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Impact Spotlight

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Impact Spotlight

Stef Zeh is the founder of Section Z, a nonprofit that takes young female athletes from underserved communities to professional sports games, including Angel City matches. Through attendance at games, plus panels and workshops with successful women who grew up playing sports, Section Z aims to leverage the excitement of live sports to set participants up for success.

Transportation to Angel City games is made possible through the Rolling with Chevy program, which provides transportation to the stadium for community groups, youth sports teams, and families. Rolling with Chevy is Chevy’s contribution to the Angel City 10% Sponsorship Model, where 10% of all sponsorship dollars are reallocated back into the community.

AngelCity.com: What is Section Z all about?

Stef Zeh: Section Z is a nonprofit organization where we take young female athletes from underserved communities to professional sports games. The idea is we leverage the excitement of live sports to set these girls up for success. We’re about taking them to the game, showing them that representation, and then we do workshops and panels where we focus on showing these girls that the transferable skills they get being an athlete set them up for life success.

The percentage of young women who will be professional athletes or collegiate athletes, it’s very small, right? But there’s so much data that shows that sports provide transferable skills that set them up for success—yet there are so many barriers. We know that girls tend to drop out of sports around age 13-14. So it’s about removing those barriers and keeping these girls excited.

ACFC: Talk a little more about the workshops and panels you do.

SZ: We’ll take girls from an underserved community to a game, and they have a pre-game panel experience. I’ll moderate a panel with female execs and former athletes, asking how their skills as athletes translate, they’ll share challenges they’ve faced along their career journey, and offer advice to these young female athletes. We also know from research, you can only aspire to be what you see, and these girls might not have met a mechanical engineer or seen what marketing a sports team looks like. 

When you think about it, there are so many jobs that exist at a sports stadium, whether it’s the person who welded the goalposts, the person who does the contracts for the athletes, the player, the coach, the PR staff, the food vendors. So, if we can take this thing that they really love and that they feel a part of, and use that to show what’s really possible, that’s the big idea. Our motto is, it’s more than a ticket. So they get exposure to the game, but it’s more than that.

ACFC: How do sports contribute to girls’ lifelong success, and how does Section Z factor into that?

SZ: I’m sure you’ve seen that stat about how 94% of women in the C-suite were athletes. That  stat is only so interesting – it’s really just a correlation. Because they only asked women in the C-Suite. This is such a small percentage of the population. It’s less than 4%! What about everyone else? If we can all agree that the things you learn from sports set you up for success, how do we get everyone else moving up? 

That’s our whole thing, and I’ve experienced the impact sports have firsthand. I’m an entrepreneur who grew up feeling like sports was the only place where I really felt like I belonged, and because I’m an athlete I can be dropped in any situation and have confidence. I’ve pivoted from being at a high-end clothing line, to hosting a morning radio show that won awards, and I feel that’s all because I was an athlete.

That whole C-suite thing, we kind of flip it on its head, and our pillars for the non-profit are what we call the Sweet C’s, which are competence, confidence, and collaboration, because that’s really what we’re helping them develop.

ACFC: What inspired you to start Section Z?

SZ: On March 6, 2020, like a week before the world shut down, I was in a bad accident. I was on Catalina Island, and they use golf carts for cars over there. I’d only been there for an hour and a half and I got tossed out of a golf cart and it flipped and landed on my head. I was airlifted out. I had a brain injury and a face laceration. So my experience of COVID was, I was in bed with a brain injury, just wanting my brain to work.

Through that experience, I started thinking about how I’ve done all these really cool things, I’ve traveled the world, but if I wouldn’t  had been so lucky. What have I done that actually matters? What have I built that’s bigger than me, that’s going to make the world a better place? 

Going to sports games was always one of my favorite things to do. I’m a season ticket holder for Angel City—front-row season tickets. I remember being so pumped to go to the first game, and about five minutes in, I had this wave of sadness come over me. I was like, man, what would my life have been like if this existed when I was a kid?

After that, I realized, I don’t know if I would have been able to go when I was growing up—so that’s the business problem that I want to solve. From there I wound up meeting [Angel City Co-Founder] Julie Uhrman, who was instrumental in building our partnership with Angel City.

The first time I heard Julie talk, she said the best way to support the team is to buy tickets. So, I called Angel City and I said, “I want the biggest group slot you guys have left.” That was for the last game in 2022. I bought 25 tickets and decided to find a school, and a bus, and that was how the first Section Z started. We’ve been at every Angel City home game since.

ACFC: What’s next for Section Z?

