NIL
No. 25 Owls Set Run Record in Series Opener
Next Game: Memphis 4/26/2025 | 2 p.m. ESPN+ Apr. 26 (Sat) / 2 p.m. Memphis History BOCA RATON, Fla. – In a historic offensive showing, the No. 25 Florida Atlantic softball team set a program record in runs with a 24-2 victory over Memphis to open its final […]

BOCA RATON, Fla. – In a historic offensive showing, the No. 25 Florida Atlantic softball team set a program record in runs with a 24-2 victory over Memphis to open its final home series of the 2025 season on Friday evening.
The Owls (38-9, 18-4) exploded out of the gate with 10 runs in the bottom of the first inning and did not let up, culminating with nine additional runs in the fourth to break the school’s record that stood for 30 years.
After falling behind 2-0 in the top of the first, junior pitcher Autumn Courtney and senior Gabby Sacco combined to keep the Tigers (17-31, 4-18) scoreless the rest of the way.
The Tigers began the outing with a two-run home run in the game’s opening frame before Courtney recorded her second strikeout to retire the side.
In what has become a common occurrence, redshirt sophomore outfielder Kylie Hammonds recorded a leadoff walk for the first of 15 plate appearances in the bottom of the first inning. With a single to second base, junior third baseman Jesiana Mora logged the game’s first RBI. Four consecutive walks loaded the bases to bring in three more runs.
Back-to-back hits from Hammonds and sophomore shortstop Kiley Channell brought home four. Freshman Destiny Johns logged the last hit of the inning, scoring Mora for the second time to put double digits on the board.
The Owls added a run off an RBI double from Hammonds in the bottom of the second.
Bats then returned in the third frame with homers from Mora and sophomore Bella Cimino to give FAU their season high of 15 runs.
With the run-rule already in reach, Florida Atlantic kept their foot on the gas in the bottom of the fourth, with 12 consecutive base runners to open the inning. Several freshman Owls received opportunities off the bench, most notably Emilie Ching who launched a double to right center field for her first career hit to score two.
A two-run single from Channell put 22 on the board, breaking the previous record of 20. FAU added the final two runs with Ching’s second hit of the inning. The defense went one-two-three in the top of the fifth to put the history-making game officially in the record books.
Coach Clark after a record-breaking night#WIP
pic.twitter.com/4KoTu8RUGx
— Florida Atlantic Softball (@FAUSoftball) April 26, 2025
- Florida Atlantic now has six run-rule wins in American Athletic Conference play and 12 during the season, the most since its debut campaign in 1995.
- 17 total hits by the Owls are the most in a game by the team since 2015.
- Mora tied the single-game program record with five runs. She also takes the team’s lead in home runs on the season with eight and added two stolen bases to remain a perfect 16-for-16 in attempts.
- 11 different FAU batters recorded an RBI, led by Ching with four. Hammonds, Channell, and Cimino each had three.
- Hammonds has reached base in 17 consecutive games and 44 out of 48 appearances in 2025.
- Courtney had five strikeouts in three innings of work and is up to 144 total on the season, upping her AAC lead to 34 more than second place.
Game two’s first pitch is scheduled for Saturday at 2 p.m. on ESPN+.
For the Owls’ complete schedule, click HERE. To follow the team socially, visit @fausoftball, or for the most up-to-date information, go to www.fausports.com.
NIL
2 Mocs Ink NFL Pacts
Story Links Schedule | Tickets CHATTANOOGA—The Chattanooga Mocs added two to NFL squad lists following the NFL Draft in Green Bay. Seniors Reuben Lowery III and Marlon Taylor are the latest to begin their professional journeys. Lowery, a defensive back from Powder Springs, Ga., signed as an undrafted free agent […]

Schedule | Tickets
CHATTANOOGA—The Chattanooga Mocs added two to NFL squad lists following the NFL Draft in Green Bay. Seniors Reuben Lowery III and Marlon Taylor are the latest to begin their professional journeys.
