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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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Former Carolina wide receiver set for WWE main roster debut

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Former South Carolina wide receiver Matrick Belton is reportedly going to get a real shot on the main roster in the WWE. Belton, who goes by Trick Williams in the top professional wrestling and sports entertainment company, joined WWE in 2021 in the NXT brand. Now, he’s going to move up to either the Raw or Smackdown roster.

NXT is basically the developmental arm of WWE while Raw and Smackdown – shows on Mondays and Fridays, respectively – are considered the main roster. According to this report from PWInsider.com, Belton will make an appearance on the upcoming Smackdown, which was pre-taped.

Whether Belton moves to Raw or Smackdown is to be determined. Here’s the reporting from PWInsider:

Former WWE NXT and TNA Champion Trick Williams will debut on Smackdown on 12/26 with the storyline being he’s a free agent looking to sign with the brand. We are told Williams has not been officially listed internally on a brand yet, so he could appear on Raw in the upcoming weeks as well, but he’ll be moving to the main roster in 2026.

Belton is a two-time NXT champion and also held the TNA World Championship for 140 days earlier this year. Belton, a former SEC football player who was in the Philadelphia Eagles’ minicamp in 2018, recently got engaged to another former SEC athlete – women’s basketball player Anriel Howard, who played for three years at Texas A&M and her final year at Mississippi State.

Belton, a Columbia native who played for Keenan High School, joined the program in 2014 after spending his first two years out of high school at Hampton University. After sitting out due to NCAA transfer rules, Belton played in every game for South Carolina in 2015 and made five starts. He caught 11 passes for 121 yards his first season on the field.

As a senior in 2016, he played primarily on special teams, appearing in nine games. He played in 21 games over the course of his two-year career with the Gamecocks and made five starts.

Belton also spent time in training camp with Philadelphia Eagles. However, he decided to take a chance on pro wrestling and started training at the Combat Zone Wrestling Academy in New Jersey.



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Ole Miss makes history with Pete Golding coaching and Lane Kiffin tweeting

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OXFORD, Miss. – About an hour before kickoff, athletic director Keith Carter stood on the sideline, just a few yards from Ole Miss legend Eli Manning, and did his best to describe what the last month had been like for the Rebels’ football program.

Chaotic would be a good place to start. Contentious would be fitting and even maddening at times.

Good luck, though, in finding a more dysfunctional build-up to a game earmarked as the most important in school history, certainly in the modern era.

“Somebody told me that I ought to write a book about it,” Carter said with an easy smile. “I said, ‘No, I’ve tried to block it all out.’”

Not the season, and certainly not Saturday, a landmark moment in the annals of Ole Miss football. The Rebels, in their first-ever College Football Playoff game, pounced on Tulane from the outset and pounded the Green Wave in a convincing 41-10 victory before a record crowd of 68,251 at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium.

It was win No. 1 for newly promoted Pete Golding as Ole Miss’ head coach and one the Hotty Toddy Nation was thirsting for ever since Lane Kiffin’s messy exit last month when he bolted for LSU.

“I’ve felt a different vibe, I really have, the way everyone has connected with Pete,” said Carter, referencing a vibe that included Archie Manning coming back to speak to the team this week for the first time since early in Kiffin’s tenure.

At a place known for throwing festive parties, hence the long-standing boast by Ole Miss fans that they’ve “never lost a party,” this was one giant football party. And make no mistake. Ole Miss fans, players and coaches (even the ones on loan from LSU) rejoiced in every minute of it.

While Kiffin might have tweeted during the game — a statistic showcasing his impressive offensive numbers since the advent of coach-to-player communication — he wasn’t around to see the Rebels make history.

“We were ready, just blocking out all extra noise,” Ole Miss receiver Deuce Alexander said. “People were saying we weren’t going to be the same team without coach (Kiffin). He’s a great coach and all, but at the end of the day, the players play the game. So we were just prepared for the moment, just ready to go out there and prove everybody wrong.”

Ready, the Rebels (12-1) were. They ran seven offensive plays on their first two possessions and led 14-0 before anybody could blink. The Green Wave never got closer than 11 points the rest of the way.

It was Golding’s first game as Ole Miss’ coach and the Rebels’ first game without Kiffin, who accepted the LSU head job two days after the Egg Bowl win over Mississippi State. He pushed to continue coaching the Rebels throughout the playoff. As the ordeal dragged on, some players became increasingly frustrated and expressed their displeasure on social media. Carter and the Ole Miss administration made it clear they were moving on without Kiffin.

