NIL
Steady Droppin Dimes – NIL on National Signing Day: Is it all about the highest bidder now?
Every week, former Michigan great, NFL 1st round pick, 10-year pro, and current Wayne State head football coach Tyrone Wheatley, former Michigan point guard Daniel Horton, and I come together on Steady Droppin’ Dimes, a sports show featuring real talk, and real views, from three real dudes. College football, college basketball, NFL, and NBA topics drive much of the debate, but discussion of other sports will enter the fray some days as well. Non-sports topics aren’t off limits, and neither are celebrity guests.
On the latest episode of Steady Droppin Dimes, the crew discusses the impact of NIL on National Signing Day. They also tackle the question of which of the new college football hires has the best odds of success, and which will crash and burn. Lastly, they revisit the question of which is the best team in college basketball.
The contents and full episode notes appear below.
Contents and Episode Notes
00:00 – Opening, Holiday Catch-Up & Steady Dropping Dimes Crew
- Sam opens another edition of Steady Dropping Dimes, reintroducing the weekly show and its Golden Limo sponsorship
- He brings in the full crew, starting with Tyrone Wheatley, whom he still calls the best athlete he’s ever seen with his own eyes
- Tyrone shares he played last episode sick and reveals he actually had pneumonia but “toted the mail” anyway
- Sam jokes about producer Lance upgrading the show with color-coded scripts and name tags on screen
- Daniel Horton checks in, saying he barely made it to the show, and chat jokes about “in this NIL era, we steady dropping bags,” foreshadowing later NIL talk
05:22 – Daniel Flips: Michigan Is the Best Team in the Country
- Sam explains fans have been asking what’s up with Daniel, since Daniel wasn’t immediately crowning Michigan as the best team
- Daniel says at first everyone was just being “Michigan homers,” and he prides himself on not being a homer, even as an alum
- He now fully agrees Michigan is the best team in the country and playing the best basketball, especially on the defensive end
- Vegas convinced him: if they defend with that energy, effort, passion, and togetherness, he’ll “stand on the table” for this team
- Daniel stresses that shots won’t always fall or look pretty, but defense, effort, and love for what you’re doing translate in any game, in any sport
10:32 – Aday Mara’s Development, Consistency Questions & Dusty’s Roster Vision
- Sam shifts to the three-big frontcourt, saying Merez has surged lately and he didn’t expect Aday Mara to be this fluid at 7’3″
- He wonders how Mara will handle Big Ten physicality—opponents getting into his body, banging him, and forcing him to prove he can still rebound and score
- Sam notes Yax looks ready to bring it nightly, but he’s unsure whether Mara can sustain high-level play game-to-game after an early stretch where he looked like a lottery pick, then disappeared
- Daniel admits he was skeptical when Mara transferred after a disappointing UCLA stint, but says Mara’s progress this quickly is encouraging for his future
- He explains the hardest jump is from “not very good” to “serviceable/good,” and Mara seems to have cleared that; now it’s about experience and building consistency to become an all-conference-level player in Dusty’s system
13:34 – Transfer Fit, AJ Storr Example & Coach Responsibility
- Sam praises Dusty May’s ability to evaluate cultural fit in the transfer portal, calling it an elite skill in this era
- He contrasts Dusty’s approach with Chris Beard’s situation at Ole Miss, where Beard publicly snapped about effort at AJ Storr—who has now been at four schools in four years
- Sam says Beard was really mad at Storr for being who he has always been, pointing out Storr’s identity and track record were clear when they recruited him
- Tyrone says it’s on the coach and staff to know who they are bringing in and how each piece fits a defined role in the “11:30 p.m. staff room board” vision
- He notes great teams come from players majoring in their roles—big or small—and from coaches building rosters around those roles instead of blaming players later for being themselves
18:28 – Winning in the Margins, Toughness & Three-Big Philosophy
- Tyrone recalls his high school coach saying, “We’re going to win in the margins,” which meant two weeks of practice without a basketball focused on effort plays
- He sees Michigan’s current team doing exactly that: winning in the margins with turnovers forced, defense, pace, hype, rebounding, and extra effort that eventually turn into points
- He jokes that if his shot isn’t falling, he’ll “turn into Moses Malone,” attacking the offensive glass to keep impacting the game
- Sam contrasts John Beilein’s instinct—play Yax at the four—with Dusty’s willingness to lean into a three-big lineup, noting both views have logic but Dusty is the one staying up at midnight designing this vision
