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Darien Harris, MSU's NIL director, takes front office job with NFL's Giants

Michigan State’s athletic department is making a major change at the top in searching for its next athletic director. It’s also going to have to replace another important figure in its front office. Darien Harris, a former Michigan State linebacker who played a key role in the development and evolution of the athletic department’s NIL […]

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Darien Harris, MSU's NIL director, takes front office job with NFL's Giants

Michigan State’s athletic department is making a major change at the top in searching for its next athletic director. It’s also going to have to replace another important figure in its front office.

Darien Harris, a former Michigan State linebacker who played a key role in the development and evolution of the athletic department’s NIL strategy, has left for a job with the NFL’s New York Giants.

Darien Harris, former MSU linebacker and current assistant athletic director, has been hired for a front office role with the New York Giants.

Harris will become the Giants’ director of player engagement. He leaves East Lansing having served in a number of roles in the Spartans’ athletic department, including as the football team’s director of player relations and program advancement. He stepped into a role with the wider athletic department in July 2023 as an assistant athletic director and special adviser to former athletic director Alan Haller. In May 2024, Harris’ title changed to assistant AD/business development and NIL strategy.

In the NIL sphere, Harris developed Michigan State’s EverGreen NIL program. His biography on Michigan State’s athletics staff directory describes him as the “primary contact” between programs, athletes, coaches and NIL partners wishing to partner with them. He was a staunch defender of Michigan State’s NIL efforts on social media, a rare vocal presence in an era when many officials in athletic departments work behind closed doors.

These are opportunities that weren’t available to him as a player, when he was a four-year letterwinner with the Michigan State football team, captaining the 2015 team to a Big Ten title and College Football Playoff appearance. In 54 career games, 25 of them starts, Harris recorded 154 tackles and was part of Michigan State’s winningest senior class in program history.

Michigan State’s front office has undergone substantial change this year. A little over a year after becoming president of the university, Kevin Guskiewicz fired Haller on May 1, embarking on a wide-ranging hiring search the past month. Guskiewicz told The Detroit News earlier this week that he is “close” to a hire. In the NIL era, Guskiewicz said the next athletic director will be one who can raise money to compete with other Big Ten programs, an issue that may only become more prominent as the NCAA prepares for revenue sharing to go into effect as early as July 1 with the ongoing House v. NCAA settlement.

“It’s a much more externally facing job today than it’s ever been,” Guskiewicz said, “and it’s about the connectedness to the donor base, the alums, the folks who can help us with sponsorships and to generate revenue.”

In February, Michigan State hired executive Jon Dykema from the Detroit Lions to oversee its NIL contracts and other deals, bringing more than 15 years of experience in compliance and roster management.

cearegood@detroitnews.com

@ConnorEaregood

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A deep dive into the futures of Alabama Football, SEC teams and top Power Four teams

In the current era of one-season massive roster rebuilds, the duration of two seasons of college football is tantamount to forever. At the end of the 2026 season, Alabama Football will be three seasons into its post-Nick Saban era. What can Crimson Tide fans expect? ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg thinks he knows. Previously, ESPN has provided […]

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In the current era of one-season massive roster rebuilds, the duration of two seasons of college football is tantamount to forever. At the end of the 2026 season, Alabama Football will be three seasons into its post-Nick Saban era. What can Crimson Tide fans expect? ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg thinks he knows.

Previously, ESPN has provided three-season Power Four Power Rankings projections. Rittenberg’s latest projection covers only the 2025 and 2026 seasons. His conclusions are subjective, using the criteria: returning quarterback, likelihood of a multi-year quarterback on the roster, offensive line and defensive line outlook, roster management, star power, and coaching staff.

Alabama football fans will not love Rittenberg’s ranking of the Crimson Tide program. Alabama is the fifth-highest ranked SEC football program at No. 10 overall. Nine SEC football teams are in the top 22 of the rankings, led by Texas at No. 1 and Georgia at No. 3. Also ranked in the top 22 are No. 8 LSU, No. 9 Tennessee, No. 15 Florida, No. 16 Ole Miss, No. 18 South Carolina, and No. 22 Missouri. The rest of the SEC is No. 27 Oklahoma, No. 28 Texas A&M, No. 37 Auburn, No. 47 Vanderbilt, No. 52 Kentucky, No. 55 Arkansas, and No. 59 Mississippi State.

