Demond Williams Jr. finds Denzel Boston for a 23-yard TD
With just three weeks left in the regular season, the postseason picture looks completely different than it did a week ago. In this week’s Field of 64 projections, we have two new hosts and a ton of movement within the top 16, as well as the entire field.
While bids will be stolen during conference tournament week, the NCAA Tournament is shaping up to be a fun one right now. The bubble has also shifted fairly significantly over recent weeks, with a lot at stake over the final weeks of the regular season.
In our latest Field of 64, the SEC leads the way with 13 bids. They are followed by the ACC (10), Big 12 (6), Big Ten (4), Sun Belt (3), Conference USA (2), Big East (2) and Big West (2) with multiple bids. On the hosting line, the SEC also leads the way with seven, including five top eight seeds. The ACC follows with four (two top eights), while the Big West, Big 12, Big Ten and Sun Belt each have one.
The full NCAA Tournament field will be announced on Monday, May 26. After the regular season concludes in three weeks, conference tournaments will get underway.
Last Four In: Texas A&M, Western Kentucky, Kansas State, Arizona State
First Four Out: Mississippi State, UTRGV, Michigan, Virginia
Next Four Out: UC Santa Barbara, Creighton, McNeese, Cincinnati
While they were in the field last week and off the bubble, Texas A&M slides back to one of our final four teams in after being swept by Texas. The Aggies are still in solid shape, but they’ll need to get to 13 SEC wins. Mississippi State also needs to reach that mark, but time is running out.
Western Kentucky has been comfortably in for a while now, even as our projected Conference USA champion, but getting swept by FIU has set them back and knocked their RPI down into the 40s. They’ll need to rebound, but for now, they stay in.
The most noteworthy team on the outside is undoubtedly preseason No. 2 Virginia, who just swept Georgia Tech to get back into the NCAA Tournament mix. They’re not in yet, but with RPI trending upwards into the 70s, they’ll have a shot if they can improve that even more over the final weeks.

1. Texas (1)*
2. UTSA*
3. Arizona State
4. Bethune-Cookman*
Once again, Texas is the top overall seed in this week’s Field of 64. To be completely honest, there’s a gap between them and the rest of the pack right now. The Longhorns are 37-5 overall, but even more impressively 19-2 in the SEC with a five-game conference lead. Texas also leads the country with 14 Q1 wins, sitting 14-3 in Q1 games.
1. UCLA (16)*
2. Arizona
3. Texas A&M
4. Grand Canyon*
While UCLA wasn’t in the hosting mix in last week’s projections, they’re back in this week. The Bruins are 32-11 overall, 16-5 in Big Ten play and No. 17 in RPI at this point. They might have to win the Big Ten to host due to a 2-5 Q1 record, but if things play out in their favor, they will be in the mix even if they can’t catch Iowa. Arizona is another potential host, falling out of our top 16 this week.
1. Georgia (2)
2. Wake Forest
3. East Tennessee State*
4. Central Connecticut*
Georgia has been all over the top eight in our projections over recent weeks, but they settle in as a comfortable No. 2 overall seed today. The Bulldogs are 35-11 overall, 12-9 in SEC play and No. 2 in RPI, also tied for second with 12 Q1 wins. Further boosting Georgia’s resume is a No. 3 non-conference RPI and a No. 4 overall strength of schedule.
1. Vanderbilt (15)
2. TCU
3. Iowa
4. Ball State*
Vanderbilt has a pretty strong resume, and the only reason they’re the No. 15 seed is their remaining schedule. The Commodores finish vs. Alabama, at Tennessee and vs. Kentucky, which won’t be an easy stretch. Still, they are 31-13 overall, 12-9 in SEC play and No. 3 in RPI, and they’re pretty safe as a host. They’re an easy candidate to rise even higher. The same is true for TCU, who is just shy of the hosting line in today’s Field of 64 but remains firmly in the mix for a top 16 seed.

1. LSU (3)
2. Virginia Tech
3. Southeastern Louisiana*
4. Missouri State*
LSU picked up a massive series win over Tennessee this past weekend, improving to 36-9 overall, 14-7 in SEC play. The Tigers come in at No. 9 in RPI, and are feeling very safe as a regional host. LSU could finish just about anywhere in the top 16, from where they are today at No. 3 to one of the first teams on the outside of the top eight.
