NIL
‘Don’t Make Sense’ — Colorado HC Deion Sanders Provides Alternate NIL Idea Amid Inequality in College Football
Deion Sanders stood at the podium during Big 12 Media Days with a message that addressed college football’s biggest problem.
The Colorado head coach wasn’t mincing words about NIL deals and the chaos they’ve created. His solution? Stop pretending the current system works and start copying what does.
Why Does Colorado HC Deion Sanders Think NIL Creates an Unfair Playing Field?
The college football landscape has shifted rapidly, largely due to the rise of NIL deals. While these opportunities benefit student-athletes, they have also deepened the divide between powerhouse programs and those with limited funding.
Wealthier schools now leverage major donor support and lucrative endorsements to secure elite talent, leaving smaller programs struggling to compete. As these major developments continue to unfold, Sanders has closely monitored them, expressing concern about the NCAA’s uncertain role in this evolving system.
Colorado head coach Deion Sanders has reemerged on the college football stage, and with him comes a renewed critique of the current state of NIL deals. Speaking at Big 12 Media Days, Sanders didn’t hold back while addressing the competitive disparity NIL has introduced into the sport.
He pointed directly at the imbalance in spending among programs and its visible impact on postseason appearances. “All you gotta do is look at the [CFP] and see what those teams spent, and you’ll understand darn well why they’re in the playoffs,” Sanders said.
His frustration was rooted not in the principle of player compensation, which he supports, but in the lack of structure guiding it. Sanders voiced concern over how programs now land recruits based primarily on NIL money rather than coaching or development.
“You got a guy that’s not that darn good, but he could go to another school and they give him a half a million dollars and you can’t compete with that,” he said. “We’re not complaining because all these coaches up here could coach their butts off… but what’s going on right now don’t make sense.”
Sanders noted that schools with the largest donor bases are stockpiling talent, while others simply can’t keep pace financially.
“And you’re talking about equality, not equality, like equal, I guess, equality. And all you have to do is look at the playoffs and see what those teams spent, and you understand darn they’re wider in the playoffs.”
What Solution Does Sanders Propose for College Football’s NIL Problem?
Sanders has long advocated for NIL regulations and, earlier in April, proposed a clear solution: a salary cap mirroring the NFL’s structure.
“There should be some kind of cap,” he said in an interview with USA Today‘s Jarrett Bell. “Our game should emulate the NFL game in every aspect. Rules. Regulations. Whatever the NFL rules, the college rules should be the same.”
Sanders believes a structured cap would allow fairness to prevail across programs of varying size and resources. This approach would level the playing field by preventing the wealthiest programs from simply outspending their competition for top talent.
RELATED: Colorado HC Deion Sanders Takes Cheeky Jab at Texas Tech HC Joey McGuire’s Transfer Portal Activity While Praising Red Raiders
However, the current trajectory suggests his concerns are only growing. As part of a recently approved antitrust settlement in the House v. NCAA case, schools will soon be permitted to share up to $20.5 million annually with athletes. However, for Sanders, that measure falls short of addressing the core issue.
“It’s kind of hard to compete with somebody who’s given $25, $30 million to a darn freshman class,” he said, pointing out the growing gap between schools flush with cash and those without such advantages.
Sanders’ message was direct and uncompromising. Without firm guidelines, the sport risks becoming a predictable cycle dominated by the wealthiest programs. His NFL-style salary cap proposal represents a fundamental shift toward structured competition rather than the current free-for-all approach that has transformed college recruiting into a bidding war.
NIL
LSU coaching search: Greg McElroy predicts Lane Kiffin will take job, names backup choice
Greg McElroy predicted Lane Kiffin will take the LSU job, but conceded that Eli Drinkwitz would be their best backup option if he doesn’t accept. Currently, Kiffin is deciding between staying at Ole Miss or taking the LSU or Florida opening this cycle.
“I think it is the best job in college football that is currently open,” McElroy said on Always College Football. “When you look at the candidates, it’s pretty obvious. It comes down to two. Lane Kiffin is number one. (He’s) going to be the number one candidate for a couple of different places, and I think Lane Kiffin is very interesting in this entire conversation, because Lane Kiffin is an elite coach, especially in the modern era. There’s no denying what he’s been able to create, not even just at Ole Miss, but even in the time that he was at FAU prior to that he won a lot of games.
“And I think with where the sport has gone, and kind of becoming a blend of the NFL and a blend of college football, there’s a little gray area between pro ball and amateur ball that we’ve always known about, right? There’s a little gray area now, and I feel like Lane Kiffin has found the right formula to having great success in the modern era by utilization of the portal being very attractive for skill position players like wide receivers and quarterbacks.”
