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Tennessee's AD just dropped a bombshell and It could change college sports forever

SEC AD says the only way forward for college athletics is collective bargaining If you’re a fan of college athletics—especially here in the heart of Big Blue Nation—you’ve probably felt the ground shifting under your feet. And now, Tennessee athletic director Danny White just confirmed what many feared and others suspected: “Collective bargaining… is the […]

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Tennessee's AD just dropped a bombshell and It could change college sports forever


SEC AD says the only way forward for college athletics is collective bargaining

If you’re a fan of college athletics—especially here in the heart of Big Blue Nation—you’ve probably felt the ground shifting under your feet. And now, Tennessee athletic director Danny White just confirmed what many feared and others suspected:

“Collective bargaining… is the only solution.”

Charlie Baker

Senate Judiciary Committee Holds Hearing On Sports Gambling In U.S. | Kevin Dietsch/GettyImages

That’s not just a hot take. That’s a full-on detonation of the NCAA’s traditional model.

White, alongside University of Tennessee Chancellor Donde Plowman, is sounding the alarm as the House v. NCAA settlement barrels toward final approval. And if their words prove prophetic, college sports could be on the verge of becoming something unrecognizable.

Let’s break down what’s going on—and why it could matter as much to Kentucky basketball fans as the Final Four itself.

What is collective bargaining, anyway?

Think labor union.

Collective bargaining is when a group of workers—usually through a union—negotiate with their employer as a group. The goal? Better pay, better benefits, and better treatment.

Instead of every athlete trying to secure their own NIL deal or fight for medical care alone, they’d have unified representation. It’s how teachers, factory workers, and professional athletes hammer out contracts.

So what White is really saying is this:

Let’s make the NCAA the employer. Let’s make athletes employees. Let’s negotiate a binding contract for everyone.

That’s a seismic shift.

Why now? House v. NCAA and the $2.8 Billion ticking time bomb

Donald Trump

President Trump Welcomes 2025 NCAA Basketball Champion Florida Gators To The White House | Alex Wong/GettyImages

The call for collective bargaining comes just as the NCAA prepares to settle three landmark lawsuits—House, Hubbard, and Carter v. NCAA—in a deal worth $2.8 billion over 10 years. That deal would compensate past athletes denied NIL revenue and let schools share up to 22% of their annual revenue—around $20-22 million per school—with current players.

That sounds like a win, right?

Well, not exactly.

Critics say the deal:

  • Imposes a salary cap that could be illegal.
  • Fails to protect women’s sports or non-revenue athletes.
  • Limits fair-market NIL deals via a new regulatory clearinghouse.
  • Reduces scholarship opportunities, replacing them with “roster limits.”
  • Was negotiated without direct athlete input.
  • Favors big schools.

Even if U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken signs off—which appears likely—the lawsuits won’t stop. Lawyers are lining up for more already before it even becomes official. The Department of Justice is watching. And no one knows where the new rules will land.

White’s message is clear: This patchwork system is broken. Let’s build a new one.

But collective bargaining isn’t simple folks.

Turning college sports into a unionized labor force brings its own massive complications, including:

  • Who’s in the union? Just football and basketball players? Or every athlete, from gymnastics to golf?
  • Are athletes now employees? If so, what about their scholarships, taxes, and transfer freedom?
  • Title IX nightmares. Equal pay under employment laws could spark lawsuits from every corner.
  • School-by-school chaos. Will Kentucky negotiate a different deal than Florida or Alabama?
  • Who represents the athletes? NIL collectives? New unions? The NCAA’s not exactly trusted here.
  • And what happens if an athlete goes on strike before the NCAA Tournament?

The potential for chaos is real—but so is the potential for progress.

What it means for Kentucky and the SEC

Kentucky has always operated like a blue-blood NBA franchise in March and a southern football school in October. But with revenue-sharing, NIL regulations, and employment classifications in play, schools like UK may have to rethink everything about how they build rosters, fund Olympic sports even more, and even recruit.

Mitch Barnhart

Kentucky’s Big Blue Madness | Andy Lyons/GettyImages

Mark Pope’s Wildcats may benefit from a clearer, more structured compensation model—especially as ticket sales and TV money continue to grow. But it could also limit flexibility and bring unexpected legal challenges to Rupp Arena’s doorstep.

So what say you, BBN?

Do you want college sports to work like the pros?
Do you trust the NCAA, or anyone, to enforce a fair system for everyone?
Or is collective bargaining—the kind Danny White is calling for—the only real path forward?

