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Quinn Ewers Was Chasing An NFL Dream, While Others Wanted Him To Chase NIL Bag

Who are we to judge a player like Quinn Ewers for his decision to pass up millions in NIL money for an opportunity to live out a dream of playing in the NFL?  I found myself asking this question over the weekend, as we watched players being taken in the NFL Draft. Social media, which […]

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Who are we to judge a player like Quinn Ewers for his decision to pass up millions in NIL money for an opportunity to live out a dream of playing in the NFL? 

I found myself asking this question over the weekend, as we watched players being taken in the NFL Draft. Social media, which is not real life, were in a constant uproar as Ewers sat in what looked like a taxidermy office, watching other players hear their names called over the course of seven rounds. 

Up until his name was finally called in the seventh round, with the Miami Dolphins taking a chance on the Texas quarterback, the questions about whether Quinn Ewers should have stayed in college for another season to collect loads of cash through an NIL deal were running rampant. 

But, we were missing the point with the former Texas Longhorns gunslinger. 

For the past two years, Quinn Ewers has dealt with more than some quarterbacks deal with during their entire tenure at one school. Oh yea, some people forget about the fact that Ewers led Texas to back-to-back college football playoff appearances, while Arch Manning sat on the sidelines waiting for his opportunity to take over the coveted position. 

Would Quinn Ewers Have Upped His Draft Stock Next Season?

While Quinn Ewers would have easily made over $5 million if he had entered the transfer portal, and not declared for the NFL Draft, the Texas quarterback was done playing college football. It wasn’t as if he was receiving bad advice from his agents or coaching staff. Ewers knew he could be sitting for a while at home, waiting on that phone call from an NFL team wanting to take a chance on a quarterback who has battled through multiple injuries over the last two seasons. 

Sure, Ewers could have returned for another season of college football. But would it have actually helped his draft stock? What more could he have done this upcoming season? It’s not as if teams were harping on his injuries that he overcame during his time at Texas. 

Would he have succeeded at Notre Dame this year, or any other top-tier program looking to bring in a veteran quarterback? That question will be left unanswered. But, do we actually think he will go in the first few rounds next year? I highly doubt it, though others will obviously disagree. 

Here’s a look at the quarterbacks who will be eligible for the 2026 NFL Draft. 

  • Drew Allar
  • Arch Manning
  • LaNorris Sellers
  • Garrett Nussmeir
  • Sam Leavitt
  • Dante Moore
  • Cade Klubnik
  • Carson Beck

Ok, so we want to argue that Ewers would’ve gone before 70% of those guys listed? If you didn’t notice from this years NFL Draft, teams are not looking for projects. There looking for guys who can come in immediately and compete. Besides Cam Ward, Jaxson Dart and Shedeur Sanders, are there quarterbacks that were taken in this year’s draft that could compete for a starting job to open the 2025 season? 

The answer is no, unless a team found lighting in a bottle. 

Quinn Ewers Was Ready To Live Out A Dream, Not Chase The Money

For all the stuff that we give players for entering the transfer portal and chasing money for another season of college football, Quinn Ewers decided it was time to move on. Why are we bashing the young man for wanting to achieve a dream, and not going to the highest bidder in the collegiate ranks? 

At the end of the day, this was his choice. It’s not up to us to decide what’s best for a player. He’ll have to live with the decision, and he seems pretty content with the choice to move on to the professional ranks. 

Miami Dolphins general manager Chris Grier mentioned that Ewers had respect from his teammates, while also discussing his competitiveness on the field. 

“Mike [McDaniel] and I. We met him the year before at the Texas workout, and we spent some time,” Grier mentioned about Ewers during his press conference. “We talked to coach [Steve] Sarkisian about him, and ‘Sark’ really likes him and was high [on him] and was talking about him playing through the injuries this year, which affected his play a little bit. But he talked about his toughness, his mental toughness, the pushing through with the injury, the expectations, all the pressure with [Arch] Manning there coming in, and so he loved his competitiveness and how he plays and how his teammates respond to him.

“So, he was someone that we always had an eye on looking at, and the opportunity at that point in the draft just made sense for us to pull the pick.”

For all the talk from fans about how the college game has turned into just chasing the bag, Quinn Ewers decided to chase his dream. He accomplished things in college football that some quarterbacks can only dream of. 

At the end of the day, he wanted to move on. So, who are we to critique his decision? It might work out for Quinn Ewers in the NFL, down the road after learning how to be a professional quarterback. If it doesn’t, then that’s an outcome that Ewers will be able to live with. 

The former Longhorn helped lead his favorite team to the college football playoff, helped Steve Sarkisian rebuild the Texas program and made a good amount of money doing it. 

