NIL
Division I Transfer Portal Surge Reshapes College Baseball At Historic Rates

Image credit:
LSU’s Jay Johnson (Photo by Jay Biggerstaff/Getty Images)
College baseball’s landscape has shifted dramatically in the past decade, with the transfer portal redefining roster construction. What was once a slow churn of attrition and replacement is now a high-volume cycle of arrivals, departures and internal battles that shape depth charts.
The most striking trend is volume. Since the portal’s inception in 2018, entries have climbed every year. When the 2025 window opened on June 2, more than 1,500 Division I players had filed their paperwork by the next morning—doubling the first-day total from last year. It was the latest surge in a system that continues to flood coaches with options to retool rosters overnight.
RELATED CONTENT
Critics often frame the portal as a mechanism that tilts power toward the sport’s giants—and there is some truth to that—but its reach extends far beyond perennial powers. The portal has become a universal marketplace, one that touches nearly every program and reshapes competition at every level of the sport.
Programs that reach Omaha increasingly do so with the help of transfers, often in ways that would have been unthinkable just a few years ago.
LSU offers a clear case study. When the Tigers captured the national championship in 2023, their roster featured only seven Division I transfers. The headliners—Paul Skenes and Tommy White—were so impactful that they masked the relatively modest volume, but the broader makeup of that roster still leaned on players developed in-house.
Two years later, the picture is strikingly different. In 2025, LSU carried 14 Division I transfers, accounting for 35% of its roster. Jay Johnson’s team was still stocked with blue-chip recruits, but the scale of outside additions illustrates how much the transfer portal has become embedded in roster design, even for the sport’s most resource-rich programs.
And LSU is hardly alone.
Across the SEC, the reliance on transfers has reached staggering levels. Georgia led the league with 19 Division I transfers on its roster in 2025, while Kentucky followed close behind at 18. Programs like Alabama, South Carolina and Texas A&M all landed in the low teens, with 13 apiece. Even traditional recruiting powers such as Florida (nine), Tennessee (eight) and Vanderbilt (nine) carried significant transfer totals—proof that the portal has become a core component of roster-building strategy regardless of a program’s recruiting pull.
All told, the average SEC roster in 2025 featured more than 11 Division I transfers, a figure that would have been unimaginable just a few years ago.

It’s a reflection of the league’s arms race: a conference that already dominates in facilities, recruiting and NIL resources now adds the portal as another lever to maintain its grip on the sport. The margins for young players to break through in this environment have grown thinner, while the expectation for instant contribution has only intensified.
The trend extends well beyond the SEC, too. The rate of transfer entry is rising everywhere, and its imprint is just as clear at the mid-major level. Of the four mid-major programs that finished the season ranked in the Top 25, each has seen a dramatic rise in its transfer totals compared to 2019, the first full season after the portal opened.
Coastal Carolina carried seven Division I transfers in 2025 after rostering just one in 2019. Murray State, one of this year’s surprise Omaha qualifiers, listed seven compared to three six years ago. UTSA’s jump was even sharper, with 10 Division I transfers in 2025 versus a lone rostered transfer in 2019. And Southern Miss, which did not roster a single Division I transfer in 2019, had five this season.

The portal has not just reshaped the balance of power at the top—it has become a universal mechanism for roster construction. Mid-majors use it to plug holes and remain competitive against the sport’s elite, while power programs use it to layer experience on top of elite recruiting classes.
The effect is a transfer-driven ecosystem that touches nearly every corner of Division I baseball.
So why does this all matter?
“This is killing high school recruiting,” one current Division I recruiting coordinator said. “What we’re looking for now is so different than what we were looking for a decade ago, maybe even less than that to be honest. We just don’t have the roster spots.”
That sentiment captures the heart of the shift. The volume of transfers entering Division I programs each year has compressed opportunities for high school players, changing how staffs evaluate prospects and allocate scholarships. Where coaches once leaned on projecting development over three or four years, they now prioritize players who can contribute immediately, especially if they come from another four-year program.
