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Army women's lacrosse coach Michelle Tumolo being all she can be

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Army women's lacrosse coach Michelle Tumolo being all she can be


MT: It’s the best! Nell (almost one year old) just learned to say “no no no” to the dog. I’m in the honeymoon stage with her now. My job allows me to spend time with her and allows my wife Lara to travel to the city (New York) 3 days a week for her job as a PA. She works incredibly long hours, while my commute is three minutes. We are very fortunate the community at West Point sets me up for success.The humble and gregarious Tumolo was a terror as a player and now leads Army’s women’s lacrosse team into battle with the same aggressive attitude displayed throughout her impressive career. With a strong 5-1 start on the 2025 season, the Daily News caught up with Coach Tumolo to discuss her mission and the bright future she has created for women’s lacrosse at the United States Military Academy at West Point.MT: The whole season was a fairy tale. We beat ranked teams for the first time to get in the top 20 and then went on a 10-game win streak, including beating Navy for only the second time ever. For our players to reach the NCAA Tournament is incredible. When we watched the selection show, the joy was… look, we are a military institution. In the summer the players do not get to play much lacrosse like other collegiate programs do. They might have a week or two off, but for the most part our players are in the woods for military training all summer. They’re not in cleats, they’re running in boots, and because they were in boots literally the day before, I don’t put them on the field for a speed test when our training starts up in August. We slow-roll it. They haven’t been able to shower regularly, they’re getting yelled at, they’re tired, they probably haven’t eaten correctly. But honestly, their military training gives our players a mental toughness that transfers to the field. So, for me it’s a tradeoff. I realize they are being trained by the finest officers in the USA. I’ll teach them lacrosse when they come back.DN: What was the best game you ever played?DN: The schedule gets tougher. No. 15 Loyola. No. 7 Stanford. No. 19 Navy. Thoughts?MT: Such a good question. As a player, there was so much blood and sweat I put into my game. I was happy for me. But with my new lens as a coach, I’m happy for my players. I love seeing them succeed together. It is their effort that wins games. I’m just there coaching, but they are physically doing it.MT: It’s definitely a problem. The students (at West Point) don’t get much time off, so weekends are precious. Plus, it’s a winter sport and it’s cold outside. So, they might not want to attend. But it’s mandatory for cadets to attend the football games in the cold. We need some of that for lacrosse. It’s also about the history and the area. B.C., Northwestern, Navy and SU really do such a good job getting people in seats and promoting their lacrosse programs, but those are also big lacrosse towns.

Army women's lacrosse coach Michelle Tumolo
MT: This generation watched me and my teams play, but I might be getting phased out a bit because I’m a little older. It is such an honor to think that people want to play for me. It provides a deeper connection. I went to Syracuse because I wanted to play for Gary Gait, the greatest lacrosse coach and player of all time. When a girl wants to play for me and my staff, that’s a connection you can’t break. When they commit to me, I’m also committing to them.Michelle Tumolo