1. NC State (14)
2. Alabama
3. Troy
4. Columbia*
All of a sudden, NC State sits atop the ACC’s standings. While a big series against UNC awaits, the Wolfpack have done enough to get into the hosting picture at 30-12 overall, 15-6 in the ACC and No. 22 in RPI. If they keep winning and end up taking the ACC crown, they’ll be in the top eight. Alabama is another potential regional host, our No. 17 overall seed this week. If someone falls out of the hosting mix, Alabama is next up.
1. North Carolina (4)*
2. Kentucky
3. UConn*
4. Bryant*
North Carolina isn’t currently in first place in the ACC, but we’re projecting them to take the ACC title by the end of the regular season. The Tar Heels are 33-10 overall, 15-9 in ACC play and No. 7 in RPI, also currently No. 1 in non-conference RPI to further boost the resume. The way things are looking now, UNC is a very comfortable host, and feeling pretty good as a top eight.
1. Oregon State (13)
2. Cal Poly
3. USC
4. Fresno State*
This past weekend was definitely a setback for Oregon State. The Beavers were swept by rival Oregon, falling to 32-10 on the year and now sit at No. 11 in RPI. Losing that series felt like a big missed opportunity, with their remaining weekends being at Hawaii (RPI 72), at Iowa (RPI 61), and vs. Long Beach State (RPI 179). For now, Oregon State is a comfortable host. But if they falter any down the stretch, they could move into danger on the hosting bubble.

1. Clemson (5)
2. Southern Miss
3. Florida
4. High Point*
Clemson lost their series over the weekend to NC State, but the Tigers are still feeling good as a top eight seed. They are 36-10 overall and 13-8 in the ACC, coming in at No. 8 in RPI at this point. This turned out to be an intriguing regional, with Southern Miss as the 2 and Florida as the 3. The Gators are still just above the bubble, but they must get to 13 wins to be in that position.
1. Coastal Carolina (12)*
2. Ole Miss
3. Duke
4. Oral Roberts*
Coastal Carolina remains a comfortable host in this week’s Field of 64, sitting 33-11 overall, 17-4 in the Sun Belt and No. 13 in RPI. Their 3-6 Q1 record is a flaw on the resume, but if the Chanticleers finish in this RPI range and run away with the Sun Belt, they’ll undoubtedly be hosting. Another potential host falls in here with Ole Miss, and the Rebels could very easily be around this range as a host if they finish the regular season strongly.
1. UC Irvine (6)*
2. Oregon
3. Kansas State
4. San Diego*
UC Irvine has stayed hot, sweeping Cal Poly on the road over the weekend. The Anteaters are now 32-9 overall, 19-2 in the Big West, and have surged up to No. 12 in RPI. That RPI is going to drop over the final weeks with a remaining weekend schedule of UC San DIego (RPI 187), at California Baptist (RPI 257) and Cal State Fullerton (RPI 150), but if they win those games and keep the RPI in a respectable spot, they’re going to be hosting and in the top eight mix.
1. Arkansas (11)
2. Kansas
3. Miami
4. Wright State*
Arkansas has lost three consecutive series, and are trending in the wrong direction. Still, the Razorbacks are 37-9 overall, 14-7 in SEC play and No. 5 in RPI. The schedule only gets tougher, too, finishing vs. Texas, at LSU and vs. Tennessee. The Razorbacks still have a hosting-caliber resume, but they’ll be in danger on the hosting bubble if they end the season with six straight series losses. Kansas is a team that could jump into the hosting picture, should a team like Arkansas fall.

1. Tennessee (7)
2. Georgia Tech
3. Western Kentucky
4. Holy Cross*
Tennessee is down a couple spots in this week’s Field of 64 after falling to LSU, but the Vols are still in great shape as a host and a potential top eight. The Vols are 35-9 overall, 13-8 in the SEC and No. 10 in RPI, with a 12-4 Q1 record. They finish with Auburn, Vanderbilt and at Arkansas, so what happens over the final weeks will determine exaclty where Tennessee settles in.
