NIL
Saturday Scrimmage Recap – West Virginia University Athletics
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – West Virginia had its first major scrimmage of fall training camp Saturday morning inside Milan Puskar Stadium. Coach Rich Rodriguez said the team got about 100 plays in for the coaching staff to evaluate.
“Everybody was getting reps, which was good to see,” he said. “Everybody was live, including the quarterbacks and they all got hit a little bit and we needed to see that.”
Overall, Rodriguez thought it was a productive first scrimmage for his transfer-laden football squad.
“From a head coach standpoint, to see the defense win some and the offense win some, that’s probably a pretty good thing,” he said. “Now, it’s on to the next thing.”
Some scrimmage notables, according to Rodriguez:
* He thought all of the quarterbacks ran competitively today, but he also saw some eyes in the wrong places at times.
“There are a lot of decisions for them to make, so we’ve got to get that corrected,” he observed. “I didn’t see a lot of missed tackles; I thought we tackled okay. The one thing we did have was way too many penalties. We had a full Big 12 crew here and we had four or five procedure penalties, which should never happen. We had three or so holding penalties and those are like turnovers.
“We had a critical offsides on fourth and four, and that should never happen. Then we had one unsportsmanlike conduct after a touchdown,” he added. “I just told the guy the next time that happens just keep running into the locker room.”
* The tackling aspect of the scrimmage was actually an encouraging sign, according to Rodriguez.
“We’ve had a couple of live periods and part of it is being a dynamic receiver or runner and making you miss,” he said. “I hope we have some of that and there were a couple of instances when we missed some tackles, but I thought we rallied to the ball okay on defense.
“We’re still not getting enough push on the O-line up front in short yardage situations, and I think we’re stalemating too much,” Rodriguez mentioned. “We’re not getting off the ball and changing the line of scrimmage in a lot of short yardage situations today.”
* Both sides of the ball seemed to handle the game planning and scheming that went on today from the offenses and the defenses. Rodriguez said he’s purposeful about not sharing plans before practices so both units can adjust on the fly.
“I normally restrict things when we’ve got the younger guys in there,” he explained. “But hell, nowadays, is there really a younger group? Maybe next year there will be a younger group, but they’re all new so I said, ‘What the heck, just throw everything at them and just go out and play.’
“From an assignment standpoint, we missed a couple defensively, and then offensively, I didn’t think there was a lot of missed assignments, but there were a couple easy ones that we can correct,” he said. “We are not a walk and talk and teach type of tempo at practice.
“Now, we have walk-throughs, of course, every day and that’s when we get our teaching done, but when we’re practicing there is not a lot of slow, deliberate (play calls) because I want our practices to be short and crisp.”
* The coach said he purposely had his assistants on the sidelines and not yelling out instructions so they could evaluate the players’ ability to process things in real time today. “I didn’t want them shouting out or yelling out what to do so those guys could be in game mode,” he said.
* The coach said there was no live special teams work this morning, but that will be in the practice planning for next week.
“We kicked some field goals and punted a couple of times,” he said. “I wanted to do more but we’re going to have one day next week we will go live with special teams just to see what we’ve got there.”
He mentioned place kicking right now is still a three-man battle between Coastal Carolina transfer Kade Hensley, Tulane transfer Ethan Head and holdover RJ Kocan.
“We’ve got three guys battling pretty good right there,” he said. “It’s all going to be earned. I need to put some pressure on our field goal kickers at the end of practice.”
Both Head and Hensley have experience kicking field goals in college games, which is helpful.
The coach indicated Head is probably the “leader in the clubhouse” on kickoffs right now.
“That’s one of the reasons (we brought him in). I don’t know what his percentage was of touchbacks, but it was pretty high. He’s got a strong leg,” he said.
Generally, Rodriguez said he prefers his kickoffs to go into or through the end zone.
“If we can kick it out, we’ll kick it out,” he said. “Sometimes, if you’ve got wind in your face, you’ll do an alternate kick, a sky kick or a squib kick or something like that. If you don’t want them to have any return at all, you’ll do a squib kick.”
Typically, the leading kickoff coverage units in the country are the ones who don’t cover a lot of kickoffs because their kicker has a strong enough leg to kick it deep into the end zone.
* Some of the cadence and ball get-off issues Rodriguez was concerned about earlier this week were improved this morning.
“Now, again, we had five procedure penalties,” he noted. “Some of that was not the quarterback’s cadence; some of it was our center wasn’t consistent in his snaps. When the cadence goes the center should be snapping the ball, so we’re still not consistent every time and the short yardage stuff, we ought to be in tune with that.”
