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PALMER: It’s not the time to hire Nick Saban

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By Hunt Palmer

Many have argued that Nick Saban slowed time down.

He can’t stop it.

Saban’s name is abuzz on the internet as a possible candidate for LSU’s head coaching position. Shaq is talking about it. Twitter and message boards are refreshing by the minute. Louisiana bar rooms and church pews are filled with chatter.

I think it’s a bad idea.

Saban is the greatest college football coach of all time. He ushered in LSU’s golden age and upstaged The Bear in Alabama with a run we may never see again anywhere.

His affinity for LSU and the people of Louisiana has been public. He also darts off the College Gameday set to make it to his suite for Alabama games. That place means a ton to him, of course.

But the circumstances that nudged Saban out of his office two years ago have only changed for the worse. He sat down with ESPN’s Rece Davis and laid out his reasons for walking away in 2023.

“To be honest, this last season was grueling,” Saban said. “It was really a grind for us to come from where we started to where we got to. It took a little more out of me than usual. When people mention the health issue, it was really just the grind. Can you do this the way you want to do it? Can you do it the way you’ve always done it and be able to sustain it for the entire season? And if I couldn’t make a commitment to do that in the future, the way I think I have to do it, I thought maybe this was the right time based on those two sets of circumstances.”

Alabama never truly slipped under Saban.

His final team led Michigan by seven with under two minutes to play in the national semifinal. Michigan mauled Kalen DeBoer and Washington 34-13 a week later to win the national title.

The game hasn’t passed him by. His energy level doesn’t allow him to do the things that made him great.

“When I was young, I could be there until 2:00 in the morning, be there at 6:00 the next day and be full of energy and go for it,” Saban said. “When you get a little older, I think it’s a little tougher, and I’m sure a lot of people can relate to that.”

Saban is now 74, two years older than he was when he gave Davis those quotes.

College football coaches are responsible for hiring a staff, recruiting high schoolers, recruiting transfer portal players, re-recruiting the current roster, managing NIL programs, motivating boosters, hosting camps, and all of that comes before the first whistle blows at a practice where schemes have to be implemented and game plans devised.

LSU does have a football front office. Resources are available to hire a staff to lighten Saban’s workload, but he’s not one to delegate fully and oversee. He’s always been involved in everything to ensure that the highest of high standards is met across the board.

That’s not a 9:00 to 4:30 in college football.

Times are different, sure. Saban wouldn’t be tasked with “building a program” like he did in at LSU or Alabama two decades ago. He’d be asked to put together three or four rosters to chase a championship. Assistants would likely line up to work for him. Players are now more willing to play somewhere for a year as opposed to being concerned the head coach would bounce and leave them stranded. So, recruiting as a 74 year old doesn’t come with as many questions now as it once did.

There are obvious positives, but the negatives outweigh them.

Saban lamented NIL and transfer portal issues that compromised his ability to run his program the way he wanted to, including high schoolers getting paid.

“And now that’s actually happening,” Saban said at the 2022 Senior Bowl. “People are making deals with high school players to go to their school….It’s not about coaching and developing as much as it is, what kind of money can you make?”

That hasn’t changed. Neither has the portal.

“It’s great that players have the freedom to do what they can do, but I also don’t think we should create circumstances where they don’t have the make the commitment and see things through,” he said.

Some of them don’t even see full season through before asking for a redshirt and bolting in December.

Saban’s era is over. His concerns from two years ago have not been rectified. And despite Saban’s quips, “I don’t want (agent Jimmy Sexton) anywhere near Miss Terry because when she hears some of these numbers, she gets interested. And I ain’t interested.”

The Sabans probably don’t want for much considering Nick’s $140 million in earnings from Alabama and the nine car dealerships he co-owns.

Do I think Saban would flatline LSU’s football program? Of course, not. LSU could do much, much worse. Do I think LSU’s best course of action is to try to steal three years from an aging coach whose energy levels are in question and doesn’t love the way the rules are structured? Again, no.

Saban’s contribution to LSU football changed its path for the better. In a different world, he never scratches the NFL itch and Saban Field is in Tiger Stadium instead of Bryant-Denny. It’s a tantalizing thought for Louisianians.

But that’s not the future. It’s the past.