1. West Virginia (10)*
2. Oklahoma
3. Northeastern*
4. George Mason*
West Virginia continues to trend upwards, now 37-5 overall, 16-3 in Big 12 play and No. 15 in RPI. The Mountaineers are still sitting at the top of the Big 12, and winning that regular season would likely solidify their status as a top 16 seed. Oklahoma is another potential host, finishing a little bit behind the rest of the pack this week.
1. Auburn (8)
2. Louisville
3. Fairfield*
4. Southeast Missouri*
Auburn’s resume keeps getting stronger, now 30-14 overall, 11-10 in the SEC and No. 4 in RPI, with an 11-9 Q1 record to go with it. The Tigers finish with Tennessee, South Carolina and Ole Miss, and if they can keep finding ways to win, they’re going to be safe as a host and a likely top eight seed, as we have them in today’s Field of 64.
1. Florida State (9)
2. Dallas Baptist*
3. Xavier
4. Austin Peay*
Florida State dropped its series against Louisville over the weekend, but the Seminoles are still a safe host at this point. They also have a strong case to be a top eight seed, at 31-9 overall, 12-6 in ACC play and No. 6 in RPI. FSU also has a 10-8 Q1 record, which will help their case. Dallas Baptist is a little bit behind some of the other hosting contenders, but they could be right there in the mix, too.
Trent Dilfer is back to coaching high school football after his failed foray into the college game. After being fired as UAB’s head coach last October, the former Super Bowl winner has returned to Lipscomb Academy, where he will oversee a program he previously led to a pair of Tennessee state titles.
Hours after news of Dilfer’s new job was announced on Thursday, OutKick’s Jonathan Hutton released part of an interview he had with the head coach, reflecting on his time with UAB.
Dilfer was fired midway through his third season in Birmingham. During that time, he led the Blazers to a 9-21 record, including a 2-4 mark through six games last year.
“I’ve got some scars, I really do,” Dilfer said when addressing his return to Libscomb from UAB. “I’m a much better man than I was when I left. I think I got truly broken by college football in a great way. Everybody goes, ‘Why would you say that?’ Well, because that’s part of growth. I mean, you’ve got to be broken and reshaped and molded.
“College football broke me. Just the losing, developing players. Like we had 14 players that we recruited, I recruited, we developed … you play them, and then they go to Ole Miss and Arkansas and Alabama and everywhere else.”
Dilfer failed to retain several of his stars at UAB due to the transfer portal, including the three departures he alluded to in his interview — offensive lineman Delano Townsend (Ole Miss), wide receiver Kam Shanks (Arkansas) and safety Jalen Key (Alabama).
During his time in charge of the Blazers spoke out on the inequities UAB dealt with in terms of NIL deals, referring to the program’s resources as “chicken scratch.”
“In our conference … we have two teams that will go to our roster and sign double or triple what these guys can make on our roster and make them backups on their roster so that we can’t have them,” Dilfer said during an interview with “McElroy and Cubelic in the Morning” on Birmingham’s WJOX-FM 94.5 last year. “That’s happening in our conference.”
During the interview released on Thursday, Dilfer reflected on the difficulties he had retaining his roster at UAB while also questioning the program’s emphasis on remaining competitive.
“It was so hard to maintain the relationships working with people that didn’t see winning like I did,” Dilfer said. “You know the one thing that’s great about Lipscomb is that they care about winning as much as I do. They are invested. I cannot say that about the last place that I was at. It was just really hard.”
Alex Mortensen will serve as UAB’s next head coach after leading the Blazers to a 2-4 record while filling in as the interim coach following Dilfer’s firing last season. Mortensen has expressed optimism about the UAB administration’s willingness to extend more resources to the football program moving forward.
“I can just tell you that the institution, the administration, the university, they want to make a commitment to help as much as they can, to adapt in this era,” Mortensen said during an appearance on WBRC’s Good Day Alabama last month. “And then also you have people in the community that want to donate to our Excellence Fund and help that grow so we can go compete.”
The Athletic has live coverage of Miami vs. Ole Miss in the College Football Playoff Fiesta Bowl game.
