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NBA players and shoe deals

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NBA players and shoe deals

The NBA Finals are basketball’s ultimate competitive showcase, including the sneakers worn on the court. Historically, that’s been a showcase run predominantly by Nike, which includes a large roster of the NBA’s biggest and highest-profile players, in addition to still producing merchandise under the Jordan Brand and Kobe Bryant.

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It’s impossible to watch the NBA without seeing the Nike influence. Nike is the league’s official uniform partner, so the logo is on every player, down to the socks.

The 2025 finals, however, aren’t about the biggest shoe brands. Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton used Game 1 to debut his first signature shoe with Puma: the Hali 1. Oklahoma City Thunder star and league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is signed to Converse, a subsidiary of Nike.

Two small-market teams are providing a big stage for shoe brands other than Nike and Adidas, which have dominated the conversation in basketball shoes for decades. Michael Jordan signed with Nike in 1984, setting the stage for its rise to the top. Adidas has a long basketball history, and has maintained the second spot in the market thanks to deals with the likes of James Harden, Damian Lillard and Tracy McGrady. Bryant also began his career with Adidas.

But as more athletes have sought more input and control over their brands, they are turning to brands without the mainstream clout, or they’re starting their own shoe lines.

After Haliburton hit a game-winning jump shot in Game 1, he brought a pair of his signature Puma sneakers to his postgame news conference. Decked out in all white with black sunglasses and a smile that stretched from ear to ear, Haliburton, who signed with Puma in October, placed the pink basketball shoes on the podium. As he took questions and cameras flashed, Haliburton seized the opportunity to showcase his new shoes.

Later, Haliburton tweeted an ode to a popular Air Jordan slogan. It was the perfect moment for a sneaker debut.

The greats have their own signature shoes. Bryant, Michael Jordan, Allen Iverson, Damian Lillard, James Harden and Kevin Durant are among the NBA’s top names from the past and present with signature shoe lines that have become part of on and off-court fashion.

For many years, the path to a signature shoe was having a brand like Nike or Adidas — another former league uniform partner — to sign the athlete and make him or her a part of the exclusive club of players with a signature shoe. There are additional ways to make that happen while also having a bigger say in the process and a bigger role with the company beyond wearing apparel.

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In some cases, players such as Haliburton opt to go with companies looking to reestablish themselves in the market like Puma, which has leaned into nostalgia with Clyde Frazier, the first NBA player with a signature shoe when the Puma Clyde was released in 1973, and is finding ways to connect with a new generation with LaMelo Ball.

Haiburton’s playoff run couldn’t come at a better time for Puma.

“I heard many rumblings through my last year with my previous brand around brands that potentially could be interested in me, and Puma was a name that always came up,” Haliburton told The Athletic. “I didn’t know how I felt about it until I met them (and) got to know them better. I feel really good about it.”

Others have found homes with newer companies, such as Kyrie Irving with Anta. And it’s not just All-Star players. Cleveland Cavaliers wing Isaac Okoro has found a home with Holo and has a signature shoe.

Irving is one of the biggest names to step away from Nike. He and the company mutually parted ways in December 2023 amid controversy over his sharing an antisemitic film on social media. He signed with Anta in July 2024 and currently serves as the brand’s chief creative officer. The China-based company already had Klay Thompson among its signature athletes.

Irving said he enjoys the creative process, but he also values ownership of his ideas. Nike owned his logo, which meant his children couldn’t benefit financially from it. He’s happy to represent Anta and also see other players exploring ways to have a presence in the sneaker world.

He likened shoe contracts to a 360 music deal, when artists surrender profits from all streams of income, even those not related to music.

“Being able to redefine this basketball shoe design space or signature athlete space, it’s been a great ride, and I’m enjoying it,” Irving said during NBA All-Star Weekend. “You’re seeing others take the same blueprint, create their own, and more kudos to them. I feel like I’m an adviser at this point, too, because I’m not really in competition with my peers in the shoe space as much as people think.”

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Jaylen Brown has been a critic of the sneaker industry and believes being left off the 2024 U.S. Olympic team was partly because of his critiques of Nike. Brown has worn Nike and Adidas, among other brands, in the NBA.

He chose to start his own company, 741 Performance, giving him control and ownership of what he wears.

“I’ve been the CEO of my company and the CFO since the season started, so I’ve been really busy,” Brown said in February. “But I did that on purpose so I can be able to explain to the next generation what it takes, how much time it takes, how much money. I’m very, very informed, and I can’t wait to share with the next generation.”

Okoro is one of those players actively practicing the lessons Irving and Brown want their peers to learn. Okoro said he was approached by Holo last year. He didn’t have a signature shoe, much less a company offering to allow him to have input, company equity and royalties for sales.

