The storied Leprechaun tradition adds a new chapter ☘️ #GoIrish☘️ pic.twitter.com/QEtBNqz6Gg
— Notre Dame Football (@NDFootball) August 21, 2025
NIL
Closing Bell

Report: MLB, ESPN reach deal to sell out-of-market games…Analyst: ESPN DTC will be ‘offering like no other’…Indiana inks $50M Merchants Bank sponsorship.

MLB and ESPN have a “framework agreement that would give the network the exclusive rights to sell all out-of-market regular-season games digitally and in-market games for five clubs over the next three years,” according to sources. Under the agreement — which would “begin next season” — ESPN would “continue to broadcast around 30 regular-season games,” but “Sunday Night Baseball” would “move to a different night during the week.” Games on the network would “remain exclusive.” The deal is “not yet signed, and its full completion is not expected until September.” Though the exact amount ESPN will pay is unknown, it is “substantial.” Netflix remains the “heavy favorite to pick up the Home Run Derby for the next three years,” while NBC and Apple are viewed as the “top landing spots for ‘Sunday Night Baseball’ and the first round playoff games.” ESPN would have MLB.TV as part of its DTC offering under the framework of the deal (THE ATHLETIC, 8/21).

ESPN launched its DTC service today, and Bank of America Securities senior media & entertainment analyst Jessica Reif Ehrlich said she “love[s] their hybrid approach” to gaining and keeping viewers. Ehrlich: “They are not cutting off the pay TV universe and potentially getting cordless viewers. … There’s 30 million-plus people who don’t subscribe.” Ehrlich lauded the fact that there are “so many features” that “should drive engagement and bring churn down, which is really key.” Ehrlich is hoping to eventually get more information on “the upside in terms of how the advertising will be hyper-personalized.” Ehrlich: “This will be an offering like no other. … If you’re a sports fan, this is euphoria, and for Disney, we don’t see a real downside here. They’re just expanding what they have now, but expanding in a really big way, and not at a humongous cost. This is stuff they’ve been investing in anyway. They have these sports rights and they have scale” (“Money Movers,” CNBC, 8/21).
Lightshed Partners predicts ESPN DTC will “add about 2 million new subs by year-end 2025.” Fox One “could add a similar number of subscribers, helped by the inclusion of Fox News.” Disney and ESPN “realize the importance of developing a direct relationship with their consumers,” and the goal of launching the ESPN DTC “is to get existing MVPD/vMVPD subscribers who have access to ESPN (over 65 million subscribers, which implies well over 130 million potential users/viewers) to watch via the ESPN app instead of watching via their MVPD/vMVPD.” Similar logic “holds for Fox, particularly as it seeks to leverage its growing success in digital advertising” with Tubi into Fox One. ESPN “chose to use their existing ESPN app for their new ESPN Unlimited streaming app experience,” but what “we do not yet understand is why the authentication process is buried and not easily accessible inside the ESPN app itself” (Lightshed Partners).
Here is a small sampling of some of the reaction to the ESPN DTC launch today:
- Sports Video Group’s Brandon Costa: “Yes, @espn’s new direct-to-consumer service is a major sports business milestone. But what will the revamped app UX look like? Live game multiviews. Squeeze back stat windows. Gaming. All linear and ESPN+ content together. Vertical video highlights on mobile. It’s loaded.”
- MLIVE’s Scott Warheit: “Would be really nice if @Xfinity figured out a deal with @espn so we Comcast customers could actually get access to the ESPN Flagship DTC app and features. I’m not sure I get not having that all lined up at the start.”
- The Wall Street Journal’s Joe Flint: “Later today I shall attempt to register for my free Fox One, ESPN, Peacock apps etc per my subscription package from Spectrum. Pray for me.”

Indiana Univ. is set to announce a 20-year, $50M agreement with Merchants Bank that will include the renaming of the playing surface at Memorial Stadium to “Merchants Bank Field at Memorial Stadium,” Sports Business Journal has learned.Merchants Bank will also provide IU athletes comprehensive financial literacy training as part of the agreement. The training will come at no cost to the athletes and will be centered on maximizing opportunities in the shifting collegiate landscape.The new partnership will be on display as soon as the Indiana’s Aug. 30 season opener against Old Dominion, including on the stadium’s playing surface, along with other varying signage.
