NIL
Breaking down the early chatter on the Florida coaching search
The University of Florida’s search for a new football coach is well underway following the dismissal of Billy Napier last Sunday.
The hire will be Florida’s fifth full time football coach since 2010 and Scott Stricklin’s third as Florida athletic director, defying the historical trend suggesting most Power 4 athletic directors get only 2 bites at the football coaching apple and bucking the prediction of many, including this author, who suggested that Stricklin’s fate at Florida may be tied to Napier’s success as Florida’s football coach.
Instead, Stricklin, one of the most gifted fundraisers in collegiate athletics, signed an extension this past spring. The Stricklin extension provides stability to the Florida athletics program, even at a time when the university as a whole grapples with leadership challenges. Earlier this year, the University of Florida hired an interim president, Donald Landry, after the eminently qualified Dr. Santa Ono, the former President of the University of Michigan, was rejected for political reasons. Compounding UF’s leadership vacuum, the university’s 2 top graduate programs, the law and medical schools, each have interim leadership. Stricklin offers rare stability, and after his basketball hire, Todd Golden, won the school’s third basketball national championship this April, UF had public-facing reasons to retain Stricklin beyond the steady fundraising and stable leadership the Florida athletic director has offered behind closed doors during an era of change at Florida.
Stricklin’s new job security has allowed him to move more nimbly, with a long overdue athletic department administration overhaul underway and a necessary Swamp stadium renovation on the horizon. Stricklin’s stable athletic program also offers a transparent rebuke to the understandable but misguided criticism that Florida is not a desirable job because the university is in tumult.
While there are certainly long-term leadership decisions to be made at Florida, the athletic department is on firm footing, with an arsenal of resources at its disposal.
Still, the best way to fundraise and promote long-term stability is to win games.
Florida hasn’t won a SEC or national championship since 2008 and has never appeared in the College Football Playoff in any format. Only 3 Florida teams have won 11 or more games since 2008, and only 1 team (2019) has managed that feat since 2012, when the last of Urban Meyer’s recruits helped Will Muschamp to an 11-2 season and Sugar Bowl appearance. Things have gone from middling and mediocre to worse this decade, with Florida’s 30-27 record since 2020 their worst half-decade mark for the program since the late 1970s.
Put plainly, the Gators have spent the better part of a decade and a half lost in the swampy wilderness, occasionally peaking their heads out of the tall grass to compete for SEC Championships under Jim McElwain and Dan Mullen, but never consistently managing to return to the national relevance the program became accustomed to from the 1980s through the Meyer era (2005-2010).
Stricklin rightly pointed out that unlike past administrations, where coaches failed, at least in part, due to a lack of administrative commitment to football and a willed refusal to engage in the resource wars that helped Alabama, Georgia, and Clemson build southern behemoths over the past 2 decades, there has “never been a time” when “as many financial resources and as much commitment has gone into making Gator football” elite. From a strong NIL infrastructure to world class facilities, Florida offered Napier everything he needed to compete. He failed, but the program is better positioned to compete now than it was when he arrived, and whoever Florida hires will walk into a situation where, at least from a foundational standpoint, winning big and winning quickly is possible.
Florida does have to navigate costs.
Florida’s 2025 roster wasn’t cheap, and Napier’s buyout approaches $21 million dollars. Speaking to the media this week, Stricklin acknowledged that the financial burden “is not insignificant.” Stricklin cautioned, however, against any narrative suggesting Florida won’t spend what is necessary to compete.
“We all want to be competitive, whether it is NIL, whether it’s coaching salaries,” Stricklin said. “We’re all responding to what the market dictates. We could sit here and talk high and mighty about we’re going to draw the line, and it would probably impact the pool of candidates you have depending on how strict you draw the line. We’re going to try to be as smart as we can with our resources and make the best possible decision. But we’re also going to be very competitive.”
Nonetheless, paying Napier’s huge buyout may limit what Florida is willing to pay to buyout another coach it might otherwise pursue aggressively. A good example of this is Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman, an obvious candidate for any job but one whose buyout is reportedly in the 8-figure range.
That outlines the foundation and terrain facing Stricklin and the Florida search committee in the weeks to come.
