AUSTIN, Texas — For the fourth time in Sean Miller’s head coaching career spanning more than two decades, the first-year leader of the Texas Longhorns basketball program has transitioned into a new role, albeit amidst a college sports landscape that looks much different than it did three years ago when Miller returned for his second stint with the Xavier Musketeers.
NIL
Sean Miller pleased with progress of experienced Texas team


With the advent of revenue sharing joining Name, Image, and Likeness rights, roster retention has never been more complicated, creating roster management challenges that led Miller to tell local media on Tuesday that his four months on the Forty Acres have felt longer as the team goes through offseason workouts.
“It feels like a lot of different things are happening that years ago when you would take over a new program, it’s about establishing your new staff, getting to know your current roster, and acclimating yourself to the new university. Now there’s roster building and decisions that have to be made almost in the first couple of weeks of being in a new place. So I think a lot has happened for us as a staff, me as a coach, in our brief time,” Miller said.
Three Texas players entered the NCAA transfer portal after Miller’s arrival, including promising junior forward Devon Pryor, Miller worked to retain the program’s lone 2025 signee, forward John Clark, kept senior guards Jordan Pope and Tramon Mark with the Longhorns, and landed the first of five additions from the NCAA transfer portal, former Xavier forward Dailyn Swain, only eight days after he took the job.
With the roster now in place as the staff awaits the arrival of international additions Lewis Obiorah, an English center, and Declan Duru, a German forward, and the full clearances of Mark (shoulder) and senior center Lassina Traore (knee) in their returns from injury, Miller is pleased with the status of the Texas program.
“I’ve been, really not surprised at all, but very, very happy with the progress that we’ve made as a group. I think we have a good group when you look at the number of players that will be on this year’s team that have a lot of history and experience in college basketball, I think that’s still a really powerful force when it comes to America’s best teams in college basketball — retention, experience, older players, I do think that’s part of the equation,” Miller said.
Mark is the example used by the Texas head coach — the Houston and Arkansas transfer has scored more than 1,500 career points over 136 games as he prepares for his sixth year of college basketball, but junior Purdue transfer forward Camden Heide has played for a national championship and junior St. John’s transfer guard Simeon Wilcher was a contributor to a Red Storm team that won the Big East regular-season and tournament titles to earn a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament.
“What we love about him is he knows how to win. He’s been a part of a really terrific program. I think he understands how to accept a role and how to play winning basketball,” Miller said of Heide.
Heidi also profiles as one of the team’s best shooters, arriving at Texas with a career 41.2-percent three-point shooting percentage. Miller also mentioned Pope as one of the shooters that stands out for this Longhorns team after finishing second on the team in made threes last season.
“We have a number of others, I think, that are solid and consistent, and my hope is that there’ll be storylines of their improvement shooting,” Miller said.
Senior guard Chendall Weaver falls into that category after shooting 40.2 percent from three as a freshman at UT Arlington before struggling as a sophomore at Texas and only taking 20 threes last year due to an injury that kept him out for most of the conference season.
Put Wilcher into that group as well — the New Jersey product shot less than 30 percent in 2024-25, but Miller has confidence in his shooting stroke that is backed up by Wilcher’s ability to knock down free throws at a rate of 73.7 percent last year.
Swain extending his range beyond the three-point line is the next step for the former Xavier standout who was one of the most coveted players in the portal after entering, according to Miller. There’s already been plenty of physical development for Swain, who is now 220 pounds after arriving in Cincinnati at 178 pounds, but shooting 20.4 percent from three in his career remains a limiting factor for his professional prospects.
“What makes Dailyn a good player is his versatility and the fact that he can check the box on both defense and offense. He’s not shown an ability to shoot the three-point shot. If you go to our last game at Xavier when we lost Illinois in the NCAA Tournament, Dailyn hit three threes. I believe this — it’s a sign of things to come. He’s working very hard at his three-point shooting to add that element to his game,” Miller said.
The versatility of Swain will be key for the Longhorns to play with the pace that Miller wants offensively after putting a great emphasis on playing uptempo basketball in recent years that helped produce the No. 31 adjusted tempo and No. 6 assist rate during the 2022-23 season in which the Musketeers advanced to the Sweet 16.