He took most of his offensive staff with him to LSU, and according to sources, told the coaches they had better be on the plane with him to LSU when he departed on Nov. 30 if they wanted a job. In the end, Kiffin agreed to let offensive coordinator Charlie Weis Jr. and others come back and coach Ole Miss’ team in the playoff, but they’re all headed back to LSU after Ole Miss’ playoff run is over.

Meanwhile, LSU’s interim head coach and one of the Tigers’ best recruiters, Frank Wilson, was recently hired to join Ole Miss’ staff after LSU’s bowl game. Sources told On3 that Kiffin wasn’t planning to keep Wilson along with general manager Austin Thomas, who has returned to Ole Miss in that same role.

“You couldn’t make this stuff up if you wanted to, the wildest shit you could imagine, how all this went down,” one Ole Miss staff member told On3. “I give these kids credit. They had a lot of questions. There was a lot of anger. Think about it. This is the greatest season in Ole Miss history, and you’re playing without your head coach, who left a playoff team for another job, and you’re being coached by other coaches who are going to one of your biggest rivals when the playoff is over and basically working for two schools at the same time.

“I don’t care what happens the rest of the way. These players are champions.”

Kiffin told On3 earlier in the week that he had “moved on” and didn’t feel like it was appropriate to make any comments heading into the game. But afterward, he congratulated the Ole Miss coaches and players on his X account and singled out Golding and seeing his two boys on the sideline.

For Golding, as has been the case since he was promoted, his focus remained squarely on the players. Over and over again, Saturday in a packed interview room, he lauded the players.

But he also threw a little shade in Kiffin’s direction when asked about some of the specific changes he made in taking over the program. He immediately pointed to his right from the podium and asked what used to be sitting down front in the team meeting room.

“We got rid of the basketball goal first,” quipped Golding, referencing a portable basketball goal Ole Miss players and staff would dunk on and play games on during meetings when Kiffin was the coach.

Golding explained that as a player he didn’t like the “forced fun aspect” of bringing teams together. What he did do after being named coach was have players make a list of things that they would want and called every player in to meet with him.

“It was like, ‘Hey give me one thing that you love the most about Ole Miss and give me the one thing that you would change first in this program if you were the head coach,’” Golding recounted.

The most important part was keeping the routine the same, no matter all the staff swapping and keeping everything being said on the outside — on the outside.

Chants of “Pete! Pete!” rang out as Golding left the field, and he joked that he’s also been on the flip side when his teams or defenses haven’t played as well. He also downplayed any difficulty of working through the chaos with the players and having them focused.

“I mean it would be one thing, no disrespect, if this was the Pop-Tarts Bowl or something like that,” Golding said. “It would have been really hard, but this is the playoffs. When people start talking about, ‘Are they going to play or not going to play?’ What are we talking about? I mean, these kids have gone 11-1 up to this point and have a home playoff game for the first time in the history of the program. … They don’t really care who runs them through the tunnel. That’s the truth. They care about their preparation. They care about the plan, are they getting developed?”

Golding held down the curse words, only a couple of “shits,” and joked that he was working on his cursing. He also wasn’t buying any conspiracy theories about the coaches on loan from LSU, including Weis, somehow not being fully invested.

Ole Miss finished with 497 yards – 346 passing and 151 rushing – and racked up 29 first downs. The Rebels were 5-of-7 in the red zone, and the only penalty came on fourth down when they took a delay and punted.

“I had zero concern with Charlie Weis calling this game for this one reason: Charlie Weis cannot afford not to call a hell of a game,” Golding said. “All he’s heard his whole life is that this is Lane Kiffin’s offense, it’s Lane Kiffin’s offense, it’s Lane Kiffin’s offense. Charlie Weis calls the offense just like he’s done all year. He did a great job tonight. So I had no concern because the last thing Charlie wanted to do was come out here and lay an egg, right? Then it’s ‘Who’s offense is it?’ and you (the media) would write about it.”

The only real downer for Ole Miss on Saturday was running back Kewan Lacy leaving the game with a bruised shoulder. He went back into the game after initially injuring it, but later left the sideline for the locker room. Golding said Lacy, the Rebels’ leading rusher, would be further evaluated.

Ole Miss now gets another shot at Georgia in the Sugar Bowl on New Year’s Day. The Bulldogs handed the Rebels their only loss this season.

As historic as Saturday’s win was, there won’t be much celebrating for the Rebels.

“The expectation is to make the playoff every year,” Golding said. “That’s why Keith Carter invests the way he does and runs the program the way he does. That’s the expectation and that’s what was unique about this group. We felt like last year we screwed that up. We had a talented enough team to be able to make the playoff and we didn’t. So all these guys that came into this team this year, their expectation was to make the playoff,  and that came true for them. I think that’s going to be for every class going forward. That’s the expectation of where this program is.