- Tyrone says different coaches prioritize different building blocks—some start with a big, some with a scorer—but Dusty’s big-heavy, physical, connected approach is working because the whole group fits the identity
21:18 – Dusty’s Transfer Strategy and Quick Chemistry in the Portal Era
- Sam circles back to Dusty’s eye for portal fits, saying he targets guys who fit Michigan’s culture first, then figures out how they fit on the court second
- Daniel points out that of the transfers, Yax was really the only one who had significant prior success; others like Elliott, Mara, and Namari came in as underused or underachieving pieces
- He credits Dusty for grabbing talented but hungry players who needed a stage and were motivated to prove they’re better than their previous roles showed
- Daniel says that in the old days, you built chemistry over 3–4 years; now, you must build it in one or two, and buy-in is easier when guys see this as a major or last chance
- He believes as long as Dusty keeps recruiting that mix of talent and hunger, Michigan can keep creating quick, genuine chemistry in modern one- and two-year windows
24:17 – Coaching Carousel Talk: Who Got It Right and Who Got It Wrong?
- Sam switches to college football, asking Daniel which recent coaching hires got it most right and most wrong
- Daniel surprisingly picks LSU for both: he sees Lane Kiffin as a home run given LSU’s resources and track record, but says the handling of the change from Brian Kelly was messy
- He also likes Jon Sumrall’s move to Florida (after tracking him at Tulane), noting his strong ties and upside as a head coach
- For “most wrong,” Daniel bluntly says it’s Penn State, because they fired their coach early yet still don’t have a replacement while other programs moved quickly
- Tyrone jokes that Crumble Cookie dropped a big NIL “dime” to help keep a coach put, illustrating how off-field money factors into these decisions too
28:02 – Lane at LSU, Complementary Football & Culture Fits
- Sam pushes back on the assumption that Kiffin will definitely win a national title at LSU, pointing out Lane has never truly “won anything big” at the highest level
- Tyrone counters that Lane’s time under Nick Saban taught him a lot, and he’ll build elite staffs and surround himself with the right people, which is how you win
- Daniel says Lane has rehabilitated his image since the Tennessee/USC days and that his confident, offensive-minded personality matches what LSU fans want more than Brian Kelly’s did
- Sam agrees LSU’s offense will be electric but questions whether Lane can sustain the kind of complementary football and elite defense required to win championships in the SEC
- They note Lane kept DC Blake Baker and has a massive NIL budget, but Tyrone warns the real challenge is using that money on the right players instead of simply stockpiling “convicts” with talent
32:58 – Michigan State, Pat Fitzgerald & Sparty’s Ceiling
- Sam pivots to a surprise take: he thinks Michigan State got it “most right” by hiring Pat Fitzgerald and jokes that MSU owes him money for saying months ago Fitz would rehabilitate them
- He paints a realistic model: at Northwestern, Fitzgerald accepted that they wouldn’t compete every year but would scrap for a few seasons and then build toward senior-heavy, competitive years every third or fourth season
- That cyclical, blue-collar approach fits Michigan State more than chasing the same recruits as Michigan and Ohio State, which Sam says “just isn’t them”
- Daniel laughs that Sam is diabolical, basically sentencing MSU to seven wins a year and one win over Michigan every five years and calling that their ceiling
- Sam leans into the bit, saying he’s giving Spartans a more honest reality than they want: they’re the “bootleg Lion-O,” not the real powerhouse, but Fitzgerald can make them respectable and occasionally dangerous
39:55 – Penn State Expectations, Fit, and the Stress of Big Jobs
- Sam and Tyrone agree LSU and Penn State both show how fanbases overestimate how “sexy” their jobs are compared to the stress and expectations
- Tyrone says some jobs are actually unattractive behind the scenes—LSU’s Bayou grind and Penn State’s national-title expectations without SEC-level resources limit the candidate pool
- He believes James Franklin got stale but also notes seven wins won’t cut it at Penn State, and coaches are now scrutinizing whether the financial and support package matches the stress level
- They argue that firing a coach isn’t a magic reset button—schools often discover the market isn’t beating down their door the way fans imagined
- Tyrone suggests Penn State might be best served hiring the interim (Terry Smith/Kenny W.), someone who already knows the realities, rather than chasing a fantasy candidate
46:17 – Savion Hiter, NIL Ambassadors & Setting Up the Signing Day Conversation
- Sam says they’d be remiss not to talk about National Signing Day and highlights No. 1 running back Savion Hiter signing with Michigan