“We want to play with pace. We want to play with pace on an opponent’s made or missed field goal. And I think that’s really important for me to convey that there’s a difference between running off of another team’s missed shots or turnovers and pushing a fast pace when they score on you. When you watch us, fast execution means we’re constantly trying to get those quick strike moments in the first six seconds. That’s something that I believe in,” Miller said.
The new Texas head coach also wants a halfc0urt offense that incorporates more ball and player movement than the Horns have had in some recent seasons.
“When we’re in the halfcourt, you should see all five players touching the ball most of the time. I think the two things that determine our halfcourt approach is unselfish cuts and movement without the ball and the ball having energy, meaning that it just moves. It shouldn’t stick. And I think that if the ball has energy and you have unselfish cuts and you have five players involved, that’s the hardest team to defend, and that team can beat the best teams on their schedule,” Miller said.
Because Miller hasn’t had his whole team together practicing yet, he’s not quite sure what the upside for this year’s group looks like, but if Texas is able to execute offensively the way that Miller wants, the Longhorns should be a more exciting team to watch.
NIL
Coveted dual-threat quarterback entering college football transfer portal
The college football transfer portal is only ten days away from officially opening for business. That hasn’t stopped players around the country from getting a head start on the action, as nearly 1,100 names are expected to transfer.
That number will continue to rise over the next few weeks. The movement could be unprecedented this offseason, as the spring window has been eliminated, meaning there will be only 15 days for players to appear in the portal.
The quarterback market is packed. Though the group might not be as top-heavy as the last few seasons, there will still be plenty of talented signal-callers available.
Former Freshman Of The Year Transferring From Arkansas State
On Tuesday evening, Arkansas State junior quarterback Jaylen Raynor revealed his intentions to transfer, per 247Sports’ Matt Zenitz.
Raynor spent the last three seasons as the starter for the Red Wolves. In 2025, he completed 333/501 passes for 3,361 yards with 19 touchdowns to 11 interceptions. He added 154 rushes for 423 yards and 7 more scores.
Raynor led the Sun Belt Conference in completions, attempts, yards, and interceptions.
Arkansas State finished 7-6, defeating Missouri State, 34-28, in the Xbox Bowl.
Raynor signed with the Red Wolves as a two-star prospect in the 2023 class. He leaped into the starting role early in his true freshman season, taking the reins for the final 10 games of the year.
Raynor was named the Sun Belt’s Freshman of the Year after completing 166/285 passes for 2,550 yards with 17 touchdowns to 7 interceptions. He rushed for 5 more scores.
The North Carolina native tied Arkansas State’s program record with six touchdown passes against UMass on September 30, 2023.
Raynor continued to lead the Red Wolves as a sophomore. In 2024, Arkansas State went 8-5 and defeated Bowling Green in the 68 Ventures Bowl.
Overall, Raynor is 20-16 as a starting quarterback and he’s 2-1 in bowl games.
During his college career, he’s completed 758 of 1,206 passes for 8,694 yards with 52 touchdowns and 28 interceptions. Raynor has rushed 414 times for 1,183 yards and 15 more scores.
The 6-foot-0, 202-pound quarterback has two years to play one at the college level.
Out of high school, Raynor held offers from programs such as UMass, Miami (OH), Army, Air Force, and Navy.
Read more on College Football HQ
• $45 million college football head coach reportedly offers Lane Kiffin unexpected role
• Paul Finebaum believes one SEC school is sticking by an ‘average’ head coach
• SEC football coach predicts major change after missing College Football Playoff
• Predicting landing spots for the Top 5 college football transfers (Dec. 17)
NIL
Two things about NIL and Brohm
1. The latest actual numbers I can find…per 247 sports, U of L was 20th in NIL monies in college sports at about 450 million. Now we are approaching 2026 and things obviously have changed, but we were at least trying to play the NIL game.
2. Jeff did not leave Purdue the first time because the timing wasn’t right or he still had a job to do with the Boilermakers. I respected Jeff for that and quite frankly made me feel more proud of who he was as a person .
I could be naive and stupid but:
A. This crazy money by rich people to pay athletes is just that, crazy and not sustainable long term.
B. U of L is probably doing the best it can but can not compete against oil monies etc.
C. Love him or not, (I love Jeff as our coach) he is the best we could have and feel safe he wants to stay. (Is this a dumb statement given the leaving fears?)
