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College football transfer portal winners, losers

Imagn Images The action during the college football spring transfer portal window isn’t the same quantity play as the winter window, but there are still good players to be had if you know where to look, and the whims of the sport created some of the weirdest portal situations we’ve ever seen in this year’s […]

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College football transfer portal winners, losers

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The action during the college football spring transfer portal window isn’t the same quantity play as the winter window, but there are still good players to be had if you know where to look, and the whims of the sport created some of the weirdest portal situations we’ve ever seen in this year’s spring. 

Take, for instance, Tennessee and UCLA, which effectively traded quarterbacks in a first-of-its-kind situation. Then there’s Cal, which battled both a donor revolt and an unclear leadership situation while virtually an entire position group left. All of this happened in what will probably be the last-of-its kind portal with the House v. NCAA settlement most likely scheduled for final approval within the next few weeks. It only adds to college football’s uncertainty. 

Nico Iamaleava’s Tennessee saga wasn’t the professionalization of college sports—it was a train wreck

Richard Johnson

Nico Iamaleava's Tennessee saga wasn't the professionalization of college sports—it was a train wreck

As always, there are some Immediate winners and losers from the cycle, so let’s dive in.

Winners 

Oklahoma 

Brent Venables is pulling out all the stops to right the ship of his disappointing early tenure as OU head man. He imported the Washington State offensive brain trust with QB John Mateer and offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle. He retooled his personnel staff with the addition of former Senior Bowl executive director Jim Nagy, and this spring he added running back Jadyn Ott from Cal. If the Sooners go down this season, they’ll go down swinging. 

Penn State

On the last day the portal was formally open, the Nittany Lions added standout Syracuse wide receiver Trebor Pena. In addition to Devonte Ross and Kyren Hudson, Pena gives a massive boost to a key position of need for Penn State as they head into a crucial season chasing an elusive national title. 

Colorado 

It wasn’t just Travis Hunter who left the CU receiving corps. Will Shephard, LaJohntay Wester and Jimmy Horn are also gone. In the spring portal, the Buffs added Campbell’s Sincere Brown to contribute to whomever wins the quarterback competition this fall between Liberty transfer Kaidon Salter and five-star freshman Julian Lewis. To protect, they added Memphis offensive lineman Xavier Hill, who’s been a full-time starter for two seasons. 

Texas Tech 

Few teams, if any, have had a better portal haul across winter and spring than the Red Raiders, who added perhaps the best player in the spring portal in EDGE David Bailey

UCLA 

It was a rocky road to get here, but adding Nico Iamaleava is a position upgrade for the Bruins at quarterback. Pair him with Cal’s leading rusher last season, Jaivian Thomas, and the Bruins did get better on the field by taking proper advantage of two of the higher-profile transfer sagas in the sport at both Tennessee and Cal. 

Losers 

Cal 

Losing Jadyn Ott out of their running back room is one thing, but Cal lost five running backs off of last year’s team in one of the largest portal exoduses at one positions you’ll ever see. It’s part of a broader picture of 18 offensive players heading in the portal between winter and spring windows. The spring window also saw another crucial loss from Cal in tight end Jack Endries

Syracuse 

Besides Pena, standout defensive tackle Maraad Watson also hopped into the portal this spring. It’s a tough one-two punch of losses, although Fran Brown is confident in his next-man-up mentality. 

Stanford 

It was technically before the portal opened, but Stanford lost a bevy of players this spring after Troy Taylor was fired by the school. The list includes: offensive lineman Jake Maikkula, wideout Emmett Mosley V, EDGE David Bailey and transfer Julian Neal, who signed with the team in December from Fresno State then reentered the portal after Taylor left. Interim coach Frank Reich will have to plug multiple roster holes in his season as caretaker. 

Potentially those who left Arkansas without paying their buyouts 

It sure seems like the Razorbacks are going to do what they can to recoup lost money from players who left this spring, and not just Madden Iamaleava, who left to join his brother at UCLA. There are multiple other players who left Fayetteville that the school will try to enforce the clause in the contract regarding liquidated damages, according to a tweet sent out by athletic director Hunter Yurachek. 

