Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

NIL

Is WSU’s NIL collective making progress? ‘It’s starting to change’ | Washington State University

Published

on


PULLMAN — Tim Brandle couldn’t believe his iPhone wasn’t buzzing a hole in his pocket. It was a sunny Saturday afternoon earlier this month, and he was sitting at his 8-year-old daughter’s soccer game, keeping one eye on the score of the Washington State football game.

The Cougars were getting pummeled in an eventual 59-10 loss to North Texas, which handed WSU its worst setback in more than a decade. Brandle is a WSU alum, so as a fan, he felt disappointed. But as the treasurer of the Cougar Collective, the main NIL arm for WSU’s athletics programs, he felt something even more important: concern.

In recent years, after the Cougars dropped similarly discouraging games like these, Brandle’s phone would light up with the worst kinds of notifications: Members of the 1890 Club, fans who committed to a monthly donation of $18.90 to support NIL at WSU, canceled their memberships out of frustration. They would do so during the game, or sometimes at the end.

So sitting at this soccer game on Saturday, Brandle was expecting several notifications alerting him that WSU fans were pulling their donations and uprooting critical momentum for the group, a key player for an athletics program already swimming upstream. If fans yanked their donations after WSU’s close losses to New Mexico and Wyoming last season, how many more would do so after this collapse?

As the game unfolded and the Cougars were getting blown out, Brandle hadn’t received a single email of the sort. He figured something was wrong on his end. He felt confused.

“I did check the settings on my phone to see if my Gmail was disconnected for some reason,” Brandle said.

Turns out, Brandle’s phone was in perfect condition. By the time the clock ran out on WSU’s loss, only one 1890 member had canceled their membership. Because of past patterns, Brandle was expecting more. Instead, the collective added more memberships that day — some even during the game itself.

As the days went by, Brandle began to understand the trend beginning to emerge: WSU fans were understanding the importance of NIL donations. Not just after huge wins, but also after bitter losses.

“The mindset of Cougar fans is starting to tilt. It’s starting to change,” Brandle said. “I think folks are realizing that the Cougar Collective is just this scrappy bunch of volunteers who are trying to give them everything they possibly could want: a wine, a beer, a cocktail, a coffee. We’re trying to give them things. We’re trying to give them all these different opportunities to help fund this fund that’s desperately needed. We’re not the problem. We’re the solution. And folks are finally starting to be like, oh, yeah.”

In this new era, Washington State needs NIL boosts more than ever. The Cougars have a home in the rebuilt Pac-12, which launches next year, but they’ve lost a lot along the way. They no longer receive funding from the traditional Pac-12, which handed each member school roughly $20 million annually, and athletics programs no longer have access to the recruiting advantages they enjoyed as a Power Five operation.

At WSU, that has spawned all manner of problems. In March 2024, when men’s basketball coach Kyle Smith left for the same job at Stanford, he said he might have thought twice about leaving had the conference stayed intact. Jake Dickert, who coached the football team from 2021-2024, put on a brave face for the Cougars — but even he often lamented the position his team found itself in, left behind by former conference allies.

But since then, some of the biggest issues facing WSU have involved the school’s NIL resources, or lack thereof. Last winter, the Cougar Collective put together a package of more than $1M in NIL to try and retain star quarterback John Mateer, a meaningful accomplishment for the organization, a sign that members could rally at the right time. But Mateer entered the transfer portal and took his talents to Oklahoma, where he accepted a package of around $2.5-$3M in NIL, according to several reports.

A few weeks later, Dickert left for Wake Forest and WSU hired coach Jimmy Rogers, who spent two years in the same role at South Dakota State. This fall, his Cougars have started 2-2. After their last loss, a 59-24 setback to archrival Washington in the Apple Cup last weekend, Rogers made headlines with one postgame quote.

“We don’t have the resources naturally to compete with $30 million and a roster that’s loaded,” Rogers said, referring to the Huskies’ advantages in recruiting and NIL funds.

Two days later, Rogers walked those comments back, saying he had never been one to complain and doing so wouldn’t get the Cougars anywhere. Maybe he had a point in his apology, but he also did in his first statement. It is true that Washington has access to tens of millions more NIL dollars than WSU, both in institutional dollars and alumni donations, which surely played a part in the Huskies’ win over the Cougars.