The downstream effects ripple across the sport. Roster churn has become a defining feature of the calendar, forcing both players and programs to think in shorter windows than ever before.
And the acceleration isn’t slowing down.
This offseason alone, 61 Division I programs took at least 10 transfer commitments, with 12 of them adding 15 or more. Just a year ago, only 36 teams reached double-digits. In 2023, that number was 20. The trend line is steep, and it underscores how rapidly the portal has gone from supplemental tool to central mechanism in roster construction.
That shift doesn’t just change who is on the field—it changes how the sport operates. Coaches now budget roster space differently, high school recruiting has been squeezed and the balance between patience and instant production tilts harder every year toward the latter.
It all adds up to a sport where roster stability is the exception, not the rule. The transfer era has created opportunity for players and flexibility for programs, but it has also introduced volatility, pressure and a new kind of arms race. What was once a gradual cycle of growth and development is now a high-speed marketplace.
NIL
Former 5-star prospect linked to four major college football programs
The NCAA transfer portal is now in its final week for college football players to enter their names in search of a new school for the 2026 season. The portal officially opened on Jan. 2 and will close on Jan. 16.
More than 4,000 players from all different areas of the college football world have decided to transfer to new programs next season in the weeks after the 2025 season’s end. Much of the shuffling on the Power Four level involves the search for better NIL compensation or quicker paths to playing time.
One significant Power Four name on the move is former Missouri defensive end Damon Wilson II. He will have two seasons of eligibility remaining at his third school.

The 6-foot-4, 250-pounder began his college football journey with Kirby Smart at Georgia in 2023. Wilson used his redshirt that season, making two tackles to go with half a sack in the Bulldogs’ games against Florida and Ole Miss.
The Bulldogs featured Wilson in 12 of their 14 games in the 2024 season. He made 22 total tackles along with three sacks and a pair of forced fumbles, assisting Georgia in a run that featured an SEC Championship victory and College Football Playoff appearance.
Wilson transferred to Missouri in the 2025 offseason. In 12 games with the Tigers, he made 23 tackles and compiled a team-high nine sacks, a fumble recovery, two pass breakups and an interception.
247Sports and On3 consider Wilson a top 10 prospect and the consensus No. 2 defensive end in the 2026 portal cycle. Pete Nakos of On3 reported four different linkages between Wilson and Power Four schools on Saturday.
LSU
Lane Kiffin has established a reputation as one of the biggest users of the transfer portal in college football. So far, LSU has 18 commitments in Kiffin’s first portal class.
LSU has already made two acquisitions at defensive end from the SEC ranks in the portal cycle. Wilson would be the most proven addition to that position group should he commit to the Tigers out of the portal.
Miami

One of the most important tasks for the Hurricanes this offseason will be replacing a pair of dominant defensive ends, Reuben Bain Jr. and Akheem Mesidor. The run to the 2025 College Football Playoff national championship has reduced much of Miami’s portal activity to visits in the first week of the portal’s window.
If proximity to the hometown is important, Miami is the closest of the four schools to Wilson’s hometown of Venice, Florida. Though Venice and Miami are on different coasts of Florida, the drive takes a little more than 3 hours.
Ohio State
The Buckeyes are another College Football Playoff team seeking defensive end talent for its 2026 roster. With Caden Curry running out of eligibility and Beau Atkinson likely to head to the NFL draft, Ohio State is working the portal to find new options.
CJ Hicks is heading for USF, and Kenyatta Jackson Jr. will likely remain at Ohio State another season. The Buckeyes have yet to add a defensive end from the portal, despite adding players at other positions.
Texas Tech

The Red Raiders began scouring the NCAA transfer portal for talent the moment it opened. Some notable acquisitions include quarterback Brendan Sorsby (Cincinnati), defensive lineman Mateen Ibirogba (Wake Forest) and linebacker Austin Romaine (Kansas State).