DN: OK, now for the really important question — how’s it feel to be a parent?Michelle Tumolo: It’s 50% lacrosse and 50% everything else. It’s all about getting buy-in to our young program from the players and staff. When I came here in 2021, we had never defeated Navy, never been to a playoff, never had a championship. So, I wanted to be in on the list of “firsts” and make history at West Point. The players in our locker room believe in themselves, with a high standard of excellence, growth and family. When you have a tight knit team that loves and trusts each other, that will transfer to the field. And I can’t say it’s all me. I’ve had incredible assistant coaches that have led us to new heights.DN: You were a fury on offense at Syracuse, posting the highest single season totals in points and assists for a freshman in the program’s history and named Big East Attack Player of the Year in 2013. Army is 13th in the nation on defense for goals allowed. Have you changed your approach as a coach to be more defensive minded?MT: Well, that’s my job. We have naturally talented players, and we really care about them. We “coach them up” starting with skills in the fall and building them into the system in the spring for everyone to be able to play at a highest level. Fall is for team chemistry; the spring is to implement the system.MT: I think about my path in life and everything that led me to this. I’m most proud to be the head coach at West Point. It’s the biggest accomplishment of my life. It’s been very eye-opening. I like to reflect about my mom. She always said to be grateful for the gifts God’s given to you. And I am very grateful I was given the athleticism that made me a great lacrosse player that then helped me become a successful coach. I loved beating Navy for the first time ever. I loved being part of a nationally ranked team as player that made it to a first ever national championship game for Syracuse. I’m also very proud to be able to wear the red, white, and blue to represent my country. And I’m so proud of the players that I’ve coached, not just for recognition for their lacrosse success but also as successful officers in the United States Army. I spoke with some of my players who graduated, who are now officers stationed in places in Europe and Iraq. To think that I led them in some sort in mentorship, is just a wonderful gift for me. These women make me a better leader and mentor. It’s such an honor.  They’ve had success in lacrosse, academics and the military. I have one of the best jobs in the country. My other greatest accomplishment is being a parent to Nell and having Lara as my wife. Please mention that. I have the greatest support system and family anyone could ask for.DN: Has the game changed since you last played in 2016?DN: Your accomplishments in women’s lacrosse over your career as a player and coach would take up this entire interview. If you had to pick a few things you’re most proud of, what would they be?MT: When I got the job I didn’t know about “don’t ask don’t tell” until I read up on it. I said to the school that this is who I am, is this a problem? And they said, “Absolutely not. We’re not hiring you for diversity. We are hiring you because you’re a great coach.” So, I’ve never felt more supported or loved. From my boss, my community. There might be underlying things in the military, but it could be everywhere, too.MT: I love it! That’s how we win championships. I’m so excited. I respect Loyola and their coaches so much. Navy is just historically good. They were in the final four in 2017, within one goal of a national championship. They have a level of excellence, and I love to play them and continue our incredible rivalry. And I’m glad Stanford is playing well, although I hope they lose to Syracuse later today. I’ll be watching. (Syracuse won 14-13 in double overtime).MT: It was back-to-back games my junior year (2012) at Syracuse. I scored with five seconds left to defeat UNC which took ‘Cuse back to the Final Four. And in the next game, we were down by seven goals against the No. 1 team in the country, Florida. We came back to win in double overtime to advance to the championship game. We all said to each other that there was no way we were losing, and we didn’t. Best times ever.DN: You’ve been openly vocal on your sexuality, emphasizing the need for women in roles of power in sports and beyond, and a proud voice for LGBTQ. Have you faced any challenges speaking out now that you’re at a Military Academy?DN: How do you approach recruiting at a military academy?DN: Can you “coach up” a good player into a great player, or is it all just talent?DN: I watched your recent game against Fairfield (Army won, 18-10). Your players seem to love each other. Maybe it’s not a problem, but how do you handle egos and poor sportsmanship?DN: You were a superstar as a player. Do the kids you recruit know who you are?MT: (laughing) I’m both. My parents were hard and supportive in a good way. My mom knew my strengths in high school were more athletic than academic. So, she’d push me on my studies and pat me on the back when I played sports. I’ll put my arm around my players