The Univ. of South Carolina is “expected to announce a new athletic apparel deal with Nike” on Friday, signaling the end of a 10-year deal with Under Armour. Getty Images The Univ. of South Carolina is “expected to announce a new athletic apparel deal with Nike” on Friday, signaling the end of a 10-year deal with Under Armour, according to sources. This would begin with the 2026-27 school year. A Board of Trustees meeting “has been called” for 9am ET Friday with “one item agenda reading: ‘Athletics Department: Apparel Agreement.’” The Gamecocks have been with Under Armour since 2007, at first “signing a six-year football-only contract” worth $10.8M. The deal was amended in 2011, when a new six-year contract that covered all the school’s teams — totaling $19M — was agreed upon. The latest contract was a 10-year extension signed in 2016. The $71.5M contract was the “second-most valuable in the SEC and the seventh-most valuable in the country” (Charleston POST & COURIER, 8/21).

Notre Dame is “revamping its iconic ‘Leprechaun’” logo ahead of the 2025-26 athletic calendar, unveiling “a football-toting leprechaun” today, the first in a “series of sports-specific leprechauns aimed at representing each sport that the university sponsors.” The new Leprechaun will “feature on Notre Dame’s sidelines during home games” this season and “into the future.” Its design, “developed by the university’s in-house media team,” was inspired “by photo, fundamentals and running styles from former and current student-athletes” (CBSSPORTS.com, 8/21).
The Association of Pickleball Players has secured a new title sponsor for its college pickleball series: endemic pickleball equipment brand Selkirk. The multiyear deal, for which financial terms were not disclosed, will see the series branded the APP Selkirk Collegiate Series. The APP and Selkirk negotiated directly.
Offering $85,000 in total prize money, the APP’s 2025-26 collegiate series will include eight events, culminating in the “APP Selkirk U.S. Collegiate Championships” at The Courts facility in Cape Coral, Fla., in March. Live coverage from that event will stream on the Selkirk TV streaming service and the APP’s YouTube channel. Collegiate series matches will also be sanctioned by USA Pickleball, meaning they will adhere to regulations set by the governing body.
To steward the collegiate series, the APP has hired two industry leaders to newly created roles — Dominic Catalano as Dir of APP College Series and Susannah Barr as College Player & Program Liaison.
On this week’s Sports Media Podcast, SBJ’s Austin Karp chats with Chapman and Maclain Way, directors of the new Netflix docuseries “America’s Team: The Gambler and his Cowboys,” about interviewing Pro Football HOFers Deion Sanders and Michael Irvin for the project.
On this week’s Sports Media Podcast, SBJ’s Rob Schaefer shares how the revamped U.S. Open mixed doubles tournament led to a packed Arthur Ashe Stadium. Despite the rain, sold-out crowds were eager to see the new format and cheer on their favorite players.
Speed Reads…
Georgia and Altius Sports Partners have agreed to a 3-year extension. As part of the deal, Altius SVP of ASP Brands Kim DeCarolis will serve as UGA’s Executive Director of Athlete Commercial Strategy (Ben Portnoy, SBJ).
DirecTV is bringing back its enhanced viewing experience of the U.S. Open starting on Sunday. Streaming and satellite customers will get five additional Court Channels of live coverage during the tournament’s first week (SBJ).
3 Arts Entertainment’s Sports is expanding its division with the addition of former Klutch Sports Director Dr. Shey Olaoshebikan. He will serve as the firm’s Executive Vice President and Manager of the Sports Division. His most notable client, Browns DE Myles Garrett will join Olaoshebikan at 3 Arts Sports for his off-field representation (Irving Mejia-Hilario, SBJ).
Spectrum announced that both ESPN’s DTC and Hulu, as well as Fox One, are both available to eligible Spectrum TV customers at no additional cost (Spectrum).
FanDuel Sports Network announced an extension of its current carriage agreement with Comcast (FanDuel Sports Network).
Stateside Brands today announced that the new name of South Philadelphia’s top entertainment destination, long known as “Xfinity Live!”, will become Stateside Live!. The name change is anticipated to take effect in the fall (Stateside Brands).
The Celtics named PIMCO as the official investment management partner of the team and new entitlement partner of the PIMCO Parquet Club at TD Garden (Boston Celtics).
Fanatics and Yeti announced a collaboration that will see Yeti’s sports-licensed drinkware and coolers available for sale on Fanatics.com, its network of partner sites and select stadium and retail stores (Fanatics).
