NIL
Inside the college basketball positional groups primed for a big jump or step back in 2025

When Florida was scouting the portal last spring, it knew that its perimeter defense was not good enough. It needed an alpha guard stopper, so it went out and landed a defensive menace in Alijah Martin, who helped change the tenor for the eventual national champions. Texas Tech doesn’t erupt into an Elite Eight team and one of the Big 12’s best clubs without understanding that it needed to hit big at point guard and big man in roster-building. All the complementary pieces made way more sense when they were settling in next to Elijah Hawkins and JT Toppin.
Self-scouting has become essential. Weaknesses can become strengths with the right transfer portal addition or smart player development. The contrary is possible, too. Now more than ever, strengths can become weaknesses in a heartbeat, just due to the avalanche of roster changes.
Let’s dive into five positional groups (one from each of the five biggest conferences in college basketball) that will look vastly different in 2025-26.
Trending up: USC’s rim defense
Big Ten foes shot a horrifying 70% at the rim against USC last season. That rated in the third percentile nationally, per CBB Analytics. It was a major stumbling block for a Trojan club that finished 5-17 against top-100 teams last season.
Eric Musselman did something about it in free agency. USC has bolstered its interior defense significantly with a wave of newcomers. Musselman has a little bit of everything at his disposal. Virginia transfer Jacob Cofie is a 6-foot-10, 230-pound big man who is mobile, athletic and a stout on-ball defender. Cofie has a chance to be one of the Big Ten’s best defenders next year. Amarion Dickerson, the reigning Horizon League Defensive Player of the Year, might only be 6-7, but the long-armed, fiery forward is a menacing weak-side rim protector who notched a block percentage that ranked among the top-35 nationally, per KenPom.com.
Utah transfer Ezra Ausar isn’t much of a shot-blocker, but he’s physically down to tango with the brutal 4s that are littered across the Big Ten. USC’s defense will need that oomph. Oh, and the Trojans have a 7-5 (!) weapon in Youngstown State transfer Gabe Dynes, who ranked third in Division I with an eye-popping 14.4% block rate. Dynes has lots to improve on, but blocking shots is his specialty. His go-go gadget arms help eradicate wide-open layups.
Some combination of Cofie, Dickerson, Ausar or Dynes will be on the floor at all times. It’s a polar-opposite reality for Musselman this year to go along with the perimeter positional size that he craves, thanks to big portal splashes like Auburn’s Chad Baker-Mazara and Maryland’s Rodney Rice. Baker-Mazara’s defensive impact will be noticeable, too. The former Auburn wing has some absolutely disrespectful chasedown blocks in his portfolio, and he owns terrific defensive instincts both on and off the ball. Baker-Mazara even defended Purdue’s Braden Smith very well for stretches and could unlock the ability for USC to trot out some hellacious defensive lineups with Baker-Mazara (6-7), Rice (6-5), Dickerson (6-7), Ausar (6-9) and Cofie (6-11) on the floor at the same team. That’s a switchable five-man group with good-to-great defenders at all three levels off the floor.
USC’s defense finished 88th nationally and 14th in Big Ten play in efficiency last season, according to KenPom. It’s primed to go from a weakness to a major strength in 2025-26. A top-25 defense is firmly in play because the interior defense no longer resembles a sieve.
USC PROJECTED STARTING LINEUP
- G Jordan Marsh
- G Rodney Rice
- G Chad Baker-Mazara
- F Ezra Ausar
- F Jacob Cofie
Trending up: Virginia’s offensive ethos
The decline of Virginia basketball has centered around an offense that has fallen off a cliff from the glory days. Here’s where UVa’s offense has finished in ACC play in the last seven seasons:
- 2019: First
- 2020: 14th
- 2021: Third
- 2022: Eighth
- 2023: Ninth
- 2024: 13th
- 2025: Eighth
Thankfully, the days of scoring 52 points at home against SMU are very likely over.
New UVa coach Ryan Odom has built a roster from scratch that has serious potency offensively, and the method behind the madness isn’t hard to spot with each addition.
- Point guards: BYU veteran Dallin Hall and incoming top-60 freshman Chance Mallory will handle most of the traditional point guard duties. Hall is a career 35% 3-point shooter who can be a bit of a gunslinger in pick-and-rolls. The turnovers will be there, but the risk is usually worth the reward. Mallory is an undersized, highly skilled 5-9 firecracker who can fill it up from downtown or the midrange, all while running a team adeptly. He’ll fit like a glove.