This week, Saturday Down South spoke with multiple industry and program sources for a glimpse at Florida’s coaching search. What follows is our reporting on names discussed as potential replacements for Napier as well as potential drawbacks and obstacles to each candidate. The list of candidates is based only on information gathered by Saturday Down South, and not necessarily exclusive. Multiple sources confirmed that Florida has vetted or will vet each of the candidates discussed below. Multiple sources also confirmed that it is unlikely Florida will make any hire quickly. While no timetable for the hire is set, it seems possible, if not likely, that Florida will not announce a new football coach until early December. The coaches discussed are listed in alphabetical order.
Eli Drinkwitz, Missouri
Record at Mizzou: 44-25
Record vs. Ranked Opponents at Mizzou: 7-15
Pros: Drinkwitz is an outstanding roster construction coach built for the NIL era. He’s recruited better than any Missouri coach since the Tigers joined the SEC, inking 2 classes ranked in the top 20 in the country. He has recruited talented hotbed St. Louis beautifully, keeping 5-star Luther Burden at home in 2022, and he’s excelled in the transfer portal, landing big time talents like Ahmad Hardy, the SEC’s leading rusher, defensive tackle Chris McLellan and Zion Young, 2 of the SEC’s most disruptive defensive linemen, and quarterback Beau Pribula who all leaders on this season’s team, to name a few.
Drinkwitz also appears immune to the ego-driven choices that cost Napier dearly at Florida.
Drinkwitz is a remarkable 27-6 since 2023, when he gave up play calling and turned his offense over to Kirby Moore, who was on staff already but has thrived as Missouri’s play caller. Drinkwitz is 5-4 against ranked foes since 2023. Bizarrely, some Florida fans have claimed Drinkwitz is a product of Moore’s success. This is a weird argument given a huge criticism of Napier was he wouldn’t hire competent coordinators. It also falls flat given that Drinkwitz has also proven adept at hiring outstanding defensive coordinators, from Blake Baker (who left for LSU to become the highest paid DC in America in 2024) to current DC Corey Battoon, who currently guides a defense ranked 5th nationally in total defense and 6th in success rate.
Drinkwitz is also a proven quarterbacks coach who has gotten the most out of his talent at the position dating back to his first job at Appalachian State.
If Florida hands a gifted CEO the reins and that leader gets the most out of DJ Lagway, who any hire will push to retain, look out.
Cons: The record against ranked opponents leaves something to be desired and Florida fans, at least the loud ones on X and other social media platforms, don’t seem to like Drinkwitz’s personality. Is there something to the “nerdy Spurrier” wisecracks and Luke Skywalker costumes that rubs folks the wrong way? Perhaps. But Twitter isn’t real life, and to borrow from Todd Golden, who found his team name-dropped in a Drake song this offseason, “People love you when you win.”
More concerning should be the fact that Drinkwitz certainly plays games at the margins, especially offensively. The Tigers average over 2 yards per play less in SEC play than nonconference play offensively in 2025, and as a result, Missouri plays a ton of close football games. Drinkwitz is 11-2 in games decided by 1 touchdown or less since 2023, the best mark in the SEC in close games. What happens when and if the games at the margins start to flip to the other team?
Brent Key, Georgia Tech
Record at Georgia Tech: 25-16
Record vs. Ranked Opponents at Georgia Tech: 7-6.
Pros: Where do we begin? Key has taken a program that won 4 games in the 2 seasons prior to him becoming head coach and turned it into a College Football Playoff contender in less than 4 full seasons. He’s done it with a team that has just 12 “blue-chip” (4 or 5 star) players and ranks 39th in the 247Sports talent composite. For perspective, Florida has a record of 3-4 in 2025 with 52 blue chips. The Gators rank 12th in the talent composite. In other words, Key gets everything out of what he has.
Before he was a head coach, Key earned a reputation as an elite offensive line coach and one of the nation’s top recruiters. His offensive lines have been nominated for the Joe Moore Award (best offensive line) 4 times, including this season. He was named the nation’s No. 1 recruiter by 247Sports in 2020 and ranked No. 2 on 2 other occasions. He’s been a finalist for the Broyles Award, honoring the nation’s top assistant coach, on a preposterous 5 occasions, including 3 times at UCF, where he helped the Knights go unbeaten, helping build the roster that eventually (after Key had left for Alabama) made Scott Frost rich and Danny White a national champion (wink, wink). Key won a legitimate national title at Alabama as a top lieutenant for Nick Saban.
Key has recruited the state of Florida, grew up in SEC country, and has seen the operation of a SEC behemoth from the inside. One of the most respected coaches in the sport, Florida could give him resources he’ll simply never have at Georgia Tech. And oh, by the way, Key understands the Georgia rivalry, which he has played in and coached in at Georgia Tech, and he won’t be bothered competing against Kirby Smart.
