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NIL

‘I Want to Keep My Head Down and Grind’

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By: D. Scott Fritchen

There are simply so many ways to begin a story about Austin Romaine. He is technically sound. He is mean. The 6-foot-2, 245-pound junior is everything you want in a linebacker. He smiles as he thinks back to his early days as a child from Hillsboro, Missouri, and how he became one of the best all-around players in the state. He played with passion. He played hungry. He received a scholarship offer from Harvard. He thought that was cool. But he knew that he was going to Kansas State, the only Power 4 school to offer him a scholarship. That’s all he needed — a golden ticket, a chance to live out his dream in this purple-and-white world, the happiest place on earth.

 

We can start the story from the beginning. Google “Hillsboro High School” and the accompanying image isn’t the academic building that houses more than 1,000 students on 123 Leon Hall Parkway in Hillsboro, Missouri. No, Google the high school and the image that pops up is the school’s football field. It’s a beautiful sight, really, with the sun dropping below the trees and large stadium lights towering over the game played below.

 

The field is where Romaine dominated as one of the nation’s top-50 inside linebackers, and it’s where he rushed for more than 3,000 yards and scored 45 touchdowns during a remarkable career. There’s a part of Romaine who always thought he’d play baseball — Jason, his father, put a baseball into Austin’s hand before he could walk — but Romaine’s strides and devastation between the lines demanded the attention of college football scouts.

 

Romaine 25 SE

Romaine came to K-State. That was a no-brainer. He arrived at K-State as a three-star recruit and the 49th-best inside linebacker in the Class of 2023 by ESPN after earning first-team all-state honors.
 
Hillsboro High head coach Bill Sucharski was understandably aghast over Romaine’s on-field exploits — and where they could lead him someday.
 
“When you watch football games there are players who are game changers,” Sucharski says. “Austin was that type of player. I watched several players who became NFL players, and you could tell they were different than other kids on the field.
 
“That was Austin.”
 

Romaine 25 SE

On Wednesday, inside the team theater room at the Vanier Family Football Complex, Romaine appears, dare we say, a little bit bashful at the heaping praise that has been laid at his feet over the summer of 2025, and as he grinded, and watched film, and watched more film, and worked out, and hit the ice tubs, and took moments now and then just to hang out with his teammates. 
 
Sometimes his teammates will say, “Congratulations.” But Romaine, without playing a single down this fall, often doesn’t know the reason behind his teammates’ praise. Romaine hears nice things about his play, but he tries to stay away from it all. Romaine even deleted his Twitter account.
 
“The preseason accolades can come out,” Romaine says, “but they don’t mean anything unless they’re after the season. I want to keep my head down and grind.”
 
One day, Romaine is on watch lists for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy and Butkus Award. The next day he’s named the best defensive player in the Big 12 Conference by Pro Football Focus. And the next day he’s listed as the highest-graded returning linebacker among Power 4 schools.
 
“I’m excited because I think he’s going to have an All-American type season,” K-State head coach Chris Klieman says.
 
Romaine has started 17 games over the last two seasons, including 12 starts during the Wildcats’ 9-4 campaign in 2024. Romaine finished with 96 tackles to go along with 7.5 tackles for loss, two sacks, three forced fumbles and two pass breakups over his 621 defensive snaps en route to All-Big 12 Second Team honors. 
 
“I think he’s one of the best linebackers we’ve had to play in this system, whether it’s been here or at other jobs that I’ve had,” Klieman says. “This kid is a great leader, great tackler, he’s got a great base to him, and he’s very athletic.”
 

Romaine 25 SE

Romaine has already shown that he’s a quick learner. For all the I-remember-when stories old men will swap in donut shops across small Kansas towns years from now, this story might not be in the conversation, but it’s a critical piece to what we’re seeing now.
 
