Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

NIL

College football teams on the move

Published

on

College football teams on the move

College football may be a sport dominated by blue blood powers, but the programs atop the sport can still change in an instant, especially in the transfer portal era.

Think about the 2024 College Football Playoff.

That 12-team bracket included Arizona State and Indiana, both of which won just three games the prior season. 

Then there’s the teams that did not participate. Defending champion Michigan? It won just seven regular season games. The national runners up, Washington, dropped from 14 wins to six. And let’s not forget 2023 ACC champion Florida State, which went from 13 regular season wins to TWO the following season. 

Rosters turn over quickly in college football, which means teams can see their records vary wildly from year to year based on who they lose and how they recruit.

Look at what it’s been like to be a Northwestern fan since 2018:

2018: 9-5
2019: 3-9
2020: 7-2
2021: 3-9
2022: 1-11
2023: 8-5
2024: 4-8

That leads us to potential risers and fallers entering 2025. Using our insider knowledge of programs, returning production numbers and some common sense, CBS Sports is projecting this upcoming season’s big risers (a two-plus win jump) and fallers (two or more losses) from each Power Four conference.

All win totals via FanDuel Sportsbook

Rise: Florida State Seminoles

2024 Record: 2-10
2025 FanDuel Win Total:
7.5 wins

It would be a historic anomaly (and a failure) if Florida State didn’t win four games this season. The Seminoles have only won three or fewer games seven times in 72 seasons as a program.

Florida State will look much different this season. The roster has turned over with just six returning starters, 46 new roster additions (23 transfers, 23 high school enrollees) and two new coordinators (offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn, defensive coordinator Tony White). That’s drastic change for head coach Mike Norvell, who had led the program to 23 combined wins over the prior two seasons.

There’s two ways to think of Florida State’s schedule. First, the top-end games are very difficult. Home tilts against Miami and Alabama. Road trips to Clemson and Florida. The Seminoles would be lucky to escape with one or two wins in that four-game gauntlet. Everything else? It’s very approachable with only one remaining game against a team (Pitt) that earned seven-plus wins last season. 

Florida State is going to be a very specific test for opposing defenses with Malzahn calling the plays and run-first QB Tommy Castellanos operating the system. That’s something that should give the Seminoles a reasonably high floor from week to week, especially when you consider their roster still meets the blue-chip ratio cutoff. 

I feel very comfortable projecting Florida State to reach a bowl in 2025. Yes, tripling its win total! As for that over/under … I think seven wins is a realistic target. 

2024 Record: 10-3
2025 FanDuel Win Total:
5.5

The Orange may have the most difficult conference schedule in the ACC. They visit Clemson, SMU, Georgia Tech and Miami. Those are arguably the four best teams in the league entering 2025, and it’s not like Syracuse gets softballs at home. Duke, Pittsburgh, North Carolina and Boston College are all on deck, four teams that enter the season with bowl expectations or better.

Then there’s the nonconference portion of the slate, which opens with Tennessee and finishes with a road trip to Notre Dame in late November.

Throw in the fact Syracuse brings back just seven starters and that the team’s potential starting quarterback, Steve Angeli, wasn’t even with the team in spring practice, and it feels like a tall ask for Syracuse to make a bowl, let alone sniff double-digit wins again this season.

2024 Record: 8-5
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 8.5

This is a bet on a talent. With the nation’s No. 2 transfer portal class, Texas Tech is the most talented on-paper team in the Big 12. Remember, the margins in the Big 12 are tighter than any other league. No team in the conference ranked better than No. 28 in the 247Sports Team Talent Composite a season ago. But 12 of them ranked between 30th and 60th. There’s no talent juggernaut, which is how you end up with Arizona State and Iowa State in the title game despite being picked 16th and sixth respectively in the preseason.

But thanks to 10-plus-million dollar transfer class, the Red Raiders stand alone atop the league from a talent and depth perspective.

It helps that Texas Tech’s nonconference schedule is friendly with a trio of home games against Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Kent State and Oregon State. The Big 12 draw is difficult with trips to against Utah, Arizona State and Kansas State. But again, this is a bet on talent above all else. Texas Tech should have the best defensive line in the league, one of the best o-lines, a ton of skill talent and one of the league’s most experienced passers in Behren Morton. It’s a formula built to win during what is an all-in season.

