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Kentucky basketball's Trent Noah on Travis Perry leaving Lexington after freshman season

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Kentucky basketball's Trent Noah on Travis Perry leaving Lexington after freshman season


AI-assisted summaryKentucky basketball player Travis Perry transferred to Ole Miss after his freshman season.Perry’s former UK teammates, Trent Noah and Collin Chandler, expressed sadness but support for Perry’s decision.Kentucky coach Mark Pope described Perry as a “terrific young man” and expressed disappointment about his departure.Perry explained his decision was based on what he felt was best for his basketball career and cited coach Chris Beard’s vision at Ole Miss.LEXINGTON — Trent Noah was well aware of Travis Perry‘s state of mind in the days and weeks following the conclusion of Kentucky basketball‘s 2024-25 season. They were roommates, after all. And Perry was clear: He was debating leaving the Wildcats to enter the transfer portal.

Though Noah wasn’t blindsided, it didn’t make the news any easier to reckon with when Perry put his name into the portal April 22, the final day it was open.

“It definitely stung,” Noah said Monday.

That Perry won’t be back for a second season at UK wasn’t for lack of trying on Noah’s part.”I did everything I could to keep him here,” Noah said. “He was one of my good friends, and he’s an excellent player. But, at the end of the day, you’ve got to do what’s best for you, and that’s what he thought was best for him. So I love him and wish him the best. Not looking forward to playing him, that’s for sure.”Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.

That’s because Perry remained in the SEC, transferring to Ole Miss.

“I was very pleased with my freshman season at Kentucky,” Perry told reporters last week. “I feel like we had a great group of guys I was able to learn a ton from and just kind of transformed my game. It’s hard for any freshman coming in, especially for a freshman coming into the SEC — the best conference ever in college basketball. So I was very blessed to have that opportunity. I have nothing but love and respect for those guys. Wish them all the best.

“But whenever I got in the portal, I felt like (Ole Miss) coach (Chris) Beard’s vision for me was exactly what I was looking for, and I felt like we had a lot of guys coming here that wanted to win, wanted to compete at a high level, and I felt like I could come in and impact that.”

While Noah wants to see his former teammate — and fellow high school legend in the Bluegrass State thanks to the storied careers each authored — excel at Ole Miss, he admitted it’s difficult no longer having Perry around the Kentucky program.

“We were both freshmen, and we (leaned) on each other for little things,” Noah said. “(But) that’s just how it goes in this day and age of college basketball: You just try to put yourself in the best position. And he thought Ole Miss was the best position.”

Noah’s words Monday echoed those of UK’s coach, Mark Pope, who acknowledged last month he was “devastated” when he learned of Perry’s departure.

“I think he’s such a terrific young man,” Pope said May 13. “I think he’s a really, really special person. I think he’s got an old soul, and he’s full of wisdom. He just is everything that you want in a young man and a player.”

Perry’s candor, Noah said, was encapsulated in the way he moved on.

“He let the whole team know before (news of his transfer) went public and stuff like that,” Noah said, “just keeping us in the loop so we didn’t have to find out on social media.”

Not a determination he came to lightly, either.

“You only get so much time to do it: You only get so much time to play basketball,” Perry said. “So I felt like I just made the decision that myself and my family came to that was best for my basketball career. I’m very excited about it.”

Collin Chandler, the third (and final) member of the Wildcats’ freshman class last season, said Perry leaving was akin to “losing a brother.”

“That was really sad because we are so close. But … I feel like God has a plan for people, and that’s what he felt like he needed to do for him and his life, which we all have to respect,” Chandler said.

Just don’t expect him to take it easy on Perry if the Wildcats and Rebels square off next season.

“It’s just gonna be sad when we have to beat up on him when we play him in SEC play,” Chandler said with a smirk.

Reach Kentucky men’s basketball and football reporter Ryan Black at rblack@gannett.com and follow him on X at @RyanABlack. 

This story was updated to add a gallery.  

