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Burning Questions: NC State’s Renaissance, USC Recruiting & More

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There’s not a day where I don’t think about college basketball. And though it’s deep in the offseason, these past few weeks have given me plenty to mull over: USC and Kansas State landed massive recruits, Kamille Pierre found a new home and more.

Here’s what’s on my mind this week.


Khamil Pierre lands at NC State. What does that mean for the Wolfpack? 

When the 2024-25 season ended, there were rumors that Vanderbilt forward Khamil Pierre, a 6-foot-2 forward, would be entering the portal. In the current landscape of college basketball, it made sense for a player of Pierre’s caliber to jump to a more successful program. She averaged 20.4 points and 9.6 rebounds per game for the Commodores (22-11), who lost to Oregon in the first round of the NCAA Tournament as a No. 7 seed.

But the transfer window came and went, and Pierre stayed put, even releasing a statement in which she renewed her commitment to Vandy. Earlier this month, though, that changed when Vanderbilt released a statement saying Pierre no longer was with the program. It was a shocking move – but a welcome one for teams in need. NC State ended up being the winning program. 

Whether she will be eligible right away is to be determined – because the transfer window passed, Pierre will need a waiver from the NCAA – but Pierre’s move certainly will affect NC State and Vanderbilt. 

NC State lost a lot of scoring between Aziaha James (17.0 points per game) and Saniya Rivers (11.9 points per game), who are having successful rookie campaigns in the WNBA. The Wolfpack do return two of their top five scorers in guards Zoe Brooks and Zamareya Jones, but Pierre fills a gap and offers a different kind of scorer for a team that has relied on its guards for the past few seasons. Having her play alongside Brooks and Jones adds another layer to the Wolfpack offense; she’s also a skilled defender, leading Vanderbilt with 2.9 steals per game last season.

With Pierre on the roster, NC State could go from a team flirting with a top-25 ranking to a team firmly in the top 15.

Five Burning Questions For the 2025-26 Women’s Hoops Season

How about Vanderbilt?

Vandy was busy this offseason, and while losing Pierre hurts, the Commodores still have strong talent. Their offense once again will revolve around sensational 5-foot-8 sophomore-to-be Mikayla Blakes, who averaged 23.2 points per game last season, with two 50-point outings. Coach Shea Ralph spent the offseason recruiting transfers to play around her star guard, landing 6-foot-2 graduate forward Ndjakalenga Mwenentanda from Texas and 6-foot-6 junior center Aliyah Del Rosario from conference rival LSU. 

Mwenentanda is a proven do-it-all player who thrives at getting to the rim on offense and using her length and athleticism to be a disruptive defender. She had three solid seasons at Texas, but her role never expanded past 17 minutes per game. Vanderbilt will allow Mwenentanda to expand on her immense potential.

Del Rosario is more of a question mark. She arrived at LSU as a five-star low-post prospect who was praised for her footwork, rebounding and ability to run the floor. None of that came through at LSU, where she averaged just 9.1 minutes per game in two seasons.

If Ralph can unlock the potential that scouts saw in Del Rosario during her high school years, Vanderbilt could be a complete team with scorers at all five positions. 

Will Nastja Claessens be an impact player for Kansas State?

Kansas State is another team that made a late roster addition, signing 6-foot-1 Belgian forward Nastja Claessens last week. Claessens, 20, is a big signing because she has national-team experience, playing for the Belgian Senior National Team during the EuroBasket Qualifiers in June, averaging 5.2 points and 1.8 rebounds; she also was on roster for the 2024 Paris Olympics. In addition, Claessens was drafted 30th overall in the 2024 WNBA Draft by the Washington Mystics but declined the opportunity.

The Wildcats needed some good news after a challenging offseason that saw them lose all five starters and four reserves to graduation or the transfer portal. Claessens has the experience and talent to give the Wildcats an instant boost. At the FIBA youth levels – before being called up to the senior team – Claessens was a consistent double-digit scorer.

As Kansas State decides on its rotation early in the season, she’s a player the team can rely upon to score. I expect her, along with five-star freshman guard Jordan Speiser and returning sharpshooter Taryn Sides, to take on a big scoring load for the Wildcats. 