Anything less than a trip to Arlington and a double-digit win total would fail to meet expectations.

2024 Record: 11-2
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 6.5

It was always going to be tough for BYU to follow up its 11-win campaign. Not only did the Cougars lose 12 starters off that team — including eight from a top 21 defense — but BYU was incredibly fortunate last year in one-score games. The Cougars won four games in 2024 by one score or fewer, including a borderline miracle in their win over Oklahoma State.

Then came the sudden departure of starting quarterback Jake Retzlaff in the face of a suspension for breaking the school’s honor code. That change makes BYU’s already perilous path to nine wins more difficult.

It’s not like the schedule is easy. The Cougars travel to Colorado, Iowa State and Texas Tech in conference play in addition to home games against TCU and Utah. There’s also a tricky Week 2 visit to East Carolina

The Cougars had some encouraging transfer additions. But a transfer class ranked No. 82 nationally doesn’t seem like it’ll scale the gap between departing production and the nine-win barrier the program much reach to make this a moot exercise.

Rise: Washington Huskies

2024 Record: 6-7
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 7.5

Yes, the Huskies followed up a 14-1 season with just six wins a season ago. But context is important when considering what Jedd Fisch inherited from Kalen DeBoer. The 2024 Huskies returned just two starters. It was a total rebuild. Six wins, including over USC and Michigan, was a respectable Year 1 effort given that level of turnover. 

There’s plenty of new faces at Washington once again in 2025. Only six starters return, but those around Seattle remain bullish. Much of that hype centers around new starting QB Demond Williams, who was brilliant (944 yards, 8 TDs, 1 INT, 78.1 CMP%) in limited action last season. Williams is one of the most athletic quarterbacks in college football. He’s expected to bring a dynamic rushing element to the Huskies offense the program lacked last season with Will Rogers under center.

While the defense returns only two players who started a season ago, they are important pieces in edge Isaiah Ward and cornerback Ephesians Prysock. It also helps Fisch brought in a pair of all-conference transfers from Arizona in linebacker Jacob Manu and cornerback Tacario Davis.

The Big Ten schedule isn’t easy, but it could be worse. The Huskies draw both Ohio State and Oregon at home, and they have some reasonable road trips outside of flight to Ann Arbor.

This is among the riskier calls on this list. But I’m a believer in what the Huskies can be this season with Williams. Washington’s staff is excellent schematically and there’s plenty of talent. This team hits at least eight wins.

Tumble: Indiana Hoosiers

2024 Record: 11-2
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 8.5

Indiana is the obvious answer here, right? The Hoosiers have only won 10-plus games once in their 127-year history. And that happened last year! So don’t think of this as a bet against Curt Cignetti and the Hoosiers’ roster. I like the way they’re built, and the schedule sets up nicely (more on that in a second). But this is a bet on history. Indiana’s never won 10-plus games in back-to-back seasons. It’s only won nine-plus games three times. Another run like that would be an almost unexplainable anomaly.

It should be said, the Hoosiers have a very friendly schedule. This is their nonconference slate: Old Dominion, Kennesaw State and Indiana State. They also avoid Ohio State and Michigan. But when you dive in there are still difficult games on deck. Indiana will travel to Iowa, Oregon and Penn State. It will host Illinois, Wisconsin and UCLA.

There’s a path for Indiana to get to nine wins this year. That feels very possible given Cignetti’s history — he’s 130-37 in his career for a reason — but 10? That’d mean pulling an upset on the road and maintaining their torrid 2024 pace with only eight returning starters and a much more difficult schedule. 

2024 Record: 5-7
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 7.5

Let’s be blunt, if Auburn doesn’t hit the seven-win barrier, Hugh Freeze is likely out of a job. That’s the sort of pressure that’s on the Tigers. The good news for Freeze: His roster is more than good enough to win seven-plus games. If Jackson Arnold can live up to his recruiting billing as QB1, Auburn is talented enough to sneak into the SEC championship conversation.

There really are no obvious holes on Auburn’s roster. The Tigers return four o-line starters and added two four-star tackles in the portal. They’ll have one of the best wide receiver duos (Cam Coleman, Eric Singleton) in the country. The defense is led by All-American candidate Keldric Faulk on the d-line and returns four starting members of the secondary, which helped anchor a top-20 defense last year.

If Arnold can be an even top half SEC quarterback and avoid some of the red zone turnovers that crippled Payton Thorne a year ago, the Tigers should be an eight-plus win team.

