NIL
Ranking the top 25 college football teams

I all but flipped a coin back in January when choosing between Penn State and Texas for No. 1. Then Steve Sarkisian’s team became arguably the biggest winner in the spring portal window and made the decision easier this time.
1. Texas (Too-early 2025 ranking: 2)
Familiar faces: QB Arch Manning, RB Quintrevion Wisner, WR Ryan Wingo, edge Colin Simmons, LB Anthony Hill Jr., S Michael Taaffe
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Notable spring additions: WR Emmett Mosley V (Stanford), TE Jack Endries (Cal), DT Maraad Watson (Syracuse), K Mason Shipley (Texas State)
Despite losing 12 draft picks, Texas looks like the closest thing to a complete team. Everyone knows about Manning, but the ’Horns should again be teeming with skill talent and strong in the trenches. Mosley and Endries become immediate targets for Manning, while Watson (6-foot-3, 313 pounds), a true freshman starter, Purdue transfer Cole Brevard and North Carolina transfer Travis Shaw fill a need at defensive tackle.
2. Penn State (Previous: No. 1)
Familiar faces: QB Drew Allar, RBs Nick Singleton and Kaytron Allen, DE Dani Dennis-Sutton, DT Zane Durant, S Zakee Wheatley
Notable spring additions: WR Trebor Pena (Syracuse), LB Amare Campbell (UNC)
Penn State most closely fits the 2023 Michigan/2024 Ohio State “everybody’s staying” mold, but last year’s College Football Playoff semifinalist still had one glaring deficiency: wide receiver. Coach James Franklin hopes he’s addressed that with a trio of transfers: USC’s Kyron Hudson, Troy’s Devonte Ross and Pena, a breakout star on last season’s 10-win Syracuse team (84 catches for 941 yards). Campbell was highly productive with 76 tackles and 10 1/2 TFLs in 2024.
3. Clemson (Previous: No. 5)
Familiar faces: QB Cade Klubnik, WR Antonio Williams, DEs T.J. Parker and Peter Woods, LB Sammy Brown, CB Avieon Terrell
Notable spring additions: None
I was already high on Clemson, and then two things happened. 1. Coach Dabo Swinney finally got some transfers, and one of them, former Southeast Missouri State receiver Tristan Smith, stole the show at the Tigers’ spring game with five catches for 137 yards. 2. Early 2026 mock drafts emerged, and every guy listed above (save for second-year player Brown) was a projected first-rounder. Clemson should have its best team in five years.
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4. Ohio State (Previous: No. 6)
Familiar faces: WRs Jeremiah Smith and Carnell Tate, LBs Sonny Styles and Arvell Reese, CB Davison Igbinosun, S Caleb Downs
Notable spring additions: DE Beau Atkinson (North Carolina)
My first 2025 top 25 was published the morning after the Buckeyes’ national championship win, at which point it was hard to overlook how many key players they were losing. (As it turned out, 14 draft picks.) But coach Ryan Day still has a lot of veterans, and now he’s added Atkinson (7 1/2 sacks last season), who could start opposite returnee Kenyatta Jackson. But it all comes down to how expected QB1 Julian Sayin performs.
5. Notre Dame (Previous: No. 3)
Familiar faces: RB Jeremiyah Love, WR Jaden Greathouse, LBs Drayk Bowen and Jaylen Sneed, CB Leonard Moore, S Adon Shuler
Notable spring additions: None
Coach Marcus Freeman’s QB competition seemingly resolved itself in the spring as redshirt freshman CJ Carr seized control of the race, prompting veteran Steve Angeli to portal his way to Syracuse. Love is a Heisman contender, TE Eli Raridon is poised for a breakout and former Virginia WR Malachi Fields arrives this summer.
6. LSU (Previous: No. 4)
Familiar faces: QB Garrett Nussmeier, RB Caden Durham, WR Aaron Anderson, LBs Whit Weeks and Harold Perkins Jr.
Notable spring additions: DT Bernard Gooden (USF), S A.J. Haulcy (Houston)
I’m still high on LSU despite the two-spot drop. Coach Brian Kelly added to what was already the nation’s No. 1 transfer class with Gooden, who had 10 TFLs last season, and first-team All-Big 12 safety Haulcy. WR Nic Anderson from Oklahoma is a big get. Reports out of spring indicated that the Tigers’ D-line will be a strength, thanks to Florida transfer Jack Pyburn and Nebraska transfer Jimari Butler.
7. Georgia (Previous: No. 7)
Familiar faces: QB Gunner Stockton, RB Nate Frazier, TE Oscar Delp, LB CJ Allen, CB Daylen Everette
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Notable spring additions: RB Josh McCray (Illinois), LB Elo Modozie (Army)
I was mildly surprised to see Georgia’s Vegas win total is only 9.5. If there’s concern, it may be either that Stockton is still relatively unproven or that the D-line is not up to previous standards. Stockton should have plenty of guys to throw to with the additions of USC’s Zachariah Branch and Texas A&M’s Noah Thomas. McCray (609 yards, 10 TDs in 2024) should be a nice complement to Frazier, and Modozie (6 1/2 sacks) should make an impact.