“It’s a top-5 program in the country, and that’s your expectation every year.”



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4 Takeaways From Alabama’s Comeback, Oklahoma’s Collapse in CFP First-Round Game

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Memorial Stadium (Norman, Oklahoma) — The stage was set for Oklahoma. Heck, the Sooners earned the right to set it. This was supposed to be the ushering in of a new era of postseason football for the No. 8 team in the country that had won 10 games in what was one of the toughest schedules this year.

No. 9 Alabama was even one of those teams that Oklahoma beat on its way to earning this spot. And Saturday night, all was going well for the Sooners. It was going so well, in fact, that after the first quarter, some Oklahoma fans might’ve peeked at flights and hotel rates for the Rose Bowl from inside Memorial Stadium.

And then the Alabama Crimson Tide curled and rolled the Sooners, 34-24, and are headed to Pasadena. After opening with 17 unanswered points, Oklahoma collapsed under the weight of that wave, becoming the only team in College Football Playoff history to blow a 17-point lead. And now, the Sooners have done it twice — before Saturday, in 2018 against Georgia.

[Best Teams in the College Football Playoff Era: Creating the Ultimate 12-team CFP]

Here are my takeaways from Alabama’s College Football Playoff first-round victory against Oklahoma on Saturday:

1. Alabama is the most resilient team in the CFP

NORMAN, OKLAHOMA: Zabien Brown #2 of the Alabama Crimson Tide stiff-arms John Mateer #10 of the Oklahoma Sooners during the second quarter during the 2025 College Football Playoff first-round game on December 19, 2025. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images)

Crimson Tide quarterback Ty Simpson is an avid reader and listener of college football news. Following the largest comeback win in Alabama postseason history, Simpson took a moment to facetiously thank media members during his post-game press conference for choosing Oklahoma to win on Saturday night. 

“I guess we can thank you guys for that,” an emboldened Simpson said. “You guys kind of wrote us off in a sort of way. So I appreciate that.”

After building a three-score lead, the Sooners watched the Crimson Tide recover a fumbled punt, pick off Oklahoma quarterback John Mateer and return it 50 yards to the end zone — all before their First Team All-American kicker Tate Sandell missed not one but two field goals in the final minutes to solidify the worst collapse in College Football Playoff history.

Meanwhile, the Alabama Crimson Tide will prepare to take on No. 1 Indiana in the Rose Bowl for the CFP quarterfinal game. This team that punches back and played its best football with its back against the wall is one that the Hoosiers must prepare for on New Year’s Day.

[MORE CFP: 4 Takeaways from Oregon’s Blowout of James Madison in CFP First Round]

2. You can’t be this up-and-down and contend for the national championship

NORMAN, OKLAHOMA: John Mateer #10 of the Oklahoma Sooners is hit by Deontae Lawson #0 of the Alabama Crimson Tide during the first quarter during the College Football Playoff first-round game on December 19, 2025. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images)

The Crimson Tide began down — just like they did against Georgia in the SEC championship game. But the last three quarters of Saturday’s game demonstrated Alabama to be just who it says it is: the kind of team that can open with a loss to a bad Florida State and also be the first team in six years to walk into Sanford Stadium in Athens, Georgia, and come out with a win.

DeBoer’s task now is to find a way to make certain that the team that showed up at Georgia earlier this season and at Oklahoma in the first round is the same one against the Hoosiers. Linebacker Deontae Lawson said that’s his job too. But Bama’s best trait isn’t one that shows itself until it’s in a fight for its life.

“Man, I just think we’re a resilient team,” Lawson said during a post-game press conference. “And even though we were down 17-0, we didn’t really look at the scoreboard. Coach DeBoer always says, ‘Keep playing the game. The game will come back to you.’ … We just keep fighting.”

[MORE CFP: 4 Takeaways From Miami’s Defense-Heavy CFP Upset Win vs. Texas A&M]

3. Oklahoma’s cartoonish errors 

NORMAN, OKLAHOMA: Head coach Brent Venables of the Oklahoma Sooners speaks to an official during the fourth quarter against the Alabama Crimson Tide on December 19, 2025. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images)

Let’s look at the bigger ones:

  • Mateer’s air-mailed pass intended for receiver JaVonnie Gibson in the first half that would’ve gone for six
  • Mateer’s pick-six with barely a minute left in the second quarter
  • Punter Grayson Miller’s fumble/blocked punt
  • Sandell’s two missed field goals — one from 36 yards, then from 51 yards, despite hitting a 51-yarder in the first quarter — to bring the game to one-score with not five minutes left to play

These are blunders. Errors that aren’t forced but self-inflicted. It’s difficult to win any game with those kinds of mistakes on your drive chart. It’s nearly impossible in a game of this magnitude, against a team as talented and as resilient as the Crimson Tide.