and tell them I love and believe in them, but I’m also going to tell them when I think they can be better. I’m a very vocal coach. This is how I am.MT: It’s not a thing for us. We might lose recruits because of it, but the way I look at it is if you’re into NIL, you’re probably not right for the military. Because it’s not all about you. I’m happy for the students who get paid, but I just want an athlete that wants to play lacrosse here at a high level, get an education at the finest institution, and become a leader themselves. It’s such an honor to coach people that want to do that.MT: So much. It’s still a beautiful finesse game, but it’s so much faster. More physical. It’s fun to watch. The stick technology these days…cradling the ball, behind the back shots on goal, it’s amazing what these women can do on the field.MT: I used to try and get the best of the best kids even if they didn’t show an interest in West Point. But now I’m much more selective about who I go after. They have to know what they’re getting into, because we have to recruit them before the summer of their senior year in high school. It’s a big commitment for a 16-year-old girl. I’m very thorough in my communications with the players. I talk to their club coaches and make sure they’re not just putting a “like” button down because we’re a good team and staff. They must really want to serve in the military. And play lacrosse at a top program. I found my (recruiting) groove, and I’ve learned that the girls who want to serve either had a grandfather or a dad or a cousin that served. To them, it’s incredibly important.DN: I counted about 20 fans at the Fairfield game last week. But how do you improve attendance for women’s lacrosse?(Courtesy of Army West Point Athletics)MT: We have such incredible young women. This is the best 33 strong I’ve ever coached. My core value that I stress is to be a great teammate. Not just a good teammate, but a great one. It builds confidence on the field when you know that every teammate has your back. The players on the sidelines constantly cheer the team on. It makes my job so much more enjoyable. And it’s something I take pride in. Each week we hand out a “Baller of the Week” award to a player who practiced especially hard and put it up on our Instagram. It’s mostly the positive attitude that they bring to practice and the field.MT: Playing in the Dome is such an experience. It’s elite. It’s historic. We wanted to play against a high caliber team to learn how to be a champion. It was hard. And I hated to lose by so much (18 to 7), but it showed our girls what it takes to be the best. It was a great learning experience.MT: I love this question. I have to give credit to our (second year) defensive coordinator Charlotte Sofield. She was an unbelievable defender at UNC (winning four ACC Championships and the National Championship in 2016). She is so passionate for defense. When we hold opponent scores to under 8, 10, or 13 goals, that’s how you become champions. I coached defense the year we made the NCAAs (2023). I was so proud, because I was so offensive minded as a player. Defense is black and white compared to offense. You force players this way or that. But Charlotte has taken our defense to new historic heights. It takes so much pressure off the offense to not have to score on every possession. Our goal every game is to force our opponents have a shot clock violation (90 seconds). It’s very deflating for an offense to suffer that violation.DN: How ticked off were you losing at your alma mater Syracuse last year?DN: Are you a “pat on the back” or “kick in the butt” coach?Daily News: What is your methodology that has led to your coaching success at West Point?MT: Oh my God yes! But guess what? I’m on the coaching staff for the 2026 national women’s team, and if we keep doing well, I’m hoping I’ll be retained, and get to coach in the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. We just have to keep doing a good job. It would be really really cool. I’ll keep you posted on that.DN: What was a bigger rush; winning as a player or as a coach?DN: Woman’s lacrosse will be an Olympic sport in 2028. Would you have liked to have played in the Olympics?Born and raised in Harrison Township, N.J., Tumolo led the Army Black Knights to their first ever NCAA Tournament bid in 2023. She has a 41-19 record in her first four seasons, including a school-record 15 wins in 2024. Before coming to West Point, Tumolo went 29-13 in three seasons at Wagner, leading the Seahawks to the 2019 NCAA Tournament. Prior to that she honed her craft as an assistant coach at Oregon, Florida and Syracuse.DN: Does the new NIL (Name, Image, Likeness) policy affect West Point?DN: How exciting was it taking Army to the NCAAs for the first time in 2023?A record-setting lacrosse player at Syracuse. World Cup champion on the U.S. national team. Assistant coach for the 2024 champion U.S. Women’s U20 national team. The 2023 Patriot League Coach of the Year. Proud parent of a one-year-old daughter. A staunch advocate for LGBTQ rights. There isn’t much the head women’s lacrosse coach at West Point, Michelle Tumolo, can’t do.