* Rodriguez thought having the Big 12 officiating crew on the field today was extremely helpful to him and his staff. “I was able to ask them some questions on how they were going to manage this or that, and some of them are seeing us for the first time and how we go about our business in a game,” he explained. “I thought that was really valuable and we need more of that, for sure.”
* The coach was asked specifically today about 6-foot-5, 288-pound Missouri transfer Eddie Kelly Jr., who has one year of college football eligibility left.
“He’s a one-year guy we brought in to make an impact and he’s worked hard,” Rodriguez opined. “He’s in better shape than he was when he got here. I think he loves football, but everything is different for him in a new system and all that. I think he’s got a chance to contribute, and you can’t have enough of those guys. Big guys who can maybe rush the passer, those are pretty valuable.”
* Among the pass catchers, he singled out North Carolina tight end transfer Ryan Ward’s performance during today’s scrimmage. The 6-foot-4, 240-pound, redshirt freshman made a couple of touchdown catches during the team and situational portions of the scrimmage.
“Ryan Ward made a big catch and the tight ends looked like they had a pretty good day blocking,” he observed. “All of the slot receivers had some big catches today. I don’t know if we had any (catches) on the perimeter, but I thought the quarterbacks ran competitively.
“This was really the first time they were live,” he added. “Sometimes they ran a little sideways, but I thought they were pretty competitive running today.”
* As far as first scrimmages go, Rodriguez thought some of the penalties were to be expected with a full officiating crew on the field and the coaches on the sidelines.
“I think we put the ball on the ground twice, which is totally unacceptable, and defensively, I don’t think we attacked the ball as much as we can,” he said. “That’s a big point of emphasis at all levels – guys that are punching the ball, tackling the ball and getting it out, especially in short yardage situations. For a first scrimmage, there is plenty to teach off of.”
* The coach thought redshirt freshman running back Diore Hubbard showed a few things today and there were a few more running backs available to work with this morning. He mentioned a couple of times that the backs needed to stick their foot in the ground and get the required yardage in short-yardage situations.
Presently, the one missing piece in the backfield is a bigger, physical runner to help with that. The quarterbacks are the biggest ball carriers on the team right now.
“We are still actively recruiting (running backs),” Rodriguez said. “When does school start, the 20th? So, we’ll see.”
* Defensive coordinator Zac Alley gave his instant analysis of today’s practice as well.
“We started fast,” he said. “The first couple of series we got off the field and did a good job executing and near the end of practice I felt like we just fell off a little bit. I challenged the guys afterward just to maintain from the first play of the first quarter to the last play of the fourth quarter. Both are important and you don’t know which one is going to win the game.”
Overall, the tackling from his guys was encouraging.
“It was one of the better overall first scrimmages I’ve had,” he admitted. “Usually, you get out there the first day and you are whiffing left and right because you haven’t actually had to go body-on-body at any point up to that time, but I felt like, overall, we tackled pretty well today compared to first scrimmages of the past. Hopefully we can build on that.”
* Alley said he front-loads the installation of his defensive packages and expects his guys to know everything as soon as possible.
“I tell them, ‘Just because you are a freshman linebacker, it doesn’t mean Robert Morris puts a freshman running back in, so you better be able to execute all the calls the same way,'” he explained. “The expectation is everybody knows everything that we do every time. I’d say some of the older guys who are more experienced definitely have a good grasp, and some of the younger guys it’s probably a little fast for them. The good news is we still have three weeks until we play.”
No on-field activities are scheduled for Sunday.
NIL
$2.4 million QB connected to major college football program in transfer portal
Cincinnati closed the 2025 season at 7–5 (5–4 Big 12) and will face Navy in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl on January 2, marking the Bearcats’ first bowl appearance since joining the Big 12 and since head coach Scott Satterfield took over in 2023.
Cincinnati rattled off seven straight wins midseason but dropped its final four games to close the regular slate before receiving the bowl invitation.
Quarterback Brendan Sorsby started 12 games for Cincinnati in 2025 and finished with 2,800 passing yards, 27 passing TDs, and five interceptions (61.6% completion, 155.15 passer rating), adding 100 carries for 580 rushing yards and nine rushing touchdowns.
A Denton/Lake Dallas (Texas) product, Sorsby was a three-star recruit who signed with Indiana (redshirted 2022, started in 2023) before transferring to Cincinnati in 2024.
However, Sorsby notified Cincinnati and publicly confirmed on December 15 that he will test the transfer portal while awaiting an NFL draft grade.