SZ: More teams, more leagues, deeper partnerships, with the goal of having a Section Z at every stadium. We are also working on some other really new and exciting things that we’re not ready to announce, but we believe it will leverage the power of sports in a way that hasn’t been done.

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Ole Miss QB Trinidad Chambliss makes NIL announcement amid college football season

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Ole Miss Rebels quarterback Trinidad Chambliss appeared in a video released Saturday that initially seemed to address his future with the program. The social media post features the senior signal-caller sitting in a living room surrounded by family and friends. The atmosphere in the room is tense as a friend holds up a phone and asks if the rumors are true. “The internet is going crazy, bro,” the friend says. “Are you really gonna transfer?”

Chambliss turns to the camera and delivers a calm response to the group. “If you wanna win, you go with the best,” he says. The room falls silent as his phone rings. He answers the call and offers a series of affirmations while the group leans in to listen. The quarterback then delivers the punchline, revealing that the video is a paid advertisement for his new NIL partner. “I’d love to transfer to AT&T,” Chambliss says.

The clever marketing campaign arrives just weeks before the college football transfer portal officially opens. No financial details on the NIL deal have been released.

The 23-year-old signal-caller previously utilized the portal to move from Ferris State to Oxford in April 2025. He took over the starting job for Ole Miss following an injury to Austin Simmons and threw for 415 yards in a win over Arkansas.

Trinidad Chambliss’ Transfer Journey From Division II Star To SEC Starter

The commercial spot highlights how quickly the quarterback has become a household name in the Southeastern Conference. Before arriving in Mississippi, Chambliss built a dominant resume at the Division II level with the Ferris State Bulldogs.

He threw for 2,925 yards and rushed for another 1,019 yards during his junior campaign. That season culminated in a national title victory over Valdosta State, where he accounted for five touchdowns.

Former Ferris State Bulldogs quarterback Trinidad Chambliss

Last year, Trinidad Chambliss played for the Ferris State Bulldogs before transferring to Ole Miss ahead of the 2025 season. | Lenny Padilla/Sentinel contributor / USA TODAY NETWORK

His performance earned him recognition as the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Player of the Year. He was also a finalist for the Harlon Hill Trophy which is awarded to the top player in Division II. Chambliss entered the transfer portal shortly after securing the championship. He committed to Ole Miss in April 2025 to compete at the FBS level.

The transition to the SEC initially placed him in a backup role behind Austin Simmons. Chambliss saw limited action in the season opener against Georgia State where he completed four passes for 59 yards.

His opportunity arrived later in the year when Simmons suffered an injury that sidelined him indefinitely. Head coach Lane Kiffin named Chambliss the starter ahead of a crucial matchup against the Arkansas Razorbacks.

Chambliss seized the moment in his first start. He tallied 415 total yards and three touchdowns to lead the Rebels to a 41-35 victory. His dual-threat ability added a new dimension to the offense as the team pushed for a playoff spot. The success of players moving up from lower divisions has become a major storyline in the portal era.

The transfer portal window formally opens on Jan. 2 for all FBS athletes. While Chambliss jokes about transferring to a phone carrier, his actual journey serves as a blueprint for talent evaluation in the modern era.

Chambliss and the Rebels will await their postseason destination as the College Football Playoff Selection Show airs Sunday.

Read more on College Football HQ





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Clark Lea: 10-win Vanderbilt being outside of College Football Playoff is upsetting

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Vanderbilt‘s 10-win regular season may not have been enough to get the Commodores into the College Football Playoff. They won’t play for a conference championship, and are currently on the bubble to make the postseason tournament.

Commodores head coach Clark Lea voiced his displeasure with the current playoff model, sounding off on his feelings about Vanderbilt’s current position. In turn, he called for an overhaul of the committee’s current evaluation process.

“I’m just frustrated. We attempted to state our case,” Lea said, via ESPN Radio. “We were fighting for our team. This team deserves the chance to be in and that’s all we want, is just the chance. Look, it’s not like I’m asking people to vote us national champion. I just want the chance to play for it.

“If you were to have told me before the season that a 10-win SEC team doesn’t get in, I would have said there’s no way. For us to be on the wrong side of this right now, it’s upsetting.”

Lea said his statement is not to criticize the College Football Playoff committee, but rather to criticize the playoff’s current model. The Vanderbilt coach specifically mentioned his issue with how automatic bids are distributed in the current 12-team format.

He mentioned the fact that the playoffs currently allows the opportunity for a Group of Six team to make the playoffs. That leaves teams that finished the regular season 10-2, such as Vanderbilt, Miami and Utah, are on the outside looking in during conference championship week and can’t do anything further to help their case.