8. Oregon (Previous: No. 8)
Familiar faces: RB Noah Whittington, WR Evan Stewart, pass-rushers Matayo Uiagalelei and Teitum Tuioti, MLB Bryce Boettcher
Notable spring additions: None
Oregon’s prospects depend heavily on former five-star QB Dante Moore, once a freshman starter for UCLA. He went 12-of-20 for 140 yards in the spring game. RB Makhi Hughes (2,779 yards in two seasons) is poised to take the Big Ten by storm. Transfer LT Isaiah World (Nevada) and G Emmanuel Pregnon (USC) should be immediate starters. Dan Lanning has no shortage of pass rushers with Uiagalelei, Tuioti and LB Blake Purchase.
9. Miami (Previous: No. 15)
Familiar faces: QB Carson Beck (Georgia), RB Mark Fletcher Jr., OT Francis Mauigoa, DE Rueben Bain Jr., LB Wesley Bissainthe
Notable spring additions: WR/KR Keelan Marion (BYU), RB CharMar Brown (North Dakota State), LBs Mohamed Toure (Rutgers) and Kamal Bonner (NC State), CB Keionte Scott (Auburn/Houston), K Bert Auburn (Texas)
No one was more active in the spring portal window than coach Mario Cristobal, who added a potential breakout star in Brown (1,181 yards, 15 TDs), the Jerry Rice Award winner for best FCS freshman; an All-American kick returner in Marion; and a proven seventh-year senior (!) in Toure (93 tackles, 10 TFLs in 2023), who missed 2024. Freshman WR Malachi Toney had a great spring game. Beck has been cleared for summer workouts.
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10. Alabama (Previous: No. 14)
Familiar faces: WRs Ryan Williams and Germie Bernard, DT Tim Keenan III, LB Deontae Lawson, CB Domani Jackson
Notable spring additions: TE Brody Dalton (Troy)
It’s notable that no Alabama players hit the portal after spring practices, indicating coach Kalen DeBoer is pleased with his roster. Fourth-year junior QB Ty Simpson seized control of the starting job this spring. He has plenty of options to throw to among Williams, Bernard and Miami transfer Isaiah Horton. This should be another top-10 defense, with Colorado LB Nikhai Hill-Green filling one of the few holes.
11. Arizona State (Previous: No. 9)
Familiar faces: QB Sam Leavitt, WR Jordyn Tyson, TE Chamon Metayer, DT C.J. Fite, S Xavion Alford
Notable spring additions: Edge Joshua Shanklin (juco)
Coach Kenny Dillingham mostly recruited for depth in the spring because he has so much coming back from last year’s Big 12 title team (with the notable exception of star RB Cam Skattebo). He previously nabbed Army RB Kanye Udoh (1,110 yards) to join promising returnee Kyson Brown. Fresno State WR Jalen Moss (48 catches, 563 yards) looks like a solid complement to Tyson. ASU’s concern is generating a better pass rush.
The Gators never gave up during an up-and-down 2024 campaign, and optimism abounds under QB DJ Lagway. (Jacob Kupferman / Getty Images)
12. Florida (Previous: No. 11)
Familiar faces: QB DJ Lagway, RB Jadan Baugh, C Jake Slaughter, DE Tyreak Sapp, DT Caleb Banks
Notable spring additions: None
Billy Napier only took five transfers between the winter and spring windows and expects major contributions from his freshman class. Early enrollee WR Dallas Wilson set a Florida spring game record with 10 catches for 195 yards. While the talented Lagway is the biggest reason for so much optimism around the Gators, they’ll also be strong in the trenches. Slaughter, OT Austin Barber, Sapp and Banks are all garnering early first-round NFL Draft buzz.
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13. BYU (Previous: No. 10)
Familiar faces: QB Jake Retzlaff, RB LJ Martin, WR Chase Roberts, LB Isaiah Glasker, K Will Ferrin
Notable spring additions: WR Tiger Bachmeier (Stanford), DT Justin Kirkland (Oklahoma State)
Notable spring defections: WR/KR Keelan Marion (All-American kick returner), LB Harrison Taggart (69 tackles in 2024)
Several key pieces from BYU’s 11-win season last year return, most notably the dual-threat QB Retzlaff. But it hurt to lose Taggart, the Cougars’ second-leading tackler last season, and Marion, a spring practice standout at receiver. Two Utah transfers, TE Carsen Ryan and DT Keanu Tanuvasa, are expected to start. BYU has a lot of proven veterans on defense, like Glasker and S Tanner Wall.
