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NIL

Inside Texas Tech’s ‘open checkbook’ and the school’s quest to rule the Big 12

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LUBBOCK, Texas — Last July, around a conference room table inside Jones AT&T Stadium, the Texas Tech football braintrust laid the foundation for a roster budget that would surpass that of the 2024 Ohio State Buckeyes, the eventual national champions.

Inside athletic director Kirby Hocutt’s suite, about a half dozen of the program’s key stakeholders, including head coach Joey McGuire, general manager James Blanchard and mega booster Cody Campbell, discussed how they would attack the 2025 offseason.

Campbell, a Mike Leach-era offensive lineman at Tech, oil and gas magnate and co-founder of the school’s name, image and likeness collective, made it clear that nothing should stand in the way of the Red Raiders acquiring who they needed to win a Big 12 championship. In the pay-for-play era of college sports, Texas Tech would position itself as a disruptor.

“Cody came in and said, in a professional way, that we had an open checkbook,” Blanchard recalls. “Telling that to a personnel guy is like telling a 6-year-old, ‘Here’s my platinum credit card, go get whatever you want.’”

Campbell identified that the transfer portal windows ahead of the 2025 season would be the last “Wild West portal periods” for every sport and “we needed to do everything we could to frontload those contracts so that we could recruit well during those transfer window periods.”

Tech leadership concocted a plan. The donors lined up. Eventually, the players followed.

When the winter transfer portal window opened in December, Blanchard, who runs Tech’s personnel operation, channeled his inner Richie Rich, running up a colossal tab. When the dust settled, Texas Tech spent more than $12 million — or almost as much revenue as some Power 4 programs will share with their entire roster — on 21 transfers. The total roster budget for the 2025 Texas Tech football team? Roughly $25 million, Blanchard said, which surpasses the $20 million the Buckeyes spent en route to last season’s national title.

It was part of Texas Tech’s athletic department-wide effort to capitalize on the final months of unlimited NIL spending before capped revenue sharing kicked in. And spend the Red Raiders did, raising $55 million to utilize on player compensation via NIL and revenue sharing across its 17 sports for the 2025-26 athletic season, according to Campbell. Of that, roughly $35 million was paid out before July 1, when the cap — roughly $20.5 million, a result of the House v. NCAA settlement — officially took effect.

Texas Tech’s willingness to splash the pot has opposing schools griping and expectations skyrocketing. But the Red Raiders haven’t even played for a Big 12 football championship in the league’s 29-year existence. They haven’t recorded a nine-win season since 2009, when Leach was their coach. The last conference title Tech won outright? The Border Conference championship in 1955 (their 1976 and 1994 Southwest Conference titles were co-championships).

But that’s what the money is for: for Texas Tech to break new ground and spend its way to success. It’s Big 12 title — and College Football Playoff — or bust. And the Red Raiders are embracing those expectations. During a video tour for their new football facility guided by football administrator Antonio Huffman, he pointed to a spot left open in the trophy room “for our Big 12 trophy.”

“If we win 10 games but we don’t win the Big 12 championship, I think we’ve missed the mark,” McGuire said.


Heading into the 2023-24 offseason, Texas Tech had only $1 million in NIL money to allocate to transfers, Blanchard said — roughly the amount it takes to get a Power 4 starting quarterback now. That meant Texas Tech couldn’t get into bidding wars for top-tier talent. “I needed to be really diligent and make sure I’m not wasting (Campbell’s) money,” Blanchard said.

The Red Raiders were competitive in 2024, going 8-5 and making a bowl for the third straight season under McGuire and fourth consecutive year overall — the longest such bowl stretch for the program since the Leach era — but they were lacking in a few areas, particularly on the offensive and defensive lines. They fell short of a Big 12 title game appearance as a result. And they vowed to learn their lesson after shopping in the bargain bin.

After Tech lost to Colorado in early November and Campbell posted on X to complain about officiating, a Tech fan replied with an expletive directed at Campbell and ordered him to “buy us an oline (sic).”

Campbell’s reply: “I will.”

Blanchard believed Campbell when he said he had an “open checkbook,” but he wasn’t 100 percent sure until they started hosting visitors. When former UCF defensive tackle Lee Hunter visited and Blanchard called Campbell to find out if it was OK to go over the amount they projected it would cost to get him, Campbell told him, “Yeah, I told you we’re gonna do whatever it takes.”

When Blanchard heard that, it was off to the races.

Tech’s top-10 portal adds (On3 industry)

Player, Pos.