Kiffin and Ole Miss are expected to have some sort of decision or announcement following the Egg Bowl Friday. What that entails is anyone’s guess right now. If he stays, a successful coach like Drinkwitz might make a lot of sense for LSU, based on what he’s done at Missouri.
“I think all three are very much on the table right now,” McElroy said. There have been points in this process in which I thought for sure he was taking the Florida job. There have been points in this process in which I thought for sure he was going to stay at Ole Miss. I really believe that. I think he really has a great appreciation for what Ole Miss can provide him, because legacy, that’s the big thing that he can have at Ole Miss, is legacy … (But) I think Lane Kiffin is going to be the head coach of the LSU Tigers here at some point in the very near future … That will hurt for Ole Miss. For sure their program is in a far better position today to hire the next guy than they were prior to Lane Kiffin’s arrival. So I think Lane Kiffin is going to end up at all at LSU.
“If he doesn’t, I fully expect it to be Eli Drinkwitz at Missouri, who has done a really good job in creating offense. They run the football at Missouri. That’s what LSU has done traditionally very well, is run the football, be good along the line of scrimmage, and then if you look to it, what Eli has done over the last six years, their defense has been excellent at times throughout the last few years, including this year, where they’re one of the best defenses in the country.”
NIL
WVU head coach Rich Rodriguez likes idea of creating a cap on NIL spending
MORGANTOWN — The introduction of NIL five years ago has made college football similar to the wild, wild west. There aren’t a lot of rules.
Teams have taken advantage of the nonexistent guardrails and are dishing out wads of cash to pay players to compete for championships. Pair that with the transfer portal, schools can buy whoever they want.
The duo of NIL and the transfer portal have seen immediate success. Last year, Ohio State rolled with its highly valued roster and won a national championship. This year, West Virginia’s opponent on Saturday, Texas Tech, accumulated a large amount of donor money to pay its roster, creating a monstrous defensive line.
The Red Raiders, with their expensive roster, are a top 10 team in the country and the favorite to win the Big 12. Last year, Texas Tech finished 8-5, and now this year, it sits at 10-1 with a game to go.
“There was a lot made of it before the season, and rightfully so,” Rich Rodriguez said. “When they get a Power Four transfer, maybe he was doing okay at the Power Four. These guys were dominant at the Power Four level, and they’re dominant still at the Power Four level. They picked the right guys, evaluated very well, and they’re coached well, too. It’s not just great players. They’re coached really well, and I’ve been really impressed by how hard they play all those guys. There was a lot made of it, before the season, rightfully so.”
There have been attempts to even the playing field so that college football doesn’t become the MLB, where there is no salary cap. To start, this June, a court ruled in favor of athletes, allowing schools to directly pay athletes through revenue sharing. There was a set cap of revenue-sharing money at $20.5 million, and the College Sports Commission was created to oversee the NIL deals and create guardrails.
But that didn’t mean there was a cap on NIL. Schools, or more correctly, donors, can pay players on top of the money used through NIL. There were no boundaries, so schools like Texas Tech can still have lucrative costing rosters.
Last Wednesday, the College Sports Commission sent out an 11-page participation agreement to all Power Four schools that would create limitations on NIL and revenue sharing, shortening the gap between the rich schools and the poor.
Rodriguez is in favor of the agreement.
“I would,” Rodriguez said on signing the agreement. “I think a majority of the schools probably would. It’s kind of fair and equal across the board, like a true salary cap, like the NFL has.”
That’s easy for Rodriguez to say, though. WVU isn’t in a position to spend millions of dollars on a roster. Athletic director Wren Baker spent all summer trying to accumulate deals to reach the revenue-sharing allotment. Baker’s working on getting extra cash, but WVU is not there yet.
Schools like Texas Tech, who have money, are hesitant to sign the agreement.
“But if I’m one of those schools that have more and can do more, I can see why they’re saying, ‘Oh, we got more. Let us do more,’” Rodriguez said. “I understand where they’re coming from.”
It’s more than just buying players, though. The New York Mets and Yankees had two of the highest payrolls in baseball, and neither were even in the conference championships. The Los Angeles Dodgers spend a lot of money, but they’ve used the money wisely, which is why they’ve won back-to-back World Series.
The same goes for college, and Texas Tech, so far, has paid the right players.
“They evaluated the right guys,” Rodriguez said. “They did a great job of evaluation, first off. I don’t know what everybody on the roster is getting paid, but it seems to me that they distributed in the right way, and they’re getting their guy, all their guys played really hard.”