It’s also worth examining how WSU landed on Rogers as head coach. The Cougars are paying Rogers a five-year contract worth about $1.57 million annually, according to reports, which is $1M less than what Dickert earned in 2024. In the new Pac-12, Rogers’ annual salary appears to rank sixth of seven football coaches, ahead of only Fresno State’s Matt Entz.

But WSU gave Rogers $4.5 million to spend on an assistant coach salary pool, WSU athletics director Anne McCoy said earlier this year, which is $1M more than what brass had planned for Dickert before he departed.

In any case, WSU did well to stay within striking distance in the Apple Cup. In his first start of the season, quarterback Zevi Eckhaus totaled three touchdowns and helped the Cougars stay within one or two scores for about three quarters. The Huskies won the fourth, 28-0, in some ways a reflection of the state of both programs: A Big Ten member flush with NIL cash, UW could afford to build the depth over the offseason to pull away in the fourth quarter. A Pac-12 holdover with fewer resources, WSU could not.

Another illustration of how Washington won Saturday’s game: Over the offseason, when former WSU linebacker Buddah Al-Uqdah hit the transfer portal, he accepted a lucrative NIL offer and transferred to UW. He left the game early with an injury, but before then, he totaled four tackles, including 1/2 for loss.

“If you don’t want your rival to take advantage of you developing a player for three years,” Brandle said, “then we gotta step up, you know?”

In the last two football seasons, WSU has become well-acquainted with that reality. After the 2023 season, QB Cam Ward transferred to Miami, where he went on to win the Heisman Trophy and become the No. 1 overall selection in this spring’s NFL draft. Last winter, the Cougars lost Mateer, who was tied for the nation’s best odds to win the Heisman before suffering a hand injury last weekend.

In the WSU NIL orbit, those kinds of brutal departures have prompted some fans to rethink their approaches: Why donate when our quarterback is getting millions of dollars more to transfer elsewhere? Why donate when our team can’t beat Wyoming at home?

But the way Brandle sees it, the tide is turning. The development that helped turn things around: In 2024, the NCAA passed a new rule that allowed athletes to pursue NIL opportunities with little oversight. That allowed coaches and administrators to mention their schools’ NIL collectives in public, in front of cameras, in front of fans. No longer did the collective have to operate in the shadows, walking on eggshells to avoid breaking rules.

Last fall, Dickert began wearing hoodies with the Cougar Collective logo to news conferences and other events. Now Rogers and other WSU coaches do the same. Cougar assistant coaches wear shirts with the logo. They keep hats adorned with collective logos in their offices. That kind of visibility has made its way to Washington State fans, who can now buy collective merch: Shirts, hats, beer, cocktails, wine, coffee, you name it. It’s also helped the organization raise even more money, which it passes on to student-athletes in the form of NIL.

In truth, it’s made life easier on Brandle and the other board members at the Cougar Collective. In its infancy, even as recently as two years ago, the collective had to fight for credibility. Because the importance of NIL was still setting in around the country, it was doing the same to WSU donors, who preferred to give to the Cougar Athletic Fund, which finances things like scholarships, coaches’ salaries and facilities.

Brandle and other members had to strike a delicate balance: They had to emphasize to donors that their gifts to the CAF were invaluable, that they should continue to give. But they also had to educate them on the importance of their organization, which might have a more immediate impact on game results — but because of NCAA rules, coaches weren’t allowed to endorse it in public. As a result, donors felt pulled in several directions, confused about where their money should go.

“Whenever there’s donor confusion, obviously, you just get no donations,” Brandle said. “Donors are paralyzed if they’re not entirely sure what to do.”

Those days are in the past, Brandle said. He described the Cougar Collective, CAF and WSU athletic department as “aligned for the first time in a couple years.” This summer, McCoy said “we interact with them on a regular basis.” It’s clear that after an early period of mixed messages, brass at WSU and the Cougar Collective have come together and made things easier to understand for donors, who have responded in kind.

“The Cougar Collective, they’ve been amazing partners, and they continue to be amazing partners,” McCoy said. “I think that as we’ve been able to work more closely with them over the past year-plus, we’ll say, I think we’ve continued to brainstorm — all of us, the Cougar Collective and folks here at Washington State — on ways we can lean into our unique abilities and the things that we can each do.”

How much NIL is WSU working with? The numbers are a bit tricky to wrangle, a purposeful effort from McCoy and other school brass to maintain competitive advantages and prevent other schools from prying away Cougar athletes with lucrative NIL offers. At the beginning of the year, as schools across the country braced for the passage of House vs. NCAA and prepared to directly compensate athletes, McCoy said the WSU football team’s annual NIL pool would be $4.5 million.

That is a fraction of the maximum of $20.5, which only the deepest-pocketed schools are spending. But additionally, McCoy indicated that part of the $4.5 million goes to scholarships and stipends, making the true NIL figure lower. It’s unclear what it is. But because the Cougar Collective remains in operation, it can sprinkle additional NIL funds on top of athletes’ compensation from the university.

The organization has the funds to do so because of the memberships it keeps adding. The collective has about 2,100 active 1890 Club members, Brandle said. Do the math and that comes out to about $475,000 annually. The goal the collective is shooting for: 5,000 members, which would net around $1.2 million per year from those donations alone, which doesn’t account for additional funds from the Ol’ Crimson beer, cocktails and merch.

Is that goal feasible? According to the WSU Alumni Association, there are about 250,000 living WSU alumni.

“And there’s only 2,150 1890 Club members,” Brandle said. “Give you 10% of that, and we have enough resources to compete with any team in the country.”

In that way, officials like Brandle, WSU legend and collective board member Jack Thompson and others are still campaigning for more support from Cougar alumni. Trying to raise more awareness, trying to instill the importance of NIL to those who remain unaware — or who aren’t ready to commit.

They haven’t reached every goal they’ve set, Brandle acknowledged, but they feel palpable momentum. They’re continuing to push the charm of small-town Pullman, the sense of community athletes feel here. Can their NIL collective help keep WSU athletics competitive in the years ahead, help retain athletes who play well and fetch offers from other schools? So far, Brandle hasn’t gotten any iPhone notifications to the contrary.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

NIL

Oregon QB Austin Novosad plans to enter NCAA Transfer Portal

Published

on


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.





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

No. 1 college football team linked to 1,700-yard RB in transfer portal

Published

on


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.

Indiana Head Coach Curt Cignetti.

Indiana Head Coach Curt Cignetti and the Hoosies celebrate after the Indiana versus Ohio State BIg Ten Championship football game at Lucas Oil Stadium. | Rich Janzaruk/Herald-Times / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

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



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Kyle Whittingham releases first public statement after Michigan hire

Published

on


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.”



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Why does Snoop Dogg have his own college football bowl game? What to know

Published

on


Dec. 27, 2025, 6:01 a.m. ET



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Tom Izzo reacts to James Nnaji eligibility decision: ‘Shame on the NCAA’

Published

on


On Christmas Eve, On3’s Joe Tipton reported James Nnaji committed to Baylor after receiving four years of eligibility. Nnaji was the No. 31 overall pick in the 2023 NBA Draft, though he never signed an NBA contract, and will play the second half of this season.

The reaction was swift, including a post on social media from UConn coach Dan Hurley. Saturday afternoon, Michigan State coach Tom Izzo weighed in on the situation.

SUBSCRIBE to the On3 NIL and Sports Business Newsletter

Izzo admitted he didn’t know all the details and reached out to “good friend” and Baylor head coach Scott Drew for more information. But he raised multiple questions about the impact of the Nnaji eligibility decision, even asking what would stop him from asking Miles Bridges – or other even Magic Johnson and Gary Harris – if they wanted to return to East Lansing.

“I asked Coen [Carr], would you be okay if I went and got Miles and brought him back? … You laugh, but that’s what we’re doing,” Izzo said. “Somebody’s sitting. Somebody’s not playing. I just don’t think that’s fair for the players. Some of them work their butt off to get to this position and maybe things didn’t go right. I’m a little surprised. I’ve got a call in to Scott. I’m anxious to see what he tells me. … But what I’m hearing and now, we’re taking guys that were drafted in the NBA and everything. I said it to you a month and a half ago, ‘Come on, Magic and Gary. Let’s go, baby. Let’s do it.’ Why not?

“If that’s what we’re going to, shame on the NCAA. Shame on the coaches, too. But shame on the NCAA because coaches are going to do what they’ve got to do, I guess. But the NCAA’s the one. Those people on those committees that are making those decisions to allow something so ridiculous and not think of the kid. Everybody talks about me thinking of my program or selfish. No. Get that straight, for all of you. I’m thinking of what is best for my son if he was in that position, and I just don’t agree with it.”