If NIL compensation is a driving factor in Wilson’s decision, Texas Tech is a strong fit. However, the Red Raiders have already acquired defensive ends Adam Trick (Miami, OH), Amarie Fleming (Allen) and Trey White (San Diego State), so playing time could be more sparse for Wilson there.
NIL
No. 3 transfer portal player delivers bad news to major college football programs
Two of the biggest programs are college football got some transfer portal bad news as one of the top players in the portal reportedly made his commitment on Saturday. Neither Ohio State nor LSU will lack for talented football players in 2026, but one player each school had reportedly coveted is moving on.
Penn State transfer Chaz Coleman has reportedly made his commitment to Tennessee on Saturday morning. Coleman, who had been ranked as the No. 3 player in the portal by On3sports and the No. 5 player by 247sports, had long been linked to Ohio State as a recruiting favorite. On the other hand, LSU had received a recent visit from Coleman. But neither school was able to land him away from the Volunteers.
Coleman was a four-star recruit out of Ohio in the class of 2025. He took official visits to Kentucky, Penn State, and then Ohio State in the final days before the early signing period, but chose to sign with Penn State. The 6’4″ EDGE has bulked up to near 250 pounds, but saw little action in his season at Penn State, making eight tackles in nine games. He’ll have three years of remaining eligibility.
Favorites Come up Empty on Coleman
Ohio State had long been considered the favorite to sign Coleman. Pete Nakos of On3 tied Coleman to Ohio State early in the portal process. Coleman visited Ohio State last week and the vast majority of On3 prediction were for the Buckeyes.
LSU, on the other hand, was thought to be more of a last-minute option for Coleman. He visited Lane Kiffin and the Tigers first, before heading to Tennessee and OSU, and many thought LSU had positioned itself as a switch-over option from the Buckeyes.
Tennessee, on the other hand, has several former Penn State defensive coaching now on staff, with former coordinator Jim Knowles and co-coordinator Anthony Poindexter joining the Vol staff. Tennessee is clearly making good use of this connection, as Coleman is the third Penn State transfer that the Vols have snagged, with linebacker Amare Campbell and lineman Xavier Gilliam also on board.
The remaining EDGE market
The EDGE market is narrowing with the early commitment of John Henry Daley to Michigan and Coleman heading to Tennessee. LSU and Ohio State might move on to Missouri transfer Damon Wilson II. Oklahoma State’s Wendell Gregory could be another option there, although many are linking Gregory to Missouri at this time. The market on top EDGE talent is thinning out and two surprising teams came up empty on Chaz Coleman.
NIL
UCF, Houston Post ‘No State Income Tax’ NIL Photo Promos amid CFB Transfer Portal
The transfer portal is really bringing out some of the wildest recruiting tools from college football programs.
For example, on Saturday, both UCF and Houston posted photos on social media aimed at players in the transfer portal to advertise there is “no state income tax” in either Florida or Texas.
It’s certainly a big, bold strategy for both programs to take with the portal deadline approaching on Jan. 16. They could use any advantage at their disposal right now as they try to keep pace with the rest of the Big 12.
BYU is the only program in the conference behind Houston and UCF in 247Sports’ transfer portal rankings.
NIL
What is Fernando Mendoza ‘s NIL Deals in 2026 – Salary with the Indiana Hoosiers and Career Earnings
With just minutes to go before the Peach Bowl showdown between the No. 1 undefeated and undisputed Indiana Hoosiers and the Oregon Ducks, all eyes are on Heisman QB Fernando Mendoza to see if he can pull off one last miracle. While he’s locked in for the biggest test of his career, some folks are wondering just how much the QB1 is actually bringing home for taking the Indiana Hoosiers to their best ever season before he heads to the NFL.
Fernando Mendoza’s Contract Breakdown
Fernando Mendoza is right in the middle of the new age of college football where players actually get paid by their schools. He doesn’t have an old-school professional contract yet, but he does have a binding agreement with Indiana University through a new revenue-sharing plan. This is separate from the money he makes from his various endorsement deals with big names like Adidas and Dr Pepper. It’s how the top guys get their cash flow now – a mix of school money and brand deals.