Arkansas NIL collective calls on prominent lawyer to enforce Madden Iamaleava buyout clause amid transfer

Brandon Marcello

Arkansas NIL collective calls on prominent lawyer to enforce Madden Iamaleava buyout clause amid transfer

The system in general 

The Nico Iamaleava saga between Tennessee and the family was a fiasco. It was an indictment on a system that simply must be reformed, but the process of reform is rocky at best in part because schools including Tennessee sued the NCAA in order to prevent the organization from enforcing NIL rules a couple years ago. Now we sit on the eve of the House settlement hopefully injecting some sanity into the process, but until the reforms are felt in the system, there is a high chance another situation like Iamaleava versus Tennessee happens again in college sports. 

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Chris Kent – Assistant Coach/Director of Player Development – Men’s Basketball Coaches

Florida State head men’s basketball coach Luke Loucks has named Chris Kent as the Director of Player Development on his first Seminole staff. Kent began his coaching career as an assistant coach for the Fort Wayne Mad Ants in the NBA D-League from 2013 to 2015. He then served as a graduate assistant for the […]

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Florida State head men’s basketball coach Luke Loucks has named Chris Kent as the Director of Player Development on his first Seminole staff.

Kent began his coaching career as an assistant coach for the Fort Wayne Mad Ants in the NBA D-League from 2013 to 2015. He then served as a graduate assistant for the Florida State University men’s basketball program from August 2015 to May 2017 before joining the University of South Florida (USF) men’s basketball program in June 2017 as the team’s Director of Player Development.

In 2018, Kent joined the Chicago Bulls as a coaching intern for the 2018-19 season. Following his internship, he was hired as the team’s video coordinator. He later transitioned to the Windy City Bulls, the Chicago Bulls’ G League affiliate, serving as an assistant coach during the 2022-23 season.

Kent played college basketball for two seasons at both Huntington University (Ind.) and Trine University (Ind.), bringing firsthand playing experience to his coaching career.

 



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Report: Texas A&M to part ways with assistant coach Will Fox after retaining Michael Earley

After announcing plans to retain Michael Earley as head baseball coach, Texas A&M is planning to make changes to the staff. The program is set to part ways with assistant coach Will Fox, D1Baseball’s Kendall Rogers reported. Fox spent the last six seasons at Texas A&M after previously serving on the staff at his alma […]

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After announcing plans to retain Michael Earley as head baseball coach, Texas A&M is planning to make changes to the staff. The program is set to part ways with assistant coach Will Fox, D1Baseball’s Kendall Rogers reported.

Fox spent the last six seasons at Texas A&M after previously serving on the staff at his alma mater, McNeese State. Rogers said he “would not be surprised” if he’s involved with an assistant vacancy at McNeese following his departure.

News of Texas A&M’s plans to part ways with Fox comes after Earley’s first season as head coach. The Aggies entered the year as the preseason No. 1 team, but wound up missing the NCAA Tournament one year after making it to the College World Series finals.

Following the 30-26 record, questions swirled about Earley’s future. However, Texas A&M athletics director Trev Alberts announced the program is set to bring him back for Year 2 in 2026.

“Earlier today I met with Coach Earley to discuss the state of our baseball program,” Alberts said in a statement. “I appreciate Mike’s work in taking a holistic view of what changes need to be made so that we have a baseball program that meets our high standards. Baseball success is critically important to Texas A&M. I am confident in Mike’s ability to execute the needed change and fully support his vision going forward.”

Earley served as the hitting coach on last year’s Texas A&M staff, which rattled off a run to Omaha. He appeared set to leave and follow Schlossnagle to Texas, but ultimately chose to stay put in College Station and take over at Texas A&M.

After the news came down, the Aggies got another big boost when Gavin Grahovac announced his plans to return next year, as well. He told TexAgs’ Ryan Brauninger he wants to be part of turning things around after the up-and-down season.

“There was never a decision to be made for me. I’m looking forward to being a leader for Coach Earley,” Grahovac said. “This year wasn’t the standard. There’s a chip on our shoulder to fix it and get it right.”

Grahovac was among the names to return to College Station following last year’s coaching change. He was a key part of Texas A&M’s run to the College World Series finals, hitting .298 with 23 home runs and 66 RBI. However, he suffered a shoulder injury and underwent season-ending surgery after just six games this year.