  

Pos. Rank

  

Former school

  

Lee Hunter, DL

1

UCF

David Bailey, edge

2

Stanford

Howard Sampson, OT

3

North Carolina

Hunter Zambrano, OT

5

Illinois State

Terrance Carter, TE

5

Louisiana

Cole Wisniewski, S

7

North Dakota State

Quinten Joyner, RB

7

USC

Romello Height, edge

8

Georgia Tech

Skyler Gill-Howard, DL

10

Northern Illinois

As commitments rolled in, McGuire and Blanchard pivoted from their original plan of signing 10 to 12 transfers to taking as many as they could. They finished with 21, including six who were ranked at the top of their board at their respective positions.

“You had this perfect storm,” McGuire said.


Texas Tech opened the $242 million Womble Football Center in March. (Nathan Giese / USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

If the Red Raiders prioritized a player, the goal was to not let him leave campus without a commitment. McGuire credits the positive vibes that permeate the building. The new, sparkling $242 million football facility — which Blanchard has called “a football resort” — didn’t hurt. And then there’s the money.

Tech paid multiple transfers over $1 million, according to sources familiar with the negotiations, granted anonymity to discuss financial decisions schools are not compelled to publicly disclose. Many who didn’t reach that threshold are getting compensated in the high six figures. Personnel staffers at schools who competed for some of Tech’s transfers have remarked that the Red Raiders have gone well above “market value” to obtain players.

Campbell calls it sour grapes.

“Market value is what somebody’s willing to pay for them,” he said. “So that’s just mostly from people that are upset because they get outbid. … I think other places just didn’t have the resources or weren’t organized enough.”

Blanchard viewed it as a necessity, given Tech’s historical place in the national football landscape and lack of blue-blood status.

“We can’t say, ‘Someone offered this player $500,000, so we’re going to match.’ That’s not gonna work,” Blanchard said. “You’ve got to put your ego and pride to the side and say, ‘If one of the top five schools in the country offered $500,000, for us to be equal, we have to offer $675,000.

“Some people may say that’s over market value. No, I got the f—ing player.”


McGuire, who is entering his fourth season and is 23-16 at the school, knows that if Texas Tech doesn’t win the Big 12, everyone will point the finger at him.

“But isn’t that what you want? Don’t you want a roster that people expect you to win?” he said. “You don’t want to be in the conversation of, ‘They’re going to have a hard time winning because their roster isn’t very good.’”

Said Hocutt: “The expectations are exactly what we want and what we expect. It now becomes time to deliver upon those expectations.”

Blanchard feels a similar pressure. McGuire gave him the keys to the roster when they arrived in Lubbock on Campbell’s jet in November 2021. This offseason Blanchard flirted with taking the GM job at Notre Dame but ultimately stayed after Tech gave him a raise.

“We have top-three-in-the-country resources. There is no reason for failure,” Blanchard said. “If we don’t get to the Big 12 Championship Game, I’m gonna feel like I failed.”

Hocutt, who has been AD at the school since 2011, said a Big 12 title and a Playoff berth are the expectations, “period.”

While acknowledging possible mitigating circumstances like injuries or bad luck, Hocutt said, “We will be extremely disappointed if we’re not in Arlington playing for that Big 12 conference championship this season.”

Football isn’t the only place Tech boosters are spending. Tech spent more than $3 million to retain forward JT Toppin to the men’s basketball team, which was agonizingly close to the Final Four. They spent more than $1 million in 2024 to sign former Stanford pitcher NiJaree Canady to the softball team. That paid off handsomely, as Canady took the Red Raiders to the championship series of the Women’s College World Series before they fell to Texas. And the softball team had a recent portal run that resembles the football team’s in December, plucking top players from across the country to load up for another run to Oklahoma City.

Campbell, who was recently appointed to the President’s Council on Sports, Fitness and Nutrition and has served as a White House advisor on college sports, may be the most visible of Tech’s money men. But he’s not the only one. John Sellers, who co-founded Double Eagle Energy Holdings with Campbell, also co-founded the Matador Club — Tech’s NIL collective — and played a major role in it, especially in softball, where he spearheaded the effort to sign Canady.

Dusty Womble, a wealthy businessman and Texas Tech regent, has his name on the school’s pristine basketball practice facility and new football facility. Many of Tech’s major donors, including Campbell, Womble, Sellers and Gary Petersen, have their names prominently displayed in the concourse of the south end zone of Jones AT&T Stadium. Campbell estimates that the Matador Club, which had 3,000 donors, had “about a dozen or more” members who contributed seven figures.

Tech’s power brokers have put their money where their mouths are.