Quinn Ewers did it the right way, and now he gets an opportunity to chase another dream. Looking back, he made a decision that was best for him, which is all that matters. 





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Current NIL system has ‘become pay for play,’ ‘a little bit off the rails’

Former Alabama football coach Nick Saban was in Hoover last week for the Regions Tradition, and the legendary coach spoke with the cast of local radio show “The Next Round” about the state of college football. Saban, who has been vocal about the landscape of college football with name, image and likeness (NIL), the transfer […]

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Former Alabama football coach Nick Saban was in Hoover last week for the Regions Tradition, and the legendary coach spoke with the cast of local radio show “The Next Round” about the state of college football.

Saban, who has been vocal about the landscape of college football with name, image and likeness (NIL), the transfer portal, and other aspects leading to his seemingly abrupt retirement, has been rumored to help lead President Donald Trump’s commission on college athletics.

RELATED: Saban: ‘I don’t really know’ what presidential commission on college athletics would do

In speaking with “The Next Round,” Saban criticized what NIL has become, saying it had gone “a little bit off the rails. He emphasized the importance of getting all state laws to mirror each other to “level the playing field.”

“Look, I want everybody to know. I’m not against players making money. I think they deserve to do that. I think name, image and likeness is no longer name, image and likeness; it’s become play for pay. So, the system that we’re paying players right now probably is a little bit off the rails. And we probably need to do something to get all the state laws the same so that everybody competes on a level playing field, authentic name, image and likeness, which means it really and truly is like a marketing opportunity. And when this House settlement comes down, there will probably be some revenue sharing and some guidelines that we can build around hopefully to make the game a little better.

To connect with the author of this story or to comment, email [email protected].

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Nico Iamaleava domino effect among ESPN’s top storylines for 2025 season

Nico Iamaleava’s very public departure from Tennessee last month remains one of the defining stories of the NIL era to this point. So does the fallout from it. TALK ABOUT IT IN THE ROCKY TOP FORUM Iamaleava’s decision to skip out on the Vols’ final spring practice amid reports of contract negotiations before entering the […]

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Nico Iamaleava’s very public departure from Tennessee last month remains one of the defining stories of the NIL era to this point.

So does the fallout from it.

TALK ABOUT IT IN THE ROCKY TOP FORUM

Iamaleava’s decision to skip out on the Vols’ final spring practice amid reports of contract negotiations before entering the transfer portal and ending up at UCLA after two years in Knoxville was highly publicized and put Tennessee at the center of the latest chapter in the ever-changing NIL saga.

ESPN listed it among its 10 “must know” storylines 100 days before the start of the 2025 college football season.

“Tennessee transfer Nico Iamaleava and his brother, Arkansas transfer Madden Iamaleava, aren’t officially enrolled at UCLA yet,” ESPN’s Dave Wilson wrote. “But during UCLA’s Spring Showcase, they watched as Luke Duncan took first- and second-team reps while Nick Billoups, who is in the transfer portal, also took some snaps, according to the Los Angeles Times. Meanwhile, Joey Aguilar, who had transferred to UCLA initially after a standout year at App State, is now transferring to Tennessee to replace Nico. By this fall, Aguilar will be in Knoxville and the Iamaleava brothers could be Nos. 1 and 2 on the Bruins’ depth chart.

Coach DeShaun Foster said ‘it’s just comforting’ having Nico around, which is not the way Tennessee felt after a dispute over NIL money. He heads to Los Angeles after throwing for 2,616 yards with 19 TDs and 5 INTs. The soap opera will continue into the fall.”

Josh Heupel and the program’s decision not to cave on a reported new contract for Iamaleava, a former five-star prospect who started just one season, was largely supported nationally and potentially set a precedent that could lead to even more changes in the landscape.

But Tennessee was left with a void to fill in its quarterbacks room, which at the end of the spring featured just two scholarship players in redshirt freshman Jake Merklinger and freshman George MacIntyre.

Enter Joey Aguilar, a record-breaking quarterback at Appalachian State two years ago before transferring to UCLA in January.

In an ironic twist, Iamaleava bolting from the Vols led Aguilar to Tennessee where he will he will compete for the starting job with Merklinger and MacIntyre in fall camp.

Though it remains to be seen who will start for the Vols once they open their season against Syracuse in the Aflac Kickoff Game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Aug. 30 (Noon ET, ABC), Aguilar holds the edge in experience.

Aguilar set single-season passing and scoring records with 3,757 yards and 33 touchdowns with the Mountaineers in 2023.

He passed for 3,003 yards, 23 touchdowns and 14 interceptions last season.