“No disrespect to those (Group of Six) teams, obviously,” Lea said. “I know how hard it is to win anywhere, but this is actually about getting the 12 best teams in to compete for the greatest of all prizes, the national championship trophy. And I just I don’t like where we’re at right now with the process.

“I’m frustrated by it. I can’t understand it. If I could understand it, I could accept it. I want to fight against it. I’m anxious to help improve it in the off season, but right now, I’m just fighting for my team.”

The final College Football Playoff rankings will be revealed on Sunday following the conference championship slate. Where Vanderbilt falls remains to be seen, but Lea has stated his case to the committee. For now, it appears that 10 wins for the Commodores may not have been enough to squeeze into the field.



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Silverfield’s rebuild underway on Hill

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FAYETTEVILLE — Ryan Silverfield had a second stop to make Thursday after his first press conference since being hired as Arkansas football coach.

He had to face the people he needs to win over, the ones the Razorbacks need to increase their spending so they can compete with the SEC’s power programs.

Silverfield signed a five-year, $33.5 million deal to take over in Arkansas earlier in the week. He had coached Memphis since the 2020 season, plus a single game with the Tigers as interim head coach in 2019. Memphis qualified for a bowl in every season with Silverfield at the helm and peaked in 2024 with an 11-2 record. The Tigers hold an 8-4 record ahead of a likely bowl game.

Those kinds of results at Arkansas would be a boon. The Razorbacks’ season concluded Saturday with a loss to Missouri. That ended a 2-10 season with an 0-8 record in the Southeastern Conference, the third season in the last seven Arkansas finished with those marks.

“This program is built on pride, resilience and toughness, and it’s time to bring it all back,” Silverfield said at the press conference. “Being all in together, we will rebuild it, we will earn it, and we will make this state proud.”

Finances were one of the biggest points in both the press conference and the public introduction a few hours later. Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek has made a point for the last year that the Razorbacks need more contributions for NIL funds in order to compete at a higher level in the SEC. The first audible announcement over the loudspeaker before Silverfield took the dais was one asking for money.

NIL war chests are tight-lipped secrets across college football. But Arkansas’ football attendance, which equates to revenue earned, ranks fifth from the bottom in the SEC. Both Silverfield and Yurachek said finances were a key topic during the interview and contract negotiations.

“I think it’s our competitive advantage not to give details of what that is, other than to tell you that it is a significant investment in all aspects of our football program that will move us to the top half of spending in all of those categories I mentioned in the Southeastern Conference,” Yurachek said. “I don’t believe we need to be at the top of spending. We need to be somewhere where we’re really competitive and Ryan and I are on the same page with where we are.”

Quarterback KJ Jackson and defensive end Quincy Rhoads Jr. both joined the press conference and announced they would return to the team in 2026. Jackson, a rising sophomore, took over as Arkansas’ starting quarterback for the final game of the season and is largely considered the future of the position. Rhoads finished in a tie for fifth in the SEC in sacks (8) and second in the league in tackles for-loss (17 1/2).

Silverfield told fans he doesn’t think a rebuild will take long.

“It’s not one of those things where we’re sitting here saying, ‘Hey, you know, Hunter, I need three years to rebuild this,'” Silverfield said. “No. We can start rebuilding the culture the moment we step down.”

Arkansas's new head football coach Ryan Silverfield, left, and athletic director Hunter Yurachek speak to reporters during an NCAA college football press conference, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, in Fayetteville, Ark. (Hank Layton/The Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette via AP)
Arkansas’s new head football coach Ryan Silverfield, left, and athletic director Hunter Yurachek speak to reporters during an NCAA college football press conference, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, in Fayetteville, Ark. (Hank Layton/The Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette via AP)
Arkansas's new head football coach Ryan Silverfield, left, and athletic director Hunter Yurachek speak to reporters during an NCAA college football press conference, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, in Fayetteville, Ark. (Hank Layton/The Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette via AP)
Arkansas’s new head football coach Ryan Silverfield, left, and athletic director Hunter Yurachek speak to reporters during an NCAA college football press conference, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, in Fayetteville, Ark. (Hank Layton/The Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette via AP)
Arkansas's new head football coach Ryan Silverfield speaks to reporters during an NCAA college football press conference, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, in Fayetteville, Ark. (Hank Layton/The Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette via AP)
Arkansas’s new head football coach Ryan Silverfield speaks to reporters during an NCAA college football press conference, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, in Fayetteville, Ark. (Hank Layton/The Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette via AP)



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Colleges ponying up in support of football coaches, programs

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Ole Miss football is among the most well-supported programs in the country, backed by the Grove Collective, widely regarded as one of the nation’s most organized name, image and likeness groups.