- Listeners have asked for a weekly Hiter film breakdown from Tyrone, but Sam wants to give Tyrone time to watch tape before putting him on the spot
- He frames today’s focus as NIL’s impact on Signing Day itself, not just recruiting months beforehand
- Sam describes the day as “almost like day trading,” with schools sliding in last minute with extra $200–300K just as kids are ready to sign
- He stresses that for many families, that amount of money is life-altering, and taking time to consider it is not a character flaw—it’s a real-life decision
53:58 – NIL on Signing Day: Day-Trading Offers, Agents & Tough Choices
- Sam says some programs still take a “This is Michigan, this is the offer, take it or leave it” stance that implicitly shames families for considering better financial deals
- He has a major problem with using “character” language against kids—especially those from modest backgrounds—who weigh a significantly higher NIL number
- Sam explains another layer: agents now sit between players and schools, some being fully certified NFL agents already eyeing future pro commissions
- He lays out a hypothetical: a recruit committed to Michigan is offered $300K more by Penn State; the player wants Michigan, asks if Michigan can come up some, but his agent keeps pressuring him to take the higher Penn State offer
- Tyrone says this creates a painful squeeze: schools can be rigid and pompous on one side, agents self-interested on the other, and the kid in the middle just wants to make the right choice for school and family
59:20 – Negotiation, Family Stories & Why Money Doesn’t Equal Bad Character
- Tyrone’s wife once commented, “This is what they chose,” meaning once NIL got opened, the chaos was inevitable; you can’t un-open the box
- He argues players don’t actually need agents for most NIL agreements and wonders why someone should get 3–5% of money they didn’t earn on the field
- Tyrone calls much of the current agent behavior predatory and believes there should be a “true dead period” around signing day with total radio silence from schools
- He emphasizes that for many families, $300K represents “300,000 opportunities”—to pay off a mortgage, fix a car, avoid foreclosure, or get stability, not greed
- Tyrone shares a personal story of his grandmother turning down an illegal under-the-table offer back in the day; if the same money were legal NIL today, he’d absolutely negotiate hard to take care of her without that being a “character issue”
1:07:25 – Can NIL Be Regulated? Agents, Salary Sheets & Player Power
- Sam floats the idea that college football should proactively regulate NIL agents—perhaps through a player association or new legal framework—so families have access to vetted, accredited representatives
- Tyrone likes the idea in theory but asks who would regulate it, since the NCAA and schools both want to avoid added legal liability
- He suggests an alternative: a public “salary sheet” by position, similar to NFL structures, where schools must declare NIL ranges so players can see going rates without middlemen
- That kind of transparency would let a recruit compare three schools on signing day, open negotiations at 2:00 p.m., decide by 3:00, and skip paying an agent to shuttle numbers back and forth
- Both acknowledge agents can provide knowledge, but in the current unregulated environment too many chase quick fees and push kids toward the highest bid rather than the best overall decision for the player
1:14:09 – From Fax Machines to NIL Chaos, Brady Marchese vs. Zion & Closing
- Tyrone reminisces about the old signing-day stress being about NLIs arriving by fax and coaches camping at houses to flip kids, contrasting that with today’s last-minute NIL calls
- Sam says signing day used to be a celebration where coaches put their feet up; now it’s the most stressful day of the year, with staff sweating over possible late flips
- They joke about coaches like Fran Brown publicly threatening retaliation against those who try to flip their commits, hinting at how emotional the new market has become
- Sam closes by comparing WR Brady Marchese and Zion Robinson: Brady is a 6-1 burner and precision route runner who can return kicks and work the slot, while Zion is a longer 6-3 high-jumper type on the outside
- He says Brady’s top-end speed and versatility make him a great complement to Travis Johnson and Jamar Browder, fitting a different profile than Zion and rounding out the receiver room
- Sam wraps the episode thanking Golden Limo, the Dimes crew, and the audience, joking that he’s missing the Lions game for them and promising to be back next week with more film and NIL talk
1:18:22 – End of show
Not a VIP subscriber to The Michigan Insider? Sign up now and get access to everything TMI has to offer on all things Michigan and access to the No. 1 site covering the Wolverines for 60% an annual subscription!