Okoro said signing with Holo was a “no-brainer.”

“Being able to actually be in the meetings and the discussions of how we would design the shoe, what colorways I want and just seeing the process of how shoes get designed was definitely eye-opening,” Okoro said.

Okoro is involved in more than designing. He tested his shoe to make sure it worked for him.

“Being able to actually put the shoes on and tell them this feels good, this doesn’t feels good (was important),” Okoro said. “Then them going back and actually fixing those problems and then coming back and giving me the shoe again … it actually fits perfectly and feels great to play in. Also, just getting all the nicks and stuff out of it.”

This generation isn’t the first to go against the grain in signing shoe deals. During the 1980s, when Converse was the top shoe, James Worthy signed with New Balance in ’82 and had the company’s first signature basketball shoe and a deal worth $1 million.

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Hakeem Olajuwon signed with Etonic in 1984 for something “fresh” when Converse or Nike seemed like logical choices, given he was the first pick in the NBA Draft, followed by a deal with L.A. Gear. He later had a shoe deal with Spalding, the company best known for making basketballs, which released the shoe in 1995. Olajuwon wanted to offer an affordable shoe option with Spalding at a time when there were reports of deaths involving sneaker thefts.

Shaquille O’Neal had a signature shoe with Reebok but still managed to produce a more affordable line of his own, Shaq shoes. Stephon Marbury also bucked tradition with his affordable Starbury shoes. Dwyane Wade established a partnership with Li Ning, something other players have done, as well, including Golden State’s Jimmy Butler and D’Angelo Russell.

Steph Curry left Nike to become Under Armour’s signature basketball player in 2013. Instead of being one of many Nike players, he became the top player for Under Armour and would have a signature shoe. By 2015, he was an NBA champion and one of the league’s premier superstars. Curry is now president of Curry Brand, which signed De’Aaron Fox as its first signature athlete in October 2023.

Kawhi Leonard left Nike for New Balance and has become a face of its basketball division. Cameron Brink, the No. 2 pick in the 2024 WNBA Draft, signed with New Balance to become the first woman to sign with the brand.

All-Stars Joel Embiid and Julius Randle both play in Skechers. The Denver Nuggets duo of Nikola Jokić and Aaron Gordon and Dallas Mavericks guard Spencer Dinwiddie all have shoes through 361 Degrees. Los Angeles Lakers guard Austin Reaves has a signature shoe with Rigorer.

Reebok is working its way back into the mix after being acquired by Adidas in 2005. Reebok was sold to the Authentic Brands Group in 2021. O’Neal and Iverson are still the biggest names associated with basketball shoes; O’Neal serves as president, and Iverson is vice president.

Much of what Reebok is doing to make a dent in the industry is included in the Netflix docuseries “Power Moves with Shaquille O’Neal.” Reebok is trying to find the next big star, similarly to what Puma has done for Haliburton this month. Reebok has signed two top WNBA players in Angel Reese and DiJonai Carrington and is trying to make inroads in the NBA with high-flying Chicago Bulls rookie Matas Buzelis and potential risers like G Leaguer Dink Pate and Tennessee Volunteers signee Nick Ament. Reebok CEO Todd Krinsky told The Athletic that Reese’s signature shoe would be released later this season, and the plan is to grow with emerging young players.

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“The players that we’ve signed, like Nate Ament and Matas, these are young kids that we really feel speak to who we want to be as a brand,” Krinsky said. “We didn’t want to go out right away first day and sign some big NBA player. We wanted to connect a little more emotionally with some of the work you’re seeing, have younger players wear the product first and then start to build the roster. We’re hoping that a lot of the young players we’re signing: grow with us and become big NBA players. But we’re in year one of a pretty long journey, and the goal was to be young.”

The same could be said of Converse, which is owned by Nike. Before Nike’s ascension, Converse was a top brand. It’s the shoe Worthy wore when playing for North Carolina. It had the classic 1986 commercial featuring Magic Johnson, Isiah Thomas, Kevin McHale, Mark Aguirre, Bernard King and Larry Bird, the NBA MVP. It’s also had relationships with league players such as Wade and Dennis Rodman, but Gilgeous-Alexander is giving the brand a modern-day elite-level talent to carry it.

Puma had a presence at NBA All-Star Weekend with Ball and his Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles-themed collection, but it couldn’t ask for a bigger spotlight than what it has with Haliburton, who has raised his profile with last-second, game-winning shots in each round of the postseason, including Game 1 of the finals.

“We had a great dinner, great meeting. (Footwear designer) Salehe Bembury is the new head of creative for basketball, and he obviously has a very big following and is well-knowledged in the game of sneaker designing,” Haliburton said. “For him to bring that mindset where he’s had so much success into basketball, and I was going to be his first basketball shoe, that was really exciting for me. I think that was appealing.