Of course, Izzo made it clear he was not planning to ask Bridges if he’d come back to school. He said his point was more about his concern with the situation.

“Sooner or later, it’s gonna get me,” Izzo said. “Not that I’m gonna be too stubborn not to ever do anything, but I’m not going and recruiting Miles. I love Miles. Would love to have him play. But what is wrong with that statement? ‘Go and replace Coen.’”

Tom Izzo: ‘I’m not going to fight city hall’

James Nnaji played professional basketball in Europe before going No. 31 in the 2023 NBA Draft when the Detroit Pistons selected him. While he did not sign a standard NBA contract, his draft rights were traded twice, most recently in the trade that sent Karl-Anthony Towns to the New York Knicks. Nnaji also played in the NBA Summer League with the Knicks.

Amid the fallout from the NCAA’s decision, Nnaji’s name also came up in an ongoing eligibility lawsuit. Attorneys for Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia and others cited it in a filing Friday. Pavia and other plaintiffs are challenging the NCAA’s junior college rules.

Tom Izzo also said he spoke with an unnamed coach who agreed with him. But Izzo also further called out the NCAA and president Charlie Baker about the state of the landscape.

“I was told by a very famous, good, great coach yesterday in a text that said, ‘I believe in everything you’re saying. Just don’t let it ruin your year. Why fight city hall?’ I’m not going to fight city hall – I’m just not going to stick up for it, either,” Izzo said.

“I’m not going to tell you that [as] a guy that worked for the NCAA for 20 years on every committee known to man. I’m not going to tell you that this president, to me, is doing anything but running from leadership and is making decisions that are against them. I’d like to poll 360 of the coaches and see how many are in favor of what’s going on.”



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

College Football Playoff team loses running back to transfer portal

Published

on


A running back with proven production is set to enter the college football transfer portal with just one year of NCAA eligibility remaining in his career.

James Madison running back Ayo Adeyi is preparing to enter the transfer portal in search of what will be a third school to play for in 2026, according to ESPN.

What he’s done on the field

Adeyi was limited to just 120 rushing yards on 24 carries for the Dukes as they made their first College Football Playoff appearance this past season, but the tailback has a history of solid output when he was initially at North Texas.

In total, Adeyi has 2,480 career rushing yards and 17 touchdowns while averaging 6.5 yards per carry over the last five collegiate seasons, mostly with the Mean Green.

He ran for 6 touchdowns on 496 yards in his initial season there before improving his per yard average to 7.2 yards the following season with 4 touchdowns and 807 total yards.

Adeyi had his best season to date in 2023, when he carried 143 times for 1,017 yards and scored 6 touchdowns while averaging 7.1 yards per attempt.

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.

(ESPN)

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

Follow College Football HQ: Bookmark | Rankings | Picks



Link

Continue Reading
Motorsports3 weeks ago

SoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

Black Bear Revises Recording Policies After Rulebook Language Surfaces via Lever

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Jo Shimoda Undergoes Back Surgery

Motorsports3 weeks ago

Donny Schatz finds new home for 2026, inks full-time deal with CJB Motorsports – InForum

NIL4 weeks ago

Bowl Projections: ESPN predicts 12-team College Football Playoff bracket, full bowl slate after Week 14

Rec Sports4 weeks ago

Robert “Bobby” Lewis Hardin, 56

Rec Sports4 weeks ago

How this startup (and a KC sports icon) turned young players into card-carrying legends overnight

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

How Donald Trump became FIFA’s ‘soccer president’ long before World Cup draw

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

David Blitzer, Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment

Sports4 weeks ago

Men’s and Women’s Track and Field Release 2026 Indoor Schedule with Opener Slated for December 6 at Home

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Michael Jordan’s fight against NASCAR heads to court, could shake up motorsports

Sports4 weeks ago

Wisconsin volleyball sweeps Minnesota with ease in ranked rivalry win

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Pohlman admits ‘there might be some spats’ as he pushes to get Kyle Busch winning again

Motorsports3 weeks ago

JR Motorsports Confirms Death Of NASCAR Veteran Michael Annett At Age 39

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Increased Purses, 19 Different Tracks Highlight 2026 Great Lakes Super Sprints Schedule – Speedway Digest

Most Viewed Posts

Trending