It’s not LSU, though, and that, Lane Kiffin said, is one of the biggest reasons he left Oxford for Baton Rouge. LSU’s financial backing is among the best in the nation, and Kiffin said it played a major role in his decision to choose the Tigers.

“Tell me the numbers and the plan for what the money is for the players, because that’s everything in that area to me,” Kiffin said. “Not what I make — what they make, to understand how you can build this.”

LSU isn’t the only school promising its coaches the resources to build competitive rosters. Several programs — including Michigan State, Penn State, Arkansas and Auburn — have announced major financial commitments aimed at program-building.

At Michigan State, the school received a $401 million donation from Acrisure co-founder Greg Williams and his wife, Dawn, with $290 million earmarked for athletics. It is the largest gift in school history and better positions the Spartans to compete in college sports’ revenue-sharing era.

Newly hired coach Pat Fitzgerald, who dealt with limited NIL resources at Northwestern, will now have far more to work with as he tries to return Michigan State to Big Ten contention.

Arkansas is also working to reshape its football budget. Athletic director Hunter Yurachek hired Ryan Silverfield as Razorbacks coach and vowed to elevate the school’s spending from near the bottom of the SEC to a more competitive level. At Silverfield’s introductory news conference, Yurachek acknowledged Arkansas’ investment had lagged behind the rest of the conference.

“The top-down alignment of a new financial commitment from our board of trustees, the university, the department of athletics and so many generous donors … was the first step to being all in on this goal,” Yurachek said. “This financial commitment will push us to the top half in key SEC items such as our assistant coaches’ pool, strength and conditioning staff, support staff pool, and our talent acquisition through revenue sharing and legitimate NIL.”

Another Big Ten program, Penn State, hired Matt Campbell from Iowa State to replace James Franklin. Since the hire, Penn State has reportedly committed around $30 million in NIL resources, according to reporter Matt Fortuna, on top of Campbell’s reported eight-year contract. That level of investment was hinted at after Penn State moved on from Franklin. Athletic director Pat Kraft made clear in October that the school intended to operate near the top of the national spending landscape.

“This is also about the modern era of college football,” Kraft said. “Our next coach needs to be able to maximize elite-level resources, attack the transfer portal and develop at the highest level.”

At Auburn, newly hired Alex Golesh said during his opening news conference that he will have “every resource known to man.” The Tigers’ administration believed former coach Hugh Freeze had strong enough support, but Auburn posted a 15-19 record during his tenure.

Even schools that aren’t changing coaches are investing more in their programs. Maryland athletic director Jim Smith reaffirmed the school’s commitment to Mike Locksley, promising to direct more resources into Locksley’s team.

“Coach Locksley, Senior Deputy Athletic Director Diana Sabau and I will review every aspect of our football program to make sure we are focused on getting the right type of resources in the right places to build a successful football program in this new era of college football,” Smith wrote in an online letter to fans.

This season, teams such as Vanderbilt, Virginia and Texas Tech have achieved success that outpaces their recent history. Revenue sharing and NIL commitments help make that more of a possibility.

The new wave of financial commitments around football programs introduces another layer to a coaching cliché. Coaches used to say, “It’s not the X’s and O’s, but the Jimmys and the Joes.” Now, more than ever, it’s about the Benjamins.





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Chambliss adds AT&T NIL deal after strong season at Ole Miss – HottyToddy.com

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Trinidad Chambliss did not expect his season to unfold this way.

The Ole Miss quarterback arrived in Oxford as a transfer hoping to compete, learn, and settle into a steady role.

Instead, he finished the fall as a First-Team SEC selection and one of the most talked-about players in college football.

His latest news added another step to his rise, as Chambliss announced a major name, image, and likeness partnership with AT&T.

The deal was revealed through a national commercial that used humor and the language of the transfer portal.

In the ad, Chambliss sits in a living room with friends as they ask whether he plans to “transfer.”

After a pause, he answers, “If you wanna win, you go with the best.”

The twist — he is “transferring” to AT&T, not a new program. It was a simple message, delivered with ease and confidence, and it signaled how far his public profile has grown.

Chambliss admitted in the commercial that the moment still feels unusual.

He said he would have thought someone was “crazy” if they had predicted he would be in this type of spotlight. But his play changed everything, and his journey from Ferris State to Ole Miss became one of the most followed stories across the SEC.

His season took shape after starting quarterback Austin Simmons went down with an early injury. That opened the door for Chambliss to get his chance.

He quickly took hold of the job, lifted the offense, and kept the Rebels stable in a year when the margin for error was tight.

From the moment he stepped in, Chambliss brought command and mobility. His ability to run and throw gave Ole Miss a balanced attack that fit well with its personnel.