It’s not a one-time thing, either. As college sports evolve amid the House settlement and direct player compensation, Texas Tech intends to remain a major player in hopes of elevating itself into the elite tier of multiple sports, even if the Red Raiders haven’t historically been there. Campbell scoffed at the idea of anything holding Tech back. “Why shouldn’t we be able to win? Just because we didn’t win a national championship 100 years ago? That doesn’t make any sense. … We have all the elements and ingredients you need to win.”

Tech’s recent high school recruiting signals the continued commitment to spend. The Red Raiders landed a commitment from five-star Felix Ojo, the No. 1 prospect in Texas and one of the top offensive tackles in the nation, with the help of a three-year $2.3 million revenue-sharing contract. That total could go up to $5.1 million if the regulation of player compensation reverts to the almost nonexistent manner that it did the last four years.

As for its roughly $20.5 million revenue sharing pool, 74 percent, or roughly $15.1 million, will be allocated to football. Another 17-18 percent, or around $3.5 to $3.7 million, is to go to men’s basketball, 2 percent to women’s basketball, 1.9 percent to baseball and the rest to Tech’s remaining sports. Campbell vows Texas Tech will pay up to the cap and work hard to get as much third-party NIL as possible but said it’s unlikely to see those numbers skyrocket nationally.

“Except for a very few marquee national players, there isn’t a whole lot there on the (true NIL) front,” he said. “There is some. But it doesn’t compare to the amount that is being paid out through revenue share.”

Whatever the situation is, Campbell said Tech will follow the rules with a plan to spend as much as is allowed.

Is it enough to take Texas Tech football to unprecedented heights? The 2025 roster isn’t without its questions. The one position Tech opted not to take a transfer, quarterback, is one of the biggest unknowns. Behren Morton, the highest-ranked high school QB recruit in program history and Tech’s starter the last two years, is considered a solid but not elite Big 12 quarterback. He played the last year-and-a-half with an AC joint injury that was finally repaired in the winter. Can a healthy Morton take the Red Raiders to the next level?


Behren Morton threw 27 TD passes and eight interceptions in 2024. (Michael C. Johnson / Imagn Images)

Tahj Brooks, Texas Tech’s best offensive player in 2024, is now in the NFL. The Red Raiders are excited about his successor, USC transfer Quinten Joyner, but his production last season (478 yards, three touchdowns) pales in comparison to Brooks’ (1,505 yards, 17 touchdowns).

Hunter Zambrano, who was widely viewed as one of the top offensive linemen in the portal, has not played at the Power 4 level and is coming off a hip injury that kept him out most of last season at Illinois State. He missed spring while rehabbing, but Blanchard said Zambrano is viewed favorably by NFL scouts. Zambrano said, “I’m moving better now than I have in a while.”

Safety Cole Wisniewski, an FCS All-American at North Dakota State, missed most of last season with a foot injury. Edge rusher Romello Height is on his fourth team and has only one season as a starter under his belt, though it was a productive one last year for Georgia Tech (6 1/2 tackles for loss, 2 1/2 sacks, two forced fumbles).

The Red Raiders are confident they’ve built a championship roster.

“We’re, on paper, the most talented team in the conference,” Campbell said. “It’s not really even close.”

Blanchard has a vision that Tech could become the new Clemson. But for all the bluster, even he knows this is no sure thing. While the portal has become a catalyst for some quick turnarounds, no program has proven that you can sustainably build a program this way.

“I don’t think it’s anywhere near a do-or-die situation,” Blanchard said. “But it is a proof-of-concept situation.”

What if it doesn’t work? What if Texas Tech wins eight games (or fewer) again? Will the money faucet shut off? Will McGuire and Blanchard be in trouble? Will the Red Raiders pivot to a different roster construction strategy?

Neither Hocutt nor Campbell gives the impression that they are thinking that way. Both are full-throated in support of McGuire and Blanchard and the plan they’ve executed. “I am confident that we’ve done everything we can possibly do to control the things that we control,” Campbell said. “We’ve given ourselves the best probability of success, but you still have to go out and win the games. And there are a lot of things that are outside of our control that affect those outcomes.”

Said Hocutt: “I’ve never been more confident that we’re positioned extremely well for success.”

After Campbell fired off his “I will” tweet after Tech’s loss to Colorado last November — which essentially knocked Tech out of serious contention for the Big 12 Championship Game — it became a meme in Tech internet circles, especially as the Red Raiders stocked up on stars in the portal. Someone even turned it into a T-shirt, and Campbell has one.

But it brought him back to why he thinks, in the NIL era, anyone has a chance to win: even Texas Tech.

“People can sit around and get mad about the state of affairs,” he said. “They can criticize the coaches. They can criticize the leadership. They can be unhappy about the position we’re in or they can go do something about it. I felt like I was in a position to do something about it.