Here’s the story: Romaine was thrust into action as a true freshman due to an array of injuries that plagued the linebacker position in 2023. He played in 12 games with five starts while earning votes from the league’s coaches for Big 12 Defensive Freshman of the Year honors. His five starts were the most by a K-State freshman linebacker since at least 1988. He had 22 tackles, 3.0 tackles for loss and one sack over his 320 defensive snaps while also seeing time on 67 special teams plays.
 
He was forced into action when sixth-year senior Deuce Green, the heartbeat of the defense, went down with a season-ending injury. Daunting? For sure. But Romaine held his own — despite playing part of the season with a broken left hand.
 
“It’s crazy just being thrown in there,” Romaine says. “I didn’t know much. It pushed me along a lot faster, being next to Austin Moore and Deuce Green, and having Deuce behind me all the time, helping me. It pushed my development a lot faster.”
 
That’s a big part of the Austin Romaine story. 
 
“We never anticipated him playing as a true freshman and all of the sudden he gets thrown in there,” K-State linebackers coach Steve Stanard says. “Austin has made tremendous gains.”
 
Last season, in his first season as a full-time starter, Romaine posted the most tackles by a K-State player since Jayd Kirby had 99 stops in 2017. Romaine had a career-high 12 tackles at West Virginia, Houston and Iowa State. Two of his forced fumbles led to game-winning scores. One was returned 60 yards for a touchdown at Tulane in a seven-point win and another forced fumble led to a 51-yard field goal against Kansas in a two-point victory.
 

Romaine 25 SE

There was a moment that Wildcat Nation didn’t see. It came as Romaine quietly stood outside the locker room at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona. K-State had just battled to a 44-41 come-from-behind victory over Rutgers. Senior Austin Moore, who seemingly forever was a standout linebacker and team leader, in his final words before disappearing into the locker room for the last time, pointed at Romaine, turned to reporters, and said, “This guy is going to be a pro!”
 
“Ever since I got here, I looked up to Austin Moore,” Romaine says. “He did everything right on and off the field as a player and leader. To get that compliment from him felt really good. To play and learn from him for two years really helped me.”
 

Romaine 25 SE

Now, Stanard chuckles. Some guys, behind their experience and playmaking ability and leadership capability, simply become a pillar of the program. That’s Romaine.
 
“Austin is going into his third year, and it feels like he’s been here for five,” Stanard says. “He sees the game at a different speed. He’s ahead of the shifts and motions and recognizes formations and what plays are coming out of formations. He’s always trying to get better and hone the craft. That’s what I really, really respect.”
 
Romaine is taking second-level and third-level steps as he prepares for the fall. He’s a demon on the field. He’s a nuisance for the offense. At times, in scrimmages, it appears that he’s probably almost too good in the eyes of K-State offensive coordinator Matt Wells.
 
Matt Wells is saying, ‘How’s he seeing this?'” Stanard says. “Austin is a really good zone cover linebacker right now. He knows routes and what routes are coming out of formations. He spends a lot of time up in the meeting room doing the ‘unrequired’ — stuff we don’t ask him to do. And he’s asking questions all the time. He wants to know what’s going on around him with the defensive ends and safeties. Then he understands concepts and pieces things together. It’s easy to coach Austin.”
 
Seems that Romaine is doing some sort of preparation all…the…time. 
 
“I’m not really sure how much time I’m up here, but I’m always asking coaches questions about what I can see, and what can get me better pre-snap and post-snap,” Romaine says. “I’m always in the film room trying to understand backfield sets and formations of what is coming out of different plays so when I get onto the field, I feel like I can see better and see what’s happening better. If I’m wrong, I’m wrong, and now I can understand why. I’ve grown a lot in that part. I was just flowing around as a young guy, and I didn’t know where to go when my keys went certain ways. I’ve grown a lot.”
 
The last K-State linebacker to study like this: Probably Mark Simoneau.
 