If you’re scoffing at that idea, let’s remember how Auburn tumbled to five wins a season ago. Seven points to Cal. Ten against Arkansas. Six against Oklahoma. Four against Missouri. Fourteen against Alabama. The Tigers were in every game they lost. It was never a talent issue. Instead, it came down to execution in the red zone and some ill-timed turnovers.

The schedule could be worse for Auburn, too. The Tigers draw Georgia and Alabama at home. They avoid Texas. We’ll know whether Auburn can clear the seven-win barrier by October. Early road games against Baylor, Oklahoma and Texas A&M will tell the story of the season.

2024 Record: 9-4
2025 FanDuel Win Total: 7.5

Do I love betting against one of the best quarterbacks (LaNorris Sellers) and defensive players (Dylan Stewart) in college football? No. But there are just a lot of questions about the rest of the roster. 

Barring a huge leap from junior Nyck Harbor, the Gamecocks lack a go-to receiver. No receiver on the roster cleared the 400-yard barrier a season ago and South Carolina did not add in the portal. Running back is a huge question with Rahsul Faison‘s status hanging up in the air. The o-line, while experienced, remains a concern coming off a season in which the unit ranked 98th nationally in PFF’s pass block metric and 105th in run blocking. Sellers and Raheim Sanders covered up a lot for that unit last year on the ground. The defense — arguably the best in the SEC last year — lost seven starters. That list of departures includes two All-Americans in EDGE Kyle Kennard and safety Nick Emmanwori.

The Gamecocks have shown an ability to recruit well and strong play in less spoken about phases of the game — special teams, turnovers — keeps them in a ton of games. But there are just a lot of concerns with the roster even with two superstars who help cover up for many deficiencies.  

And the schedule isn’t easy once the Gamecocks get out of a reasonably soft early slate. LSU, Oklahoma, Alabama, Ole Miss and Texas A&M is a gauntlet that will begin Oct. 11 and not end util Nov. 15. Of course, Clemson is awaiting South Carolina at season’s end.

There are scenarios in which South Carolina sees internal development at key spots and maintains its momentum. But more likely than not this feels like a year of at least some regression. 

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

NIL

Commute: Wilson Countersues Georgia in Monumental NIL Case

Published

on


Welcome to the Morning Commute

Today we are talking about Mizzou Football!

In case you missed it, Mizzou defensive end Damon Wilson II got sued by Georgia in regards to breached agreement by transferring and owes $390,000, the unpaid portion of the deal, under a liquidated damages clause.

The Missouri defensive end challenges whether or not that agreement was ever legally binding.

Wilson is suing for defamation after spokesman Steven Drummond told ESPN that Georgia “expects student athletes to honor commitments.” The complaint alleges the comment damaged Wilson’s character by falsely implying he breached a contract.

This is definitely an ongoing subject so the best way to stay updated is the Rock M+ forums!

Yesterday at Rock M and Rock M+

Let’s shift our focus to Mizzou Football as Missouri plays in the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl vs Virginia on Saturday night. For the final time this season, it’s game week.

Hey… Missouri Football is playing! Should be an exciting matchup to wrap up Christmas festivities!

MU has seen its three-point field goal percentage drop from 45 percent to 31 percent since Stone, who shot 41.7 percent from beyond the arc in his six games this season, left the rotation. Gates used the analogy of his team as a puzzle in the postgame press conference, pointing to Pierce and Stone as key (missing) pieces.

Key players missing leads to major impact. Mizzou needs to get healthy if it wants a chance to compete in the SEC.

From Rock M Radio: Dive Cuts

In this episode, what turned into a slaughter fest of the Braggin’ Rights matchup is previewed. More to come soon on Rock M Radio!

If you like Rock M Radio drop us a Review and be sure to subscribe on your preferred podcasting platform. Follow @RockMRadio on Twitter and if you haven’t already head over to our YouTube channel and click that subscribe button!

(** RockMNation has affiliate partnerships. These do not influence editorial content, though RockMNation may earn commissions for products purchased via affiliate links.**)





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Georgia football maintains ‘relationship business’ with roster management

Published

on


ATHENS — Collectively, the Georgia football program is focused on its Sugar Bowl showdown with Ole Miss that’s rapidly approaching.