For all the angst caused by the tumultuous evolution of college football into something that is not quite professional sports but definitely not what it used to be, the effects on what happens on the field have been all kinds of fun.
The new rules — or maybe the lack of rules — permitting players to be paid and leaving them free to move from team to team have produced a final four like never before.
This week’s College Football Playoff semifinals matching Ole Miss against Miami and Oregon against Indiana provide a fitting conclusion to what can comfortably be described as the most unpredictable season of the Playoff era. For the first time, the final four includes no recent national title winners and no preseason top-five teams.
The main criticism of the CFP’s four-team era was that the national title race had become too predictable. By expanding the field to 12, the hope was to bring some new blood beyond just the blue bloods into the spotlight.
Two years in, mission accomplished. In last week’s quarterfinals, Ohio State, Georgia and Alabama — combined 11 national titles since 2002 — were all eliminated.
The bigger field, though, is not so much the reason for the power shift as the vehicle for showcasing how much name, image and likeness compensation and unrestricted transfers have flattened the talent curve.
“Teams are built differently today than they were five years ago,” former Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby said. “There’s no question about that. I don’t know if it’s leveled the playing field, but it’s moved talent around, following money.”
The margins between top teams have shrunk, intangibles such as fit, culture and identity are more impactful than ever and the number of teams that can aspire to win a national championship seems to have expanded, fortuitously, along with the CFP.
“Well, it is the new normal,” said former Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick, who along with Bowlsby was one of the architects of the 12-team format. “Indiana, they are a new powerhouse. I would argue that some traditional powerhouses aren’t flourishing as much. You’re changing out who’s in that position but are there really more (national title contenders)? I don’t know?
“It feels like there are more teams with an opportunity to be in the top echelon.”
This newfound unpredictability comes on the heels of maybe the most predictable period in modern college football history as it relates to the national championship race: the super-team era, dominated by Nick Saban’s Alabama dynasty and a small group of challengers.
Preseason rankings of CFP semifinalists
| Season | Champion | Runner-up | Semifinalist | Semifinalist |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
2014 |
Oregon (3) |
Alabama (2) |
Florida State (1) |
|
|
2015 |
Clemson (12) |
Michigan State (5) |
Oklahoma (19) |
|
|
2016 |
Alabama (1) |
Ohio State (6) |
Washington (14) |
|
|
2017 |
Georgia (15) |
Clemson (5) |
Oklahoma (7) |
|
|
2018 |
Alabama (1) |
Notre Dame (12) |
Oklahoma (7) |
|
|
2019 |
Clemson (1) |
Ohio State (2) |
Oklahoma (4) |
|
|
2020 |
Ohio State (2) |
Clemson (1) |
Notre Dame (10) |
|
|
2021 |
Alabama (1) |
Michigan (NR) |
Cincinnati (8) |
|
|
2022 |
TCU (NR) |
Michigan (8) |
Ohio State (2) |
|
|
2023 |
Washington (10) |
Texas (11) |
Alabama (4) |
|
|
2024 |
Notre Dame (7) |
Texas (4) |
Penn State (8) |
|
|
Semifinalists |
||||
|
2025 |
Oregon (7) |
Ole Miss (21) |
Miami (10) |
From 2009 to 2022, the Crimson Tide won six national titles and lost three championship games in the Bowl Championship Series and the four-team CFP. Clemson broke up Bama’s run by winning two CFP championships. There was a streak of four consecutive seasons in which Dabo Swinney’s Tigers and Saban’s Tide played in the CFP (they split those games). Kirby Smart and Georgia finally displaced Alabama and won two straight titles in 2021 and ‘22.
Sprinkle in titles for loaded Florida State (2013), Ohio State (2014) and LSU (2019), and the only national champion that could be viewed as legitimately surprising during Saban’s 17 seasons at Alabama was Auburn in 2010. The Tigers were ranked No. 22 in the AP poll to start the season and went undefeated behind the force of nature that was Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton.
Since the CFP started in 2014, the lowest preseason ranking of any national champion is No. 6 by LSU and Joe Burrow in 2019.
Every previous CFP semifinal has had at least two preseason top-five teams. All but one CFP semifinal (2015) had at least three preseason top-10 teams. Last year, the 12-team CFP debuted with four preseason top-10 teams in the semifinals.