Cons: Key’s offense isn’t flashy and the name won’t inspire the more casual element of the fan base. More vital? Key is building something special at his alma mater. He won’t ever have Florida style resources in Atlanta, but playing in the ACC, he is set up to consistently compete to make College Football Playoffs and eventually have a statue built of his likeness outside Bobby Dodd Stadium. Why enter the fishbowl furnace of the Florida job when you can win plenty at home in Atlanta? Plus, while his ceiling might be higher at Florida, if you are in the Playoff constantly at Georgia Tech, perhaps he can breakthrough? He’s already competed with Kirby better than Napier ever did at Florida, despite a talent deficit. Given Key’s allegiances to Georgia Tech, Florida would also likely have to overpay substantially here. For all these reasons, this hire seems unlikely, but it makes too much sense not to explore.
Lane Kiffin, Ole Miss
Record at Ole Miss: 50-19
Record at Ole Miss vs. Ranked Opponents: 9-10
Pros: Lane is the People’s Champion. Florida fans have been clamoring for Kiffin for months and he’s candidate 1 in the eyes of 2 prominent boosters who spoke with SDS as well. Part of the Lane love is the cult of personality, to be sure. Kiffin is playful on social media, has a high-flying offense, isn’t afraid to take a jab at a conference foe, and wins with swagger. Florida fans, desperate for the joyous bravado of the Spurrier era, see an intellectual heir in Kiffin.
Kiffin’s football track record is strong, too. He’s an offensive mastermind who revolutionized Nick Saban’s offense at Alabama, allowing the Crimson Tide to compete and win national championships while playing a more modern offense than what Saban originally brought to Tuscaloosa. He’s also won at levels unprecedented at Ole Miss in the modern, post-integration SEC. A savvy roster builder who has excelled in the transfer portal, Kiffin is also a quarterback whisperer. That means that if he is hired and he can keep DJ Lagway on campus, Florida could win quickly in 2025.
What’s more, Kiffin has embraced his role as a CEO, hiring Pete Golding, one of the best football minds in the sport, to coach his defense, a change that elevated his program in Oxford from competitive to Playoff contenders.
Cons: Kiffin has established roots in Oxford. His family is happy, he’s built a consistent winner, and Keith Carter is one of the best in the business at getting his hires what they need to succeed.
From a football standpoint, Kiffin has won plenty but nothing of substance beyond New Year’s Six bowl games and 2 conference titles at Florida Atlantic. He’s not nearly as good a recruiter as Key and he’s at best equal to Drinkwitz on that front, and he’s rarely seemed motivated to improve in that area, despite the fact that recruiting, even in the world of the portal and NIL, remains the lifeblood of the sport. Florida has hired offensive geniuses who succeeded in Mississippi before. The world of NIL and an expanded College Football Playoff make the comparison with Mullen imperfect, but if Kiffin is Mullen 2.0, will Florida fans be satisfied?
Rhett Lashlee, SMU
Record at SMU: 34-14
Record at SMU vs. Ranked Opponents: 3-5
Pros: Lashlee has marshaled excellent resources (SMU has a ton of money!) and utilized it to take a program to the College Football Playoff in Year 1 in a Power 4 conference. The Mustangs were blown out by Penn State, 38-10, but they played in a Playoff game, something the University of Florida has never done. Lashlee doesn’t call his own plays, but his scheme has succeeded at multiple stops, earning him a Broyles Award nod while the offensive coordinator at Auburn under Gus Malzahn. While his 2025 offense is middling (55th in total offense, 51st in success rate), his team ranked 27th in total offense and 25th in success rate in their Playoff season and finished in the top 20 nationally in 2022 and 2023.
Cons: This hire won’t move the fan base or the national needle. Lashlee is 0-3 in bowl and Playoff games, has just 3 wins over ranked foes as a head coach, and he’s never signed a recruiting class ranked in the top 30. Sources told Saturday Down South that Florida was impressed with Lashlee last season, but there’s a sense, at least among those sources, that the Gators interest here has waned.
Lashlee also may feel that competing at SMU, where he only has to reckon with ACC competition and has rich NIL resources and a terrific recruiting base, is a better place for him to build his coaching résumé before he takes on a job at a pressure cooker program like Florida.