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Transfer portal tracker: Demond Williams at odds with Washington over portal move

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Former Michigan quarterback Davis Warren is headed to the ACC next season.

Warren committed to join Stanford on Wednesday after entering the transfer portal, according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel. Warren is expected to have two years of eligibility left, thanks in part to a medical redshirt he’s expected to receive.

Warren spent three seasons with the Wolverines, and was a backup to J.J. McCarthy during their national championship season in 2023. He started for the majority of the 2024 campaign, and threw for 1,199 yards with seven touchdowns and nine interceptions.

Warren, however, tore his right ACL during the ReliaQuest Bowl in 2024. That kept him out for the entirety of last season.



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Sign of times: Demond Williams Jr. bolts Washington despite NIL deal

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The decision by Washington quarterback Demond Williams Jr. to enter the transfer portal shocked and angered the Huskies because only days earlier the sophomore breakout star had signed a lucrative name, image and likeness deal to remain in Seattle.

Legal action by Washington would be no surprise two weeks after similar events prompted an exchange of lawsuits involving Damon Wilson II, an edge rusher who transferred from Georgia to Missouri in January 2025, days after signing an NIL contract.

With recruiting strategy reduced to shoveling stacks of NIL dollars at players who jump through the transfer portal seemingly at will, it’s no wonder loyalty and etiquette have given way to opportunity and greed.

And it should surprise no one that the implementation of rules might be done by judges, not NCAA officials or conference commissioners.

According to ESPN’s Pete Thamel, Washington is “prepared to pursue all legal avenues to enforce Williams’ signed contract,” and the quarterback’s situation has also “drawn the attention of the Big Ten.” Already, Washington has declined to enter Williams’ name into the portal, citing language in the NIL contract that states the school is not obligated to do so.

It appears Washington wants to play hardball, much the way Georgia is attempting to do with Wilson, whose countersuit against the Bulldogs claims he was one of several players pressured into signing his NIL contract on Dec. 21, 2024. Georgia is seeking $390,000 in damages, pointing to a liquidated damage fee clause in the NIL contract that may or may not hold up in court.

Washington officials suspect that another school contacted Williams after he had signed his Huskies deal, and submitted evidence of tampering to the Big Ten. Tony Petitti, the conference commissioner, happened to be in Seattle on Tuesday for a Celebration of Life service for Washington goalkeeper Mia Hamant, who died on Nov. 6 from an rare form of kidney cancer.

Many Huskies football players and coaches also were in attendance when Williams posted his official announcement about entering the transfer portal on Instagram.

“To post his decision to enter the portal during the service was, at best, the result of horrible advice from his PR team, and at worst, a stunning lack of self-awareness,” wrote Matt Calkins in the Seattle Times.

Williams’ NIL deal with Washington for 2026 was estimated at $4 million, a reasonable number for a quarterback who was among the top 15 nationally in passing efficiency, passing yards and yards per attempt. He attempted to enter the portal with a “do not contact” tag, an indication he has a destination in mind.

A chronology of top quarterback movement in recent days provides circumstantial evidence that Louisiana State and Williams have mutual interest. LSU, of course, has a new coach in Lane Kiffin, and a need at quarterback. Turns out Williams and Kiffin aren’t strangers.

Kiffin’s first target was Brendan Sorsby, who had left Cincinnati, but he committed to Texas Tech. Sam Leavitt of Arizona State is considered the best quarterback left in the portal, and he visited Baton Rouge this week before heading to Tennessee for another visit.

However, Kiffin easily could shift his attention to Williams, a dual-threat signal-caller who while in high school committed to Ole Miss when Kiffin was coach. He eventually signed with Arizona, and when coach Jedd Fisch took the job at Washington, Williams followed him.

Williams blossomed as a sophomore in 2025, passing for 3,065 yards and 25 touchdowns with eight interceptions while adding 611 yards and six touchdowns on the ground.