Romaine 25 SE

And again, there was a time when football was on the backburner and baseball was the buzz for Romaine in Hillsboro. That changed when a coach approached Jason Romaine about possibly having Austin play little league football. Austin was 12. As his football career took off, college interest grew as well. Romaine carried a 4.3 GPA and received interest from all the Ivy League schools. He had 17 scholarship offers in all. But he had a soft spot for K-State, which was the only Power 4 school to offer him a scholarship. He loved that Stanard chose to attend his high school football games. It was while participating in a K-State camp on June 27, 2022, that Romaine received his official offer from the Wildcats.
 
Today, the national spotlight shines upon the pride of Hillsboro. And it’ll assuredly follow him when No. 20 K-State opens its season against No. 21 Iowa State in the Aer Lingus College Football Classic in Dublin, Ireland, on August 23. And it’ll follow him on through the October and November and into the Big 12 Championship Game, if the Wildcats reach that goal. And if things work out, the lights will absolutely follow Romaine into the College Football Playoff.
 
In this day and age in college football in which some star players seemingly arrive — and then leave — Romaine has apparently planted roots in the Little Apple. Sometimes he thinks back to simpler times, when this dream began, and it was him, a football, and an opportunity.
 
Now he has the opportunity to be regarded as one of the best linebackers in college football. But that stuff, he insists, doesn’t matter until the season and body of work has been fully digested.
 
In that sense, the Austin Romaine story is just getting started.
 
And he wouldn’t want to finish his story anywhere else.
 
“I love this place,” Romaine says. “I’ve loved it ever since I stepped on campus. When I was in high school, I knew it was home. It was the only Power 4 school to offer me and give me a shot. I’ve taken full advantage of that, and I’ve dug in here. Our coaches say to dig in where you’re at. I’ve dug in here, into this culture, and into my teammates and coaches and support staff.”
 
He pauses.
 
“I’ve dug in,” he says, “and I will continue to keep digging in.”



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NIL

The NCAA has made a mess of college football. Here’s a remedy.

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(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Utes quarterback Byrd Ficklin (15) warms up on the field before Big-12 Football action between the Utah Utes and the Kansas State Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium, on Saturday, Nov. 22, 2025.

I enjoy college football, but the College Football Playoff Selection Committee just killed my postseason viewing. I’ll only watch the Utah Utes in the Las Vegas Bowl, but I’m supporting Notre Dame’s bowl boycott after it was cheated out of a spot in the College Football Playoff. The University of Alabama was chosen instead, despite having poorer performance stats and losing big in its conference championship game. The University of Miami was also elevated above Notre Dame despite its less impressive stats — with the exception of having narrowly beaten The Fighting Irish in the season opener.

In recent years, the National Collegiate Athletics Association has made a mess of college football, but if the NCAA wants to redeem itself, it could:

1. Expand the playoff to 16 teams with no byes which would have eliminated this year’s fiasco.

2. Realign conferences to have no more than ten teams. The conference champion would be the team with the best record in nine conference games. No conference championship game needed.

3. Eliminate publishing CFP rankings before the end of the season. The committee embarrasses itself when it reorders those without cause.

4. Put income limits on Name Image Likeness as it grossly enriches some players. NIL has turned college football into the NFL Lite.

5. Fix the transfer portal. Allow players only one transfer and perhaps a second if a coach moves on.

6. Convince the Heisman Trophy Trust to award its statue at the end of the playoffs eliminating the embarrassment when an awardee fizzles in postseason play.

7. Consider eliminating conferences altogether. Create leagues of 60 or so teams in upper and lower divisions like European sports are structured with fluidity between the divisions based on teams’ previous year’s performance.

To do all this would just require some good will.

Jim Catano, Salt Lake City

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Nick Saban’s new role with the Nashville Predators

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Nick Saban knows his strengths with seven national championships as a college football coach. He also understands how to put coaches and athletes in the best position to succeed.

That’s what he hopes to bring to the NHL’s Nashville Predators after joining the franchise as a minority owner.

“I’m no expert in hockey, so don’t look at me like I’m going to make some huge impact coaching around here because that’s not going to happen,” Saban said Monday. “But I do have a pretty good idea of what it takes to have successful organizations.”