Neil Blackmon covers SEC football and basketball for SaturdayDownSouth.com. An attorney, he is also a member of the Football and Basketball Writers Associations of America. He also coaches basketball.
NIL
Minnesota Football: Kerry Brown and three other Gophers to return for 2026
Safety Kerry Brown, cornerback John Nestor, and offensive linemen Greg Johnson and Nathan Roy all announced their return to Minnesota next season through the NIL collective Dinkytown Athletes on Tuesday. All four were starters this season and represent key returnees for the Gophers next season.
The announcements are part of Cub Foods’ contribution to Dinkytown Athletes.
These types of announcements have become commonplace in college football today, driven by the introduction of NIL and revenue-sharing agreements, as well as the transfer portal.
More announcements are expected in the coming days and weeks, so stay tuned.
NIL
Unexpected college football program among favorites for $2 million transfer QB
Florida quarterback DJ Lagway, a former five-star recruit and two-year starter, is now in the transfer portal after a 2025 season defined by inconsistency and organizational change in Gainesville.
In 2025, Lagway completed 213 of 337 passes (63.2%) for 2,264 yards, 16 touchdowns, and 14 interceptions, while adding 136 rushing yards and a rushing score.
However, the turnovers and a string of uneven performances contributed to a 4–8 season (2-6 SEC) for Florida and intensified scrutiny on the program’s direction.
Florida dismissed fourth-year head coach Billy Napier on October 19 following a 3–4 start and later hired Tulane’s Jon Sumrall to lead the program forward, a change that has prompted several top players to explore fresh starts.
Several Power Five programs have emerged as early fits for Lagway, with Baylor, LSU, and Miami frequently mentioned by national outlets.
Recently, On3’s Pete Nakos singled out Baylor, noting that home-state proximity and family ties to Waco could make the Bears an appealing landing spot.

A five-star dual-threat quarterback from Willis, Texas, Lagway entered college as one of the top prospects in the 2024 class, ranking as 247Sports’ No. 1 quarterback before signing with Florida in December 2022.
Lagway threw for 4,605 yards and 59 touchdowns as a senior, adding 953 rushing yards and 16 scores on the ground to earn Gatorade National Player of the Year honors.
He drew more than 30 offers from several Power Five programs, including Baylor, Alabama, Georgia, LSU, and Clemson, before committing to the Gators.
From a marketplace standpoint, Lagway arrives in January’s portal with considerable commercial value.
On3’s NIL tracker lists Lagway with an estimated valuation near $2.0 million, and the quarterback already has multiple reported brand partnerships, including Hollister, Red Bull, and Mercedes-Benz of Gainesville.
For Baylor, Lagway would offer a marketable, high-upside option who can start right away, with 2025 starter Sawyer Robertson expected to enter the 2026 NFL Draft.
Read More at College Football HQ
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- No. 1 college football team predicted to sign $2.1 million transfer QB
- Major college football program loses 15 players to transfer portal
- College Football Playoff team has ‘significant interest’ in 4,000-yard QB
NIL
$2.4 million transfer QB reportedly down to three college football programs
Bevies of college football players have made the decision to enter the NCAA transfer portal in the 2026 offseason.
In the weeks leading up to the portal’s opening, quarterbacks have dominated the headlines surrounding the entrants in the 2026 offseason. DJ Lagway, Brendan Sorsby, Dylan Raiola and Josh Hoover are among the most recent entries into the portal at quarterback.
The first well-known entry into the portal at quarterback was Sam Leavitt of Arizona State. Leavitt is entering the portal with two seasons of eligibility left.
The next school Leavitt transfers to will be his third in his college football journey. The 6-foot-3, 225-pounder began his collegiate career at Michigan State for his redshirt freshman season in 2023.
He has passed for 4,652 yards, 36 touchdowns and 11 interceptions while rushing for 810 yards and 10 touchdowns in three seasons. He earned Second Team All-Big 12 distinction and Big 12 Offensive Freshman of the Year in 2024.
While the portal has not officially opened, three schools have begun to separate themselves in the race for Sam Leavitt. Below is a look at the three schools that appear to be the final choices for Leavitt in the coming weeks.
LSU

Only two of the four quarterbacks to start for Lane Kiffin at Ole Miss were recruited by the Rebels out of high school. Both Jaxson Dart (USC) and Trinidad Chambliss (Ferris State) arrived in Oxford via the transfer portal.