In his lengthy Instagram post, Williams thanked everyone associated with Washington before revealing the news: “I have to do what is best for me and my future. After much thought and prayer, I will be entering the transfer portal.”

He’s not there yet.





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Robert Griffin III reveals why NIL, transfer portal are making college football better

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Robert Griffin III reveals why NIL, transfer portal are making college football better appeared first on ClutchPoints. Add ClutchPoints as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

When the NCAA entered this new era, where NIL deals routinely enter into seven figures and seemingly a quarter of the players switch teams in the transfer portal each year, it effectively changed the sport forever.

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To many, who loved the legacy, tradition, and homegrown feel of college sports, this has been a major adjustment, but to some, especially those who played the sport themselves, it’s been worth it, as it allows players to make some money for their hard work, where that in the past, that would be afforded only to the universities.

Case and point, Baylor legend-turned-pundit Robert Griffin III, who used some time on Outta Pocket Podcast to celebrate this new era for all of the opportunities it gives players.

“A lot of people say that the transfer portal and NIL have destroyed college football. I actually think it’s made college football better. Because now there’s more parody. It’s harder to be a team that is constantly repeating or constantly playing in the national championship game, playing in the college football semifinals. Ohio State, $35 million roster. Couldn’t get to the semifinal this year,” Griffin III declared.

“So what’s the solution? Well you still have to spend money. So that’s been a lot of money. But now you’ve got to be a better recruiter. Now you got to be a better coach. Because if you’re bringing in 10,12,15, 20, 30 guys through the transfer portal, how do you win? You win because they buy into your culture. And if they don’t buy into your culture and there’s a little bit of slippage or you don’t pay the right guy at wide receiver, or quarterback, man you’ll be down the creek without a paddle now.”

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Is Griffin on the money? Does forcing programs to continue investing in their players, outbidding rivals in the transfer portal, and hitting the recruiting trail hard actually make for a better product? Considering Ohio State spent that much NIL money on their roster only to get bumped in the first round of the playoffs, it’s clear they will have to pony up for an even better roster next year, which will benefit the players even more.

Related: Big Ten ADs send ‘unanimous’ support to Washington football amid Demond Williams drama

Related: Gio Lopez leaves North Carolina, Bill Belichick for Wake Forest



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College Football TV Ratings: Top 10 most-watched non-CFP bowl games of 2025-26 season

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Through the first part of Bowl Season, ESPN announced its non-College Football Playoff TV ratings surged. That trend continued through the rest of the bowl games.

Across the 33 non-CFP bowl games that aired on ESPN networks, viewership increased by 13% year-over-year, the network announced. The Citrus Bowl between Michigan and Texas led the charge, just surpassing the Pop-Tarts Bowl for the top spot.

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All told, 11 bowl games hit at least a five-year high this season, ESPN said. Here are the most-watched non-College Football Playoff bowl games for 2025, based on Nielsen Big Data + Panel data.

Citrus Bowl: Michigan vs. Texas

Date/Time: Dec. 31, 3 p.m. ET
Channel: ABC
Viewers: 9.1 million

Texas coach Steve Sarkisian predicted the Citrus Bowl would draw strong TV ratings, and it did just that to lead non-College Football Playoff bowl game viewership. An average of 9.1 million viewers tuned in as Arch Manning and the Longhorns defeated Bryce Underwood and Michigan.

Pop-Tarts Bowl: BYU vs. Georgia Tech

Pop-Tarts Bowl 2025
© Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Date/Time: Dec. 27, 3:30 p.m. ET
Channel: ABC
Viewers: 8.7 million

One of the most popular bowl games delivered for ESPN as 8.7 million viewers watched the Pop-Tarts Bowl. BYU held on for a wild victory over Georgia Tech Dec. 27, meaning the Cougars had the chance to partake in one of the sport’s newest traditions: eating the edible mascot.