Nastja Claessens brings professional experience to K-State, after successful stints in the EuroBasket Qualifiers and the Paris Olympics

Nastja Claessens brings professional experience to K-State, after successful stints in the EuroBasket Qualifiers and the Paris Olympics

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Is USC the new landing spot for No. 1 recruits? 

Saniyah Hall, a 6-foot-2 wing from Montverde Academy and a 2026 prospect, announced her commitment to USC on Friday, making her the third No. 1 recruit in the past four years to choose the Trojans, joining JuJu Watkins (2023) and Jazzy Davidson (2025).

In the past 10 recruiting classes (2017-26), five No. 1 recruits have signed with UConn (the latest being Sarah Strong in 2024) and two with Stanford (Haley Jones in 2019 and Lauren Betts, who later transferred to UCLA, in 2022). Landing the top recruit in three of the past four classes bodes well for the future of the Trojans’ program with coach Lindsay Gottlieb at the helm.

Wooing Watkins away from schools like South Carolina and Stanford was a major first step, but landing the past two No. 1s prove Gottlieb has staying power as a recruiter. The Trojans also have extended an offer to Kaleena Smith, the No. 1 recruit in the class of 2027, who attends high school in a Los Angeles suburb.

When it comes to recruiting, USC clearly will compete with top programs for years to come.

Can Iowa State have a redemption season?

Last season was disappointing for Iowa State. The Cyclones returned 6-foot-3 center Audi Crooks, 6-foot-2 forward Addy Brown and 5-foot-11 guard Emily Ryan. That trio played significant roles in a successful 2023-24 campaign that ended in a near-upset of No. 2 Stanford in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. In that game (an 87-81 OT loss), Ryan had 36 points, Brown 18 points and Crooks 10 points and 8 rebounds.

That led to lofty expectations for the 2024-25 season, which weren’t met. Iowa State started the season in the top 25, but fell out of the rankings, finishing 23-12 after a first-round tournament loss to Michigan as a No. 11 seed.

It’s hard to pinpoint what exactly went wrong for Iowa State last season, as the talent was there. Coach Bill Fennelly was honest early in the season after his team dropped games to Northern Iowa, South Carolina, Iowa and UConn, stating that the schedule was too hard, too soon. Things never really improved, and by the end of the season, Iowa State had just one top-25 win.

Iowa State lost Ryan, a five-year starter who graduated. But the Cyclones may have found their needed spark plug in 5-foot-8 Arizona transfer point guard Jada Williams. Williams was one of the top guards in the 2023 recruiting class. She averaged 12.7 points, 3.5 rebounds and 2.9 assists last season for a struggling Wildcats team.

Williams is a skilled ballhandler who pushes pace. She’s also an elite interior passer, which works well when playing alongside Crooks. Iowa State will have a sense of urgency this season; that could lead to the type of record they were hoping for last season.

After a disappointing season, Coach Bill Fennelly hopes Jada Walker can reverse Iowa State's fortune

After a disappointing season, Coach Bill Fennelly hopes Jada Walker can reverse Iowa State’s fortune

NCAA Photos via Getty Images





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Miami quieted the College Football Playoff debate at Texas A&M, now will chase a 25-year-old ghost

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COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Mario Cristobal was in the middle of his postgame interview in the manic moments after Miami’s 10-3 win over Texas A&M at Kyle Field. Out of nowhere, Hurricanes legend Michael Irvin appeared in the shot, grabbed Cristobal’s arm, and planted a wet kiss on his cheek.

“It was disgusting,” Cristobal said later, laughing. “I couldn’t find enough wipes to clean myself.”

That kiss almost didn’t happen. This win almost didn’t happen. And it had nothing to do with the gritty nature of the game, which felt like the Aggies were going to win multiple times. For weeks, Miami was engaged in a resume debate with Notre Dame and Alabama about its worthiness for College Football Playoff inclusion. Even as the game played out — and offenses struggled — there were plenty of people mocking the CFP Committee for taking Miami.

But Miami, which “wasn’t even good enough” to make the ACC Championship Game, went on the road and knocked off Texas A&M, a team that started the season 11-0 and was ranked in the top three of those very CFP rankings at the end of November.

Miami now faces Ohio State in the Cotton Bowl on New Year’s Eve. It continues its chance to win the program’s first national title since 2001. But even as the journey continues, Miami has made clear that this program is going to be a problem nationally for years to come.

