Warren Moon and Andre Ware share plenty in common.
NIL
Mississippi State – Official Athletics Website
Lemonis was in his seventh season as the Bulldogs’ head coach. A national search to identify the program’s next head coach is underway.
Assistant coach Justin Parker will serve as interim head coach for the remainder of the season.
“A change in leadership is what’s best for the future of Mississippi State Baseball,” Selmon said. “We have not consistently met the standard of success that our university, fans and student-athletes expect and deserve. I want to thank Coach Lemonis for his work and the time he gave to our program, including a national championship in 2021. We appreciate his efforts and wish him and his family all the best moving forward.
“In a team meeting moments ago, I expressed to our student-athletes the confidence we have in their abilities and the potential they have for the remainder of the season. I encouraged them to compete with pride, resilience, and intensity. With the hard work, preparation, and talent already within this group, we are committed to putting them in the best position to finish the season competing at the highest level.
“Mississippi State is the premier job in college baseball. The tradition, the facilities, the NIL offerings and the fan base are all second to none. Dudy Noble Field is the best environment in the sport, period.
“This program is built for success. Our history proves it, and our future demands it. We are one of only four programs in NCAA history to reach the College World Series in six consecutive decades. With 40 NCAA Tournament appearances, 12 trips to Omaha, 11 SEC regular season titles, and a national championship, our program has always been a national contender. That is the bar. We’re going to find a leader who will embrace that, elevate our program and compete for championships.”
Lemonis became State’s 18th head baseball coach on June 25, 2018, and was 232-135 in his six-plus seasons. He owns a 373-226-2 career record as a head coach. Prior to MSU, he went 141-91-2 as head coach at Indiana. Under Lemonis, MSU made three NCAA Tournaments (2019, 2021, 2024), two College World Series (2019, 2021) and won the 2021 national title.
NIL
Curt Cignetti expresses frustration with college football calendar amid playoff schedule
The eight teams still remaining in the College Football Playoff are going to see a quick turnaround following their games and the start of the NCAA transfer portal. The quarterfinals will be played on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1, and the portal opens on Jan. 2.
Indiana head coach Curt Cignetti is one of the several head coaches having to deal with CFP fallout, followed by the portal opening a few hours later. Ahead of the Rose Bowl, Cignetti expressed his frustration with the current schedule in college football.
“I definitely think the calendar could be improved,” Cignetti said. “And that would be unanimous amongst the coaches. Whether you got to move the start of the regular season up a week and start playing in the playoffs when the season ends so there’s a little bit better time to devote to high school recruiting and portal recruiting, we’re all looking, I think, for that solution.
“What you’re doing within college football is just you don’t have one guy in charge. If you had one person calling the shots, I think it would be a lot cleaner. So hopefully we’ll make some progress in that regard.”
In the Hoosiers’ case, they have a 4 p.m. ET kickoff vs. Alabama in the Rose Bowl. Regardless of the outcome, the transfer portal opens at midnight for both teams. Either Cignetti, or Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer, will be dealing with major disappointment after a loss. The other will be starting bowl prep for the national semifinal.
The overlap has shaped the decision-making process in the coaching carousel following the regular season. Three head coaches — Lane Kiffin (Ole Miss–LSU), Jon Sumrall (Tulane–Florida) and Bob Chesney (James Madison–UCLA) –ended up taking their next job before their team played in the College Football Playoff.
Sumrall and Chesney wore two hats during their respective CFP preparation in order to build their staff and maintain recruits in time for the portal to open. Kiffin, who was not allowed to coach Ole Miss in the playoff, has had his sole focus on LSU since being hired earlier this month.
The NCAA transfer portal will be open for 15 days, closing on Jan. 16 — three days before the national championship on Jan. 19. Additionally, the transfer portal is open for five extra days for players competing in the title game.
Cignetti isn’t the first coach to take issue with the current college football schedule this season. That said, if changes aren’t made — he won’t be the last.
NIL
Houston’s most legendary QBs detest this element of modern football