Among the other three Power Four conferences, the Big Ten has seven programs in the top 25; the Big 12 and the ACC have four each. Five Big 12 programs are ranked below Mississippi State, as are three Big Ten programs.

Alabama Football Program Ranking

Two main factors reduced the Alabama Crimson Tide’s program ranking. One is not having a returning starting quarterback. The other is that Kalen DeBoer must prove themselves by making a College Football Playoff field. Given those criteria, Rittenberg’s No. 10 ranking for the Alabama Crimson Tide is more plausible.

Rittenberg did not factor 2025 Strength of Schedules into his projections. However, using his program rankings, the Alabama Crimson Tide will play at least six 2025 teams ranked in the top 27 programs for the next two seasons. Getting through that gauntlet with only a loss or two would indicate that Rittenberg’s No. 10 program ranking for the Crimson Tide is too low.



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Standout baseball transfer commits to Florida Gators

The Florida Gators have landed a talented baseball transfer who had a strong 2025 season for another program in the Sunshine State. That player is Jaden Bastian, according to Jacob Rudner of Baseball America. Bastian, who plays center field, is transferring to UF from Jacksonville. He is considered one of the top college baseball players […]

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The Florida Gators have landed a talented baseball transfer who had a strong 2025 season for another program in the Sunshine State. That player is Jaden Bastian, according to Jacob Rudner of Baseball America.

Bastian, who plays center field, is transferring to UF from Jacksonville. He is considered one of the top college baseball players in the transfer portal. Last season, Bastian hit .302/.433/.552 with 11 homers, 10 doubles, 5 triples and 33 RBI. Additionally, he recorded 36 stolen bases in 2025.

Bastian, a native of Winter Garden, Fla., just completed his sophomore season with the Dolphins. He also had a productive freshman season, when he posted a slash line of .263/.421/.465 with 6 home runs, 2 doubles, 25 RBI and 11 stolen bases.

Here are Florida’s other baseball pickups thus far since the season ended:

RHP Russell Sandefer commits

Florida landed UCF right-handed pitcher Russell Sandefer on June 6. Sandefer went 2-3 this season and recorded a 3.38 ERA with 49 strikeouts in 50.2 innings as a sophomore for the Knights. He had the third lowest ERA on the team.

C/DH AJ Malzone commits

The Gators landed their second commitment on June 5 from junior college catcher/DH AJ Malzone of Wabash Valley College in Illinois. In 2025, he batted .347 and had 10 homers, 58 RBI and a .602 slugging percentage over 58 games.

RHP Ricky Reeth commits

Notre Dame pitcher Ricky Reeth committed to Florida on June 5 for his final year of eligibility. This season Reeth posted a 4-2 record, 4.31 ERA and 43 strikeouts against 12 walks in 22 appearances. He allowed 23 earned runs and 44 hits in 48 innings.

Not a member of Gators Online?

CLICK HERE to join the Gators Online community! It’s the top place for passionate Florida fans to find the best insight and news in the market. 

Boasting a talented collection of experienced journalists, we dig deep into recruiting and provide breaking news and analysis on UF sports.

We have exciting news to announce from our good friend Andy Luedecke from MyPerfectFranchise.net. He is a big baseball fan and from his line of work he has seen first hand the fantastic traits that baseball players bring to the franchise world. Andy is offering up a donation of $500 – $1000 to Florida’s Baseball NIL collective if any member of GatorsOnline.com purchases a franchise. We think this is a cool opportunity to help the UF baseball program!

Now is the perfect time to contact Andy to learn more. Remember his services are 100% free and he’s here to help if you have any questions about business ownership! Go to MyPerfectFranchise.net to learn more or you can text or call Andy at 404.973.9901.



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Bruce Pearl claims ‘nobody had a better year in college basketball than Johni Broome’

Auburn forward Johni Broome emerged as one of the top players in college basketball last season, earning All-American and SEC Player of the Year honors starring for a Bruce Pearl-led Tigers team that made just its second Final Four in program history. In his fifth and final season of college basketball, Broome averaged 18.6 points, […]

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Auburn forward Johni Broome emerged as one of the top players in college basketball last season, earning All-American and SEC Player of the Year honors starring for a Bruce Pearl-led Tigers team that made just its second Final Four in program history.