Around the World….
The Albanese government “ruled out any further cash injections” for the Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games, meaning Queensland will be “forced to cover any cost blowouts during the construction of venues” for the games (THE AUSTRALIAN, 8/21).
Aston Villa and Adidas unveiled their third kit for the 2025-26 season. The new kit marks the first time the Adidas Trefoil logo has appeared on a kit for the team (Aston Villa FC).

A soccer game near Buenos Aires was “unexpectedly canceled” last night after “violence in the stands left some fans hospitalized or detained by the local authorities” (N.Y. TIMES, 8/21).
Everton FC has entered a partnership with Japanese club Nagoya Grampus “as part of efforts to grow the club’s reach in Asia” (Liverpool ECHO, 8/21).
Social Scoop….
Fox One & Prime Video have a deal making new DTC service available on Prime in U.S. ($20/month). For sports fans, access to Fox, FS1, FS2, Fox Deportes, Big Ten Net)
Prime Video now has a decent chunk of NFL available. Can add on Paramount+ (CBS games) and “TNF” included
— Austin Karp (@AustinKarp) August 21, 2025
In meetings this week, SEC executives moved closer to adopting a nine-game conference football schedule, sources tell @YahooSports. A decision remains with presidents, who are expected to meet soon on the issue.
— Ross Dellenger (@RossDellenger) August 21, 2025
Next stop: ESPN DTC 🚇
NYC’s @MTA Subway E Train has been wrapped inside-out with ESPN branding celebrating the launch of ESPN’s DTC service & enhanced app
At the Spring Street station, fans can hear special announcements from @stephenasmith
📸 (Phil Ellsworth / ESPN Images) pic.twitter.com/fn9ObLT0ii
— ESPN PR (@ESPNPR) August 21, 2025
Daily Download….
DraftKings launched two commercials featuring Lakers F LeBron James and comedian Kevin Hart, both featuring the two discussing notable touchdowns, including the Music City Miracle.
Daily Digit….
$14 — Average cost for two hot dogs or two sodas at Big Ten football stadiums. Those prices, along with $24 for two beers, led Oddspedia to reveal the conference’s stadiums as boasting the most expensive concessions on average (AXIOS, 8/16)
NIL
Darian Mensah’s millions give college football players leverage over NFL
Updated Dec. 19, 2025, 4:05 p.m. ET
- Duke quarterback Darian Mensah is returning to college instead of entering the NFL Draft.
- Mensah will earn more money by staying at Duke than he likely would have as an NFL rookie.
- The decision highlights how private NIL deals are making college football competitive with the NFL for talent.
Darian Mensah finally pulled off what eventually had to happen, further underscoring a booming college football economy that isn’t slowing down.
An elite quarterback chose college football over the NFL. And will make more money because of it.
Mensah, who led Duke to its first outright ACC championship since 1962 in his first season after transferring from Tulane, will make — at the very least — the back half of a two-year, $8 million deal he signed prior to this season.
If Mensah were to leave for the NFL, he’d make half that or less for one season — depending on where he was selected in the 2026 NFL Draft.

Stay or go is no longer a professional decision. It’s now, in most cases, a monetary move.
Just when you think paradigm change over the past four years of college football couldn’t be more dramatic, we now have quarterbacks staying in college for more money than they’d earn in the NFL.
College football isn’t the NFL’s minor league. It’s now the NFL’s competition.
The last quarterback selected in the first round of the 2025 NFL Draft was Jaxson Dart, who was the 25th overall pick and signed a four-year deal with the Giants averaging $4.2 million annually.
The first quarterback selected outside the first round was Tyler Shough, who was the 40th overall pick by the Saints and signed a four-year deal averaging $2.7 annually. The next selected was Jalen Milroe, 92nd overall by the Seahawks with a deal averaging $1.56 million annually.
Mensah, who more than likely would’ve been selected somewhere outside the first 50 picks, will earn $4 million by returning to Duke.
But that’s not the point of this exercise. The reality that Mensah will earn more in college football than the NFL, that he is choosing to delay playing at the highest level of football with a multi-year contract to stay in college, should tell you all you need to know about the flourishing private NIL economy.
The one area of unthinkable college football change the NCAA has no control over. And by no, I mean none.