Pinstripe Bowl: Penn State vs. Clemson

Date/Time: Dec. 27, Noon ET
Channel: ABC
Viewers: 7.6 million

The Pinstripe Bowl between Penn State and Clemson drew its best viewership on record as 7.6 million people tuned in for the Nittany Lions’ victory over the Tigers. It marked the final game for Terry Smith as Penn State interim head coach, though he is staying on staff under new head coach Matt Campbell.

Gator Bowl: Virginia vs. Missouri

Date/Time: Dec. 27, 7:30 p.m. ET
Channel: ABC
Viewers: 5.996 million

The Gator Bowl hit 6.0 million viewers on average Dec. 27 – its best figure since 2009. Virginia took down Missouri in that game to secure a 10-win season for the Cavaliers as part of an impressive year under Tony Elliott.

Music City Bowl: Tennessee vs. Illinois

Illinois HC Bret Bielema after the Music City Bowl
© Andrew Nelles / The Tennessean / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Date/Time: Dec. 30, 5:30 p.m. ET
Channel: ESPN
Viewers: 5.4 million

At 5.4 million viewers, the Music City Bowl drew its best viewership since 2021 as Illinois took on Tennessee. The Fighting Illini secured another nine-win season under Bret Bielema as they took down the Volunteers, 30-28, on a last-second field goal from David Olano.

Alamo Bowl: USC vs. TCU

Date/Time: Dec. 30, 9 p.m. ET
Channel: ESPN
Viewers: 4.9 million

In the Alamo Bowl, TCU mounted a comeback late in regulation and eventually forced overtime against USC. The Trojans scored first in the extra period with a field goal, but the Horned Frogs got the victory as Jeremy Payne broke free for a wild game-winning touchdown on 3rd and long.

ReliaQuest Bowl: Iowa vs. Vanderbilt

Date/Time: Dec. 31, Noon ET
Channel: ESPN
Viewers: 4.6 million

Points were hard to come by in the first half of the ReliaQuest Bowl, but Iowa and Vanderbilt traded blows in the final two quarters. The two teams combined for 44 second-half points, but the Hawkeyes were the ones who came out victorious, 34-27, in front of 4.6 million people on ESPN.

Rate Bowl: New Mexico vs. Minnesota

Minnesota HC PJ Fleck after the Rate Bowl
© Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Date/Time: Dec. 26, 4:30 p.m. ET
Channel: ESPN
Viewers: 4.4 million

At 4.4 million viewers, the Rate Bowl drew its highest numbers since 2011 as Minnesota picked up yet another bowl game victory under P.J. Fleck, taking down New Mexico. It marked the Golden Gophers’ seventh straight bowl win as they finished the year with an 8-5 overall record.

L.A. Bowl: Boise State vs. Washington

Date/Time: Dec. 13, 8 p.m. ET
Channel: ABC
Viewers: 3.8 million

The L.A. Bowl went out on a high note with a new record-high of 3.8 million viewers tuning in for Washington’s win against Boise State. It marks the final installment of the game, as On3’s Brett McMurphy previously reported, and it drew its highest viewership ever.

Liberty Bowl: Navy vs. Cincinnati

Date/Time: Jan. 2, 4:30 p.m. ET
Channel: ESPN
Viewers: 3.4 million

One of the final non-College Football Playoff bowl games also rounds out the 10 most-watched matchups. Navy completed an 11-win season with a resounding win over Cincinnati in the Liberty Bowl, which averaged 3.4 million viewers on Jan. 2.