Want the latest news on Michigan delivered right to your email? Subscribe to The Michigan Insider newsletter here. It is free and a great way to get daily updates on Michigan football, basketball, baseball, recruiting, and more delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign up for FREE text alerts on The Michigan Insider to get breaking news on commitments, decommitments, transfers, injuries, coaching changes, and more with our NEW text alert system available to all registered users and VIP subscribers. Click here to become a FREE registered user and Click here if you are already a VIP subscriber then follow these directions to set up your text alerts.
NIL
Joel Klatt names college football powerhouse making a ‘big mistake’
The College Football Playoff selection committee delivered a stunning blow to a prominent 10-win program on Sunday by excluding the team from the 12-team field. In response to the snub, the university announced it would decline any bowl invitation and end its season immediately.
This unprecedented move by the athletic director and head coach has drawn sharp criticism from national media figures. The leadership group felt the playoff spot was stolen after weeks of being ranked safely inside the bracket, leading them to opt out rather than play in a consolation game.
Notre Dame was positioned at No. 11 in previous rankings but fell out of the bracket in favor of the Miami Hurricanes. The Fighting Irish subsequently withdrew from the postseason, a choice that has sparked a significant debate regarding the culture of the sport.
Joel Klatt Labels The Decision A Big Mistake
Fox Sports college football analyst Joel Klatt addressed the controversy on The Joel Klatt Show, labeling the decision a significant error in judgment. Klatt argued that bypassing the postseason is an emotional reaction that negatively impacts the roster’s development. While the frustration in South Bend is palpable following the committee’s decision, the analyst believes the historic program is mishandling the situation.
Klatt outlined three primary concerns regarding the choice to pack up for the year. His first point focused on competitive development. Bowl preparation typically offers teams 15 extra practices, which are crucial for younger players. Klatt questioned how forfeiting this time helps the team prepare for the 2026 campaign.
“Bowl practice is where you develop for the next season,” Klatt said. “So, I don’t understand how just saying like, ‘No, we’re done with that,’ helps you for next year.”

The analyst also suggested the move appeared rooted in bitterness toward the selection process and the network broadcasting the games. He noted that the decision feels “petty” if it is based on anger regarding the weekly rankings reveal. Klatt emphasized that a program with such high stature should rise above such feelings.
“I think that that decision was born out of an emotional reaction rather than a disciplined response,” Klatt said. “And those two things are very different.”
Finally, Klatt directed a message to the athletes who may have played their final down of football. He warned that players might look back on this choice with regret. He stressed that athletes have a finite number of opportunities to compete at the highest level and should not artificially create a finish line.

Klatt also criticized the leadership strategy behind the choice. He compared the situation to parenting, noting that adults should intervene when young people react out of hurt feelings. He argued that leaders must prioritize logic over immediate emotional responses. ESPN analyst Paul Finebaum also took aim at the Irish fan base for their reaction to being left out of the playoff.
“I wouldn’t have asked the players what they wanted to do because they feel hurt,” Klatt said. “You don’t want to respond with your emotions. You want to respond with your reason and logic.”
Read more on College Football HQ
NIL
Josh Pate questions inclusion of Group of Five in CFP, suggests a G5 Playoff
One of the biggest storylines of this edition of the College Football Playoff is the inclusion of two champions from the Group of Five, with No. 11 Tulane in out of the American and No. 12 James Madison in out of the Sun Belt. That has caused quite a lot of questions and criticism, with a suggestion now made to potentially fix that by Josh Pate.
During his reaction show to the reveal of the playoff on Sunday, Pate touched on the topic of the inclusion of the G5. He wondered about that aspect of this model altogether, as he thinks better contenders aren’t making the field for teams who may have next to no chance in the CFP.
