NIL
Future of transfer portal takes spotlight as Kirby Smart calls it college football's 'biggest decision'
Kirby Smart was ready to pounce. This week at SEC spring meetings, hot-button issues include College Football Playoff expansion, the impact of the yet-to-be-approved House v. NCAA settlement and a nine-game SEC schedule. But asked about the transfer portal on Tuesday, the two-time national champion head coach did not hold back. While commissioners and presidents […]


Kirby Smart was ready to pounce. This week at SEC spring meetings, hot-button issues include College Football Playoff expansion, the impact of the yet-to-be-approved House v. NCAA settlement and a nine-game SEC schedule.
But asked about the transfer portal on Tuesday, the two-time national champion head coach did not hold back. While commissioners and presidents debate the future of the sport, the Georgia head coach shed light on the transfer portal discussion currently taking place among the coaching ranks.
“The biggest decision that has to be made in college football right now, by far, to me, is when is the portal window, and is there one or two?” Smart said. “That’s not being decided by us today. A lot of people don’t even know how it’s getting decided, who’s deciding it.”
The NCAA Division I Committee voted in October to shorten the college football window from 45 days to 30. The American Football Coaches Association proposed in January to move the transfer portal to a 10-day window in early January after bowl games, with the spring window eliminated.
In recent years, the spring portal has become a contentious issue for programs. Tennessee lost starting quarterback Nico Iamaleava to free agency in April following a public, NIL-fueled divorce. It’s just the latest example of last-minute contract negotiations before players are locked in on rosters for the season.
“The second portal, you’re getting shook down twice,” Arkansas head coach Sam Pittman told On3 last week.
The current transfer portal format calls for the winter window to open in December, the Monday after the College Football Playoff field is announced. With the portal starting in the middle of December, it carries into the postseason. This last winter, Penn State quarterback Beau Pribula opted to enter the portal and transfer to Missouri, leaving the Nittany Lions before the start of the CFP.
“It’s really hard to be playing in a championship setting and having to deal with that,” Smart said Tuesday. “But when I brought that up as a complaint, it was told to me, ‘There’s no crying from the yacht.’ So if you’re going to play in these environments, you have to be willing to do that. Now it’s we can’t do that.”
Most Power Four coaches agree that college football needs a single portal window, instead of the current two-window setup. But when exactly free agency should be is a split issue.
“If you’re asking me, I always lend to what are the professional models, and what do they look like,” Texas A&M head coach Mike Elko said Tuesday at SEC spring meetings. “It certainly seems free agency happens once, not twice. And it happens right after the season, before you start practicing. That seems to be the landscape for every single professional league across the world. So why do we believe that this shouldn’t be how this works is hard to get your head wrapped around.”
Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian echoed Elko’s views on the portal. “I do think we’re all in agreement that one transfer portal would be beneficial,” he said. “As coaches, we’re team builders. That’s what we do. And it’s hard to build a team when you’ve got two different portal windows, and you’re not sure who’s on your team.”
Because the CFP now stretches into late January, some coaches believe a single portal window should be held later in January. That way, rosters will be set entering the second half of the academic calendar and spring practice.
Others are proponents of a spring-only portal, distancing free agency from the postseason. But in that hypothetical, rosters would not be finalized until April or May, giving coaches less face time with players. More than 4,900 players entered the FBS transfer portal this offseason.
“There’s a large contingency that’s growing now, trying to push an April, maybe May portal,” Smart said. “They want to practice in June. I want y’all to think about June for us. We have 10 days of high school camp in June. We believe in using those across the Southeast. We use 10 days. We also have official visits every weekend. So now we’re going to practice with our team in that same window. Something’s going to suffer.”
Next steps for how to reshape the college football transfer portal remain vague. Nothing is expected to come down before the House v. NCAA settlement is officially approved.
The NCAA Division I Committee could take action. Smart believes the settlement’s implementation committee should take charge. Lawmakers have even introduced legislation in the last 18 months that would restructure the sport’s transfer portal.
“It’s not really talked about,” Smart said. “Nobody’s talking about the portal. They just don’t think it’s a big deal.”