Not with some special clearinghouse, or contrived czar, or play-nice agreement schools are refusing to sign. Private NIL is the heart of the college football economy, the only way to separate the haves from the have-nots.
You don’t really think the haves are going to sit there and take it, do you? They’re not going to nod their heads and spend 75% of their NCAA-mandated $20-23 million annual salary pool on football, and go along their merry way.
Because the elite of the elite players want more, and are they’re getting it through private NIL. It’s basic economics: supply and demand.
Ohio State overpaid for Quinshon Judkins and Will Howard and Caleb Downs, and won a national title because of it. Indiana outbid Georgia and Miami for Fernando Mendoza, and just polished off the first unbeaten regular season in school history.
Duke, meanwhile, won its first outright ACC title in more than six decades after overpaying Mensah. That’s return on investment, everyone.
A similar or marginally better revenue sharing deal isn’t convincing elite players to change schools. Private NIL deals are.
Players don’t have to stay at programs if they feel (take your pick) they’re not being developed properly, don’t have a chance to play for a championship, or just don’t like their situation.
Now they aren’t forced to leave college for the NFL, where the ability to earn was always the greatest draw — no matter what you read from players about taking their talents to (insert team here). Thanks, LeBron.
With that being said, of course.
Imagine the sheer power of telling the NFL no, and then picking up a larger paycheck because of it. And, bonus: Mensah, who has only played two seasons of college football — with at TD/INT ratio of 52/11 — can play another season and strengthen his draft stock.
Go bet on yourself, kid. Have another big season, make twice what you’d earn in the NFL, and then improve your draft stock for 2027. The next thing you know, you’ve moved into a first round projection and your rookie deal goes from seven figures to eight.
Quinn Ewers should’ve done it last season, and there will be more outside of Mensah who will do it this season. Brendan Sorsby and Sam Leavitt could leave for the NFL, and be selected in the first two days.
So could Ty Simpson and John Mateer and Nico Iamaleava. They’ll all make more — per season — in college football with private NIL deals. And that’s just at the quarterback position.
It’s a bear market for the elite of college football, and nothing is stopping it. Not contrived NCAA guidelines with no teeth, and not some document with no legal standing.
And no longer, as crazy as it sounds, the big, bad NFL.
Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.
NIL
Arch Manning Channels Inner Tom Brady With Selfless NIL Decision
In today’s day and age of college football, the landscape of the sport has dramatically changed.
Now, instead of loyalty, coaches are forced to battle against the tampering of their best players in order to keep them from entering the portal for a big pay day.
And, as has been seen with USC and Texas A&M, players are also now announcing contract extensions to simply forgo that portal temptation, and stay with the school they are currently playing for.
Fortunately – and refreshingly – Texas Longhorns quarterback Arch Manning is taking a different approach.
According to reports from Inside Texas reporter Justin Wells, Manning is set to take a reduced payment from the Longhorns’ 2026 revenue-sharing pool in order to free up money to help his team both retain its own star players, as well as attack the transfer portal to improve the roster for a 2026 championship run.
A Tom Brady-Like Approach From Arch Manning

This move is eerily reminiscent of former NFL superstar Tom Brady, who was famous for taking pay cuts throughout his career in order to help his team acquire players in free agency in hopes of winning a championship.
Dallas Mavericks superstar Dirk Nowitzki also took a similar approach during his time in the NBA, helping Mark Cuban to add firepower to the roster by taking a massive pay cut.
The only difference is that this is college football, and in an era of a ‘look at me and my bank account’ mentality from the vast majority of college football, Manning’s selfless approach is a sight for sore eyes.
Manning Selfless Despite Elite Season
This is especially true considering the fact that Manning deservedly earned a major pay raise in his first season as the starter, completing 227 of 370 passes for 2,942 yards and 24 touchdowns with seven interceptions. He also rushed for 244 yards and led the Longhorns with eight rushing touchdowns, and had a receiving touchdown, accounting for 33 total scores for the season.
And, he was able to do all of that behind a leaky offensive line that ranked 67th in the country in pass blocking grade per PFF, while allowing 159 total pressures and 22 sacks – numbers that could have been much higher if Manning did not have such elite pocket presence and escapability. Not to mention, the offense being encumbered by the worst rushing attack the school had since 1944.
But instead of using that as leverage, like so many other players in the sport, Manning is giving Texas the Brady treatment – allowing them more money to dedicate towards NIL in the transfer portal in hopes of bringing in help to fix the team’s issues up front on the offensive line and in the running game, with potentially multiple additions at the running back spot.