“So I said that I would and I did.”

(Top photo of Joey McGuire: Nathan Giese / USA Today Network via Imagn Images)



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The staggering NIL figure that transfer portal QBs are expected to cost

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If you thought the NIL transfer market in college football already was out of control, just wait until the upcoming battles next month for the top quarterbacks looking to switch schools.

ESPN college football insider Pete Thamel believes the dollar figures during the January cycle could be as much as $5 million for one season.

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“This market looks robust already, guys,” Thamel said Friday on College GameDay ahead of Alabama’s playoff win over Oklahoma. “You’ve got Cincinnati’s Brendan Sorsby at [the top], Nebraska’s Dylan Raiola, TCU’s Josh Hoover went in [this week], you have Arizona State’s Sam Leavitt, Florida’s DJ Lagway.”

Cincinnati Bearcats quarterback Brendan Sorsby (2) warms up before the game against the Utah Utes at Rice-Eccles Stadium. Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Cincinnati Bearcats quarterback Brendan Sorsby (2) warms up before the game against the Utah Utes at Rice-Eccles Stadium. Rob Gray-Imagn Images

“So I made some calls today, guys, and sources told me the tip-top of this quarterback market, financially, could reach $5 million for one season. Look, it’s supply and demand. You have all those guys. Sorsby’s been linked early to Texas Tech. Dylan Raiola, there’s some smoke to Louisville, although maybe a [College Football Playoff] team jumps in late there. There have been early links between Indiana and Hoover, assuming that [Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza] goes pro.”

Thamel also noted that CFP programs such as Oregon and Miami are likely to be looking for a new quarterback for 2026, as well as LSU, with new coach Lane Kiffin looking to make a splash.

“Look, this is what’s going to drive the market,” Thamel said. “Oregon may lose [draft prospect] Dante Moore. Miami will be in the quarterback market again. So will LSU. So, when you really take a look at what could drive this quarterback market, it’s going to be the most expensive in the history of college football.”

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Thamel also pointed out that seven of the past nine Heisman winners landed at those schools through the transfer portal, including Mendoza, who moved from Cal to Indiana for this season.

The main transfer portal window is open from Jan. 2-16.



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Trinidad Chambliss waiver: ESPN reveals Ole Miss’ expected timeline for response from NCAA

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Amid a decorated season at Ole Miss after transferring from Division II Ferris State, Trinidad Chambliss is seeking another year of eligibility. He applied for a waiver, and ESPN’s Katie George shared the timeline for which the Rebels are expecting an answer.

Ole Miss expected about a month-long wait for a response from the NCAA, George said during Saturday’s College Football Playoff game against Tulane. Chambliss told the ESPN broadcast crew, which is calling the game on TNT, he applied for the waiver three weeks ago. As a result, the school is expecting a response to come down soon.

Chambliss spent three years at Ferris State before arriving at Ole Miss this season. However, he only played in two games as a freshman due to multiple health issues, which is why he’s seeking one more season at the FBS level.

“He said that they filed the waiver three weeks ago,” George reported during the first half. “Ole Miss expects it to take a month before they get an answer.

“Back in 2022 when he was at Ferris State, he did not play in a single game due to chronic tonsillitis, heart palpitations and trouble breathing, so he medically redshirted. After the season he had, proving he’s capable of playing at this level, he wants another year to build on his progress.”

After transferring to Ole Miss this year, Chambliss initially served as the backup quarterback behind Austin Simmons. However, after Simmons suffered an injury, Chambliss took the starting job and ran with it as he helped lead the Rebels to their first-ever College Football Playoff appearance.

Across his 12 appearances, Trinidad Chambliss completed 65.5% of his passes for 3,016 yards and 18 touchdowns, to three interceptions. He also added 470 rushing yards and six touchdowns on the ground. In the process, Chambliss also put himself in the Heisman Trophy conversation, finishing eighth in the voting for college football’s most prestigious award.

But as he waits for an answer on his waiver, Chambliss is keeping everything in perspective. During a press conference ahead of the CFP first round, he said he’s preparing for “every possibility” with his future still up in the air.

“I would have to consider, like, what the best situation is for me,” Chambliss said. “What I feel more comfortable with. Who I trust the most and I’m just going to feel for every possibility, really. There’s a lot that goes into that.”



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No. 1 transfer portal player linked to major college football program

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The newly top-ranked overall prospect in the 2025 college football transfer portal has now been linked to a major college football program and a rival of his former team.