NIL
Texas Tech, Oklahoma State reaches sellout status
LUBBOCK, Texas – Texas Tech announced its first advanced sellout of the 2025 season on Thursday as Red Raider fans have secured the primary ticket inventory for the Oct. 25 showdown with Oklahoma State at Jones AT&T Stadium. The advanced sellout is likely the first of several for a highly anticipated Red Raider football season as demand continues […]

LUBBOCK, Texas – Texas Tech announced its first advanced sellout of the 2025 season on Thursday as Red Raider fans have secured the primary ticket inventory for the Oct. 25 showdown with Oklahoma State at Jones AT&T Stadium.
The advanced sellout is likely the first of several for a highly anticipated Red Raider football season as demand continues to reach all-time highs with Texas Tech selling out of season tickets for a third consecutive year earlier this spring. Oklahoma State will serve as the Parents and Family Weekend game, which attracts large crowds to the Texas Tech campus annually.
In addition, Texas Tech will formally induct record-setting quarterback Graham Harrell into the Ring of Honor at halftime between the Red Raiders and Cowboys. He will also be recognized for his upcoming induction into the National Football Foundation College Football Hall of Fame as part of the NFF’s On-Campus Salute program. Harrell will become the seventh Red Raider in program history to be enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame and the 12th to join the prestigious Ring of Honor, with his name being unveiled on the Jones AT&T Stadium pressbox.
Tickets for the Oklahoma State game can still be purchased via SeatGeek, the official secondary ticket provider of Texas Tech Athletics. An official game time and television designation for the Oklahoma State game or any other Big 12 contest will be determined during the season on a 6-to-12-day window by the Big 12 Conference’s television partners in ESPN, FOX and TNT Sports.
Single-game tickets for each of Texas Tech’s six other home dates are still on sale through the Athletic Ticket Office. Tickets can be purchased at any time via TexasTech.com or by calling 806-742-TECH during normal business hours.
–TECH–
NIL
Illinois 2026 recruit Mack Sutter commits to Alabama football
Alabama football recruiting: Watch Mack Sutter in Dunlap commit to Tide Mack Sutter, a four-star tight end from Dunlap, Illinois, on Thursday, June 26, 2025, committed to play for Alabama football. Sutter chose the Crimson Tide over Illinois, Ole Miss, and Ohio State. He is the No. 1 prospect in Illinois and the No. 80 […]


Alabama football recruiting: Watch Mack Sutter in Dunlap commit to Tide
Mack Sutter, a four-star tight end from Dunlap, Illinois, on Thursday, June 26, 2025, committed to play for Alabama football.
- Sutter chose the Crimson Tide over Illinois, Ole Miss, and Ohio State.
- He is the No. 1 prospect in Illinois and the No. 80 prospect nationally, according to 247Sports Composite.
- Sutter is the first tight end in Alabama’s 2026 recruiting class.
PEORIA — Roll Tide.
Dunlap four-star tight end Mack Sutter announced his commitment to Alabama on Thursday night before family and friends at Weaver’s Fresh Food and Drink.
Sutter thanks his teammates, coaches, friends and family before choosing the Southeastern Conference power over other finalists Illinois, Ole Miss and Ohio State. He then pulled on a maroon long-sleeved shirt before grabbing a few others and tossing them to the crowd.
“Thank you guys for pushing me every day. I’m so lucky to have a great group of guys to compete with every day,” Sutter said. “… Most of all, my parents, I am just so grateful for them. They’ve guided me and shaped me into the man I am today.”
The 6-foot-6, 225-pound senior-to-be made Alabama his final official visit on June 20. He’ll join the Tide’s 11-member recruiting Class of 2026 that features five-star cornerback Jorden Edmonds and four-star athlete Zyan Gibson.
Sutter becomes the first tight end, and the third highest-ranked Alabama commit in the class of 2026, ranking as the No. 80 prospect nationally, seventh-ranked tight end and the No. 1 prospect in Illinois by 247Sports Composite.
During the last 18 months, Sutter picked up 45 scholarship offers highlighted by a combined 30 offers from the Big Ten SEC. He is one of the most sought-after football recruits in Peoria-area history.
“Mack,” Dunlap football coach Brett Cazalet said, “the reason he had so many offers and so many opportunities is not only because of his physical traits, but also, when a coach sits down and talks to him for just a couple minutes and sees how he wants to be as a player, what kind of young man he is.