Advertisement
Actually looking back on the last five years, Fernando has been busy just being a world-class student and certified player. He played for the UC Berkeley Golden Bears from 2022 through 2024, becoming a full-time starter in 2023 and graduating from the Haas School of Business last summer with a degree in business administration. Explains why his post-game pressers are gems.
December 06, 2025: Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza 15 holds up MVP trophy after NCAA, College League, USA football game action between the Indiana Hoosiers and the Ohio State Buckeyes at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana. /CSM Indianapolis United States of America – ZUMAc04_ 20251206_zma_c04_714 Copyright: xJohnxMersitsx
However, the big leap of faith came with his transfer to Indiana for the 2025 season. It came with around $2 million worth of greens.
The real money jump is still in the future. Fernando is expected to enter the 2026 NFL Draft after this season wraps up. Right now, all the experts think he’ll be the number one pick overall. If that happens, he will finally sign a true professional contract with an NFL team that could be worth well over $55 million. That’s when his current college earnings will look like small pennies compared to his pro salary!
Advertisement
What is Fernando Mendoza’s salary?
Because of NCAA rules, Fernando doesn’t get a “salary” from his school, so his bank account grows through Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals instead. Think of it as a collection of high-paying side hustles rather than one steady paycheck from the university. Since NIL only became a thing in 2021, he went from earning nothing early in his career to a millionaire this season.
Right now, analysts estimate Fernando Mendoza’s total net worth to be somewhere between $800k and $1.5 million. It’s a bit of a moving target because of things like taxes and how some of that money might be structured in trusts. His NIL earnings jumped from $1.6 million to the current $2.6 million after taking his Hoosiers to 14-0, including first outright Big 10 title since 1955.
Fernando Mendoza’s NIL Deal Net Worth/ Sponsors
Fernando has some pretty big-name sponsors backing him. He’s signed deals with major brands like Dr Pepper, T-Mobile, and even Epic Games (you know, the Fortnite folks). Can’t forget his biggest one. Adidas contract. Last month, Mendoza took it to his Linkedin to flex his Three stripes deal,“Excited to share that I’ve accepted an opportunity to join adidas!
Advertisement
I’m very grateful for everyone who has supported me along the way and excited to bring my passion for sport, leadership, and work ethic to the Three Stripes. Let’s get to work.”
He also has partnerships with Keurig, Rent-A-Center, and Royal Canin. The exact length of these individual contracts isn’t made public, but they’re all part of what makes up his impressive total earning potential. But here’s a rough estimation:
(Mind, this is just a rough estimation to give you an idea.)
Fernando Mendoza’s NIL welfare
What’s really cool is that Fernando is using his fame for good. He’s pledged to donate all of his NIL earnings to the Mendoza Hope Fund, which supports after-school programs and scholarships. Plus, he launched a “Mendoza Mania” merchandise line, and all the money from that goes to the National MS Society, a cause close to his heart because his mother has MS (Multiple Sclerosis).
Advertisement
The truth is, he turned his college years into a multimillion-dollar platform. All that while staying humble enough to give back to charity. Whether he beats Oregon today or not, he has already won the financial game and the hearts of the state of Indiana by putting a basketball-first program on the CFP semifinals map. It’s only a matter of time before his NFL career takes off.
The post What is Fernando Mendoza ‘s NIL Deals in 2026 – Salary with the Indiana Hoosiers and Career Earnings appeared first on EssentiallySports.
NIL
Stephen A. Smith: ‘There’s some mediocrity within the SEC’ after missing national title game once again
The Southeastern Conference will once again be absent from the national championship stage. ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith believes the issue runs far deeper than a single postseason loss.