“I do think a lot of people have started to throw around one of the proposals that we’ve made on the show, and that is, if you’re going to make the playoff, shouldn’t you at least have a minimum baseline ranking? I don’t know what that ranking would be. Shouldn’t you have to be Top-15? Shouldn’t you have to be Top-20?” said Pate. “A lot of people are looking at the fact that we’ve got two G5 teams in here, and, of course, that’s a joke. That’s a complete joke. It’s an utter disgrace to the overall spirit of what this thing is supposed to be about, that I got a team like Notre Dame sitting at home. Notre Dame could legitimately make a run to win a national title. They have that maximum capability. They’re going to sit at home, so that we made room for a team to be a three-plus touchdown underdog in Eugene, Oregon. So, yes, even the most diehard of G5, Cinderella supporters out there understand, from a pure principle standpoint, this makes no sense. And so I do think something will be done to address that.”
Pate addressed those same points later on in the show. With respect to the seasons just had by Tulane and James Madison, the fact is that they will be massive underdogs respectively in their first-round games against Ole Miss and Oregon, with little chance of them winning even a game, let alone multiple, as part of the College Football Playoff. That is why he doesn’t understand their insertions, even if that’s how the bracket is built, as teams like this from the Group of Five are unlikely to compete with these level of teams from the Power Four.
“Now we have to get uncomfortable. Now we have to broach the subject everyone is talking about. So, we have two G5 teams in the playoff – Tulane-Ole Miss, JMU-Oregon…So, people have some really, really strong thoughts on this. I’ve had strong thoughts on this for a while. I’ve told you for a while. It makes no sense that college football is structured the way it is, for many reasons, but it makes no sense that college football pretends that 136 teams are playing the same sport. It’s so obvious they’re not,” said Pate. “You got to get some smart people in the room to understand we can restructure the playoff, or we can rebuild the playoff entirely actually, to where you don’t have G5 inclusion in the main playoff, and still have a very, very nice, revenue-producing product that is exclusive G5. You know, a world where JMU can actually win the title, or Tulane could actually win the title. Now, everybody, logically, watching this or listening to this knows Oregon is not playing the same sport at JMU. Everybody knows that Ole Miss is not playing the same sport as Tulane. Everybody knows that. But, for some reason, we’re still forced to pretend that they are when it comes playoff time. So, you can say what I just said without having disdain or hate in your heart for the G5. I feel the total opposite! I love G5 football. I’d like to build a world, I’d like to build an ecosystem where it thrives, not cutting it out of this system to watch it die. That’s not how that has to happen.”
“The mental gymnastics that proponents of G5 inclusion put themselves through are so mind-numbing that I just remove myself from the conversation. Because the way I look at it is no G5 team is ever going to win this national championship. Certainly, they’re not. So, like, it’s never like they’re going to make a run in the playoff. The worst that happens is it takes away and robs us of what would be far more premier first-round playoff games, and then JMU and Tulane will get disposed of in the first round because they’re far inferior teams and then we’ll move on about the playoff. So, it’s not like I’m going to get burned,” Pate continued. “The argument you’re making is a very bad faith argument, if you’re making this one – ‘Well, you know, upsets have happened before!’. It’s so far away from the point that it doesn’t even deserve a reply, but here’s the reply. I don’t care if JMU goes and beats Oregon. It doesn’t disprove my point. My point is they don’t deserve inclusion in this format…The point there is we’re not playing the same sport. We’re not looking at the same sport…My point is not even that it’s impossible for them to pull the upset if they get in the playoff. My point is they shouldn’t be in the playoff to begin with because the road that they took looks way different than the road these other teams have to take.”
This comes a year after, in the original expanded format, Boise State (12-1), out of the Mountain West, earned a bye into the quarterfinals of the CFP. Now, a season later, Tulane (11-2) is in as the highest-ranked of the non-power conference champions after winning the American, while James Madison (12-1), due to the low rating of Duke (8-5) as the winner of the ACC Championship, managed to get in as well after winning the Sun Belt.
That all may have sounded like a lot of negativity for the G5, but, from there, Pate offered suggestions to better include them in the process of college football. He did, to a lesser extent, suggest the idea of relegation, with poor power teams moving down to make space for deserving mid-majors. His biggest idea, though, was creating a playoff specifically for the Group of Five, which Pate knows they would be able to market and sell, instead of them playing as part of the CFP.