“Yeah, it’s a no brainer. You want a guy like that in your program.”
For Sutter, this most recent trip to Tuscaloosa came after he attended a pair of Alabama games during the 2024 season. He was at Alabama’s 41-34 win over Georgia in September, then attended the annual Iron Bowl against Auburn in November where Bama won 28-14.
“It was unreal,” Sutter told the Journal Star in December after attending the Egg Bowl and Iron Bowl on back-to-back days. “They were both pretty electric games, so it was sweet seeing that. … You could tell that it was big-time football down there.”
Sutter joins an Alabama tight end room that should be completely revamped heading into 2026, according to Colin Gay of the Tuscaloosa News. It could be headlined by returnees Marshall Pritchett and Kaleb Edwards, along with West Virginia transfer Jack Sammarco.
“At Alabama, tight end is a ‘developmental’ position, one where freshmen rarely see the field,” Gay wrote, adding that Sutter will “need to develop blocking SEC-level tackles before he sees significant playing time.”
Sutter and Dunlap will open the 2025 campaign on the road against Galesburg at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 29.
Adam Duvall is a Journal Star sports reporter. Email him at aduvall@pjstar.com. Follow him on Twitter @AdamDuvall.
NIL
ESPN Analyst Drops Truth Bomb For $3 Million NIL Valued College Football QB Ahead of 2025 Season
Greg McElroy is getting real about the impact of NIL on high school athletics. The ESPN analyst opened up about the weight of NIL expectations on young athletes like Michigan Wolverines’ five-star recruit Bryce Underwood. Underwood, who has an NIL valuation of $3 Million per ON3, possesses a first-hand experience with the changing landscape of […]

Greg McElroy is getting real about the impact of NIL on high school athletics. The ESPN analyst opened up about the weight of NIL expectations on young athletes like Michigan Wolverines’ five-star recruit Bryce Underwood.
Underwood, who has an NIL valuation of $3 Million per ON3, possesses a first-hand experience with the changing landscape of college athletics. He is the No. 1-ranked quarterback in the 2025 class and flipped his commitment from LSU after Michigan offered him an NIL deal reportedly worth $10.5 million over the next four years.
In an appearance on “Always College Football” on Thursday, McElroy discussed the increased pressure placed on high school athletes in the NIL age.
“I think Bryce Underwood is making a lot more money than pretty much everybody,” McElroy said. “But there’s been a handful of guys that have not lived up to the expectations and the weight of the NIL expectations, because I do think – now in the era of the NIL – the expectations are higher and the pressure is higher as well.”
Expectations are certainly high for Underwood. The Wolverines’ massive NIL package highlights their need for the nation’s top quarterback recruit.
Michigan had one of the worst offenses in the country last season and played to an 8-5 record after going undefeated the year before. The Wolverines had the 131st passing offense, something they will look to bounce back from with Underwood’s help.

What Bryce Underwood brings to Michigan?
Bryce Underwood joins the Wolverines as the No. 1 player in his class with a perfect 247Sports prospect score.
Underwood was a four-year starter at Belleville High School, where he led the Tigers to two Division I MHSAA State Championships in 2021 and 2022 and three consecutive appearances from 2021 to 2023.
In his senior season, Underwood accumulated 2,509 passing yards and 32 touchdowns with just six interceptions. He made 71.8 percent of his passes and scored six rushing touchdowns with over 600 yards.
Throughout his high school career, he racked up 12,919 all-purpose yards including 11,488 passing yards and 179 total touchdowns.
Underwood was a dominant force in high school and played his way into being the nation’s top recruit. He will look to transform Michigan’s offense with his impressive skill set. He will hopefully look to transform Michigan’s offense with his impressive skill set and abilities.
College Sports Network has you covered with the latest news, analysis, insights, and trending stories in football, basketball, and more!
NIL
LSU athletes can benefit from revenue sharing with new NIL rules
BATON ROUGE, La. (Louisiana First News) — When the LSU baseball team lifted its eighth championship trophy Sunday, it symbolized the end of a consequential era for college sports: the beginning of name, image and likeness (NIL). New rule changes will impact what it takes to stay atop the college sports world. Advertisement “You have […]
BATON ROUGE, La. (Louisiana First News) — When the LSU baseball team lifted its eighth championship trophy Sunday, it symbolized the end of a consequential era for college sports: the beginning of name, image and likeness (NIL). New rule changes will impact what it takes to stay atop the college sports world.