Andre Ware and Warren Moon are two Houston legends with plenty to say on the state of college football.
Both are former quarterbacks who shined in the Bayou City. Both led college and pro football in an assortment of passing stats in the 1980s, helping revolutionize the sport with high-flying, high-scoring offenses. What do the two share in 2025? Frustration with the state of modern college football.
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“It’s like the Wild West out there right now,” Moon, a star at Washington in the late-1970s before his 1980s dominance with the Houston Oilers, told Chron this month. “There need to be restrictions on some of the things that are going on right now where it’s not just free-free fall every six months.”
Moon, now 69, played his college games on the west coast at Washington when Pac-8 games were watched by a small fraction of the country each week. Ware had more fanfare as a collegiate player. He took college football by storm in his senior season with the Houston Cougars in 1989, earning the Heisman Trophy with nearly 4,700 yards passing and 46 touchdowns (both NCAA highs) in 11 games.
Ware became a major celebrity in Houston and nationwide in 1989. The Galveston kid became something of a local hero. For Ware, there was no absence of fanfare. But he insists there’s still a crucial difference between his collegiate career and that of many recent Heisman-worthy quarterbacks, who log stints at multiple programs and secure major gains in NIL contracts as a result. Ware says his greatest joy as a quarterback didn’t come from awards or esteem. Rather, a bond with his teammates, forged over multiple years of mutual growth.
Ware didn’t attend the Heisman Trophy ceremony in New York in 1989. Instead, he remained in Houston before a season-finale against Rice, where he famously watched the ceremony with his Houston offensive lineman. Ware insists no amount of NIL money could have poached him from Houston. When a quarterback makes a commitment, he’s obliged to keep it.
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“All someone has to do now is open a wallet and a kid will switch,” Ware said. “It’s one of the things coaches always tell me. But if you commit, stay committed. It says a lot about your character.”

Former Houston Cougars quarterback Andre Ware spent his Heisman Trophy ceremony not in New York, but with his offensive linemen in Houston.
Moon admits he isn’t quite so much of a hardliner as his fellow Houston legend. Moon’s career, in some ways, is defined by its winding course. He started his collegiate career at West Los Angeles College before making the leap to major college football at Washington. He won four straight championships in the Canadian Football League from 1978-81, and his NFL career included four franchises from 1984-2000. Moon doesn’t want an overly-strict approach. He just wants to fortify the currently crumbling guardrails.
“I understand why guys end up leaving, but I don’t really like it. I think there should be some more parameters behind it,” Moon said. “Parameters should be put on how much you can move around, if you have to sit out a year after you transfer. … There are plenty of things [the NCAA] can do.
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“The old structure wasn’t perfect. It works better than this.”

Warren Moon starred at the University of Washington before starting his winding professional career.
Moon then removes his metaphorical soap box for a moment, offering understanding through a more personal moment of reflection. Moon was a young quarterback once, widely considered one of the top upcoming passers during his time at Washington. “If I was playing today, everything would be different. I would command top dollar,” Moon says.
The actual money is important, of course, but Moon hints at something deeper in the NIL and college compensation game these days, especially among top quarterbacks. Just as chasing passing records is a competition, so is the jockeying for contract dollars. That battle was previously waged professionally. It’s now done collegiately, a system Moon and Ware can understand given their own superstar journeys.
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“If I was the same type of caliber player today as I was back then, yeah, I’d be a big time earner,” Moon says. “I’d be at the top with just about any other player.”
NIL
Can UW Sports Compete In Division I As Lower Divisions Offer More NIL Money?
Scott Ortiz watched from the stands at War Memorial Stadium on Nov. 22 as the University of Wyoming Cowboys faced Nevada in what should have been a season-defining moment for the school’s football program.
The atmosphere was electric — one of the most charged Ortiz had experienced since star quarterback Josh Allen was slinging passes for the Brown and Gold.
The crowd roared.
The energy crackled through the crisp November air.
On the field, however, the Cowboys couldn’t convert when it mattered.
“You’re watching the game and you’re realizing that if we had money to spend at certain skill positions, we could easily convert these third downs, we could keep drives alive, and we just don’t,” Ortiz told Cowboy State Daily. “Our inability to move the ball to score in that electric atmosphere was just painful.”
The 13-7 loss to Nevada was only the beginning.
Wyoming went on to score just seven points total in its final four games — a stunning collapse that left the Cowboys out of bowl eligibility and left the Casper attorney and longtime UW booster convinced that without action, Wyoming athletics faces an existential crisis.
The Pokes’ dismal end to the 2025 season kept them out of a bowl game.
Now in the heart of football bowl season and the college football playoffs, sports fans around Wyoming will continue to debate how best to shape the future of UW football.
Should UW do all it can to pay for the best players in an effort to climb the totem pole of television ratings and one day contend for a playoff berth in big-time Division I competition?
Or should Wyoming go the way of Saint Francis University, one of a growing number of schools voluntarily dropping out of the rat race for TV revenue and voluntarily leaving the Division 1 ranks?