“I think it was important first to get into the Playoff,” Cristobal said. “Then to go and win at a place like this, right? It was 100,000-plus people on the road, a team that was arguably top two or three until their last game, and to get it done in this type of environment. We needed that. If you could draw it up the way we wanted it, we wanted to go there. We wanted to come here and do it against a great football team.

“What does it mean for us? Continued progress. The vision. We have never altered the course or been deterred despite all the challenges that come with it. That’s part of it. I am really proud of our players. It’s all about them and that staff, because, again, 40-plus days ago, we were lower than low. We found a way to bring a different level of energy every single day and lift each other and the program up. And here we are with a chance to keep playing. That’s all that matters now.” 

For much of that game, things weren’t pretty. Miami missed a few field goals in the first half, and offensive coordinator Shannon Dawson didn’t call his best game, giving in to the temptation to run atypical plays to get the ball into the hands of his best player — true freshman Malachi Toney.

Toney fumbled the ball near midfield with seven minutes remaining in a 3-3 game, making it seem like the Aggies were going to steal this one at home. But Miami’s defense came up with a stop, got the ball back, and rode running back Mark Fletcher — who carried it 17 times for 172 yards — deep into Aggies territory. Then it was Toney, affectionately known as Baby Jesus, who took a shovel pass from quarterback Carson Back for 11 yards to the house, giving the Hurricanes a seven-point lead with 1:44 remaining. 

There was a debate about whether Toney should have scored or fallen short of the goal line to milk the clock and set up the Hurricanes for a game-winning field goal as time expired. The debate grew more heated as Texas A&M drove down the field inside the Miami 10 with less than a minute remaining. But Aggies quarterback Marcel Reed threw an interception into the end zone to freshman Bryce Fitzgerald, ending the game. 

Those who don’t think Miami should have been in the CFP to begin with will tell you it was two bad teams on the field Saturday. It raises the never-ending debate about whether Notre Dame would have made things look easier, which is ironic given that this game featured two teams that beat the Irish earlier in the season.

After the game, Cristobal was asked whether he felt this game validated the CFP Committee’s decision to include Miami. His answer knocked it out of the park.

“Regardless of what the result was today, they made the right decision,” Cristobal said. “Last year, we had to go to court, I felt. We had a case, other teams had a case, but it was fuzzy. It was muddy. This year, there was nothing fuzzy about it. We had common opponents with another football team — that I’m sure would be great in the Playoffs – but we did better against those common opponents and we won the head-to-head win.

“God forbid we should ever get away from the meaning of head-to-head. Look out there today. How many guys were helped off the field? How many guys had to be carried or had to limp off, had to get on crutches? How many guys are seeing the doctor right now? For competing head-to-head. Let us never ever devalue the importance of head-to-head competition please.”

Through all the CFP discourse, Miami was repeatedly torn down. We heard over and over about its losses to Louisville and SMU, about how it played in a weak conference, how it didn’t make it to Charlotte for the ACC Championship Game and how it wasn’t worthy of this stage.

During that discourse, we forgot how this Miami team is built. Sturdy on the lines of scrimmage, punishing on defense — as illustrated in College Station on Saturday. It has a young phenom receiver in Toney and a reliable back in Fletcher who can move the sticks in close games. It also has two veteran players who have been here through Cristobal’s entire build: edge rusher Rueben Bain and offensive tackle Francis Mauigoa. It is built to compete against these teams.

Now we’ll spend the next 10 days debating whether these Hurricanes are equipped to compete with Ohio State, the team that beat them in the national title game in Tempe, Ariz., more than 20 years ago. That game, some say, marked the end of Miami’s reign of dominance.

The Hurricanes get another shot, not just at Ohio State but also at college football relevance. What happened in College Station was a massive step, but the job for national acceptance is far from over.

And who knows? Maybe Miami will shock the world in Dallas the way the Buckeyes did in Arizona in 2002. Remember, that’s why they play the games. The results matter and hypotheticals are irrelevant during this time of year.

Miami is making the most of the ones it’s been afforded the opportunity to keep playing.



