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Navy Football HC Brian Newberry: ‘NIL Here Is On The Back End’

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The college football landscape has often been referred to as the “Wild Wild West” in recent years, with players able to seek out NIL opportunities, transfer without sitting out a year and take advantage of extra eligibility stemming from the COVID-19 years.

That climate has created an era of constant turnover in college football, but the Naval Academy has largely been insulated from that environment. Has Navy football coach Brian Newberry heard from jealous colleagues around the game?

“Quite a few,” Newberry said on Glenn Clark Radio Aug. 22. “I’ve got a lot of friends out there coaching in a lot of different places and have really good jobs at a lot of places. But certainly, it’s frustrating times for coaches and rightfully so. You get in this profession to build relationships, to make an impact, to make a difference — not that it’s impossible to do right now, but it’s become more difficult, for sure.”

Coaches in all sports at the Academy can develop their players in a more traditional way than their counterparts who are knee-deep in the portal, NIL and now revenue share. Midshipmen who are in it for the long haul sign a “2 for 7” contract at the end of their sophomore year, tying them to the Academy for two more years and to the Navy or Marine Corps for five years after graduation.

Navy football went 10-3 in 2024, taking home the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy and winning the Armed Forces Bowl against Oklahoma. The Mids’ top contributors from a year ago are either back in Annapolis, on an NFL roster or serving their country.

“These days with the transfer portal, certainly we have guys who could have put their name in there and had some options and been able to make some money,” Newberry said. “But they see the value in a degree from the Naval Academy, they love their brothers here. They know that while we don’t do NIL and those kinds of things here, the NIL here is on the back end of getting that degree and serving their country and it’s something that’s going to last them for the rest of their lives.”

The 2024 campaign marked Navy’s first winning season since 2019, when the Mids went 11-2 behind a brilliant season from quarterback Malcolm Perry. Navy went 16-30 from 2020-2023, with the offense proving to be the primary culprit for the struggles. The Mids ranked at or near the bottom of the AAC in scoring offense in each of those seasons.

But in 2024, Navy found the right combination in offensive coordinator Drew Cronic and quarterback Blake Horvath. The Mids scored 31.3 points per game, a big improvement from the previous four years. Cronic’s hybrid Wing-T system brought more variety to the offense. Horvath (1,353 passing yards, 1,246 rushing yards, 30 total touchdowns) was one of the country’s breakout stars.

Horvath is back in Annapolis for his senior year, as are top weapons Eli Heidenreich and Alex Tecza.

“Guys know that we’re not going to sneak up on anybody. We’re going to have a little bit more of a target on our backs now,” Newberry said. “The message was going back to January, ‘Hey, we’re still the hunter. We’re still the team that’s the underdog. We’re still the team that has a chip on our shoulder, something to prove all the time. We’ve got to play with an edge. We’re going to have to fight and claw and scratch for everything that we get.’ There’s only a few times this year where we’re going to be as talented as the teams that we’re playing, and our guys know that. There’s a formula to win here and our guys know exactly what that is.”

Navy opens the 2025 season against VMI at Navy-Marine Corps Stadium on Aug. 30, then opens AAC play at home against UAB on Sept. 6. Other key matchups include Air Force (Oct. 4 in Annapolis), Notre Dame (Nov. 8 in South Bend) and Army (Dec. 13 in Baltimore).

The 2024 season gave the Mids a taste of what they’re capable of, but everyone starts the 2025 season fresh.

“Past success doesn’t determine future success. It’s important to understand that, but it certainly does create a sense of expectation in your program of what you’re capable of doing when you do things the right way,” Newberry said. “I had a good feeling going into last season about our team, about the character of our team, about the work they put in [during] the offseason. I felt like we did all the right things to prepare, embrace the process and work the way that we needed to. I thought we were a team going into the season that deserved to have some success. Obviously didn’t know what that was going to look like, but turned out pretty good.”

For more from Newberry, listen to the full interview here:

Photo Credit: Kenya Allen/PressBox



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Should you enter NCAA transfer portal? What all athletes need to know

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Jan. 3, 2026, 7:02 a.m. ET



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Washington Huskies Sign QB Demond Williams Jr. to New Deal For 2026

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Jan. 2, 2026, 3:44 p.m. PT

Washington Huskies sophomore quarterback Demond Williams Jr. will begin his third season at the school among the top compensated players in college football after agreeing to a new deal on Friday.

ESPN college football insider Pete Thamel reported the deal between the 5-foot-11, 190-pound signal-caller and the school on Friday, reuniting Williams and Jedd Fisch for the next two seasons through his senior year in 2027.

The Chandler, Arizona native emerged as one of the best quarterbacks in the Big Ten in his first year as the Huskies’ starter, throwing for 3,064 yards and 25 touchdowns with an additional 611 yards rushing and six touchdowns on the ground in 2025, leading the program to a 9-4 overall record in year two under Fisch.