“(Aguilar) has starts. He’s played at a high level. He’s the got the ability to throw the ball vertically,” Heupel told reporters last month. “He’s accurate and on time in the intermediate passing game. He has the ability to use his feet to extend plays and in the quarterback run game too. It’s similar to the traits that we have with guys on campus right now.”



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Tennessee ‘Athlete-Friendly’ NIL Law Takes Shot at House Settlement

Earlier this month, Tennessee signed Senate Bill 536 into law, giving major protection to college sports programs in the state as they traverse the new, chaotic NIL landscape. As college football and basketball programs in Tennessee strategize for the future amid the absence of federal NIL legislation or final approval on the House settlement, they […]

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Earlier this month, Tennessee signed Senate Bill 536 into law, giving major protection to college sports programs in the state as they traverse the new, chaotic NIL landscape.

As college football and basketball programs in Tennessee strategize for the future amid the absence of federal NIL legislation or final approval on the House settlement, they can do so without fear of the NCAA.

In what’s considered one of the most “athlete-friendly” NIL laws in the country, as On3 Sports reports, the law will protect schools from antitrust lawsuits while taking some shots at the terms within the settlement.

Under S.B. 356, which went into effect May 1, athletes in Tennessee will be able to receive compensation from NIL collectives until explicitly told otherwise by federal law, antitrust law, or a valid court order.

The NCAA cannot “create anticompetitive restrictions that lessen, or tend to lessen, full and free competition in trade or commerce affecting this State or to otherwise violate state and federal law.”

In addition, the NCAA shall not “establish, adopt, promulgate, implement, or enforce any rule, standard, procedure, policy, or guideline that violates an applicable state or federal antitrust law,” and it should make sure it’s “legally exempt from applicable antitrust laws” before doing so.

It shields Tennessee schools from legal issues arising over any alleged violations, as the NCAA “shall fully indemnify and hold harmless the state, its institutions, and intercollegiate athletes from any damages, losses, claims, or remedies of any kind arising from its noncompliance or failure under such applicable law.”

It also provides protections for grant-in-aid and athletic eligibility that may arise from any disputes.

While the date for final approval of the House settlement is July 1, there’s growing skepticism that it will curtail all the problems within the college sports landscape.

By shifting liability to the NCAA, Tennessee lawmakers are allowing in-state schools to work toward that assumed future without fear of facing legal repercussions.

They aren’t the only state to enact protections, with Louisiana recently joining the charge with an executive order granting schools the ability to directly pay athletes for NIL.

However, Tennessee might offer the strongest shield, as reported by Adam Sparks of the Knoxville News Sentinel (subscription required) based on analysis by NIL expert and sports attorney Mit Winter.

“This Tennessee law goes further than the others because it was specifically drafted in a way that says schools in the state of Tennessee and their athletes don’t have to adhere to any restrictions on NIL compensation, except in certain limited circumstances,” Winter said.

Now, unlike some universities that may have concerns, those in Tennessee can operate without worrying about becoming defendants.



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Tennessee 'Athlete

Earlier this month, Tennessee signed Senate Bill 536 into law, giving major protection to college sports programs in the state as they traverse the new, chaotic NIL landscape. As college football and basketball programs in Tennessee strategize for the future amid the absence of federal NIL legislation or final approval on the House settlement, they […]

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Tennessee 'Athlete

Earlier this month, Tennessee signed Senate Bill 536 into law, giving major protection to college sports programs in the state as they traverse the new, chaotic NIL landscape.

As college football and basketball programs in Tennessee strategize for the future amid the absence of federal NIL legislation or final approval on the House settlement, they can do so without fear of the NCAA.

In what’s considered one of the most “athlete-friendly” NIL laws in the country, as On3 Sports reports, the law will protect schools from antitrust lawsuits while taking some shots at the terms within the settlement.

Under S.B. 356, which went into effect May 1, athletes in Tennessee will be able to receive compensation from NIL collectives until explicitly told otherwise by federal law, antitrust law, or a valid court order.

The NCAA cannot “create anticompetitive restrictions that lessen, or tend to lessen, full and free competition in trade or commerce affecting this State or to otherwise violate state and federal law.”

In addition, the NCAA shall not “establish, adopt, promulgate, implement, or enforce any rule, standard, procedure, policy, or guideline that violates an applicable state or federal antitrust law,” and it should make sure it’s “legally exempt from applicable antitrust laws” before doing so.

It shields Tennessee schools from legal issues arising over any alleged violations, as the NCAA “shall fully indemnify and hold harmless the state, its institutions, and intercollegiate athletes from any damages, losses, claims, or remedies of any kind arising from its noncompliance or failure under such applicable law.”

It also provides protections for grant-in-aid and athletic eligibility that may arise from any disputes.