Penn State defensive end Chaz Coleman is entering the NCAA transfer portal ahead of the 2026 football season, and reigning national champion Ohio State has emerged as an early school to watch for his forthcoming decision, according to On3 Sports.

Ohio State made a late push to earn the commitment of the in-state edge rusher back when he was a recruit, but he ultimately chose the Nittany Lions, where he got some early, and very promising, exposure.

Now, as that program embarks on the post-James Franklin future, it appears Coleman is looking for an exit, and their Big Ten rival is an early contender to pounce on him.

Early production

A former four-star prospect from Warren, Ohio, the edge rusher was given playing time at Penn State as a true freshman this past season, notching 8 stops with 3 tackles for loss, adding 1 sack, a forced fumble, a pair of fumble recoveries, and a pass defense in that time.

Coleman was considered the No. 25 ranked defensive and the No. 8 prospect from the state of Ohio as a high school player, according to a consensus of the national recruiting services.

Top-ranked transfer

Following news of his intention to transfer, Coleman quickly shot up to the No. 1 position nationally as the best player in the portal, according to the latest 247Sports Composite standings.

“Chaz Coleman has been one of the most dynamic true freshman pass rushers in college football this season,” Rivals scouting director Charles Power said in an assessment of the player.

That early production and continued promise is expected to cost a school considerable money, as Coleman is projected to command a seven-figure package wherever he lands as a transfer, according to the On3 report.

How the college football transfer portal works

College football’s transfer portal officially opens on Jan. 2, but that hasn’t stopped a flurry of players from entering their names for consideration at a new school right now.

The new 15-day transfer portal window from Jan. 2-16 and the elimination of the spring transfer period has condensed the timeline for players and programs to make their moves.

The NCAA Transfer Portal is a private database that includes the names of student-athletes in every sport at the Division I, II, and III levels. The full list of names is not available to the public.

A player can enter their name into the transfer portal through their school’s compliance office.

Once a player gives written notification of their intent to transfer, the office puts the player’s name into the database, and they officially become a transfer.

The compliance office has 48 hours to comply with the player’s request and NCAA rules forbid anyone from refusing that request.

The database includes the player’s name, contact information, info on whether the player was on scholarship, and if he is a graduate student.

Once a player’s name appears in the transfer portal database, other schools are free to contact the player, who can change his mind at any point in the process and withdraw from the transfer portal.

Notably, once a player enters the portal, his school no longer has to honor the athletic scholarship it gave him.

And if that player decides to leave the portal and return to his original school, the school doesn’t have to give him another scholarship.

More college football from SI: Top 25 Rankings | Schedule | Teams

Follow College Football HQ: Bookmark | Rankings | Picks



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Who is Trinidad Chambliss? How a reluctant D-II transfer took the SEC by storm at Ole Miss

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The Athletic has live coverage of Tulane vs. Ole Miss in the College Football Playoff first round.

Editor’s note: This story was originally published in October and has been updated ahead of Ole Miss’ College Football Playoff game against Tulane.

A few days after leading Ferris State to its third Division II national championship in four years, Tony Annese was on his way to Tampa to watch Michigan practice before the ReliaQuest Bowl against Alabama.

Annese’s phone rang. It was the family of Trinidad Chambliss, Ferris State’s star quarterback, calling to say Chambliss was receiving offers to enter the transfer portal.

“I was like, ‘Technically speaking, that’s tampering, but maybe you should test the waters,’” Annese said.

Chambliss was reluctant. He’d gone to Ferris State, a Division II power in Big Rapids, Mich., as a 170-pound quarterback recruit with no FBS offers. He waited his turn, backing up two other quarterbacks during the Bulldogs’ championship seasons in 2021 and 2022. The opportunity to play Division I football was a dream, but his heart was at Ferris State.

In late December, Chambliss made up his mind. He was staying.

“January, February passed,” Annese said. “Around March, people were starting to hound him. To me, there’s always a certain level of money that might be life-changing. I just said to him, ‘If people are going to give you a lot of money, maybe you need to see what they’re going to give you and get in the portal.’ And the rest is history.”

Chambliss ended up becoming one of college football’s surprise breakout stars of 2025. After stepping in for the injured Austin Simmons against Arkansas on Sept. 13, he led Ole Miss to an 11-1 record and No. 6 seed in the College Football Playoff, where the Rebels will host Tulane in the first round.

A second-team All-SEC pick who finished eighth in the Heisman Trophy vote, Chambliss passed for 3,016 yards, 18 touchdowns and three interceptions and rushed for 470 yards and six touchdowns in the regular season. Fans in Oxford have taken up the banner by waving flags of Trinidad and Tobago, a dual-island nation in the Caribbean.

Chambliss has become such a phenomenon that a reporter from Trinidad and Tobago joined an October conference call to ask about his connection to the Caribbean. He doesn’t have one — or he didn’t, until recently — but his breakout season has been good for international relations.

“I drive downtown near the square and see some of the flags from the houses and whatnot. It’s just cool,” Chambliss said. “I’m sure a lot of people from Trinidad are wondering why so many flags are being ordered to Oxford, Mississippi.”

Chambliss said his name was inspired by the Holy Trinity, not by any family connection to the country. Though that’s true, there is another part to the story. His parents, Trent and Cheryl, had an agreement: If their child were a girl, they would go with Cheryl’s preferred name, Trinity. If their child were a boy, Trent would get to choose. Trent liked the connection to the Trinity, and he also happened to be a fan of the boxer Félix Trinidad.

“I kind of took a liking to that name,” Trent Chambliss said. “It does have that spiritual connection, the Holy Trinity. It stood by itself, a pretty strong name. I just figured that was a good fit.”

The name captures a duality that makes Chambliss who he is. He’s grateful for the providential path that took him from playing road games in front of 500 fans to beating LSU in front of nearly 68,000 in Oxford, plus millions watching on TV. He’s also a fighter who can punch above his weight class.

“Fate kind of gave him an opportunity,” said Eddie Ostipow, who coached Chambliss at Forest Hills Northern High School in Grand Rapids. “We all know how talented he is. He’s gotten an opportunity and really ran with it.”

Chambliss was entering his junior season when Ostipow got the job at Forest Hills Northern. He’d shared time at quarterback the previous season but was known mostly for his exploits on the basketball court, where he was a star point guard.

The perception at the time was that Chambliss would play basketball in college. He grew up attending basketball camps and playing in tournaments around the country, which meant he didn’t get as much exposure as a football recruit. When he got the chance to be a full-time quarterback, he flourished. He had a natural throwing motion and easy mechanics, Ostipow said, but his best trait was the vision to anticipate plays that other quarterbacks couldn’t see.

“As a quarterback, you have to distribute the ball, find zones in the defense, find matchups and take your matchups with wide receivers throwing down the field,” Chambliss said. “In basketball, as a point guard, that’s basically the same thing.”

Ostipow saw Chambliss as a Division I prospect, but the nearby Mid-American Conference programs didn’t see him the same way. At 6 feet and 170 pounds, he didn’t have the size that bigger schools wanted in a point guard or a quarterback. But he was a perfect fit for Ferris State, a program known for developing athletic quarterbacks.

Annese, 64, has a 152-21 record in 13 seasons at Ferris State, including a 15-0 mark this year with a spot in the D-II national title game on Saturday. He’s made a Hall of Fame career out of developing overlooked recruits, including Miami Dolphins defensive tackle Zach Sieler, a seventh-round pick in 2018 who signed a $64 million contract extension in August.

It speaks to the depth at Ferris State that Chambliss, a player torching SEC defenses, didn’t become a full-time starter until his fourth year on a D-II campus. The Bulldogs had other quarterbacks in front of him, and he needed time to add about 30 pounds to fill out his point guard’s frame. When he got his chance to start in 2024, he exploded for 51 touchdowns, nearly 3,000 passing yards and more than 1,000 yards on the ground while leading Ferris State to a 14-1 season.

Chambliss also caught the eye of quarterback-hungry teams in the FBS. He wasn’t looking to leave Ferris State, but name, image and likeness offers were difficult to ignore.

“It’s every child’s dream to be able to play at the Division I level,” said Trent Chambliss, an assistant principal at Wyoming High School near Grand Rapids. “With NIL, you end up having that dangling carrot, a large sum of money. It kind of moves people. You’ve got to be strong enough to not move on the emotional charge that you may get.”

Chambliss initially decided not to enter the transfer portal and spent the spring at Ferris State. When programs started calling him again in March, he decided he owed it to himself and his family to listen. Annese gave his blessing and apprised him of the risks and benefits of transferring.

Trinidad Chambliss led Ferris State to the D-II national title last year. (Adam Vander Kooy / USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

Transferring to a bigger school could mean exposure and development for the NFL, along with the not-insignificant money available through NIL and revenue sharing. Though the amount Chambliss is being paid is undisclosed, CBS Sports reported that Chambliss’ deal with Ole Miss is believed to be more than $500,000, a number The Athletic confirmed with a person familiar with his transfer recruitment.