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Report: SEC indicates it is not supporting multiple CFP automatic bids after ‘pushback’

Following this week’s spring meetings, the SEC indicates it is not supporting multiple automatic bids to the College Football Playoff, Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger reported. The league received “pushback” from coaches and data, which led to the change in support for the proposed 4-4-2-2-1 format. Top officials at Georgia and Alabama played key roles in […]

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Following this week’s spring meetings, the SEC indicates it is not supporting multiple automatic bids to the College Football Playoff, Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger reported. The league received “pushback” from coaches and data, which led to the change in support for the proposed 4-4-2-2-1 format.

Top officials at Georgia and Alabama played key roles in the conversations this past week, Dellenger added, considering the model could have limited the SEC to four spots in the CFP. They also pushed back on the idea of “play-in games.”

Throughout the week in Destin, the sense was SEC coaches had more support for a 5-plus-11 model than the 4-4-2-2-1. Under the latter, the SEC and Big Ten would each receive four bids to the CFP, while the Big 12 and ACC would get two bids apiece, and one spot would be for the Group of 6. There would also be three at-large spots.

Under the 5-plus-11, the five highest-ranked conference champions would make the field, along with 11 at-large teams. However, Dellenger noted, it “is in no way a guarantee for approval.”

On3’s Pete Nakos confirmed Big Ten athletics directors discussed the 5-plus-11 format on their weekly call this week. Dellenger also added the sense is most would not support the model if the SEC stays at eight league games.

The SEC’s conference schedule could be a reason for the coaches’ hesitancy about the 4-4-2-2-1 model, Dellenger said. That could lead the league to add a ninth game, one of the central points of discussion during this week’s meetings. Dellenger wondered how many coaches want the additional league game, and he heard frustration was building around the 4-4-2-2-1 format.

“I think they’re not in favor of that for a few reasons,” Dellenger said. “One, I think most of the coaches in the SEC don’t want to play a ninth conference game. I think when you have a 4-4-2-2-1 format, that would lead itself to playing a ninth conference game. I don’t know how many coaches want to play these play-in games that they talked about doing, along with the 4-4-2-2-1.

“So the ADs heard today from some somewhat, I heard, frustrated coaches at this model. We have a real serious consideration here from the SEC ADs and presidents today, and then tomorrow, for this 5-11 that has more at-larges than the automatic qualifiers.”

During its spring meetings, the SEC presented documents and graphics illustrating the “gauntlet” of the regular season. It showed the strength of the conference through multiple metrics such as Massey Ratings, SP+ and strength of record.

The documents illustrated the rigor of the conference schedule. In the last 10 years, the SEC showed it only has two teams outside the Top 50 in both average strength of record and average Massey Rating. That, the league said, showed “clear evidence of the rigor of its regular season compared to other schools.”





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Cooper Flagg’s NIL earnings at Duke reached staggering amount, per report

In just a few short weeks, the 2025 NBA Draft will take place, and the winner of the draft lottery, the Dallas Mavericks, already knows who they will be selecting. Unless you have been living under a rock, former Duke Blue Devils superstar and projected No. 1 pick Cooper Flagg has been the unanimous choice […]

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In just a few short weeks, the 2025 NBA Draft will take place, and the winner of the draft lottery, the Dallas Mavericks, already knows who they will be selecting.

Unless you have been living under a rock, former Duke Blue Devils superstar and projected No. 1 pick Cooper Flagg has been the unanimous choice to be selected first overall since entering college.

RELATED: Major Celebrities at Madison Square Garden For New York’s Huge Game 5 Win Over Indiana

Flagg had a dominant freshman season with the Blue Devils, and according to recent reports, may have had a hard time turning down a second year in Durham due to the NIL he was raking in.

During a recent conversation between Howard Bryant and Bob Costas, Bryant revealed that by his estimations, Flagg made somewhere near $28 million due to NIL deals the future number one pick made during his collegiate career.

NIL has forever changed the landscape for college athletes. In some cases, it could even persuade a player to return to school for another year, knowing they will have financial success.

Cooper Flag

Duke Blue Devils forward Cooper Flagg shoots the ball against Houston Cougars forward J’Wan Roberts during the second half in the semifinals of the men’s Final Four of the 2025 NCAA Tournament at Alamodome. / Scott Wachter-Imagn Images

However, Flagg’s estimated $28 million might be the most any college athlete has ever made in this new era.