While the date for final approval of the House settlement is July 1, there’s growing skepticism that it will curtail all the problems within the college sports landscape.

By shifting liability to the NCAA, Tennessee lawmakers are allowing in-state schools to work toward that assumed future without fear of facing legal repercussions.

They aren’t the only state to enact protections, with Louisiana recently joining the charge with an executive order granting schools the ability to directly pay athletes for NIL.

However, Tennessee might offer the strongest shield, as reported by Adam Sparks of the Knoxville News Sentinel (subscription required) based on analysis by NIL expert and sports attorney Mit Winter.

“This Tennessee law goes further than the others because it was specifically drafted in a way that says schools in the state of Tennessee and their athletes don’t have to adhere to any restrictions on NIL compensation, except in certain limited circumstances,” Winter said.

Now, unlike some universities that may have concerns, those in Tennessee can operate without worrying about becoming defendants.

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Former USC RB LenDale White speaks on transfer portal impact for current players

There is a lot going on in college football. USC is trying to regain their place in the sport in terms of modern-day contexts. In terms of historical significance and the power of the Trojan emblem, the university continues to be a top school in the NCAA. Only the record as of late has not […]

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Former USC RB LenDale White speaks on transfer portal impact for current players

There is a lot going on in college football. USC is trying to regain their place in the sport in terms of modern-day contexts. In terms of historical significance and the power of the Trojan emblem, the university continues to be a top school in the NCAA. Only the record as of late has not matched that of some of the past teams that have walked through the Coliseum.

An excellent example of a familiar face from a past, more successful era is LenDale White. The former running back won back-to-back titles and was on the team that came close to achieving a three-peat.

The retired player sat down with The Coach JB and Big Smitty Show and discussed part of why he joined USC and why he believes the Trojans are close to being annual contenders again.

For White, he knew that the power and connection of being a member of the USC football team would go further than anywhere else. Not to mention that he played on a roster that had an embarrassment of riches in the RB room alone.

From Joe McKnight to Reggie Bush, USC brought in top talent at all positions and was the force to be reckoned with on a national level.

While the program has taken a sizable dip since the days of coach Pete Carroll, White believes that there is a resurgence happening now under coach Lincoln Riley. According to him, it starts with the current recruiting classes and how the staff is winning those battles. It won’t be too long before the future wins also translate to increases in the win column.

White did discuss an important difference between when he was a player and now. NIL gets a lot of attention, but the transfer portal affects the relationship with players in a different way between them and their schools.

As mentioned, White played in a great position group room. In today’s era, most likely, many would have sought the door after the first season or had flipped on a commitment once finding out who their teammates would be.

Certainly, there are positive cases of the transfer portal, and athletes have benefitted from this newfound freedom. It does, however, give a bad look when the only apparent reason for transferring out is due to lack of initial playing time or fear of competition at the same position.

Important distinction mentioned by former USC player

That’s something that was not as readily an option back in the day compared to now. Again, all circumstances have individual factors to consider. There is something to be said for sticking with a program and fighting for a spot and earning playing time after learning and working behind the scenes.

One advantage that older players have compared to now, as White mentioned, is that when he returns to Los Angeles, he is unquestionably a Trojan. That isn’t to bemoan those who transfer for a season and find themselves in a good situation. It should be something of a stronger consideration point for all athletes as to the why when deciding to move to a different school.

Players like White have a legacy and are immortalized at USC forever. It feels different when comparing those who hop around, changing their school colors every semester.  

 

  

    

 

 

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Delaware head coach Martin Ingelsby Leads the Blue Hens into Conference USA

Coach Martin Ingelsby has built Delaware into a solid program; after a tough regular season, the Blue Hens moved into the Coastal Athletic Association Tournament and won four games in a row before losing a tough 76-72 decision to UNC Wilmington in the championship. Delaware moves into Conference USA on July 1. Coach Ingelsby discusses […]

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Delaware head coach Martin Ingelsby Leads the Blue Hens into Conference USA

Coach Martin Ingelsby has built Delaware into a solid program; after a tough regular season, the Blue Hens moved into the Coastal Athletic Association Tournament and won four games in a row before losing a tough 76-72 decision to UNC Wilmington in the championship. Delaware moves into Conference USA on July 1. Coach Ingelsby discusses his ideas on how to rebuild as the Blue Hens are a program that builds quality players.

Topics of Conversation Include:

  • Winning the 4 games to get into the CAA Championship Final
  • The impacts of the move to Conference USA
  • Bringing over Providence transfer Justyn Fernandez and former Temple Owl Jameel Brown
  • The return of Cavan Reilly for a fourth season

… and much more!

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