This risk of leaving was that Chambliss would be giving up a chance at the Harlon Hill Trophy, the Heisman of Division II, with no guarantees of seeing the field. When Chambliss visited Ole Miss, coaches made it clear that he’d be coming in behind Simmons, a four-star recruit who was the Rebels’ backup quarterback last season behind New York Giants rookie Jaxson Dart. Chambliss decided to bet on himself, knowing there was a chance he wouldn’t see the field.

“There’s a risk that you don’t get enough playing time to be seen by the NFL,” Annese said. “That was my concern for him. If Austin Simmons didn’t get hurt, how was it going to be?”

Ferris State lost eight starters from last year’s team who transferred to Division I programs. The list includes Bryce George and Lawrence Hattar, reserve offensive linemen at Iowa and Michigan, respectively, and running back Kannon Katzer, who has yet to record a carry at West Virginia.

Annese said he’s happy for the transfers who have carved out roles and sad for the ones who aren’t playing. Heading into the season, it wasn’t clear which category would apply to Chambliss. Even with Chambliss throwing for more than 300 yards in wins against Arkansas, Tulane and LSU, there was a question of what Ole Miss would do once Simmons got healthy.

That question took on more weight after the Rebels had a close call against Washington State in a 24-21 win. Chambliss threw for 209 yards but struggled to get the offense in gear, prompting a blunt pep talk from coach Lane Kiffin.

“Let’s not go back to that Division II stuff,” Kiffin told him, as he recounted to ESPN at halftime.

But Chambliss held on to the job as he became a viral sensation. The legend will only grow if he takes Ole Miss on a Playoff run after Kiffin’s departure for LSU.

The decision to leave Ferris State wasn’t easy, but it’s earned Chambliss a fan following that stretches from West Michigan to Oxford, Miss. — and even as far as the Caribbean.

“I get so many texts and calls from back home from my friends, people I’ve grown up with, people that supported me before I even got to Ole Miss,” Chambliss said. “It’s just good to have a community behind you while you’re chasing one of your dreams.”

The Athletic’s Sam Khan Jr. contributed to this report.





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Miami quieted the College Football Playoff debate at Texas A&M, now will chase a 25-year-old ghost

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COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Mario Cristobal was in the middle of his postgame interview in the manic moments after Miami’s 10-3 win over Texas A&M at Kyle Field. Out of nowhere, Hurricanes legend Michael Irvin appeared in the shot, grabbed Cristobal’s arm, and planted a wet kiss on his cheek.

“It was disgusting,” Cristobal said later, laughing. “I couldn’t find enough wipes to clean myself.”

That kiss almost didn’t happen. This win almost didn’t happen. And it had nothing to do with the gritty nature of the game, which felt like the Aggies were going to win multiple times. For weeks, Miami was engaged in a resume debate with Notre Dame and Alabama about its worthiness for College Football Playoff inclusion. Even as the game played out — and offenses struggled — there were plenty of people mocking the CFP Committee for taking Miami.

But Miami, which “wasn’t even good enough” to make the ACC Championship Game, went on the road and knocked off Texas A&M, a team that started the season 11-0 and was ranked in the top three of those very CFP rankings at the end of November.

Miami now faces Ohio State in the Cotton Bowl on New Year’s Eve. It continues its chance to win the program’s first national title since 2001. But even as the journey continues, Miami has made clear that this program is going to be a problem nationally for years to come.

“I think it was important first to get into the Playoff,” Cristobal said. “Then to go and win at a place like this, right? It was 100,000-plus people on the road, a team that was arguably top two or three until their last game, and to get it done in this type of environment. We needed that. If you could draw it up the way we wanted it, we wanted to go there. We wanted to come here and do it against a great football team.

“What does it mean for us? Continued progress. The vision. We have never altered the course or been deterred despite all the challenges that come with it. That’s part of it. I am really proud of our players. It’s all about them and that staff, because, again, 40-plus days ago, we were lower than low. We found a way to bring a different level of energy every single day and lift each other and the program up. And here we are with a chance to keep playing. That’s all that matters now.” 

For much of that game, things weren’t pretty. Miami missed a few field goals in the first half, and offensive coordinator Shannon Dawson didn’t call his best game, giving in to the temptation to run atypical plays to get the ball into the hands of his best player — true freshman Malachi Toney.

Toney fumbled the ball near midfield with seven minutes remaining in a 3-3 game, making it seem like the Aggies were going to steal this one at home. But Miami’s defense came up with a stop, got the ball back, and rode running back Mark Fletcher — who carried it 17 times for 172 yards — deep into Aggies territory. Then it was Toney, affectionately known as Baby Jesus, who took a shovel pass from quarterback Carson Back for 11 yards to the house, giving the Hurricanes a seven-point lead with 1:44 remaining. 