In his fifth and final season of college basketball, Broome averaged 18.6 points, 10.8 rebounds and 2.1 blocks per game. He finished as runner-up in National Player of the Year honors behind Duke‘s Cooper Flagg, who will be the No. 1 overall pick in the upcoming NBA Draft.

Pearl however believes that nobody had a better year in college basketball last season than Broome, he revealed on Andy Katz’s “The Sidelines with Andy Katz” podcast.

Johni Broome wasn’t the best player in college basketball last year and the [NBA] Draft will probably point that out in terms of being a pro prospect, but nobody had a year in college basketball like Johni Broome,” Pearl said. “Nobody affected winning more than Johni Broome. Every level, whether it be high school coming out of Tampa Catholic or being overlooked in AAU basketball or having to go to Morehead State first instead of the SEC or ACC first coming out of Florida. “

Pearl says Broome’s NBA future depends on team

“And he was too slow at Auburn and he wasn’t gonna be able to move his feet quicker or be a good athlete [Pearl said while mocking his doubters], and all he did was become All-League his first year, All-American his second year and National Player of the Year in his third year.”

Broome, who turns 23 in July, is currently projected to be drafted by the New York Knicks with the No. 50 overall pick in On3’s latest NBA Mock Draft.

“He’s not gonna get drafted high. He’s probably not gonna get drafted in the first round. He might maybe the right team. And so again he’s just gonna have to prove them wrong. He’s an elite passer, he’s an elite scorer, he’s an unbelievable kid and he’s a great teammate. He just knows he’s got it. He just knows how to play. Is he a freaky athlete? No. But he’s affective, and the right team that needs a piece and a guy that can play right away as a backup stretch-five man. If he goes to the right team, he’ll do good in the NBA.

When it comes to Broome’s future, we’ll have to wait and see where he ends up. Wherever it may be however, Bruce Pearl will always be his No. 1 supporter.



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The next conquest: El Paso’s Jake Fette charts new NIL frontier

Of all the stellar throws Jake Fette made in 2024 — and there were a bevy of them during the Del Valle High School quarterback’s junior year, a campaign that saw the Conquistadores complete their first undefeated regular season in more than two decades — it was a set of tosses during a seemingly innocuous […]

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Of all the stellar throws Jake Fette made in 2024 — and there were a bevy of them during the Del Valle High School quarterback’s junior year, a campaign that saw the Conquistadores complete their first undefeated regular season in more than two decades — it was a set of tosses during a seemingly innocuous January workout that have reverberated. The plays touched off a frenetic 16-month period that placed the 17-year-old football phenom amid a national conversation.

That day, Kirk Bryant, then an assistant coach at Texas Tech, was in El Paso with a small contingent of Red Raider coaches to scout potential high school talent. As Del Valle head coach Rudy Contreras recalled, Bryant was getting ready to catch a flight out of the city on the heels of a conversation about a “pretty good quarterback” Contreras wanted him to see. Bryant’s flight, however, got delayed. And he reached out to Contreras to ask if he could make an unplanned visit to the Del Valle campus.

“I said, ‘We’re about to go out here and throw a little bit,’” Contreras said. “Yeah, come back.” 

Bryant did more than see. 

Del Valle High School quarterback Jake Fette throws a pass as the team warms up for a spring scrimmage, May 22, 2025. (Corrie Boudreaux/El Paso Matters)

“After about four throws,” Contreras said, “(Bryant) said, ‘Hold on,’ and took out his phone, started recording.” 

Bryant began FaceTiming other Texas Tech coaches, offering them a virtual glimpse of the 6-foot-2, 180-pound player who threw for 2,488 yards that fall en route to a third consecutive District 2-5A title. After the session, the coaches convened and Bryant told  Contreras, “This kid is the real deal. He could be at Texas Tech and be our third best quarterback right now.”

Before the group headed back to the airport, Texas Tech extended an offer, the first of numerous schools over the last year-and-a-half that offered Fette a scholarship to play collegiately. Bryant also had some prophetic parting words for Contreras.