LSU also has a strong track record with quarterbacks transferring in over the last decade, as both Joe Burrow and Jayden Daniels won Heisman Trophies two years after transferring in. As it relates to Leavitt, Daniels came to Baton Rouge by way of Arizona State in the 2022 offseason.
Oregon
Oregon has established itself as a destination for quarterbacks out of the transfer portal. Anthony Brown (Boston College), Bo Nix (Auburn), Dillon Gabriel (Oklahoma), and Dante Moore (UCLA) have all transferred to the Ducks and have each won 10 or more games in each season.
Adding to Leavitt’s interest in Oregon is its proximity to his hometown. He is from West Linn, Oregon, a suburb located just south of Portland.
Indiana

Indiana is the final school Leavitt is eyeing. The transfer portal has been crucial to Indiana fielding successful quarterbacks under Curt Cignetti.
The Hoosiers grabbed Kurtis Rourke from Ohio in the 2024 offseason and immediately went to a College Football Playoff the following season. California transfer Fernando Mendoza immediately won a Big Ten Championship and a Heisman Trophy and clinched the No. 1 seed in the 2025 College Football Playoff.
NIL
Missouri DE Damon Wilson II countersues Georgia, setting up a potentially major NIL legal battle
A messy player-school NIL dispute just got messier.
Less than a month after Georgia sued Damon Wilson II for transfer damages, Missouri’s star pass rusher filed a countersuit against Georgia, setting up a potentially precedent-setting NIL legal battle between an athlete and school.
“Recent court decisions have changed the landscape of college football and paved the way for NIL payments,” Bogdan Susan, one of Wilson’s attorneys, told PowerMizzou.com. “What has not changed is that college football players still have only four years of competition to realize their potential and try to achieve their dreams of playing in the NFL. A lot of trust is put into the colleges and coaching staffs. Coaches are not limited to four years of competition. The University of Georgia has been playing football for over 133 years. Damon has four years to play and he spent half of that time at Georgia. Decisions to transfer are not always about money. Stopping a young man from pursuing his dreams by forcing him to pay money that he has not received is just wrong.”
Wilson filed a 42-page complaint in Boone County, Mo. on Tuesday morning, an action first reported by The Athletic, alleging a civil conspiracy involving Georgia and its collective for trying to “penalize Wilson for his decision to transfer.” The defendants named in the suit are the University of Georgia Athletic Association, the Classic City Collective and former Classic City CEO’s Matt Hibbs and Taylor Potts.
The suit alleges Georgia didn’t immediately put Wilson’s name in the transfer portal last January and also lied about his buyout, telling multiple unnamed Power 4 programs that they’d owe Georgia $1.2 million if Wilson transferred to their school.
“UGAA’s actions signal that it is stuck in its old ways. The era of universities exerting total control over the career trajectories and rights of their student-athletes has been dead for nearly half a decade. Nonetheless, UGAA has demonstrated that, left to its own devices, it will attempt to exploit every loophole to deprive student-athletes like Wilson of the ability to reap the benefits of full and fair competition for their NIL rights. 23. No longer willing to endure UGAA’s harassment campaign and ready to hold UGAA and CCC accountable for their tortious interference with his business expectations when he entered the portal and chose to transfer, their breach of the Term Sheet’s Confidentiality Agreement, and UGAA’s efforts to tarnish his reputation as he pursues his lifelong dream of playing in the NFL, Wilson brings this action.”
Wilson’s claim hinges largely on the document signed by the player, the Classic City Collective and Hibbs and Potts. The involved parties signed a term sheet. Wilson’s suit claims the term sheet is not binding.
“The Term Sheet stated that it ‘preced[es]’ a ‘full License and Option Agreement,’ and specifically provided: ‘In the event the parties agree to this Term Sheet, then they shall work cooperatively to set forth these terms in a full legal contract including all the standard provisions of NIL licensing agreements.’ The Term Sheet further stated that Wilson ‘should seek legal counsel before finalizing the full License and Option Agreement.'”
The suit claims that Wilson, as part of a group of Georgia players, “without counsel present and with UGAA employees telling him that time was of the essence.” The suit alleges not only that Wilson signed the term sheet under pressure, but that the full binding contract was never presented, much less signed.
“The parties thus never executed a legally binding agreement containing any of the provisions in the Term Sheet,” the suit states.
The suit further claims that UGAA and the Classic City Collective violated the term sheet’s confidentiality agreement “by disclosing one or more of the Term Sheet’s provisions to sympathetic news outlets and affiliates to tarnish Wilson’s reputation.”