Since then, multiple programs have reportedly shown interest, with some NIL offers rumored to approach $5 million, a figure that would rank among the highest in college football.
On3’s NIL tracker currently values Sorsby at approximately $2.4 million, placing him among the higher-valued quarterbacks in the college game.
On Friday, Fox Sports’ Laken Litman included Oregon among the programs expected to pursue a quarterback through the transfer portal and identified Sorsby as a “top quarterback from the portal,” along with Texas Tech, Indiana, and Oklahoma.

Oregon’s starter, Dante Moore, is widely regarded as a likely high NFL Draft selection and has not publicly committed to returning, stating that he has yet to make a final decision.
With a young and largely unproven group of quarterbacks behind him on the depth chart, speculation has been that Dan Lanning and his staff could pursue a transfer portal quarterback should Moore declare.
If Moore declares for the draft, Oregon would likely seek an experienced, pro-ready signal-caller capable of operating a tempo-based offense while sustaining recruiting and NIL momentum.
Sorsby’s size (6’3″, 235 pounds), proven starter experience, marketplace value, and dual-threat rushing ability, a trait Oregon has used successfully, would make him an immediate candidate.
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- Major college football program surges as candidate for 4,000-yard QB
NIL
Damon Wilson seeks denial for arbitration in NIL dispute with Georgia
Updated Dec. 28, 2025, 1:33 p.m. ET
Former Georgia football defensive end Damon Wilson is asking an Athens-Clarke County Superior Court judge to deny Georgia athletics’ attempt to go to arbitration on what it contends is Wilson breaking an NIL contract when he entered the transfer portal.
Georgia sued Wilson, seeking $390,000 in liquidated damages after he agreed to an NIL deal with Classic City Collective and transferred weeks later. He played this season at Missouri where he was second-team All-SEC.
NIL
Kyle Whittingham reveals if he had any hesitation on Michigan with controversy, investigation around program
Michigan has been in hot water the past few years. In 2023, the football program was exposed for participating in an illegal sign-stealing scheme. This year, the school fired head coach Sherrone Moore after he was charged with felony third-degree home invasion and two misdemeanors.
Now, the school is thoroughly investigating its entire football program for any other signs of misconduct. Nonetheless, the program is seemingly heading in a new direction after hiring Kyle Whittingham to be its next head coach.
Whittingham is a well-respected figure in the college football community and was Utah‘s head coach from 2005-25. During his introductory press conference on Sunday, Whittingham revealed whether he hesitated to join the Wolverines due to the controversy surrounding Michigan.
“I didn’t have any hesitation. There’s some issues, missteps that are being taken care of, but the key is the players are solid,” Whittingham said. “The players here are rock-solid. None of those issues, none of those things that we’re dealing with involve the players. And to their credit, they just kept grinding and kept after it.
“I’m so impressed with that because there was a lot of distractions and a lot of adversity, I guess you can say. But, I got no doubt that everything’s going to be handled properly. We’ll see. I’m not knowledgeable enough and privy enough to exactly what’s going on in the details, but I’ve got full confidence that we’ll come out of this just fine.”
Michigan doesn’t have a talent problem. The team posted a 9-3 record in the regular season, including a 7-2 mark in conference play. The Wolverines are expected to return several key players as well, most notably quarterback Bryce Underwood.
Underwood is a freshman this season, but started in all 12 of Michigan’s regular-season games. While Underwood didn’t regularly dominate opponents, he showed promising flashes and will be pivotal to Michigan’s future success.
Kyle Whittingham isn’t allowing any administrative measures to affect his relationships with Michigan’s players. After all, he knows those relationships will be the key to a successful first year in Ann Arbor.
“My culture is going to be with the players. What I’m concerned with is the players,” Whittingham said. “I certainly know the general gist of what transpired, in this series of, I guess we’ll call them unfortunate events, but not really fazing me.
“The players are a great group of kids. They’re hungry. They got a lot of want-to in them and that’s where my focus is. I focus on coaching the team, and everything else be handled in due time and in due process.”
NIL
Kyle Whittingham introduced as Michigan football coach
Updated Dec. 28, 2025, 11:53 a.m. ET
Highlights from the press conference Sunday to introduce Kyle Whittingham as Michigan’s new head football coach:
➤On how someone from the outside will reset the culture: “My culture is going to be with the players.” Whittingham said he knows the “gist” of what transpired in the investigation and firing of former head coach Sherrone Moore, but says his focus is on the players and hopes the university and program will handle the rest.