- The dude: San Francisco transfer Malik Thomas is a proven bucket. He’s the best bet to lead this team in scoring with his barrage of 3s and a knack for getting to the charity stripe. Thomas, a fifth-year senior, will be one of the oldest players in the ACC. He won’t be overwhelmed by anything he sees, and Thomas has so many outs. He hunts buckets in transition. He’s an excellent slasher, especially attacking long closeouts, and he’s drained over 39% of his triples in back-to-back years while showing the ability to score at all three levels.
- Sweet-shootin’ role players: Sam Lewis (from Toledo) and Jacari White (from North Dakota State) are projected to be primarily off-ball spacers. Lewis shot over 52% on catch-and-shoot 3-pointers last year, and White was over 41% on catch-and-shoot 3-pointers on absurd volume (162 attempts, 89th percentile nationally). While they project to play off the ball, White and Lewis both notched over 100 ball-screen reps last year. Odom loves having a stable of capable guards who can run pick-and-rolls and make decisions. He has five (!) different guards who have proven they can handle the rock. That’s invaluable in this guard-friendly scheme.
- Fearsome Fours: Skilled 4s are essential for some of the best offenses, and Virginia has two of them. Thijs de Ridder is a 22-year-old Belgian who can make 3s and punish switches inside. Tillis is another fifth-year senior who was a key weapon of UC Irvine’s 32-win club. The 6-7 forward is a bootyball threat who can both invert the floor and operate as a spacer (39% from 3-point range on 3.3 attempts).
- Complementary centers: Johann Grünloh and Ugonna Onyenso build a center platoon that does opposite things well. Grunloh is a true stretch 5 who shot 34% from downtown on over 2.5 attempts (in just 22 minutes) in Germany last season. When he’s on the floor, Grunloh will pull would-be shot-blockers away from the rim. Onyenso is the opposite as a long-armed 7-footer who can operate as a rim-running, lob threat. Virginia can have two different looks depending on which center is on the floor. Those complementary skill sets are vital.
The verdict: Virginia should have four or five trustworthy shooters on the floor at all times with a sterling mix of creators, slashers, rim-runners and post-up threats. Virginia should be a top-five offense in the ACC for the first time since 2021, and it also has the upside to flirt with a top-10 offense nationally.
VIRGINIA PROJECTED STARTING LINEUP
- G Dallin Hall
- G Malik Thomas
- G Jacari White
- F Thijs de Ridder
- C Johann Grünloh
Trending down: Auburn’s interior fortress
Auburn’s defensive approach centered around the trio of Dylan Cardwell, Johni Broome and Chaney Johnson, who built an “enter at your own risk” barricade around the rim. Auburn was one of the best shot-blocking teams in America, and it seeped into everything about the Tigers’ defensive identity. Perimeter defenders like Chad Baker-Mazara, Denver Jones and Miles Kelly were weaponized to heat up the basketball even more and blanket 3-point shooters. Auburn rarely gave up treys and funneled everyone into the paint, where Cardwell or Broome would usually swallow ’em up.
Elite shot-blocking has been a staple of Bruce Pearl-coached teams for the better part of a decade, but it looks poised to come back down to earth a little bit in 2025-26 now that Cardwell, Broome and Johnson are off to chase their professional dreams.
As usual, the Tigers have a bevy of options. Emeka Opurum, a 7-footer from the junior college ranks armed with a 7-6 wingspan, has the tools to be a good SEC rim protector. He can help Auburn right away, but he’s expected to be more of a second-unit piece. Auburn seems headed to go all-in on the Keyshawn Hall-KeShawn Murphy, 1-2 punch as the featured frontcourt. They both have the same-sounding first name and excellent offensive games. Hall is a walking bucket, and Murphy’s slick handle and behind-the-back passes form a tantalizing combination. Even with so many new faces, Auburn has a chance to be excellent offensively with Tahaad Pettiford at the reins, paired with the Hall-Murphy duo.
It’s clear that Auburn has prioritized offensive skill with its highest-paid offseason additions, but defensively, the personnel just is not the same. Cardwell and Broome were excellent shot-blockers who were massive, thick and impossible to move. Murphy is a good rim protector, not a great one. Hall has not been an overly impactful defender throughout his college career. Murphy will redirect some shots in the paint, but his switchability on the perimeter is his superpower defensively.