Lowery, a defensive back from Powder Springs, Ga., signed as an undrafted free agent with the Baltimore Ravens. A first team All-Southern Conference selection, Lowery had a decorated career as a 5-year starter.
He was second on the 2024 squad with 62 tackles tying for second in tackles for loss with 7.5. He intercepted two passes scoring once. Lowery played in 46 career games with 166 tackles, 19.0 for loss and 15 passes defended with three interceptions and two pick-6s.
He was a 2-time CSC (formerly CoSIDA) Academic All-District along with being named all-conference twice as well as all-freshman in 2021. Lowery was a finalist for the Doris Robinson Award and served on the NCAA Football Oversight Committee/Student-Athlete Connection Group.
Taylor, a defensive tackle from Brunswick, Ga., joins the Atlanta Falcons via a mini-camp invitation. He spent the last two seasons recognized among the nation’s best interior defensive linemen in NCAA Division I ranking highly on metrics provided by Pro Football Focus college division.
He was a first team All-SoCon honoree in 2024 after second team honors as a sophomore and junior following the 2022 and 2023 campaigns. He saw action in 48 games with 37 starts and was one of three Mocs – TE Jay Gibson and RB Lance Jackson – on the roster from Coach Rusty Wright‘s first season in 2019.
Taylor collected 28 tackles with six for loss and 2.5 sacks in 2024. For his career, he amassed 96 stops with 22 for loss and nine sacks from the middle of the Mocs 4-man defensive front. His biggest highlight was keying the Mocs first FCS Playoff road win with six tackles including two sacks in the 2023 triumph at Austin Peay. He was a regular Dean’s List and A.D. Honor Roll student.
“Excited for Marlon and Reuben having an opportunity to further their careers,” Wright shared. “Both of them are very deserving. They’ve worked really hard in their five seasons with us, developed over time and gave themselves a great chance to keep competing at the highest level.
“We’re excited to see the next steps for all of our professional guys.”
That raises the total to five in NFL camps this summer. OL Cole Strange (New England Patriots), OL McClendon Curtis (Arizona Cardinals) and OL Corey Levin (Tennessee Titans) look to continue their journeys.
Four more – DT Devonnsha Maxwell (D.C.), DE Isaiah Mack (St. Louis), DE Vantrel McMillian (Michigan) & OL Griffin McDowell (Arlington) – started the year on UFL rosters with RB Gino Appleberry (Quad City) and LB Austin Collier (San Antonio) in the IFL.LB Jay Person (Winnipeg) and DB Clay Fields III (Ottawa) are on the ledger in the CFL with QB Chase Artopoeus on Winnipeg’s fall negotiation list giving the Blue Bombers exclusive league rights to the signal caller.
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NIL
Quinn Ewers leaves double NFL salary on NIL table
Ewers could have doubled his salary to upwards for $8 million dollars should he had transferred to a different school. Former Texas Longhorns quarterback Quinn Ewers opted to pursue his NFL ambitions, forgoing potentially record-setting name, image, and likeness (NIL) deals that could have netted him millions had he chosen to remain in college football […]

Ewers could have doubled his salary to upwards for $8 million dollars should he had transferred to a different school.
Former Texas Longhorns quarterback Quinn Ewers opted to pursue his NFL ambitions, forgoing potentially record-setting name, image, and likeness (NIL) deals that could have netted him millions had he chosen to remain in college football for another season.
Ewers, once projected as a first-round pick, was selected by the Miami Dolphins with the 231st overall pick in the seventh round of the 2025 NFL Draft. His rookie contract is estimated to be worth $4.33 million over four years-an amount that, according to multiple reports, is less than what he could have earned in a single year through NIL opportunities had he transferred to another program for his final year of eligibility.
During Texas’s run to the College Football Playoff semifinals last season, speculation swirled about Ewers’ future. With the Longhorns preparing to hand the starting job to redshirt sophomore Arch Manning, Ewers faced a pivotal decision: transfer to another powerhouse program and cash in on NIL deals reportedly worth up to $8 million, or declare for the NFL Draft and begin his professional career.
Ewers ultimately chose the latter, citing his desire to play only for Texas at the collegiate level and expressing no regrets about his decision. “I didn’t want to play for another school besides Texas,” Ewers said before the draft. “I’m happy I went through the adversity I did during the end of my college career.”
The decision has sparked debate across the college football landscape. Industry insiders and analysts have pointed out that Ewers left millions on the table by passing on the transfer portal and NIL deals, especially given his status as one of the highest-valued athletes in college sports.
Ewers’ college career, though marked by injuries and a late-season dip in draft stock, was highly successful. He led Texas to back-to-back College Football Playoff appearances, threw for over 9,000 yards and 68 touchdowns, and helped revive the Longhorns’ national prominence. Off the field, he secured numerous NIL deals, including national endorsements and a spot on the cover of EA Sports College Football, amassing significant earnings even before his NFL contract.
While some were critics, Josh Pate applauded Quinn Ewers for heading to the NFL.
His decision also starts the clock on his eligibility for a potentially more lucrative second NFL contract, should he prove himself at the professional level. Steve Sarkisian added on Monday from the Touchdown Club event in Houston that Ewers never took from the Texas NIL Collective, instead opting for his own NIL deals holistically, “He never took money from our collective. All of what he did through NIL was his true name, image, and likeness.”
Utilizing the Texas NIL fund could have led to more financial gain for the Southland Carroll product, but it seems money was never the thought on Ewers mind. For Ewers it was all about playing for Texas and then living the NFL dream. That outweighed the NIL millions left behind. Ewers is all but guaranteed to receive playing time in the NFL this upcoming fall behind Miami’s Tua Tagovailoa who has suffered his fair share of injuries.
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NIL
Big Money Moves: Endorsements, NIL Deals, Music Industry Shakeups, and New Frontiers in Sports and Streaming | Foster Garvey PC
Endorsement Deals, Sponsorships & Investments Mountain America Credit Union obtains naming rights for another Valley sports facilityApril 23, 2025 via Biz Journal Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes Signs Prestigious EndorsementApril 23, 2025 via Fort Worth Star Susquehanna-Backed Soccer Shots Builds Pee Wee Sports PowerhouseApril 22, 2025 via Sportico Emma Raducanu loses Vodafone endorsement deal after ‘demanding too […]

Endorsement Deals, Sponsorships & Investments
Mountain America Credit Union obtains naming rights for another Valley sports facility
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Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes Signs Prestigious Endorsement
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Susquehanna-Backed Soccer Shots Builds Pee Wee Sports Powerhouse
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Emma Raducanu loses Vodafone endorsement deal after ‘demanding too much money’
April 16, 2025 via SportsPro
Jalen Hurts, Serena Williams Among Athletes in Time100; Snoop Dogg to Host Gala
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Here’s How Much Shedeur Sanders’ NFL Draft Slide Could Cost Him
April 25, 2025 via Forbes
Judge delays House settlement over roster limits
April 24, 2025 via Sports Business Journal
Malik Beasley Agency Lawsuit Features Limits on Arbitration
April 24, 2025 via Sportico
NFL Draft 2025: Is The League Ready For New Stars — Like Cam Ward, Abdul Carter And Travis Hunter?
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PGA Tour’s Zurich Classic extends title sponsorship through 2030
April 24, 2025 via WGNO ABC News
Women’s flag football grows on college campuses, from startup clubs to varsity teams with NFL boost
April 23, 2025 via Anchorage Daily News
College sports enter new era with NIL deals
April 22, 2025 via Southwest Times
Dallas just signed a basketball star Nico Harrison isn’t allowed to trade
April 22, 2025 via SB Nation
NCAA Greenlights Major Rule Change Letting Schools Pay Athletes—If A Judge Approves
April 22, 2025 via Forbes
NFL scouts make adjustments as they navigate evolving college football world ahead of draft
April 19, 2025 via Times of Northwest Indiana
Livvy Dunne makes big announcement
April 19, 2025 via Larry Brown Sports
Thompson High School football player declines $750,000 NIL deal to stay in state, trainer says
April 18, 2025 via WVTM 13
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Universal Music Group’s $775 Million Acquisition of Downtown to Be Scrutinized by European Regulators
April 25, 2025 via Variety
Meta launches Edits, a rival to TikTok parent-owned CapCut, with plans for expanded music options, including ‘royalty-free’
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Diplo Inks Global Admin Deal With Warner Chappell: ‘One of the Most Accomplished Artists and Music Pioneers’
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Cookie giant Crumbl, reportedly eyeing $2bn sale, sued by Warner Music Group over ‘massive’ copyright infringement in TikTok posts
April 23, 2025 via Music Business Worldwide
‘You Are Somehow a Villain If You Use It’: Tons of Music Producers Are Secretly Using AI, New Study Reveals
April 21, 2025 via Entrepreneur Magazine
Coachella: The music festival-turned ‘marketing mecca’
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MSG Networks nearing deal to avoid bankruptcy, could lead to YES Network merger
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Shaquille O’Neal reaches settlement in FTX lawsuit, terms remain secret
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Author Claims Meghan Markle ‘Pearl’ Netflix Project “Similar To Own Work” – report
April 20, 2025 via Deadline
Fat Joe’s Life Story Is Coming to Starz With Help from Kenya Barris
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YouTube TV Could Soon Be The Exclusive Home For The NFL’s Week 1 Action But Max & Amazon Are Also in The Mix
April 18, 2025 via Cord Cutters News
NIL
Inside Quinn Ewers’ incredible fall from No. 1 overall recruit to seventh round pick in 2025 NFL Draft
Four years later, it’s hard to remember just how heralded Quinn Ewers was as a recruit. He became the first recruit at any position since 2016 to earn a perfect 1.0000 rating in the 247Sports composite, and joins Longhorns legend Vince Young as the only quarterback to hit the mark in the metric’s history (since […]

Four years later, it’s hard to remember just how heralded Quinn Ewers was as a recruit. He became the first recruit at any position since 2016 to earn a perfect 1.0000 rating in the 247Sports composite, and joins Longhorns legend Vince Young as the only quarterback to hit the mark in the metric’s history (since 2000). When he decommitted from Texas in October 2020, it was the final nail in the coffin for Tom Herman, who was fired shortly thereafter.
Ewers was so highly regarded that he reclassified so he could collect a seven-figure NIL contract a year early. No matter, he went from the No. 1 player in 2022 to the No. 1 player in 2021. Ewers used the most exclusive quarterback room in America, Ohio State, as a de facto study abroad program before ultimately ending up in Austin as Steve Sarkisian’s protégé.
On Saturday, his college story ended with the 231st pick of the seventh round of the 2025 NFL Draft. He was 14th out of 14 quarterbacks selected, behind even FCS quarterbacks Tommy Mellott and Cam Miller. It was not the finish anyone expected for one of the most high-profile quarterback recruits in the history of the sport.
How did we get here, from No. 1 overall recruit to the seventh round? It’s a complicated story filled with the trappings of this era, injuries and the battle between cash grabs and legacy that makes him a case study in the impossible decisions asked of quarterbacks in this moment.
Reclassification saga
The first time I watched Ewers play live was during the 2020 Texas Class 6A-D1 State Championship Game. Ironically, he played for Southlake Carroll against Clemson’s Cade Klubnik, who went on to become the No. 1 quarterback in the 2022 class after Ewers reclassified. Even competing against another highly ranked QB while dealing with injuries during a loss, Ewers was a man among boys. He threw for 350 yards against one of the top defenses in state history.
What no one realized at the time was that they were watching Ewers’ final high school football game. Instead of riding into his senior year under heralded quarterback developer Riley Dodge, he suddenly reclassified so he could pursue seven figures in NIL deals, primarily with a kombucha company. He arrived on campus in August before the season after not going through either spring or summer drills. Ohio State made clear that they weren’t thrilled about the timing but still took him for his prodigious talents.
There was little opportunity for Ohio State to dedicate any real development time to Ewers with C.J. Stroud, Kyle McCord and Jack Miller already on campus. Instead, Ewers essentially came, drove a massive truck he received through an NIL contract, collected checks, and then transferred to Texas. Ewers also benefitted from the NCAA’s new rule that allowed players to transfer without sitting out, so he could leave immediately and start.
Did Ewers stunt his development by leaving a quarterback development factory in Southlake to be an afterthought in Columbus? Not necessarily, but it likely didn’t help.
Injury woes
Even dating back to high school, Ewers struggled to stay healthy. He dealt with a core issue during his final high school season that cost him multiple games. After winning the starting job at Texas, he dealt with injury issues each of his three years.
Ewers suffered major sprains of his SC joint (2022) and AC joint (2023) in his shoulders that cost him multiple games. In 2024, the core issues popped up again after a non-contact abdominal strain against UTSA. His efficiency fell from Year 2 to Year 3 after playing through some of the discomfort.
Overall, Ewers missed seven starts across three years, which opened the door for Arch Manning, Maalik Murphy and Hudson Card to start in his wake. Ewers always fought back — his toughness was never appreciated enough — but it remains unclear how much the injuries have to do with losing some of the zip and accuracy he displayed during his sensational high school career.
For many college football fans, it was confusing that Ewers was ever considered such a can’t-miss prospect with his limitations. Go watch his high school tape. It wasn’t always that way.
Manning’s arrival at Texas
Ewers is one of the most touted quarterback recruits in the history of the sport. Unfortunately for him, his college career was often defined by one of the few who surpass him: Arch Manning, who was also a No. 1 overall quarterback recruit for 2023, but with the most famous name in football on his back. Whereas some wanted Ewers to see playing time at Ohio State when Stroud struggled early, the noise for Manning was raucous from the start.
Sarkisian handled the situation about as well as possible. From the start, he was clear: Ewers was the starting quarterback. That was echoed by both Ewers and Manning, along with every other member of the team. Still, almost every week involved at least some question about the famous last name.
Arch Manning in 2026 NFL Draft? Could the prospect of going No. 1 cut Texas QB’s college career short?
Will Backus

There were moments when the pressures of having a famous backup QB clearly impacted Ewers. He was pulled for a few drives near halftime of the 2024 Georgia game. Though he looked rattled on the sideline, Ewers came back in and played better. He also rushed back from his abdominal injury and never truly looked healthy.
Most teams would take a fourth season from a two-time all-conference quarterback. That was never the case at Texas. The Manning era starts now.
Ewers’ legacy
Ewers potentially left millions of dollars on the table by turning down the transfer portal and entering the NFL Draft. Notre Dame and Miami were among the programs that reportedly did their homework on Ewers before he opted to turn pro. There’s no sugarcoating it: there’s a real chance that Ewers never makes that much money for the rest of his life.
Despite his draft slot, Ewers had a tremendously successful college career. He led Texas to back-to-back national semifinals, the only team to accomplish the feat each of the past two seasons. Both times, they were one play away from making the national title game. The program had a top-five finish drought dating back to 2009, and Ewers led the Horns there in each of his last two seasons. Ewers threw for 9,128 yards and 68 touchdowns on 64.9% completion in three seasons — outstanding numbers for any pedigree.
How much money did Quinn Ewers lose by not returning for NIL in college football, sliding in 2025 NFL Draft?
Richard Johnson

Frankly, there’s something to be said for leaving college football when it’s time. Ewers started three years at a blue-blood school and leaves as one of the top five greatest quarterbacks in the history of the program, behind only Colt McCoy and Vince Young post-integration. In an era when players are ruining legacies to chase short-term money, Ewers was even more valuable. Young, for example, has been hired multiple times as an athletic department ambassador. Ewers could easily go down a similar path with his reputation in Austin.
If anything, Ewers’ decision to move on from college to the NFL without any guarantees is an emblem of how much he’s grown over the past four years. With the Miami Dolphins, Ewers finds a solid fit and a realistic chance to grow into a rostered quarterback behind Tua Tagovailoa and Zach Wilson. If it doesn’t work out, he’ll head into the world with a few million dollars in his bank account and the support of the UT network behind him.
“I think about a lot of the people that come through this program over the last four years that have impacted the growth and trajectory of our program, and he’s right there near the top, if not at the top of the impact that he’s had, not only on the field but off the field,” Sarkisian said Monday. “His ability to help recruit other players come be part of our program. I think he was one of the first guys through all this talk about collective and all the things that were going on in the world of NIL, he never took money from our collective. All of what he did through NIL was his true Name, Image, and Likeness — the intent of the rule. On that front I’m very grateful for what he did for our program.”
Still, Ewers’ arc will be an instructive one about the complications of the modern era of being a college quarterback. Stock rises and falls faster than anyone can imagine — even for the No. 1 quarterback in the country.
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NIL
Texas 5-star QB commit Dia Bell inks NIL deal with Gatorade
Shortly after committing to Texas last year, Dia Bell signed his first NIL deal. Now, he’s adding another notable partnership to his portfolio. Bell has inked an agreement with Gatorade. The partnership comes after he was named the 2024 Florida Gatorade Player of the Year as he threw for 2,597 yards and 29 touchdowns. He […]

Shortly after committing to Texas last year, Dia Bell signed his first NIL deal. Now, he’s adding another notable partnership to his portfolio.
Bell has inked an agreement with Gatorade. The partnership comes after he was named the 2024 Florida Gatorade Player of the Year as he threw for 2,597 yards and 29 touchdowns. He now joins Florida quarterback DJ Lagway as players from the state to win the award and sign a deal with Gatorade.
As he gets ready for his senior season at Plantation (Fla.) American Heritage, Beck’s $927,000 On3 NIL Valuation is one of the highest in high school football. His agreement with Gatorade is his second NIL deal after signing with Leaf Trading Cards two months after his commitent.
Bell is one of the top quarterbacks from the 2026 cycle and received an invitation to the Elite 11 Finals in Los Angeles this summer. A five-star prospect, he is the No. 14 overall player and top recruit from the state of Florida out of the 2026 cycle, according to the On3 Industry Ranking, a weighted average that utilizes all four major recruiting media companies. In the updated On300 released last week, Bell came in as the No. 4 overall prospect and No. 2-ranked quarterback.
Off the field, Bell is one of the highest-profile high school football players and is setting himself up for NIL success at the next level. His $927,000 On3 NIL Valuation ranks No. 4 in the high school football NIL rankings.
Dia Bell scouting report
Dia Bell is the crown jewel of Texas’ 2026 recruiting class. The Longhorns have four commitments so far and currently sit at No. 12 in the On3 Industry Team Recruiting Ranking. Bell is the lone five-star so far, but gives Steve Sarkisian one of the top quarterbacks out of the cycle.
“Precision passer with the arm talent, size, and athleticism to translate to college football and beyond,” On3’s Charles Power wrote. “Measured in at around 6-foot-3, 190 pounds with a 10-inch hand before his junior season. Mechanically clean with a smooth throwing motion that he replicates with consistency. Has polished footwork that is married to his upper body. Shows high-level arm talent, delivering well-placed passes to multiple levels of the field. A dangerous operator from the pocket. Able to evade pressure, reset his feet, and fire. Throws a pretty deep ball. Was a first-year starter as a sophomore and showed marked improvement while playing top competition as a junior. Flashed an added playmaking element and rushing component to his game down the stretch of his junior season. Ripped off long runs, including two 40+ yard touchdown runs against top programs.
“Completed 70.6% of his passes for 2,597 yards (11.4 yards per attempt) and 29 touchdowns against six interceptions in 2025. Also rushed for 561 yards and five touchdowns. Also has a basketball background. Is the son of long-time NBA veteran guard Raja Bell. The level of improvement displayed throughout his junior season should be taken as an encouraging sign of his long-term upside.”