But behind the scenes next season’s roster is being determined, as Kirby Smart has met with players about their football futures.

Smart — arguably the master of modern-day roster management with the most NFL draft picks (46) and national titles (2) in college football the previous four years — has held private meetings with players about their football futures.

It’s fair to say retention, as much as recruiting, has been key to the Bulldogs’ championship runs going back to Jordan Davis and Devonte Wyatt deciding together to return for the 2021 season.

Georgia, with 54% of its roster made up of first- or second-year players, figures to have several key contributors returning to a team Smart has enjoyed coaching this season.

“A couple of them just told me they want to go back and practice tonight, they said they want to get out there tonight and get on a Bloody Tuesday when we get back home,” Smart said in his postgame on-field interview after the 28-7 SEC title game win over Alabama.

“That’s the kind of mentality this team has — they want to practice some more, they want to practice some more, they love contact, and we love them.”

Settling up

If there is a silver lining to Georgia missing out on 2026 quarterback recruit Jared Curtis — whose signing would have cost in excess of $700,000 — it’s that Smart has more funds to spread around on returning players.

The Bulldogs, like many other programs, front-loaded investing in the 2025 class with the settlement of the landmark House vs. NCAA case pending, as it brought about a $20.5 million cap that schools could directly pay student-athletes for usage of their Name, Image and Likeness.

Smart noted the challenge some of the front-loaded deals would bring when discussing last year’s signing classes.

“ … What’s going to happen when those people expect that same money the next year and it’s not there because you’re in a cap?” Smart said last April. “There’s going to be a correction eventually, and I don’t think any of us know what’s going to happen.”

What has happened is that Georgia, like other schools, is working to help secure NIL deals for student-athletes that meet the standard for approval required by the College Sports Commission’s “NIL Go” platform.

“We can now help our athletes really serve as a marketing agency to go out and source opportunities, whether it’s corporate opportunities, whether it’s local opportunities, whether it’s social media opportunities,” Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork said on Front Office Sports Today. “That’s going to be the next race.”

Per ESPN, more than 8,300 NIL deals worth approximately $80 million were approved between June 11 and Aug. 31 alone.

Keeping the culture

Name Image and Likeness deals, though not intended to be an incentive for recruiting talent or inducing transfers, certainly have had an effect.

But in a college football world dominated by high-profile transfers — including seven of the 10 Heisman Trophy finalists — Smart’s program continues to feature a culture built from within.

Indeed, the difference between Georgia and Ole Miss — its CFP Sugar Bowl quarterfinal opponent (8 p.m. Jan. 1) — is no less than stunning.

UGA recruits have made 90% of the starts for the Bulldogs this season, while nearly two-thirds (66.3%) of the starts made in the Rebels’ program have been made by transfers.

Perhaps it’s fitting that Lane Kiffin, the architect of the Ole Miss roster, has himself transferred in the sense of leaving his team for what’s perceived to be a better job as LSU’s head coach.

Building blocks

Indiana and Texas Tech — the next two most transfer-heavy teams in the 12-team College Football Playoff — took different approaches to free agency.

Hoosiers coach Curt Cignetti has brought 13 transfers with him from his previous job as James Madison head coach, effectively replanting a team culture in Bloomington, Indiana.

Cignetti, like Kiffin a former Nick Saban assistant, was not like Kiffin when it came to cashing in on his success in pursuit of a better job, even while his name was among the hottest for the most high-profile jobs.

Cignetti, whose most recent portal haul included 23 players (including Heisman Trophy-winner Fernando Mendoza and veteran Notre Dame starting center Pat Coogan), re-signed an 8-year contract with Indiana that will pay him $11.6 million annually — this, after more than doubling his salary at Indiana with an extension worth more than $8 million annually signed the year before.

Texas Tech, meanwhile, has a roster reportedly worth some $25 million reportedly funded by prominent Texas Tech booster and billionaire oilman Cody Campbell, a former Red Raiders offensive lineman (2001-04).

Campbell, who founded the Double Eagle Energy oil and gas company, leads the school’s “Matador Club” NIL collective and he is the school’s Chairman of the Board of Regents.

The Red Raiders brought in seven of the top 75 players in ESPN’s transfer rankings.