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Trinidad Chambliss’ New NIL Deal With Ole Miss Is Perfect Move Against NCAA

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Is Trinidad Chambliss returning to Ole Miss next season? Well, that all depends on the NCAA, but his new NIL deal with the Rebels could actually be the backup plan if his medical waiver is not granted. 

Just when you thought some of these financial figures would drop, teams across the country are still paying top-dollar for premier talent through the portal. 

This was going to be the case for teams who ‘frontloaded’ a lot of their deals with athletes before the ‘House Settlement’ took effect. Essentially, teams who decided to pay these players upfront have a lot of money to spend from their ‘rev-share’ pot. 

Steve Sarkisian Blasts Unqualified NIL Agents, And Roommates, Ahead Of Transfer Portal Chaos

So, what we have seen so far should not be surprising to some, especially when you see some of these financial deals being put together. 

Texas Tech would be a perfect example. On Sunday, Cincinnati quarterback Brendan Sorsby signed a deal with Texas Tech that will reportedly pay him in the neighborhood of $5 million for his one season with the Red Raiders. 

Is it worth that amount of money? Sure it is, especially if you’re willing to spend it, like Texas Tech billionaire booster Cody Campbell is doing right now in Lubbock. 

Does this mean every top-tier quarterback is making that type of money? Nope, but they are still going to bring in seven figures in NIL earnings. 

Take for instance Arizona State transfer Sam Leavitt. While some wanted to mention that he could make somewhere close to the $5 million range, multiple sources told OutKick that the number is a bit inflated, but that is why these players hire smart agents to drive up the price, while also mentioning that most top programs are interested. 

Trinidad Chambliss Is Set For Ole Miss Return, Pending NCAA

Coming off a monster performance in the Sugar Bowl last week, the Rebels quarterback is now preparing for a semifinal showdown with Miami that will see the winner playing for a national championship. 

In the midst of this postseason run, Chambliss is also battling the NCAA over a medical redshirt waiver that is now in the hands of the organization that will decide his eligibility. 

Due to a health issue that arose during his time at Division II Ferris State, Trinidad Chambliss missed the 2022 season. After battling respiratory issues, doctors discovered that removing his tonsils could actually fix the problem, but this also led to him sitting out the season while recovering. 

Fast-forward a few years later, and Chambliss is hoping to get that year back, with the help of attorney Tom Mars, who is handling his waiver case with the NCAA. Mars, who has provided the NCAA with a 91-page report, also included key documents pertaining to the medical situation, which should ultimately be enough for the NCAA to grant him a sixth-year of eligibility. 

Chambliss played in 2023, 2024 and this current season. He redshirted in 2021, while not playing at all due to his medical issue in 2022. On paper, this feels like a pretty easy case, if we’re just basing this off NCAA bylaws. 

Pete Golding Is Done Babysitting Lane Kiffin’s Mess as Charlie Weis Jr. Commits To Ole Miss For CFP

But, there was another tactic that the school decided to use in the case Chambliss does not receive a waiver from the NCAA. Late Sunday night, Trinidad and Ole Miss agreed to a new deal for the 2026 season, which can now be used against the NCAA if they were to deny his medical request. 

Not only would the organization be denying him the ability to play another season, the NCAA would also be preventing him from earning a substantial amount of money. This move would allow Chambliss and his attorneys to file a lawsuit against the NCAA directed towards the loss of NIL revenue. 

I’ll be honest, this is a smart move by all parties. Now, the NCAA isn’t just dealing with a medical issue, as they will also know that a lawsuit could be coming if a denial is issued. 

The school is hoping a decision will be made this week, given that the transfer portal only runs through January 16th, and decisions have to be made regarding the Rebels’ quarterback future. 

Can The Transfer Portal Market Be Sustained? 

That is one question on the minds of plenty of folks around college athletics. 

The short answer is no. But, we said that after last year’s transfer portal influx of players, along with the contracts they received for their services. 

The problem lies in the fact that donors are not receiving a ROI (Return On Investment) unless their team is hoisting a trophy at season’s end. Some schools have the money to spend, thanks to boosters who are willing to spend their own money. 

But, there will come a time when renting a quarterback or running back for a year, with a pricetag in the seven-figure range is no longer worth it. 

We will see how much longer this is sustainable, but it certainly feels as though we are seeing some separation in college athletics when it comes to a plethora of schools just handing out massive deals. 

Some are going to start playing the ‘Moneyball’ route, while others will continue to write massive checks. 