“He said, ‘Coach, I want you to remember we were the first ones to offer him because it’s going to get crazy here in the next couple of years,’” Contreras said. “I thought he was exaggerating. I was thinking maybe we get a couple more schools. But, two years later and, yeah, it’s been crazy.”

Fette’s story captures a transformative moment in high school and college football. As he prepares to compete this week in the prestigious Elite 11 Finals quarterback competition, he’s also navigating a recruiting process shaped by seismic shifts in college athletics. The rise of name, image and likeness compensation has rewritten the rules of recruitment and athlete branding. 

Setting the stage

As a junior, Fette was unflappable, throwing for 32 touchdowns and rushing for 11 more in leading Del Valle to its second undefeated regular season in school history. In the UIL Class 5A state football playoffs, the Conquistadores became the first El Paso program to defeat Abilene Cooper in the postseason. Fette threw for over 200 yards and three touchdowns while also running for two scores. He threw his lone interception of the season in the subsequent area-round loss to Lucas Lovejoy.

Jake Fette, the Del Valle quarterback who is currently ranked 4th nationally, walks off the field during a spring scrimmage, May 22, 2025. (Corrie Boudreaux/El Paso Matters)

Fette’s story took another major turn in September 2024, just as the season was getting underway. With Del Valle off to a 3-0 start and Fette already compiling 612 passing yards and 148 rushing yards — including wins over Franklin and Canutillo — he announced his verbal commitment to Arizona State on social media.

This week, Fette will be in Los Angeles to compete in the Elite 11 Finals — one of the country’s most prestigious quarterback competitions for high school seniors. The invite-only event June 17-19 at Mira Costa High School will bring together 20 of the nation’s top prospects for advanced training, on-field evaluation and leadership development. Fette is the only quarterback from the El Paso area selected to compete and will represent Del Valle among peers already committed to programs such as Texas, Clemson, Penn State and USC.

Fette chose ASU over offers from Kansas, SMU, Houston, Texas Tech, New Mexico State, Texas State, California and UTEP. His feats on the field have drawn national renown. This spring, Fette was named the No. 4 quarterback prospect in the nation in the Class of 2026 by On3 Recruits, a leading sports publication that tracks high school and college athletics. 

“Jake is a great person, and he’s a great college prospect,” Contreras said. “This is a decision he took time in making and he’s got our full support here at Del Valle. He has so much promise as a player and he puts in the time to get better. He is a leader for us.”

Players to watch

Other El Paso high school football seniors drawing interest from Power Four college football programs: 

Justin Morales

  • School: Franklin
  • Position: Offensive line/defensive line
  • Size: 6-foot-4, 265 pounds
  • Recruited by: Arizona, California, Kansas State, Michigan State, Oregon State, UTEP, Wisconsin
  • Verbal commitment: Kansas State 

Ryan Estrada

  • School: El Dorado High School
  • Position: Running back
  • Size: 6-foot, 195 pounds
  • Recruited by: Alabama, California, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Oklahoma State, Wisconsin
  • Verbal commitment: None

Fette’s journey is unfolding in an era of historic change in college athletics. Since 2021, NCAA rules have allowed college athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness — a legal right often referred to as NIL. This means student-athletes such as Fette can now earn income through endorsements, social media, autograph signings and personal appearances, all while in college.

For top-tier prospects, NIL is a key part of the recruiting conversation. College programs are increasingly evaluated not just for their coaching and facilities, but for the strength of their NIL infrastructure — including what kind of opportunities and support they offer athletes. While Texas currently does not allow high school athletes to enter into NIL deals, prospects such as Fette are already being recruited into environments where those opportunities are front and center.

Athletes and their families must now navigate an unfamiliar mix of traditional sports decision-making and modern brand-building. For Fette and his family, this balancing act has played a central role in the decisions they’ve made and how they’ve approached the spotlight.

From the ground up: Early days and athletic roots

Jake Fette’s athleticism showed itself early, according to his father. From YMCA basketball games to flag football and soccer, he dabbled in everything. 

“He was always good at sports,” said Rick Fette. “Always a little bigger, faster than the other kids. It was just fun. He had fun doing it and we had fun watching him.”

The elder Fette recalled Jake’s transition to quarterback came unexpectedly. In 2019, Del Valle’s previous head coach, Jesse Perales, left for the same position at Garland Naaman Forest. Perales’ son, DeAngelo, was the quarterback of the sixth-grade youth team where Jake played wide receiver. 