The rest of college football is taking notes on how Texas Tech used its money in the right places. It’s not a new idea, either. The Red Raiders saw what Ohio State did a year ago, and pretty much did the same thing. WVU will try to take as much as possible from Texas Tech after this year.
“I’m sure,” Rodriguez said. “We are. I think everybody is. You study people who are doing well. Why are you winning? Obviously, you got the right players, you got the right staff, you got the right facility. There’s usually a multitude of reasons that you have so much success.”
The Mountaineers brought in a lot of players through the transfer portal, 70-plus. Most of them were paid, and a lot of them haven’t panned out. Two quarterbacks on its roster haven’t won a game.
Charlotte quarterback transfer Max Brown hasn’t completed a pass all season. Most of WVU’s transfers have also been injured, too.
There’s a little luck when it comes to building a roster.
“You got to be fortunate, too,” Rodriguez said. “There’s always a little bit of guesswork. They got to stay healthy, too, right? Say a guy you bring in and evaluate, you hit on his evaluation, he’ll be a great player, but then he gets banged up, and he can’t play well. Maybe you did everything right, you just had bad luck. There’s always going to be some luck or some fortune involved in that as well.”
Right now, there is no salary cap on NIL or on how much a team can spend. Rodriguez might want change, but that might not happen for a while. So for now, Rodriguez is working with what he’s got and figuring out ways for WVU to close the gap.
“You can sit there and complain about it, or you can say, ‘What do we do to overcome that team, or teams that can simply buy more players more than you because they got more NIL money? I think every coach can sit and complain about it. I think the better avenue is, how do we solve that problem? Whether it’s fundraising or evaluation or what have you. Try to make sure that gap doesn’t determine wins and losses.”
NIL
Last Week’s NIL Deals Recap
Data provided by Student Athlete Score
(Nov. 25th, 2025) — The NIL era continues to accelerate heading into the holiday season, with brands tapping into athletes across football, basketball, gymnastics, cheer, and track this past week. From national names like Puma, Crocs, Celsius, Monster Energy, and Motorola to mission-driven local campaigns like Wisconsin’s “Keep Wisconsin Warm/Cool Fund,” athletes are activating meaningful partnerships across the country. Here’s a look at the standout NIL deals from the week of November 17th, 2025.
For a full, searchable archive of past deals, visit our NIL Deal Tracker.
NIL
College Football Playoff rankings live updates: Countdown to today’s release after Week 13 games
The last time Ohio State played at Michigan in 2023, Fox Sports’ Joel Klatt lamented on the broadcast that it would be the last edition of “The Game” that would have those kinds of stakes once college football adopted a 12-team Playoff in 2024. He was right — kind of.
If the 12-team field had been in effect in that 2023 game, then Ohio State would have definitely made the field despite the loss, as it entered 11-0 and ranked No. 2 in the nation. In fact, that scenario played out last year. Ohio State entered with enough margin for error to make the Playoff even after getting stunned 13-10 by a five-loss Michigan team in Columbus. The Buckeyes then used that as fuel to run the table and reach a national championship.
This year, however, high stakes for both teams have returned to “The Game.” Despite being 11-0 and the No. 1 team in the country, Ohio State may be in the Playoff already but has not yet secured a return trip to the Big Ten Championship Game, which it has not played in since the pandemic-altered 2020 season.
The main reason? A 9-2 Michigan team with just one conference loss can still leapfrog the Buckeyes with a win today (and some help). And a win over the top team in the nation would force the Playoff committee to seriously consider Michigan for an at-large spot, regardless of whether it makes another conference title game. Meanwhile, Michigan is definitely eliminated from the Playoff with a loss, a bonus for an Ohio State team that will not lack any motivation entering Saturday with a four-game losing streak in college football’s greatest rivalry.
NIL
Kiyan Anthony announced as one of four new Jordan Brand NIL athletes
Syracuse men’s basketball freshman Kiyan Anthony signed an NIL deal with Jordan Brand, Nike announced Monday. Kiyan — son of Syracuse legend Carmelo — was one of four athletes signed by Jordan Brand for their “Class of 2025″, along with Duke’s Cameron and Cayden Boozer and UConn’s Sarah Strong.
“To be part of the Jordan Brand family, to me, means carrying on a legacy,” Kiyan said, via Nike’s press release. “I want my legacy to be more than just basketball. I want it to be on and off the court, giving back to the community, doing everything I can to uphold my last name and carry the torch.”
Carmelo was Jordan Brand’s first signature athlete over 20 years ago, releasing the Jordan Melo 1.5 in 2004. Carmelo met Michael Jordan during the Jordan Brand Classic in 2002, where he led all players in points with 27. Kiyan scored 26 in the 2025 Jordan Brand Classic, taking home the MVP award.