Oh, and the days of stockpiling talent are long gone. So, we’re about to find out which teams are capable of spending this type of money on a yearly basis. 





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Texas Tech Lands Cincinnati Transfer QB Brendan Sorsby in Portal

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Texas Tech is quickly re-tooling as it looks to makes another College Football Playoff run in 2026. After falling in the quarterfinals too Oregon, the Red Raiders have already locked down a big win in the transfer portal, receiving a commitment from arguably the best available quarterback in the nation.

According to multiple reports, Texas Tech is expected to land Cincinnati transfer quarterback Brendan Sorsby in the portal. Sorsby was reportedly mulling between LSU and Texas Tech, and in the end it seems he was lured to Lubbock, opting to join Joey McGuire over the new-look, Lane Kiffin-led Tigers.

Related: Transfer Portal Tracker: Where Top Players in College Football Are Heading This Winter

Sorsby has been the Bearcats’ starting quarterback for the last two seasons. In 2025, he threw for 27 touchdowns and five interceptions while completing 61.6% of his passes for 2,800 yards. He also rushed for 580 yards and nine touchdowns this year.

Prior to his two-year stint at Cincinnati, Sorsby was at Indiana, where he started as a redshirt freshman in 2023. That year, he had 1,587 yards, 15 touchdowns and five interceptions.

With Behren Morton set to graduate, the Red Raiders had an immediate need at quarterback as they look to make a push for a national championship, thanks to a bevy of NIL funding. Morton’s departure opened the door for Sorsby to join one of college football’s most complete teams. With Sorsby under center, Texas Tech will likely be favorites to win the Big 12 again next season.

More College Football on Sports Illustrated



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NIL Changed The Transfer Portal — Now Taxes May Decide Where Stars Go

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The college football transfer portal is in its winter 15-day window, and over 3,700 players – roughly one third of all college football players – have indicated that they might be on the move. While players will consider many aspects when deciding on their new team, expect taxes to be one of those considerations. This article discusses the tax treatment for NIL and how state income tax law is already becoming a factor.

NIL Tax Treatment

Section 61 of the Internal Revenue Code states that “gross income means all income from whatever source derived.” This income definition stretches all the way from baristas making coffee at their shop to small business owners producing goods and services to corporate executives making millions of dollars each year in salaries, bonuses, and equity compensation.

Section 61 also applies to college athletes earning income from their NIL. This income can span anywhere from actual cash payments received for NIL, all the way to payment in kind. For instance, an athlete who receives a free car lease will recognize the value of that car lease as income, even though no money was exchanged.

While all athletes will be required to pay taxes at the Federal level with a tax rate of up to 37%, athletes will face varying tax effects at the state level. Nine states in total – Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming – do not impose a tax on income. Furthermore, as I discuss in a Forbes contributor article, Arkansas taxes income but provides a statutory exemption from state income taxation on NIL earnings, a policy designed to attract athletes to its state.

ForbesArkansas Makes NIL Income Tax-Exempt. Will Other States Follow?

Importantly, NIL income is generally taxed based on where the income was earned, rather than where the player plays their games or practices. This notion differs from pro sports athletes, who are subject to the jock tax, which taxes the athletes based on the location of their duty days. While some college athletes will be subject to tax in varying jurisdictions because of their home domicile or where specific income was earned (i.e., a player who shoots a commercial in a different state), the vast majority of college athletes will primarily pay state income taxes in their school state jurisdiction.

College athletes face differing tax consequences if they were to play for a team in a low or no-tax jurisdiction versus a high-tax jurisdiction. As I detail in a Forbes contributor article, two highly touted players from the 2025 football season – Carson Beck of Miami and Jeremiah Smith of Ohio State – had an NIL valuation of $4.3 million and $4.2 million, respectively. Despite being only $100 thousand difference in compensation, Beck, the higher compensated player, actually pays less in taxes than Smith because Beck is not subject to state income taxes in Florida. Meanwhile, Smith must pay an estimated $145,534 in state income taxes for his NIL income.

