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Happy Gump Day: College Football Wednesday!

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Happy Gump Day! We’re going to focus on College Football today, despite there being little news out there. Why? Because previews are starting to roll out, as we find ourselves just 95 days from the 2025 season kickoff.

But first, the man who rescued Alabama football and retired as the greatest of all-time, has added more hardware to a trophy case that can fill up a medium-size McMansion in East Mobile at this point.

That’s Emmy award-winning Coach Nick Saban, thank you very much. Imagine being an “emerging talent” in your 70s and bagging an Emmy in your first year? The dude has superhuman work ethic.

We kind of knew this was coming too, because after saving LSU and Alabama football, he also saved the venerable College Gameday broadcast — its rating shot up 25% once Saint Nick grabbed the mic. And though I don’t personally care for McAffee, the interplay of meathead-meets-old-timer has been a ratings bonanza, and is the most unlikely and successful buddy cop show we’ve seen in a while.

And what did the GOAT say about his Emmy nomination? Classic Saban:

“Must have been not a good year for people in the Emmys.”

He also weighed in on playoff expansion: Pandora’s box has been opened, may as well invite a few more to the party.

“Back in the years I was never for expanding the playoff because I thought bowl games were really important to the history and tradition of college football,” Saban said. “Now that we have expanded the playoff, now the bowl games have taken a less significant role. I think expanding the playoff and having as many teams involved as we can —without playing too many games for the players. I think that’s a little bit of a concern — is probably a good thing.”


Now, time for some footbaw.

We begin with genuinely the worst playoff bracket prediction I’ve ever seen:

Please note, for this to happen, Alabama would have to lose to LSU on its home field in the regular season, then lose to LSU in Bryant Denny West. Or Georgia being a mid-seed, and then losing to tissue-soft Oregon. Or that an Illinois team with a catastrophe of a defense will somehow survive the Buckeyes, USC, a trip to Seattle, a trip to Madison, and an Indiana offense in Bloomington that can drop points in a hurry — and do all it to finish third or fourth in the Big 10. Or that the Big 10 will even have four teams for that matter.

We could go on, but the more you look at it, the more impressively terrible it is.


Just a second to toot our own horn here. Roll ‘Bama Roll: The Champagne of ‘Bama Blogs since 2006, has been ranked third among the most influential Tuscaloosa sites, just behind UA Athletics and the Tuscaloosa News. And that’s pretty damned cool. So, thanks for being here with us, guys, and making it your own.


ESPN takes a stab at their Preseason story lines to watch. Of course, Alabama is going to be on there.

3. DeBoer at Alabama, Year 2: …Replacing Nick Saban at Alabama was always going to be a unique conundrum because it’s completely unfair to expect anyone to replace the greatest college football coach of all time. The coach who came after Saban was going to be measured against him. That’s just how this works. While that dynamic is probably unfair, that doesn’t make DeBoer’s task any easier…

I still don’t think most of the CFB media grasp the profound hole KDB found himself in last February. We should recap it though:

  • He had to replace the greatest coach of all time
  • OSU tampering with the roster before Saban even left, taking Alabama’s most important defender with them
  • Lost almost half the class to the initial portal period and a second transfer window after the coaching change
  • Did not have the benefit of signing additional help following that second transfer window
  • Had to re-recruit the entire roster and get them to buy-in, at least to stay
  • Implement two new schemes, and retool much of the program from the ground-up
  • Try and establish recruiting ties 2500 miles away from KDB’s head coaching experience at Fresno and Washington
  • Bring in almost an entirely new staff
  • Hired an offensive coordinator who accepted the job, backed out late, and then left ‘Bama scrambling for a replacement
  • Inherited a team rife with prima donna who too often prioritized self over team, and had been allowed to create a culture of entitlement
  • Inherited two mediocre lines, and a running back corps that has sadly proven to be JAGs
  • Incorporating freshmen and transfers all over the roster.
  • And, when all that was done, the games had to be played, and the Tide had the second-toughest schedule in the SEC and the 7th hardest overall.