We’re entering a new era of college athletics. The question is no longer if change is coming—but how much, and how fast.

And for once, Kentucky might not be able to dribble past the politics after all. Interesting times indeed.

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“I Never Wanted to Be a Coach”: Nick Saban Looks Back at How His Coaching Career Started

Seven national championships. 297 total career wins. A 206–29 record at Alabama. Forty-nine first-round NFL Draft picks. From 2007 to 2023, Nick Saban turned the Alabama Crimson Tide program into the gold standard of college football. Alabama never lost more than two SEC games in a season under him, redefining what long-term dominance looks like […]

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Seven national championships. 297 total career wins. A 206–29 record at Alabama. Forty-nine first-round NFL Draft picks. From 2007 to 2023, Nick Saban turned the Alabama Crimson Tide program into the gold standard of college football. Alabama never lost more than two SEC games in a season under him, redefining what long-term dominance looks like in the modern era.

Add to that an unmatched coaching tree, adaptability through NIL and transfer portal chaos, schematic innovations that shaped both college and pro defenses, and we can’t help but place Saban as the greatest college football coach of all time.

Under normal circumstances, many would assume that a genius like Saban must have been obsessed with football from an early age. But in reality, he was juggling both a pigskin and a baseball in his senior year. And believe it or not, becoming a coach never even crossed his mind at the time.

“I never grew up wanting to be a coach. I never wanted to be a coach when I was in college,” Saban admitted in his recent appearance on the Pure Athlete podcast.

This remark feels almost surreal, coming from a man who would spend more than four decades molding programs, mentoring legends, and building dynasties. However, a look at his formative years and this point starts making sense.

As a college athlete at Kent State, Saban planned to focus on baseball full-time after his senior football season. Then came an unexpected detour. Shortly after the Tangerine Bowl, Kent State head coach Don James called Saban into his office with an offer.

“He said, ‘I want you to be a graduate assistant next year’. And I said, ‘Coach, why would I do that? I don’t want to go to grad school, and I don’t want to be a coach’,” recalled Saban.

At the time, Saban was newly married. His wife, Miss Terry, still had a year left in school, and Coach James knew that too. “He said, ‘Boy, your wife’s got to finish school. You can’t go anywhere. You might as well just get your master’s — it’ll help you long term’.”

After some persuasion, Saban agreed. So he quit baseball, dove into coaching, and quickly found that the competitive grind and player development lit something inside him. Hence, after a year as a grad assistant, he took a part-time role and kept climbing. By 27, he was Ohio State’s secondary coach. But still, he wasn’t sold.

“One of these days I’m going to get a real job,” Saban recalled thinking at the time. The real shift in the Alabama legend’s attitude towards coaching came in 1987, when he served as defensive coordinator for Michigan State’s Rose Bowl-winning team.

That season — the best defense in the country, a major bowl win, and national recognition — planted the seed. “I thought, maybe I’ll be a head coach someday,” Saban said.

So he applied for the Kent State job, but as luck would have it, he didn’t get it. “Came in second. And I said, ‘Well, I’ll never be a head coach’.”

Saban then jumped to the NFL with the Houston Oilers. And as we all know, that job didn’t last forever [1988-1989], but the move reminded Saban of a truth he now credits as part of his legacy: “Sometimes the best deals you make are the ones you don’t,” because had he taken that Kent State job, he’d have “probably got fired there like every other coach.”

And while he went on to become the face of college football from then on, Saban’s original career ambition was far from the sidelines.

“I worked at my dad’s service station growing up… I really wanted to go to General Motors school and manage a car dealership. That’s what I had planned,” revealed Saban.

And naturally, he laughs now, knowing how it all turned out. “So after 40 years of coaching… I finally got a car dealership,” said Saban, flexing his investment in nine car dealerships across five states.

All said and done, what started as a reluctant compromise turned into the most decorated coaching career the sport has ever seen. So even if Saban may not have chased the sport, football — and history — chased him.



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What 5-Star Recruit Ryder Lyons Said About NIL After BYU Commitment

The Oregon Ducks have had some notable misses on the 2026 recruiting trail this offseason but certainly one of the more frustrating shortcomings was the loss to the BYU Cougars for five-star quarterback Ryder Lyons. A native of Folsom, CA in the Sacramento area, Lyons is the No. 1 player in the state, the No. […]

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The Oregon Ducks have had some notable misses on the 2026 recruiting trail this offseason but certainly one of the more frustrating shortcomings was the loss to the BYU Cougars for five-star quarterback Ryder Lyons.