Auburn went all-in with last year’s group and was rewarded with a Final Four appearance and one of the best seasons in program history. Some natural regression is expected when seven of the top eight players from a 32-win superteam depart, but the interior defense is where it could show up the most.
Auburn’s defense can still be solid with Kevin Overton hounding lead guards and Murphy being that switchable, mobile big fella, but the floor is significantly lower this year. Bart Torvik’s early 2025-26 projections have Auburn pegged around a top-25 defense. That’d be a huge win for this new-look group.
AUBURN PROJECTED STARTING LINEUP
Trending up: UConn’s point guard play
UConn’s collection of primary ball-handlers, namely Hassan Diarra, Aidan Mahaney and Liam McNeeley, combined to post the highest turnover rate in pick-and-rolls last year of any team in the Dan Hurley-UConn era.
A whopping 19.9% of UConn’s pick-and-roll possessions last season ended with a giveaway. That can’t happen anymore.
The turnovers were just part of the problem for UConn’s point guards. Diarra was excellent as a high-energy sixth man, but he wasn’t at his best as a late-clock, bucket-getter who could bail out possessions gone awry. Diarra’s inability to become a knockdown shooter made UConn a little easier to guard, too. Mahaney’s inability to defend exacerbated everything and bled into his confidence offensively. McNeeley, best-suited to be an off-ball wing, was thrust into even more of the ball-handling work out of pure necessity because of the other options.
Try as they might, UConn’s staff was rotating through a cast of point guards who all had one or two major weaknesses in their portfolios.
That should be much different in 2025-26. Georgia transfer Silas Demary Jr. was one of the most well-rounded lead guards in the portal. At 6-5 and a well-built 195 pounds, Demary has the positional size that UConn craves. He’s an excellent defender who smartly oscillates between scorer and distributor. Demary averaged nearly 5.0 free-throw attempts per game at Georgia, and he’ll give UConn’s offense a get out of jail free card that it desperately needs.
It’s not all on Demary’s plate, either. Dayton transfer Malachi Smith is a high-risk, high-reward playmaker who can shoot and also generates loads of paint touches. He’s a bit undersized (6-foot, 175 pounds), but Smith can heat up opposing ball-handlers for all 94 feet. He can be one of the elite backup point guards in college basketball, who can easily carve out 20+ minutes a night thanks to Demary’s versatility.
We’ll see how the rest of the preseason workouts shake out, but UConn should have four excellent options to play with at the three backcourt spots. Lineups featuring Smith (a high-feel initiator point guard), Demary (a scoring combo guard) and Solo Ball (a net-shredding sharpshooter) make plenty of sense. Hurley could also pair Demary with Ball and five-star freshman Braylon Mullins, who is another plus shooter. If Demary needs a blow, Smith-Mullins-Ball is a feasible trio as well.
UCONN PROJECTED STARTING LINEUP
- G Silas Demary Jr.
- G Braylon Mullins
- G Solo Ball
- F Alex Karaban
- C Tarris Reed
Trending up: BYU’s point of attack defense
BYU’s defense was blowtorched by lead guards all year long. BYU’s pick-and-roll defense against lead guards rated 353rd nationally in efficiency, only ahead of the likes of Chicago State, Gardner-Webb, Syracuse, Pepperdine and Central Arkansas.
It just was not a strength, and that showed up in the NCAA Tournament when Alabama’s Mark Sears and Aden Holloway combined for 16 triples and 57 points.
In an effort to keep his best offensive lineups on the floor, BYU coach Kevin Young didn’t have a ton of flexibility defensively. BYU was mostly passive, choosing to go under screens whenever possible. Alabama made Young pay like no other in the Sweet 16, but there wasn’t some easy adjustment BYU could have made. The personnel was what it was. It didn’t have that fleet-footed guard who could mirror those lightning-quick lead guards. It didn’t have great rim protection whenever Keba Keita needed a blow. Ultimately, it’s why BYU’s lightning-strike offense didn’t advance further in the Big Dance.
Overall, BYU’s defense allowed 118.0 points per 100 possessions in the 13 games against top-50 competition. Woooooof.
BYU wasn’t athletic enough. It didn’t have enough bite or defensive optionality.