Despite that, Alabama was 8-2 in late November, and tracking for a bid in the playoffs. I still maintain that it’s not that ‘Bama finished 9-4 that bothered people, it’s to whom and how those losses occurred: two games especially. If Alabama beats Vandy or Alabama finishes on a high note against a depleted Michigan team, there’s not nearly the pressure on DeBoer this season. He had to have one of those, preferably both. Still, 9-4 with ‘Bama’s back against the wall, and all of the structural woes he inherited, was a good job under the circumstances. And this is functionally Year One in my books.


College Football News is a site I don’t hit up much in the season. But during the offseason, Fuitak does a great job meticulously previewing every college football team in D1, as well as the FCS.

We’ll look at two today: Vanderbilt and Auburn.

snip

For a program with just 54 winning seasons in 121 years, 2024 was magical. Vanderbilt went to a bowl game and won it.

The season opened up with a win over Virginia Tech from the ACC, and ended it with a win over the ACC’s Georgia Tech. It beat Alabama for the first time since 1984. It had its first winning season since 2013. It was super-fun thanks to the wonderful Diego Pavia taking over at quarterback. All of that is what Commodore fans will remember.

We’re grading on a curve here. Going 6-6 in the regular season gets SEC coaches fired, but for Vanderbilt, it wasn’t just about the record. It pushed Texas hard in a 27-24 loss, and it showed up big in tough road defeats to Missouri and LSU.

No, Vanderbilt head coach Clark Lea will never accept any sort of a moral victory, and Pavia sure as shoot won’t, but for all the positives last year, there was a loss to a 3-9 Georgia State, and Alabama was the only regular season victory over a team that finished with a winning record.

This year’s version is loaded with experience, it’s better than the 2024 team, and it might just find enough magic again to keep it all going.

Even if that means another 6-6 regular season.

snip

Let’s start with this. Auburn will have a winning season, and it’ll go to a bowl game, and things will finally trend upwards again. While that might seem like a low bar, after four years without a winning season and no more than six wins since going 9-4 in 2019, being back to potentially normal matters.

Going to Baylor to start the season isn’t a layup, but Ball State, South Alabama, and Mercer will be a base of three wins. It won’t be easy, but Auburn has to beat Kentucky, win at Vanderbilt, and then come up with an upset somewhere.

LOL

Anyway, hit up CFN if you need your college football fix. Best offseason site for previews, IMO.


ESPN was not alone in starting to make predictions for the 2025 campaign: 247 National got in on the prognostications:

Kalen DeBoer would not be able to remove the stench of a season-opening loss to Florida State upon his return to Tuscaloosa if the Crimson Tide fail. Considering last year’s disappointing finish, Alabama is a marked program. Most are anticipate a rebound. Mike Norvell has another portal-infused roster with the Seminoles and after the faceplant in 2024, would love to get off on the right foot against a national brand. However, this is arguably Florida State’s second-toughest game of the year outside of a road trip to Clemson in November.


CBS Sports also has begun their Hawt Takes, and unsurprisingly SEC Hater Emeritus Danny Kannell thinks the SEC is mid.

Danny Kanell: The SEC champion will have a 9-3 regular season record

The SEC continues to increase its overall talent with nearly every transfer portal window, as even the best recruiting programs out of high school have been shopping for additions at positions of need. And while that has boosted the overall talent level of the conference it has also increased the parity and lessened the chances of seeing one team dominate the conference the way that Nick Saban’s Alabama program did throughout a good portion of the 2010s. Danny is doubting the strength of the conference with this prediction as much as the potential for more chaos, as the top teams have quarterback questions and the ability to separate from the pack has become more difficult in the modern era.

I genuinely don’t understand how Panhandle Uncle Rico keeps getting jobs. Schedules as much as talent determine the conference standings. He might not know that, cutting his teeth in the poverty ACC. But Georgia has a much easier path ahead of them this year, and Texas is once again pampered. If the SEC winner has more than two regular season losses, I will crawl to Tallahassee and smooch his fetid chocolate starfish in contrition.

I think I can keep my Chapstick in my pocket though; neither of those are going to happen.


How mad is OSU at having to play the Fox Big Noon game vs. Texas? The (ahem) esteemed lawmakers of the Buckeye State apparently have decided it’s their job to prevent noon kickoffs for all state schools.

No, that’s not a joke.