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“You have to be able to adapt,” said Fritz Metzinger, a New Orleans sports attorney.
A House settlement earlier this month paved the way for revenue sharing. Under this new model, athletic departments will be able to spend up to $20.5 million on the people who drive a program’s success.
“Schools like LSU can now directly pay their student athletes,” Metzinger said.
That will add a new wrinkle to what has been possible since 2021, when the NIL era first began. For the last four years, athletes could only profit from endorsement deals. Metzinger said an “arms race” started to acquire top talent, and a “pay-for-play” system developed across college sports.
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Groups called collectives stepped in to become fundraising arms for schools. At LSU, the collective is called Bayou Traditions. The money required to field top teams increased over the last four years, particularly in football and basketball.
“These collectives have become very powerful,” Metzinger said. “Local businesses that’re LSU supporters or Tulane supporters have thrown a lot of money at it.”
Baton Rouge attorney Gordon McKernan got in early.
“I signed (former LSU women’s basketball player) Alexis Morris,” McKernan said. “I think it was the first NIL deal at LSU. I don’t remember.”
McKernan signed many more athletes to deals, where they appeared on billboards, in commercials, and on social media posts. The money necessary to keep these players in Baton Rouge continued to rise.
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“You’ve got to have the facilities, the tradition, all the winning and all that stuff is great,” McKernan said. “But you have to have the money, or they’ll go somewhere else.”
Under new changes, boosters will be relied on less. An athlete who signs any deals with a booster or collective will need to prove the deal isn’t a pay-for-play situation to a newly-created board, Metzinger said, as programs can use their own revenue for that money.
“I’ve been told they’re not going to ask me for as much, or other boosters, as well,” McKernan said. “Like, ‘hey, we’ve got more money now, we’re in a good spot.”
Athletes can still do third-party deals, which will be advantageous for businesses and athletes in a culture that has become increasingly star-powered.
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“Any other businesses can pay any athlete whatever they want,” Metzinger said.
AJ’s Sports Cards on Drusilla Lane in Baton Rouge has been doing NIL signing deals with athletes, where they come to the shop and autograph memorabilia for fans.
“I think it’s good for the hobby,” said Nikki Erckert, AJ’s Sports Cards owner. “The little collectors get to meet their heroes.”
Erckert said the first NIL deal was with former baseball player Tre Morgan. The return on investment was immediately apparent.
“At least 150 people showed up to our very first in-person signing,” Morgan said.
The next AJ’s signing is Saturday, and it will feature members from the newly crowned LSU baseball champions. Erckert said that the signing was set up months in advance.
“A show that probably would’ve brought in about 500 customers…no telling what that’s going to look like now,” Erckert said.
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Under the new rules, Metzinger said LSU is primed to continue to thrive athletically because of the business support, marketability and revenue opportunities.
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NIL
Big 12, Big Ten announce partnership with PayPal to payout revenue share to student-athletes
Colleges are preparing for revenue-sharing with student-athletes beginning on July 1st. In anticipation of that, the Big 12 and Big Ten have announced a new partnership with PayPal to pay out their student-athletes. Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark appeared on Get Up alongside PayPal CEO Alex Chriss. There, Yormark dove into what made the partnership […]

Colleges are preparing for revenue-sharing with student-athletes beginning on July 1st. In anticipation of that, the Big 12 and Big Ten have announced a new partnership with PayPal to pay out their student-athletes.
Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark appeared on Get Up alongside PayPal CEO Alex Chriss. There, Yormark dove into what made the partnership a good idea for the conference at this point in time.
“July 1 starts rev-share with our student-athletes,” Yormark said. “A long time coming and well deserved from a conference perspective, but I speak beyond just the Big 12. I speak for all of collegiate athletics; we need a reliable payment platform to distribute money to our student-athletes.”
Revenue-sharing stems from the recent House settlement. That is going to lead to several new changes to college athletics and NIL specifically. That includes third-party oversight over NIL, a new enforcement agency, and roster limits. Arguably most important, it also allows for revenue-sharing between schools and student-athletes, with each school being able to share $20.5 million annually.