“For me, I wanted to go somewhere I was valued, and I think Puma from the jump just showed how much they valued me.”

For Haliburton, being empowered to be a part of the creative process in designing the sneaker, as well as everything being an extension of his personal basketball story, was important. His involvement in the design can be seen in the unique rounded edges of his “TH” and “Hali” logos, in addition to the hibiscus pink colorway.

“There’s a bunch of different colorways that we have in our planning moving forward, but the pink was important to me because my first pair of real basketball shoes, my first organized pair, was a pair of pink basketball shoes,” Haliburton explained. “That was, like, fourth grade, at a time where wearing pink shoes wasn’t a thing. ‘Hey, that’s the kid who wears pink shoes.’ … We wanted to do something that was kind of a nod.”

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Haliburton said he wanted everything about his debut shoe to be “different,” and he feels the switch to Puma allowed him to do so. Doing things differently has worked for Haliburton.

For other players daring to be different, there are now more ways than ever to carve out a niche in the sneaker world.

(Photo of Tyrese Haliburton: David L. Nemec / NBAE via Getty Images)

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College football quarterback with 6,600 career passing yards enters transfer portal

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A quarterback with nearly 7,000 career passing yards has elected to enter the college football transfer portal in search of what will be his fifth school heading into the 2026 season.

North Texas quarterback Reese Poffenbarger has entered his name into the NCAA transfer portal looking for a new school next year, according to CBS Sports.

Over the last four seasons, the quarterback has been on three different rosters after redshirting his first year at Old Dominion in 2021.

His best performance to date

Poffenbarger had his two best overall outings in the 2022 and 2023 seasons when suited up for Albany, where he transferred to the FCS ranks.

He was named the starter at Albany after competing with two other candidates for the position and established a school record with 412 passing yards in a game against Fordham.

That year, Poffenbarger finished with one yard shy of 3,000 yards with 24 touchdowns and was named the Colonial Athletic Conference Offensive Rookie of the Year.

He led Albany to the FCS playoff semifinal round the following season, and elected to transfer away after leading the FCS with 36 passing touchdowns and 3,603 passing yards.

The quarterback finished as the school’s touchdown passing record-holder in his time with the program.

Where he’s been lately

Poffenbarger transferred to Miami ahead of the 2024 season, ultimately serving as the backup to Cam Ward, himself a transfer to the school who went on to lead college football’s top-ranked passing attack that year.

From there, Poffenbarger transferred to the Group of Five ranks, landing at North Texas, where he competed for and ultimately lost the starting quarterback job to eventual NCAA passing leader Drew Mestemaker.

What he’s done on the field

In his career, Poffenbarger boasts a 14-12 overall record in 26 starts across 32 total games, passing for 6,669 yards with 60 touchdowns and 17 interceptions.

He rushed for an additional 342 yards and eight more touchdowns.

Poffenbarger’s best outing came with Albany in the 2023 season, going 11-4 overall with 3,614 yards with 36 touchdowns and 13 interceptions, rushing for 6 touchdowns.

How the college football transfer portal works

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.

(CBS)

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No. 8 transfer WR sets official visits with two major college football programs

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One of the top offensive weapons on a Big Ten team and one of the highest-ranked players at his position in the college football transfer portal is in play and two notable programs are already making overtures as the 2026 cycle heats up.

Former Rutgers wide receiver Ian Strong is in the NCAA transfer portal coming off a very productive season, and has already set two official visits as he scouts a new school, according to On3 Sports.

Who is interested in the wideout?

Notre Dame is at the front of the line for the wide receiver, and is scheduled to meet him on campus for an official visit some time this week, according to the report.

The wide receiver position is an area of some need for the Fighting Irish looking ahead to the 2026 season with one notable player on the way out.

Malachi Fields, himself a transfer from Virginia last offseason, led Notre Dame in total receiving production in 2025, but is set to exit the program and enter the NFL Draft.

And while there are other notable receiving targets currently on the roster for quarterback CJ Carr, most notably Jordan Faison, the Fighting Irish are said to be in the market for another go-to wide receiver talent for their offense next season.

Where has Strong been?

A notable ACC hopeful undergoing a notable coaching change and returning a potentially-elite quarterback in 2026 is in the market for the wide receiver.

California recently hosted Strong on an official visit, which took place on Sunday, according to the most recent reporting.

Head coach Tosh Lupoi earned a major re-commitment in December when star quarterback and former five-star prospect Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele confirmed his decision to return as QB1 for the Golden Bears in 2026.

Now he needs a go-to target, and Strong is a player who would theoretically fit the bill, and would potentially give the Cal offense an instant upgrade.