A bill has been introduced in the legislature to prohibit Ohio State and other state schools from playing most of its home games before 3:30 p.m. Under the terms of the proposal by Rep. Tex Fischer (R), games including at least one state school and games including top-10 teams would be prohibited from starting earlier than the mid-afternoon. With one exception.

“Division (B) of this section does not apply if an earlier start time of a college football game between two teams is a college football tradition,” the bill states. “For this purpose, a ‘college football tradition’ is a start time of a game between the teams of two institutions whose football teams have competed against each other at least fifty times and the start time has been the same for at least ninety-five per cent of those games.”

We have the democracy we deserve — we voted for every single one of these buffoons speedrunning their way to Idiocracy.

I would, however, like to direct the esteemed Assemblymen of Ohio to something called the United States Constitution, specifically Section 1, Article 10, Clause 3 (known as the the Contract Clause.) You sit in in law school, hungover and half-assing your way through the “lesser” provisions, and wait your whole life to see a Contract Clause case in the wild. Then — BAM! — Ohio serves one up for you. G’bless, gentlemen.

(No, we’re not talking about NIL today or the NCAA. It’s an important story, but I refuse to deal with this any more…or at least on this Gump Day).


The other day I made a comment similar to one Saban made regarding Ty Simpson: It’s both a rare trait, but a welcome one, to see perserverance in players now. Some guys have to season in the broth a bit longer. Mac Jones was one such player, so was Mal Moore. Nick Saban sees the same in semi-incumbent QB Ty Simpson:

“Ty was an outstanding high school player, no doubt. He’s a fine young man,” Saban said. “I think his example is a true example of development. He matured for two years, and now he’s getting an opportunity, and his experiences will help him be successful.”

Simpson was a 5-star quarterback and top-25 prospect in the 2022 recruiting class as a high school recruit. He redshirted his true freshman season behind starting quarterback Bryce Young and served as the primary backup during Saban’s final season in 2023 behind Jalen Milroe.

Despite losing the job to Milroe in 2023, Simpson didn’t enter the transfer portal and stuck around as the backup again in 2024. He’s now entering his fourth year in the Crimson Tide program, is the most experienced quarterback in the room, and seems to be in line to take over the starting job this coming fall.


And, finally, I leave you with a moment of levity.

He cracked the code.

Have a great one, Roll Tide.

Poll

Best time for a kickoff? (God’s Right and Proper Central Time Zone, of course).

  • 1%

    Breakfast with the Barn: the 11:00 a.m. JP game

    (4 votes)

  • 54%

    CBS 2:30 afternoon slot, forever and always.

    (123 votes)

  • 10%

    Weird late afternoon ESPN2 slot, like 5 or 6.

    (24 votes)

  • 26%

    Primetime, baby! 7 Central!

    (61 votes)

  • 0%

    I love getting home after the bars close. Give me that 8:30 late SEC Network game!

    (2 votes)

  • 2%

    Depends on how drunk I am.

    (5 votes)

  • 3%

    This is not basketball content. #Refund #BOG

    (8 votes)



227 votes total

Vote Now



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Landing Spots for Top 20 Players

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The 2026 college football transfer portal is officially open and features a boatload of star talent. NIL deals have completely changed the game and turned the portal in to the NCAA’s version of free agency. Offering up game changing talents to the highest bidder.

So where will the best players in the transfer portal land? We look to answer that question with bold predictions for the destinations for the top 20 college football players available starting Jan. 2.

Wayne Knight to Notre Dame

wayne knight
Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images

All-American running back Wayne Knight is one of the elite talents that Sun Belt Conference champion James Madison is losing to the transfer portal this week. While Knight is undersized, the junior is very explosive, and that was proven when he finished sixth in the nation for rushing yards with 1,373 yards.

He is evolving into an elite talent and could be a Heisman contender in 2026 with the right program. That’s why it feels like a perfect fit if he heads to Notre Dame to replace future NFL Draft first-round pick Jeremiyah Love.

Lincoln Keinholz to USF Bulls

Lincoln Kienholz
Samantha Madar/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Following their devastating loss to Miami in the college football playoffs, backup QB Lincoln Keinholz was the first player to jump ship and leave Ohio State for the transfer portal. And it is understandable why, since he is stuck behind freshman Heisman finalist Julian Sayin.