“We’ve [Big 12 and PayPal] been at this for over 14 months,” Yormark said. “Trying to figure out if there was a place and a point of entry for PayPal in this world of collegiate athletics, and we found it on the heels of the [House] settlement and rev-share. Truly excited about it. When you think about PayPal and Venmo, probably the most culturally relevant payment platform globally. 100 million customers, including consumers and merchants. It’s a big opportunity for the Big 12. Big for college athletics and I truly believe that the product is ubiquitous across all campuses, and today, yes, we’re announcing two conferences, but it’s going to go well beyond that moving forward.”
Per Ross Dellenger, the Big 12 deal with PayPal is significant. It’s added value of about $100 million over five years, or ~$1M per school annually.
“PayPal and Venmo are the applications that college students are using now,” Alex Chriss said. “Over half of college students are using Venmo today, and it’s the ecosystem that they use. Their parents are giving them money. It’s how they’re paying for their pizzas. It’s the ecosystem of the economy of college students. Now, they’re able to get the payouts from revenue share, will be able to do NIL distributions. We’ll be able to give them a debit card. We’ll be giving debit cards with Venmo with their college logo on them. So, we’re enabling this whole ecosystem to work going forward.”
Ultimately, Yormark believes that this step by the Big 12 and the Big Ten is the first step to some uniformity in how student-athletes are paid. Only time will tell, but Alex Chriss is confident that PayPal and Venmo are the platforms to accomplish this.
“It really is,” Chriss said. “We’re in discussions with all the conferences. PayPal is the ecosystem. The easiest way to distribute these funds. You want to make it seamless and simple for student-athletes to be able to get their dollars in their wallet and be able to spend it, and PayPal is the right way to do it.”
NIL
Report: Florida State defends controversial rev-share contract language that concerned agents, rival GMs
Florida State released a statement to CBS Sports defending language in drafts of the school’s revenue-sharing contracts. The school addressed reporting from CBS Sports detailing controversial language, which concerned agents and rival GMs. FSU pointed out that individual situations will be “unique” as the revenue-sharing era gets underway in college athletics. Under the newly approved […]

Florida State released a statement to CBS Sports defending language in drafts of the school’s revenue-sharing contracts. The school addressed reporting from CBS Sports detailing controversial language, which concerned agents and rival GMs.
FSU pointed out that individual situations will be “unique” as the revenue-sharing era gets underway in college athletics. Under the newly approved House v. NCAA settlement — which will be implemented July 1 – schools will be able to directly share up to $20.5 million with athletes, and 75% is widely expected to go toward football.
“As we enter into a new age of collegiate athletics, Florida State has put together an agreement that provides deliverables and expectations for all parties,” Florida State’s statement to CBS Sports read. “Each individual situation will be unique and the hypotheticals are impossible to predict. However, we are committed to continuing to provide an elite experience for our student-athletes in all aspects of their collegiate career. Florida State is looking forward to the mutually beneficial partnerships with our student-athletes in this new era.”
In drafts viewed by CBS Sports, a clause said Florida State could unilaterally extend a player at the end of a contract without going through negotiations with them. Additionally, there’s a maximum $2,500 fine for the first offense is a player loses any team equipment, such as cleats, and the maximum fine for use of a controlled substance for the first time is $1,000.
The drafts also include a clause regarding breach of contract. It includes “illness or injury which is serious enough to affect the value of rights granted to the school,” CBS Sports reported. Florida State could either renegotiate or cancel a player’s deal at its discretion after any sort of injury, according to the way the clause is written. The language concerned rival general managers’ agents who spoke with CBS Sports.
“Some of the concepts are pretty standard,” an agent, who represents at least one player at Florida State, told CBS Sports. “But FSU is going about this far more aggressively than any school I’ve seen. I’m disappointed by the adversarial nature of these contracts.”
Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House v. NCAA settlement earlier this month, officially ushering in the revenue-sharing era in college sports. The cap is set at $20.5 million for the first year of the settlement, and that figure is expected to increase annually as part of the 10-year agreement.
While Florida State has not confirmed how it will distribute the rev-share funds, the Board of Regents paved the way for the university to do so. Many schools across the country are planning to share 75% of the funds with football, 15% with men’s basketball, 5% with women’s basketball and 5% with the remainder of the sports.
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