“With all this money floating around right now, people are insane if they don’t think a G5 Playoff would sell, and sell big. Do you understand how desperate other networks are for quality postseason college football inventory?…You don’t think, if we took a package of G5 playoff games, and put them on any network, that it wouldn’t sell? Of course it would,” said Pate. “Invest in a G5 Playoff. Everybody wins. I’m not trying to box you out, by the way…So, the money is there to figure this out.”
“The argument it always boils down to is a fundamental argument. No one really looks at JMU and Tulane in the playoff and thinks to themselves, yep, purely from a competitive standpoint, this makes sense to me. You don’t think that…You want to make it because you want to make it. I’m talking about removing that lens, and looking at it purely from a logic-based, competitive standpoint,” continued Pate. “No one looks at this and thinks it makes sense, so the argument doesn’t come to that. The argument comes to, if we’re not involved in the College Football Playoff, we can’t make enough money to survive. And, what I’m saying is there is plenty enough money floating around the world of college athletics to get it figured out. That’s my point on that whole thing, and it should have long ago gotten figured out but it still hasn’t.”
This has now absolutely been a major talking point through the first two years in the expansion of the CFP. However, because of that, one way or another, Pate expects that we could see a change in that process because of it, as the playoff could be better balanced.
“I do think that there are changes coming,” said Pate. “I do think that that committee, just like they did this past year? They had one round, and then they adjusted their terms. And now they’ve had another round, and I think they’re going to adjust their terms again.”
NIL
Robert Griffin III sends strong message after major football program declines bowl game bid
The 2025 College Football Playoff field was unveiled at noon EDT on Sunday.
Of the many difficult decisions made by the College Football Playoff committee, none was more notable than its decision to award bids to Miami (No. 10), Tulane (No. 11) and James Madison (No. 12) over Notre Dame, which sat at No. 11 in the final College Football Playoff rankings.
In response to the committee’s decision to exclude it from the College Football Playoff, Notre Dame declined any potential bowl bids as a form of protest.
“As a team, we’ve decided to withdraw our name from consideration from a bowl game following the 2025 season. We appreciate all the support from our families and fans, and we’re hoping to bring the 12th national title to South Bend in 2026.”
Notre Dame Football (@NDFootball on X)
— Notre Dame Football (@NDFootball) December 7, 2025
The decision sparked an online discourse about the potential precedent for future dismissal of bowl bids in college football. One proponent of Notre Dame’s decision was former Baylor and Heisman-winning quarterback and current FOX Sports college football analyst Robert Griffin III.
“I don’t blame Notre Dame one bit for deciding not to play in a Bowl Game when they should have been playing for a chance to win the National Championship in the College Football Playoff.”
Robert Griffin III (@RGIII on X)
I don’t blame Notre Dame one bit for deciding not to play in a Bowl Game when they should have been playing for a chance to win the National Championship in the College Football Playoff. pic.twitter.com/TgB0kAn85r
— Robert Griffin III (@RGIII) December 7, 2025
Declining a bowl bid was not the only step in Notre Dame’s efforts to secure a better future for the program. Ross Dellenger of Yahoo Sports and On3 reported that Notre Dame is guaranteed a College Football Playoff bid if it is ranked No. 12 or higher in the final poll beginning in 2026, per Notre Dame athletics director Pete Bevacqua.
“A newsy wrinkle from Bevacqua: As part of an MOU signed last spring, Notre Dame is assured of a CFP berth if it is ranked in the top 12 starting next year.”
Ross Dellenger (@RossDellenger on X)
A newsy wrinkle from Bevacqua: As part of an MOU signed last spring, Notre Dame is assured of a CFP berth if it is ranked in the top 12 starting next year.
If this year’s situation unfolds next year, the final at-large team (Miami) would have gotten bumped for No. 11 Notre Dame.
— Ross Dellenger (@RossDellenger) December 7, 2025
Notre Dame is one of three Power Four programs to decline a bowl bid in 2025. The other two are Iowa State (8-4) and Kansas State (6-6), both of which opted out of bowl bids in the wake of head coaching changes.