There was a debate about whether Toney should have scored or fallen short of the goal line to milk the clock and set up the Hurricanes for a game-winning field goal as time expired. The debate grew more heated as Texas A&M drove down the field inside the Miami 10 with less than a minute remaining. But Aggies quarterback Marcel Reed threw an interception into the end zone to freshman Bryce Fitzgerald, ending the game. 

Those who don’t think Miami should have been in the CFP to begin with will tell you it was two bad teams on the field Saturday. It raises the never-ending debate about whether Notre Dame would have made things look easier, which is ironic given that this game featured two teams that beat the Irish earlier in the season.

After the game, Cristobal was asked whether he felt this game validated the CFP Committee’s decision to include Miami. His answer knocked it out of the park.

“Regardless of what the result was today, they made the right decision,” Cristobal said. “Last year, we had to go to court, I felt. We had a case, other teams had a case, but it was fuzzy. It was muddy. This year, there was nothing fuzzy about it. We had common opponents with another football team — that I’m sure would be great in the Playoffs – but we did better against those common opponents and we won the head-to-head win.

“God forbid we should ever get away from the meaning of head-to-head. Look out there today. How many guys were helped off the field? How many guys had to be carried or had to limp off, had to get on crutches? How many guys are seeing the doctor right now? For competing head-to-head. Let us never ever devalue the importance of head-to-head competition please.”

Through all the CFP discourse, Miami was repeatedly torn down. We heard over and over about its losses to Louisville and SMU, about how it played in a weak conference, how it didn’t make it to Charlotte for the ACC Championship Game and how it wasn’t worthy of this stage.

During that discourse, we forgot how this Miami team is built. Sturdy on the lines of scrimmage, punishing on defense — as illustrated in College Station on Saturday. It has a young phenom receiver in Toney and a reliable back in Fletcher who can move the sticks in close games. It also has two veteran players who have been here through Cristobal’s entire build: edge rusher Rueben Bain and offensive tackle Francis Mauigoa. It is built to compete against these teams.

Now we’ll spend the next 10 days debating whether these Hurricanes are equipped to compete with Ohio State, the team that beat them in the national title game in Tempe, Ariz., more than 20 years ago. That game, some say, marked the end of Miami’s reign of dominance.

The Hurricanes get another shot, not just at Ohio State but also at college football relevance. What happened in College Station was a massive step, but the job for national acceptance is far from over.

And who knows? Maybe Miami will shock the world in Dallas the way the Buckeyes did in Arizona in 2002. Remember, that’s why they play the games. The results matter and hypotheticals are irrelevant during this time of year.

Miami is making the most of the ones it’s been afforded the opportunity to keep playing.



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The $5 million NIL figure that transfer portal QBs are expected to cost

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If you thought the NIL transfer market in college football already was out of control, just wait until the upcoming battles next month for the top quarterbacks looking to switch schools.

ESPN college football insider Pete Thamel believes the dollar figures during the January cycle could be as much as $5 million for one season.

“This market looks robust already, guys,” Thamel said Friday on College GameDay ahead of Alabama’s playoff win over Oklahoma. “You’ve got Cincinnati’s Brendan Sorsby at [the top], Nebraska’s Dylan Raiola, TCU’s Josh Hoover went in [this week], you have Arizona State’s Sam Leavitt, Florida’s DJ Lagway.”


Cincinnati Bearcats quarterback Brendan Sorsby warming up.
Cincinnati Bearcats quarterback Brendan Sorsby (2) warms up before the game against the Utah Utes at Rice-Eccles Stadium. Rob Gray-Imagn Images

“So I made some calls today, guys, and sources told me the tip-top of this quarterback market, financially, could reach $5 million for one season. Look, it’s supply and demand. You have all those guys. Sorsby’s been linked early to Texas Tech. Dylan Raiola, there’s some smoke to Louisville, although maybe a [College Football Playoff] team jumps in late there. There have been early links between Indiana and Hoover, assuming that [Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza] goes pro.”

Thamel also noted that CFP programs such as Oregon and Miami are likely to be looking for a new quarterback for 2026, as well as LSU, with new coach Lane Kiffin looking to make a splash.

“Look, this is what’s going to drive the market,” Thamel said. “Oregon may lose [draft prospect] Dante Moore. Miami will be in the quarterback market again. So will LSU. So, when you really take a look at what could drive this quarterback market, it’s going to be the most expensive in the history of college football.”

Thamel also pointed out that seven of the past nine Heisman winners landed at those schools through the transfer portal, including Mendoza, who moved from Cal to Indiana for this season.

The main transfer portal window is open from Jan. 2-16.



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