What Strong has done on the field

Rutgers played one of the most productive passing offenses in the Big Ten this past season, and Strong’s performance at wide receiver was one of the reasons why.

The 6-foot-3, 210-pound wideout, the former top prospect from the state of New York, had 111 receptions for 1,668 yards and 12 touchdowns over the last three seasons.

This past season saw Strong’s best effort as he finished with 52 grabs for 762 yards and five touchdowns, all career-highs in a Rutgers offense that was top 25 nationally in passing output.

Strong is listed as the No. 8 transfer wide receiver in the 2026 college football transfer portal cycle, according to the On3 Sports national player rankings.

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IU football adds TCU QB Josh Hoover out of the transfer portal – The Daily Hoosier

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Indiana has an experienced veteran in the stable at quarterback for 2026.

Texas Christian transfer Josh Hoover is headed to Bloomington based on multiple Sunday reports.

For his career the Heath, Texas product projects to have the most passing yards (9,629) and touchdown passes (71) of any player returning to college football next season.

The 6-foot-2 and 200-pound Hoover has been with TCU each of the last four seasons, taking a redshirt year in 2022.  Since he took over as the starter in October 2023, the team went 19-12, including 17-8 in the last two years.  He led the Horned Frogs to nine wins in 2024 and eight this season.

He was originally committed to Tom Allen and the Hoosiers out of high school before flipping his decision late in the cycle following the 2021 season.

Hoover has one year of eligibility remaining.

As a redshirt freshman in 2023, Hoover started the final six games of the season.  He completed 62.1% of his throws for 2,206 yards with 15 touchdowns and nine interceptions.

In 2024 Hoover completed 66.5% of his passes for 3,949 yards with 27 touchdowns and 11 interceptions.

This season he completed 65.9% of his throws for 3,472 yards with 29 touchdowns and 13 interceptions.

Hoover was sacked 18 times in 2025 and 16 times in 2024.

Like Indiana, TCU ran a lot of RPO offense with Hoover as the starter under offensive coordinator Kendal Briles, who has left for South Carolina.  In that system Hoover showed he is a capable runner too.  Over the last three years he has rushed for 267 yards (before sack adjustment) with eight touchdowns.

More transfer portal information:

For complete coverage of IU football recruiting, GO HERE.

The Daily Hoosier –“Where Indiana fans assemble when they’re not at Assembly”



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The Price: What It Takes To Win in College Football’s Era of Chaos

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The Price: What It Takes to Win in College Football’s Era of Chaos was released in August of 2024. It is written by Armen Keteyian and John Talty. This book is a tell all and deep inside look at this new era of college football that covers NIL, the transfer portal, NCAA and recruiting scandals. In addition, heated conflicts between coaches, and all of the above.

COVID-19 pretty much started the beginning of the new era of college football. During that time, was when NIL started to become a thing in the state of California and was heavily discussed nationally. Also, the transfer portal started to rise rapidly.

Clemson Tigers head coach Dabo Swinney mentions, “There’s no rules, no guidance, no nothing. It’s out of control. It is not sustainable. It’s an absolute mess and a train wreck, and the kids are going to be the ones who suffer in the end.”

Coaches weren’t the only ones feeling the effects of this new era. One high-level crisis management consultant who has a lot of connections and clients in college football mentioned, “The unhappiness and dissatisfaction level are off the charts. I’m going to project eighty percent of my presidential clients, commissioner clients, AD clients, and my coaches are miserable.”

Coach Nick Saban

On May 18, 2022, Alabama head coach and all-time great Nick Saban started a war when he claimed Texas A&M bought every player on their team. He even double downed on the claim, saying he did not buy one player. But, he also continued to say he might have to in the future because more and more people are doing it.

Saban previously lobbied for Stephen A Smith and Paul Finebaum to call out Texas A&M as a high ranking Alabama source said “using NIL as a recruiting inducement is a clear violation of NCAA rules on NIL.” However, allegedly Saban’s claim is a little hypocritical as he was doing the same thing when he coached at LSU years before NIL was even legal.

Former Tigers running back Elice Parker, was paid by Saban. Saban also mentioned, if anybody cheats you’re fired, but can’t control what the boosters do.

Once Saban got to Alabama and NIL started up, he and the Crimson Tide did not handle NIL well. The program and staffers acknowledged when Saban ever left or retired, they would be screwed. While Saban was head coach, in 2022, Saban refused to pay a marquee transfer $1 million dollars. A sports agent mentioned, if NIL did not exist, they would’ve had three more five stars in their recruiting class. Saban struggled bringing in guys cause of NIL. As well as, players inability to sit and wait for their opportunity like in years past during the dynasty.