First Responder Bowl: FIU vs. UTSA (Dec. 26, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN) – 3.1 million
Las Vegas Bowl: Nebraska vs. Utah (Dec. 31, 3:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) – 3.0 million
Texas Bowl: LSU vs. Houston (Dec. 27, 9:15 p.m. ET, ESPN) – 2.9 million
Hawaii Bowl: Cal vs. Hawaii (Dec. 24, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN) – 2.7 million
Duke’s Mayo Bowl: Wake Forest vs. Mississippi State (Jan. 2, 8 p.m. ET, ESPN) – 2.6 million
Military Bowl: Pitt vs. East Carolina (Dec. 27, Noon ET, ESPN) – 2.5 million
GameAbove Sports Bowl: Northwestern vs. Central Michigan (Dec. 26, 1 p.m. ET, ESPN) – 2.4 million
Holiday Bowl: Arizona vs. SMU (Jan. 2, 8 p.m. ET, FOX) – 2.34 million
Celebration Bowl: SC State vs. Prairie View A&M (Dec. 13, Noon ET, ABC) – 2.32 million
Sun Bowl: Arizona State vs. Duke (Dec. 31, 2 p.m. ET, CBS) – 2.2 million

Although the non-College Football Playoff bowl games are in the books, the CFP semifinals and national championship are still on the horizon. ESPN has also seen viewership increase throughout this year’s bracket and is hoping to continue that trend the rest of the way.



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Inside Ole Miss’ landmark NIL victories after Lane Kiffin’s exit

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Moments after Ole Miss’ thrilling Sugar Bowl win over Georgia, the first person Walker Jones found on the field was newly minted Rebels hero Lucas Carneiro.

Carneiro had just hit the game-winning 47-yard field goal to send Ole Miss to a national semifinal and one win away from the national championship game.

When Carneiro saw Jones, the executive director of the Grove Collective, a big smile broke across his face amidst the exuberant on-field celebration.

“I’ll call you tomorrow,” Carneiro said with a grin.

“You better,” Jones replied.

“I’ve never been so happy to get that call the next day,” Jones told CBS Sports this week.

Keeping a star kicker has been just one piece of the puzzle for Ole Miss, but in many ways, it has been representative of what the last couple of weeks for the Rebels. It’s been a wild run of success, concern over possible tampering and poaching off the field and a concerted effort to do everything possible to keep the momentum.

It’s hard to find a program that has handled the uniquely challenging circumstances better than Ole Miss.

Consider what Ole Miss head coach Pete Golding, athletic director Keith Carter and others have had to deal with in recent weeks. All the drama around whether the coaches following Lane Kiffin to LSU would be allowed to finish the playoff run.  A narrative that it was just a matter of time before Ole Miss’ top players fled Oxford to join Kiffin at LSU. All of this while preparing for a Thursday semifinal against Miami and navigating an especially wild and active transfer portal.

And yet, Ole Miss has re-signed quarterback Trinidad Chambliss (pending waiver), running back Kewan Lacy, Carneiro and other key contributors.

“None of these guys left,” Matt Bowers, a prominent Ole Miss booster who owns 14 car dealerships, told CBS Sports. “We don’t have to guess what that means. You can say whatever you want if you’re LSU. You can say, ‘Well, they overspent.’ OK, tell yourself that. The truth may be harder to accept.”

That’s a credit to a talented, sleep-deprived group. Everyone from Golding and his staff to Jones and his team at the Grove Collective — along with newly added president of football Austin Thomas, assistant general manager Kelvin Bolden and senior associate athletic director for cap management Matt McLaughlin — has helped keep the train on the tracks.

“We’re in a really good place,” Carter told CBS Sports. “The brand is really strong. Clearly, we’re proving that we can win at a high level and make deep runs in the playoffs. So why would these guys want to leave? I think that’s what we have to continue to build here in Oxford.”

Invest in Golding

Carter’s big bet on Golding to replace Kiffin has already paid major dividends. In many ways, it was both a bold and practical decision to elevate the likable defensive coordinator and entrust a first-time head coach with navigating an unprecedented situation. 

What Carter and others around the program understood was that Golding had forged real connections with players, boosters and other key figures. He had long been a top recruiter for a reason. If Ole Miss wanted to keep its roster intact for a playoff run, Golding may have been the only choice.

The way Golding handled the aftermath of Kiffin’s exit has been about as close to ideal as anyone could have hoped. And while this story is not about Lane Kiffin, there is no question he has had an impact, intentional or not, on what is happening in Oxford. 