It’s worth noting five of the top 10 ESPN transfers helped lead their respective new programs into the 12-team College Football Playoff:

• John Mateer (Oklahoma, ranked No. 1)

• Carson Beck (Miami, ranked No. 2)

• Fernando Mendoza (Indiana, ranked No. 5)

• Makhi Hughes (Oregon, ranked No. 7)

• Zachariah Branch (Georgia, ranked No. 10).

The Red Raiders will next face Oregon in the CFP Orange Bowl quarterfinal at noon on Jan. 1.

The Ducks’ roster is widely believed to benefit from the school’s well-known association with Nike co-founder and billionaire booster Phil Knight.

Smart said at the 2024 SEC Media Days: “(I) wish I could get some of that NIL money (Knight is) sharing with Dan Lanning.”

Campaigning for dollars

Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham openly campaigned on Saturday for $20 million in NIL money from someone — anyone — in the Phoenix community.

“We need to find one of these really rich people in this city to step up and stroke a check,” said Dillingham, whose Sun Devils missed making this year’s CFP field after winning the Big 12 last season.

“We live in Phoenix, Arizona. You’re telling me there’s not one person who could stroke a $20 million check right now? There is somebody out there who can.”

The funding required to compete for championships doesn’t stop with NIL dollars.

Per a recent story in “The Athletic,” this year’s College Football Playoff field reflected the four schools with the highest football budgets — not all calculated the same, the story notes — each made the field.

Total expenses submitted by the schools for 2023-24:

• Alabama: $112.2 million

• Texas A&M: $82.2 million

• Ohio State: $78.6 million

• Miami: $78.1 million

• Georgia: $68.9 million

• Oklahoma: $65.8 million

• Indiana: $61.3 million

• Ole Miss: $57.1 million

• Oregon: $53.9 million

• Texas Tech: $34.3 million

• James Madison: $15.9 million

• Tulane: $13 million

At Georgia, Smart works closely with athletics director Josh Brooks to stay within the proposed budget, while maintaining the necessary relationships with players, eschewing the trend of hiring a general manager.

“It’s still a relationship business for us,” Smart said last spring. “We find our niche in our culture, which is relational, and trying to have a relationship with somebody.”



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

The NCAA has made a mess of college football. Here’s a remedy.

Published

on


(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Utes quarterback Byrd Ficklin (15) warms up on the field before Big-12 Football action between the Utah Utes and the Kansas State Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium, on Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025.

I enjoy college football, but the College Football Playoff Selection Committee just killed my postseason viewing. I’ll only watch the Utah Utes in the Las Vegas Bowl, but I’m supporting Notre Dame’s bowl boycott after it was cheated out of a spot in the College Football Playoff. The University of Alabama was chosen instead, despite having poorer performance stats and losing big in its conference championship game. The University of Miami was also elevated above Notre Dame despite its less impressive stats — with the exception of having narrowly beaten The Fighting Irish in the season opener.

In recent years, the National Collegiate Athletics Association has made a mess of college football, but if the NCAA wants to redeem itself, it could:

1. Expand the playoff to 16 teams with no byes which would have eliminated this year’s fiasco.

2. Realign conferences to have no more than ten teams. The conference champion would be the team with the best record in nine conference games. No conference championship game needed.

3. Eliminate publishing CFP rankings before the end of the season. The committee embarrasses itself when it reorders those without cause.

4. Put income limits on Name Image Likeness as it grossly enriches some players. NIL has turned college football into the NFL Lite.

5. Fix the transfer portal. Allow players only one transfer and perhaps a second if a coach moves on.

6. Convince the Heisman Trophy Trust to award its statue at the end of the playoffs eliminating the embarrassment when an awardee fizzles in postseason play.

7. Consider eliminating conferences altogether. Create leagues of 60 or so teams in upper and lower divisions like European sports are structured with fluidity between the divisions based on teams’ previous year’s performance.

To do all this would just require some good will.

Jim Catano, Salt Lake City

Submit a letter to the editor



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Nick Saban’s new role with the Nashville Predators

Published

on


NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Nick Saban knows his strengths with seven national championships as a college football coach. He also understands how to put coaches and athletes in the best position to succeed.

That’s what he hopes to bring to the NHL’s Nashville Predators after joining the franchise as a minority owner.

“I’m no expert in hockey, so don’t look at me like I’m going to make some huge impact coaching around here because that’s not going to happen,” Saban said Monday. “But I do have a pretty good idea of what it takes to have successful organizations.”

