NIL
BOMBSHELL
Jay Bilas, the prominent ESPN college basketball analyst and former Duke basketball player, has indeed been vocal about the evolving landscape of college athletics Author: wusa9.com Published: 8:20 PM EDT June 19, 2025 Updated: 8:20 PM EDT June 19, 2025 2

NIL
Crystal Ball prediction has Ohio State football team losing on another DE recruit
The Ohio State football team is projected to lose yet another defensive end recruit that they have been trying to land. This time, they are projected to lose out on KJ Ford, a player that they tried to get late in this cycle. They are desperate to add defensive ends at this point. ON3 is […]

The Ohio State football team is projected to lose yet another defensive end recruit that they have been trying to land. This time, they are projected to lose out on KJ Ford, a player that they tried to get late in this cycle. They are desperate to add defensive ends at this point.
ON3 is predicting that Ford is going to end up at Florida, which would be devastating for the Buckeyes. They are striking out left and right at defensive linemen, which is a major problem. Larry Johnson has struggled to be able to recruit in the NIL era.
Fans of the Ohio State Buckeyes were split when Johnson decided to stay for another year. Johnson was contemplating retirement, but decided to come back. If Ryan Day is smart, he will make sure that this is the only extra year that Johnson will be getting.
Another DE is expected to rebuke the Ohio State football team
Ford is a four-star recruit, so losing him would be another blow to a 2026 recruiting class that has slid down the rankings in recent weeks. They now have just the fifth-best recruiting class in the country. Just a couple of months ago, they had the second-best class.
At that time, there was talk that the Buckeyes could possibly win a recruiting national championship for the first time. Now, they are staring down the barrel of the lowest-rated recruiting class in the Ryan Day era. The fact that it is coming close to happening the year after a national championship is mind-blogging.
Ohio State will have to pivot to some different options at DE, but those options are becoming slimmer as the summer goes on. There are still six months before these kids sign with a program, so fans shouldn’t panic yet. Still, this is a bad pattern from Johnson.
NIL
Texas Tech’s $5M NIL Deal, Big 12 Trade Talk & Media Days
Share Tweet Share Share Email What’s going on in the Big 12 and beyond? I expand and explain every Sunday in Postscripts at Heartland College Sports, your home for independent Big 12 coverage. This week, let’s break down Texas Tech’s latest financial outlay, why hypothetical trades don’t matter and it’s time for media days. […]