ForbesBreaking Down The Top 20 College Football Stars’ 2025 NIL Tax Bills

Because of these nuances in the way states tax income, now that players can be compensated for their NIL, there are clear advantages to players choosing to play for a school in a low or no-income tax state versus a high-income tax state. This tax liability is even more impactful for players like Arch Manning, who, as I discuss in a Forbes contributor article, is the highest compensated college athlete as estimated by On3 NIL valuation and has tremendous tax benefits for playing for the University of Texas, since they are making millions of dollars. Thus, a few percentage points of their income going to pay for state income taxes can represent hundreds of thousands of dollars of tax liabilities.

ForbesArch Manning’s $6.5 Million NIL Valuation Includes A Big Tax Advantage

Taxes Are Already Impacting The Transfer Portal Via NIL

As reported by Yahoo!Sports, over 3,700 college football players are in the transfer portal. Given that there are only about 10,000 college football players, this movement means that approximately one in three players will continue their college football careers for a different team.

Taxes are unlikely to be the primary reason why a player chooses a specific school. Furthermore, there are not enough roster spots on teams in the ten states that do not tax income for every single college football player to transfer to a team in a no-state income tax jurisdiction. Lastly, if donors in a high-state income tax jurisdiction want better players, they could simply donate more to compensate the players for having additional tax costs.

However, several key decisions have already unfolded that suggest that taxes could already be playing a role. For instance, the number one player in the transfer portal, according to ESPN, Brendan Sorsby, has chosen to take his talents to Texas Tech University, which is located in a state that does not tax income. Quarterback Josh Hoover and wide receiver Nick Marsh are transferring to Indiana University. While Indiana taxes income at the state level, the top rate is only 3%, which is among the lowest among states that tax income. Similarly, Rocco Becht, a quarterback who previously played for Iowa State, will now be playing for Penn State. Like Indiana, Pennsylvania imposes a very low state income tax rate of 3.07%.

These three examples are illustrative and do not necessarily imply that taxes were the reason why they chose those locations. Furthermore, other top players are transferring to states that are not low or no-income-tax-rate jurisdictions, such as Oklahoma State University. What is seemingly absent from this list are players who are choosing to go to high-tax rate jurisdictions like California, New York, or New Jersey.


As this record-breaking transfer portal continues to unfold, the era of NIL appears to have made its mark. Assuming taxes continue to be a significant factor in determining players’ locational decisions, we can expect to see many of the top NIL earners flock to these low or no-income tax rate jurisdictions. On the flip side, players who are still quality players but not earning the same amount of NIL income might end up at schools that were not previously available to them. Regardless of the outcome, the NIL-era appears to have dramatically reshaped college football, and it is unfolding right in front of us during this January transfer portal window.



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What can we learn from 2025 Indiana football?

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Good morning, and thanks for spending part of your day with Extra Points. I hope you all had a wonderful and restful winter holiday season!

We’ve got several announcements of our own to make over the next few weeks, but there’s one I’d like to quickly mention now. We will be at this year’s NCAA convention! Both I and my colleague at NIL Wire, Kyle Rowland, will be in D.C. from Jan. 13-15. I’ve already made a few commitments to speak to graduate classes while I’m there, but if you’ll be in town and would like to catch up, drop me an email! We’ll see you there!

There will be plenty of time to talk about bylaw changes, collective bargaining, revenue generation and a whole bunch of administrative stuff. But today, I’d like to quickly talk about the Indiana Hoosiers.

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Because this isn’t supposed to be happening.

A theory from my pal Bud Elliott over at CBS could almost completely predict success in the four-team playoff era. It’s called the Blue Chip Theory, and it states that teams that win championships must have signed more four- and five-star recruits out of high school than three-star guys.

Almost every team to even make the four-team playoff field over the past decade recruited at that level, and every champion did.

And in the first year of the expanded College Football Playoff, the theory mostly held up. Ohio State (an elite recruiting program) defeated Notre Dame (another elite recruiting program), and late-round playoff spots went to teams like Oregon, Texas, Penn State and Georgia. A few teams that didn’t recruit at that level — like Indiana, SMU and Boise State — made the field, but they didn’t make it far.

But this year? The bracket looks different.

Before the season, CBS identified the 18 teams that recruited at an elite enough clip to have a Blue Chip Ratio over 50 percent. Those teams? Alabama, Ohio State, Georgia, Texas A&M, Oregon, Texas, LSU, Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Penn State, Miami, Florida, Auburn, Michigan, USC, Clemson, Tennessee and Florida State. Just short of that bar were South Carolina and Ole Miss.