However, he made Sayin work into the late summer to earn the starting job and has a reputation as a great locker room presence and leader. With offensive coordinator Brian Hartline headed to USF to be their new head coach, it would not be a surprise if Keinholz followed to be the new starting QB.

Sam Leavitt to Florida Gators

transfer portal
Joe Rondone/The Republic / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Entering the 2025 season, Arizona State signal-caller Sam Leavitt was seen as one to watch as he was primed for a big breakout season. However, a season-ending foot injury limited him to just seven games. Nevertheless, the sophomore is very smart with a football, has a good arm, and is strong at processing plays before the snap. Plus, he is also dangerous scrambling or tucking the ball and running.

With former Tulane coach Jon Sumrall taking over at Florida, look for the Gators to make a big splash by landing Leavitt.

Quintrevion Wisner to Baylor Bears

tre wisner
Scott Wachter-Imagn Images

There has been a stunning mass exodus of Texas running backs into the transfer portal. The most notable of them is Quintrevion Wisner. The junior had a down season in 2025 as hamstring injuries limited him to just nine starts. However, in 2024, he posted 1,067 rushing yards, reeled in 311 passing yards on 44 receptions, and also had six touchdowns from scrimmage.

The Texas native is sure to draw interest from around the country. However, he will probably stay close to home again and will head to Baylor in the transfer portal.

Rocco Becht to Penn State Nittany Lions

rocco becht
SARAH PHIPPS/THE OKLAHOMAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Iowa State veteran Rocco Becht regressed in year four. After posting career highs of 3,505 passing yards, 33 total TDs, and 318 yards on the ground in 2024, his numbers were down for an 8-4 Cyclones team. However, he is tough, gritty, and is good at extending plays.

While he is a little undersized for the position, doesn’t have a big arm, and he has some decision-making issues, he is a very talented player. With his Cyclones now overseeing things at Penn State, don’t be surprised if Becht reunites with Matt Campbell in State College.

Dylan Raiola to LSU Tigers

dylan raiola
Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

There was a lot of hype surrounding former five-star recruit Dylan Raiola when the hopes of Nebraska’s football program were foisted on his sizable shoulders two years ago. He has an NFL build, arm, and accuracy for the next level. However, he is a classic pocket passer who isn’t very mobile.

Nevertheless, with the right coordinator and QB coach, he has the potential to be a Heisman candidate in his final two seasons. With Lane Kiffin taking over at LSU, they are sure to make a big splash in the transfer portal. Raiola will be that major move.

Isaac Brown to Miami Hurricanes

isaac brown
Jeff Romance-Imagn Images

Stud Louisville running back Isaac Bown is one of the best RB’s in the latest transfer portal. He was limited to nine games in 2025 and rushed over 60 times less than the previous season because of a lower leg injury suffered in November. However, in 2024, he had a breakthrough season as he rushed for 1,173 yards and 11 touchdowns. His 7.1 yards per carry on 165 rushes was among the best in the entire nation among starting backs.

Considering his Miami roots, don’t be surprised if he heads to the Hurricanes to possibly replace Mark Fletcher Jr.

Drew Mestemaker to Oklahoma State Cowboys

drew mestemaker
Stephen Lew-Imagn Images

North Texas QB Drew Mestemaker had a huge season for the Mean Green in 2025. Leading the nation in passing yards with 4,129. That was over 400 more than the second-place finisher. He was also tied for second with 31 TD passes.

He could arguably be the best QB in the transfer portal. So he will draw a ton of interest. However, the current rumors suggest the Texas native is headed to Oklahoma State to play for new head coach Eric Morris. Who just so happens to be his former coach at North Texas.

Byrum Brown to Auburn Tigers

byrum brown
Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images

South Florida veteran Byrum Brown has a ton of potential if he can get into a program that maximizes his talents after four seasons with the Bulls. This past season, he led the team to a rock-solid 9-4 record. Throwing for 3,158 yards with 28 touchdowns and seven interceptions. But most importantly, he also ran for just over 1,000 yards in 2025.

With his former coach, Alex Golesh, taking over at Auburn, it would make sense if he followed him to be the new Tigers head coach.

Nick Marsh to Ohio State Buckeyes

nick marsh
Brendan Mullin-Imagn Images

Ohio State is sure to lose star receiver Carnell Tate to the NFL Draft after a huge breakout season in 2025. While receiver guru Brian Hartline is leaving the program, the Buckeyes will still hold a lot of appeal to stud receivers in the transfer portal. That is why the school replacing Tate with Michigan State sophomore Nick Marsh makes a ton of sense.

While his stats from his first two years don’t jump off the page, he has great size and potential. It is why he is seen as one of the best receivers in the portal. With Julian Sayin throwing passes to him in 2026, he could have a similar breakout year as Tate.

Cam Coleman to Texas Longhorns

Syndication: The Montgomery Advertiser
Jake Crandall/ Advertiser / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Texas Longhorns emerged almost immediately as a top suitor for Cam Coleman after reports surfaced that he would enter the transfer portal. With the 6-foot-3 wideout prioritizing both NIL (reportedly a $2 million price tag) and the opportunity to play with a proven quarterback, there are only a few viable landing spots. Arch Manning recently reduced his NIL earnings from the school’s revenue-sharing pool to facilitate Texas bringing in more talent. Coleman will likely wind up in Austin, giving the Longhorns’ offense a true No. 1 wide receiver with both Manning and Coleman able to turn a great year into being top picks in the 2027 NFL Draft.

Related: Cam Coleman Transfer Landing Spots

John Henry Daley Heads to Michigan Wolverines

NCAA Football: Cincinnati at Utah
Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Since taking over as the Michigan Wolverines’ coach, Kyle Whittingham has been raiding the state of Utah for talent. After poaching BYU’s Jay Hill to take over as the Wolverines’ defensive coordinator, the duo can now turn their focus to luring elite talent out of the state. John Henry Daley, fresh off earning first-team All-Big 12 honors in 2025, is coming off a breakout year with 17.5 tackles for loss and 11.5 sacks in 11 games. The 6-foot-4 edge rusher would provide Michigan’s defense with a blue-chip pass rusher who could be even more impactful next season with Hill as his play-caller.

Caleb Hawkins Lands with Oklahoma State Cowboys

NCAA Football: North Texas at Army
Danny Wild-Imagn Images

The raiding of North Texas will continue by former head coach Eric Morris. In addition to pulling in his former quarterback, Drew Mestemaker, Morris will bring his entire backfield to the Oklahoma State Cowboys’ offense for the 2026 season. Caleb Hawkins, the 6-foot-2 running back, earned first-team American Rookie of the Year honors in 2025 after putting up 1,804 scrimmage yards with 29 total touchdowns as a freshman. He will join the Cowboys’ offense and reunite with Mestemaker and Morris, even as Texas was reportedly focusing on another running back.

Chaz Coleman Returns Home to Ohio State Buckeyes

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Lori Schmidt / Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

It is going to be a do-over for the Ohio State Buckeyes. Chaz Coleman starred at Warren G. Harding High School, but the Buckeyes seemed to pass him over, and that is when the Penn State Nittany Lions swooped in. Fortunately for Ryan Day and Matt Patricia, they get to correct their mistake after Coleman entered the college football transfer portal. While he only had 3 tackles for loss and 1 sack as a freshman, the 6-foot-4 edge defender stood out in his opportunities. The Buckeyes will bring him back home, and by 2027, he will be a first-team All-Big Ten edge rusher.

DJ Lagway to the Baylor Bears

Syndication: Gainesville Sun
Alan Youngblood/Gainesville Sun / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

No one can fault DJ Lagway for trying to make it work with the Florida Gators, a program that could have positioned him for stardom. Unfortunately for him, things just did not work out. The young quarterback needs a change of scenery and would greatly benefit from going to a school where the expectations are more reasonable. The Baylor Bears offer that, and it would be an opportunity to play for the program his father did years ago. If all goes well, maybe we see a Lagway-led Baylor program in the Big 12 Championship Game next December.

Brendan Sorsby to Texas Tech

NCAA Football: Cincinnati at Texas Christian
Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

A brutal showing and exit in the College Football Playoff will likely push the Texas Tech Red Raiders to be even more aggressive in the portal for a top quarterback. While Cincinnati signal-caller Brendan Sorsby might not be on that Sam Leavitt tier of passers, he is not too far behind. Across his time at Indiana and Cincinnati, he has posted a 42–10 TD–INT line with an impressive passing touchdown rate, and he has rushed for over 1,300 yards and 22 touchdowns in his career. He is the caliber of dual-threat quarterback who can truly elevate the Red Raiders’ offense next season.

Read More: Staggering Cost Expected to Land Top QBs in College Football Transfer Portal

Rasheem Biles Joins Ohio State

NCAA Football: Syracuse at Pittsburgh
Barry Reeger-Imagn Images

Yes, after losing in the College Football Playoff, we expect the Buckeyes to go all-out in the transfer portal. It also helps that one of the top defenders available, All-ACC linebacker Rasheem Biles, is an Ohio native who reportedly has real interest in playing for the Buckeyes. We anticipate that Ohio State will come out of January with several top defenders, bringing both Coleman and Biles back home.

Mateen Ibirogba Heads to Oregon

NCAA Football: Wake Forest at Duke
Zachary Taft-Imagn Images

The Oregon Ducks’ defense is about to lose a lot of talent to the 2026 NFL Draft, including projected first-round pick A’Mauri Washington. Dan Lanning’s program has done an excellent job in recent seasons at getting defensive tackles to the pros, which is just another selling point they can offer to Mateen Ibirogba. Coming off a season where he was one of the most disruptive interior defensive linemen in the ACC, the 6-foot-4 standout can step in and become an integral part of Oregon’s defensive success next season.

Omarion Miller Heads West to USC Trojans

NCAA Football: Wyoming at Colorado
Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

With Makai Lemon poised to be a top-20 pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, Lincoln Riley and the USC Trojans need to find a new No. 1 receiver. Cam Coleman would be great, but there are enough needs on the Trojans’ roster that it would probably be wise to spread the money around a bit more. Consequently, USC goes one tier down among the available receivers in the portal and will land Omarion Miller. He earned second-team All-Big 12 honors this past season, averaging an eye-popping 18 yards per reception with 808 receiving yards and 8 touchdowns. He will have a much better quarterback at USC, and functioning as the No. 1 wideout in the Trojans’ offense could propel him to becoming a top-50 pick next year.

Carius Curne to Ole Miss

NCAA Football: Louisiana State at Mississippi
Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

With the money saved by not engaging in a bidding war for Lane Kiffin, the Ole Miss Rebels should remain major players in the college football transfer portal. We also suspect that with the hiring of Frank Wilson, the former interim coach at LSU, the Rebels’ new running backs coach will pull some of the elite talent out of Louisiana. Offensive lineman Carius Curne will likely turn down an opportunity to return home to Arkansas, instead taking a rewarding NIL deal to start on the Rebels’ offensive line next season.

After earning his journalism degree in 2017, Jason Burgos served as a contributor to several sites, including MMA Sucka … More about Jason Burgos



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Sugar Bowl Highlights: Ole Miss Knocks Off Georgia in CFP Sugar Bowl Thriller

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Live Coverage for this has ended

12:25a ET

Georgia with a much-needed answer

11:45p ET

Ole Miss hits go-ahead field goal

11:09p ET

Ole Miss recaptures 3-point lead

11:07p ET

Ole Miss’ discipline leads to TD

10:38p ET

Georgia’s fake punt keeps drive alive

10:33p ET

Georgia returns fumble for a touchdown

10:32p ET

Kewan Lacy finds the end zone

9:18p ET

Gunner Stockton scores another rushing TD

9:12p ET

Georgia captures lead with first touchdown of the Sugar Bowl

9:07p ET

Ole Miss answers quickly

8:59p ET

Ole Miss kicker tops his own record

8:37p ET

Record-setting FG gives Ole Miss lead

Live Coverage for this began on 12:30a ET



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Dengler Domain: College Football | News, Sports, Jobs

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Sean Dengler.

College football is a mess. Talent is not worse, but something about the game feels off with where the sport is heading. The façade of being on scholarship was all which mattered did not make sense in comparison to when coaches started making lucrative salaries and athletic conferences began signing rich media rights deals. Being compensated for their time made sense, but the way they are being paid feels like the Wild West. With schools bidding on players, other athletes sitting out mid-season to transfer to a new team the next season, and athletes feeling like mercenaries, hopping from one team to the next.