This year’s CFP final four has no team that was ranked better than No. 7 (Oregon) in the preseason AP poll. Miami started 10th; Indiana was No. 20 and Ole Miss was No. 21. Meanwhile, three of the preseason AP top five (Texas, Penn State and Clemson) did not even make the CFP. The Tigers and Nittany Lions will finish the season unranked.
The combined average ranking of the semifinal teams is 12.6, the second-highest of any final four — with a caveat.
TCU in 2022 was one of two teams during the four-team CFP to make the field after starting the season unranked, along with Michigan in 2021. The Horned Frogs were not even among the others receiving votes in the preseason poll, so counting their ranking as 49th (48 teams received votes) skews the number for a group that otherwise included three preseason top-eight teams.
Every previous CFP semifinal has also included at least three teams that claim at least one national title from a major poll (AP or coaches), BCS or CFP. Miami is the only program among the four still remaining that has even one of those. The Hurricanes stacked five titles from 1983 to 2001 but haven’t sniffed one since.
It has been well-established that the very best teams now are not as good as the juggernauts that typically won national titles during the four-team CFP. The difference is especially noticeable in the SEC, which could be looking at three straight seasons without a team in the title game if Ole Miss loses.
In lieu of stacked teams that overwhelm opponents with talent, and with rosters turning over quicker than ever, everything else that helps determine success is amplified.
“Vibes is probably as good a way to go about describing it as any,” ESPN analyst and former Georgia Tech running back Roddy Jones said. “What’s the motivation? What’s the culture? How well coached are you?”
Stacking highly ranked high school recruiting classes remains the best way to get good and stay good in college football, but it is no longer the only way to compete for a national championship.
All of the remaining CFP teams have a starting lineup of at least 42 percent transfers. The four CFP teams with the most homegrown starters (Georgia, Ohio State, Oklahoma and Alabama) were knocked out in the first two rounds.
An Indiana-Ole Miss national title game would match the teams in the field with the highest percentage of transfer starters. The Hoosiers check in at 65.4 percent, and the Rebels lead the pack at 66.3 percent.
“If you look at the four teams that are remaining, they all know exactly who they are,” ESPN analyst Greg McElroy said. “That’s really helpful, and they all know how to recruit exactly to what they need. So I think that it allows them to be hyper-focused on the players in the portal that can help them win.”
Players getting paid can also affect locker room chemistry and become another variable to be managed.
“I think it is all of the intangible things that become more important,” Jones said. “That’s not to say one school just because they have it one year will have it the next. I think it is so team dependent. Leadership dependent. It is circumstance dependent.”
So this is a good thing for college football, right?
Prepare for TV ratings to possibly say otherwise. The lack of traditional powers in this year’s semifinals — unlike last year, when Texas played Ohio State and Penn State played Notre Dame — might not draw in as many casual fans.
“I think it’s always helpful to have, like, the Death Star,” said McElroy, who was the quarterback of Saban’s first championship Alabama team in 2009. “It’s always helpful to have the team that everybody hates for just the sport’s consumability.”
Still, it might be a trade-off worth making in the long run.
“The engagement of fan bases and believing that they have a legitimate shot to win a championship is greater than ever,” Jones said.
Of course, Indiana’s meteoric and unprecedented rise under coach Curt Cignetti might just lead to more frustration among fans as schools unsuccessfully chase a Hoosier-esque turnaround.
“I think the trend is that there will be more schools among the willing to throw money at NIL, and in doing so, attract good players,” Bowlsby said. “And if you can more broadly distribute the best players, you will have more upsets and more of the (previously) downtrodden playing deep into the tournament.”
On the flip side, many schools are likely to get priced out as the ante to get in the game goes up. And the current administration and oversight of college football has never been more discombobulated. The current structure is tenuous, and the future is uncertain.
“It’s a little crazy right now, but you know, the college football fan that wants to watch whatever’s on and be dazzled by what happens in the end of the game, I don’t know that it could be any better than it is right now,” Bowlsby said.
