4-8 season, said, “Listen, we all love our players, whether they’re one year in our program, six months, or four years.”

Linebacker Alex Afari, defensive back Jordan Lovett and tight end Josh Kattus were the seniors who accompanied Stoops to Atlanta. “Of course I love making money from name, image and likeness,” Lovett said. “But I love football first. You know, football was my first love. So I play for the game, not for money.”

Lovett added his primary motivation for returning was to earn his first win over Georgia.

“It’s the big part of college football now because some dudes just make decisions off, you know, the financial stuff,” Lovett said. “I love football. … I still haven’t, you know, beat Georgia yet. You know, Georgia’s one of my goals.”

Reporting by The Associated Press.

Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily!

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending