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Has parity arrived? Transfer portal, NIL money credited for tighter games | News, Sports, Jobs
Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia (2) poses with a fan after the team’s win after an NCAA college football game against LSU, Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Quarterback Diego Pavia ran for a first down only to stop at the LSU 1, sacrificing a chance to pad his stats to ensure Vanderbilt could run out the clock for a big Southeastern Conference win.
It’s the type of smart decision coach Clark Lea wants as he looks for every possible edge. The moves have never been more crucial than now.
“I feel like I’m coaching in the NFL now,” Lea said Tuesday. “I feel like every game I’ve got to be dialed into the situations and I’ve got to be on point to make sure we’re putting the team in position to be successful.”
Read between the lines and what Lea is saying is that his team is competitive in far more games than it used to be. Vandy hasn’t been this good in years — and the Commodores are not alone. Look at the standings and the rankings and teams like Georgia Tech, Texas Tech, Indiana, SMU and Cincinnati are in the mix for conference titles and playoff berths.
The transfer portal and NIL money have helped level the playing field across college football with talented players able to move around rather than waiting their turns at traditional powers. The result is the type of parity that makes the NFL must-see TV with the competition tighter than ever, especially at Power Four conferences.
Southeastern Conference games currently have an average margin of victory of 10.0 points a game, which is on pace for the slimmest for any power conference since at least 2000 and the SEC’s lowest since 11.2 in 2006. The NFL itself has an average margin of victory of 10.1 points per game going into Week 7.
It’s a far cry from the SEC average margin of victory between 2010 and 2023, when it was at least 16.7 points for league games.
“A lot of people probably are talking about there’s more parity than it’s ever been,” Oklahoma coach Brent Venables said. “And I think that’s exciting for the game.”
Not confined to the SEC
The advent of the name, image and likeness era in July 2021 sent money flowing into college sports and the impact has been immense. Combined with loosened transfer rules — players no longer have to sit out a season at their new school — the result has been college free agency, which hundreds of athletes changing schools every season, often lured by lucrative, booster- and sponsor-backed NIL deals.
In that first season of NIL in 2021-22, the margin of victory was 18 points for the Big Ten, 15.7 points for both the SEC and Pac-12, 15.2 for the Big 12 and 14.1 for the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Now the ACC has an average margin of 13 points per victory with the Big 12 at 14.5 points and the Big Ten at 15.5 points.
LSU coach Brian Kelly, whose Tigers lost 31-24 to Vanderbilt last week, pointed toward last week’s slate of SEC games: Kentucky took then-No. 16 Texas to overtime before losing. Auburn lost in overtime to Missouri. Arkansas forced Texas A&M, the only undefeated team left in the SEC, to pull out a 45-42 win.
“I wouldn’t stand up here and say, ‘Hey, all these teams are good because they got money.’ That’s disingenuous,” Kelly said. “But it does play into it. There’s no doubt about it, and I think we see that within the SEC.”
Money matters
Ohio State won the national championship last season and much was made about how much NIL played a role in stacking the roster with talent. Texas Tech’s roster is reportedly filled with NIL millionaries to augment the revenue-sharing distributions of up to $20.5 million allowed for each school under the House settlement.
The Red Raiders are 6-1 coming off their first loss, 26-22 at Arizona State, with a path still open to the Big 12 title game and a College Football Playoff berth.
In a terrible year for Wisconsin, athletic director Chris McIntosh sent a letter to season-ticket holders committing to spending more money on infrastructure, staff and, yes, to attract and retain athletes.
“In this new era of collegiate athletics, the clear reality is that high expectations must be matched with an equal level of support,” he wrote.
Don’t forget the transfer portal
Georgia coach Kirby Smart said the transfer portal gives teams a chance to add an elite group or find just the right quarterback or dynamic player to finish off a roster. Beyond more competitive games going down to the wire, there also are more new teams in the AP Top 25.
“That’s the life that we’re in, and that’s the world that we’re in,” Smart said. “I don’t know that it’s going to change. I think it’s football. I think it’s more interesting because games that are tighter are more interesting than games that aren’t.”
Lea said the transfer portal and NIL have been “huge” ar Vanderbilt. Going from 5-7 in 2022 to 2-10 in 2023 made clear the need for more resources.
“The minute we did it, this whole thing changed,” Lea said. “And it changed for the better.”
The Commodores are 6-1 and No. 10 in the country, their highest ranking since 1947. Key portal additions include Pavia, who cited his potential NIL earnings when he got a federal injunction to play this season, tight end Eli Stowers and defensive ends Khordae Sydnor and Zaylin Wood.
“That’s why we are where we are,” Lea said.
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Three Phoenix Named All-Americans – Elon University Athletics
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Elon Athletics
Jeff Yurk Voted First Team All-American Twice
- First Team All-American (FCS Football Central)
- First Team All-American (Stats Perform FCS)
- Second Team All-American (Associated Press)
- Second Team All-American (American Football Coaches Association)
Yurk finished his fourth season with the Phoenix as Elon’s all-time leading punter. As a senior this fall, Yurk ranked second in the FCS and third in all of college football in punting average (48.3 yards). He tallied 17 punts inside the 20-yard line and 24 punts of greater than 50 or more yards. Yurk dominated his CAA competition during his senior season, averaging more than five yards per punt greater than any other punter in the league. He concludes his Phoenix career as Elon’s all-time leader in career punting average and has the top three seasons by punting average in program history.
- Second Team All-American (FCS Football Central)
- Second Team All-American (Stats Perform FCS)
- Second Team All-American (Associated Press)
Brown became the first Elon player ever with double-digit sacks in a season (12.0) during his standout sophomore campaign this fall. Brown broke Elon’s single-season FCS sacks record and tied the program’s FCS career sacks record (16.5) in just two years. He led the CAA in sacks by 2.5 and was the only CAA player with double-digit sacks. Brown ranked top-15 nationally in forced fumbles, sacks, and tackles for loss. The Jacksonville native was twice named CAA Defensive Player of the Week in 2025.
- Honorable Mention All-American (Associated Press)
Barnes was chosen as an Associated Press Honorable Mention All-American following his first full season as Elon’s starting kicker. The sophomore finished 15-for-18 on field goals and missed just one attempt inside 50 yards. He was a perfect 40-for-40 on PATs, the most in the CAA without a miss. His 85 points were the second most in the CAA among kickers and first on the team. On kickoff duty, he recorded 20 touchbacks on 49 kickoffs.
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Big Ten Coach Exposes Fake NIL Offers Ahead of Bowl Game
The Minnesota Golden Gophers are 7-5 this season following a season-ending home win over the Wisconsin Badgers with one final matchup left on Friday, Dec. 26 (4:30 p.m.) at Chase Field in Phoenix against the New Mexico Lobos in the Rate Bowl.
The Golden Gophers are led by charismatic head coach P.J. Fleck, known for his motivational slogans (‘Row the Boat’) and history of getting maximum effort and performance out of his oftentimes overmatched teams.
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Fleck coaches in a brave new world of college football including NIL (Name, Image and Likeness) payments for college football players that are often set up by universities, granting lucrative opportunities for student athletes to earn off of sponsorship deals.
On Wednesday, Fleck spoke at a press conference during which he detailed the head spinning world of NIL payments and negotiations while stating that some offers used as bargaining chips by players are not real in his personal estimation.
Fleck’s Stunning NIL Admission
Fleck’s story on NIL was shared by Tony Liebert of ‘Bring Me the News,’ a media company based in Minneapolis.
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“I don’t think the general public actually truly knows what college football truly looks like,” Fleck said.
He painted the picture of a complex process of negotiating contracts that lacks the structure of the National Football League’s professional contracts.
“I think that everybody has representation now,” Fleck said, with the goal of “getting the most money they possibly can.”
He spoke about the complex roles college coaches play in the process.
“The roles we’re in is like, you’re the head coach, you’re the president, you’re the owner, you’re the GM, you’re the director of player personnel, and you’ve almost got to be a negotiator as well of what you have in your budget…And you’re doing that without the systems that the NFL has in place,” Fleck added.
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Fake NIL Offers Cloud Negotiation Process, Fleck Says
A media member commented on the lack of a salary cap in the sport, musing that it must be difficult for Fleck and other coaches to know how much each player is being offered by other schools before writing, proposing, offering and negotiating contracts.
“Sometimes those offers are real, sometimes those offers aren’t real,” Fleck added.
“It is a very unique environment to work in,” Fleck added.
“I truly believe…You could put a camera on somebody’s shoulder…You (could) do a reality show of what’s going on right now,” the Golden Gophers coach added, gesturing that it’s a wild, unpredictable situation.
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“I don’t think the general public truly knows what college football looks like when you peel back the onion.”
Related: Penn State Fans Blast Nick Saban For Comments on New HC Matt Campbell
Related: Michigan’s Kenny Dillingham Chances Get Update From ESPN Reporter
This story was originally published by Athlon Sports on Dec 18, 2025, where it first appeared in the College section. Add Athlon Sports as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
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Frustrated Ron DeSantis waits for Donald Trump to address college sports NIL issues
Gov. Ron DeSantis says college football is a “total mess” in light of athletes shopping around for better deals from programs, and that his efforts to reform it have been paused by Donald Trump’s White House.
Speaking in Sebring, DeSantis said he spoke to a bipartisan group of Governors “about a year ago” and said Governors on both sides of the aisle wanted to “come up with a framework.”