Saban made his first appearance Monday in his new role as a minority owner alongside Predators chairman Bill Haslam.

The Predators announced Saban’s purchase Dec. 16 through Dream Sports Ventures LLC, an entity controlled by Saban and business partner Joe Agresti. That business group features 10 car dealerships, including two in Nashville.

Haslam, a former Tennessee governor, was working on a possible WNBA expansion franchise when Saban told the Predators controlling owner that he also might be interested in hockey.

“I thought, ‘Well, that’s the greatest no brainer of all time,’” Haslam said. “You have somebody who understands building a championship culture, who understands, I think, better than almost anybody in sports the process that’s needed to get to where you can compete as a champion.”

Saban grew up in West Virginia with no hockey around. He became interested in hockey when coaching at Michigan State and became friends and shared ideas with that team’s coach. Saban called this an opportunity to be involved with a team for the first time since he announced his retirement Jan. 10, 2024.

So what will Saban bring to the NHL and the Predators in his newest role?

His experience building programs both in college football and six seasons in the NFL working for Bill Belichick in Cleveland and as head coach of Miami. A “transformational leader” as Saban put it. Once college football season ends, Saban said he will be involved as much as Haslam wants.

Saban already has spoken to coaches and some players during what he called a minicamp. Saban also has met a couple times with general manager Barry Trotz, saying his goal is to support Trotz and everyone else with the Predators.

Nashville won the Western Conference before losing the Stanley Cup Final in 2017 to Pittsburgh in six games. The Predators won the Presidents’ Trophy for the 2017-18 season but ranked 26th out of 32 NHL teams Monday five points back of the second wild-card spot in the West.

“To be a part of the hockey team here is something special, and we’d love to build it into a championship,” Saban said. “We’d love to partner with Mr. Haslam to do anything that we can do to help this organization be successful.”

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Missouri linebacker Damon Wilson II accuses Georgia of illegal punishment in transfer portal lawsuit

Published

on


COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri pass rusher Damon Wilson II claims that the athletic department at Georgia is trying to illegally punish him for entering the transfer portal in a lawsuit filed by the linebacker in state court Tuesday in Boone County, Missouri.

Wilson transferred to the Tigers last January after signing a 14-month deal with Georgia’s booster collective to capitalize on his name, image and likeness. He received $30,000 in an initial payment on a $500,000 deal before entering the transfer portal.

Georgia filed a lawsuit last month claiming that Wilson owed its athletic department $390,000 in liquidated damages for leaving the team. Wilson’s countersuit claims that his former school is using such damages to “punish” him for his decision to leave.

Georgia spokesman Steve Drummond said the school had no comment because it involves pending litigation.

“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,” Drummond said upon the school’s initial lawsuit in early December.

Wilson had nine sacks and an interception this season for the Tigers. They will play Virginia in the Gator Bowl on Saturday.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Dylan Stewart, top 2027 NFL prospect, stays with Gamecocks, lands major NIL deal

Published

on


One day after South Carolina received word that star quarterback LaNorris Sellers was staying in town, another star said he plans to return to the fold.

Dylan Stewart, the Gamecocks’ star edge rusher, announced he is returning for his true junior season in 2026, according to Pete Thamel, ESPN’s college football insider.

Stewart has 11 sacks in his two seasons at South Carolina and has forced 6 fumbles. Among ESPN’s draft projections, he appears to be a top prospect for the 2027 NFL Draft.

READ MORE | “South Carolina QB LaNorris Sellers stays put, vows stronger return for 2026 season.”

The former five-star recruit and rising SEC pass rusher chose continuity over the transfer portal, agreeing to an NIL deal that places him among the highest compensated non-quarterbacks in college football, according to ESPN’s reporting.

South Carolina’s defense is back in reliable hands, as the Gamecocks ready themselves to bounceback from a 4-8 season.

After the pitiful finish, South Carolina head coach Shane Beamer shook up his coaching staff.

South Carolina is also expected to hire Penn State defensive line coach Deion Barnes as the defensive end and outside linebacker coach.

He’s been Penn State’s defensive line coach the past three years and worked with the line there since 2020. He coached Abdul Carter, Chop Robinson and Adisa Isaac.

Comment with Bubbles

BE THE FIRST TO COMMENT

READ MORE | “South Carolina to kick off 2026 football season at home against Kent State.”



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending