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New SEC scheduling model forces Razorbacks to embrace NIL like never before

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New SEC scheduling model forces Razorbacks to embrace NIL like never before

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Arkansas coach Sam Pittman entered the SEC at a time when the league reached its pinnacle of dominance back in December 2019.

So many changes have happened since. COVID-19, NIL, and transfer portal chaos has evolved the world of college football into something unrecognizable from six seasons ago.

Now, the Razorbacks football department must take a proactive approach to an extra game on the conference schedule, which certainly reminds everyone of the forgettable 2020 season.

There’s only one way for the SEC to make things right with not only Arkansas, but the whole league in general and that’s by going one direction that celebrates it’s regional roots.

Recruit More Depth

It all starts with NIL and Arkansas must get serious about being competitive in a league instead of nickeling and diming a roster pieced together by Group of Five and FCS starters.

The Razorbacks must uncover every single stone and prioritize SEC transfers first before going after players from other conferences.

Razorbacks linebacker Xavian Sorey against LSU

Arkansas Razorbacks linebacker Xavian Sorey against the LSU Tigers at Razorback Stadium in Fayetteville, Ark. / Nilsen Roman-Hogs on SI Images

Honestly, Arkansas is in a unique situation with the novel revenue sharing model as one of its big three sports is already financially taken care of by super donor John Tyson and his group of buddies.

While most schools will allot between 10-20% of its $20.5 million in revenue to its men’s basketball team, that’s extra money the Razorbacks can utilize during the winter transfer portal period when most impact transfers are on the market.

Most SEC football teams are likely taking advantage of having infinite funds with their NIL collectives’ abilities to remain intact by following new guidelines. Yet, there is hope that perhaps things can get back to an even playing field.

Leadership Embraces NIL?

Just this week, Pittman appears to have put his “Blue Light Special” days behind him while publicly embracing the NIL way this week on social media.

“NIL directly relates to success,” Pittman said via X. “In order for us to compete we need our fans’ support. The college landscape has changed, and we have to continue to thrive in the NIL world. Along with our facilities and coaches, Arkansas Edge makes us competitive with anyone.”

Not all blame should be placed on Pittman’s shoulders either because his boss, Arkansas athletics director Hunter Yuracheck, is the one who stubbornly fought against paying players one red cent from the onset.

He wanted to use NIL the way it was intended by receiving compensation for having their likeness used in video games, commercials and such. Instead of ‘buying teams’ like other teams were actively doing, he decided to fight against it which caused Arkansas to slip from a fighter’s chance and back to the world of SEC also-ran.

“Collectives are not paying market value, they’re buying teams,” Yurachek said last year at the Little Rock Touchdown Club. “We’ve finally gotten our footing with NIL.”

Well, nearly a year later, things don’t seem to be getting any better against increasingly tougher competition. The only way fans can protect the sanctity of the Razorbacks brand is to give blindly and force change of on-field efforts as it seems Arkansas leadership has finally woken up and smelled the greenery of the almighty dollar.

Arkansas must completely immerse itself in the game or willfully enforce its own death penalty because the desire to adapt isn’t a concept leadership wants to embrace.

SEC Shoves Back

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey gave the Big Ten and Indiana a huge stiff arm in the scheduling discussion Thursday with a shift to a 9-game conference schedule.

One new concept media are putting a major emphasis on is that SEC members are required to play at least one extra out-of-conference Power Four opponent, or schedule Notre Dame each season.

While most outlets are labeling this as a new concept, Sankey wanted to reinforce a requirement in place since conference expansion in 2012 when Texas A&M and Missouri entered the league.

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey addressing Media Days

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey speaks to the media at the 2024 SEC Football Kickoff on Monday at the Omni Dallas Hotel in Dallas. / James D. Smith / SEC

Hoosiers coach Curt Cignetti went into a one-way shoving match at Big Ten Media Day when asked about his program cancelling a home-and-home series against ACC program Virginia.

“The best two conferences in college football, any football guy that’s objective, will tell you are the Big 10 and the SEC,” Cignetti said last month. “12/16 SEC teams play 3 G5 [Group of Five] or FBS games. Twelve of those teams play 36 games, 29 Group of Five games, seven FCS games, and one less conference game. So, we’d figured we’d just adopt SEC scheduling philosophy. Some people don’t like it. I’m more focused on those nine conference games.”

Cignetti’s comments don’t make sense considering Arkansas has embraced the SEC requirement each year with the exception of 2018-19 when Michigan cancelled its series via e-mail in July 2016.

With such late notice, former athletic director Jeff Long was forced to improvise by scheduling a home-and-home series against Mountain West Conference team Colorado State. The SEC granted Arkansas a waiver due to circumstances of losing such a profitable home-and-home venture.

Arkansas Razorbacks head coach Sam Pittman talks to Texas Longhorns head coach Steve Sarkisian

Arkansas Razorbacks head coach Sam Pittman talks to Texas Longhorns head coach Steve Sarkisian after the game at Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium. Arkansas won 40-21. / Nelson Chenault-Imagn Images

Since 2012, Arkansas has been compliant with the SEC’s scheduling mandate with home-and-home series against Rutgers (Big East 2012-13), Texas Tech (2014-15, 2030-31), TCU (2016-17), Texas (2021), BYU (2022-23), Oklahoma State (2024, 2027, 2032-2033), Notre Dame (2025, 2028) and Utah (2026, 2029).

Prior to the SEC’s mandate, Arkansas faced Texas A&M during non-conference play from 2009-11 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington for the Southwest Classic when the Aggies were part of the Big 12 Conference.

Other notable non-conference games Arkansas has played in since joining the SEC include USC (2005-06) and Texas (2003-04, 2008).

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Dengler Domain: College Football | News, Sports, Jobs

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Sean Dengler.

College football is a mess. Talent is not worse, but something about the game feels off with where the sport is heading. The façade of being on scholarship was all which mattered did not make sense in comparison to when coaches started making lucrative salaries and athletic conferences began signing rich media rights deals. Being compensated for their time made sense, but the way they are being paid feels like the Wild West. With schools bidding on players, other athletes sitting out mid-season to transfer to a new team the next season, and athletes feeling like mercenaries, hopping from one team to the next.

NIL was supposed to have the athletes starring in a local car dealership advertisement. What has happened from the fan’s perspective is it feels like it has become easier to buy the best team. Using merit to succeed has fallen to the wayside while money solves the problems. This has left an unregulated, gross feeling hovering above college football. Change needs to come where athletes are paid their worth, but they also do not feel like mercenaries. The bond between players and fans from building a program instead of buying one is falling to the wayside.

The loss of regionalism in athletic conferences has also created friction. The Big Ten and the SEC started this trouble, but the ACC and Big 12 have also pushed to reach coast to coast while destroying a historic conference, PAC-12, in the process. If our grandparents’ generation found out the Hawkeyes were playing at Rutgers, and the Cyclones were playing at the University of Central Florida, they would roll over in their grave twofold.

This loss of regionalism and the mercenary aspect show the fractures Americans see in their society. Like the rest of society, and what has changed from the past is capital is king. College football has become about the bottom line. Athletes are quick to change their situation if met with a tiny bit of friction while universities sell out their fanbases to join conferences which make zero regional or numerical sense.

“Not falling behind” is the excuse given for why these decisions are being made. Change must happen because it is a different world. Society has seen this type of comment before in other parts of society. When it comes to agriculture, it was “go big or go home.” This has led to rural towns hollowing out, medical clinics closing, and churches and schools consolidating. This has all come in the name of “change was needed.” The only ones benefiting from the change are those hoarding the capital at the expense of the loss of the collectiveness everyone else enjoys from college football.

College football is also following the rest of the American economy where it forms a free market ensuring fair competition, minus athletes getting paid but this would work under the right conditions, to where a lot of markets like college football are less regulated and the one with the most capital has the best chance at succeeding. Whether having college football like this be the best for society does not matter because this is how the “market” is supposed to be. The big get bigger, the smaller get smaller, and those in the middle continue to hollow out.

Whether college sports, agriculture, or other parts of society, this is the current path. Until Americans decide to make markets about fair competition and not one decided by the few at the top, this problem will keep existing throughout society. The mess college football is in is a symptom of this bigger problem. To change, we all will need to fight for a better, more fair American society.

Sean Dengler is a writer, comedian, now-retired beginning farmer, and host of the Pandaring Talk podcast who grew up on a farm between Traer and Dysart. You can reach him at sean.h.dengler@gmail.com.





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College football’s transfer portal officially opens Jan. 2. What to know about player movement :: WRAL.com

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The college football season isn’t over yet and won’t be for several weeks, but the sport’s offseason, if you can even call it that, has been in full swing for quite some time — hirings, firings and players announcing they’re returning or leaving or heading to the NFL. 

Many players already know where they’re headed, having worked out deals through agents with new schools. Everyone can begin making it official Jan. 2, the official start of college football’s transfer window.

Unlike in previous years, there is just one transfer window. Players will not have the opportunity to change teams later in the spring. The NCAA approved the change to a single window in October, hoping to bring a little more stability to the sport — if such a thing is possible in college football.

MORE: College football transfer portal tracker for Duke, North Carolina and North Carolina State

Although schools are limited to spending $20.5 million to directly pay athletes, the cost to lure and keep any individual player continues to rise, especially for quarterbacks. ESPN’s Pete Thamel reported that the market for top quarterbacks could reach $5 million. 

Duke’s Darian Mensah was among the highest-paid quarterbacks this season, at a reported $4 million. Mensah, the ACC leader in passing yards and passing touchdowns in 2025, has said he would return to the Blue Devils for the 2026 season. 

There are several high-profile quarterbacks who intend to transfer, including TCU’s Josh Hoover, Nebraska’s Dylan Raiola, Cincinnati’s Brendan Sorsby. NC State’s CJ Bailey could add to the list. High-profile programs like Indiana, Miami and LSU are in the market for quarterback transfers.

Despite the change to a single window, it’s not perfect. The portal is open from Jan. 2 to Jan. 16, while the College Football Playoff is happening. It closes before the national championship game. Players on those two teams can enter the portal from Jan. 20 through Jan. 24. 

Players need only to enter the portal during the window. They don’t have to choose their school during that time. However, the school calendar plays a role if players want to participate in spring practice.

Players have been entering the portal – not a physical place, just a NCAA database — since the regular season wrapped up in late November.

More than a dozen North Carolina players, for example, plan to transfer from Bill Belichick’s program, including leading tackler Khmori House, standout defensive end Tyler Thompson and running back Davion Gause.

NC State running back Hollywood Smothers, an All-ACC first-team selection, skipped the team’s bowl victory over Memphis and plans to transfer or enter the NFL Draft.

Coaches signed new recruiting classes in early December without knowing exactly what spots they might need to fill.

“You take your high school class based on who you know is leaving the program, like we’ll do our seniors and things like that,” NC State coach Dave Doeren said in December. “That’s where the portal now has to supplement. You may have more attrition than you expected at a certain position and you didn’t sign as many high school players as you needed.”

Coaches led the push from the old system which had a transfer window in December (one of the busiest months of the calendar for coaches) and another in April after most programs completed spring ball. Some pushed for the single window to be in the spring, and the NCAA initially adopted a 10-day period, before extending it to 15 days.

“Every college coach would tell you that our calendar is just not in sync with the demands of what’s happening in our sport,” Doeren said. “We need to get our arms around that to make our jobs a little bit easier from a planning standpoint.”

The new single window does help with that. Rosters are locked in early in the year.

UNC made heavy use of the post-spring portal in 2025, after the mid-December 2024 hiring of head coach Bill Belichick, and lost several key players as well. Many programs have stopped holding traditional spring games, in part due to concerns that other coaches could scout those games and try to pluck players from their roster.

“The best thing about this year is that on Jan. 17, the portal will close and you’ll be able to build your team, knowing that when you go to spring ball, that is your team,” UNC general manager Michael Lombardi said. “Knowing that when you go through your offseason program, that is your team.”





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Lane Kiffin receives $500,000 payout from LSU after Ole Miss advances to College Football Playoff semifinal

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With Ole Miss’ Sugar Bowl victory over Georgia in the Sugar Bowl, Lane Kiffin will receive another bonus. Per the terms of his contract at LSU, he will get the $500,000 he would have gotten from the Rebels for advancing to the College Football Playoff semifinal.

Kiffin was already set to receive a payout as a result of Ole Miss’ first-round win over Tulane. That set him up for a $250,000 payday, which was the amount he would have received from the school if he was coaching in the game. Now, that figure will go up.

After Kiffin’s high-profile departure for LSU, Pete Golding took over as Ole Miss’ full-time head coach. But the Tigers said they would include “ancillary benefits” in Kiffin’s deal with the Rebels, and that means a $500,000 payout because his former program is advancing in the CFP.

Kiffin’s high-profile departure for LSU came after Ole Miss took down Mississippi State to complete the first 11-win regular season in program history. It also helped the Rebels virtually secure a spot in the College Football Playoff, and they hosted the first-round game on Saturday.

Per the terms of Kiffin’s contract at Ole Miss, there would be two more escalators if the Rebels keep going in the CFP. His payout would increase to $750,000 if they advance to the national championship and go up to $1 million if Ole Miss wins it all. LSU vowed to pay that same amount after Kiffin’s departure prior to the postseason.

“Coach will be entitled to receive a payment in an amount equal to the amount Coach would have been entitled to receive had he remained Head Coach at Coach’s immediate prior employer and coached the prior employer’s football team through the 2025-26 CFP,” Kiffin’s contract at LSU reads. “… If applicable, the payment under this section may be paid from affiliated foundation funds and shall be paid within 30 days following the prior employer’s team being eliminated from the 2025-26 CFP.”

Ole Miss takes down Georgia in thrilling Sugar Bowl

Ole Miss and Georgia square off in a thriller at the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans on Thursday. The two teams combined to score 30 points in the fourth quarter as the Rebels rallied to take down the Bulldogs, 39-34.

Trinidad Chambliss had a monster day, completing 30 of 46 passes for 362 yards and two touchdowns. Harrison Wallace III also had a career night, hauling in nine receptions for 156 yards and a touchdown. De’Zhaun Stribling also had a big performance with seven receptions for 122 yards.

For Golding, it marks a second straight victory as head coach after taking over for Lane Kiffin. Ole Miss will now get ready to take on Miami in the Fiesta Bowl.



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Football Transfer Portal Chaos Continues Despite New Rules

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Football Transfer Portal Chaos Continues Despite New Rules



































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Indiana football destroys Alabama at Rose Bowl to advance to Peach Bowl

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Jan. 1, 2026Updated Jan. 2, 2026, 12:20 a.m. ET

PASADENA, Ca. — The singing starts early in the fourth quarter of the Rose Bowl, where the clouds are rising above the San Gabriel Mountains and the No. 1 Indiana Hoosiers are just destroying No. 9 Alabama. This is a 2025 College Football Playoff quarterfinal, serious business, but the IU football crowd has been having a blast, and they know what to do when this stadium in Southern California starts playing Bloomington’s John Mellencamp over the loudspeakers.



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Texas Tech’s College Football Playoff reality check just made a transfer QB rich

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The Texas Tech Red Raiders are currently trailing Oregon 13-0 in the College Football Playoff quarterfinals, putting a loaded team on the brink of elimination. Given how bad the offense has looked for this team, the fanbase is already moving on to the offseason, as even with a comeback win in this game, Texas Tech isn’t good enough on offense to win the National Championship.

The biggest flaw with this offense seems to be the play of their quarterback, Behren Morton, who’s had a brutal day with 3 turnovers early in the 4th quarter. Given the fact that Behren Morton is out of eligibility, Texas Tech needs a new quarterback, and the fans are swinging for the fences.

Texas Tech fans are begging for Cody Campbell to pay Brendan Sorsby

On Friday, the Transfer Portal in college football will open, and Texas Tech fans are hoping that Cody Campbell and the Red Raiders spend big to continue building up this roster. The overwhelming biggest wish by the fanbase and outsiders is quarterback Brendan Sorsby.

While Oregon will advance if the score holds, everyone believes whichever quarterback Texas Tech ends up adding is the true big winner.

The members of the media even seemingly believe that Brendan Sorsby is destined to be a Red Raider.

Cody Campbell specifically is being begged by the fans to go improve this team on offense, especially at quarterback.

It’ll now become interesting to see where Texas Tech and Cody Campbell look to find their quarterback in the Transfer Portal. Backup QB Will Hammond showed a ton of promise, but his season ending injury may change the plans at quarterback.

Brendan Sorsby is ranked as the top quarterback in the Transfer Portal in our latest Transfer Portal Quarterback Rankings. Between his experience in the Big 12, his talent level, and the fact that his girlfriend now plays volleyball at Texas Tech, the pairing seems like a perfect fit, but both sides will need to lock the deal in.





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