“Honestly, you really only need 10, 12 states, right? Because, you know, if you get Florida, Texas, Georgia, Alabama, Michigan, now you need Indiana, California,” DeSantis said, explaining that once states with “big-time programs” act, that would be enough to set up a workable structure.
But DeSantis said comments by Trump that the federal government planned to step in halted the state-led effort.
“So we’re like, all right, we’ll let the feds do it,” DeSantis added.

DeSantis said as early as last year that he wanted Governors to join him in some reform effort.
“I know they’re working on something, but I think it’s hit rock bottom just in terms of all the static that’s in the system,” DeSantis said.
He noted that “general managers” in college football make it “like a professional thing,” adding that many of the athletes recruited “haven’t even really produced that well.”
He also suggested that athletes are currently holding up programs for more money when they are performing.
“Now it’s like they have more rights than pro athletes,” he said.

“A quarterback will, you know, throw for four touchdowns. The third game of the season (he will) go, ‘Hey, coach, any more NIL money? Oh, I’m going to hit the transfer portal.’ And then you just go hop around schools. So you can play for four or five schools the way it goes now. And you can even play a few games, do very well, sit out and still get eligibility for the next year.”
Players’ mobility hurts programs, he argued.
“It’s hard to even know whether your teams are going to be good year after year because you don’t know who you’re going to lose. And then to do the transfer portal, right as we’re getting into the playoff, how does that make sense where these teams are going to have to make the decision?”
While the Governor stopped short of saying he regrets signing the name, image and likeness legislation that helped start the current cycle of professionalization of college sports, he does want a “happy medium” between athletes not being compensated and the current system.
But with time running out, reforms may not be realized before DeSantis leaves Tallahassee.
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$64 million college football coach emerges as prime candidate to replace Sherrone Moore at Michigan
Less than a week after Michigan dismissed Sherrone Moore for cause, the Wolverines are navigating a condensed and high-pressure coaching search, with at least one prominent candidate already drawing serious consideration.
Michigan closed the 2025 regular season 9–3 (7-2 Big Ten) and will play No. 13 Texas in the Cheez-It Citrus Bowl on December 31 under interim coach Biff Poggi.
The program swiftly moved to remove Moore on December 10 after an internal probe concluded that there was an inappropriate relationship with a staff member.
While a cluster of candidates has emerged across national hot boards and analyst shows, college football analyst Josh Pate on Tuesday specifically singled out Missouri’s Eli Drinkwitz.
“I think Eli Drinkwitz’s name is involved here,” Pate said. “Names like Eli Drinkwitz get thrown out, and people are really quick to scoff at it… I have always been baffled by people who turn their nose up at Eli Drinkwitz. It’s well known in the SEC, he’s one of the better staffers in the country.”

A former offensive coordinator at Boise State and NC State who won a Sun Belt title at Appalachian State in 2019, Drinkwitz inherited Missouri in 2020 and built the program to back-to-back double-digit win seasons (2023-24) and an 8–4 showing in 2025.
That on-field progress led to a recent six-year contract extension in late November, which anchors him at roughly $10–10.75 million annually and includes significant buyout provisions.
Drinkwitz has also publicly pushed back on any rumors, calling coaching carousel speculation “just a distraction,” saying he loves Mizzou, is focused on the job, and recently signed an extension.
On the Michigan front, the program has indicated it hopes to finalize a hire before the end of December, a timeline that highlights how little margin the search affords.
In the next two weeks, expect intensified contact between Michigan’s search firm and top-tier candidates, a group many believe includes Drinkwitz.
Read More at College Football HQ
- $3.7 million college football head coach named clear candidate for Michigan vacancy
- College football program signs $1.2 million deal with NFL legend
- College Football Playoff team losing all-conference player to transfer portal
- $2.1 million college football QB announces return to Big Ten program
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Talent pipeline developing between Carroll and Montana
HELENA — It’s been a two-way relationship between the Carroll College and University of Montana football programs.
Some guys who didn’t quite stick with the Grizzlies — like current Carroll quarterback Kaden Huot — have had success in Helena. And on the other side of the equation, a standout few have jumped up from the NAIA level to the Division I FCS level.
Each of the past two seasons, Carroll has produced the Frontier Conference defensive player of the year. And each time, that player has subsequently transferred to Montana.
“It shows well for our ability to develop,” Carroll head coach Troy Purcell told MTN Sports, “where they didn’t have that opportunity, and now with our coaching and our structure here and our culture here, to develop fine young men and great football players.”
On Dec. 10, Saints cornerback Braeden Orlandi — the NAIA’s reigning tackles leader — announced he was leaving Helena for Missoula. And the year before, it was NAIA All-American Hunter Peck trading Purple and Gold for Maroon and Silver. And following his first regular season with the Griz, Peck made the Big Sky all-conference first team, something he credits his time at Carroll for making possible.