He was angry with Kiffin that he’s never had a coach he couldn’t control or get to do his way. Even though the two had a lot of success together, Saban did not like the fact that Kiffin was egotistical.

Coach Jim Harbaugh, “The Michigan Man”

The Michigan man is none other than former Michigan quarterback and head coach Jim Harbaugh. Harbaugh’s infamous “nobody” speech started originally from his dad making him and his brother John walk to school while dribbling a basketball. Both brothers were very competitive at every sport they played which helped them get to where they were today.

Harbaugh got himself into some trouble at Michigan. As a result, he debated leaving and going back to the NFL taking a job as head coach of the Denver Broncos. However, he declined due to his loyalty to college football and for seniors JJ McCarthy, Blake Corum, Zak Zinter, and Kris Jenkins.

Harbaugh while at Michigan, wanted to take advantage of one of the better states in the country in top high school talent in New Jersey. He hired Chris Partridge to help him recruit some top New Jersey. It worked well as they landed some future NFL players such as Jabrill Peppers and Rashan Gary.

Harbaugh had a very interesting path to coaching as he started off as an assistant coach at Western Kentucky for eight years. Then, he became a quarterbacks coach in the NFL for the Oakland Raiders. Then, he got to be a head coach for the first time back in college for the San Diego Toreros. After, he earned his chance to be a head coach at the NFL with the San Francisco 49ers. With the 49ers, he made it to the Super Bowl. But eventually, he ended up at his alma mater.

The Michigan Man II

At one point, Harbaugh was struggling early in Ann Arbor. He was failing to compete for national championships and struggled against rival Ohio State. He thought, he was going to get fired. In efforts to save his job, he got a younger staff, landed JJ McCarthy. As a result of those things, he was able to win four straight against their arch rival.

In terms of NIL and recruiting, 2021 was their best season in the NIL era. They raised between $15 and $25 million dollars.

Investigators would after being unsuccessful to find out the truth, would threaten people with their jobs to get them to tell the truth or remember the situation. If not, they could lose their job and/or be suspended. After six months of investigating, Harbaugh was suspended four games.

Another scandal that happened in Ann Arbor, Michigan was the Connor Stallions situation. Stallions would pay 65 total people including his friends to use their phones and film other teams. He also, dressed up as a staffer with a visiting pass. Stallions later resigned and told people coach Harbaugh had nothing to do with it. Harbaugh was suspended three games but they didn’t find any evidence for him being involved, just was guilty by association.

Despite all of the scandals and suspensions, as well as flirting with the NFL, Harbaugh led the Wolverines to a national championship. Harbaugh after feeling the NCAA was against him and with investigations still going, he finally took a NFL head coaching job with the Los Angeles Chargers.

EA Lawsuit

Former student-athlete Ray Dennison was the reason the term “student-athlete” became a thing. After his death, students were only compensated for books, tuition, and housing.

Sonny Vaccaro co-founded the Dapper Dan Roundball Classic which was the first high school all star game. From there, he worked with Nike and got sponsorships with coaches. As well as 21-year-old Michael Jordan to join. This was one of the first public sponsorships for a collegiate athlete. After being fired from Nike, Vaccaro landed Kobe Bryant a five million dollar deal with Adidas in high school.

Ed O’Bannon, a former collegiate basketball player at UCLA, was not paid for his name, image, or likeness in the NCAA March Madness 09 video game. As a result, O’Bannon and others sued the NCAA and EA Sports. NCAA was leaving over $8 million dollars a year by not allowing EA to license NIL. “The names and likeness are rigged into the games now by illegal means”

End of EA video games

The NCAA and EA eventually lost the lawsuit. The NCAA paid out 20 million dollars to former division one football and basketball players during the video games in 2014. EA paid out $40 million dollars to athletes and shut down their collegiate games in 2014. I was not until July 2024, where a college football video game came back. Players were compensated as well as a copy of the game.

Schools now paid “full cost of attendance” in addition to full scholarships. Otherwise meaning, student-athletes had their tuition, room and board, textbooks, and meal plans paid for.

California Senate Bill 206 “Fair pay to play act” college athletes legalize NIL watered down version in 2019 signed but wouldn’t be in effect until 2023. Even though NIL didn’t become a thing nationally until 2021, California was the first state to create some sort of NIL laws in 2019. But as a result, the NCAA threatened to ban California schools from NCAA sporting events.

Florida joined California with a similar law but put it into effect in 2021. NIL on July 1, 2021 almost didn’t happen as the NCAA nearly let states operate their own way. 27 states had their own rules which offered unfair advantages.