Following Ole Miss’ defeat to Miami in the College Football Playoff semifinals, Smith delivered a pointed critique of the SEC on First Take, arguing that the conference’s long-held dominance has eroded in the modern NIL and transfer portal era. The loss marked the third consecutive season the SEC will miss the national title game, an unthinkable outcome just a few years ago.
“They ain’t feeling you anymore,” Smith stated. “When you look at the absence of depth, why? Because players are choosing to go elsewhere. It ain’t just the second-stringers anymore. You got some all-world players saying, ‘We don’t have to be in the SEC anymore the way that we used to.’”
Smith pointed to the growing national parity as evidence that the SEC’s grip on elite talent has loosened. With players now empowered by NIL opportunities and immediate eligibility via the transfer portal, Smith argued that the conference no longer holds the same gravitational pull it once did.
“We’ll go to the Big Ten, we’ll go to the Big 12, we’ll go to the ACC,” Smith stated. “You see some of these cats in Miami, how are they looking? Think about that for a second here.”
Beyond roster movement, Smith also questioned whether the SEC still boasts the same sideline advantage it once did. He specifically referenced the transition at Alabama, where Kalen DeBoer replaced Nick Saban, calling the shift a clear inflection point.
“He’s a good coach,” Smith said of DeBoer. “He just ain’t in the same class as Nick Saban. So, there’s a precipitous drop off there.”
Moreover, Smith argued the landscape began changing when Georgia won back-to-back national titles, exposing a widening gap between the league’s elite and the rest of the conference. From there, he rattled off programs he believes no longer resemble their former selves, including Auburn, Arkansas, Florida and LSU.
“This ain’t the days of Urban Meyer,” Smith explained. “They don’t have Tim Tebow in Florida. They don’t look the same.”
While acknowledging that the SEC remains powerful, Smith concluded that its mystique has faded. Where the league once featured five or six national title-caliber programs, he now sees a conference filled with teams that look increasingly beatable.
“There’s some mediocrity within the SEC Conference,” Smith concluded. “The allure is gone. They’re a powerful conference, but the allure that they once had has been eviscerated. Period.”
As the College Football Playoff moves forward without an SEC team competing for the title once again, Smith’s comments underscore a growing national conversation. Whether college football’s most dominant league is still setting the standard, or simply chasing it.
NIL
Oregon Ducks’ Dante Moore Takes Blame For Season-Ending Loss To Indiana
The Oregon Ducks’ season came to an end in the College Football Playoff semifinals in a 56-22 loss to Indiana at the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl.
Dante Moore finished with 285 yards through the air and two touchdowns. However, the Duck’ star quarterback had three turnovers with two fumbles and one interception in what could be his final game in an Oregon uniform.

On Multi-Turnover Game
Moore hasn’t had many multi-turnover games. He tossed two interceptions in the loss to Indiana during the regular season and he did it again in the first-round CFP win vs. James Madison. He didn’t shy away from taking responsibility for the turnovers.
“First thing is first, the quarterback has to protect the football. They have a great defense, great disguise and different looks, but you can’t win football games if you’re causing turnovers. Something of course I need to work at. It comes with just reps. But overall, I mean, Indiana defense is great, defensive coordinator, but at the end of the day, we beat ourselves,” Moore said.
On First Lost Fumble
Moore’s first fumble came in the begininng of the second quarter as Oregon was attempting to make a comeback down 20-7. Backed up inside their own 15-yard line, Moore coughed up a costly turnover.

“On that play, it was running back was behind me in the pistol and tried to throw the smoke screen off the field. I gotta clear the midline better to make sure that when I am going to throw, I don’t hit the running back in his elbow. So the ball hit his elbow, but at the end of the day, it’s on me. I gotta take care of the ball and make sure they’re out of the way and get the ball to the receivers,” Moore said.
On Relationship With Ducks’ Center Iapani Laloulu
After the final whistle, Moore embraced center Iapani “Poncho” Laloulu in a powerful moment that represented the Ducks’ brotherhood.