Not to mention, it potentially allows Texas to make some major improvements at wide receiver, linebacker, and defensive back.
His decision also makes it much easier for Texas retain current players on the roster, who have no doubt been receiving tampering-level overtures from other schools and agents.
And it will be made possible in part thanks to a selfless act from Manning, who has now made he desire to win a national championship quite clear.
NIL
$54 million college football HC predicted to be candidate for high-profile NFL job
The college football coaching carousel spins on, but now some of that speculation includes one of the most prestigious positions in the NFL which came open this year, and a rising star in the NCAA is now being connected to the vacancy.
Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman is someone who should be considered in contention to become the next coach of the New York Giants franchise, according to college football analyst Josh Pate.
Freeman in play for the Giants?
“I just think Marcus Freeman is gonna be in play for the Giants job,” Pate said during an appearance with Bussin’ With The Boys.
“I think a lot of people in the college football administrative world know that/expect that. The agency world knows that/expects that. Not a done deal. I’m not going Schefter.
“If it’s even a remote possibility, and it certainly is, then that means the Notre Dame job may be open, as well. The coaching cycle is not close to done yet.”
NFL insiders seem to agree
The talk connecting Freeman to the Giants is not just random speculation at this point.
Freeman has also emerged as one of the most prominent names on the shortlist being assembled by the Giants franchise itself, according to The Athletic.
That is something to keep an eye on, as the NFL coaching bonanza is only just getting started, and Freeman is considered one of the best young coaching minds in circulation at any level.
LSU, Penn State, and Florida were all reportedly in communication with Freeman through his representatives when those schools were in the market for a coach, and the Giants could be next.
What Freeman has done at Notre Dame
Freeman has just completed his fourth season at the helm of the Fighting Irish program and boasts a 43-12 overall record, winning more than 78 percent of his games.
Freeman led Notre Dame to a No. 2 national ranking and an appearance in the national championship game against his alma mater a year ago.
His team went 10-2 this season and seemed poised for another berth in the College Football Playoff, before the committee reversed course on Selection Day and left the Irish out of the field, leading the school to decline playing in a bowl game.
What Notre Dame is giving Freeman
Freeman, who will turn 40 next month, signed a contract extension with Notre Dame last year that will lock him in with the school through the 2030 season, but if this carousel has proven anything, it’s that almost any contract can be gotten out of.
Notre Dame is a private school and is not obligated to publish its coaching salaries, but insiders contend his deal pays him $9 million per season and is worth a total of a reported $54 million.
But that raise is already somewhat out of date after Indiana recently inked Curt Cignetti to a new deal that will pay him $11.7 million per season.
The most recent reporting contends that Notre Dame and Freeman have not yet reworked his deal with the school, but that both sides are interested in coming to a new arrangement by the new year.
The faster they do that, the faster they can end talk of his leaving.
Read more from College Football HQ
NIL
The Cost of NIL
JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) – Name, image, and likeness.
It has taken athletics across the amateur level by storm nationally, creating an avenue for players to make money from their NIL, particularly in football.
College football, most notably at the NCAA Division I level, has been forever changed because of it, with one SEC coach calling the state of CFB “sick.”
“We’re trying to sound warning bells. There’s a warning that the system that we are in really is sick right now, and college football is sick,” Missouri head football coach Eli Drinkwitz said about NIL on Monday, December 16, ahead of his team’s appearance in the Gator Bowl. “There’s showing signs of this cracking moving forward… Tampering is at the highest levels – there is no such thing as tampering, because there’s no one that’s been punished for tampering. Everybody on my roster is being called.”
In Mississippi, Ole Miss has benefited from its strong NIL movement, the Grove Collective, which is a large reason why the football program is hosting a College Football playoff game in the school’s first-ever appearance.
But how is NIL affecting high school student-athletes in Mississippi?
Thirty-six states in the country are allowing high school student-athletes to profit from their name, image, and likeness.
Mississippi is not one of them.
“NIL is not for high school students,” Rickey Neaves, the Executive Director of the Mississippi High School Activities Association, said. ”They’re much too young to be taking on that responsibility and handling that large sum of money. So, a high school student and our association need to concentrate on number one, being a young person and enjoying school, enjoying the high school experience, and just being a young man or a young lady. And then the rest of it will take care of itself later on. They’re going to have to work and be responsible later on in life, and long enough. So let them be young while they can.”