Young, armed with one of the elite budgets in college basketball, has the roster to do things a little bit differently this year defensively. Make no mistake, BYU’s best defense will be an offense that forces opponents to take it out of the net, but Southern Illinois transfer Kennard Davis and five-star freshman AJ Dybantsa provide some semblance of athleticism and floor coverage that BYU just didn’t have last year. Baylor transfer Rob Wright was not a great defender as a freshman in the Big 12, but he’s extremely fast and can get skinny to dodge screens. With the right development, Wright should take another step in the right direction on that end.
Dybantsa’s defensive production tends to ebb and flow, depending on the night, but the tools are unquestionably noticeable. Dybantsa bounds across the floor and can plug gaps and provide a splash of secondary rim protection. Davis might be the most impactful addition for this defense. The 6-6, Southern Illinois product has serious potential as a lead guard stopper. When he’s dialed in, Davis mirrors drivers extremely well. With a smaller offensive burden at BYU, Davis should be unleashed to bring it even more defensively at BYU.
This team should simply be able to scramble, rotate, peel-switch and cover up hot spots way easier because of the boosted athleticism and speed that this roster has. Even a 6-8 athlete like Dominique Diomande can’t be overlooked in this equation.
The days of BYU rating 353rd against lead guards are over.
BYU PROJECTED STARTING LINEUP
- G Rob Wright
- G Kennard Davis
- G Richie Saunders
- G/F AJ Dybantsa
- F Keba Keita
NIL
Athletic Director Confident Wyoming is ‘Catching Up’ in NIL Game
LARAMIE — When it comes to the controversial subject of Name, Image and Likeness in college sports, Tom Burman will be the first to tell you Wyoming has been playing catch up.
That doesn’t mean a solution isn’t on the horizon.
“We need to grow it quickly,” the school’s longtime athletics director admitted on Saturday night.

A report by the Cowboy State Daily earlier in the day stated the department is only allocating $1.4 million annually in NIL funds, $800,000 less per year than regional programs Montana and Montana State, which compete in the FCS.
While the latter dollar amount could not be substantiated, Burman said the initial figure for UW is now at $1.5 million, adding that number only illustrates the revenue sharing monies between the school’s two largest income generating programs, football and men’s basketball. An additional $200,000 is being divvied up between women’s basketball, volleyball and wrestling, he added.
“This does not include any third-party NIL dollars or Learfield NIL partnerships, which are likely another $500,000 total,” he continued. “This also does not include Alston Scholarship dollars, which is $1.1 million, and are included as revenue sharing as part of the House Settlement analysis.”
There are other future plans in place to bring in additional revenue, Burman said. including jersey patches, field and court logos and venue naming opportunities.
UNLV, one of the Cowboys’ current Mountain West foes, recently announced a 5-year, $11 million deal to promote a local Las Vegas company on its uniforms in football, men’s and women’s basketball and baseball. That is expected to be approved in August.
Burman said this will happen at UW, but added, “We’re not going to give it away.”
The same can be said for a permanent field sponsor inside War Memorial Stadium.
Ramos Law, a firm based out of Colorado, purchased that space for the Cowboys’ home finale last month against Nevada — the “Josh Allen game” — for a reported $90,000-plus. The company logo was placed at both 25 yards lines.
MORE UW FOOTBALL NEWS VIA 7220SPORTS:
* Burman, UW Athletics Seeking Additional Revenue Streams
* Recruiting, Portal Misses Have Lasting Impact in Laramie
* Injured Wyoming Running Back Says He’s Entering Portal
* Wyoming Inks 20 Freshmen in 2026 Recruiting Class
* Wyoming in the Market for New Offensive Coordinator
* PODCAST: Offseason ‘Rework’ Underway in Laramie
* Running Back Terron Kellman Again Looking for New Home
* Wyoming’s Leading Receiver Entering NCAA Transfer Portal
There are other potential avenues that could help Wyoming gain ground on the competition.
“If we get support from the state — and not a budget cut, also — and continued investment from the private sector, coupled with support from campus, we will be in a good place in short order,” Burman said.
The department earlier this month asked the joint appropriations committee of the Wyoming Legislature for an additional $3 million on top of the annual $11.2 it receives annually through the school’s block grant. The state will also match up to $5 million a year in private donations.
The grand total is just over $19 million.
Though the $3 million, annually, wouldn’t go directly to NIL and revenue sharing, Burman said, it will help UW to handle other escalating costs that have occurred due to inflation and additional costs related to the NCAA House settlement and Mountain West membership changes.
The university is now on the hook for reimbursements to former student-athletes. That number totals $2.8 billion in damages. Over the next 10 years, Burman added, Wyoming will lose funding to the tune of $550,000, annually.
The current media rights deal with the conference, which currently brings in $3.7 million a year, is also likely to take a hit.
San Diego State, Fresno State, Utah State, Boise State and the Cowboys’ Border War rival, Colorado State, are departing in July for the new-look Pac-12. The league is adding UTEP and Northern Illinois, the latter in football only. UC Davis and Grand Canyon have joined on the basketball side. Hawaii is also now a full member.
The department, though, could soon see an influx of cash once the legal battle between the Mountain West and Pac-12 is finalized. Poaching fees and exit fees are at the heart of the litigation. The next hearing in that case is set for Sept. 9.
Donations to the Cowboy Joe Club, the department’s lead fundraising arm, will also open up additional opportunities to retain and lure future student-athletes, Burman added.
“We are starting to see people donate,” he said. “That frees up money for revenue sharing through ticket sales, media rights, corporate dollars, television, etc.
“We are just getting started.”
University of Wyoming’s Top 50 Football Players
The rules are simple: What was the player’s impact while in Laramie? That means NFL stats, draft status or any other accolade earned outside of UW is irrelevant when it comes to this list.
This isn’t a one-man job. This task called for a panel of experts. Joining 7220’s Cody Tucker are Robert Gagliardi, Jared Newland, Ryan Thorburn, and Kevin McKinney.
We all compiled our own list of 50 and let computer averages do the work. Think BCS — only we hope this catalog is fairer.
Gallery Credit: 7220Sports.com
– University of Wyoming’s Top 50 Football Players
NIL
Clemson Fans Want Dabo Swinney Fired Immediately After Bowl Game
It’s getting hard for Clemson to ignore the downfall of Dabo Swinney.
Prior to the start of the 2025 season, Clemson was a trendy pick to make the national championship game. The program’s hopes of making a run in the College Football Playoff were destroyed once Swinney’s squad fell to 1-3 on Sept. 20. Although the Tigers finished the regular season with a 7-5 record, the reality is they underachieved this year.
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As if this season wasn’t brutal enough for Clemson fans, they had to watch their team get dismantled by Penn State in the Bad Boy Mowers Pinstripe Bowl.
Clemson’s offense was neutralized by Penn State’s defense. On the flip side, the Nittany Lions received a sharp performance from quarterback Ethan Grunkemeyer.
Before Penn State even put the finishing touches on its bowl victory over Clemson, people voiced their complaints about Swinney online. Most of them believe he should be fired this offseason.
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Nov 14, 2025; Louisville, Kentucky, USA; Clemson Tigers head coach Dabo Swinney talks with the officials during the first half against the Louisville Cardinals at L&N Federal Credit Union Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Rhodes-Imagn Images
Dabo on the hot seat.
“Fire Dabo, fire the whole staff, cut the entire team. Losing to a piss poor Penn State team is unacceptable,” one fan said.
“Please fire Dabo..it’s time,” a second fan wrote. “I’m sorry but it’s time.”
“Fire Dabo NOW,” a third fan commented.
“Dabo Swinney has stated numerous times that he’s against NIL If he can’t adapt then Clemson needs to fire him,” another fan argued. “I think he’s a great football coach and would have success in the NFL, but the college game is a lot different now.”
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Swinney, a two-time national champion, has accomplished remarkable things at Clemson since taking over the program in 2009.
At the end of the day though, Swinney has struggled to adapt in the NIL era of college football.
Should Clemson fire Swinney this offseason?
This story was originally published by The Spun on Dec 27, 2025, where it first appeared in the College Football section. Add The Spun as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
NIL
Oregon QB Austin Novosad plans to enter NCAA Transfer Portal
Oregon redshirt sophomore quarterback Austin Novosad plans to enter the NCAA transfer portal, according to a report from ESPN’s Pete Thamel on Saturday afternoon.
Novosad, a native of Dripping Springs, Texas, spent three seasons at Oregon and appeared in seven games. During that span, he completed 12 of 15 passes for 99 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions.
Novosad waited his turn in Eugene throughout that time. He learned behind Bo Nix during his true freshman season in 2023 and Dillon Gabriel in 2024. Novosad remained with the program losing the spring quarterback competition to Dante Moore, and played very little during his third season with the program.