Of course, an NBA rookie contract will bring a lot more than $28 million. However, if the number is true, then it wouldn’t have been that big of a surprise to see Flagg return for another season of college basketball.

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College Baseball Regional 2025 Results, Highlights and Bracket from Saturday

The NCAA Division I baseball tournament continued on Saturday with elimination games in the regional rounds, followed by contests between the winners of the matchups from Friday, when the 64-team competition began. Here’s a look at the results, highlights and bracket thus far, with updates throughout Saturday on the double-elimination regionals. Most updated bracket can […]

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The NCAA Division I baseball tournament continued on Saturday with elimination games in the regional rounds, followed by contests between the winners of the matchups from Friday, when the 64-team competition began.

Here’s a look at the results, highlights and bracket thus far, with updates throughout Saturday on the double-elimination regionals.

Most updated bracket can be found via this link from NCAA.com.

Wright State 7, ETSU 5 (ETSU eliminated)

Vanderbilt vs. Louisville: 9 p.m.

Southern Miss 6, Alabama 5 (Alabama eliminated)

University of Miami vs. Columbia: 9 p.m.

Northeastern 4, Bethune-Cookman 3 (Bethune-Cookman eliminated)

Florida State def. Mississippi State, 10-3

Oregon State 7, TCU 2 (TCU eliminated)

Saint Mary’s vs. USC: 9 p.m.

Nebraska 4, Holy Cross 1 (Holy Cross eliminated)

North Carolina vs. Oklahoma: 6 p.m.

Cal Poly 10, Oregon 8 (Oregon eliminated)

Arizona vs. Utah Valley: 9 p.m.

Florida 17, Fairfield 2 (Fairfield eliminated)

Coastal Carolina vs. East Carolina: 7 p.m.

North Carolina State 12, Central Connecticut State 0 (Central Connecticut State eliminated)

Auburn vs. Stetson: 9 p.m.

Kansas State 7, Houston Christian 4 (Houston Christian eliminated)

UC Irvine 8, Fresno State 3 (Fresno State eliminated)

UCLA vs. Arizona State: 9 p.m.

Ole Miss 8, Western Kentucky 6 (Western Kentucky eliminated)

Murray State vs. Georgia Tech: 6 p.m.

Oklahoma State 13, Binghamton 5 (Binghamton eliminated)

Little Rock 22, Rhode Island 10 (Rhode Island eliminated)

Kentucky 7, USC Upstate 3 (USC Upstate eliminated)

Clemson vs. West Virginia: 6 p.m.

Wake Forest 14, Miami University 13 (Miami University eliminated)

Tennessee vs. Cincinnati: 6 p.m.

North Dakota State 4, Kansas 3 (Kansas eliminated)

Arkansas vs. Creighton: 8 p.m.

Highlights and Notable Results

Nebraska recorded the day’s first win after beating Holy Cross, 4-1. Cayden Brumbaugh and Hogan Helligso each hit home runs, while Devin Nunez added four hits.

Ty Horn got the win on the mound, throwing 7.1 innings of one-run ball while striking out six.

Oklahoma State 13, Binghamton 5

Oklahoma State hit seven home runs in a 13-5 win over Binghamton to knock its foe out of the tournament. Kollin Ritchie hit two of the seven, and he now has three for the tournament. Ritchie led a back-to-back-to-back homer spurt in the bottom of the third.

Wake Forest 14, Miami University 13

Wake Forest held off a tough challenge from Miami University in a high-scoring, 14-13 affair that featured 31 hits. Luke Costello hit two home runs to produce five runs batted in to lead the Demon Deacons’ offense. His second one was a towering blast to left.

Wake Forest led 14-9 in the bottom of the ninth, but Miami fought back with four runs. The first five batters got on base. First, an Anthony Zarlingo single led to an Evan Appelwick two-run homer. Three more batters got on via a walk, hit-by-pitch and single to load the bases before a strikeout put one out on the board.

However, a Blake Buzzeo single coupled with an error brought in two more runs and put runners on the corners with one out and Miami down 14-13. After a foulout, Buzzeo stole second to get the winning run into scoring position, but another strikeout ended the game.