According to Yahoo Sports, Fazion Brandon, a five-star recruit playing high school football in North Carolina, is allegedly making $1.2 million in NIL money, who signed several highly publicized contracts since his lawsuit.
Tristen Keys, the highest-rated Mississippi recruit in the class of 2026 and a senior at Hattiesburg High School who signed to play CFB at Tennessee, has an NIL valuation of over $500k, according to On3 Sports.
While not naming the said student-athletes, Neaves confirmed that several Mississippi athletes have been approached every year with a large sum of money with NIL deals since its emergence.
$1.2 and $1.4 million to be exact.
These individuals likely played football in the state, with Mississippi consistently ranking in the top five, and even the best in the country in producing four and five-star talent on the gridiron, multiple reports show.
In fact, 12 high school student-athletes are ranked in ESPN’s Top 300 recruits in the nation, with 5 of them being ranked in the top 100.
That amount of money is hard to turn down for anyone, let alone a high school athlete with the opportunity to achieve dreams at the tip of their finger.
Neaves said turning this opportunity down has impacted a select few of student-athletes in the state.
However, there are ways around signing an NIL contract that can’t be accepted until they graduate and are enrolled in a university.
“They can sign an NIL contract. [But] they or their parents cannot receive any money or any goods that can be escrowed, as we call it, into a bank account for when they do graduate,” Neaves stated. “They cannot use their school logo, their school colors. It does not keep them from using their own name, their own image, and their own likeness, but all of that other belongs either to their school or even to the association, so they can’t use that.”
“We do encourage parents to look into that,” he continued. “I had a deal with a couple of student-athletes last year, and my advice to them was, you can’t tell a young man when they’re 17, 18 years old to turn down $1.2 million. What you can tell them is to be very careful, have that money escrowed and waiting on you once you use your eligibility or once you have graduated, and then build your own name, your own legacy, and build off of that.”
No local student-athletes, according to Neaves, have left the state to pursue NIL deals that are eligible to profit from while in high school.
While the NIL movement hasn’t made its way to high school athletics in the Magnolia State, Neaves suggests another entity is directly affecting high school athletics here.
The transfer portal.
It has changed the landscape of amateur athletics forever, with major colleges able to pay millions in NIL contracts for transfers arguably older and more ready-made for a football program – or any other athletics program, for that matter – to win immediately.
While there are no formal, large-scale academic studies that provide a precise, specific percentage of high schoolers affected, this in turn undoubtedly results in fewer roster spots and scholarship offers for talented high school recruits.
In 2023, an analysis done by Gene’s Page shows that SEC programs’ high school signees dipped nearly 11-percent between 2019 and 2021 as the portal gained prominence.
The FootballScoop stated in an article that in 2021, around 400 fewer players across the country signed FBS scholarships compared to the two cycles prior, and the trend has continued.
Neaves proposes that high school athletes in the state are impacted today.
“We need to look at what that is doing to our high school athletes,“ he warned. ”Right now, we have some outstanding high school athletes, both male and female, who are not getting the opportunity to go on to the next level because these people are still hanging around. They’re gaining some of the six and seven-year college athletes, and that’s not letting today’s seniors in the room. One of these days, NIL money is going to run out, and you have, you have juniors and seniors in college that are staying in college because they’re making more money off their NIL than they would make out of working.”
Is there a future for NIL in Mississippi high school sports?
For the possibility of NIL to maneuver its way into Mississippi high school sports, it would first have to start above the MHSAA.
Neaves doubled down that it is not in the picture within the rules of the association, but that “the legislature could pass a bylaw that says student athletes of high school age can do this.”
“If that ever happened, we would have to stay within the rules ourselves. So, we would have to allow it,“ he said. ”I personally hope that does not happen because I think we have the best option for both worlds here. The student athlete can still have [NIL deals] waiting on them when they get out of school at any time in their life, when they are more adapted to [the] use of it and can benefit from it even more.”
It does remain a possibility, however.
More states are trending towards allowing high schoolers to make NIL money.
On November 25, Ohio became the latest state to join the NIL movement.
While it is technically out of Neaves’ control, he does encourage that high school sports remain the same in Mississippi.
“You never know in today’s world what’s going to be coming down the pipe, but I think you have to always look ahead and see what pitfalls are out there.”