14. Oklahoma (Previous: No. 25)
Familiar faces: RB Jovantae Barnes, WR Deion Burks, DE R Mason Thomas, S Robert Spears-Jennings, LB Kip Jennings
Notable spring additions: RB Jaydn Ott (Cal), G Jake Maikkula (Stanford)
Notable spring defection: RB Gavin Sawchuk (744 yards in 2023)
I didn’t realize in January how much Oklahoma would transform its offense. Washington State QB John Mateer, one of the most coveted QBs this offseason, reunited with his former offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle. Then coach Brent Venables got Ott, who ran for 2,212 yards and 20 TDs the past two seasons. Top receiver Burks is back after missing most of last season. Florida State’s Marvin Jones Jr. adds to an already talented defense.
15. Texas A&M (Previous: No. 17)
Familiar faces: QB Marcel Reed, RB Le’Veon Moss, DE Cashius Howell, LB Taurean York, S Dalton Brooks
Notable spring additions: None
Reed is the face of A&M’s offense now. Coach Mike Elko spent the winter cycle upgrading his receivers and D-line, which showed in the spring game. Mississippi State’s Mario Craver and NC State’s Kevin Concepcion both made big plays. DEs T.J. Searcy (Florida) and Dayon Hayes (Colorado) and DT Tyler Onyedim (Iowa State) should be starters or rotation guys, as well as freshman Marco Jones, who had five sacks in the spring game.
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16. Illinois (Previous: 12)
Familiar faces: QB Luke Altmyer, LT J.C. Davis, OLB Gabe Jacas, S Matthew Bailey, DB Xavier Scott
Notable spring additions: DL Carter Hewitt (Northern Iowa)
Notable spring defection: RB Josh McCray (609 yards, 10 TDs in 2024)
I went a bit overboard on the Illini in January, before they lost top returning rusher McCray to Georgia. But there’s still a lot to like coming off a 10-win season. Unsurprisingly, coach Bret Bielema’s team is built up front, with four O-linemen who earned All-Big Ten honors in 2024. Former Wisconsin DL James Thompson Jr. helps fill a need, as does former West Virginia WR Hudson Clement (51 catches, 741 yards).
17. South Carolina (Previous: No. 16)
Familiar faces: QB LaNorris Sellers, WR Nyck Harbor, DEs Dylan Stewart and Bryan Thomas Jr., DB Jalon Kilgore
Notable spring additions: DE Demon Clowney (Ole Miss)
Notable spring defection: OL Jakai Moore (28 career starts, injured in 2024)
Sellers should be one of the stars of the sport after a breakout redshirt freshman season (2,534 yards passing, 674 yards rushing). Freshman WR Malik Clark could become one of his targets. The Gamecocks lost a lot from last year’s dominant D-line. Coach Shane Beamer got help on the interior with Gabriel Brownlow-Dindy (Texas A&M) and Troy Pikes (Georgia Southern). NC State’s Brandon Cisse will help in the secondary.
18. Indiana (Previous: 20)
Familiar faces: WRs Elijah Starrett and Omar Cooper Jr., LB Aiden Fisher, OLB Mikail Kamara, CB D’Angelo Ponds
Notable spring additions: WR Jonathan Brady (Cal; 98 career receptions for 1,317 yards), edge Kellan Wyatt (Maryland; 80 career tackles, 8 1/2 sacks), DE Stephen Daley (Kent State; 51 tackles, 9 TFLs in 2024)
Coach Curt Cignetti used the portal in the winter to reload on offense, landing Cal QB Fernando Mendoza (19 career starts), Maryland RB Roman Hamby (2,276 career rushing yards), Tennessee TE Holden Staes and three potential starters on the O-line, most notably Notre Dame’s Pat Coogan. In the spring, he added two proven pass rushers in Wyatt and Daly. Indiana plays a tougher Big Ten schedule in 2025.
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19. Texas Tech (Previous: NR)
Familiar faces: QB Behren Morton, WR Caleb Douglas, LBs Jacob Rodriguez and Ben Roberts, S Maurion Horn
Notable spring additions: WR Micah Hudson (Texas A&M), C Cash Cleveland (Colorado), DE David Bailey (Stanford)
Notable spring defection: Edge Joseph Adedire (14 career starts)
Texas Tech reportedly spent more than $10 million on its winter portal class, and that was before a seven-figure deal for Bailey, who had 14 1/2 sacks in three seasons. He and Georgia Tech’s Romello Height give coach Joey McGuire two big-time ends, joined by disruptive DTs Lee Hunter (UCF) and Skyler Gill-Howard (NIU). Other impact guys include USC RB Quinten Joyner and Miami (Ohio) WR Reggie Virgil.
20. Michigan (Previous: 18)
Familiar faces: Edges Derrick Moore and TJ Guy, LB Ernest Hausmann, CB Zeke Berry, S Rod Moore
Notable spring additions: RBs CJ Hester (UMass) and John Volker (Princeton), P Luke Bauer (Missouri)
All signs point to five-star freshman QB Bryce Underwood assuming the reins come Week 1. Coach Sherrone Moore needs new skill players to emerge. Alabama RB Justice Haynes is one proven guy, as is Indiana WR Donaven McCulley (48 catches for 644 yards in 2023). Michigan’s defense should again be a strength, with experience across the board. Arkansas’ TJ Metcalf should be a factor in the secondary.
21. Baylor (Previous: 19)
Familiar faces: QB Sawyer Robertson, RB Bryson Washington, WR/KR Josh Cameron, TE Michael Trigg, LB Keaton Thomas
Notable spring additions: WR Louis Brown IV (San Diego State; 38 catches for 620 yards in 2024), CB Caldra Williford (Tennessee Tech; 88 tackles over two seasons)
Baylor has the chance to field one of the nation’s most dangerous offenses, led by Robertson, Washington and four returning O-line starters. Coach Dave Aranda added several capable receivers, including Alabama’s Kobe Prentice. The defense has questions, though; Aranda will count on Oregon LB Emar’rion Winston, FIU LB Travion Barnes (129 tackles in 2024) and Northwestern S Devin Turner (130 career tackles).
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22. Boise State (Previous: 21)
Familiar faces: QB Maddux Madsen, WR Latrell Caples, TE Matt Lauter, Edge Jayden Virgin-Morgan, S Ty Benefield
Notable spring additions: Edge Sterling Lane II (Arizona), S Derek Ganter Jr. (Eastern Washington)
Notable spring defections: LB Andrew Simpson (25 career starts), P James Ferguson-Reynolds (three-year starter)
Boise, which returns its QB1 and four offensive line starters, will be the Group of 5 front-runner again. While there’s no replacing Ashton Jeanty, Fresno State RB Malik Sherrod (172 carries, 966 yards in 2023) was the star of spring and will be joined by promising redshirt freshman Sire Gaines. Boise lost several big names on defense from last year’s Playoff team and saw its D-line thinned by portal exits.
23. Louisville (Previous: No. 22)
Familiar faces: RBs Isaac Brown, WRs Caullin Lacy and Chris Bell, LBs TJ Quinn and Stanquan Clark
Notable spring additions: WRs Dacari Collins (NC State) and TreyShun Hurry (San Jose State), S Joseph Jefferson (Purdue)
Notable spring defection: G Austin Collins (14 starts over two seasons)
Jeff Brohm has the makings of another potent offense with USC QB Miller Moss, who played well in the spring game, two solid running backs and the return of Lacy, a 1,316-yard receiver in 2023 who was injured last season. Brohm stocked up on receiver depth in the spring. Three transfers could start on the O-line. Louisville needs to get much better in pass coverage. Southern CB Rodney Johnson should help.
24. Auburn (Previous: NR)
Familiar faces: WR Cam Coleman, DE Keldric Faulk, LB Demarcus Riddick, CB Kayin Lee, S Sylvester Smith
Notable spring additions: DE James Ash (Florida A&M), LB Caleb Wheatland (Maryland)
I predict Auburn will be one of the most improved teams in the country. Despite going 6-7, it fielded a top-20 defense last year with many young players, nearly all of whom return. Oklahoma QB Jackson Arnold should fare better now that he’ll have a bunch of stud receivers, led by freshman standout Coleman and Georgia Tech’s Eric Singleton Jr. (1,468 yards in two seasons). Some running backs will need to step up.
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25. Kansas State (Previous: No. 23)
Familiar faces: QB Avery Johnson, RB Dylan Edwards, WR Jayce Brown, LB Austin Romaine, S VJ Payne
Notable spring additions: RB Antonio Johnson Jr. (Southeastern Louisiana), OLs JB Nelson (Penn State) and Terrence Enos Jr. (Pittsburgh)
New OC Matt Wells has several proven playmakers in Johnson, Edwards and Brown and TE Garrett Oakley, and K-State added another potential impact receiver in Purdue’s Jaron Tibbs. Head coach Chris Klieman addressed several needs on the offensive line by bringing in Ohio State T George Fitzpatrick, Nelson and Enos Jr. Standout Arizona safety Gunner Maldonado (175 career tackles) was a big get.
Dropped out: No. 13 Tennessee, No. 24 Navy
Just missed: SMU, Iowa, Iowa State, Missouri, Ole Miss
(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Kevin C. Cox, Tim Warner, Carmen Mandato, Jacob Kupferman / Getty Images)
NIL
NCAA Football Oversight Committee expected to recommend potentially significant changes to college football calendar
For the second consecutive offseason, college football’s convoluted calendar could be in for another massive overhaul, according to Yahoo! Sports insider Ross Dellenger.
This season, everyone from coaches to fans have complained about the sport’s overly-congested calendar that includes the coaching carousel, the early signing period, the NCAA Transfer Portal’s two-week window and the College Football Playoff all happening within a span of about two months. In fact, it’s exactly nine weeks between Nov. 17, when Virginia Tech kicked off this year’s coaching carousel by hiring James Franklin, and Jan. 19, when the CFP National Championship Game will be played in Miami.