North Dakota State 4, Kansas 3

North Dakota State continued its Cinderella run, defeating a 43-win Kansas to remain alive in the NCAA tournament, 4-3.

Evan Gustafson’s RBI double in the fifth inning proved to be the game-winning hit.

North Dakota State is 21-33 overall, having earned an NCAA tournament berth by virtue of winning the Summit League tournament.

North Dakota State finished third in a six-team league with a 13-15 conference record but actually earned a No. 2 seed with St. Thomas ineligible due to its transition from Division III to Division I.

The Bison made the most of it, beating No. 3 seed Omaha before taking down No. 1 seed Oral Roberts (two games to none). North Dakota State lost the NCAA tournament opener 6-2 to Arkansas, but hope remains after the big win over Kansas.

Oregon, the No. 12 national seed and No. 1 in the Eugene regional, is out after a 6-5 loss to Utah Valley Friday and a 10-8 loss to Cal Poly Saturday.

The Ducks were up 8-5 in the seventh, but Cal Poly scored four in the seventh and one in the eighth for the win. Casey Murray Jr.’s two-RBI single tied the game at eight before Cam Hoiland’s RBI single gave Cal Poly a 9-8 edge. Zach Daudet added an insurance run with a solo homer in the eighth.

Murray went 4-for-4 with two runs and three RBI. He also had a solo homer in the sixth.

Little Rock 22, Rhode Island 10

Little Rock exploded for 22 runs on 20 hits, with Angel Cano doing the most damage with four hits, four runs and seven RBI.

Cano’s hits included a seventh-inning homer and a pair of doubles. The homer gave Little Rock a 15-8 lead.

Four other Little Rock players smacked three hits: Alex Seguine, Zach Henry, Ty Rhoades and Sammy Harris.



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Anthony Davis slams current state of college basketball

Dallas Mavericks star Anthony Davis is one of the greatest college basketball players in recent memory, being one of just four freshmen to ever win the Wooden National Player of the Year Award (Cooper Flagg, a likely soon-to-be Maverick, is also on that list). He led Kentucky to its most recent national championship in 2012, […]

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Dallas Mavericks star Anthony Davis is one of the greatest college basketball players in recent memory, being one of just four freshmen to ever win the Wooden National Player of the Year Award (Cooper Flagg, a likely soon-to-be Maverick, is also on that list). He led Kentucky to its most recent national championship in 2012, averaging 14.2 PPG, 10.4 RPG, and a ridiculous 4.7 BPG.

Had Davis played in today’s era, he would’ve made a killing off of the new Name, Image, and Likeness that is flooding college athletics. Instead, he used that elite freshman season to go first overall in the 2012 NBA Draft, going to the New Orleans Hornets.

READ MORE: Mavericks free agent predicted to land in unexpected destination

Dallas Mavericks forward Anthony Davis

Apr 18, 2025; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Dallas Mavericks forward Anthony Davis (3) dribbles during the second quarter against the Memphis Grizzlies at FedExForum. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images / Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

Davis recently sat down with Sports Illustrated’s Patrick Andres to discuss NIL and its impact on college basketball.

“It’s tough, because obviously they didn’t have that when I was in college,” Davis said. “It kinda takes away from the game a little bit because of—and I’m not hating—it takes away from the integrity in the sense of players are only going to certain schools because of the money.

“College basketball is still competitive, but the recruitment of it has kinda gotten a little wacky, especially when player can leave and enter the (transfer) portal and go anywhere. It just gets a little tricky,” Davis continued. “The coaches either a) have to be more strategic with their recruiting, or b) if you don’t have a lot of money for NIL, that kind of takes away your school, your program, as far as being a top recruiter for some of these players.

“Because one guy can leave the next year, transfer—it gets tough, when you start talking about culture. That kind of goes out the window, in my opinion.”

His concerns echo those of a lot of people around college basketball. It’s hard for coaches to maintain a culture and for fans to become attached to players. NIL in a vacuum is a good thing, as players deserve to be paid for the contributions they bring to a school; however, it’s the Wild West since there are no regulations governing it.

READ MORE: Scottie Scheffler proves loyalty to hometown Mavericks in viral video

Stick with MavericksGameday for more FREE coverage of the Dallas Mavericks throughout the offseason

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