The modern landscape of college football often focuses on Name, Image and Likeness valuations or immediate playing time when top prospects enter the transfer portal. Yet for the nation’s highest-ranked available quarterback, the recruitment process has taken a clinical turn, prioritizing long-term health over immediate impact. Programs chasing the most coveted arm on the market are pausing to ensure his physical durability matches his statistical production.
Recruiting visits typically revolve around photo shoots, steak dinners and campus tours designed to woo elite talent. In this specific high-stakes recruitment, however, the itinerary includes mandatory stops with team physicians and athletic trainers.
Coaching staffs are exercising caution as they attempt to secure a commitment from a player who could redefine their offense if he can stay on the field.
A new report indicates that every university hosting this prospect is conducting thorough physicals to gauge a recovery timeline. The concern centers on availability for spring practice, a crucial period for any transfer trying to learn a new playbook and build chemistry with receivers. While the talent is undeniable, the medical reality has added a layer of complexity to a frenzied race for his signature.
Sam Leavitt, the former Arizona State standout and the top-ranked quarterback in the transfer portal according to On3, is undergoing medical evaluations at each of his campus visits. The scrutiny stems from a foot injury that ended his 2025 season prematurely.
During an appearance on the Crain & Company Podcast, Pete Nakos of On3 emphasized the uncertainty surrounding the timeline, stating that “every school that’s bringing him in on a visit is doing a medical evaluation to understand what his timeline looks like for recovery.”

The timeline for Leavitt remains murky following surgery for a Lisfranc ligament tear he suffered in October. While schools are eager to sign the talented passer, Nakos added that “it is unclear if he’d be available for spring football” after missing the back half of the season. It is currently unclear if Leavitt will be ready to take snaps when spring camps open across the country.
This medical uncertainty hovered over his recent trip to Baton Rouge. Leavitt visited LSU earlier this week and was spotted at a basketball game with head coach Lane Kiffin.

Despite the hospitality, the Tigers’ medical staff likely spent significant time assessing his surgically repaired right foot. The evaluation process is standard protocol, but carries greater weight given the severity of Lisfranc injuries.
The rigorous testing continues as Leavitt heads to Knoxville. Tennessee is the latest program to host the quarterback, hoping to add his experience to its roster. The Volunteers are in the market for a proven starter, but, like LSU, they must weigh his rehabilitation schedule against their need for immediate competition at quarterback. Kentucky also shared a visit with Leavitt.
After a hectic 48 hours, quarterback Demond Williams Jr. is staying put at Washington.
Williams announced Tuesday that he intended to enter the transfer portal, but reversed course Thursday night, revealing on social media that he will remain with the Huskies.
“After thoughtful reflection with my family, I am excited to announce that I will continue my football journey at the University of Washington,” Williams wrote. “I am fully committed and focused on contributing to what we are building.”
The standout quarterback became the latest face of the debate surrounding name, image and likeness (NIL) and its enforcement when he announced that he was entering the transfer portal. Williams’ announcement came just four days after he signed an NIL deal to remain at Washington that was reportedly worth $4 million for one season.
It was reported shortly after that Washington planned to pursue legal action against Williams for breach of contract. Williams’ agent, Doug Hendrickson, dropped him as a client on Thursday.
“I have made the decision to end my representation of Demond Williams Jr. effective immediately due to philosophical differences,” Hendrickson wrote in a social media post. “Demond is an incredible talent and we wish him and his family the best in their future endeavors.”
Hendrickson is also the agent for Washington head coach Jedd Fisch.
Williams just completed his sophomore season at Washington, which was his first as the Huskies’ full-time starter. He helped Washington go 9-4, completing 69.5% of his passes for 3,065 yards, 25 touchdowns and eight interceptions. He also proved to be one of the top dual-threat quarterbacks in the country, rushing for 611 yards and six touchdowns.
Following a strong first season as a starter, Williams has been viewed as a potential Heisman candidate for the 2026 season. FOX Sports lead college football analyst Joel Klatt placed Williams fifth in his initial Heisman rankings for next season.
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Washington quarterback Demond Williams shook the college football world on Tuesday night, as ESPN’s Pete Thamel reported that the dynamic dual-threat quarterback was set to enter the transfer portal just a week after signing a lucrative NIL agreement to remain at Washington. Now, after days of controversy surrounding his next career move, Williams will remain with the Huskies after all.