“They tried out a few guys and realized (Jake) could throw a lot farther than they could,” Rick said. 

Initially, the position change was jarring for the younger Fette. 

“To be honest, I didn’t even like it at first,” Jake Fette said. “But, being able to control the game, I really like. I like having the ball in my hands and I get to make the decisions that choose the outcome of the game.”

The Del Valle High School football team stretches before a spring scrimmage, May 22, 2025. (Corrie Boudreaux/El Paso Matters)

Rick Fette, who played at UTEP, was cautious but observant as the years progressed. 

“I knew very little about quarterbacking,” he said. “But, I saw he looked like one of the better ones. Strong arm, moved well, decent size.”

That mix of tools, versatility and parental guidance became more evident as he reached high school. 

“His coaches liked him,” Rick Fette said. “We knew that people were going to be more receptive to a kind, polite kid that’s got his manners.”

A coach and a father

Rick Fette brings a unique perspective — he is both Jake’s father and one of his team’s coaches. The elder Fette, who played football at Flour Bluff High School in Corpus Christi, has been an assistant defensive coach at Del Valle for 16 years. 

He arrived in El Paso to play defensive end for UTEP in 1999 and was part of the Miners’ 2000 Western Athletic Conference championship team. Rick Fette said he chose UTEP over North Texas, Air Force and SMU because of the demeanor of then-defensive line coach Lorenzo Constantini, but also because of what he perceived as the success of the school’s strength and conditioning program. 

“I thought, ‘Man, the guys are huge here,’” Rick Fette recalled of former UTEP players such as Brian Young and Paul Smith, both of whom played in the NFL. “It felt like an impressive club to be a part of.”

Rick Fette was part of stalwart defensive line units that produced NFL draft picks Leif Larsen and Menson Holloway. He said apart from his teammates, he was also impressed with the school’s amenities. 

“It felt really big-time,” Rick Fette said. “When I was at UTEP, we had trainers giving us water. We had cold water in all our drills. It felt like I was in the NFL.”

That sense of professionalism, structure and preparation has shaped how he has helped guide his son through the recruiting and NIL maze.

“There’s two ways we could probably do it right now,” Rick Fette said of NIL. “You can go get an agent and have that agent go to work for you and shop you around to the highest bidder … or you go where you want to go.”

Rick Fette said they preferred the second approach — focusing on fit, relationships and values. 

What Rick Fette saw in Arizona State was a program that was building the right way. 

“Their background in general … what they were talking about and what they were doing even before they had a really good season, it all kind of made sense,” he said.

Jake Fette, the Del Valle quarterback who is currently ranked 4th nationally, has verbally committed to Arizona State University, May 22, 2025. (Corrie Boudreaux/El Paso Matters)

The Arizona State commitment

Jake Fette committed to Arizona State as his junior year at Del Valle got underway — before the Sun Devils’ surprise run to the 2024 College Football Playoff.

At the time, ASU was coming off a 3-9 season and was picked to finish at the bottom of the Big 12 Conference in preseason rankings. But as the 2024 college football season unfolded, the Sun Devils shocked the country.

Behind the leadership of second-year head coach Kenny Dillingham and breakout performances from players such as quarterback Sam Leavitt and running back Cam Skattebo, ASU won the Big 12 championship and earned a berth in the inaugural postseason tournament. In the Peach Bowl quarterfinal, they pushed national powerhouse Texas to double overtime before falling 39-31.

Leavitt’s postseason success elevated him to national prominence — and, according to On3, a top-10 NIL valuation of $3.1 million.

Despite the meteoric rise of ASU and Leavitt’s emerging stardom, Jake Fette said he has not wavered in his commitment even as schools continue to make overtures. 

“I was committed to stay committed,” he said. “I wasn’t looking to flip or anything. You know, for them to have a season like they did, it just made me more and more excited to be a part of that program.”

Jake Fette said he was impressed not just by the system, but by the authenticity of the coaches. In addition to Dillingham, Fette was courted by offensive coordinator and quarterback coach Marcus Arroyo, who has coached numerous NFL quarterbacks, including the San Diego Chargers’ Justin Herbert. 