This is believed to be the first time a school and an athlete have taken each other to court over an NIL issue. The resolution could depend on whether or not Wilson’s NIL agreement with Georgia’s collective was a binding contract.
The UGAA lawsuit against Wilson recently filed seeks liquidated damages of $390,000. Wilson’s countersuit claims those funds are not liquidated damages, but instead penalties for transferring from Georgia.
“A penalty provision masquerading as a “liquidated damages” provision is unenforceable,” the filing reads. “It makes no effort to reasonably quantify damages that are difficult to ascertain, and it serves only to penalize Wilson for his decision to enter the transfer portal.”
Wilson’s suit also alleges defamation against UGAA, referencing a statement from Chief Marketing Officer Steven Drummond made to ESPN: “When the University of Georgia Athletic Association enters binding agreements with student-athletes, we honor our commitments and expect student-athletes to do the same.”
The suit clams “UGAA’s statement implies that Wilson is dishonest in his business dealings and his profession, impairing his ability to enter into future NIL agreements, and harms his reputation.”
Wilson was one of the top edge defenders in the SEC in 2025, recording 9 sacks, tied for third-most in the SEC, and 49 total pressures, second-most in the SEC. He is currently expected to play for Missouri in the Taxslayer Gator Bowl on Saturday. He has not declared his intent for next season. He has until January 14 to enter his name into the NFL Draft as an underclassman.
This story will be updated as more information becomes available.
Cody Goodwin covers the Missouri Tigers for PowerMizzou and 247Sports. Follow him on Twitter/X at @codygoodwin.
PowerMizzou.com publisher Gabe DeArmond contributed to this report.
NIL
Georgia, Ex-Football Player Suing Each Other in NIL Dispute
NIL
Georgia football: Missouri LB Damon Wilson II sues Bulldogs
Missouri linebacker Damon Wilson II is suing the University of Georgia’s athletic association and its Classic City Collective, which he says is attempting to “punish” him through a “coordinated campaign” for his decision to transfer. Earlier this month, Georgia sought $390,000 in damages citing a clause in Wilson’s NIL contract after his departure to another SEC program.
The lawsuit initiated what appears to be a landmark case in college football, which now includes the plaintiff fighting back with his own legal documents. Highlighting a 42-page complaint filed Dec. 23 in Boone County, Missouri, Wilson’s attorneys claim Georgia tried to sabotage their client’s potential destinations after employees “falsely” told “at least three programs that — if Wilson left Georgia and joined their programs — Wilson would be subject to a $1.2 million buyout.”
The complaint claims Georgia “continued to assert similar demands in an effort to harass Wilson and impair his on-field performance for a conference rival” throughout the 2025 regular season.
Wilson signed a new deal with Georgia’s NIL collective in December 2024 during the College Football Playoff, but entered the transfer portal and moved to Missouri weeks later. While documents show Georgia paid Wilson $30,000 under the terms of the new deal before his departure, the athletic department states Wilson owed a $390,000 lump sum within 30 days of his exit.
The contract was a 14-month agreement worth $500,000, which was set to be paid in monthly $30,000 increments. Georgia would have also paid Wilson two $40,000 retention bonuses at the end of the NCAA transfer portal windows. The exit clause states that Wilson would owe a lump-sum payment worth the total he would have received if he remained with the program through the duration of the contract.
“The era of universities exerting total control over the career trajectories and rights of their student-athletes has been dead for nearly half a decade,” Wilson’s complaint said. “Nonetheless, UGAA has demonstrated that, left to its own devices, it will attempt to exploit every loophole to deprive student-athletes like Wilson of the ability to reap the benefits of full and fair competition for their NIL rights.”
The previous term sheet signed by Wilson, his representation argues, was not a “legally binding document” as Georgia states.
“CCC failed even to present Wilson what it promised in the Term Sheet — a “full License and Option Agreement,” the lawsuit said. “The parties thus never executed a legally binding agreement containing any of the provisions in the Term Sheet.”
Wilson appeared in 26 games at Georgia from during the 2023 and 2024 seasons and projected to be an impact starter prior to his decision to leave the program.
Georgia’s NIL collective’s two now-former CEOs — Matt Hibbs and Tanner Potts — were named in the lawsuit. Wilson seeks a “fair and reasonable amount of damages” for “financial and reputational harm he has suffered” in the aftermath of playing at Missouri this season.
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