Doubling down 

The manner in which Kiffin left Ole Miss for LSU, and the hurt feelings it stirred among fans, has energized the base. There is a sense of resolve to prove the program can sustain its success in a post-Kiffin world, that the self-appointed “Portal King” was not the lone driver of Ole Miss’ success in the NIL and transfer portal era. 

As Jones joked, “It’s amazing what a common enemy will do.”

“I think they knew this was a rallying point,” Jones said. “Our people kind of love us against the world, little Ole Miss can’t compete, little Ole Miss was built just by happenstance. They wanted, along with us, to show everybody this is built to last and we’re bigger than any one man or any one variable.

“We’ve got a lot of resources in place, commitment in place from our administration to our coaches to our collective, and that has aligned our fanbase. They know what to do.”

The money has come pouring in. Carter said Ole Miss athletics has already set a record for annual giving just six months into the fiscal year. After Ole Miss’ home playoff win over Tulane, 30-40 people joined the Vaught Society, which comes with a $25,000 commitment. 

“It’s been a perfect storm in a really good way,” Carter said. “Our fans are more galvanized at this moment than maybe they’ve ever been.”

Said Bowers, a key financial contributor: “These people have money, and they’re motivated. In the name, image and likeness era, we’re one of the most successful programs in the country. That’s a fact.” 

Everything Ole Miss is doing at this moment works toward sustainability. Beyond retaining top talent, Golding and his staff have been aggressively adding it. The Rebels currently have the nation’s No. 6 transfer class, headlined by Florida defensive lineman Micai Boireau, LSU offensive lineman Carius Curne and Auburn defensive back Jay Crawford. If Chambliss’ waiver isn’t approved, it’s a good bet Ole Miss will add an impact transfer quarterback, too. 

With the new additions, there’s a world in which Ole Miss could be even better next season. After all, this was supposed to be the rebuilding year after losing top talent such as Jaxson Dart and Walter Nolen off last year’s team. If Chambliss is eligible for another year — and that is a big if right now — there may not be a better one-two offensive punch in the country than he and Lacy. 

At minimum, Ole Miss fans will get to watch the two stars suit up for at least one more game on Thursday in Arizona. A win would add another chapter in what’s already been a remarkable and historic season for the Rebels. One more win and Ole Miss is playing for a national championship without the man who started the season as its head coach. Two more wins and Golding and this special group of Rebels will go down as legends. 

Through all the outside noise and wild circumstances, Ole Miss football has never been in a better place. And everyone associated with the program is putting in the hard work to keep it going.

“They’ve got a taste of this,” Carter said, “and they want to hold onto it.” 





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Thriving in the NIL era, Ole Miss turns into an unlikely college football powerhouse

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Mississippi’s football program is thriving in the NCAA’s pay-for-play era. The sixth-seeded Rebels will face No. 10 Miami in the Fiesta Bowl for a spot in the…

Keith Carter had a premium vantage point at the Sugar Bowl for arguably the biggest moment in Mississippi’s college football history, standing directly behind the goalposts as Lucas Carneiro’s 47-yard field goal split the uprights.

The Ole Miss athletic director scooped up the football and tucked it under both arms, hugging it tight like a fullback as he ran through the end zone in jubilation.

The 49-year-old Carter — who played basketball for the Rebels in the late 1990s — didn’t play a snap in Ole Miss’ 39-34 victory over Georgia in the College Football Playoff quarterfinals. But in some ways, he might be the most important person for a football program that hasn’t acheived this much success since the early 1960s.

He is also the man working to keep Ole Miss on top.

“We want to go win the whole thing this year, obviously,” Carter said. “But our hope is to be right back here next year and be a program that’s an every-year CFP contender with a chance to win national championships.”