Ahead of last week’s College Football Playoff quarterfinals, former Alabama coach-turned-ESPN analyst Nick Saban once again called for widespread changes to the sports’ current calendar during last week’s ESPN College GameDay: “We need to change the calendar.” As it turns out, college football’s powers-that-be heard Saban’s call and plan to take action as soon as next week’s AFCA Convention.
Dellenger reported the NCAA Football Oversight Committee, led by Georgia athletic director Josh Brooks and Buffalo AD Mark Alnutt, is set to examine and address college football’s challenging calendar, with the expection significant changes could be recommended as soon as this upcoming offseason.
“We’re trying to take a step back and look at everything in totality so we’re not doing one-offs that have an impact on other parts of the calendar,” Brooks told Dellenger. “We’ve got to take a 30,000-foot view and see how everything could be better.”
SEC commissioner Greg Sankey proposes eliminating early signing period in December
Among those changes could be the elimination of the December early signing period, a suggestion SEC commissioner Greg Sankey pushed during last week’s Sugar Bowl between No. 3 Georgia and No. 6 Ole Miss in New Orleans. “Put it back in February, maybe even mid-February,” Sankey told Dellenger.
Other changes that could be up for debate include potentially moving the college football regular season up a week to what is now considered “Week 0,” altering the current CFP schedule of games, further pushing back the transfer portal window, and possibly adding Spring and Summer access periods, per Dellenger. The moves could further align college football with a NFL-like format that completely separates the postseason, the draft and free agency across several months. It’s something Saban has been calling for for awhile.
“Do the same thing in college football and you wouldn’t have these issues with coaches changing jobs, because everybody could finish the season with their team, which is what’s best for the players — that’s No. 1,” Saban added. “Because there’d be no hurry. Because now there’s a hurry because all the recruiting calendar is (all about) ‘hurry up and get a coach or you can’t take advantage of an early signing date and you can’t take advantage of (the) portal.’”
— On3’s Thomas Goldkamp contributed to this report.
NIL
Here’s how much Group of 6 football players cost and where Nevada fits in
On its official social-media pages, the Nevada football team has been posting graphics of returning players with the phrase “Let’s run it back.”
This is a new phenomenon in roster building. A couple of years ago, you could simply assume players with remaining eligibility would return to school unless they declared for the NFL draft.
Now, you have schools announcing they’ve reached a “deal” to retain a player, as Ole Miss did today with its star running back Kewan Lacy.
Roster building in college football is in unchartered territory with unlimited transfers, unlimited name, image and likeness compensation and legalized revenue sharing where athletic departments can directly pay athletes.
To compete at the top of the FBS, football programs need $20 million-plus budgets. Good quarterbacks make in excess of $3.5 million a year, which is in line with the salary of a late first-round draft pick. Exact compensation numbers remain an inexact science as most are not public record despite these schools largely being public institutions. But The Athletic surveyed industry experts to get a feel for how much players make on the transfer market, both in the Power 4 and Group of 6, with a vast difference between the two.
The Athletic writes: The rates for transfers who sign with Group of 5 schools are much lower because roster budgets are much smaller than at their Power 4 counterparts. While Power 4 programs’ football roster budgets can range from $13 million up to $30 million, G5 schools mostly ranged between $1 million and $10 million in 2025. The vast majority of Group of 5 schools have roster budgets below $5 million, with a few exceptions. The top spending schools in the American, like USF, Memphis and Tulane, are believed to be above that.
The Athletic said Group of 6 quarterbacks top out “around $500,000 or $600,000” with a range of $300,000 to $400,000 for schools with a $3 million budget, which is around 10 percent of that budget. Starting running backs and tight ends top out around $200,000 to $250,000 with star receivers around $300,000 and offensive tackles at $300,000 to $400,000. On defense, linemen max out around $250,000 to $300,000 with linebackers and defensive backs in the $150,000 to $200,000 range. Start adding those up and its gets real expensive real fast.
Those are the marks for the top players in the Group of 6 with the floor for most players at that level in the five figures, although some Group of 6 players have to “settle” for a full-ride scholarship. Oh, the humanity! The Athletic said a Group of 6 consensus is hard to find because budgets wildly with The American having the most robust NIL offerings. Next in line in 2026 would be the Pac-12 with the Mountain West and Sun Belt behind them.
One of the deciding factors when the Pac-12 poached the MW in September 2024 was football investment with the larger-budget schools getting invitations to the rebuilt Pac-12. Again, specific numbers are hard to pin down, but Washington State president Betsy Cantwell is asking donors for $5 million in NIL money for new coach Kirby Moore after saying the Cougars were last among Pac-12 programs (current and future) in NIL this season. So, lets say the Pac-12 average for a football roster is $5 million. And let’s say the new MW average is around $2 million, which might be an ambitious mark.