“They’re gonna tell you what it is and how it is,” Jake Fette said. “I really appreciate that. Just telling me, like, I’m not guaranteed to play or any of that, but just the fact that they’ll work with me and not lie to me.”

Contreras saw the effect ripple beyond just Jake. 

“Jake Fette is spearheading that ’26 class,” Contreras said. “Now, they have a lot of commits because of Jake Fette, so they’re going to be very talented in the upcoming future.”

Jake Fette (6) receives a snap during a Del Valle High School scrimmage, May 22, 2025. Fette is nationally ranked in 4th place and has verbally committed to Arizona State University. (Corrie Boudreaux/El Paso Matters)

NIL in focus

As the family learned more about NIL, they stayed focused on the long-term benefits rather than immediate payouts, Rick Fette said.

“Now you’ve got to basically show proof of value,” Rick Fette said. “They’re trying to follow kind of an NFL model on it.”

He pointed out that most players aren’t raking in millions — despite headlines. 

“That’s a very, very select view of, like, five-star guys that they think, ‘This guy’s generational,’” he said.

On June 6, a major shift in the NIL landscape was made official with the ratification of the House v. NCAA settlement. The class-action lawsuit, brought by former college athletes including Arizona State swimmer Grant House, challenged the NCAA’s longtime restrictions on athlete compensation and forced a landmark agreement that will allow schools to share revenue directly with players for the first time. 

Starting July 1, universities will be allowed to directly pay athletes through revenue-sharing agreements. Power conference schools such as Arizona State are expected to allocate up to $20.5 million annually across their athletic departments, with football projected to receive the lion’s share. 

The Sun Angel Collective, the official NIL collective of Arizona State athletics, did not respond to a request for general information on how it will conduct operations during the 2025-26 athletics season. 

This pay-for-play model marks a new era in college sports. Compensation is expected to be governed by a College Sports Commission, which will enforce caps and ensure NIL deals meet fair market standards. While athletes will remain classified as non-employees, their compensation could reach levels once unthinkable in college athletics. NIL contracts will be vetted through a clearinghouse run by Deloitte, with booster-funded deals facing increased scrutiny.

Del Valle High School football players run onto the field before a spring scrimmage, May 22, 2025. (Corrie Boudreaux/El Paso Matters)

For Jake Fette, this means he will enter college amid a structured, high-stakes NIL system. While he has not spoken publicly about pursuing NIL deals, the infrastructure surrounding him will change significantly by the time he arrives in Tempe.

And through it all, the family’s guiding principle has remained steady: “He made that decision for the right reasons early on,” Rick Fette said.

Contreras agreed. 

“The process and the steps that Jake has taken to get to where he’s at … he’s never asked about money,” he said.

Lessons from the past: Advice from El Paso’s quarterback trailblazers

Jake Fette isn’t the first El Paso quarterback to draw national attention — but his journey is unfolding in a landscape far different from those navigated by Steven Montez and Ed Stansbury.

Montez, also a Del Valle alumnus now living in northern California, graduated in 2015 and played at the University of Colorado and later in the NFL with the Washington Football Team. He sees continuity in the school’s culture of quarterback development.

Steven Montez

“Even before me, Del Valle was already kind of a powerhouse and a QB factory,” Montez said. “Jordan Baeza, Tury Rios, Adrian Gonzalez — all those dudes had really good runs into the playoffs and played high-level football.”

Montez believes the longevity in the school’s coaching staff is at the heart of that legacy. 

“They’ve managed to keep that staff relatively intact. We had a ton of high-level coaches who taught us how to play the game and play it at a high level.”

Asked about Fette, Montez didn’t hesitate: “He’s a phenomenal player in his own right. His accuracy at his age is much farther along than I was. He spins the hell out of the ball. There’s really no weaknesses in his game.”

Stansbury, who graduated from Irvin High School in 1997, and played at UCLA and in the NFL with the Houston Texans, also sees Fette’s character as a difference-maker. 

Ed Stansbury

“He’s active on social media, but he’s in no way showing off or taking advantage of the situation,” Stansbury said. “It’s been all business for Jake.”

Stansbury said his own recruiting journey was different: “A lot of my success and my exposure was due directly to my high school football coach (Tony Shaw) … he spent countless hours sending out VHS tapes.”