A member of the 2023 recruiting class, he was the No. 113 overall prospect and the No. 10 quarterback in the cycle, per the Rivals Industry Ranking, a proprietary algorithm that compiles ratings and rankings from all of the primary recruiting media services. He was the No. 21 player from the state of Texas that year.
Novosad is set to have have two years of eligibility at the next school he attends. He used a redshirt during his true freshman season.
As a high schooler, he completed 563-of-873 passes (64.5%) for 8,983 yards and 114 touchdowns compared to 18 interceptions during a three-year career at the varsity level. He had three games where he finished with seven touchdowns, as well as one six-touchdown game, and six separate games where he threw five touchdowns. Novosad was recruited by the likes of Ohio State, Texas A&M and Baylor, among others. A one-time Baylor commit, he flipped late to the Ducks before National Signing Day.
More on the NCAA Transfer Portal
Once the NCAA transfer portal opens on Jan. 2, players can officially enter their names in the NCAA transfer portal and go on to initiate contact with their preferred schools. The portal will be open for 15 days and close on Jan. 16.
Notably, players who are on teams competing in the national championship game are allowed five extra days to make their portal decision. The College Football Playoff championship game will be played on Jan. 19, so the players on those teams will be allowed until Jan. 24 to enter the portal and choose their next school.
To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire. The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.
NIL
No. 1 college football team linked to 1,700-yard RB in transfer portal
James Madison completed a historic 2025 campaign, capturing the Sun Belt title and earning the program’s first-ever College Football Playoff berth before a first-round loss to Oregon.
Even with the postseason loss, the Dukes finished ranked inside the top 25 and reinforced their status as one of the fastest-rising programs in the FBS after transitioning from the FCS in 2022.
The team’s biggest contributor was junior running back Wayne Knight.
Across the season, he totaled 1,373 rushing yards on 207 carries (6.6 yards per carry) with nine rushing touchdowns and added 40 receptions for 397 receiving yards, producing 1,770 all-purpose yards.
Knight posted multiple 100-yard rushing games, set a school record with 234 all-purpose yards in the Sun Belt championship (including a 212-yard rushing effort), became a Paul Hornung Award finalist, earned first-team All–Sun Belt honors, and garnered All-American recognition from select outlets.
However, on Saturday, Knight announced his intention to enter the NCAA transfer portal.
Early reporting has already linked him to several Power Five programs, with Yahoo Sports explicitly naming No. 1-ranked Indiana as a logical fit.

Knight redshirted in 2023 before establishing himself as James Madison’s primary back in 2024, totaling 449 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns while adding 137 receiving yards and two receiving scores ahead of his breakout 2025 campaign.
Knight signed with James Madison in December 2021, choosing the Dukes over more than a dozen other scholarship offers, including Delaware, Navy, Brown, Howard, and Maine.
Hoosiers head coach Curt Cignetti is the central link in the Knight to Indiana storyline.
Before taking the Indiana job in 2024, Cignetti led James Madison to an 8–3 record in 2022 and an 11–1 finish in 2023, reaching as high as No. 18 in the AP poll.
Knight played under Cignetti during both seasons and was originally recruited to JMU by him.
For Cignetti and Indiana, adding a high-production, battle-tested running back would bolster depth and special teams for a program now competing at the highest level.
Read More at College Football HQ
- $2.4 million QB emerges as transfer portal candidate for SEC program
- Major college football program ‘expected to hire’ 66-year-old head coach
- College Football Playoff team loses player to transfer portal
- College Football Playoff team loses starting QB to transfer portal
NIL
Kyle Whittingham releases first public statement after Michigan hire
Late Friday night, Michigan made it official. Kyle Whittingham will take over as the next Wolverines head coach, and he released his first public statement.
News broke earlier Friday that Whittingham would replace Sherrone Moore as Michigan head coach. He previously announced his plans to step down as Utah head coach after a decorated run, becoming the winningest coach in program history. Michigan confirmed he is signing a five-year contract.
In Friday’s announcement, Whittingham and athletics director Warde Manuel released statements. Whittingham pointed to the tradition in Ann Arbor and high standard as he takes over the program.
“We are honored to lead the outstanding student-athletes, coaches, and staff who represent Michigan Football each day,” Whittingham said in a statement. “Michigan is synonymous with tradition and excellence – both on the field and beyond – and our entire program is committed to upholding those values while striving for greatness together.