NIL
Florida’s 2025 NFL Draft results illustrate how college football talent moves work
Florida had one NFL Draft pick in 2024, but it was a first round selection in Ricky Pearsall. This year, the Gators had no one taken in the first three rounds but still ended up with a healthy seven guys taken. Those events are unusual enough, but UF in this draft really showed how times […]

Florida had one NFL Draft pick in 2024, but it was a first round selection in Ricky Pearsall. This year, the Gators had no one taken in the first three rounds but still ended up with a healthy seven guys taken.
Those events are unusual enough, but UF in this draft really showed how times have changed with how talent moves work in the last few years. Let’s look at some specific history to put this in context.
I am today looking specifically at drafts that happened after a head coach’s third season. The 2025 draft, after all, was the one after Billy Napier’s third campaign.
It can be a difficult time to get a lot of picks for a school. The draft-eligible players have generally been signees from the head coach’s transitional class or holdovers from the old head coach’s final class or two. However transitional classes are typically small and not that highly rated, as I’ve gone over plenty of times in the past. Also even in the pre-free transfer era, it was common for a lot of transfer attrition when head coaches turn over. Plus if the former coach was obviously headed towards a firing, his last class or two might’ve been less good due to the better recruits not wanting to board a sinking ship.
I went through and looked at the draft after each of Florida’s head coaches since Ron Zook to see what there is to learn here. Draft picks went into three buckets. Holdovers are anyone who played for the prior head coach; in Zook’s case, that’d be anyone who suited up for Steve Spurrier. Signees would be any traditional high school or JUCO recruits who signed for the head coach in question. Transfers then are anyone who transferred into the program under the specified head coach.
Here is what I found:
Coach | Holdovers | Signees | Transfers | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|
Zook | 0 | 3 | 0 | 3 |
Meyer | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Muschamp | 4 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
McElwain | 4 | 1 | 0 | 5 |
Mullen | 6 | 2 | 0 | 8 |
Napier | 2 | 1 | 4 | 7 |
The one that sticks out as most strange is probably the first. Not a single Spurrier player got drafted after Zook’s third (and final) season. The last of any to hear their name called came the prior year’s draft in 2004, which followed the 2003 season. The Gators still managed three guys taken thanks to Zook’s recruiting prowess: high school signees Channing Crowder and Ciatrick Fason along with JUCO signee Reynaldo Hill. Crowder was the highest guy taken as a third rounder.
The 2008 draft, after Urban Meyer’s third season in 2007, saw even fewer at just two: first rounder Derrick Harvey and third rounder Bubba Caldwell. UF had just seen off nine selections the year before after Meyer’s first national title, and they had a lot of younger talent getting ready for another title run the next season.
The Gators bounced back with four picks in the 2014 draft, which came after Will Muschamp’s third year in 2013. It was mostly due to holdovers from Meyer’s final blowout recruiting class in 2010: Dominique Easley (first round), Jaylen Watkins (fourth), and Ronald Powell (fifth). Jon Halapio (sixth round), who signed the year before in 2009, was the only exception there. The only Muschamp signee to go pro early was Marcus Roberson, but he went undrafted.
Jim McElwain did Muschamp one better by having one of his own signees meet the commish. There were a couple of early round picks thanks to Coach Boom’s eye for defensive talent, and a specialist finally appears. The list is first rounder Taven Bryan, second rounder Duke Dawson, the one signee in fourth rounder Antonio Callaway, fifth rounder Johnny Townsend, and sixth rounder Marcell Harris.
The 2021 draft class that came after Mullen’s third year in 2020 is the high-water mark here. He was the first since Zook to have two signees get drafted, one somewhat predictable in versatile tight end Kyle Pitts (first round) and one very unexpected in kicker Evan McPherson (fifth). Rare is the specialist who declares early for the draft.