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Is Missouri football close to landing transfer portal QB? Reports say so

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Updated Jan. 2, 2026, 5:25 p.m. CT

Missouri football does not appear to be wasting much time on the most important question on its roster.

Multiple reports landed Friday, Jan. 2, indicating that the Tigers are the team to watch for Austin Simmons, who, at the beginning of the 2025 season, was widely expected to be the starting quarterback for the Ole Miss Rebels under then-head coach Lane Kiffin.

Simmons, according to a report Friday from national ESPN reporter Pete Thamel, has entered the transfer portal with a no-contact tag. That typically means that a player has a good idea where they would like to end up, and it bars other schools from reaching out to him or his representatives.



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College football transfer tracker: With portal now open, where will top players end up?

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We’ve known Leavitt was going to leave Arizona State for a couple weeks now after a social media post, but he’s officially in the portal as of this morning.

He played in seven games this season before suffering a foot injury that required him to have surgery and miss the remainder of the year. In those seven games, he threw for 1,628 yards and 10 TDs along with three interceptions. He also ran for 306 yards and five TDs. The previous season, he threw for 2,885 yards and 24 TDs with six interceptions while running for another five rushing TDs.

The former four-star prospect originally committed to Michigan State before transferring to ASU, where he’s been the last 2 years.



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SEC team linked to star transfer WR Cam Coleman

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Auburn wide receiver Cam Coleman announced his intention to enter the transfer portal on Dec. 29, a move that assuredly had high-profile programs queuing up for his services.

Four days later, and a day until the transfer portal officially opens, an apparent leader for those services emerged: the Texas Longhorns.

The Houston Chronicle’s Kirk Bohls reported that Texas is saving NIL money in an effort to land Coleman in the portal – even though the star wideout’s asking price could be as high as $4 million.

Coleman is arguably the top overall player to announce plans to enter the transfer portal this offseason, having accounted for over 1,300 yards in 2 seasons at Auburn despite inconsistent quarterback play on the Plains.

According to Pro Football Focus, Coleman caught 57 of his 88 targets this season. His average depth of target was 13.4 yards, which was third among SEC receivers with at least 75 targets.

Adding Coleman to the Longhorns would be a major coup for an offense that ranked 45th in the country both in passing yards (250.7) and scoring (30.5) in 2025. Arch Manning is set to return for his junior season after throwing for 3,163 yards and 26 touchdowns against seven interceptions.

David WassonDavid Wasson

An APSE national award-winning writer and editor, David Wasson has almost four decades of experience in the print journalism business in Florida and Alabama. His work has also appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times and several national magazines and websites. He also hosts Gulfshore Sports with David Wasson, weekdays from 3-5 pm across Southwest Florida and on FoxSportsFM.com. His Twitter handle: @JustDWasson.





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Texas WR Parker Livingstone to enter the NCAA transfer portal

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Turnover in the Texas Longhorns wide receiver room continued on Thursday with the unexpected news that redshirt freshman Parker Livingstone will enter the NCAA transfer portal when it opens.

The 6’4, 191-pounder’s decision comes in the wake of Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian opting to retain position coach Chris Jackson as Livingstone becomes the third departure, joining junior DeAndre Moore Jr. and redshirt freshman Aaron Butler.

Ranked as a consensus four-star prospect out of Lucas Lovejoy in the 2024 recruiting class, Livingstone was the No, 270 prospect nationally and the No. 46 wide receiver, according to the 247Sports Composite rankings. With 35 offers, Livingstone took official visits to Texas and South Carolina before committing to the Longhorns. Other offers included Arkansas, Auburn, Florida State, Georgia, LSU, Miami, Michigan, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, and Texas A&M, among others.

As a freshman, Livingstone appeared in four games for the Longhorns, playing 28 snaps and receiving two targets without recording a catch.

Entering the 2025 season, Livingstone drew buzz during the spring for his development and emerged as a seven-game starter during his redshirt freshman season, flashing early with three touchdowns and 175 receiving yards on six receptions over the first two games.

Livingstone finished the year with 29 receptions for 516 yards and six touchdowns, ending the campaign as the fourth-leading receiver in receptions, the third-leading receiver in receiving yards, and the second-leading receiver in touchdown catches.

The promise that Livingstone showed during his breakout second season on the Forty Acres didn’t lead to a third year in Austin even though he was a roommate of quarterback Arch Manning and grew up a Longhorns fan.

So that marks Moore and Livingstone as major contributors who are leaving the Texas program as Sarkisian and general manager Brandon Harris push to upgrade a position that finished as a net disappointment with the possibility increasing that the Horns will target multiple wide receivers in the portal, including a high-profile target like Cam Coleman.



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