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The $5 million NIL figure that transfer portal QBs are expected to cost

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If you thought the NIL transfer market in college football already was out of control, just wait until the upcoming battles next month for the top quarterbacks looking to switch schools.

ESPN college football insider Pete Thamel believes the dollar figures during the January cycle could be as much as $5 million for one season.

“This market looks robust already, guys,” Thamel said Friday on College GameDay ahead of Alabama’s playoff win over Oklahoma. “You’ve got Cincinnati’s Brendan Sorsby at [the top], Nebraska’s Dylan Raiola, TCU’s Josh Hoover went in [this week], you have Arizona State’s Sam Leavitt, Florida’s DJ Lagway.”


Cincinnati Bearcats quarterback Brendan Sorsby warming up.
Cincinnati Bearcats quarterback Brendan Sorsby (2) warms up before the game against the Utah Utes at Rice-Eccles Stadium. Rob Gray-Imagn Images

“So I made some calls today, guys, and sources told me the tip-top of this quarterback market, financially, could reach $5 million for one season. Look, it’s supply and demand. You have all those guys. Sorsby’s been linked early to Texas Tech. Dylan Raiola, there’s some smoke to Louisville, although maybe a [College Football Playoff] team jumps in late there. There have been early links between Indiana and Hoover, assuming that [Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza] goes pro.”

Thamel also noted that CFP programs such as Oregon and Miami are likely to be looking for a new quarterback for 2026, as well as LSU, with new coach Lane Kiffin looking to make a splash.

“Look, this is what’s going to drive the market,” Thamel said. “Oregon may lose [draft prospect] Dante Moore. Miami will be in the quarterback market again. So will LSU. So, when you really take a look at what could drive this quarterback market, it’s going to be the most expensive in the history of college football.”

Thamel also pointed out that seven of the past nine Heisman winners landed at those schools through the transfer portal, including Mendoza, who moved from Cal to Indiana for this season.

The main transfer portal window is open from Jan. 2-16.



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Pay To Play: University Of Wyoming’s Battle To Remain Division I In An NIL World

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Late one night, Sundance Wicks scrolled through a spreadsheet containing 3,500 names. 

The Gillette native and University of Wyoming men’s basketball coach was hunting for something his competitors might not see — a player hidden in plain sight, undervalued by the market, waiting to be discovered.

He applied an algorithm designed to identify under-the-radar talent, as described in the best-selling book and hit 2011 film “Moneyball” starring Brad Pitt about how the Oakland A’s built their rosters with players no one else wanted.

Wicks found Damarion Dennis at Texas A&M Corpus Christi. 

A freshman backup averaging seven points in 17 minutes per game, he wasn’t a starter and he played at a backwater school. Every other team in the Mountain West Conference likely scrolled right past him.

But the algorithm told Wicks a different story.

“We looked at the numbers and we recruited him as a human being, knowing that he loves to compete,” Wicks said. “He wanted to come up a level and play more minutes at a competitive place, willing to take less money because he wanted to come up a level. 

“And he was the most efficient player in the transfer portal, per the money that he could make.”

Heading into 2026, this is the reality facing the University of Wyoming: To maintain its major Division I basketball and football programs, it needs to generate revenue that is then paid to players.

As much as that disappoints many UW alumni, there is no turning back, according to Wicks and others adapting to the pressures of professional college sports in the age of Name, Image and Likeness deals that have turned college athletics into a pay-to-play system. 

As NIL money reshapes college athletics, the state's only Division I program turns to analytics — and a Gillette native's vision — to compete against schools with deeper pockets. It’s a new pay-to-play landscape for the University of Wyoming. Men's basektball coach Sundance Wicks found Damarion Dennis at Texas A&M Corpus Christi using a "Moneyball" approach.
As NIL money reshapes college athletics, the state’s only Division I program turns to analytics — and a Gillette native’s vision — to compete against schools with deeper pockets. It’s a new pay-to-play landscape for the University of Wyoming. Men’s basektball coach Sundance Wicks found Damarion Dennis at Texas A&M Corpus Christi using a “Moneyball” approach. (University of Wyoming Athletics)

Compete With The ‘Big Dogs’

The question is whether Wyoming can compete with programs that have far deeper pockets — and whether an approach borrowed from professional baseball can help level the playing field.