College Is Pro
Chase Horsley has watched college athletics transform from his perch at “The 5 Horsemen” podcast in Gillette, where he covers Wyoming sports for Horseman Broadcasting and Entertainment.
“Nothing is the same anymore,” Horsley told Cowboy State Daily. “It kind of feels like more of the NFL type of thing.”
The NIL era of paying players has created a new reality where talent flows toward money.
Horsley sees it affecting Wyoming’s ability to keep homegrown talent and recruit out-of-state prospects to choose UW. Then there’s the challenge of keeping talented players from being lured away by other universities with larger NIL war chests.
“The Wyoming kids aren’t really trying to go to the University of Wyoming,” Horsley said. “Some of them are going, some of them aren’t going.”
The lure is obvious.
“Would you not want to go play if you’re going to get paid, like, a million bucks or $500,000?” Horsley asked. “I mean, we’ve got college kids that are getting out of college and are millionaires.”
For Ortiz, the comparison to schools within Wyoming’s own competitive tier is damning.
Research shows that Montana and Montana State — schools competing in the Football Championship Subdivision, a tier below Wyoming’s Football Bowl Subdivision — are spending about $2.2 million on NIL, while Wyoming hovers around $1.4 million.
“Isn’t that shockingly embarrassing to think about?” Ortiz said. “Schools that don’t sit on the wealth of money we do are outspending us.”
Ortiz said he’s speaking with legislators about tapping into a tiny fraction of the state’s mineral-wealth rainy day fund to help back UW athletics.
He points to what he considers a wake-up call from neighboring Utah: Brigham Young University reportedly paying $7 million to one basketball player.

Left Behind
Not everyone in Wyoming is convinced the answer is more spending. Some voices have quietly suggested the Cowboys consider stepping down in the Division I ranks and from FBS competition entirely.
Alan Stuber, a Gillette Police Department patrol officer and lifelong Wyoming fan who wrestled collegiately at Dakota Wesleyan, has heard the arguments.
“There’s always been an argument of, ‘Well, why don’t we just go to the Big Sky (Conference) and kind of deal with the South Dakota States,'” Stuber told Cowboy State Daily. “Their football program is very successful year after year at making the (FCS) playoffs.”
But Stuber rejects that reasoning.
“In my mind, it’s still a step down,” he said. “Those are the schools that have the least amount of NIL money. So they’re going to be content where they’re at.”
Stuber points to the career trajectory of former Wyoming head coach Craig Bohl as evidence of Division I’s value.
“If it wasn’t such a big deal to be a D-1 college, why did Coach Bohl make the move from North Dakota State to Wyoming?” Stuber asked.
For Stuber, the choice is binary: “You either roll with the changes or get left behind. And I feel that Wyoming is kind of on that verge of getting left behind.”

Cautious Dissent
One Laramie resident who contacted Cowboy State Daily took the opposite view, arguing Wyoming should follow the lead of Saint Francis University in Pennsylvania, which announced in March it would transition from Division I to Division III.
“That is exactly what Wyoming should do,” the reader wrote, suggesting the university examine “the zero athletic scholarship Division III” model or even “club sports.”
The reader, who asked to remain anonymous, explained the reason for his reluctance to go public.
“I do not wish to stimulate even more harassment or other adverse actions from the university’s administration by being made part of this story,” he wrote.
Saint Francis is part of a small but growing list of schools reconsidering their Division I commitments. The University of Hartford completed its transition from D-I to D-III in September 2025.
Another St. Francis — St. Francis College in Brooklyn — eliminated all athletics programs entirely in 2023. Sonoma State University in California cut all 11 intercollegiate athletic programs in January 2025.
But such moves remain the exception.
Before 2025, only two schools in the previous quarter-century had voluntarily dropped from Division I to Division III: Centenary College in Louisiana (2009) and Birmingham-Southern College in Alabama (2006).