The number is also juiced a bit by two rare fifth-year senior selections in Kyle Trask (second round) and Stone Forsythe (sixth). True pro prospects usually, though not always, don’t stay in school that long. There is also a good chance that Marco Wilson (fourth) declares the year before if his career wasn’t set back by injury. Wilson came from McElwain’s low-key quite impressive 2017 recruiting class, along with Kadarius Toney (first), Shawn Davis (fifth), and Tedarrell Slaton (fifth). Mullen did a good job of making a meal from the groceries Mac bought in his final go-round.
Which brings us to Napier. For the first time, there isn’t a zero in the Transfers column. In case you don’t have the names memorized yet, they are Chimere Dike (fourth round), Cam Jackson (fifth), Graham Mertz (sixth), and Trikweze Bridges (seventh).
It’s not that none of the other coaches had transfers selected in early drafts. For example Meyer had Ryan Smith and Mullen had Jonathan Greenard, both of them one-year grad transfers, taken in the drafts after their second seasons. Transfers are just so much more common now that you’d have to either be terrible at the portal or a near-abstainer like Dabo Swinney to not have any transfer draftees at a Power 4 program. Recall that last year’s one pick was a transfer who Napier had picked up.
Mullen got the boot for many reasons, several of which boiled down to his recruiting. In an “exceptions that prove the rule” showing, the two holdovers were one of two 5-stars that Mullen signed in four seasons (Jason Marshall, fifth) and an Aussie punter (Jeremy Crawshaw, sixth). Mullen did at least get a commitment from the one Napier signee (Shemar James, fifth), though he decommitted and later re-committed to Florida under Napier.
In a sign of the times, three players who transferred out of Florida were taken in this draft. One, sixth round pick Antwaun Powell-Ryland, transferred out a couple seasons ago. But Princely Umanmielen, picked before any Gator in the third round, and Trevor Etienne, taken only behind Dike in the fourth, only left after last season and easily would’ve been welcomed back had they not entered the portal.
If you imagine no transfers had happened and just look at players who originally signed with UF in this draft, you’d see six total: four holdovers in Umanmielen, Marshall, Powell-Ryland, and Crawshaw, along with two signees in James and Etienne. That mix wouldn’t have stood out from the results for McElwain and Mullen.
So what did we learn here?
For a draft at this point in a head coach’s sequence, the thing that had been providing the bulk of the selections was the prior coach’s final recruiting class. Spurrier’s last one was very small at just 15 guys, and though it had some good college players, it didn’t have many pro prospects. Zook’s final class was bigger at 23 and had a higher percentage of good college players, but it still had just three total draft selections (Harvey, plus Brandon Siler the year before and Cornelius Ingram the year after).
But then Muschamp got four holdovers from Meyer, McElwain got four from Muschamp, and Mullen got six from McElwain — but four from Mac’s final recruiting class. Napier got just one this year from Mullen’s final class in Marshall. Crawshaw was a 2020 signee, and actually so were Umanmielen and Powell-Ryland if you’re counting along at home.
That said, the new era of college football shows up for Napier beyond all the transfers. That final Mullen class still has more picks to go out of Gainesville. Jake Slaughter, Tyreak Sapp, and Austin Barber all signed in 2021, and each are real draft prospects for next year.
Slaughter, as an All-American, easily could’ve gotten picked this year. Sapp, due to body changes from Napier’s staff moving him inside and then back out, and Barber, due to some injury history, would’ve been more borderline. All are back in college football in no small part due to NIL making it possible for guys who aren’t certain early-round picks to stay for longer by removing some or all of the financial risk.
Whatever Sapp and Barber are making in NIL this year, I would guess that it’s a healthy chunk of what a seventh-round pick makes in a year, and that’s if the seventh-round pick makes the team. I’m sure it’s more than the $101,474 signing bonus that their former teammate Bridges gets as a seventh round pick, and he may not make much more than that if he gets cut before the preseason.
Florida could’ve had earlier picks if the likes of Slaguhter or Caleb Banks declared for the draft. The Gators maybe could’ve had more picks if Sapp and Barber (or a handful of others) did too.
In any event, the breakdown here shows in a concrete way how the NIL and free-transfer rules have changed how talent flows through the college ranks and then onto the professional level.
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