NIL was supposed to have the athletes starring in a local car dealership advertisement. What has happened from the fan’s perspective is it feels like it has become easier to buy the best team. Using merit to succeed has fallen to the wayside while money solves the problems. This has left an unregulated, gross feeling hovering above college football. Change needs to come where athletes are paid their worth, but they also do not feel like mercenaries. The bond between players and fans from building a program instead of buying one is falling to the wayside.

The loss of regionalism in athletic conferences has also created friction. The Big Ten and the SEC started this trouble, but the ACC and Big 12 have also pushed to reach coast to coast while destroying a historic conference, PAC-12, in the process. If our grandparents’ generation found out the Hawkeyes were playing at Rutgers, and the Cyclones were playing at the University of Central Florida, they would roll over in their grave twofold.

This loss of regionalism and the mercenary aspect show the fractures Americans see in their society. Like the rest of society, and what has changed from the past is capital is king. College football has become about the bottom line. Athletes are quick to change their situation if met with a tiny bit of friction while universities sell out their fanbases to join conferences which make zero regional or numerical sense.

“Not falling behind” is the excuse given for why these decisions are being made. Change must happen because it is a different world. Society has seen this type of comment before in other parts of society. When it comes to agriculture, it was “go big or go home.” This has led to rural towns hollowing out, medical clinics closing, and churches and schools consolidating. This has all come in the name of “change was needed.” The only ones benefiting from the change are those hoarding the capital at the expense of the loss of the collectiveness everyone else enjoys from college football.

College football is also following the rest of the American economy where it forms a free market ensuring fair competition, minus athletes getting paid but this would work under the right conditions, to where a lot of markets like college football are less regulated and the one with the most capital has the best chance at succeeding. Whether having college football like this be the best for society does not matter because this is how the “market” is supposed to be. The big get bigger, the smaller get smaller, and those in the middle continue to hollow out.

Whether college sports, agriculture, or other parts of society, this is the current path. Until Americans decide to make markets about fair competition and not one decided by the few at the top, this problem will keep existing throughout society. The mess college football is in is a symptom of this bigger problem. To change, we all will need to fight for a better, more fair American society.

Sean Dengler is a writer, comedian, now-retired beginning farmer, and host of the Pandaring Talk podcast who grew up on a farm between Traer and Dysart. You can reach him at sean.h.dengler@gmail.com.





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College football’s transfer portal officially opens Jan. 2. What to know about player movement :: WRAL.com

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The college football season isn’t over yet and won’t be for several weeks, but the sport’s offseason, if you can even call it that, has been in full swing for quite some time — hirings, firings and players announcing they’re returning or leaving or heading to the NFL. 

Many players already know where they’re headed, having worked out deals through agents with new schools. Everyone can begin making it official Jan. 2, the official start of college football’s transfer window.

Unlike in previous years, there is just one transfer window. Players will not have the opportunity to change teams later in the spring. The NCAA approved the change to a single window in October, hoping to bring a little more stability to the sport — if such a thing is possible in college football.

MORE: College football transfer portal tracker for Duke, North Carolina and North Carolina State

Although schools are limited to spending $20.5 million to directly pay athletes, the cost to lure and keep any individual player continues to rise, especially for quarterbacks. ESPN’s Pete Thamel reported that the market for top quarterbacks could reach $5 million. 

Duke’s Darian Mensah was among the highest-paid quarterbacks this season, at a reported $4 million. Mensah, the ACC leader in passing yards and passing touchdowns in 2025, has said he would return to the Blue Devils for the 2026 season. 

There are several high-profile quarterbacks who intend to transfer, including TCU’s Josh Hoover, Nebraska’s Dylan Raiola, Cincinnati’s Brendan Sorsby. NC State’s CJ Bailey could add to the list. High-profile programs like Indiana, Miami and LSU are in the market for quarterback transfers.

Despite the change to a single window, it’s not perfect. The portal is open from Jan. 2 to Jan. 16, while the College Football Playoff is happening. It closes before the national championship game. Players on those two teams can enter the portal from Jan. 20 through Jan. 24. 

Players need only to enter the portal during the window. They don’t have to choose their school during that time. However, the school calendar plays a role if players want to participate in spring practice.

Players have been entering the portal – not a physical place, just a NCAA database — since the regular season wrapped up in late November.