Begging To Get In
UW Athletic Director Tom Burman offered a pointed rebuttal to those suggesting Wyoming consider the FCS route.
“The better question is, why are Montana, Montana State begging to get into the Mountain West?” Burman told Cowboy State Daily. “I can tell you that the top tier of the FCS is willing to pay money to join the Mountain West.”
Horsley, despite his concerns about NIL pressures, agrees that dropping down would be a mistake.
“I think they would do well with the Big Sky,” Horsley said. “But I think revenue-wise and like booster clubs, things like that, I think they would want to just keep D-1 and in the FBS.”
The financial gap between the two levels remains substantial.
Mountain West schools receive about $3.5 million annually from the conference’s television deal with CBS and Fox — a six-year, $270 million agreement running through 2025-26, according to The Associated Press.
The Big Sky Conference’s ESPN deal, while recently extended through 2029-30, does not publicly disclose per-school distributions, though Big Sky Commissioner Tom Wistrcill has said the new contract includes a “very nice increase in dollars.”
New upstart members like Utah Tech have agreed to receive no media revenue until 2030-31, according to membership agreements obtained through public records requests by the sports website Hero Sports.
Total athletic department budgets tell a similar story.
Wyoming’s annual budget sits around $50 million, according to NCAA financial reports compiled by USA Today.
In the Big Sky, budgets range from Sacramento State’s $35.8 million down to Idaho State’s $12.1 million, with Montana and Idaho around $22-23 million, according to the USA Today database.
Yet on NIL specifically, the picture is more complicated.
Montana’s estimated $2.2 million in collective spending actually exceeds Wyoming’s, according to NIL tracking data compiled by nil-ncaa.com, placing it ahead of even some Big 12 teams in the NIL arms race.
“We struggled from the time NIL started really in ’22 until the end of June this past year,” Burman said. “We struggled getting people — Wyoming fans, alumni, donors — to invest in the collective.
“It’s just not something Wyoming people embraced.”

At A Crossroads
For Ortiz, the stakes extend beyond wins and losses. He sees Wyoming at a historical crossroads, comparing the current moment to the program’s darkest chapter.
“We are now at probably the biggest low point since the Black 14 in 1970,” Ortiz said.
The Black 14 incident actually happened in October 1969, when 14 Black players planned to wear black armbands during an upcoming game against Brigham Young University.
They sought to protest the LDS Church’s policy barring Black men from the priesthood, amid broader racial tensions that included racist taunts directed at Wyoming’s Black players during BYU games.
When the players approached head coach Lloyd Eaton for permission, he expelled them on the spot, citing team rules against demonstrations.
“It took Wyoming a decade to recover from that when they lost all those players,” Ortiz said. “And I see this as exponentially more dangerous.”
Without action, Ortiz fears a spiral that could fundamentally alter Wyoming’s place in college athletics.
“Once people say, ‘OK, you’re on a losing slide anyway, and you’re not an exciting team, and you’ve already been passed over to go to a better conference, and you don’t have any money to pay us anyway’ — I mean, we could become the doormat of the Mountain West,” he said. “Or worse.”
Does worse mean dropping down to the Big Sky Conference?
“Maybe the Big Sky doesn’t want us,” Ortiz said. “Maybe we’re in a league with Chadron State. From an enrollment standpoint, there’s a lot of Division II and Division III schools that have the same enrollment as Laramie does.”
He warns those calling for self-relegation that, “You literally might as well say, ‘Fine, we’ll just be a rodeo school and have a good science department.’”
Contact David Madison at david@cowboystatedaily.com