“My family and I are thrilled to join the University of Michigan community, and we look forward to helping our players grow, develop, and reach their highest potential – on the gridiron, in the classroom, and as leaders. It’s a privilege to be part of something that inspires pride in every Wolverine fan. Go Blue!”
Whittingham replaced Urban Meyer as Utah head coach in 2005 and amassed a 177-88 overall record at the helm – the most wins in Utes history. He initially joined the program in 1994, starting out as defensive line coach ad becoming the Utes’ defensive coordinator in 1995. When Meyer left for Florida in 2005, Whittingham took over as head coach.
Although he announced he’d step down as Utah coach, Whittingham made it clear he wasn’t necessarily done coaching. Now, he’ll prepare to head to Ann Arbor and take over a Michigan team which underwent a major shakeup this month.
“Kyle Whittingham is a well-respected and highly successful head coach who is widely recognized as a leader of exceptional character and principled leadership,” Manuel said in a statement. “Throughout our search, he consistently demonstrated the qualities we value at Michigan: vision, resilience, and the ability to build and sustain championship-caliber teams.
“Kyle brings not only a proven track record of success, but also a commitment to creating a program rooted in toughness, physicality, discipline and respect – where student-athletes and coaches represent the university with distinction both on and off the field. We are excited to welcome Kyle to the University of Michigan family as he takes the helm of our football program.”
NIL
Why does Snoop Dogg have his own college football bowl game? What to know
Dec. 27, 2025, 6:01 a.m. ET
D-O-Double G is back for his second year hosting a college football bowl game.
In what was one of the more distinct bowl experiences last season, Snoop Dogg’s eponymously named Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl is set for its second edition on Saturday, Dec. 27 between the Miami (Ohio) RedHawks and Fresno State Bulldogs inside Arizona Stadium in Tucson, Arizona.
The Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl is the second main sporting event that Snoop Dogg will be a part of this week, as he performed during halftime of Game 2 of the Netflix-NFL’s Christmas doubleheader between the Minnesota Vikings and Detroit Lions.
Here’s what to know on how Snoop Dogg came to have his own college football bowl game:
How did Snoop Dogg get his own college football bowl game?
Snoop Dogg signed a partnership deal with the Arizona Bowl — founded by the Arizona Sports and Entertainment Commission in 2015 — to be the bowl game’s title and presenting sponsor.
As part of his multi-year sponsorship deal, which was signed in May 2024, Snoop Dogg’s alcoholic beverage — Gin & Juice by Dre and Snoop — serve as the presenting sponsor of the bowl game as well.
“College football fans are exhausted by the talk around NIL, conference realignment, coach movement, transfer portal and super conferences. So it is time we get back to the roots of college football, when it was focused on the colleges, the players, the competition, the community, the fan experience, and the pageantry,” Snoop Dogg said in a video posted on his personal X (formerly Twitter) when he announced his partnership in 2024. “…It’s only fitting that I step up and help this thing right. I’m ready to bring the juice back to college football.”
Snoop Dogg isn’t the first celebrity to be a presenting sponsor of a college football bowl game. Comedian Jimmy Kimmel, host of ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” used to be the sponsor of the LA Bowl.
Snoop Dogg was heavily involved with the game and corresponding events in last year’s inaugural bowl game, even interviewing Miami (Ohio) coach Chuck Martin at halftime live on The CW Network.
The 2025 Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl marks the second consecutive trip for Miami (Ohio) to Tucson, Arizona for the bowl game.
“We couldn’t be more excited to go back to Arizona,” Martin said at a media availability on Monday, Dec. 8. “… Where do you get to go to a bowl (game) and you get to be around for five minutes (with) one of the biggest icons in the history of the world (in Snoop Dogg)?”
Added Martin: “We were dying to get back there and we can’t wait to get back there.”
Who is competing in the Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl 2025?
Miami (Ohio) and Fresno State are competing in the 2025 Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl. It’s the second consecutive season the RedHawks will play in the game.
Where is the Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl?
- Location: Arizona Stadium (Tucson, Ariz.)
The Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl will once again take place at Arizona Stadium, the home of the Big 12 Conference’s University of Arizona Wildcats, in Tucson, Arizona.
Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl time today
- Date: Saturday, Dec. 27
- Time: 4:30 p.m. ET (2:30 p.m. MT)
Miami (Ohio) and Fresno State will kick off at 4:30 p.m. ET (2:30 p.m. local time) on Saturday, Dec. 27.
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