Now, watching NIL transform the landscape, Stansbury said Fette is handling it the right way.

“What parents and players can take away from Jake is how he has conducted himself,” Stansbury said. “The humbleness he’s carried throughout this speaks volumes.”

These lessons carry personal relevance for Stansbury, too. His son, West Stansbury, is an up-and-coming quarterback at Coronado High School. As West enters his sophomore year and begins what could become his own recruiting journey, Ed is already thinking about how to prepare him for a future that includes the realities of NIL.

“We’ve built his brand pretty good for what he’s done so far,” Stansbury said. “Now the second part is being a productive, good athlete that colleges want. The NIL opportunities will follow if those things are done. Jake’s journey shows how to do it right.”

Both Montez and Stansbury emphasized that the spotlight brings pressure, but Fette appears well-prepared.

“Just don’t let anybody take your confidence away,” Montez said. “He knows he’s a great quarterback. He just has to keep pushing to be great — and he will.”

What comes next

Jake Fette will graduate in December and enroll at Arizona State in the spring of 2025, giving him a head start to learn the playbook and adjust to the pace of college football. But before that, he has one final high school season to complete.

Del Valle High School quarterback Jake Fette, ranked 4th in the country, spins a ball as his team warms up for a spring scrimmage, May 22, 2025. (Corrie Boudreaux/El Paso Matters)

“Last season doesn’t matter anymore, so we’ve got to prove that we’re good again,” Fette said. “I don’t think anyone’s expecting us to be as good as we were last year with all the graduates, but we’re reloaded. We’re not rebuilding.”

His preparation for his senior season, which begins Aug. 29 against Montwood High School, continues. 

“I’m just gonna stick to what I’ve been doing,” he said. “Regularly work out and just get my mind ready to go.”

Contreras is already thinking ahead. 

“We’re gonna miss his talent and everything he does on the field, but we’re also gonna miss the way he represents Del Valle football, the leadership he brings to this team in the locker room, the way he carries himself in the building,” he said.

As for Jake Fette, he remains focused on what matters most. 

“At the end of the day, I’m going to college to play football because I love football,” he said.

For his school, his city, and the next wave of El Paso athletes, he has shown what the new standard can look like.

“Football ends at some point or another for everybody,” Contreras said. “But to know that he has some money to kind of start his life on — his adulthood on — who knows, maybe the rest of his life. It’s a good deal for them. And we’re proud.”

Jake Fette (6), the Del Valle quarterback who is currently ranked 4th nationally, kneels for a moment of silence with his team, May 22, 2025. (Corrie Boudreaux/El Paso Matters)



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Bruce Pearl wants men’s college basketball to switch to quarters over halves: ‘Just like everybody else’

It’s the offseason for college basketball, but that doesn’t mean there hasn’t been any controversy. In particular, there’s been a growing debate surrounding playing two halves or four quarters. Now Auburn Tigers head coach Bruce Pearl has joined the conversation, sharing his thoughts. While being interviewed by Andy Katz on The Sideline, Pearl shared that […]

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It’s the offseason for college basketball, but that doesn’t mean there hasn’t been any controversy. In particular, there’s been a growing debate surrounding playing two halves or four quarters. Now Auburn Tigers head coach Bruce Pearl has joined the conversation, sharing his thoughts.

While being interviewed by Andy Katz on The Sideline, Pearl shared that he prefers quarters over halves. After all, that’s how the game is played at every other level.

“Quarters,” Bruce Pearl said. “Just like everybody else.”

Pearl didn’t expand on his reasoning beyond that. Part of that might have been because Andy Katz asked him for a rapid-fire answer, though. Still, to his point, basketball is played in a four-quarter format in the NBA, in high school, and even in women’s college basketball. Women’s basketball made the switch back in the 2015-16 season. So, men playing two halves does remain an odd outlier.

This growing concern over halves and quarters stems from a recent NCAA press release. In it, the NCAA was announcing some changes to help with the flow of the game. Among those changes was the move to allow coaches to challenge and review out-of-bounds calls and goaltending or basket interference. However, deeper inside that press release was an interesting note about the halves and quarters format.