“Look at the movie ‘Moneyball,’” Wicks said. “It’s a great movie. Every time you watch, you get goosebumps because you’re going, ‘Man, every one of us can relate to being the Oakland A’s at some point in their life where we’re having to compete against big dogs.’”

Wicks digs into his spreadsheet, crunching numbers like minutes played, effective field goal percentage, turnover percentage, rebounding, steals, blocks — all the things that indicate whether a player helps a team win, not just whether he scores points.

“We look at the person over the position,” Wicks said. “We always preach minutes over money because I still think valuing to play the game of basketball should reign supreme. 

“And if you’re finding a kid or a player that’s worried about money over minutes, then he’s probably not very competitive.”

With Dennis, Wicks said Wyoming found exactly what it was looking for. 

“This is a guy we have to have,” Wicks recalled thinking. “We believe that he can come in and help Wyoming win while nobody else will value him.”

Here’s the question that keeps Wicks and others at UW up at night: Will athletic talent continue to value the University of Wyoming when other, better-financed schools offer bigger paydays? 

Now that Division 1 athletes are able to profit from their Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) and revenue sharing with their chosen school, is the “Moneyball” approach enough to maintain a winning edge? 

Will Wyoming keep up as rivals like Colorado State and BYU build war chests to pay for top players?

Shifting Landscape

Athletic Director Tom Burman has watched Wyoming’s position evolve rapidly since NIL became legal in 2021, and again after the landmark House v. NCAA settlement opened the door to direct revenue sharing this past July. 

Initially, the response from Wyoming donors was discouraging.

“We struggled from the time NIL started really in ’22 until the end of June this past year,” Burman said. “We struggled getting people — Wyoming fans, alumni, donors — to invest in the collective or provide money through our third-party portals. It’s just not something Wyoming people embraced.”

The resistance, Burman believes, reflects regional culture. 

“It’s kind of funny. You look at schools around the country that had success with those things,” he told Cowboy State Daily. “The areas along the coast did really well with it — the Californias, the Washingtons, Oregons. 

“The middle of America struggled with it. I think it has a little bit to do with a conservative nature and style. They just were like, ‘I’m not sure who I’m giving this money to. I don’t feel comfortable with it.'”

But attitudes are changing. 

“Now we are seeing people say to us, ‘OK, if I can give the money to Cowboy Joe (the UW booster club), I’ll up my annual Cowboy Joe donation,’” Burman said, adding an optimistic spin. “If you ask me where we are a year from now, we’ll have caught up significantly to our competition.”

The structural disadvantages, however, remain. UW is an isolated school and the state lacks the corporate base that funds competitors. 

“I was just visiting with some people in San Diego,” Burman said. “There’s companies there that have $3- or $4-million ad budgets. For them to spin off 10% to support the Aztecs is kind of a no-brainer.

“In our case, a big ad budget for a company in Wyoming is $500,000 to $600,000. So they spin off 10%, that’s $50,000. It helps, but it doesn’t change the formula.”

Just Business

When Josh Allen returned to Laramie in November for his jersey retirement, Burman had a chance to discuss the NIL landscape with Wyoming’s most famous football alumnus.

“He’s like, ‘I didn’t have it,’” remembered Burman, noting how Allen’s college career ended before pay-for-play kicked in. “He didn’t say he doesn’t like it. He just — it’s just weird to him.”

Allen’s perspective mirrors that of many former players.

“Guys like him see what the business side of football is,” Burman said. “I’ve had this conversation with Frank Crum and Dewey Wingard. They’re like, ‘You know, this is business. It’s not nearly as fun anymore.'”

That business reality has Burman contemplating scenarios that would have seemed unthinkable a decade ago.

The best outcome is Wyoming develops what Burman called “a really magical scenario” where Wyoming leverages all it has to offer — great degree programs, a cool college town and enough money for players so top talent keeps picking UW. 

As NIL money reshapes college athletics, the state's only Division I program turns to analytics — and a Gillette native's vision — to compete against schools with deeper pockets. It’s a new pay-to-play landscape for Athletic Director Tom Burman and the University of Wyoming.
As NIL money reshapes college athletics, the state’s only Division I program turns to analytics — and a Gillette native’s vision — to compete against schools with deeper pockets. It’s a new pay-to-play landscape for Athletic Director Tom Burman and the University of Wyoming. (University of Wyoming Athletics)

How To Stay Division I

This allows the Pokes to continue to be competitive against its rivals and prevents UW from dropping down into the Football Championship Subdivision of Division 1 play where the Big Sky Conference and teams like Montana and Idaho compete. 