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Sports Economist Concocts His $25 Million Recipe for Silverfield’s First Arkansas Roster

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Sports Economist Concocts His $25 Million Recipe for Silverfield’s First Arkansas Roster
photo credit: Craven Whitlow

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In this era of college football, one of the most pressing questions facing Arkansas – and every program, for that matter – seems simple on the surface, but is actually quite complex upon closer inspection: How should teams spend their budget when it comes to building a roster?

The Razorbacks, in particular, are trying to sort this out as we speak. As things currently stand, they have just one scholarship quarterback, one semi-proven running back, two returning starting offensive linemen, one established defensive end, three scholarship linebackers and very limited experience in the secondary. (The partridge in a pear tree just entered the transfer portal.)

That’s a lot of holes to fill – a task made even more difficult by the fact that there is no centralized clearinghouse of contracts like in the NFL. That means college football programs are left trying to figure out how much each player and position is worth and how to keep talent contributing now and into the future.

It’s a question at the top of mind for every FBS staffer, as well as most fans, so Trey Biddy over at HawgSports took a stab at it last week, giving himself $25 million to distribute across the Razorbacks’ roster. It’s an interesting breakdown and one we strongly recommend reading for yourself.

Best of Arkansas Sports, though, wanted to take a slightly different approach to the topic, so they asked sports economist Parker Fleming to take a stab at it from an analytics perspective. Here’s what he came up with…

Using the NFL as a Guide

When building a college roster, many front offices look to the NFL, which has a centralized database of player contracts as part of its Collective Bargaining Agreement. Valuing a player in the NFL becomes as straightforward as looking at a few key metrics, seeing where that player ranks in those key metrics, and then slotting their earnings in accordance with their production.

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In fact, many college teams have hired directly from the NFL ranks to have someone with professional experience help with their cap and contract management. While the experience and general principles from the NFL have great value, there are still some unique realities in college football one must consider. 

First, uncertainty around player quality in college football is dramatically higher than the NFL. New Arkansas general manager Gaizka Crowley mentioned this in a recent interview with The Athletic, citing college being distinct from the pros because there is “a ton of variance” among and between programs. College prospects are developmental, and that means the range of outcomes on a player are much larger than their more polished pro counterparts. Due to that uncertainty, investing all your resources in just a few players is going to increase your risk. 

Second, and perhaps more important, is the fact that the NFL is a passing league, where college football features the run game much more prominently. In 2025, college football teams rushed about 15% more than an average NFL team, given down, distance and game state. That means we must recalibrate our positional value relative to the NFL: QB passing and WR/CB play become slightly less important, while the run game – running backs, offensive and defensive linemen, linebackers, blocking tight end – becomes more important.

Ryan Silverfield’s Memphis was a slightly pass-heavy team in 2025, passing 2.9 percentage points more than the average team (56th most-pass happy in the nation, per cfb-graphs.com), so for this specific example, we won’t over-indulge in the run game, but we do know that’s a clear difference from the NFL example. 

Clearly, we can’t just map one for one the structure of the NFL and hope for the best with the rest of the roster. While a roster of 15 elite players and 90 replacement players would be a fun experiment, it also puts the team in a hole for recruitment (money you have to tie into players who need to develop to contribute), and at severe risk of an injury or bust derailing a season spectacularly. 

What we can do, though, is use NFL benchmarks for elite talent and adjust for rush rates to get us guiding principles for position-by-position group allocation. For our rushing adjustment, we want to increase the value of the rushing positions by about 15% and decrease the value of the passing positions by about 15%.

Then, we’ll adjust by number of players: we need more linemen and more wide receivers than we do quarterbacks or running backs, so we’ll adjust the pools accordingly. At this point, we’re entering into art not science, and different teams will have strong opinions about this adjustment. But as a guiding principle, this illustrates the roster building challenge and ways to attack it.

Position-by-Position Breakdown

One place many programs have started is with the NFL franchise tag. The franchise tag is a tool teams have where they can retain a free agent player for one season at a premium salary, designated by the average annual value of the top five salaries at that position over the last four years. 

In 2026, per overthecap.com, the franchise tag values are projected to look something like this:

Screenshot 2026-01-02 at 4.38.54 PMScreenshot 2026-01-02 at 4.38.54 PM

This table essentially reflects how the league values elite talent at each position. 

We can apply our rushing adjustment to these values to get guidelines for our position-by-position distribution. Applying the 15% adjustment to the positions as stated above, we get percentages and total amounts of a $25 million dollar budget as follows: 

Screenshot 2026-01-02 at 4.39.22 PMScreenshot 2026-01-02 at 4.39.22 PM

Following the Eagles’ Blueprint

Now that we have guardrails for positional value and overall spending, we need to think about how to distribute these amounts across players. In his article, Trey Biddy acknowledges this problem and articulates a reasonable solution: 

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“I’m capped at 105 roster spots, but instead of giving something to everyone, I’m going to focus on 75 players and no more. Everyone else will have to be happy with a scholarship. At least 20 of those 75 players will be elite recruits. However, there might be the possibility that a recruit fits into a starter, backup or reserve role. In that case it would be 20-plus recruits.