[MORE CFP: 4 Takeaways From Ole Miss’ Dominant CFP First-Round Win Against Tulane]

4. A (brief) live concert

NORMAN, OKLAHOMA: Keon Keeley #31 of the Alabama Crimson Tide celebrates after defeating the Oklahoma Sooners in the College Football Playoff first-round game. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

Oklahoma usually plays 50 Cent’s “Many Men” before the start of the fourth quarter. In an attempt to make a statement for its first CFP game at Owen Field, the Sooners brought the rapper himself out onto the field to perform the song for fans in a Hard to Kill Hoodie.

“I didn’t know it was live,” DeBoer said during the post-game press conference.

“I didn’t know who 50 Cent was,” Simpson added, “but I know that song.”

“We play that song at practice on Fridays,” Lawson said.

RJ Young is a national college football writer and analyst for FOX Sports. Follow him @RJ_Young.





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Steve Spurrier reveals his concern level for the state of college football

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Steve Spurrier is never shy about voicing his thoughts on college football. And he’s not a huge fan of a more recent development in the last few years. Well, a few of them.

There have been plenty of changes to the sport in that timeframe. The implementation of new transfer portal windows, reform of the transfer process in general, the introduction of NIL legislation and more.

Spurrier recently joined Another Dooley Noted Podcast and opened up on the state of the sport. He was blunt.

“Yeah, I wish all this had not happened, but it is what it is now,” Steve Spurrier said. “I don’t know how they change it, because they don’t know how to do it either. There have got to be smarter people than me that can look at it and say, ‘Why don’t we put some like… you’ve got to stay two years somewhere.’ Or just anything. And every school gets $20 or $22 million and that’s it, you can’t spend more than that. And you’ve got to have accounts of it.”

In other words, let’s rein in the free transfer era a bit. And let’s level the playing field when it comes to NIL spending. The alternative is the kind of chaos we’ve seen unfold in the sport.

For Steve Spurrier, there are some obvious things that should be cleaned up. For one, it’s impossible for most people to get a handle on what’s going on in the NIL world.

“I heard Ricky Neuheisel talking on his radio show the other day, he said, ‘College football is the only sport in the world, or the only business in the world you don’t have to tell anybody how much money you make,’” Spurrier said. “It’s supposed to be public knowledge.”

Steve Spurrier provided two high-profile examples. Both came from the SEC.

“Nobody knows what (DJ) Lagway got,” Spurrier said. “They asked me, ‘What did Lagway get?’ I said, ‘I think three, four or five million. Arch Manning supposedly got six million a year. So I can’t put an exact number on it because they don’t tell you.”

For those in charge in the sport, the lack of transparency is a feature, not a bug, Spurrier said. Coaches have an easier time managing things if it’s not readily apparent that one player is getting paid far more than another.

“Obviously they tell the players don’t tell anybody how much you got now, because we can’t give everybody that much,” Steve Spurrier said. “So yeah, it’s just what it is. But like people say, the attendance is good as ever, the TV ratings are as good as ever. So people are watching and there’s great interest in it, I will say that. But just have some rules somehow. You would think they would want to do that, but they haven’t done it yet.”



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Calls mount for College Football Playoff to make drastic changes after Saturday’s games

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ESPN analyst and former head coach Nick Saban ruffled a few feathers earlier in the week, but could not hand out some “I told you so” takes.

Saban is one of many advocates of some significant change in the College Football Playoff system who saw Saturday’s results validate a point he was making all week. The system, fairly obviously, is broken.

Two Group of Five teams reached the CFP after the ACC stumbled, fumbled, and tumbled to 8-5 Duke winning the league. After Saturday’s results for Tulane and James Madison, it’s fair to wonder: what on Earth were they doing in the Playoff?

Ole Miss waxed Tulane 41-10 in a game that wasn’t even as close as its lop-sided score. Oregon likewise easily controlled JMU, rolling up a 34-6 halftime edge before taking the easy victory. After an fairly electric Oklahoma/Alabama showdown on Friday and a defensive battle between Miami and Texas A&M on Saturday morning, the CFP suddenly fell very, very flat.

Enter Saban having built a solid base for his “I told you so” platform. Back on Thursday, on The Pat McAfee Show, Saban rebuked the entire idea of G5 teams in the Playoff. “Would we allow ther winner of the AAA baseball league… in the World Series playoffs?” asked Saban. “That’s the equivalent of what we do when JMU gets into the College Football Playoff and Notre Dame doesn’t.”