Instead of dropping down, Burman envisions another possible scenario. Like other fans and officials across college sports, Burman wonders about a future where Wyoming always has a shot at playing at the highest level.

To do that, a productive combination of smart recruiting and revenue generation needs to blossom for UW, he said.

Burman also recognizes that fans could see, “The top 40-ish spin off — basically the Big Ten, SEC. And they invite a few others that have great television markets and maybe some with great traditions, but a lot will be left out. 

“Whether that number is 40 or 60, I don’t know. But I think that happens someday. And then the rest of us recalibrate and build what I would call a more traditional college model.”

A relegation system, similar to European soccer, could be looming on the horizon. 

“There could be a relegation model created for Division I athletics, even within conferences,” Burman said.

In such a scenario, the current Football Championship Subdivision — home to Idaho State, Montana State, North Dakota State — could merge with programs left out of the super league. 

“Maybe there’s a scenario where the level of play goes up because all of these teams that got left out of the top 40 Premier League come together,” Burman said.

In the meantime, Burman and the rest of UW’s athletic department want to remain competitive as television revenue and the financial side of college sports continues to reshape football and basketball. 

“We have 400 student athletes here at the University of Wyoming, and revenue sharing might really affect a small portion of that,” said Alex Jewell, UW’s assistant athletic director for development. “The majority of our student athletes are the same student athletes that were here 10 years ago, 15 years ago, 30 years ago.”

The rising costs affect everyone, though. 

“Scholarships cost more than they did 20 years ago,” Jewell noted. “Nutrition, team travel, uniforms.” 

Then there’s health insurance and travel. 

The goal isn’t just recruiting, he said, it’s retention.

“If we can help them with revenue sharing, in conjunction with all the other great things that we think we excel in compared to some of our competitors — like our class sizes, like our educators, like the coaches we have here, like the fan base we have here — all of those things, combined with some revenue share, helps us retain some great student athletes,” Jewell said.

Cultural Resistance

For all the urgency from athletics officials, a stubborn resistance among some Wyoming fans complicates the path forward, according to those keeping tabs on the intersection of money and athletic talent drawn to Laramie. 

“A lot of fans, especially the older ones, are really late to the game,” said Cody Tucker, founder of 7220Sports.com and one of the state’s leading voices on Cowboys athletics. “They’re still in the mindset like, ‘Hey, these guys have scholarships, they get free room and board.’ They do not want to pay players.”

Tucker recalled hearing about a donor who made a $15,000 contribution to the Cowboy Joe Club, designating $5,000 for NIL. The donor had one stipulation: “I don’t want to hear about it. I don’t want to know who it goes to.”

“Some people just cannot live with the idea that they’re paying a player and giving them a scholarship,” Tucker said. “I get the sentiment. But it is what it is, man. You either get on board or you’re going to get left behind.”

The resistance extends to corporate partnerships. 

When Wyoming announced a $90,000 sponsorship deal with Ramos Law, a Denver-based firm with an office in Cheyenne, to put its name on the 25-yard lines for the final home game, fans revolted, calling the attorney an “ambulance chaser” and complaining about Colorado money on their sacred field.

“You can’t have it both ways, man,” Tucker said. “It’s the new order.”

Fans don’t always know what they missed, Tucker noted, as recruiting battles play out and Wyoming loses quietly. 

“There’s another school that offered more,” he said. “Those are the stories we don’t often hear.”

Tucker noted structural advantages enjoyed by rival Colorado State, home to around 34,000 students.

“Wyoming has, like, 11,000,” he said. “Those student fees alone are incredible.”

How might UW close this funding gap without hiking student fees in Laramie? A booster in Gillette has a plan. 

A Tourism Tax For Athletics?

Alan Stuber, a Gillette Police Department patrol officer and lifelong Wyoming fan, has a novel idea that he believes holds promise. 