At the time (July of 2025), here’s what Bud said about a team potentially beating that model:

Will someone eventually bust the model?

At some point … probably?. A team with a high-40s BCR, a transcendent quarterback and a lot of health luck will probably win it all. It almost happened with Oregon and Marcus Mariota in 2014. 

But who might it be this season? Ole Miss? South Carolina? Louisville? Utah? See, this is getting a little silly. The top 13 teams in the Vegas odds to win the national title are all BCR members.

Now, there were a lot of elite teams on that BCR list. Seven of them made the playoff, and two, Oregon and Miami, are in the quarterfinals. Ole Miss is just outside that range.

But Indiana is nowhere close. The Hoosiers signed just one blue-chip high school player in 2025, and just one more in 2024, well behind programs like Purdue, Minnesota and Rutgers. In terms of team talent composite, which adds up the recruiting ranking of everybody on the roster (including transfers), Indiana has just seven blue-chip players. Its roster rating is 72, behind teams including Boston College, Tulane, UTSA, Oregon State and Purdue.

Teams with those sorts of rosters, historically, battle for spots in the Little Caesar’s Bowl, not the College Football Playoff.

And Indiana didn’t just sneak into its spot in the Peach Bowl. It flat-out kicked the shit out of Alabama in the Rose Bowl after earning the top seed in the field. The Hoosiers are undefeated, with wins over Oregon and Ohio State.

So how is this possible? I freely admit I am not enough of a Certified Ball Knower to offer a completely conclusive answer, and I don’t think we have quite enough data to totally throw out the Blue Chip Ratio as a predictive tool. But I do have a few theories.

Indiana is old.

The Hoosiers have just one underclassman in their starting offensive 11 (a redshirt freshman) and two sophomores on defense. Many of the team’s most important players are redshirt juniors and seniors … dudes who have been in college weight programs and training systems for four or five years.

That last point is significant. I don’t think having a bunch of dudes who are 21, 22, 23, etc. on the roster matters as much as it does to have a team whose players have played a lot of college football. BYU never enjoyed much of bonus for having one of the oldest rosters in the country over the 2000s, because spending two years dodging Malaria in northern Brazil as a missionary doesn’t actually make you a better football player. But spending two years in the weight room, in the film room and on the training table can.

The concept of getting a roster “old” has been a college basketball buzzword for several years. If you’re a mid-major, the thinking went that it would be better to have five guys who aren’t as athletically gifted but are smart, disciplined and experienced than to have five guys who can jump out of the gym but have only been actually coached for, like, two months. When major upsets happened in March, the Cinderella often followed that profile: a scrappy team full of seniors.

Historically, that’s been more difficult to assemble in college football. But there may be some real truth to it. I wrote last year that the engine of Ohio State’s 2024 national title wasn’t so much transfers or elite underclassmen (although those both helped) as it was spending NIL money to bring back a lot of experienced players. It’s why Penn State was such a trendy national title pick this year too.

Indiana’s coaching staff really is just that much better than everybody else.

College football coaches have come out of nowhere to quickly bring lousy teams into contention. Bill Snyder at Kansas State, LaVell Edwards at BYU, Barry Alvarez at Wisconsin and Randy Walker at Northwestern have all done variations of this before …but what Curt Cignetti has done at Indiana is arguably the most impressive turnaround job in college football history.

How is he pulling this off? Well, for one, he’s been doing it a while. Cignetti isn’t a hotshot offensive wizard who looks like he’s barely old enough to buy a beer. He’s 64 years old. He’s coached QBs at NC State (including some dude named Phillip Rivers) and wideouts at Alabama under Nick Saban. Then, he’s won everywhere he’s been a head coach, from Division II IUP to Elon to James Madison.

To the extent there’s a Cignetti blueprint? It appears to be based on a relentless focus on the fundamentals, dramatically improving existing players and being elite at scouting and identifying potential. Via the Athletic:

Cignetti chose experienced, productive transfers to join his James Madison players, and many adopted Cignetti’s mindset. Of the Hoosiers’ 34 core players on offense and defense, 23 are former transfers. The holdovers, long tired of Indiana’s losing history, happily bought in.

“There’s a certain kind of guy that I just won’t take,” Cignetti said. “A guy’s gotta love ball and have some ankle, knee, hip flexibility, and a certain level of athleticism. And then habits are important. How bad does he want it? … You’ve got a role in helping him develop. He’s got to be coachable, too.”