Williams announced his return via social media, just minutes after a report by ESPN’s Pete Thamel that he was leaning towards remaining at the school.
“After thoughtful reflection with my family, I am excited to announce that I will continue my football journey at the University of Washington,” Williams wrote. “I am deeply grateful to my coaches, teammates, and everyone in the program for fostering an environment where I can thrive both as an athlete and as an individual.
“I am full committed and focused on contributing to what we are building.”
In his statement, Williams also apologized for the timing of Tuesday’s decision to enter the transfer portal, which took place while much of the football team was attending a celebration of life for Huskies soccer player Mia Hamant, who died from a rare form of kidney cancer in November.
Forde: Lane Kiffin Once Again Pushes Boundaries in Demond Williams Jr. Saga
“Over the last few days, Demond and I have engaged in very honest and heartfelt conversations about his present and future,” Washington coach Jedd Fisch said in a statement. “We both agree that the University of Washington is the best place for him to continue his academic, athletic and social development.”
Williams’s agreement with the Huskies is reportedly worth around $4.5 million, and Washington was reportedly prepared to pursue legal recourse if he did not honor the deal. Lane Kiffin’s LSU program was the program most frequently attached to Williams, but now will look elsewhere to fill its quarterback position for 2026.
The decision comes hours after Williams was dropped by his agent, Doug Hendrickson of Wasserman Football. He also retained lawyer Darren Heitner, who has become a regular figure in college athletics eligibility cases during the NIL and transfer portal era.
GameDay host Rece Davis mentioned that there will have to be some fences mended between Williams and Washington. Before Williams’s ultimate decision to return, Matt Zenitz of CBS Sports reported that the program “would still welcome Demond Williams back to the team and is still hoping for him to remain with the program.”
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Williams committed to play for Fisch at his home-state program Arizona, transferring to Washington when Fisch took the job following the departure of Kalen DeBoer. He played in 13 games as a freshman, accounting for 1,226 total yards and 11 touchdowns before taking over as full-time starter in 2025.
Williams totaled over 3,600 yards and 31 touchdowns as a sophomore under Fisch.
|
Season |
Comp % |
Pass Yards |
YPA |
TD |
Int |
Rush Yards |
TD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
2024 |
78.1 |
944 |
9.0 |
8 |
1 |
282 |
2 |
|
2025 |
69.5 |
3,065 |
8.7 |
25 |
8 |
611 |
6 |
Williams was an honorable mention All-Big Ten selection behind Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza, Ohio State’s Julian Sayin and USC’s Jayden Maiava in a conference stocked with passing talent.
Now, he will be back for a third Big Ten season rather than make a controversial jump to LSU or another program.
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If you’re a sports fan, you may be unaware of a very important fact: the College Football Playoff semifinals start tonight.
There are several reasons for why the actual CFP has fallen off the radar for sports fans. Week 18 of the NFL season and the first week of the NFL playoffs always present huge storylines, let alone the coaching carousel that is already underway. Then there’s the fact that the College Football Playoff had the spotlight to itself around the New Year’s Day holiday, which has historically been dedicated to the sport. Even the NBA has snuck into the headlines with the first blockbuster trade of the season, with Trae Young being dealt from the Hawks to the Wizards.
Miami and Ole Miss square off on Thursday night at the Fiesta Bowl while Indiana will play Oregon in an all-Big Ten affair at the Peach Bowl. But unless you’ve been following each program closely, you likely haven’t heard too much in the way of actual previews or analysis about the games.
Perhaps the biggest reason as to why the College Football Playoff semifinals have gone missing from our collective consciousness? Transfer portal and NIL drama are sucking up all the oxygen in and around college football.
Much of the consternation in college football over the current calendar is related to the timing of the transfer portal opening in early January. It’s why Lane Kiffin felt the need to controversially bail on Ole Miss and move to LSU with his team still very much alive in the national championship hunt. It’s why players on playoff teams are entering the portal before their season is done. And it’s why so many headlines and social media chatter is being dedicated to what will happen next season before this season is done.