“What I want to do is find somebody in the Legislature that would be willing to sponsor a bill to come up with some sort of resort tax,” Stuber said. “So, you would hit like the Brush Creek Ranch down in Saratoga or your big resorts in Jackson. 

“If there was some sort of a resort tax, it doesn’t come out of my pocket unless I go stay there.”

Stuber, who wrestled in college at Dakota Wesleyan and remains a diehard Pokes booster across several sports, understands the political challenge in tax-averse Wyoming. 

Campbell County, he noted, “is the only county in the entire state that doesn’t have a local lodging tax.”

But as a father who travels around Wyoming for his kids’ activities, Stuber sees the appeal. 

“I am more than happy to spend $20 a year on that tax staying in Casper, staying on the other side of the mountain for football, for wrestling, for swimming — and have that money go towards NIL,” he said. 

The best part in Stuber’s mind? Visiting fans would fund Wyoming’s competitiveness.

“How great would it be to sit there and shake these people’s hands and say, ‘Hey, thanks for coming. Thanks for traveling with your team to Laramie,'” Stuber said. “Oh, yeah, by the way, because you’re staying here, you’re getting taxed. You’re paying our players to play against you.”

Thunder Model

Back on the hardwood in Laramie, coach Wicks has built a payment structure modeled on one of the NBA’s most analytically sophisticated franchises: the Oklahoma City Thunder.

“The Oklahoma City Thunder are a great team to study,” Wicks said. They use what’s called the Gini coefficient, which is named after an Italian statistician. 

Wyoming’s basketball budget this year started at roughly $550,000 for a roster of up to 15 players. 

“All our guys sign non-disclosure agreements,” Wicks said. “That’s a big deal for us to have in these days, because I think that’s the first thing that becomes divisive in the locker room.”

Under the Gini coefficient, the best player on the roster makes 20% of the budget. 

“The next best player makes 18%, the next 16, so on and so on all the way down,” Wicks said. “Because if you overspend for one player, then you hurt the back end of your roster. And your chance to be successful drops if injury happens.”

For a program operating with such constraints, every dollar matters, and so does knowing what opponents are spending.

“Every single team that we play outside of Air Force — because Air Force is government — has a bigger budget,” Wicks said. 

When asked about upcoming opponent Grand Canyon University, he offered a stark assessment: “They’re a for-profit university. I’ll be completely honest with you. I don’t know the exact numbers, but they may have the most expensive roster in the Mountain West.”

Wyoming, by contrast, may have “one of the least expensive rosters at the mid-major-plus level,” Wicks said. “And we’re producing results. That means we’re doing our job.

“We’re a conservative, fiscally conservative state,” he said. “We spend wisely around here. And that’s why I say it’s a value-based approach to all this stuff. There has to be value for us. There has to be value for them. And then we have to meet in the middle somewhere to make sure this all works out.”

David Madison can be reached at david@cowboystatedaily.com.



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College Football Transfer Quarterback Market Could Reach $5 Million This Offseason

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As programs across the country begin to settle into the NIL and revenue-sharing era of college athletics, it’s clear that the annual pay of key positions on the field is starting to take shape.

That’s especially true, of course, at the quarterback position, where ESPN’s Pete Thamel says that the annual pay in the transfer portal could approach all-time highs at the top of the market.

“I made some calls today, guys. Sources told me that the tip top of this quarterback market financially could reach $5 million for one season,” Thamel said in a College GameDay hit on Friday night.

Thamel mentioned where some of the biggest names on the market are trending, including Cincinnati quarterback Brendan Sorsby, TCU’s Josh Hoover and Nebraska’s Dylan Raiola.

“Sorsby’s been linked early to Texas Tech. Dylan Raiola there’s some smoke to Louisville, although maybe a playoff team jumps in late there. There’s been some early links between Indiana and Hoover, assuming that [Fernando] Mendoza goes pro.”

Thamel emphasized that supply and demand for the most important position on the field is driving prices up to historically high levels.

It’ll be interesting to see where the top players eventually land.

More College Football on Sports Illustrated





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Wisconsin’s new $104.5 million Under Armour deal could help launch athletics into NIL-era

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The University of Wisconsin-Madison and Under Armour agreed to a 10-year, $104.5 million apparel relations extension on Nov. 24, retaining UA as the Badgers’ exclusive outfitter and injecting new funding into NIL.