Over the final two months, he ranked among the league’s top quarterbacks and helped Ole Miss stay in the postseason race.

The Rebels believed they had solid depth entering the year, but Chambliss offered something more. He became the center of the team’s identity and one of the clearest examples of how the transfer portal can reshape a season.

Even Arkansas fans, watching as the Razorbacks navigated roster changes, saw how one player’s move could shift a program’s direction.

Heading into winter, Chambliss’ name carried weight both on and off the field, and companies noticed.

The AT&T deal became the latest sign his impact is reaching far beyond the box score.

Production places Chambliss among SEC’s best

Chambliss completed 218 of 333 passes for 3,016 yards, 18 touchdowns and three interceptions. His consistency helped Ole Miss settle into its offensive rhythm as the season progressed.

He also rushed 118 times for 470 yards and six touchdowns, finishing with 3,486 total yards.

His statistical rise showed how quickly he adapted to SEC play. For long stretches, he averaged more than 300 yards per game and kept drives alive with timely scrambles and smart reads.

Coaches praised his decision-making and his willingness to manage tough moments without forcing plays.

Chambliss often talked about the role his time at Ferris State played in shaping his mindset.

At the Division II level, he won awards and led a successful offense, but he believed taking a step to the SEC would show him a different level of competition. That belief proved correct, and he handled the transition with poise.

As Ole Miss piled up wins, attention grew. His leadership steadied the Rebels during close games, and fans responded to his calm presence. National media outlets highlighted his story, and discussions about his future expanded.

It was during that rise that NIL interest intensified.

The AT&T announcement confirmed the momentum. Though financial terms were not disclosed, the partnership showed that corporations now view college quarterbacks as voices capable of appealing to broad audiences.

It also reflected the changing nature of college football. NIL deals shape the landscape, and a player like Chambliss now balances his on-field duties with growing visibility off it.

Programs across the SEC, including the Hogs, track these developments closely. NIL structure affects recruiting, retention, and how players evaluate their opportunities.

Chambliss’ deal served as another example of how today’s game operates.

What comes next for Ole Miss quarterback

For the Rebels, the deal supports the program’s wider goals. Chambliss has become a central figure and a dependable leader for a team seeking long-term stability.

His growth reinforces what Ole Miss wants to build moving forward, both in recruiting and in performance.

Chambliss said the journey has been unpredictable but rewarding. He remains focused on his development as he balances new expectations and responsibilities. The next steps in his career will hold weight as Ole Miss prepares for its future on offense.

Key takeaways

  • Trinidad Chambliss secured a major NIL partnership with AT&T after a strong season at Ole Miss.

  • His rise from backup to First-Team SEC quarterback showed the power of the transfer portal.

  • The shifting NIL landscape, which affects programs like the Razorbacks, continues to reshape college football.



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Scott Frost found another fall guy to blame for his own failings

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As the Nebraska football team prepares for its second straight bowl game, UCF and Scott Frost are doing a post-mortem on just why they suffered through another losing season. To the surprise of no one, when Frost talked about what went wrong and how he would fix things, he did not point the finger at himself. Instead, he lined up another fall guy. This time, the blame fell on NIL and the transfer portal.

“It’s broken,” Frost said during the Signing Day press conference. “College football’s broken. Yeah, I don’t know if you’ll get that honest answer from everyone, but everyone would agree if they were honest.”

It’s worth pointing out that the former Nebraska football coach isn’t saying anything that many failed coaches have said before him. Even if he tried to paint it as though he was departing some never-before-heard wisdom.

Former Nebraska coach Scott Frost blames NIL, transfer portal for UCF’s losing season

Frost then told a story that may or may not have actually happened.

“I laugh about it now, but I did my press conference last year and had a couple players and their agents waiting outside my office five minutes after I did my press conference to start telling me how much money I needed to pay them, and I didn’t even know who the kids were.”

“We’re going to know our team now. We’re going to know our strengths and weaknesses. I think we’re in a better financial position to approach this.”

This is hardly the first time that the former Nebraska coach and storied quarterback blamed forces beyond his control for his failures. It’s not even the first time he’s done it since joining UCF. He spent most of his first offseason with the Knights last year, blaming everyone but him at Nebraska for his getting fired after 4.5 seasons.

Frost has demonstrated plenty of times that he hasn’t changed much since he ran Nebraska. That’s bad news for UCF fans who are hoping for improvements in 2026 after the team went 5-7 this season and was a late rally away from going 1-8 in the Big 12 with a loss to the worst team in the conference. Who will be the fall guy next year if Scott Frost does that again.





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