Essentially, I’m going for 55 players who are going to see the field or provide insurance in case of an injury, plus 20 more I’m invested in for the future. I also considered limiting it to as few as 47 players (the two-deep plus special teams) plus 20 or so recruits.”

Biddy was on the right track with that final statement.

The Philadelphia Eagles, one of the NFL’s most savvy front offices, invest about 80% of the salary cap in 55% of their roster, which equates to about 47 players we want to really invest in, some of whom will be recruits. Ideally, some of those recruits can contribute immediately, especially wide receivers, running backs and defensive backs. We’ll bump that up to a round 50 to include two specialists and a fourth quarterback for depth.

We’ll use the percentages above and allocate $20 million of our $25 million to those 47+3 players on the roster to give us a $5 million reserve for recruitment and portal – that’s money we want to spend every year, but reserve to allow us to go over slot or over positional numbers as the roster needs dictate based on eligibility and turnover. 

To allocate this money within position groups, I’ll use a Pareto distribution to allocate the position budgets across players. Some of you may be familiar with the Pareto rule in business, where 20% of inputs yield 80% of outputs. In our context, what it means is simple: Top-end talent will have more influence on our results, and we want to pay accordingly. Using this Pareto distribution to spread money across position groups will allow us to invest our money in high-quality talent at the most impactful positions, yielding the best results on the field, both now and in the future.

Without further ado, let’s go position by position and allocate our 50 roster spots. 

QUARTERBACK (4 Players)

  • QB1: $2,500,000
  • QB2: $647,775
  • QB3: $254,000
  • QB4: $150,723

RUNNING BACK (4 Players)

  • RB1: $548,931
  • RB2: $245,654
  • RB3: $153,482
  • RB4: $109,933

WIDE RECEIVER (7 Players)

  • WR1: $1,022,607
  • WR2: $457,629
  • WR3: $285,922
  • WR4: $204,795
  • WR5: $158,090
  • WR6: $127,000
  • WR7: $107,003

TIGHT END (3 Players)

  • TE1: $602,161
  • TE2: $269,474
  • TE3: $168,365

OFFENSIVE LINE (10 Players)

  • OT1: $1,558,248
  • OT2: $710,761
  • OG1: $444,076
  • OT3: $318,074
  • C: $245,535
  • OG2: $198,730
  • OT4: $166,190
  • OT5: $142,342
  • IOL4: $124,164
  • IOL5: $109,880

DEFENSIVE END (4 Players)

  • DE1: $767,881
  • DE2: $343,636
  • DE3: $214,701
  • DE4: $153,782

DEFENSIVE TACKLE (4 Players)

  • DT1: $1,209,932
  • DT2: $541,460
  • DT3: $338,299
  • DT4: $242,310

LINEBACKER (4 Players)

  • LB1: $1,073,996
  • LB2: $480,627
  • LB3: $300,291
  • LB4: $215,086

SAFETY (4 Players)

  • S1: $795,899
  • S2: $356,175
  • S3: $222,534
  • S4: $159,393

CORNERBACK (4 Players)

  • CB1: $599,777
  • CB2: 268,408
  • CB3: $167,699
  • CB4: $120,116

SPECIALISTS (2 Players)

TOTAL: 50 Players, $19,726,000

  • OFFENSE: 28 Players, $11,010,000
  • DEFENSE: 20 Players, $8,572,000
  • SPECIALISTS: 2 Players, $144,000

RECRUITING BUDGET AND REST OF ROSTER: $5,418,000 ($235,565 per player for an average recruiting class of 23 players)

These are some of the key differences between mine and Trey Biddy’s methods: 