A native of Folsom, CA in the Sacramento area, Lyons is the No. 1 player in the state, the No. 4 overall quarterback and the No. 13 player in the 2026 class, according to 247Sports’ rankings. He had been recruited by Oregon coach Dan Lanning and offensive coordinator Will Stein for multiple years, but it was all for naught.

Oregon had been viewed as the favorite for Lyons for most of spring before the buzz started leaning in favor of BYU leading up to his commitment, leading many to believe some lofty Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) money was in play. But during his announcement on The Pat McAfee Show, Lyons admitted that his decision came down to more than just dollar signs.

Ryder Lyons

St. Bonaventure’s Dylan Dunst tackles Folsom quarterback Ryder Lyons during the fourth quarter of the CIF-State Division 1-A state championship bowl at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo on Saturday, Dec. 9, 2023. St. Bonaventure lost 20-14. / JOE LUMAYA/SPECIAL TO THE STAR / USA TODAY NETWORK

MORE: Oregon Ducks Recruiting Class Ranking After 4-Star Recruit Bryson Beaver Commitment

MORE: Why 4-Star Quarterback Recruit Bryson Beaver Committed To Oregon Ducks Over Alabama, LSU

MORE: 5-Star Recruit Ryder Lyons Commits To BYU Over Oregon Ducks On Pat McAfee Show

“It’s hard,” Lyons said of his recruitment and NIL offers. “It’s hard for sure. I do have someone who handles it for me. I have an agent. I have a whole team. But it definitely makes it just confusing. I mean, you’re thrown a lot of money from a lot of different places. … But I think you got to obviously stay humble. Money is not the biggest part. I mean, the biggest part is making it to the NFL, because that’s where the serious money is. That’s where the long term money is.”

During the past two years at Folsom High School, Lyons went 470 of 691 passing for 6,589 yards, 84 touchdowns and 14 interceptions. He also added 344 carries for 1,514 yards and 37 rushing touchdowns, showing off his true dual-threat ability.

If he’s able to replicate this production in Provo, the NFL will certainly be calling his name in the years to come.

On3’s Steve Wiltfong said in May that Oregon had been recruiting Lyons for three years, clearly showing an emphasis on making him a major part of the program’s future.

Dan Lanning

Oregon head coach Dan Lanning walks off the field as the Oregon Ducks face the Ohio State Buckeyes Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025, in the quarterfinal of the College Football Playoff at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. / Ben Lonergan/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

“Oregon’s been recruiting him for three years, led by Will Stein,” Wiltfong said. “(Lyons) loves the offense, what they’ve done with quarterbacks, the fit there.”

Oregon was also unable to land five-star quarterback Jared Curtis in May, as he chose the Georgia Bulldogs. More recently, the Ducks also missed out on five-star cornerback/athlete Brandon Arrington, who chose the Texas A&M.

Oregon didn’t take long to make up for these losses, recently securing a commitment from rising 2026 four-star quarterback Bryson Beaver.

Despite some shortcomings on the recruiting trail, there is still national title expectations in Eugene. Oregon will begin its quest for glory in 2025 when the regular season begins Aug. 30 at home against Montana State.



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‘Don’t Think We Did a Very Good Job’ — Legendary Coach Nick Saban Gets Brutally Honest About NCAA’s NIL Mistakes

It’s no secret that the NIL landscape in college football has been chaotic ever since it was legalized in 2021. With virtually no clear rules or oversight, the sport has become increasingly unpredictable, as programs and players navigate what many see as a lawless environment. One of the most vocal critics of the current NIL […]

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It’s no secret that the NIL landscape in college football has been chaotic ever since it was legalized in 2021. With virtually no clear rules or oversight, the sport has become increasingly unpredictable, as programs and players navigate what many see as a lawless environment.

One of the most vocal critics of the current NIL system in college football has been former Alabama head coach Nick Saban, who is widely considered one of the greatest coaches in the sport’s history. Saban has repeatedly expressed concern that NIL has been implemented in a way that damages college football.

Still, he remains hopeful that the House v. NCAA settlement will bring about the meaningful reforms needed to preserve the game’s integrity.

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Nick Saban Points to NCAA’s NIL Failures as Threat to College Football’s Future

When Saban speaks, the college football world listens. The legendary head coach recently appeared on the “Pure Athlete” podcast to explain how the current NIL system is ruining college football.

Saban believes that NIL was building a pay-to-win system in the sport, and that larger schools with better funding could out-spend smaller schools with less funding.