➤On his conversation with starting quarterback Bryce Underwood: “Quarterbacks have to have that ‘it’ factor, and he has that ‘it’ factor.” Believes that Underwood has potential and can’t wait to work with him.
➤On if his 21 years at Utah prepared him for a top-five job in college football: “Well, I hope so. I definitely learned a lot, it was my first head coaching job. … I don’t care how much you think you’re ready.” Notes how the transfer portal, NIL, etc. have changed the college football landscape, but hopes his lessons have prepared him to be fully equipped for this position.
➤On if he was treated fairly in his final years at Utah: Again states it was his decision to step down at Utah, gives praise to the administration in Utah for being supportive throughout the years. Talks about the community, the sellouts, says it was an enjoyable ride in Salt Lake City.
➤On what he’ll do during the week with the team during their bowl game prep: Currently wants to stay out of the way during the bowl week, has already talked to a few players such as Bryce Underwood and a few coaches, but won’t be hands-on.
➤On expectations: Believes in the 10-win mark, Big Ten championship, and College Football Playoff as expectations during his tenure as head coach.
➤On the type of culture he wants to build: “Family culture, without a doubt.” Whittingham said he wants to build a culture where no one is above the team, and where everyone buys in. Believes in the challenge of roster turnover that other programs face, but wants to retain players currently in the program.
➤On bringing in new staff: “You gotta bring in guys that you’re familiar with that you trust.” Whittingham said he’s talked with Urban Meyer, said there will be a few faces in the current staff that will stay but highly anticipates there will be new guys on staff.
➤On how he’ll use the resources to build and recruit his rosters: “We got excellent resources here.” Talks about the brand and the NIL opportunities that come with being a part of the Michigan brand.
➤On the opportunity to become Michigan head coach after stepping down as Utah’s head coach: Said he didn’t expect the job to open up. Already committed to stepping down as Utah’s head coach a day before the Michigan job became available.
➤What fans can expect from his teams: “Our team will fall in line to what Michigan is used to.” He said he used to watch old Michigan vs. Ohio State games, mostly the battles between Bo Schembechler and Woody Hayes, wants his teams to show physicality during games.
➤On why he took the job: “It’s obvious, it’s Michigan,” saying it’s one of the top five jobs in the country in terms of college football. States that he wants to retain players currently on the roster and those coming in for their first season.
➤Opening statement: “I can say, without question, what an honor and privilege it is to be the head coach of this program.” Noted that he stepped down from his position in Utah two weeks ago, did not know if he was done coaching, but decided to take the Michigan job.
➤Warde Manuel leads with an opening statement, giving a summary of Kyle Whittingham’s record and success at Utah in his 21 seasons as head coach, highlighting Whittingham’s players in their play on the field and the graduation rate. Manuel noted that Whittingham’s high character came through during multiple conversations through the hiring process.
Press conference preview
Kyle Whittingham is set to be introduced as Michigan’s new head football coach during a press conference on Sunday at 11 a.m.
The event will take place at the Hyatt Regency Orlando. The Wolverines are in Orlando for the Citrus Bowl, and they will face Texas on Wednesday at 3 p.m. at Camping World Stadium.
Whittingham comes to Michigan after serving as head football coach at Utah for 21 seasons, compiling a 177-88 overall record.
Detroit News contributor Kameron Goodwill will provide live updates throughout Sunday’s press conference.
Kyle Whittingham record
Head coaching record: Utah, 2005-2025, 177-88 overall, including 11-6 in bowl games.
Championships: One Mountain West title (2008), two Pac-12 titles (2021, 2022), four Pac-12 division titles (2015, 2018, 2019, 2021).
Awards: AFCA Coach of the Year (2008), Bear Bryant Award (2008), Mountain West Coach of the Year (2008), Bobby Dodd Award (2019), Pac-12 Coach of the Year (2019, 2021).
Playing career: Whittingham earned undergraduate (1984) and graduate (1987) degrees from BYU. He was a linebacker for the Cougars from 1978-81, earning first-team All-WAC and WAC Defensive Player of the Year awards in 1981.
NIL
The Clemson Insider
CLEMSON — From time to time, we have heard Dabo Swinney say, “the proof is in the pudding.”
During Clemson’s run from 2015-’20 in the College Football Playoff, there was plenty of proof of Clemson having an elite football program. The argument was strong — 79 wins, 6 ACC Championships, 6 College Football Playoff appearances, 4 National Championship Game appearances and 2 National Championships.