The top ranked Indiana Hoosiers are a perfect example. Perhaps after their Rose Bowl thumping of Alabama, everyone has assumed that their job is done even though they have two more games to win before they can claim a national championship. But the focus right now is at least being shared between what Indiana is doing in the transfer portal for next season and Mark Cuban stepping up to fund NIL efforts and finishing the job for this season.
“Indiana is cleaning up in the transfer portal right now, even while they’re preparing for a National Semifinal.”
More from @joelklatt on how Curt Cignetti is reloading with @IndianaFootball. pic.twitter.com/CjFz9PnSaG
— The Joel Klatt Show: A College Football on FOX Pod (@JoelKlattShow) January 6, 2026
NEW: Billionaire Indiana alumnus Mark Cuban is donating to the Hoosiers 2026 transfer portal class, @FOS reports💰
“Let’s just say they are happier this year than last year.”https://t.co/mXEX3QniMt pic.twitter.com/u5QgP3DQkC
— On3 (@On3sports) January 7, 2026
Of course, that’s nothing compared to the drama at Ole Miss, where the transfer portal isn’t just about Rebels players but coaches. The shadowy figure of Lane Kiffin is still looming large over the Ole Miss playoff run. And as Jimbo Fisher pointed out in a scathing condemnation of Kiffin’s behavior, the drama around which assistants will and won’t coach Ole Miss in the semifinals is likely because Kiffin thought his former team would lose to Georgia and be done with their season. On top of that, the future of star quarterback Trinidad Chambliss was a huge question mark before he finally “agreed a new deal” with Ole Miss if he is granted eligibility to play next season.
Look around college football and so many headlines and social media conversations are geared towards what is happening in the transfer portal and not whether Oregon can avenge their loss to Indiana or whether Miami can physically dominate Ole Miss the way they did Ohio State.
Washington quarterback Demond Williams has caused a firestorm for breaking an agreement with his current school to potentially take more money from elsewhere.
Ohio State has lost several former four and five star recruits to the portal after their surprising quarterfinal exit to the Hurricanes.
Texas Tech landed top portal quarterback Brendan Sorsby with a $5 million offer.
New Penn State coach Matt Campbell has taken a huge chunk of his former Iowa State team with him to Happy Valley.
All of this transfer portal news is a boom for recruiting sites and others that make player movement part of the core of their coverage. But mainstream outlets are also forced to balance out their CFP output with daily updates, portal trackers, and headlines.
With the transfer portal only open from January 2-16, the college football world has no choice but to try to spin all the plates at once and keep track of all the news. Not only is it insane for the schools and programs to try to balance, especially those still competing for a title, but it’s insane for the health of the overall sport and keeping the focus where it should be.
The transfer portal will open and shut entirely within the College Football Playoff. Could you imagine a universe where NFL free agency kicks off the day after the Divisional Round and shuts down a few days before the Super Bowl? Could you imagine the NBA holding its draft during the middle of the NBA Finals? It would be ludicrous decision making that no sane person would ever sign off on — not just because it’s a nonsensical way to run a sport, but because it would take the attention off of its actual championship.
We are human beings. We are naturally inclined to be sucked in by drama. And the transfer portal fulfills all of our primal needs. The flips, the mysteries, the betrayals, the shocks, the surprises. It fulfills our natural thirst for intrigue and excitement in a way that breaking down Miami’s pass rush against the Ole Miss OL simply can’t. And the fact that it’s a true wild west experience with no rules, guardrails, or boundaries makes it all the more tantalizing.
College football has never been more popular as a sport across the nation in spite of so many unforced errors and own goals. Nobody in their right mind would want to divert attention away from crowning a champion during what should be the pinnacle of the sport and the entire reason for its existence. And yet, that’s exactly how college football is currently operating.
The simple fix, as suggested by Oregon coach Dan Lanning, is to move the College Football Playoff earlier so that it ends on New Year’s Day and the portal can be a true offseason activity. That way, the hearts and minds of the college football universe don’t have to be so divided and we can actually celebrate a national champion for one season before actually moving on to the next. Of course, since that seems like the right and easy thing to do, don’t hold your breath waiting on it to actually happen.
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