The NCAA has since announced that there’s been “positive momentum” toward the switch. Bruce Pearl, seemingly, is a good example of that momentum now. The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel also recommended that Division I conferences actually develop a working group to provide further feedback on the option.

“In considering the decisions last month, the NCAA Men’s Basketball Committee had conversations about ways to continue this direction in the upcoming years, which includes positive momentum for moving the men’s game from halves to quarters,” the NCAA’s press release read. “The committee realizes there are hurdles to implementing the quarter format to the game, including the structuring of media timeouts to accommodate commercial inventory. The committee recommended NCAA Division I conferences create a joint working group to provide feedback on the potential change from halves to quarters.”

For many coaches, this would be a massive change. In particular, they’d have to adjust to a new system as it relates to clock management. For some, that may be more difficult than others. Still, if Bruce Pearl, who has been in college coaching since 1982 and has been a head coach since 1992, wants the change, then he is probably confident that he can adjust just fine. After a trip to the Final Four, of course, it’s easy to be confident.



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Ole Miss Baseball Lands Pair of Commitments From Talented Transfer Portal Prospects

Mike Bianco and the Ole Miss Rebels continue navigating a critical offseason in Oxford with the program remaining active in the NCAA Transfer Portal. After falling in the Oxford Regional last month, Ole Miss has hit the recruiting trail with force in order to reconstruct the roster ahead of the 2026 season. On Thursday, the […]

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Ole Miss Baseball Lands Pair of Commitments From Talented Transfer Portal Prospects

Mike Bianco and the Ole Miss Rebels continue navigating a critical offseason in Oxford with the program remaining active in the NCAA Transfer Portal.

After falling in the Oxford Regional last month, Ole Miss has hit the recruiting trail with force in order to reconstruct the roster ahead of the 2026 season.

On Thursday, the Rebels added their first commitment of the offseason after Grand Canyon left-handed pitcher Grant Richardson pledged to the Rebels.

The 6-foot-3, 220-pounder came out of the bullpen for first six appearances of the season before developing into a top-of-the-rotation pitcher and starting his final eight games.

Richardson had the highest strikeout rate per nine innings in Grand Canyon’s all-time history at 12.43 (min. 50 innings).

The talented southpaw ranked among the Western Athletic Conference’s tops in: strikeouts per nine innings (12.43, third), strikeouts (70, eighth), ERA (3.73, 12th) and opponent batting average (.245, 13th).

During his 2024 campaign, Richardson struck out 70 batters and walked 30 in 50.2 innings as a sophomore.

Fast forward to Saturday and the Ole Miss program got back to work in the NCAA Transfer Portal with the Rebels reeling in a pair of sought-after transfers.

Who’s been added to the 2026 roster?

No. 1: Tristan Bissetta – Outfielder [Clemson]

The South Carolina native entered the NCAA Transfer Portal after three seasons with Clemson where he saw significant production during the 2024 season.

Bissetta’s 2025 campaign was cut short due to injury, but still managed to hit .227 with a .358 on-base percentage in 31 games played.

In 75 at-bats last season, Bissetta logged 13 runs with 17 hits, 16 RBI, 15 BB with 28 strikeouts.

The 6-foot-1, 225-pounder hit .298 with seven homers and 34 RBI during the 2024 season in his most productive year with the Tigers.

No. 2: Daniel Pacella – Outfielder [Illinois State]

Pacella, a First-Team All-Missouri Valley Conference selection, started in 56 games for the Red Birds last season on his way to a career year with the program.

The 6-foot-4, 235-pounder logged 59 RBI, which became the seventh-most in a single season in program history, while also leading Illinois State with a .355 batting average.

He had 41 extra-base hits during the 2025 season, including 20 home runs. The home run count is the second-most in a single season in program history.

Pacella wrapped up his time at Illinois State second all-time in career home runs with 45 total and RBI with 169 across three seasons.

One of the most decorated players in Illinois State baseball history, Pacellla was a back-to-back all-conference selection during his time with the program.

He’ll be a player to keep tabs on in the 2025 MLB Draft with the Ole Miss Rebels looking to get him to Oxford for the 2026 season.

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Follow Zack Nagy on Twitter: @znagy20 and Ole Miss Rebels On SI: @OleMissOnSI for all coverage surrounding the Ole Miss program.

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