Saban made his first appearance Monday in his new role as a minority owner alongside Predators chairman Bill Haslam.

The Predators announced Saban’s purchase Dec. 16 through Dream Sports Ventures LLC, an entity controlled by Saban and business partner Joe Agresti. That business group features 10 car dealerships, including two in Nashville.

Haslam, a former Tennessee governor, was working on a possible WNBA expansion franchise when Saban told the Predators controlling owner that he also might be interested in hockey.

“I thought, ‘Well, that’s the greatest no brainer of all time,’” Haslam said. “You have somebody who understands building a championship culture, who understands, I think, better than almost anybody in sports the process that’s needed to get to where you can compete as a champion.”

Saban grew up in West Virginia with no hockey around. He became interested in hockey when coaching at Michigan State and became friends and shared ideas with that team’s coach. Saban called this an opportunity to be involved with a team for the first time since he announced his retirement Jan. 10, 2024.

So what will Saban bring to the NHL and the Predators in his newest role?

His experience building programs both in college football and six seasons in the NFL working for Bill Belichick in Cleveland and as head coach of Miami. A “transformational leader” as Saban put it. Once college football season ends, Saban said he will be involved as much as Haslam wants.

Saban already has spoken to coaches and some players during what he called a minicamp. Saban also has met a couple times with general manager Barry Trotz, saying his goal is to support Trotz and everyone else with the Predators.

Nashville won the Western Conference before losing the Stanley Cup Final in 2017 to Pittsburgh in six games. The Predators won the Presidents’ Trophy for the 2017-18 season but ranked 26th out of 32 NHL teams Monday five points back of the second wild-card spot in the West.

“To be a part of the hockey team here is something special, and we’d love to build it into a championship,” Saban said. “We’d love to partner with Mr. Haslam to do anything that we can do to help this organization be successful.”

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl



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Missouri linebacker Damon Wilson II accuses Georgia of illegal punishment in transfer portal lawsuit

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COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri pass rusher Damon Wilson II claims that the athletic department at Georgia is trying to illegally punish him for entering the transfer portal in a lawsuit filed by the linebacker in state court Tuesday in Boone County, Missouri.

Wilson transferred to the Tigers last January after signing a 14-month deal with Georgia’s booster collective to capitalize on his name, image and likeness. He received $30,000 in an initial payment on a $500,000 deal before entering the transfer portal.

Georgia filed a lawsuit last month claiming that Wilson owed its athletic department $390,000 in liquidated damages for leaving the team. Wilson’s countersuit claims that his former school is using such damages to “punish” him for his decision to leave.

Georgia spokesman Steve Drummond said the school had no comment because it involves pending litigation.

“When the University of Georgia Athletic Association enters binding agreements with student-athletes, we honor our commitments and expect student-athletes to do the same,” Drummond said upon the school’s initial lawsuit in early December.

Wilson had nine sacks and an interception this season for the Tigers. They will play Virginia in the Gator Bowl on Saturday.



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Dylan Stewart, top 2027 NFL prospect, stays with Gamecocks, lands major NIL deal

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One day after South Carolina received word that star quarterback LaNorris Sellers was staying in town, another star said he plans to return to the fold.

Dylan Stewart, the Gamecocks’ star edge rusher, announced he is returning for his true junior season in 2026, according to Pete Thamel, ESPN’s college football insider.

Stewart has 11 sacks in his two seasons at South Carolina and has forced 6 fumbles. Among ESPN’s draft projections, he appears to be a top prospect for the 2027 NFL Draft.

READ MORE | “South Carolina QB LaNorris Sellers stays put, vows stronger return for 2026 season.”

The former five-star recruit and rising SEC pass rusher chose continuity over the transfer portal, agreeing to an NIL deal that places him among the highest compensated non-quarterbacks in college football, according to ESPN’s reporting.