Saban’s Mentors

Kirby Smart is the Georgia Bulldogs head coach and arguably the best active head coach in college football. But before being the powerhouse he is now, he started as an assistant learning from the best in Saban. Many have been successful on their own after learning from and leaving Saban, but undoubtedly, Smart is the most successful.

Smart finally got to beat his former mentor in a national championship. Originally, Saban was happy for him. But then, he started making up excuses and mentioning he didn’t have his best roster due to injuries.

Saban would often demonstrate he could be rather difficult to work with at times. He would be laser focused on winning even if it meant overworking his staff or ignoring life changing events such as 9/11. Saban would even call his staff multiple times on Christmas and when his staff members or himself were on vacation. He was so competitive, he even tried to block defensive back Maurice Smith from transferring to Georgia before the SEC got involved.

Jimbo Fisher’s $76 million dollar buyout from Texas A&M in November 2023 was the largest in sports history. Fisher during his time at FSU did not see eye to eye with the athletic director or the president of the school (John Thrasher). He’d constantly complain to Thrasher and go into his office asking for helicopters, better referees, and better facilities.

Fisher was always jealous of Saban and wanted to claim his successes including the RPO’s and a more balanced offensive approach. But, Saban didn’t even utilize until Lane Kiffin was with him and after. On Fisher’s best A&M recruiting class, he was accused of spending between $25 and $30 million dollars.

Calling Collectives

The TCA Group founded (The Collective Association) which represents and defends collectives. Also, pushes back on the narrative they were at fault for college football’s problems. They are there to show and demonstrate why collectives are good for college sports and how they are beneficial to recruiting. The NCAA and college administrators didn’t realize when introducing NIL the power boosters had. Their powerful because of their impact in landing recruits.

When the time was right, job offers would be even made to the parents of a top recruit. They would receive a paycheck, health benefits, and a pension even if they weren’t qualified for the role. Schools would go to great lengths, even unfair or illegal ways, just to land top talent and be competitive in football. Cheating has always happened in college football. Some examples of this are, 1987 SMU, and Alabama in 2002 paying players. Also, Ole Miss in 1995 got a TV ban and 4 years of probation for boosters offering cars and cash to recruits. In the late 50’s people would put money in players helmets as compensation. Even in college basketball, schools like North Carolina were in trouble for creating fake classes.

In 2021, the Florida Gators created the first NIL Collective. At the time, it only featured autographs and Q&A’s for fans over Zoom. Tennessee and Texas A&M quickly followed.

Calling Collectives II

John Ruiz, a Coral Gables based lawyer, got Nijel Pack to transfer to the U for $800,000 for two years. Many starting players at Miami grew frustrated with football head coach Mario Cristobal and staff about making way less than people lower on the depth chart.

In this new era of college football, if you weren’t spending millions of dollars on your roster and facilities, you were already behind. Top contenders are supposed to spend at least $7 million to have a natty contender roster. In the SEC, teams would generally spend $5 mil for bowl eligible, $7 or $8 million for 7 or 8 wins, and $10 or more million to contend for a title.

NIL matters so much nowadays in this era, that players and coaches will leave strictly for a larger check. Ole Miss head coach Lane Kiffin nearly left for Auburn cause of a larger NIL budget, until Kiffin got a $10 million dollar raise. His star running back Quinshon Judkins nearly entered the transfer portal after his freshman year. But eventually, was convinced to stay after agreeing to a six-figure deal. But that was not good enough, as he transferred to Ohio State just a year later. His transfer earned seven figures to truly show, money talks.

Fighting For Opportunity

Washington Huskies head coach Jedd Fisch definitely has one of the more unique and interesting paths to football and where he is now. He grew up in New Jersey, playing tennis. He became infatuated with football by his mom’s boyfriend who was a high school football coach.

Fisch then attended the University of Florida. His roommate was none other than future Executive Vice President and General Manager of the Philadelphia Eagles Howie Roseman. Fisch, a young and hungry college student would keep showing up to Gators head coach Steve Spurrier’s office. He would also leave notes until he got an opportunity.

He also went to some coaching greats in Sean McVay and Bill Belichick for advice, before taking the head coaching job at the University of Arizona. Fisch focused on upgrading facilities at Arizona after $14 million dollars upgraded facility. Some of the upgrades include a pool table, new offices and meeting rooms for coaches, expanded weight room, players lounge, and barbershop. However, even with all of those nice upgrades, he had to compete with the Wildcats basketball team for donor money.

Fighting for Opportunity II

He was able to earn some NIL money in 2022, Arizona had 22nd best recruiting class. That also put them first in the PAC-12. Impressively, he did it without spending a dollar on NIL but rather promising the opportunities to podcast and sell your jersey. That class landed stars such as Jacob Manu, Noah Fifita, and Tetairoa McMillan.