On the field, my read of what has made Indiana so dang good is that the players just don’t make mistakes. The Hoosiers are top in FBS in turnover margin, top in third down conversion percentage, third in penalty yards and seventh in yards per play. If you have experienced guys who are capable of making good decisions again and again and again … you’re going to always be in a position to win.

Or, as my pal Richard Johnson described it over at CBS:

Indiana’s success is boring by design and, like all teams, a reflection of its head coach. It’s deliberate. It’s competent. The Hoosiers block, tackle and execute. They are vegetables in a society obsessed with the fast-food version of success

I think it’s a little bit of a misnomer to just say Indiana is the product of Cignetti taking all of his old James Madison players, as there are key contributors who came from other programs, like Maryland, Notre Dame and Cal. And the idea of “having an advantage by taking a bunch of Sun Belt dudes” only works if you’re really good at identifying and developing guys at a Sun Belt school.

I think two other factors are at play here: money and transfer portal evaluations.

Without public data, we can’t really say for sure, but I have yet to hear from an athletic director, reporter or industry person I trust that Indiana is rocking a team payroll anywhere near those of Ohio State, Oregon, Texas, Texas Tech or any other top spender. In On3’s preseason survey about team payrolls, Indiana didn’t get a single vote.

But Indiana has made meaningful investments elsewhere. According to FY24’s MFRS reports (obtained and organized by the Extra Points Library), Indiana reported over $61 million in total operational expenses for football. That’s 13th in the country among public schools, more than Auburn, Oklahoma and Oregon.

Indiana spent big to keep Cignetti and his assistants, and it’s about to do it again. When the dust settles after this season, Cignetti and his staff will be among the very highest paid in the entire country. Couple that with what Indiana has invested in operations and staff, and you have a school that is just as committed to football success as the others on that top-15 list … even if it might not have a $30 million payroll.

I also suspect there is something to the idea that recruiting out of the transfer portal is really hard.

High school recruiting rankings are not perfect, but they’ve been highly predictive for the past 15 years, especially on the aggregate. High school recruiting rankings are a great way to see if a particular athlete has the physical measurables of a potential NFL draft pick and a good projection of how strong a college player he might become.

But transfer rankings? They’re a bit different.

If you have a kid who had high four-star measurables as a 17-year-old, but he hasn’t demonstrated those at the college level in two seasons, how do you evaluate his potential? Is he still a four-star? How much do you “ding” him for not meeting his previous development curve? And how do you project a very productive player at a lower level who is a few inches shorter and a few steps slower than the guys at the all-American camps?

Here’s an example. Let’s take last year’s transfer rankings. The No. 1 recruit, a “five star” on the 247 top transfer board, was Nico Iamaleava, who went from Tennessee to UCLA, and was … fine. (UCLA was not.) Fernando Mendoza, the guy who just won the dang Heisman Trophy, was fourth. But you could also find very productive Power 4 starters in the low 20s … and lots of guys who didn’t play much in between. That’s true at nearly every position group.

My hunch is that over time, the transfer rankings will become predictive. But if you have a coach who really is better at talent evaluation than his peers, it’ll show up in the portal compared to high school recruiting, where everybody has more data and more time. My gut is Indiana has that.

And also, Homefield Apparel.

That was probably worth at least three wins a season, right?

Who's That Football Team?

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CLUE #1

Despite being one of the most successful teams in FBS history, this program has a historical losing record against Duke, Indiana, Minnesota, Washington State and the Carlisle Indian School

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College football transfer portal tracker: Trinidad Chambliss returning to Ole Miss if granted waiver

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After a year at Wisconsin, Billy Edwards is heading back east.

The former Badger and Maryland Terrapin is signing with North Carolina. Edwards was Wisconsin’s Week 1 starter in 2025 but suffered a knee injury in the opener and made just one more appearance the rest of the season.

In 2024, Edwards was 273-of-420 passing for 2,881 yards, 15 TDs and nine interceptions.

Belichick and UNC added former South Alabama QB Gio Lopez via the transfer portal in the spring and, with Lopez expected to stay in Chapel Hill, he’ll compete with Edwards for the starting job.



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Florida football transfer tracker as UF builds roster under Jon Sumrall

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Updated Jan. 4, 2026, 8:04 p.m. ET



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