Kiyan has shown promise in his short time with the Orange. He currently averages 13.8 points a game on 52% shooting from the field. He scored 18 and 19 points in the two games he started while Syracuse guard J.J. Starling dealt with an injury. The Orange lost to No. 3 Houston 78-74 in overtime Monday. Kiyan had 10 points and two steals in 24 minutes off the bench with Carmelo and his mother, La La, watching courtside.
“Let me tell you about (Kiyan), he’s a lot like his daddy,” Houston coach Kelvin Sampson said, via Alejandro Compean on X. “That boy can score that ball, he’s good.”
Kiyan, along with the Boozer twins, are the first men’s college basketball players who have an NIL deal with Jordan Brand.
NIL
Joel Klatt backs Nick Saban’s plea for change in college football due to Lane Kiffin situation
During last Saturday’s ESPN‘s College GameDay, Nick Saban attempted to shift the narrative surrounding Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin‘s ongoing dilemma of being openly courted by Florida and LSU while also trying to guide his sixth-ranked Rebels to the College Football Playoffs. Rampant speculation surrounding Kiffin’s pending decision — which is expected to come Saturday following Friday’s Egg Bowl — has created an untenable situation for all three SEC programs and their diehard fanbases.
But rather then delve into that drama, Saban turned his ire on college football’s inherently flawed calendar that unfairly forces both coaches and players to make life-changing decisions while many are still playing football. It happened last season when Penn State‘s Beau Pribula and SMU‘s Preston Stone were forced to enter the transfer portal while their respective teams were just entering the Playoffs. Now it has involved a sitting head coach in the midst of a national championship push.
“Everybody should be thinking about the players,” Saban said during Saturday’s College GameDay. “Players should be able to play for their coach for the entire season. Players shouldn’t be penalized if a coach leaves, because the committee has the opportunity, if a player or coach doesn’t participate, they can sink you in the rankings. … This is not a Lane Kiffin conundrum. This is a college football conundrum, and we need some leadership to step up and change the rules.”
This week, FOX Sports‘ Joel Klatt doubled-down on Saban’s point about college football’s oppressive calendar that overlaps in-season competition and offseason roster building, and even offered a potential solution.
Joel Klatt: ‘We should never be in a position where roster building and competition co-exist’
“What Nick Saban was saying on GameDay was absolutely correct. … (Because) here’s what’s broken: we are trying to build rosters through Early Signing Day and early December (when) the season’s still going on. In fact, it’s Championship Game week, which is so dumb. Then we’re going to have the transfer portal open up (in early January) when some teams are still trying to play in the Playoffs,” Klatt said on Monday’s episode of The Joel Klatt Show podcast. “The calendar is broken and so we have programs trying to hire their next head coach and they feel like they need their coach in order to build the roster, because the roster building is taking place the first week of December. But the season doesn’t end until potentially Jan. 20th. … We should never be in a position where roster building and competition co-exist.”
Saban did offer a potential resolution of college football’s calendar problem by suggesting it should better align with the academic calendar, as it did before the implementation of the early signing period and the transfer portal. Ultimately, Saban proposed college football adopt a more professionalized NFL scheduling model that restricts hiring windows, eliminates early signing day and pushes recruiting cycles into the Spring to allow teams to finish their seasons with continuity. Even spring practice, he suggested, could be replaced with OTA-style summer sessions like the NFL uses. And Klatt couldn’t agree more.
“Saban made an excellent point, in the NFL there are specific times when you can and can’t talk with a coach … even if you fired your (previous) coach, there are times that are specific when you can talk to players to try to recruit them towards your franchise, whether it’s in the draft process and/or in free agency,” Klatt continued, comparing high school recruiting to the NFL Draft process and the transfer portal to free agency. “There is no reason — none — absolutely no reason why (college football) should have the competition of the season co-exist with roster building. It’s asinine. It’s crazy, and we need to change that. … And I will tell you, I can fix it in 30 seconds. … Here’s how you do it: finish the football season, then sign your high school players, then open the transfer portal. Period. It is not that difficult.”
Klatt’s proposal involves moving the College Football Playoff national championship game back to New Year’s Day, or as close to Jan. 1st as possible. Then re-establish the original National Signing Day in early February as the first opportunity to add high school prospects before opening the NCAA transfer portal in April, ahead of Spring practice. And while a mid-Spring semester portal window could create other issues for student-athletes, Klatt believes the benefit of separating competition from off season roster construction would ultimately outweigh all other problems.
“But finishing the season before roster building is how you fix this,” Klatt concluded. “And these rules about when you can talk to coaches and when you can’t talk to coaches, that would obviously help as well.”
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