After a 5-7 season, Fisch was able to get every scholarship player $18,000 and the opportunity to earn another $6,000 and a laptop for good grades. Every walk-on player also got paid, as they earned $12,500. However, he still dealt with losses as he lost All-PAC-12 wide receiver Dorian Singer to conference rival USC for $250,000.

Fisch would go see McMillan’s family in Hawaii often to let him know important he was to the team and to essentially re-recruit him. He wanted to keep him happy and remind him of his important role so he wouldn’t transfer for larger amounts of money. The pitch worked as he kept his star player. Post spring ball in 2023, 6,350 football players entered the transfer portal.

Maryland tried to operate their own “Moneyball” system in efforts to compete with some of the bigger programs. Before revenue sharing, the Big Ten powerhouses got to spend between $10 and $15 million. Meanwhile, the lower end schools spent around $2.5 million. Maryland was closer to the lower end, hence the Macy’s comparison.

Paying For Athletes + Recruiting System

One of the first ways athletes received compensation in the NIL era was online through MyNILpay.com. It was a Venmo like website where people could directly pay athletes. Over 500,000 athletes ranging from D1 to DIII were on the website.

Locksley said Maryland is like Macy’s cause it’s stuck in no man’s land. They’d lose elite talent to Bama, LSU, and Arkansas and also lose nine depth players to Charlotte.

Taulia Tagovailoa and his dad kept constantly asking for more NIL money. If not he’d contemplate transferring. It was rumored he would transfer to Miami to be closer to his older brother Tua. Him and another teammate would only play in a bowl game if they got $500k.

NIL Resources

On3 was founded by Shannon Terry and took over Rivals in 2000. On3 is a website database that allows anybody to see anything ranging from NIL valuations and contracts to high school and transfer portal recruiting. It was later acquired by Yahoo in 2008. Two years later he founded 247Sports and then he sold to CBS Sports in 2016. Then five years later he started On3.

In the summer of 2023, five-stars cost $165,000 to $350,000. Meanwhile, it would cost $375,000 for a top-10 high school QB.

Julian Sayin’s parents stayed away from the NIL Market including agents and financial advisors. However, in the summer of his junior year, he signed with Athletes First which is the largest NFL agency. They represent guys like Aaron Rodgers and Dak Prescott.

Early 2000s, most SEC schools including Alabama tried to buy top defensive linemen out of Memphis and were in trouble.

Former AAC commissioner, Mike Aresco mentioned he doesn’t understand why it’s called NIL when it’s really pay to play and pay to recruit. Saban landed a freshman NIL deal where every player earned $25,000.

NIL Impacting People’s Lives

88.5% of NIL activities start on social media. Livvy Dunne, a former gymnast at LSU had a NIL value of $3.4 million and would get $500k from On3 just for posting on social. However, there were some downsides as Dunne mentions having security and recommends keeping your life private. She also mentions on the documentary “The Money Game: LSU” that while in college, she attended class online due to safety and security reasons.

Florida State was fined $1.7 million, disassociate from a collective, and their OC was suspended three games for the first ever NIL violation and lawsuit.

Conference Realignment + TV Rights

Maryland moved from ACC to the BIG 10 strictly cause of money and left the rivalries with UNC and Duke for Iowa and Purdue. Washington and Oregon each accepted a $30 million dollar offer to join USC and UCLA in going to the Big Ten. Since then, at least 11 schools left to join the Big 12, Big Ten, or ACC. The PAC 12 as many knew was gone.

TV rights (7 years more than $8 billion from ESPN, CBS, and NBC for the Big 10)
⁃  10 years, 3 billion from ESPN/Disney just for SEC’s game of the week

University of Arizona President Bobby Robbins wanted to compete against the SEC by proposing a mega conference of the PAC-12 merging with the ACC, and Big 12. USC was against other schools like Baylor and TCU joining the PAC-12. Colorado joining the Big 12 cost the PAC-12 deals with ESPN, FOX NBC CBS. Oregon and Washington join the Big 10 and Washington did because of disagreeing with Apple deal about streaming only (mainly head coach Kalen DeBoer).

Cal and Stanford went to the ACC while, Arizona, Arizona State, and Utah were heavily pursued by the Big 12 before joining. Oliver Luck convinced Oregon State and Washington State to not leave the PAC-12 an to try and save it due to more money directly going to them and its rich history. Big Ten didn’t take Cal or Stanford cause all they care about is tv ratings and not academics.

Agent + Top QB? Dynamic Duo? Utter Disaster?

20 year old SMU student Jackson Zager is also the NIL sports agent for Arizona State quarterback Jaden Rashada. Rashada was offered a 4 year, $13.85 million dollar contract to play for the Florida Gators. He would’ve been making more than NFL QB Brock Purdy. The deal went away because Gator Guard and Gator Collective couldn’t raise the money.