“Let’s be realistic. Is a 16 or 17-year-old mature enough to handle a million dollars? No. I know when I was that age, I would have blown it and probably ruined my whole career while doing it. Now, that’s not what everybody would do, but if that happens to one person, that’s one too many.”
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NIL
Arch Manning Is Taking A Pay Cut To Help Texas Gain An Edge
© Scott Wachter-Imagn Images
College football has been skidding down a slippery slope since the start of the NIL Era, and the line between that level and the pros gets blurrier with every year that passes. Now, we’ve been treated to our latest shift on that front courtesy of Arch Manning’s decision to take a pay cut ahead of his second season as the starter for Texas.
Next summer will mark the fifth anniversary of the landmark Supreme Court decision that essentially forced the NCAA to abandon its longstanding efforts to prevent students from cashing in on their name, image, and likeness.
It was a fairly inevitable development and one that was poised to have a dramatic impact on the landscape of college sports. While most fans agreed that student-athletes deserved to make some money, the ways in which they’re now able to do so have slowly but surely eroded the spirit of collegiate athletics as the concept of amateurism becomes a memory of the past.
That evolution has been marked by a number of tangible signposts, and the latest stake has been pounded into the ground courtesy of Arch Manning.
Arch Manning is taking a pay cut to allow Texas to use more of its House settlement funds on other talent
Earlier this week, we were treated to the latest piece of evidence that college football is basically a pro sport when USC went out of its way to announce running back Waymond Jordan had re-signed with the program after deciding to return to the Trojans for a second season.
We’ve reached a point where every player is effectively a free agent when their season comes to an end due to the transfer portal, and schools now have even more money they can use to try to poach and retain talent in the wake of the House settlement that will allow athletic departments to redistribute up to $20.5 million in revenue to athletes during the current academic year.
According to Texas Insider, the University of Texas is setting aside around $14 million for its football program next season. Arch Manning will undoubtedly receive a significant chunk of that sum, but the outlet spoke with sources who say the quarterback will accept “a reduced compensation” from the Longhorns so they can spend more money on other players in pursuit of a national championship.
Manning certainly isn’t hurting for cash, as he reportedly received at least $3.5 million this season thanks to NIL deals with companies including Red Bull, Uber, and Warby Parker.
It’s a commendable move for a QB who will be looking to improve after largely failing to meet the admittedly lofty expectations surrounding him during a campaign where the Longhorns went 9-3, but it’s also one that shows the sport has firmly reached the point of no return.
NIL
Texas QB asks for less NIL money to help boost roster
Updated Dec. 19, 2025, 10:54 a.m. CT
There are plenty of examples of a star in pro sports taking less money in order to help the overall roster. But it isn’t something that’s hit college football yet … until now, thanks to Arch Manning. Manning has asked to take a reduced portion of the Longhorns’ direct payout pool.
Manning’s aim at taking less NIL funds is to help improve the roster around him. Just like Patrick Mahomes, who regularly gives up millions to help the Kansas City Chief’s roster. Tom Brady did it with New England. Dirk Nowitzki, Tim Duncan, LeBron James, Kevin Durant, Jalen Brunson, Aaron Rodgers and Ben Roethlisberger have all helped the rosters around them by taking less.
In the pros, there are salary caps to negotiate. While college has no salary cap (yet), there is a finite amount in the NIL house pool. Texas can only spend what it has available. And while that pool is one of the biggest in the nation, Texas still follows a budget.
No doubt, Manning will be hoping the Texas coaching staff uses some of the freed up football revenue sharing funds on the offensive line. The line struggled in front of Manning all season and certainly inhibited his development early in the season.
Two offensive linemen are gone after the Citrus Bowl and Texas might lose a third. Left tackle Trevor Goosby was named first-team All-SEC is now contemplating going pro. Running back Jadan Baugh from Florida is also on Texas’ radar. The talented RB won’t be cheap.
Of course, it’s not like Manning will starve. The redshirt sophomore has one of the highest NIL valuations in nation. Manning has NIL deals with Red Bull, Panani, Uber and Warby Parker. Manning made north of $3.5 million in NIL deals in 2025, according to the Houston Chronicle.
With a big name that attracts major brands, Manning doesn’t need his big deals supplemented. But most college athletes are paid by the common pool of funds. Manning frees up some of that money for transfers.
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