It’s been reported Wyoming, a remaining MW school, hovers around $1.4 million. Hawaii, another remaining MW school, is asking state lawmakers for $5 million annually in NIL money for all of its sports, and you’d have to think at least half of that money would go to football. Nevada football’s NIL and revenue sharing budget is unknown, but I imagine is was in the lower quarter of the MW this season with $1 million to $1.5 million a reasonable ballpark, which doesn’t really cut it these days.
As part of its “Let’s run it back” announcements, Nevada said it has retained offensive lineman Zach Cochnauer, who had Power 4 offers, and defensive lineman Dylan LaBarbera, a first-team All-MW pick in 2025 who would have had Power 4 offers if he entered the portal. Those were huge “keeps” that had to cost Nevada six figures each. I’m sure both could have gotten bigger offers — probably by double — from Power 4 schools.
Still, Nevada has lost 21 players to the transfer portal with three — defensive end Jonathan Maldonado (Ole Miss), punter Bailey Ettridge (Oregon) and kicker Keaton Emmett (Oregon) — already committing to power-conference opponents. That’s right, Nevada couldn’t even afford to keep its starting punter and backup kicker. A few more Wolf Pack transfers should eventually land at Power 4 schools. That’s part of doing business these days.
Of Nevada’s 24 primary starters last season — 11 on offense, 11 on defense, kicker, punter — the Wolf Pack has retained just four in LaBarbera, Cochnauer, offensive guard Snoop Leota-Amaama and quarterback Carter Jones, with the latter of those two starting six and seven games, respectively. The Wolf Pack has lost seven starters to transfer and had 12 graduate (the nickel position on defense didn’t have a full-time starter).
Candidly, retaining four starters while losing seven to transfer is a good result given what LaBarbera and Cochnauer could have made on the open market. This kind of attrition will continue until Nevada gets a more competitive NIL budget that can pay the going Group of 6 rate, which, if the numbers provided by The Athletic are accurate, is around $5 million for a starting 24. The price of doing business continues to increase.
Columnist Chris Murray provides insight on Northern Nevada sports. Contact him at crmurray@sbgtv.com or follow him on Twitter at @ByChrisMurray.
NIL
Jon Sumrall: ‘Common Sense’ Can Fix College Football, Credits Ole Miss In Portal
There is an ongoing debate around college football centered around how to fix the sport, as it pertains to the calendar which coaches and players have to abide by. The two main topics seem to be the transfer portal, along with the timing of the CFP.
As you have most certainly noticed over the past month, there have been numerous coaches who have taken other jobs while also participating in the playoff. None of these moves have garnered the attention of Lane Kiffin, who left Ole Miss for LSU right before the Rebels postseason run.
But, lost in the shuffle of daily news simmering out of Baton Rouge are other coaches like Florida’s Jon Sumrall, who coached two teams during a chaotic stretch which saw Tulane face Ole Miss in the first round of the college football playoff.
The same could be said for Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein, who is the new head coach at Kentucky, while defensive coordinator Tosh Lupoi accepted the Cal Bears head coaching position.
Both of these assistants have stuck with Oregon during its CFP run and will be on the sideline Friday night when the Ducks face Indiana for a spot in the national championship.
So, while making sure both of their new jobs are taken care of when it comes to roster management and setting up for future success, they are still helping Dan Lanning prepare for a rematch against the Hoosiers.
College Football Calendar Can Be Fixed, Right?
But, as Gators head coach Jon Sumrall pointed out during an interview with OutKick’s Hot Mic crew of Jonathan Hutton and Chad Withrow, all it takes is a little common sense to fix the calendar.
This is obviously easier said than done, with the college football playoff still ongoing, and the transfer portal is only open for just over one more week. So, how do they fix it?
“In the NFL, they’ve got this thing figured out where they do this thing called football season,” Sumrall quipped. “At the end of football season, you can have coach movement and player movement, but nobody can leave until the season’s over, unless someone is traded. Then, after the season is over, coaches and players can move …
“How can we change that in our world? Move the season up, start the playoffs earlier. End the playoffs earlier, closer to January 1, like we used to do. I think there is a way we can get the national championship game back closer to January 1st, and then everybody right now would be focused on just player movement.”
And while most of that sounds easy, I don’t know how many leaders running college football think the same way.
For Sumrall, it might be a little bit too easy.
“I don’t think it’s that complicated. I do think it takes common sense, and I don’t know how many people got that.”
In a world in which players are paid six to seven figures to play football, there are still archaic rules around the sport, which make zero sense to a coach like Jon Sumrall. And, I imagine he’s not alone in his thinking.
“We give out Jordan Brand shoes here, because we’re a Jumpman school,” Sumrall noted. “So, that’s like a cool, hip thing. And I’ve got all those Jordan’s on my desk here, but we can’t give them to the players after their careers are over because the monetary value is too great. It’s called an extra-benefit.
“I’m like, the shoes are worth a couple-hundred bucks, I don’t know maybe a couple thousand bucks, I don’t know how much they’re worth. But, we’re already paying these dudes. Why can’t we give them these shoes?”