More than a dozen North Carolina players, for example, plan to transfer from Bill Belichick’s program, including leading tackler Khmori House, standout defensive end Tyler Thompson and running back Davion Gause.

NC State running back Hollywood Smothers, an All-ACC first-team selection, skipped the team’s bowl victory over Memphis and plans to transfer or enter the NFL Draft.

Coaches signed new recruiting classes in early December without knowing exactly what spots they might need to fill.

“You take your high school class based on who you know is leaving the program, like we’ll do our seniors and things like that,” NC State coach Dave Doeren said in December. “That’s where the portal now has to supplement. You may have more attrition than you expected at a certain position and you didn’t sign as many high school players as you needed.”

Coaches led the push from the old system which had a transfer window in December (one of the busiest months of the calendar for coaches) and another in April after most programs completed spring ball. Some pushed for the single window to be in the spring, and the NCAA initially adopted a 10-day period, before extending it to 15 days.

“Every college coach would tell you that our calendar is just not in sync with the demands of what’s happening in our sport,” Doeren said. “We need to get our arms around that to make our jobs a little bit easier from a planning standpoint.”

The new single window does help with that. Rosters are locked in early in the year.

UNC made heavy use of the post-spring portal in 2025, after the mid-December 2024 hiring of head coach Bill Belichick, and lost several key players as well. Many programs have stopped holding traditional spring games, in part due to concerns that other coaches could scout those games and try to pluck players from their roster.

“The best thing about this year is that on Jan. 17, the portal will close and you’ll be able to build your team, knowing that when you go to spring ball, that is your team,” UNC general manager Michael Lombardi said. “Knowing that when you go through your offseason program, that is your team.”





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Lane Kiffin receives $500,000 payout from LSU after Ole Miss advances to College Football Playoff semifinal

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With Ole Miss’ Sugar Bowl victory over Georgia in the Sugar Bowl, Lane Kiffin will receive another bonus. Per the terms of his contract at LSU, he will get the $500,000 he would have gotten from the Rebels for advancing to the College Football Playoff semifinal.

Kiffin was already set to receive a payout as a result of Ole Miss’ first-round win over Tulane. That set him up for a $250,000 payday, which was the amount he would have received from the school if he was coaching in the game. Now, that figure will go up.

After Kiffin’s high-profile departure for LSU, Pete Golding took over as Ole Miss’ full-time head coach. But the Tigers said they would include “ancillary benefits” in Kiffin’s deal with the Rebels, and that means a $500,000 payout because his former program is advancing in the CFP.

Kiffin’s high-profile departure for LSU came after Ole Miss took down Mississippi State to complete the first 11-win regular season in program history. It also helped the Rebels virtually secure a spot in the College Football Playoff, and they hosted the first-round game on Saturday.

Per the terms of Kiffin’s contract at Ole Miss, there would be two more escalators if the Rebels keep going in the CFP. His payout would increase to $750,000 if they advance to the national championship and go up to $1 million if Ole Miss wins it all. LSU vowed to pay that same amount after Kiffin’s departure prior to the postseason.

“Coach will be entitled to receive a payment in an amount equal to the amount Coach would have been entitled to receive had he remained Head Coach at Coach’s immediate prior employer and coached the prior employer’s football team through the 2025-26 CFP,” Kiffin’s contract at LSU reads. “… If applicable, the payment under this section may be paid from affiliated foundation funds and shall be paid within 30 days following the prior employer’s team being eliminated from the 2025-26 CFP.”

Ole Miss takes down Georgia in thrilling Sugar Bowl

Ole Miss and Georgia square off in a thriller at the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans on Thursday. The two teams combined to score 30 points in the fourth quarter as the Rebels rallied to take down the Bulldogs, 39-34.

Trinidad Chambliss had a monster day, completing 30 of 46 passes for 362 yards and two touchdowns. Harrison Wallace III also had a career night, hauling in nine receptions for 156 yards and a touchdown. De’Zhaun Stribling also had a big performance with seven receptions for 122 yards.

For Golding, it marks a second straight victory as head coach after taking over for Lane Kiffin. Ole Miss will now get ready to take on Miami in the Fiesta Bowl.



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Football Transfer Portal Chaos Continues Despite New Rules

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Football Transfer Portal Chaos Continues Despite New Rules



































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