D. Let’s keep winning at Jeff’s level or better
NIL
4 Missouri football staffers, including lead NIL exec, follow Moore to WSU
Updated Dec. 24, 2025, 2:51 p.m. CT
Four Missouri football staff members, including the lead executive of the Tigers’ NIL agency, are leaving MU to follow former offensive coordinator Kirby Moore to Washington State.
Brad Larrondo, who was the CEO and general manager of Every True Tiger Brands, is moving to take a role at WSU. He is a Boise State grad and still has significant connections to the region.
The Tigers also are set to lose tight ends coach Derham Cato to the same role with the Cougars, and Mizzou assistant offensive line coach Jack Abercrombie is set to become Moore’s lead O-line coach. Those staff changes were first reported by Matt Zenitz at CBS Sports.
Finally, Mizzou assistant director of football athletic performance Malcolm Hardmon will become Washington State’s strength and conditioning coach, per Bruce Feldman at The Athletic.
The most significant loss of the group, arguably, is Larrondo, who has been instrumental in the name, image and likeness space for Missouri.
Mizzou coach Eli Drinkwitz originally hired Larrondo, who like the MU coach had spent time working at Auburn and Boise State, to oversee recruiting and external relations. Larrondo ultimately became the lead executive at Every True Tiger, where he helped establish the core of Mizzou’s current NIL structure.
Every True Tiger and Larrondo are influential in negotiating both revenue-sharing and third-party NIL deals for Missouri athletes, as well as distributing money to athletes and making sure the football program remains within its spending cap. The agency also is a marketing arm and has helped facilitate deals for Mizzou student-athletes.
The college football transfer portal is approaching, which brings significant challenges for both roster retention and recruitment for teams — something Larrondo would have been closely involved with.
The portal officially opens Jan. 2 and remains open for new entries through Jan. 16.

Missouri football has not hired a general manager partly because, with Drinkwitz at the forefront, it has recreated that role in the aggregate through Larrondo and other staffers.
Drinkwitz responded to reports of Larrondo’s exit via his personal X/Twitter account.
“Good luck to Brad and thank you for all he did, but MIZZOU NIL was started way before Brad, and is a STRONG POSITION! Carry on!” Drinkwitz wrote Wednesday, Dec. 24.
Beyond Larrondo, the staff shakeup was seemingly expected. Drinkwitz indicated Dec. 16 that some assistants could end up following Moore to Pullman, Washington.
“Could lose a couple more people off of our staff from analyst roles as coach Moore finalizes and puts his staff together,” Drinkwitz said Dec. 16. “It shouldn’t change the dynamic of what we do at all.”
Missouri is only actively looking to replace one primary assistant on its staff in Cato, who had been with the team for three seasons. The Tigers will need a new tight ends coach.
As part of Drinkwitz’s recent contract extension, he was given an additional $4 million to spend on his assistant and staff salary pool.
Mizzou has recently made two notable hires.
Michigan’s Chip Lindsey was tabbed as the Tigers’ new offensive coordinator, and Jack Breske has joined the team from Tennessee as MU’s president of player personnel and recruiting.
NIL
Matt Patricia’s first season at Ohio State exceeds expectations going into College Football Playoff :: WRALSportsFan.com
Matt Patricia is used to postseason runs from his days as the defensive coordinator of the New England Patriots.
However, Patricia acknowledges that the preparation for the College Football Playoff is different than the NFL. Patricia is in his first season as Ohio State’s defensive coordinator as the second-seeded Buckeyes (12-1) get ready to face 10th-seeded Miami (11-2) in a CFP quarterfinal at the Cotton Bowl on Dec. 31.
“It’s a learning (process) for me. We’d have bye-week kind of moments in the NFL, but this is a really long layover and break,” Patricia said. “Right now, I’m trying to trust the expertise in the building. Some of the things we did transfer, you know, because we have some different kind of scheduling and when everybody is in school and that stuff.”
Ohio State was off for two weeks after its 13-10 loss to Indiana in the Big Ten championship game on Dec. 6. Players were mostly occupied with final exams while waiting to see who they would face in the Cotton Bowl.
With the Buckeyes going for consecutive national championships for the first time in school history, Patricia’s first season in Columbus has exceeded expectations. He was hired after Jim Knowles left for Penn State, tasked with leading a unit that returned only three starters, none on the defensive line.
Patricia and Ohio State made an emphatic opening statement in their Aug. 30 14-7 victory over Texas and continued the momentum throughout the season.