South Carolina’s defense is back in reliable hands, as the Gamecocks ready themselves to bounceback from a 4-8 season.

After the pitiful finish, South Carolina head coach Shane Beamer shook up his coaching staff.

South Carolina is also expected to hire Penn State defensive line coach Deion Barnes as the defensive end and outside linebacker coach.

He’s been Penn State’s defensive line coach the past three years and worked with the line there since 2020. He coached Abdul Carter, Chop Robinson and Adisa Isaac.

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READ MORE | “South Carolina to kick off 2026 football season at home against Kent State.”



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Michigan coaching search: Rece Davis advises Wolverines to keep waiting if they want Kalen DeBoer

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Until Michigan officially hires a head coach, the name Kalen DeBoer is going to be mentioned with the search. Even after DeBoer released statements saying he would stay with Alabama, rumors are out there. Folks in Ann Arbor might have been cheering for Oklahoma on Friday night to potentially speed up the process.

Instead, Alabama is heading to the Rose Bowl to face Indiana on Jan. 1. So, if DeBoer was going to be Michigan’s hire, the wait will continue. Which is exactly what ESPN’s Rece Davis believes the Wolverines should be doing in this situation.

“From Michigan’s standpoint, if that’s the guy you want, wait,” Davis said via the College GameDay Podcast. “If it takes waiting until they finish, if they were to upset Indiana, wait if that’s the guy you want. Why settle? One portal class, one recruiting class is not worth settling for a program like Michigan. Now, I understand the concept that there’s no guarantee you’re going to get him. I get that. But if you are convicted that this is your guy, wait it out. See what happens, push forward.”

If Alabama were to win in Pasadena, the next College Football Playoff date would be Jan. 8 or 9. A run to the national championship means DeBoer would not be done coaching the 2025 season until Jan. 19. But Davis mentions no singular NCAA transfer portal and/or recruiting class is as important as getting the right guy for Michigan.

When it comes down to it, Davis does not think DeBoer will leave Tuscaloosa this offseason. Those released statements were viewed as pretty telling in Davis’s eyes. And at the end of the day, DeBoer is still looking to prove to be the guy who can replace Nick Saban at Alabama.

“I do not think Kalen DeBoer will take the job,” Davis said. “Ultimately, because I don’t think he wants to be perceived as running from what he ran to. Michigan’s a great job. If he does, he does, and great for him if that’s what he decides. I don’t think he will end up doing that. Maybe he will.”

The latest update on where the Michigan coaching search came from On3’s Pete Nakos on Saturday. Nakos outlined who the top candidates are at the moment, mainly after Kenny Dillingham signed an extension to stay in Tempe with the Arizona State Sun Devils not too long ago.



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Damon Wilson ll files countersuit against UGA, claims NIL contract non-binding

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Georgia Bulldogs

Wilson’s lawsuit states that UGA’s attempt to collect the $390K lump sum was a ‘strong-arm tactic.’

Damon Wilson II played 417 defensive snaps for UGA during the 2024-25 season. He transferred to Missouri. (Jason Getz / AJC)

Damon Wilson II played 417 defensive snaps for UGA during the 2024-25 season. He transferred to Missouri. (Jason Getz / AJC)

Damon Wilson ll, who transferred from Georgia to Missouri, is suing the University of Georgia Athletic Association and the Classic City Collective claiming the term sheet he signed to remain with the program is not a legally binding agreement.

The 42-page lawsuit, acquired by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution after it was filed in the circuit court of Boone County, Mo. on Tuesday, seeks to grant Wilson relief from UGA seeking a $390,000 lump sum it claims Wilson owes by contract and hold defendants liable for “damages sufficient to compensate him for the financial and reputational harm” suffered.

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Mike Griffith

Mike is in his 10th season covering SEC and Georgia athletics for AJC-DawgNation and has 25 years of CFB experience. Mike is a Heisman Trophy voter and former Football Writers President who was named the National FWAA Beat Writer of the Year in January, 2018.



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