What’s going on in the Big 12 and beyond? I expand and explain every Sunday in Postscripts at Heartland College Sports, your home for independent Big 12 coverage.
This week, let’s break down Texas Tech’s latest financial outlay, why hypothetical trades don’t matter and it’s time for media days.
Felix Ojo is Texas Tech’s $5 Million Man
Texas Tech celebrated July 4 by getting a commitment from a five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo. It’s the kind of thing Tech isn’t known for. To many recruiting services, Ojo is the highest-rated commitment Tech has ever landed.
But what made more news of course was the NIL money attached to Ojo’s commitment. Here’s how it was originally reported on social media by outlets like On3Sports.
Well, that’s a lot of money. Some social media users made a good point. That amount is more than some NFL draft picks make on a four-year rookie deal, including Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders. He received $4.6 million from the Cleveland Browns.
But, as always, the devil is in the details. There was no context to the graphic. Reporters — who I’m sure were oh so thrilled to work on Independence Day — were on the case.
Turns out there is money attached, but it’s not “exactly” $5.1 million.
Eli Lederman at ESPN reported that the deal was a fully guaranteed, three-year, $5.1 million revenue share contract. He got that information from Ojo’s agent, Derrick Shelby, who just happens to be the same agent for Texas Tech softball star NiJaree Canady.
Not long after that, CBS Sports’ Shehan Jeyarajah, reported that the guaranteed revenue share amount was about “half that amount.” He also reported there were stipulations in the deal that would allow it grow to the full amount.
On3Sports’ Pete Nakos had the full breakdown shortly. Ojo would get $1.2 million his first year, followed by $1.6 million in Year 2 and $2.1 million in Year 3. He also confirmed that the guaranteed amount is roughly half the total amount. He reported the contract “actually pays” $775,000 per year.
CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz also reported the same amount per year as an average. He also reported there was an understanding between Tech and Ojo’s representatives that the deal could be renegotiated if NIL returns to the “Wild West” format.
So a few things here:
First, for highly regarded recruits, this could be the norm. I was skeptical that he was getting a fully guaranteed deal, and that doesn’t appear to be the case. This feels like a typical NFL deal — a base salary with incentives that can be reached over time. The incentives become guaranteed as they get triggered.
Second, I must assume one of those incentives is staying at Tech. I think coaches, fans and collectives are tired of the year-over-year churn. Multi-year deals are going to be used more often, with triggers tied to staying multiple years, baseline grade-point averages and other factors.
Third, I found Zenith’s report about NIL returning to the “Wild West” curious. As long as the NIL money in this deal is coming from a third party, it won’t count against the rev share. If it’s a direct payment from the school, it does. I do think NIL will revert back to a “Wild West” format at some point as I don’t believe it’s controllable. But that would be a weird way to approach the future contract if you’re the player’s agent.
Last, as I wrote two weeks ago, enough with the pearl-clutching. Tech has money. It’s using it. Recruits know it. That’s why they’re interested. This is the world. Move on.
A Big 12-ACC Trade?
Earlier this week, a reader for the mailbag answered by The Athletic’s Stewart Mandel posed a question about a trade between conferences. In the reader’s eyes, the Big 12 could trade UCF, Cincinnati and West Virginia to the ACC for Cal, Stanford and SMU.
Mandel loved the idea and said it made “too much sense.” Our Pete Mundo wrote about it. We even conducted a poll.
You were not warm to the idea.
Hypotheticals are fun, but …
When I posed the WVU to ACC hypothetical a few years ago many WVU fans told me the ACC didn’t want them. It probably still doesn’t.
Stanford and Cal don’t want any part of the Big 12. Those two schools, in my opinion, will go it alone before joining.
SMU wanted in, but the Mustangs are a redundancy in the DFW market and for the Big 12 and didn’t add anything, in part because the area isn’t a college sports area. If DFW were a huge college sports area that would be another story. But the area is wrapped up in pro sports and for those that live here, they know that.
I mean, yes, if someone with realignment and can just wave a magic wand, sure. But there is no reality to this. Unless everyone wants to play with the same bucket of TV money like the NFL, something like this won’t happen.
Big 12 Media Days Return
It’s talking season this week in Frisco, Texas, as I’ll be covering Big 12 Media Days for Heartland College Sports. It’s the official kickoff of the Big 12 football season.
It’s a week we look forward to because it allows us to start getting a little less hypothetical in coverage and a little more actual. Like I can’t wait for someone to Kalani Sitake who is going to start at quarterback at BYU, or to ask Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire when the NIL budget for the Red Raiders actually looks like (like he’s gonna tell us).
Should be good times. Follow us all week. After media days I’m getting some vacation, my annual trip to Red Rocks in Colorado to see The Avett Brothers. Then, much more football.
You can find Matthew Postins on Twitter @PostinsPostcard.

NIL
Texas Tech's $5M NIL Deal, Big 12 Trade Talk & Media Days
What’s going on in the Big 12 and beyond? I expand and explain every Sunday in Postscripts at Heartland College Sports, your home for independent Big 12 coverage. This week, let’s break down Texas Tech’s latest financial outlay, why hypothetical trades don’t matter and it’s time for media days. Felix Ojo is Texas Tech’s […]