NIL
$2.1 million SEC quarterback announces he’ll forgo NFL Draft, return for 2026
One College Football Playoff program just received some major positive news ahead of their postseason run. One of the many flaws in the current CFB calendar is that players really have to make decisions on their futures before the playoffs are over, since they could be playing well into January — and past the deadline for transferring. Then, there’s the NFL Draft and that process to think about.
Luckily for Texas A&M, they have full assurance that their star quarterback, Marcel Reed, is fully locked in on the Aggie program amid any portal offers or professional attention. As part of an interview with former Heisman Trophy winner Robert Griffin III, Reed confirmed his intention to remain with A&M program next fall, returning for his junior season. On a recent episode of Griffin’s podcast, Outta Pocket, Reed as was asked point-blank whether he is coming back to Texas A&M for the 2026 season. His response:
“I’m coming back,” he said with a head nod. “I’ll be back.” Griffin went on to comment that, from his view, A&M seemed like the ideal home for Marcel Reed.
“I do too,” Reed responded, agreeing that A&M is the perfect fit. “I mean, I got offers after my freshman year, ” he added. “I thought that this was the best place to be. I didn’t think there was any reason to leave Texas A&M. I have the job and it’s mine to lose. But like, there’s no reason for me to leave.”
Marcel Reed stats, NIL valuation

The good folks at On3 put together a formula for calculating a player’s NIL and roster value based on real reporting on player compensation plus social media exposure and overall talent level. According to their esteemed metric, Marcel Reed checks in with a $2.1 million NIL evaluation. That puts him No. 13 among current college football players and No. 17 among all college athletes.
As a starting quarterback for one of the top 10 teams in the nation this season, you wouldn’t think there’s much reason for Marcel Reed to transfer away from Texas A&M. However, after the stellar year he put together, NFL scouts certainly have him on the radar.
Across 12 regular season games, Reed threw for just under 3,000 yards and will almost certainly eclipse that milestone in the postseason. He also tossed 25 touchdowns vs. just 10 interceptions and added another six touchdowns as a runner to give him more than 30 on the year. Reed’s rushing tally is currently 466 yards. Easily one of the best dual threat quarterbacks in the country, Reed projects to return to a contending Aggie squad in 2026 as a Heisman Trophy frontrunner and potential NFL first round pick,.
More on College Football HQ
NIL
Dick Vitale finds College Football Playoff selection committee far from awesome, baby
Dickie V knows football
Dick Vitale is well-known and loved as a passionate broadcaster and follower of college basketball. His boundless enthusiam and endless catch phrases have dominated college basketball for several decades. But Vitale pretty clearly knows the gridiron as well, and directed some harsh comments on Sunday to the College Football Playoff selection committee. The topic of discussion was Notre Dame, long a Vitale favorite, as he acknowledged 11 family members who have graduated from the school.
Notre Dame’s rough situation
Notre Dame was ranked as the first team out of the College Football Playoff. The two biggest points of contention for the Irish and their fans are that three-loss Alabama remained ahead of them despite a 28-point loss in the SEC championship game, and that Miami– consistently ranked behind Notre Dame in the CFP weekly rankings– somehow jumped them in the final week despite neither team playing a game.
Vitale speaks out
Vitale shared a video to social media with comments he directed straight toward the CFP selection committee.
I’m really having a tough time. Every Tuesday for five consecutive weeks, you post on ESPN, the teams you think, the top 12 that would be eligible at that time to qualify for the Playoffs. Every week, EVERY, not two of the weeks, but all five weeks, you had Notre Dame over Miami. You had Notre Dame in there every week. How logically do they drop out on the last week, when they’ve done nothing in terms of losing a game during that period? Miami lost two games to unranked teams. I have a real tough time with that…. How do you explain the five weeks of having Notre Dame there and then bouncing them? They did zilch in terms of anything in causing that to happen. They didn’t lose a game. They blew out everybody they played, and the bottom line is they got a raw deal. They got a raw deal. Those kids belong in the Playoffs.
Dick Vitale
Irish reaction
Despite the emotional pitch of his video– and Vitale acknowledges that he’s a fan of the Irish– it’s hard to argue with Vitale’s fundamental talking points. Notre Dame pretty clearly felt the sting of CFP exclusion, as the Irish then turned down non-CFP bowl berths, indicating that for the Irish, the season ended up as CFP or bust. But even if the Irish are outside the Playoff, they do have one of the most notable voices in college sports indicating that their CFP exclusion is a difficult-to-justify stance that wrongs an excellent team.