The Buckeyes are ranked either first or second nationally in nine different categories. They lead the nation in scoring defense (8.2 points per game), passing yards (129.1), red zone scores (66.7%) and fewest plays of 10 or more yards (90).
Ohio State had three AP All-America first-team selections on the defense — defensive tackle Kayden McDonald, linebacker Arvell Reese and safety Caleb Downs. All three plus linebacker Sonny Styles are projected to be first-round picks in April’s NFL draft.
Patricia, who returned to coaching in college for the first time since 2002, is a finalist for the Broyles Award, which is given to the top assistant coach in college football.
“The players have done an unbelievable job. Again, give them all the credit. I think they’ve played so hard and aggressive and flying around on the field. And it is a lot of fun. I tell them all the time, it’s such a privilege to be up there in front of the group and talk to the group,” Patricia said. “And just for me, personally, it has been so much fun to come back to college and have that little bit of a youthful energy with the players that we have here and their excitement to go out and play.”
When Patricia was hired, many lauded his ability to adjust his personnel by running multiple fronts and coverages. He also has shown the ability to relate to players.
“When he first stepped on campus here, it was like a long-lost family member that just came back from whatever he came from, but he came back home,” defensive end Kenyatta Jackson said. “And I mean, all the guys love him. Even offensive guys. He don’t just talk to the starters or whatever the case may be, but he talks to everybody. And I think that’s why everybody loves him.”
One person who hasn’t been surprised with Patricia’s success is the guy who hired him.
“His background speaks for itself and putting guys into a situation to be successful. And every player just wants someone that’s going to be there to get them better but also wants someone to care about them. He’s done both of those things,” coach Ryan Day said. “It’s great to have somebody in the building who has been through some of the games he’s been through, the Super Bowls and a lot of playoff games, so there’s a confidence level the guys have in him. So, I think all of that adds up to what you’re seeing.”
___
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NIL
How would I put together a $25 million Arkansas football roster?
If I were given $25 million to build the 105-man Arkansas football roster, how would I do it? All schools on the Power Four level have $22.5 million allotted for revenue sharing across all sports. SEC programs have pledged to donate $2.5 million of that to scholarships. For most schools, football is expected to receive approximately 75% of the remaining balance.
That comes out to $13.5 million in revenue sharing for football. That means we need to raise an additional $11.5 million in NIL to get to $25 million, which is probably the amount of money a program would need to be considered to be in the upper-half of NIL among SEC programs. And that’s an educated guess. Arkansas is likely working somewhere between $20 million and $25 million, I would assume.
That’s probably what it takes to bump someone out among programs like Georgia, Alabama, Texas, Texas A&M, Florida, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Auburn and Ole Miss. Let’s suppose the breakdown below is for Arkansas. It has always been said Arkansas must do more with less. I’ve got a formula that should stretch that $25 million in Monopoly Money I’m playing with today…
NIL
Commute: Wilson Countersues Georgia in Monumental NIL Case
Welcome to the Morning Commute
Today we are talking about Mizzou Football!
In case you missed it, Mizzou defensive end Damon Wilson II got sued by Georgia in regards to breached agreement by transferring and owes $390,000, the unpaid portion of the deal, under a liquidated damages clause.
The Missouri defensive end challenges whether or not that agreement was ever legally binding.
Wilson is suing for defamation after spokesman Steven Drummond told ESPN that Georgia “expects student athletes to honor commitments.” The complaint alleges the comment damaged Wilson’s character by falsely implying he breached a contract.
This is definitely an ongoing subject so the best way to stay updated is the Rock M+ forums!
Yesterday at Rock M and Rock M+
Let’s shift our focus to Mizzou Football as Missouri plays in the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl vs Virginia on Saturday night. For the final time this season, it’s game week.
Hey… Missouri Football is playing! Should be an exciting matchup to wrap up Christmas festivities!
MU has seen its three-point field goal percentage drop from 45 percent to 31 percent since Stone, who shot 41.7 percent from beyond the arc in his six games this season, left the rotation. Gates used the analogy of his team as a puzzle in the postgame press conference, pointing to Pierce and Stone as key (missing) pieces.
Key players missing leads to major impact. Mizzou needs to get healthy if it wants a chance to compete in the SEC.
From Rock M Radio: Dive Cuts
In this episode, what turned into a slaughter fest of the Braggin’ Rights matchup is previewed. More to come soon on Rock M Radio!
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