“Poncho is somebody I love to death, and we’ve been through a lot this year, and I love him to death. And he’s just somebody that’s always willing to pray for me. He prayed for us in that moment, just prayed for the season. Just at the end of the day, Jesus won,” Moore said.
“At the end of the day, you have to give him his glory. It is just two competitive teams that’s playing on the biggest stages in the world right now. And at the end of the day, you gotta give God the glory win or loss,” Moore added.
MORE: What Dan Lanning Said After Oregon’s Loss to Indiana
MORE: Instant Takeaways From Oregon’s Playoff Loss to Indiana
MORE: Dante Moore NFL Outlook Comes Into Focus After Peach Bowl Loss
SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER HERE!
On NFL Aspirations
Regardless of how he played vs. Indiana, Moore is still seen as one of the top prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft if he chooses to declare. He gave a brief update on where he is with his decision process.
“I knew that question was coming. Yeah. I want to soak this moment up. That’s most important. Just giving hugs and just thank yous to my teammates, but at the end of the day, I don’t know my decision yet,” Moore said.
I’m going to talk to Coach Lanning and talk to my family and everybody, but at the end of the day, I don’t want to think about that right now. I just want to think about my teammates and give love to them. Appreciate you though,” Moore continued.
On Indiana’s Crowd Size
The entire Mercedes-Benz Stadium was filled with Indiana red. It became apparent very quickly for the Ducks that the Hoosiers would have the crowd on their side.
“I thought it was just the red seats, but it was the Indiana fans. They had a ton of fans here. Of course I’m just glad that the fans from Oregon were able to make it. I’m glad they came. Yeah, but it was pretty loud. At the end of the day, the dome gets pretty loud, but we prepared for loud situations and changed up the cadence. But yeah, they came out and showed out,” Moore said.
On His Faith

“My faith has taken me a long way, my freshmen year at UCLA. That was the most adversity I’ve been in my life. Being 17 years old in LA, there’s not many people I could rely on. You know, I am from Detroit, Michigan, very far from there,” Moore said.
“I know God is always on my side through the good, bad and ugly. Just someone I relied on, prayed everyday to. And even right now, you know, the sun will come up in the morning and give me light, walk in His path, and trust in His journey that he has for me. It’s God’s time in everything I do,” Moore added.
On Learning From Indiana Quarterback Fernando Mendoza
While doing game prep for the Hoosiers, Moore made it a point to study a bit of Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza.
“Quarterbacks learn from each other. Of course when I watched the film, I’m not just going to watch our side of the ball. I’m going to watch him. He’s done a great job all year especially in the red area protecting the football, scoring, doing what they’ve been doing. They’re on the field for a reason,” Moore said.
“I give him his credit. Somebody I’m going to stay in touch with when it comes to just talking ball, talking life, but quarterbacks learn from each other. And I’m excited how much I can learn from this game and learn from my future coming up,” Moore continued.
Recommended Articles
-
Sports3 weeks agoBadgers news: Wisconsin lands 2nd commitment from transfer portal
-
Rec Sports1 week agoFive Youth Sports Trends We’re Watching in 2026
-
Sports2 weeks agoKentucky VB adds an All-American honorable mention, loses Brooke Bultema to portal
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoDr. Patrick Staropoli Lands Full-Time O’Reilly Ride with Big Machine Racing
-
Rec Sports3 weeks agoNBA, Global Basketball Community Unite for World Basketball Day Celebration
-
Sports2 weeks ago2025 Volleyball Player of the Year: Witherow makes big impact on Central program | Nvdaily
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoBangShift.com IHRA Acquires Historic Memphis Motorsports Park In Millington Tennessee. Big Race Weekend’s Planned For 2026!
-
Sports2 weeks agoColorado volleyball poised to repeat success
-
NIL3 weeks agoInsider Reveals Biggest Reason Behind Colorado’s Transfer Portal Mass Exodus
-
NIL2 weeks ago
Fifty years after IU’s undefeated champs … a Rose Bowl