Yes, these are current dilemmas ongoing within college athletics. Don’t give them shoes!!
Sumrall Credits Ole Miss For Putting Together Strong NIL Presence
The former Tulane coach is now doing his best to adjust to life within the SEC, but he does have a perspective on CFP semifinalist Ole Miss, who will battle Miami on Thursday night in the Fiesta Bowl.
“They beat us 45-10 in Game 1, and 41-10 in Game2. They look a lot the same to me. They kicked our ass both times.”
But, it’s not only about what you see on the field with the Rebels. How Ole Miss has been able to retain players during this time period as the transfer portal runs wild is a testament to what Pete Golding has been able to do during chaotic times in Oxford.
Trinidad Chambliss’ Ole Miss Future Hinges On NCAA Waiver — New NIL Deal Raises Stakes With Potential Lawsuit
If the Rebels coach did not have such a solid foundation built by athletic director Keith Carter, along with Walker Jones of the Grove Collective, they would not be retaining players like Kewan Lacy, along with Trinidad Chambliss pending his NCAA waiver.
For that, Jon Sumrall is doing his best in Florida to replicate the structure built in Oxford, and build that same kind of foundation in Gainesville.
“We talked about alignment, structure and organization within the portal. I think Ole Miss has had great success. Not to take away anything from Lane, but Keith Carter, Walker Jones, not taking anything away from Pete (Golding) either. But Ole Miss, they’re doing this NIL, rev-share stuff, as good as anybody in America.
“They’re paying dudes, and they are writing bigger checks. And, kudos to them. They’ve got a great plan that we all need to learn from and emulate. So, they’re a really good football team. I didn’t see many weaknesses when we played them in Game 1 or 2.”
Continue following OutKick and Trey Wallace for the latest news around college football, as we get you prepared for the CFP semifinals later this week!
NIL
RB Jadan Baugh affirms commitment to Florida; spurns Texas’ pursuit of transfer

Jadan Baugh will return to the Florida Gators for the 2026 season. The star running back announced his decision to run it back in Gainesville on Instagram on Tuesday.
That came after ample speculation he could follow former Florida running backs coach Jabbar Juluke to Texas. The Longhorns have a need for a new starting running back after the departure of Tre Wisner (and others) from Austin. The Gators put up a strong push to retain Baugh, as keeping the SEC’s third-leading rusher from 2025 in Gainesville became a top priority for Jon Sumrall and the new Florida staff.
As reported by CBS Sports’ Richard Johnson, the expectation was that Baugh would command more than $1 million on the transfer portal market as part of the surge in price for star backs this season. The question was less whether Florida would be willing to spend on Baugh, but more if Baugh would view the Gators under Sumrall as the best opportunity for him. Texas figured to offer a starting spot, a familiar face in Juluke and the opportunity for ample attention in the backfield alongside quarterback Arch Manning.
However, Baugh opted to stick around in Florida as the Gators seem to have met his asking price and answered any questions he might’ve had about how the offense will operate in 2026.
With former Georgia Tech offensive coordinator Buster Faulkner making the move to Gainesville — and bringing quarterback Aaron Philo with him — the expectation is the Gators will lean on the ground game in 2026 similarly to the Yellow Jackets in 2025. Faulkner was surely part of the sales pitch to Baugh, and he bought in on that vision.
Baugh rushed for 1,170 yards and eight touchdowns on 220 carries this season, with his 266 yards against Florida State in the Gators’ season finale serving as an exclamation point on his year. Now he’ll be back for his junior campaign in Gainesville in a big victory for Sumrall in retaining a top talent, fending off the Longhorns and others hoping to poach the star back and further weaken the Gators’ roster.
NIL
Urban Meyer Sends Strong Message About Colorado New Athletic Director
When the Colorado Buffaloes named Fernando Lovo as their next athletic director, the move resonated far beyond Boulder, drawing attention from some of the most prominent figures in college football.

Among those offering the loudest praise was three-time national champion coach Urban Meyer, who witnessed firsthand Lovo’s rise from a student assistant at Florida to an indispensable executive at Ohio State and then the NFL.
The Urban Meyer Connection and a Proven Pedigree

“He’s the best at what he does, regardless of the responsibility,” Meyer said of Lovo. “He will be a great athletic director. He’s the ultimate team player with extremely high character and high work ethic. He was always a guy I could trust. When he was an undergraduate at Florida, very early on… his reputation started to make its way to me as the head coach. He was a guy that I brought with me to Ohio State. He’s elite.”
It’s an endorsement that carries immense weight because it’s rooted in firsthand observation of a championship-caliber work ethic. For Lovo, moving from Florida to Ohio State alongside Meyer wasn’t just a career jump; it was a testament to his ability to manage the high-pressure, high-stakes ecosystem of elite college football.
Meyer’s success was built on surrounding himself with people who could handle the grind of a championship program, and Lovo was a primary pillar in that structure. At Florida, Lovo was part of the 2008 National Championship staff working as an equipment manager. He then followed Meyer to Ohio State, where he helped the Buckeyes win the first-ever College Football Playoff National Championship in 2014.