  • Less commitment to QBs: we want to keep the money on the field, and so while we want to entice backups to stay, we also need to walk a fine line between paying for players who aren’t contributing this season. 
  • Balance at the tails for premium positions: The value of a good running back is higher in college than the NFL, but we also know a couple things: Running Backs take a lot of wear and tear, and their success is dependent on their surroundings. The analytical approach would be to pay for an upper middle class veteran back, and play your young running backs as well, investing the rest of the top end money into the offensive line. 
  • Specialist numbers were too high. A good punting and kicking game is important, but ancillary to moving the ball well in the down-to-down business of football. We want to attract and retain talent without paying market premiums for positions that yield minimal influence on our overall success. I refrained from paying a long-snapper at all; long-snapping is a skill that can be taught, and I have faith in the coaching staff to find a walk-on who would be happy to have that role. 

What we’ve done above is taken an analytical approach to framing ideal targets for roster spending. This approach, one of many potential successful approaches, emphasizes top-end talent on on-field contribution, while leaving substantial funds for coaching preference at depth or paying premiums for transfer portal talent.

When building a roster, the current money on the books will be the biggest constraint for coaches, as well as the natural evolution of the roster due to eligibility limits. The analytical approach above attempts to tie spending to on-field impact and position Arkansas to build a championship caliber roster.

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More coverage of Arkansas football and the transfer portal from BoAS…



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Ranking potential CFP National Championship games: Miami vs. Oregon leads the way

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We have reached the College Football Playoff semifinals, and unlike last season when the favorites won all eight games in the first two rounds, we’ve seen some surprises this year. Gone are the likes of Ohio State, Georgia and Alabama. In are the upstarts like Indiana, Ole Miss and a Miami team that hasn’t played on a stage like this in over 20 years.

Between those three and Oregon, we are guaranteed to not only have a new national champion but a team that will win its first title in the CFP era. Of our final four teams, Miami is the only program to win a national title going back to the BCS era — its last natty coming in 2001.

For Ole Miss, you have to go back to 1960, which is the lone national title in program history. Indiana and Oregon? They’ve never won the national title.

College Football Playoff overreactions: Best postseason we’ve seen, Curt Cignetti on Hall of Fame track

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College Football Playoff overreactions: Best postseason we've seen, Curt Cignetti on Hall of Fame track

NIL, the transfer portal and the College Football Playoff were supposed to bring us new blood, and it’s hard to argue with the results right now, isn’t it? So we’re either re-crowning a long-dormant national power or welcoming a new power to the fold, but I’m not here to figure out who will take the trophy at the end right now. No, the point of our exercise today is to determine what the best possible title game matchups would be. To figure that out, I looked at the possibilities from multiple perspectives. How competitive would the game likely be? How does the matchup look? Who has the coolest uniforms? And, while I’m not a television executive, I also considered which matchup would be most appealing to a broader audience.

Here are my highly scientific results.

1. (5) Oregon vs. (10) Miami

Oregon may not have a national title to its name, but it’s not exactly a stranger to the stage. This is Oregon’s third appearance in the CFP, and if it advances to the title game, it will be its second appearance in a national championship game since the start of the BCS era in 1998. Miami is the blue blood of the group. It has won a national title this century and has five in its history.

While neither team is a television draw the likes of Ohio State or Alabama, they are known commodities in the college football world and would draw more “casual” eyeballs in this spot than any other possible combination. As for the matchup itself, the teams are quite similar. They have physical run games that look to punish you for 60 minutes but also have accurate quarterbacks who can get the ball to dangerous playmakers at the wide receiver position.

They’re also both led by coaches who put a strong emphasis on building their program from the lines of scrimmage out, though Dan Lanning is more aggressive when it comes to gameday decisions than Mario Cristobal. Oh, and that brings up another fun storyline for this game. Mario Cristobal left Oregon to take the job at Miami and was replaced by Lanning. There was a lot of talk about the possibility of a Carson Beck vs. Georgia’s revenge game the last few weeks, but we all overlooked Mario vs. Oregon.