NIL
Every college football team that declined their bowl game on Sunday
Years ago, schools basically cued in line to plead for a spot in a post-season bowl game. Of course, that was an era before every breakfast cereal, motor oil, or obscure mortgage company was sponsoring its own personal bowl game. But Sunday emphasized a growing trend with a number of teams saying ‘thanks, but no thanks’ to bowl berths on Sunday. The final count included at least 10 teams that turned down bowl berths.
The denials sprang from a variety of potential reasons– from pouting over exclusion from the College Football Playoff to teams not wishing the dive into postseason play in the midst of coaching changes to teams that had given up hope at a bowl and moved on with the offseason. But Sunday’s massive exodus of teams NOT playing in bowls certainly made some college football history.
The Wrath of the Irish
Notre Dame’s bowl denial will probably draw the most attention. The Irish finished one spot out of the College Football Playoff, and accordingly decided that they would pass on the gamut of lower bowls. Notre Dame was purportedly offered a spot in the Pop-Tarts Bowl to play the team ranked behind them in the CFP rankings, BYU, but turned it down flat.
All of college football (and even some college basketball celebrities) weighed in on the propriety of the Irish bowl declination, but it’s a massive move that could reverberate throughout future bowl seasons.
— Notre Dame Football (@NDFootball) December 7, 2025
Two Big 12 Coaching Shifts
Kansas State and Iowa State each turned down bowl invitations. In both cases, there are coaching transitions underway. Iowa State lost Matt Campbell to Penn State and is replacing him with Jimmy Rogers. Kansas State saw Chris Kliemann retire and Collin Klein replace him.
Despite the business excuse, the Big 12 made it clear that the decision was not a popular one at the league level. Both schools were fined $500,000 for turning down bowl bids.
The Big 12 fines Kansas State and Iowa State $500,000 each for opting out of a bowl. pic.twitter.com/TLQcgkB6a1
— Ross Dellenger (@RossDellenger) December 7, 2025
Bowl Denial Dominoes (or Sunday Choas for the Birmingham Bowl)
While the NCAA had exactly the number of teams with six or more wins that it needed to fill the bowl vacancies, these three teams declining bowl berths caused the bowls to have to dip into the pool of 5-7 teams. A multitude of 5-7 teams declined bowl bids before Appalachian State finally completed the bowl picture by agreeing to play Georgia Southern in the Birmingham Bowl.
At least seven teams were reported to have turned down last-minute bowl invites off of 5-7 seasons. The list includes Florida State, Auburn, UCF, Baylor, Rutgers, Temple, and Kansas. The 11th hour bowl chaos led to more than a few jokes online. While the 82nd bowl berth was finally filled, at least 10 teams passed on postseason play on a memorable Sunday.
We interrupt for a Public Service Announcement: if you’re a football team (must have at least 11 players) & would like to play in a really cool bowl game & be on ESPN vs. Georgia Southern, please show up at Birmingham’s Protective Stadium by 1 pm Dec. 29th kickoff. Thank you
— Brett McMurphy (@Brett_McMurphy) December 8, 2025
-
Rec Sports2 weeks agoFirst Tee Winter Registration is open
-
Rec Sports2 weeks agoFargo girl, 13, dies after collapsing during school basketball game – Grand Forks Herald
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoCPG Brands Like Allegra Are Betting on F1 for the First Time
-
Sports3 weeks agoVolleyball Recaps – November 18
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoF1 Las Vegas: Verstappen win, Norris and Piastri DQ tighten 2025 title fight
-
Sports2 weeks agoTwo Pro Volleyball Leagues Serve Up Plans for Minnesota Teams
-
Sports2 weeks agoUtah State Announces 2025-26 Indoor Track & Field Schedule
-
Sports2 weeks agoSycamores unveil 2026 track and field schedule
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoRedemption Means First Pro Stock World Championship for Dallas Glenn
-
NIL1 week agoBowl Projections: ESPN predicts 12-team College Football Playoff bracket, full bowl slate after Week 14