What’s going on in the Big 12 and beyond? I expand and explain every Sunday in Postscripts at Heartland College Sports, your home for independent Big 12 coverage.
This week, let’s break down Texas Tech’s latest financial outlay, why hypothetical trades don’t matter and it’s time for media days.
Felix Ojo is Texas Tech’s $5 Million Man
Texas Tech celebrated July 4 by getting a commitment from a five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo. It’s the kind of thing Tech isn’t known for. To many recruiting services, Ojo is the highest-rated commitment Tech has ever landed.
But what made more news of course was the NIL money attached to Ojo’s commitment. Here’s how it was originally reported on social media by outlets like On3Sports.
Well, that’s a lot of money. Some social media users made a good point. That amount is more than some NFL draft picks make on a four-year rookie deal, including Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders. He received $4.6 million from the Cleveland Browns.
But, as always, the devil is in the details. There was no context to the graphic. Reporters — who I’m sure were oh so thrilled to work on Independence Day — were on the case.
Turns out there is money attached, but it’s not “exactly” $5.1 million.
Eli Lederman at ESPN reported that the deal was a fully guaranteed, three-year, $5.1 million revenue share contract. He got that information from Ojo’s agent, Derrick Shelby, who just happens to be the same agent for Texas Tech softball star NiJaree Canady.
Not long after that, CBS Sports’ Shehan Jeyarajah, reported that the guaranteed revenue share amount was about “half that amount.” He also reported there were stipulations in the deal that would allow it grow to the full amount.
On3Sports’ Pete Nakos had the full breakdown shortly. Ojo would get $1.2 million his first year, followed by $1.6 million in Year 2 and $2.1 million in Year 3. He also confirmed that the guaranteed amount is roughly half the total amount. He reported the contract “actually pays” $775,000 per year.
CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz also reported the same amount per year as an average. He also reported there was an understanding between Tech and Ojo’s representatives that the deal could be renegotiated if NIL returns to the “Wild West” format.
So a few things here:
First, for highly regarded recruits, this could be the norm. I was skeptical that he was getting a fully guaranteed deal, and that doesn’t appear to be the case. This feels like a typical NFL deal — a base salary with incentives that can be reached over time. The incentives become guaranteed as they get triggered.
Second, I must assume one of those incentives is staying at Tech. I think coaches, fans and collectives are tired of the year-over-year churn. Multi-year deals are going to be used more often, with triggers tied to staying multiple years, baseline grade-point averages and other factors.
Third, I found Zenith’s report about NIL returning to the “Wild West” curious. As long as the NIL money in this deal is coming from a third party, it won’t count against the rev share. If it’s a direct payment from the school, it does. I do think NIL will revert back to a “Wild West” format at some point as I don’t believe it’s controllable. But that would be a weird way to approach the future contract if you’re the player’s agent.
Last, as I wrote two weeks ago, enough with the pearl-clutching. Tech has money. It’s using it. Recruits know it. That’s why they’re interested. This is the world. Move on.
A Big 12-ACC Trade?
Earlier this week, a reader for the mailbag answered by The Athletic’s Stewart Mandel posed a question about a trade between conferences. In the reader’s eyes, the Big 12 could trade UCF, Cincinnati and West Virginia to the ACC for Cal, Stanford and SMU.
Mandel loved the idea and said it made “too much sense.” Our Pete Mundo wrote about it. We even conducted a poll.
You were not warm to the idea.
Hypotheticals are fun, but …
When I posed the WVU to ACC hypothetical a few years ago many WVU fans told me the ACC didn’t want them. It probably still doesn’t.
Stanford and Cal don’t want any part of the Big 12. Those two schools, in my opinion, will go it alone before joining.
SMU wanted in, but the Mustangs are a redundancy in the DFW market and for the Big 12 and didn’t add anything, in part because the area isn’t a college sports area. If DFW were a huge college sports area that would be another story. But the area is wrapped up in pro sports and for those that live here, they know that.
I mean, yes, if someone with realignment and can just wave a magic wand, sure. But there is no reality to this. Unless everyone wants to play with the same bucket of TV money like the NFL, something like this won’t happen.
Big 12 Media Days Return
It’s talking season this week in Frisco, Texas, as I’ll be covering Big 12 Media Days for Heartland College Sports. It’s the official kickoff of the Big 12 football season.
It’s a week we look forward to because it allows us to start getting a little less hypothetical in coverage and a little more actual. Like I can’t wait for someone to Kalani Sitake who is going to start at quarterback at BYU, or to ask Texas Tech coach Joey McGuire when the NIL budget for the Red Raiders actually looks like (like he’s gonna tell us).
Should be good times. Follow us all week. After media days I’m getting some vacation, my annual trip to Red Rocks in Colorado to see The Avett Brothers. Then, much more football.
You can find Matthew Postins on Twitter @PostinsPostcard.

NIL
NIL contract Texas Tech OL
Mansfield (TX) Lake Ridge five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo, one of the top prospects in 2026, made a Fourth of July commitment to Texas Tech. The Red Raiders will now be paying him quite well with an unprecendented, fully guaranteed revenue-sharing deal. Ojo committed to Texas Tech this afternoon over top schools like Texas, Oklahoma, […]