The partnership with Under Armour first started in 2015 with the Badgers men’s basketball run to the Final Four. In the decade since, Athletic Director Chris McIntosh considers Under Armour one of the university’s “most valued partners.” 

In the recent history of Wisconsin football, the Badgers have struggled to compete with other Big Ten foes during the NIL era of college athletics. Since NIL was implemented into college sports in 2021, Wisconsin Football has experienced difficulties with gathering the funds necessary to recruit high-end talent. 

Under Armour’s sponsorship aims to help the Badgers further adapt to the NIL era of college football, including the transfer portal by giving the Badgers the ability to acquire great talent throughout the rest of the country. The contract contains a “starting sum of $175,000 annually”, that will continue to rise, to reward NIL contracts to Badger athletes. Under Armour is not only providing the Badgers with NIL, but they are also providing brand and business opportunities for UW athletes. 

In order to achieve success in the modern college football landscape, programs have to devote more monetary rewards than just scholarships to athletes. For example, the defending national champion Ohio State Buckeyes spent around $20 million in NIL on their program

In comparison to the Buckeyes, Wisconsin’s football budget is significantly less. After another abysmal football season and ranking towards the bottom of the Big Ten in NIL funds, this renewed contract with Under Armour will help catapult Wisconsin into the top half of the conference in NIL funds. 

Under Armour sponsors other notable football programs like Notre Dame and Texas Tech. These two football powerhouses — who finished the regular season  in the mix for the College Football Playoff — have seen direct benefits, such as new apparel, more flexibility, and better morale within their respective programs from their sponsorships with Under Armour. 

In a new era of collegiate athletics, the Badgers have found themselves trailing not just the Big Ten, but most Power-4 programs throughout the country as well. While their sponsorship with Under Armour doesn’t fix everything, it is definitely a step in the right direction for the future of Wisconsin Athletics. 

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No. 1 transfer portal quarterback predicted to join major college football program

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The NCAA transfer portal will feature hundreds of players across all levels of college football in the 2026 offseason.

Prominent quarterbacks have begun to declare their intent to enter the transfer portal in the weeks before it opens. DJ Lagway, Josh Hoover, Rocco Becht and Dylan Raiola are among the Power Four quarterbacks who will be at a new school in 2026.

One of the first Power Four quarterbacks that decided to enter the transfer portal was Arizona State quarterback Sam Leavitt. He will have two seasons of eligibility at his next school.

One program linked to Leavitt when he enters the portal is Oregon. Leavitt is from West Linn, Oregon, just south of Portland and an hour and a half drive from Eugene by interstate highway.

Oregon has not started a quarterback that it recruited from high school for an entire season since Justin Herbert in 2019. Bo Nix, Dillon Gabriel and Dante Moore (transferred back) all came to the Ducks via the transfer portal.

The 6-foot-2, 205-pounder began his college football career at Michigan State in 2023. He played in a maximum of four games to keep his redshirt for the Spartans, passing for 139 yards, two touchdowns and two interceptions on 15-of-23 passing.

Sam Leavitt throws the ball in Arizona State's game against Houston.

Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Sam Leavitt (10) | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Leavitt transferred to Arizona State in the 2024 offseason. He started every game for the Sun Devils while accumulating 2,885 passing yards, 24 touchdowns and six interceptions while rushing for 443 yards and five touchdowns en route to their Big 12 Championship victory and subsequent College Football Playoff appearance.

The Big 12 named Leavitt its Freshman of the Year and Second-Team All-Big 12 for his heroics. The conference also named him as its Newcomer of the Week on multiple occasions. He finished 2024 with the most passing yards by a freshman in a season in Arizona State history.

Leavitt’s 2025 season was cut to just seven games due to injuries. He passed for 1,626 yards, 10 touchdowns and three interceptions while rushing for 306 yards and five touchdowns.

The Sun Devils will not start Leavitt in their bowl as he has declared his intent to leave. Arizona State (8-4, 6-3) will face ACC champion Duke (8-5, 6-2) in the Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl in El Paso, Texas on Dec. 31 (3 p.m. EST, CBS).

The NCAA transfer portal will officially open for all college football players looking for new destinations on Jan. 2, 2026. The portal will stay open until Jan. 16, 2026.



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