However, the same argument can now be made that the Clemson Football program is no longer an elite program. And like Swinney says, “the proof is in the pudding.”
Since 2021, the Clemson Football Program has 47 wins, 2 ACC Championships and 1 CFP appearance and that is it.
Now, it is probably not fair to expect the Tigers to play for a national championship in each of the last five years like it did from 2015-’19. However, it is fair to expect the program to compete for one, and right now that is not really happening. And Dabo Swinney knows it.
You could see the look of despair on his face following Saturday’s embarrassing performance to Penn State in the Pinstripe Bowl. A game in which the Tigers did not look like a competent football team.
There was miscommunication. There was questionable play calling on both sides of the ball. There was a lack of execution. There were a lot of things that went wrong.
It was a disaster.
And yes, Clemson was playing without a lot of players, but so was Penn State, and the Nittany Lions were coached by an interim head coach, plus a staff full of coaches who were leaving for other programs after the game. And Penn State looked way more competent as a football team and program.
Do you want to know why Penn State dominated the Tigers in the second half of Saturday’s game at Yankee Stadium in New York, N.Y.? It had better depth than Clemson.
Why is that true?
Because Penn State, despite their struggles this season, has invested more in trying to build its roster through the transfer portal and NIL, way more than Clemson has at least.
And, as Swinney says, “the proof is in the pudding.”
When comparing the Clemson program in the pre-NIL-and-transfer-portal era to the current era, there is no comparison. The Tigers won 91.5 percent of their games in the previous five-year stretch. In the last five years since the transfer-portal and NIL took over college athletics, Clemson has won 70.1 percent of its games.
However, in the previous five-year stretch, when playing the top programs in college football, the Tigers were 14-4 (.778). In the last five seasons, they are 1-8 (.125), and that is the most telling part of all of this.
I can keep going. Clemson was 38-3 (.927) in ACC play from 2016-’20, and in the last five seasons, 29-11 (.723) which includes two 4-4 campaigns and two consecutive losses to Duke. If Duke had lost to Clemson in men’s basketball in consecutive games, I can promise you Jon Scheyer would be on the hot seat in Durham.
Guess what? After Saturday’s disappointing loss, which wrapped up an extremely disappointing season, the seat that Dabo Swinney has sat on for so long at Clemson is hot. If he does not get things turned around soon, it’s going to be too hot for him to sit on.
NIL
$5.3 million QB explains career decision to return to college football
The highest-valued player in college sports officially announced his plans to delay a professional career and return to school for the 2026 season. This decision secures the most vital position on the field for the Texas Longhorns as they prepare for the Citrus Bowl and look toward a future conference title run.
Holding a massive $5.3 million valuation and the top spot in the On3 NIL 100, the redshirt sophomore faced intense speculation regarding the NFL Draft. Many analysts projected him as a potential early selection despite a season that began with mixed results. However, the signal-caller opted to prioritize further development at the collegiate level over immediate professional opportunities.
His return ensures continuity for an offense that found its rhythm late in the year. By bypassing the draft, the program retains a leader who guided the team to nine wins and a victory over a bitter in-state rival to close the regular season. The choice reflects a desire to complete unfinished business before making the leap to the next level.
Texas Longhorns QB discusses development and future in Austin
Arch Manning addressed the media ahead of the postseason matchup against the Michigan Wolverines, clarifying why he chose to stay in Austin. The decision comes after a season where he completed 61.4 percent of his passes for 2,942 yards. Manning emphasized that his growth on the field was the primary factor in postponing his NFL entry.
“I felt like I developed a lot this year, especially towards the back half, and I want to keep it going… There’s no reason to leave,” Manning said. “I feel like I got a lot more football left to play, and I’m excited to still be a part of this team.”

The quarterback’s performance improved significantly following early setbacks against the Ohio State Buckeyes and Florida Gators. He finished the regular season with 24 passing touchdowns and added eight scores on the ground. His dual-threat ability was on display during the regular-season finale, where he accounted for two touchdowns to help defeat the then-undefeated Texas A&M Aggies.

Texas Longhorns head coach Steve Sarkisian supported the move. He noted the mental and physical maturity Manning demonstrated during his first full year as the starter. The return of the team captain fortifies a roster that will face a nine-game SEC schedule in 2026, including a highly anticipated rematch with Ohio State in September.
Manning and his teammates are currently focused on their upcoming opponent in Orlando. A victory would secure a 10-win season and generate significant momentum heading into the offseason. The Longhorns will face the Michigan Wolverines in the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida, on Dec. 31 at 3 p.m. ET on ABC.
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