Ojo committed to Texas Tech this afternoon over top schools like Texas, Oklahoma, Michigan, Ohio State, and Ole Miss. ESPN’s Eli Lederman reported that the Red Raiders signed Ojo to a fully guaranteed revenue-share deal worth $5.1 million over three years. On3’s Pete Nakos reported more details of the agreement.
Ojo’s guaranteed rev-share amount is roughly half the $5.1 million, according to Nakos, and the contract pays out $775,000 per year over three years. Including incentives and if the deal is renegotiated, the five-star offensive lineman is set to earn $1.2 million in Year 1, $1.6 million in Year 2 and $2.1 million in Year 3.
NIL
Urban Meyer makes it clear where he stands on returning to college football as a general manager
One of the significant shifts of the NIL and transfer portal era, some college football programs have turned to general manager roles to help lead the way in roster management. Programs have hired from within the assistant ranks while others have plucked former head coaches and NFL executives. Most recently, Ron Rivera, a two-time NFL […]

One of the significant shifts of the NIL and transfer portal era, some college football programs have turned to general manager roles to help lead the way in roster management.
Programs have hired from within the assistant ranks while others have plucked former head coaches and NFL executives.
Most recently, Ron Rivera, a two-time NFL Head Coach of the Year, is back at his alma mater Cal as general manager. And Oklahoma hired former NFL executive Jim Nagy to the same position.
Three-time national champion head coach Urban Meyer, now with Fox Sports as an analyst, admitted he was approached by a college program for their general manager role. The former Utah, Florida, Ohio State and Jacksonville Jaguars head coach even met with leadership to hear the program’s pitch.
“I had a school come see me this year and ask if I wanted to be the GM,” Meyer said on “The Triple Option.” “And a couple other phone calls. And you start to think, ‘OK, they actually came to see me,’ so I said, ‘Yeah, I’ll meet and I’ll sit down with you guys.’”
Despite Meyer’s early interest, he wasn’t inclined to take the offer after learning about the job description. In fact, Meyer would rather “step on a rusty nail” than dealing with players’ agents.
“I said, ‘OK, what is the job description?.’ “They said, ‘Well, basically you meet with all the agents of the 17-, 18-year-olds,’” Meyer said. “And I thought, ‘I’d rather step on a rusty nail and pull it out myself.’”
Meyer’s name is regularly mentioned when major head coaching roles open, and it wouldn’t be a big shock to see the 60-year-old return to college football at some point. As a general manager, though, it’s safe to say Meyer won’t be taking up that title.
NIL
BYU Quarterback Jake Retzlaff has a complicated path to playing in 2025
Last week, College Football had a stunning story emerge as BYU’s starting quarterback, Jake Retzlaff announced he was going to enter the transfer portal as he was going to be suspended by the Cougars after violating the school’s honor code. The honor code violations stemmed from a lawsuit against Retzlaff which has since been dismissed. […]


Last week, College Football had a stunning story emerge as BYU’s starting quarterback, Jake Retzlaff announced he was going to enter the transfer portal as he was going to be suspended by the Cougars after violating the school’s honor code. The honor code violations stemmed from a lawsuit against Retzlaff which has since been dismissed. While the lawsuit has been dismissed, Retzlaff still faces a suspension from BYU.
One week after it was announced that Jake Retzlaff would enter the transfer portal, he has yet to actually enter his name into the transfer portal. As a Graduate Transfer, Jake Retzlaff would have been able to transfer at any point in the last few seasons but, in April, new legislation was passed that even graduate transfers would need to enter before the transfer portal window closed.
If Jake Retzlaff is going to end up playing in 2025, he’ll likely need a waiver to transfer; otherwise, he may be forced to serve his suspension at BYU. A waiver isn’t a given, and it may end up taking longer than expected, as South Carolina has been waiting for a waiver for Rahsul Faision since January.
There is also one other potential chance for Jake Retzlaff to enter the transfer portal but, it remains to be seen. Among the many changes the NCAA House Settlement brought is a one-time transfer portal window for “Designated Student Athletes”. Athletes can be placed on the list by their schools if they would have been removed due to roster limits, were on the roster in 2024-25, or if they were recruited and assured a roster spot for this season.
The hurdle for Jake Retzlaff is the fact that the BYU administration would have to agree and place him on the Designated Student Athlete list. If the administration feels that he needs to serve his punishment, they could keep him off of the list which would leave Retzlaff relying on getting a waiver from the NCAA.
If Jake Retzlaff is able to secure a waiver or is placed on the Designated Student Athlete list, it will make for a fascinating storyline this Summer. Jake Retzlaff is coming off of an impressive season at BYU and could easily draw some serious interest from programs that need a quarterback. Among the potential landing spots for Retzlaff if he transfers are programs like Tennessee, Stanford, Alabama, Maryland, and UNLV, among others.
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