“They did a great job with taking me in, developing me not (just) into a football player, but a young man, as well,” Peck said of his four years at Carroll. “And so, those life lessons are ones that you take off the football field and are arguably the most important part of the game.”
So, in this transfer-portal-and-NIL-dominated era of college athletics, the Carroll coaching staff said they understand their position in the larger college football ecosystem.
“Let us develop you. Let us make you the best you can possibly be for two to three years, get some tape, get some good film out there,” Purcell said. “You get some great ball in along the way. And then when the time is right, and it looks good, you have an opportunity to go up, maybe put a little money in your pocket, and get to play at a higher level. So, maybe that kid could be a walk-on but now has an opportunity to play for us, and like I said, we can develop him.”
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Ohio State standout pauses College Football Playoff prep to use NIL for good: ‘I want people to feel loved’
COLUMBUS, Ohio — They wore red aprons, waited their turn in a line of volunteers and carried bags filled with toys through the Lausche Building at the Ohio Expo Center & State Fairgrounds.
In their actions, they were unassuming, helping bring holiday joy to families in central Ohio. But these volunteers were far from unrecognizable in Columbus.
They were safety Jaylen McClain, defensive tackle Eddrick Houston, safety Caleb Downs and running back James Peoples — a collection of some of Ohio State football’s top contributors this season.
And they were there to fulfill a vision of McClain’s.
The McClain family recently launched Everyday Legends — a foundation created to, “honor and uplift individuals who demonstrate excellence in scholarship, service, and sportsmanship.”
One of its first initiatives came via a partnership with the Salvation Army in Central Ohio. Courtesy of opportunities presented through college football’s name, image and likeness rules, McClain started a virtual toy drive in which donors could purchase toys through an Amazon wish list put together by the foundation with gifts going directly toward Wednesday’s event.
With his teammates working alongside him, McClain — who went to Target the day after Ohio State’s loss in the Big Ten Championship Game to ensure enough toys were purchased — helped those in a community far from his home state of New Jersey.
“I didn’t have everything, but my parents provided so much support for me and made sacrifices for my life,” McClain told cleveland.com. “Now that I have a bigger platform for myself as a college football player and NIL, I’m able to give my blessings off to other people, other foundations and be able to recognize other people that also have the blessings.”
As the foundation’s name suggests, McClain co-founded this venture with intentions of helping everyday people in our lives. His goals range from toy drives to buying uniforms for his youth football team and helping his high school, Seton Hall Prep.
“The intended goal is to provide support for any initiatives in any of those pillars (athletics, scholastics and community),” said Syreeta McClain, Jaylen’s mother.
“Your influence really carries,” she later added. “It carries some weight, so people are willing to give and people are willing to donate and make an impact. It really helps to make an impact. That’s the intended goal in all this: to be able to transcend the sport.”
Jaylen grew up in a family familiar with football.
One of his brothers, KJ McClain, recently signed with Tennessee. Another brother, Cameron McClain, is in the 2028 class with offers trickling in.
His father, Maurice McClain, played at Syracuse (1998-2001) and overlapped with Matt Patricia — a former graduate assistant for the Orange who is now Ohio State’s defensive coordinator.
Athletes such as Maurice didn’t have NIL privileges to help get through college, but his sons are experiencing a new era in the sport. They’re leaning on those opportunities to grow their foundation.
“He’s just like, ‘You’ve got the platform. Use it. If you could do it, then you should be able to do it. It goes a long way and helps other people as well,’” Jaylen said.

Others in Ohio State’s locker room have taken a similar approach in utilizing their NIL privileges.
In July, Downs’ foundation held an event at Topgolf in Columbus to raise awareness for families experiencing homelessness. Many Ohio State players and coaches were present for it.
While helping those in need, Downs also provided a blueprint for how NIL should be used in Columbus.
“He’s a great role model for not just me, but a lot of other people on this team,” Jaylen said. “… Just to be around him every day, I get to soak in a lot of stuff and just learn so much from him. To see how he carries himself, how he moves in terms of community service and how he moves on the field – obviously, it means a lot to me.”
The willingness to help comes without a need to ask, Jaylen added.
When word started to spread about Everyday Legends working with the Salvation Army, players reached out to Jaylen with intentions of assisting.
“We’re not just all about football. We actually have a soul, too, and care about others,” Houston said.

The toy drive, in part due to the effort of Everyday Legends, will provide gifts for more than 4,000 families in the area during the holiday season.
Jaylen hopes it’s only the start of creating a larger legacy in Columbus, which is also fueled by his play as Ohio State prepares for the upcoming College Football Playoff.
“I just want to be able to give back,” Jaylen said. “I want people to feel supported. I want people to feel loved.”
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