Rusty Hardin, a famous Houston area litigator who works with Zager is prepared to sue Billy Napier for the largest lawsuit since NIL became a thing for “fraudulently induces Jaden into signing national letter of intent.” Zager and Rashada met at IMG Academy despite Zager being two years older and Rashada only going there for a month. As a college freshman, Zager started JTM Sports with former teammate Tommy Thomson and landed their first client, Illinois State quarterback Zack Annexstad.

Rashada’s Downfall?

Since Rashada lives in California, he could earn NIL in high school and he reached out to Zager to team up. Eddie Rojas, a former Gators pitcher launched the first NIL collective. Although, Rashada chose Miami’s $9.5 million over Florida’s 10 million and committed to U Miami before crying and calling Zager once the numbers got released. After a renegotiated contract, Rashada flipped his commitment to Florida for $13 million with $8 million coming from Gator Guard and a $500,000 signing bonus.

Florida terminated the deal a day after the $500,000 dollar wire never went through. Napier told Rashada to sign the letter of intent and even bribed him with a million dollars to do which is illegal. Rashada was upset when he wasn’t being paid what he was and wanted to sue. His agent said stick at Florida despite being screwed and Rashada said no an asked for his release from Florida which was granted January 17th. Rashada only had two options, his dads Alma mater in Arizona state or national championship runner-up TCU and he chose Arizona State with zero NIL money.

Now, fast forward to present time, and Rashada has played for Arizona State, Georgia, and now Sacramento State.

Overall, if you are a college football fan and are opinionated one way or the other about sports business and NIL, it is definitely worth the read. There are also tons of other information the book goes into detail about that was fascinating.

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Brian Ramos is a contributor on Back Sports Page. Along with receiving his B.A. in Sports Communications, he has over six years of experience in the sports industry and has interviewed a variety of people in the sports industry, such as Daniel Jones, Tommy DeVito, Mac McClung, Julius Randle, Bobby Portis, Don La Greca, Adam Schefter, James and Trevor van Riemsdyk, and others. In addition to writing, Ramos has called women’s lacrosse and baseball on ESPN+. Ramos has a podcast on YouTube called Cut The Nets, along with his co-host Jeremy Gretzer. You can find Brian on Instagram at @Brian.ramos0219 and Twitter at @brianramos0219.





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Can I say it now. College football is losing me as a fan.

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I don’t understand.

Overwhelmingly on this board the sentiment was to pay players. No forethought or implication considerations, just pay them. They deserved it.

Now, the aftermath isn’t so cozy anymore. I read where upwards of 70% of transfers will not receive a scholarship at the next school.

So they either get paid NIL riches or they find themselves in a pickle. In either case this is what the vast majority wanted.

Remember, you wanted this.

Ready shoot aim is eviserating college sports. These are minor leagues. Get what you can while you can. It’s a business now since NIL was introduced. Free movement has little to do with it. It’s all about getting it now

Remember y’all wanted this



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Why college football fans should care about the transfer portal

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College Football Enquirer co-hosts Andy Staples and Steven Godfrey discuss why college football fans should care about the transfer portal and all its storylines. Hear the full conversation on the “College Football Enquirer” podcast – and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you listen.

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Video Transcript

We want to have a transfer portal discussion that is really not for recruitment.

It is for the mainstream college football fan.

Yes.

…who wants to know why all of this rigmarole matters.

And I feel like you’ve gotten enough evidence in the last few days, In the last few weeks, the last few months, to understand why this matters.

Mm-hmm.

Yeah.

Why, when, when a D2 quarterback from Ferris State commits to be the backup at Ole Miss out of the transfer portal.

Might be important.

…could be important later on.

Why, when the quarterback from a .500 Cal team decides to go to Indiana, and you may not have known who else was looking at him during his Recruitment, that it may matter, that he might wind up holding the Heisman Trophy.

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He might wind up destroying Alabama in the Rose Bowl.

So this matters quite a bit.

It does.

Quite a bit.

It matters, and yet, as the sort of Everyman proxy on this program, I think people are still learning how to, Pick up on the portal and figure out what’s important about it.

Like, I’ve had a lot of just college football dads in the real world just say, Like, “Hey, I, you know, I get it.

I, I get that Fernando Mendoza, I didn’t know who that guy was last year, and now he’s quarterback of probably the best team left in our tournament.

But am I, like, really fired up right now about The Cincinnati quarterback?

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Like, am I, like, “Why does my team need Brendan Sorsby?”

I think there’s, There’s a lot, there’s a lot that’s kind of lost in translation about this one.

Like, who to target, who to get excited about.



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