Such talk would have sounded crazy less than a decade ago when Ole Miss was mostly an afterthought in the SEC, dealing with the fallout of an NCAA investigation into rules violations and a messy breakup with then-coach Hugh Freeze.

But as the No. 6 seed Rebels prepare to face No. 10 Miami in the Fiesta Bowl on Thursday with a spot in the national championship game on the line, it doesn’t feel nearly as far-fetched.

Thanks to a group of behind-the-scenes people that includes Carter and Walker Jones — who leads the Ole Miss NIL collective — the Rebels have thrived in the pay-for-play era, building a fundraising behemoth that’s given them resources to build a roster that includes quarterback Trinidad Chambliss, running back Kewan Lacy and a defense stacked with NFL-caliber talent.

Chambliss recently committed to return to the Rebels next season pending NCAA approval. He said Ole Miss has all of the resources it needs to compete at the highest level.

“I feel like college football’s changed throughout the years,” Chambliss said. “NIL changed that. The transfer portal changed that. The college football playoff changed that. I feel like Ole Miss, being in the SEC, the best conference in the nation, you’re going to get guys. You’re going to get good guys and coaches want to coach there. Ole Miss has done a good job transitioning with how college football is transitioning itself.”

Jones played football for the Rebels in the 1990s before a business career that included more than a decade with Under Armour. He came back to Ole Miss in 2022 to lead The Grove Collective, which is the athletic department’s fundraising arm.

Carter and Jones have known each other since their days playing Ole Miss sports and that connection was crucial.

“I always talk about the trust Keith had in me to come back in this capacity during a very confusing and complex time,” Jones said. “That probably wasn’t easy. I credit our history together and the experience of being student-athletes together.”

The Rebels were quick to adapt to the NIL era under coach Lane Kiffin, who iprovided the recruiting. Carter and Jones provided the money and a juggernaut was born.

Now Kiffin is gone — headed to LSU after an awkward breakup — but the money remains. Jones has cultivated a group of roughly 7,000 donors in The Grove Collective who range from millionaries to college students. It’s all impressive for a school that has a large following, but not the same kind of massive alumni base of schools like Ohio State or Texas.

“We may not have a T. Boone Pickens or a Phil Knight,” Carter said, referring to the well-heeled donors for Oklahoma State and Oregon. “But when you put us all together collectively, pull the rope in the same direction and people give not only what they can, but maybe even a little above what they should, we’ve been able to be really good.”

Ole Miss’ staying power has been evident over the past 12 months after last year’s disappointing ending to the season. The Rebels spent a boatload of money in 2024 for a roster that included quarterback Jaxson Dart, but they went 9-3 in the regular season and didn’t make the playoff.

Jones and Carter weren’t deterred and the donations kept pouring into the program. One year later, they’re exactly where they want to be. Even losing Kiffin hasn’t stopped the momentum; Carter quickly promoted Pete Golding and the Rebels keep chugging along.

“You’ve seen this before in sports,” Carter said. “There’s a team with all the expectations and you fall a little short. Then the very next year, you look up, and there’s a team that’s maybe not as heralded or doesn’t have as much preseason hype. But the pieces fit perfectly, the locker room is right, all these intangible things happen and it’s the best team in school history.”

It’s all new territory for an Ole Miss program that hasn’t been a powerhouse since the 1950s and ’60s, back before integration. The Rebels claim three national championships in football, though none since 1962.

There were a few good moments in the ensuing decades: Eli Manning was the team’s quarterback during a few heady years in the early 2000s, the Rebels won the Cotton Bowl in 2008 and Freeze had it rolling for a few years in the mid-2010s before NCAA troubles arose.

All those flashes of national relavance faded quickly.

Now because of Carter, Jones and a whole lot of cash, this version of Ole Miss might stick around for a while. Carter is soaking in the moment.

“It’s not just for me,” Carter said. “I’m the one who gets recognized and is the one out in front, but there are so many people who deserve this. I’m so happy for our fans, the ones who have been through some ups and downs.”

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football



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