2. (1) Indiana vs. (10) Miami

A lot of what I said about the football matchup between Oregon and Miami applies here as well. Indiana may not have a bunch of blue-chip prospects on their offensive and defensive lines, but go ahead and ask all those blue-chip teams it’s beaten if they could tell the difference when facing them. The Hoosiers are just as mean as anybody, and I don’t know that there’s a defense in the country that takes as much joy in hitting ballcarriers as Indiana’s does.

Indiana also might have the best quarterback in the country. Fernando Mendoza won the Heisman Trophy for good reason and could be the first pick in the NFL Draft this spring. So that certainly brings some “sizzle” to the matchup for television purposes. Plus, you can always sell this as New Blood vs. Blue Blood.

3. (5) Oregon vs. (6) Ole Miss

Of the four possible matchups, this is the one most likely to deliver us a shootout. Ole Miss has been involved in plenty of those all year, thanks to the likes of Trinidad Chambliss and an explosive offense. Lane Kiffin might be gone (oh, the irony of leaving for LSU to compete for national championships while then watching the team you just left do that), but he didn’t take the offense with him. Ole Miss has scored 80 points through its first two playoff games after averaging 37.6 during the regular season.

Oregon has shown more versatility. It can win a rock fight, but it’s also one of the most explosive offenses in the country. It has scored 40 points or more seven times this season and has cracked the 50-point mark four times.

4. (1) Indiana vs. (6) Ole Miss

This is the matchup that would have the largest spread. I don’t know where the final odds would be by the time the game came around, but using my power ratings, I’d have Indiana as roughly a 10-point favorite here. Of course, if this game happens, Ole Miss will have reached the title game after beating both Georgia and Miami as underdogs in the quarters and semis, so it’s not a position where the Rebels would be afraid.

Still, while I’ll be happy to watch this game if it’s the one we get. The blowout potential here is higher than anywhere else, which makes it the least appealing. Yes, there’s the angle of neither team having won or competed for national titles in the modern era before, but like Indiana, Oregon hasn’t won a national title either, so the novelty doesn’t carry much weight.





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Should you enter NCAA transfer portal? What all athletes need to know

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Jan. 3, 2026, 7:02 a.m. ET



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Washington Huskies Sign QB Demond Williams Jr. to New Deal For 2026

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Jan. 2, 2026, 3:44 p.m. PT

Washington Huskies sophomore quarterback Demond Williams Jr. will begin his third season at the school among the top compensated players in college football after agreeing to a new deal on Friday.

ESPN college football insider Pete Thamel reported the deal between the 5-foot-11, 190-pound signal-caller and the school on Friday, reuniting Williams and Jedd Fisch for the next two seasons through his senior year in 2027.

The Chandler, Arizona native emerged as one of the best quarterbacks in the Big Ten in his first year as the Huskies’ starter, throwing for 3,064 yards and 25 touchdowns with an additional 611 yards rushing and six touchdowns on the ground in 2025, leading the program to a 9-4 overall record in year two under Fisch.



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Is Missouri football close to landing transfer portal QB? Reports say so

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Updated Jan. 2, 2026, 5:25 p.m. CT

Missouri football does not appear to be wasting much time on the most important question on its roster.

Multiple reports landed Friday, Jan. 2, indicating that the Tigers are the team to watch for Austin Simmons, who, at the beginning of the 2025 season, was widely expected to be the starting quarterback for the Ole Miss Rebels under then-head coach Lane Kiffin.

Simmons, according to a report Friday from national ESPN reporter Pete Thamel, has entered the transfer portal with a no-contact tag. That typically means that a player has a good idea where they would like to end up, and it bars other schools from reaching out to him or his representatives.



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College football transfer tracker: With portal now open, where will top players end up?

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We’ve known Leavitt was going to leave Arizona State for a couple weeks now after a social media post, but he’s officially in the portal as of this morning.

He played in seven games this season before suffering a foot injury that required him to have surgery and miss the remainder of the year. In those seven games, he threw for 1,628 yards and 10 TDs along with three interceptions. He also ran for 306 yards and five TDs. The previous season, he threw for 2,885 yards and 24 TDs with six interceptions while running for another five rushing TDs.

The former four-star prospect originally committed to Michigan State before transferring to ASU, where he’s been the last 2 years.



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