David Madison can be reached at david@cowboystatedaily.com.
NIL
Texas RB Quintrevion ‘Tre’ Wisner plans to enter the NCAA Transfer Portal
Texas running back Quintrevion Wisner plans to enter the NCAA Transfer Portal, according to On3’s Pete Nakos. Wisner’s agent Grayson Sheena of AiC.Sports confirmed the decision to Nakos.
Wisner has spent the past three seasons at Texas, where he’s rushed for 1,734 yards on 369 carries, averaging 45.6 yards per game, with 20 starts in 38 career games in Austin. He’s also caught 66 passes for 457 yards and two more scores.
After appearing mostly on special teams as a freshman, Wisner broke out over the past two seasons as the Longhorns’ leading rusher, posting 357 carries for 1,661 yards, averaging 69.2 per game and 4.7 per rush, with eight touchdowns along with all of his receiving production.
Following a breakout sophomore season where he earned a place on the All-SEC third-team with 1,375 yards from scrimmage, including 1,064 rushing yards and six total touchdowns, Wisner struggled through a difficult junior season this past year. Appearing in nine games, Wisner managed just 597 rushing yards and three scores on the ground in 2025.
A native of Glenn Heights (Texas), Wisner played his high school football at DeSoto, where he was a Top-450 overall recruit as a three-star prospect in the 2023 recruiting cycle. He also rated as the No. 30 RB in the class and just inside the Top-75 of players that year coming out of the state of Texas. That’s according to Rivals’ Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies.
This transfer news comes as Texas is preparing to play Michigan in the Citrus Bowl on New Year’s Eve. With Wisner’s departure, the Longhorns lose their top two running backs from this fall after CJ Baxter also revealed plans to enter back on December 8th. Those, along with the others so far, will then become official once the one-time portal window opens on Jan. 2nd.
Wisner has been a key part of the offense the last two seasons for Texas. He, however, will be spending his final season of eligibility elsewhere, with him intending to be in once the two-week portal window opens on January 2nd.
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
Damon Wilson II vs. Georgia football battle could set NIL contract precedent
UGA seeks to enforce agreement signed last year with former Georgia player, whose countersuit claims term sheet not binding.
Georgia linebacker Damon Wilson II comes off of the field after a play during the fourth quarter against Mississippi at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium, Saturday, November 9, 2024, in Oxford, Miss. Mississippi won 28-10. (Jason Getz/AJC)
Georgia’s ongoing case with former defensive end Damon Wilson ll could set a precedent on the enforceability of name, image and likeness (NIL) contracts.
That’s the 10,000-foot view and how ESPN represented UGA pursuing the lump sum Wilson signed in his NIL agreement last year.
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- Is a three-page term sheet legally enforceable?
- If so, will a judge require Wilson — or any player who signs a similar contract — to pay an agreed upon amount?
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NIL
Surprising List of Oregon Ducks’ Biggest NIL Valuations
A Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) valuation is described as an estimation of how much a specific college sports player’s NIL is worth at a given point in time. It’s not the actual dollar amount that an athlete is making.
Roster value refers to the value an athlete has by being a member of his or her team at his or her school, which factors into the role of NIL collectives such as the Oregon Ducks’ Division Street. It’s the primary factor influencing most players’ NIL valuation.

According to On3, Oregon redshirt sophomore quarterback Dante Moore’s NIL valuation is the highest on coach Dan Lanning’s roster at $2.3 million, which is ranked No. 14 amongst all the college football programs. He has a roster value of $2.1 million.
Following Moore, the redshirt senior offensive tackle Isaiah World has the second-highest NIL valuation/roster value on the 2025 Oregon roster at $1.2 million (ranked No. 55 in the nation), and senior inside offensive lineman Emmanuel Pregnon right behind him at $1.1 million (ranked No. 58 in the country).
With the announced return of redshirt junior defensive lineman Bear Alexander for next season, his NIL valuation has jumped all the way up to $976K and a roster value of $932K, the fourth-highest on the Oregon’s team. That places Alexander at No. 80 in the sport.

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Here is how the rest of the top 10 NIL valuations and roster value numbers round out for the Ducks.
- Junior safety Dillion Thieneman – $855,000/$829,000 (ranked No. 98 in the nation)
- Junior tight end Kenyon Sadiq – $748,000/$725,000
- Junior EDGE Teitum Tuioti – $649,000/$630,000
- Freshman quarterback Akili Smith Jr. – $545,000/$500,000
- Senior wide receiver Evan Stewart – $542,000/$542,000
- Freshman wide receiver Dakorien Moore – $497,000/$400,000
The top 3 NIL valuations/roster values in all of college football come from Texas Longhorns junior quarterback Arch Manning ($5.3M/$2.8M), Ohio State Buckeyes sophomore wide receiver Jeremiah Smith ($4.2M/$3.2M), and Miami Hurricanes redshirt senior quarterback Carson Beck ($3.1M/$2.8M).

Dante Moore to Come Back for 2026 Season?
Moore’s future in Eugene is up in the air at the moment. He’s being regarded as the potential No. 1 pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. Tennessee Titans quarterback Cam Ward, the No. 1 pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, made $8,865,000 in his rookie season. Moore and the rest of the players remaining in the postseason have until the deadline of Jan. 23 to enter their names into the upcoming draft pool.
His decision to stay in school or turn professional will depend on how Oregon’s season ends. If it’s an abrupt finish, one has to wonder if Moore will have some remaining business to take care of, bringing a national championship to the storied program for the first time in school history.
The No. 5 Ducks (12-1, 8-1 Big Ten) take on the Big 12 Conference champion, the No. 4 Texas Tech Red Raiders (12-1, 8-1), at the Orange Bowl at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, Florida. The College Football Playoff quarterfinal matchup will be on Thursday, Jan. 1, at 9 a.m. PT on ESPN. The winner moves on to the Peach Bowl at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia.
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