To be hand-picked by one of the most demanding and successful coaches in the history of the sport speaks volumes about Lovo’s operational brilliance and the high regard Meyer held for him, even early in his career.
But it isn’t just about Lovo’s resume; it’s about the “trust” Meyer mentioned. In the modern era of college athletics, an athletic director must be more than a figurehead; they must be a tactical partner who understands the nuances of football operations, NIL, and revenue generation. Meyer’s public backing confirms that Lovo possesses the rare combination of character and the relentless work ethic required to navigate Colorado through its current financial and competitive hurdles.
Alignment with the “Coach Prime” Vision

While Rick George was the architect of the Deion Sanders hire, the future of Colorado football now rests in the synergy between Lovo and “Coach Prime.” Though early indications suggest the two are already in lockstep. Sanders, who participated in the hiring process, was quick to express his enthusiasm for Lovo’s arrival, emphasizing the need for a leader who understands the “city and wonderful university.”
“He is a man of character and the type of leader this department, city and wonderful university deserves,” Sanders said. “He has a great knowledge of football and understands what it takes to win in today’s game. I’m motivated to show all of our incredible fans the tremendous heights we will take this program.”
For Colorado to reach those “heights,” the relationship must mirror the professional alignment George and Sanders shared. Lovo’s background as a “football guy” first ensures that he speaks the same language as Sanders, providing the administrative support that “Coach Prime” will need.
MORE: Zac Taylor Doesn’t Hold Back About Shedeur Sanders’ Impact at Colorado
MORE: Colorado’s Latest Transfer Portal Departure Adds To Buffaloes’ Growing Concerns
MORE: Best Transfer Portal Fits For Former Colorado Cornerback DJ McKinney
Why the Lovo Hire Is Pivotal for Colorado

Colorado’s decision to hire Fernando Lovo comes at a defining moment for the university. Rising costs, NIL, revenue sharing, facility demands, and increasing competitive pressure in the Big 12 have fundamentally reshaped the role of the athletic director. However, Lovo’s track record at New Mexico, where he helped lead the department to a record revenue year and a 17.6 percent budget increase in just twelve months, aligns perfectly with what CU’s Board of Regents set out to find.
He’s no longer just a rising name in athletic administration. He brings years of hands-on experience in revenue generation, operational restructuring, and facility management—areas that have become inseparable from competitive success at the Power Four level.
With his experience and the trust and support of influential voices like Urban Meyer and “Coach Prime,” Lovo steps into Boulder with momentum already behind him. Now, the task is turning that momentum into results.
NIL
Missouri football star DE Damon Wilson to enter transfer portal
Updated Jan. 6, 2026, 12:55 p.m. CT
The offseason decision for Damon Wilson II appeared to be two-fold: Return to Columbia, or head to the NFL as a junior.
There was a third option, which came in a surprise announcement on Tuesday afternoon.
Wilson, the star Missouri football defensive end, will enter the transfer portal, he posted to Instagram on Tuesday. The news was first reported by Hayes Fawcett and On3. The move does not necessarily mean Wilson won’t head to the NFL, where he had received some top-100 projections for the 2026 draft.
But it appears that if Wilson remains in college, it will not be at Mizzou.
The defensive end was one of the SEC’s leading pass rushers in 2026, recording 54 total pressures across 13 games. That included a team-high eight sacks.
Wilson only spent one season with Missouri after transferring to the Tigers from Georgia, where he spent two seasons.
The defensive end and his former school have become one of the stories of the college football offseason, as they have each filed litigation against one another over an NIL dispute.
UGA is attempting to take Wilson into arbitration and is seeking $390,000 in liquidated damages from the star edge rusher, who transferred to the Tigers in January 2025, over what the university views as an unfulfilled contract with the Bulldogs’ former NIL collective, Classic City Collective.
Wilson then countersued Georgia athletics, a move countering a Georgia lawsuit filed against Wilson earlier this year and escalating what was already a novel and likely first-of-its-kind case over an NIL contract dispute.

In response, escalating what was already an attempt at a potentially precedent-setting case, Wilson’s attorneys allege that his former team “falsely (told) at least three programs” unnamed Power Four teams that “Wilson would be subject to a $1.2 million buyout.”
Wilson’s suit also alleges that Georgia violated a confidentiality provision on his term sheet, which was provided as part of the UGA lawsuit in a public court filing.
Missouri is already expected to lose starting defensive end Zion Young to eligibility issues and backups Nate Johnson and Javion Hilson to the transfer portal, so defensive end is likely to be a priority target in the portal, which is open for entries through Jan. 16.
The Tigers can return rotation members Darris Smith and Langden Kitchen, as well as true freshman Daeden Hopkins. Mizzou signed top JUCO recruit Demarcus Johnson in its Class of 2026, too.
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