Oregon wide receiver Malik Benson celebrates with tight end Jamari Johnson

Oregon Ducks wide receiver Malik Benson (4) celebrates with Oregon tight end Jamari Johnson (9) | Craig Strobeck-Imagn Images

Likewise, Urban Meyer made similar arguments last week. On The Triple Option podcast, he advocated for a qualification test for G5 teams– they should play three teams in the top 50 to qualify. “You’re telling the [Notre Dame] Fighting Irish to sit home and James Madison’s going?” asked Meyer. “The better team is supposed to be in the game.”

It was certainly clear on Saturday that the better team was not actually in the game. Joe Tessitore and Jesse Palmer actually made that point clearly in broadcasting the Ole Miss/Tulane blowout.

“This has been a completely non-competitive game,” Tessitore said. “If this were Notre Dame, what kind of game would we have had?”

Jesse Palmer stated, “Imagine how big this environment already is… and what that would have looked like if Notre Dame had that opportunity…. I think this is something that the committee needs to continue working out as they press forward.”

Palmer and Tessitore made a more moderate case, essentially adovicating allowing one team to make a Playoff appearance, but not a second.

That said, considering the trouble that both G5 teams had, a separate bracket might be the only way to make the Playoff experience tenable for Group of Five schools.

With power conferences going to nine-game schedules, it’s also less and less likely that big schools will want to play top Group of Five foes.



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Grimsley’s Faizon Brandon cemented his legacy in the best way possible: on the field

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Faizon Brandon’s decision to return to the field late in his senior senior was eerily similar to the decision made by another Grimsley player just five seasons earlier.

“I’m very glad to end it the right way,” he said.

Travis Shaw, who at the time was ranked as high as the No. 4 defensive lineman in his senior class class, was — like Brandon — coming off a state championship the year before. Also like Brandon, Shaw was injured early in the year — Shaw missed all eight of the first games to start the 2021 season, returning to the field just in time for senior night and a playoff run.

But Brandon, the nation’s top-ranked quarterback and 2024 N.C. Gatorade Player of the Year, had to have had more on his mind than Shaw did.

After all, a lot has changed in five years.

Shaw had to weigh the possibility of returning to the field and getting re-injured and how that might affect his ability to play right away as a freshman.

The birth of the “NIL era” in college football means players have a real financial risk.

Brandon’s injury — a ligament on his right thumb — was in an area where you can’t be too careful.

“Faizon,” who has earned the first-name-only recognition statewide that few players reach in four years in any sport, was also the athlete who challenged the state’s NIL rules and won.

If anyone understood what was at stake, he did.

But sports are not made with the spirit of accounting.

They were made for competitors.

“When he goes out and everybody that thinks they know says ‘You shouldn’t come back.’ I got phone calls saying he had already moved to Tennessee. I thought that was funny because he was in my office when I got that call,” Grimsley coach Darryl Brown said. “And everything else, you know, like he’s done, he’s not playing at Grimsley High School anymore. And he does everything within his power to get himself back to be a part of this run with his teammates. He could have said, I’m good, I already won a state championship.”

In his final year, he returned to the playoffs after missing all but the season opener, wasn’t quite himself. Yet, while playing a total of just six games, and throwing 11 touchdowns, he also walked away as a two-time N.C. High School Athletic Association champion and a two-time MVP.

“Playing high school football in anywhere, playing varsity high school football, for anybody listening, it means something,” Brown said. “It matters. It’s important. A lot of times everybody wants to speed stuff up. But that school you’re at and the teammates you’re with, and the coaches you play for, that matters. And you can see that it means something to our kids.”

He had all the reasons, probably millions if you count every potential dollar, to not play again for the Whirlies. He would have still walked away as one of the best North Carolina high school quarterbacks since the turn of the century.

But he didn’t go out as a healthy scratch.

He went out as a two-time champion, two-time MVP, and his legacy at Grimsley — like Shaw’s — was cemented where it should have always been: on the field.

“I was just trying to give it everything I got, you know, go out there and lay it on the line,” Brandon said. “That was the biggest thing that I felt whenever I came to realization that it would be in my last high school game is just giving it everything I got.”

Faizon Brandon. Grimsley defeated Clayton in the NCHSAA 7A football state championship on December 12, 2025. (Photo: Joshua Chayer/HighSchoolOT)
Faizon Brandon. Grimsley defeated Clayton in the NCHSAA 7A football state championship on December 12, 2025. (Photo: Joshua Chayer/HighSchoolOT)

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