“I think the system that we had in college football the last few years, you could actually buy a championship,” Saban said. “If you were a school that could raise a significant amount of funds in a collective, you may be operating with a $30 million collective and playing against teams that have a $3 million collective.”

Saban went on to explain that for NIL to work, the fans need to see a good product on Saturdays. With how NIL was being run in the past year, Saban believed that the product was becoming significantly worse, and fans were disinterested in this sport.

“If you don’t have the fans, the support, and the interest, how are you going to maintain the standard of the financial benefits you need to be able to pay players and do all the things we’re talking about in improving the quality of life and having the kind of support for them that’s necessary for the future,” Saban said. “I don’t think we did a very good job of that the last few years in college.”

While Saban has his criticisms of how NIL has been run in the past few years, he believes that the House v. NCAA settlement, which caps NIL spending for each school at $20.5 million, will help even out the college football landscape.

“This is a step in the right direction, this House settlement that just occurred,” Saban said. It does give some guidelines.”

Only time will tell if the settlement can solve many of NIL’s issues, but it aims to level the playing field for all programs regarding spending. Saban’s opinion carries weight, and it’s clear he’s unhappy with the current direction of the sport.





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PSG demolishes Messi's Inter Miami 4

Joao Neves scored twice as Paris St-Germain demolished Inter Miami 4-nil to reach the quarter-finals of the FIFA Club World Cup. The European champions were always expected to brush off the team who sit sixth in Major League Soccer’s Eastern Conference – and so it proved. Neves stooped down to head Vitinha’s free-kick in from […]

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PSG demolishes Messi's Inter Miami 4

Joao Neves scored twice as Paris St-Germain demolished Inter Miami 4-nil to reach the quarter-finals of the FIFA Club World Cup.

The European champions were always expected to brush off the team who sit sixth in Major League Soccer’s Eastern Conference – and so it proved.

Neves stooped down to head Vitinha’s free-kick in from close range for their sixth-minute opener in Atlanta.

The Portugal midfielder got the second goal too in the 39th minute when he slotted in to cap off a fine passing move involving Bradley Barcola and Fabian Ruiz, who also had a goal disallowed himself for offside.

PSG added two more before half-time as Desire Doue’s cross was turned into his own net by Tomas Aviles, before Achraf Hakimi slammed a fourth in added time after his initial effort had been deflected on to the bar.

The French champions eased up in the second half, shutting out their old boy Lionel Messi, who had a couple of chances for Inter Miami.

In the quarter-finals confirmed so far, PSG will play Bayern Munich at 4am on Sunday while Chelsea takes on Palmeiras at 1am on Saturday.

[Source: BBC Sports]

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Coach Johnny Jones Sheds Light On HBCU Basketball’s Biggest Challenges

HOUSTON — The landscape of college basketball continues to evolve and shift for HBCUs, which continue to spiral from the effects of NILs. HBCU Legends spoke with Texas Southern head basketball coach Johnny Jones about the decreasing opportunities for HBCU basketball players hoping to “shoot their shots” at an NBA career. “I think the hard […]

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HOUSTON — The landscape of college basketball continues to evolve and shift for HBCUs, which continue to spiral from the effects of NILs. HBCU Legends spoke with Texas Southern head basketball coach Johnny Jones about the decreasing opportunities for HBCU basketball players hoping to “shoot their shots” at an NBA career.

“I think the hard part is finding that “diamond in the rough” like you used to,” Coach Johnny Jones said. “Before the days of, I guess, with the social media and all the camps and everything that’s ongoing, there may have been someone there that you could get that could really blossom as a freshman that people may not have seen or heard about, and then they could put themselves in position to possibly be considered even for the draft.”

TSU Coach Johnny Jones

TSU Coach Johnny Jones / Credit: Kyle T. Mosley, HBCU Legends

It’s been more than a decade since an HBCU player (Kyle O’Quinn in 2012) heard their name called in the NBA draft. Coach Jones noted that opportunities for discovery have diminished despite Travis Williams’ efforts to showcase HBCU basketball talent over the past four years at the HBCU All-Star Games.

With the mushrooming of scouting opportunities, camps, and AAU circuits fueled by social media, most elite prospects are snatched early by power conference programs.

But recent years have seen even top Power 5 talent slip through the cracks, with Jones citing players like Alabama’s Sears and Arizona’s Love as high-profile examples who didn’t get drafted despite immense exposure. With just 60 spots in the NBA draft — and the increased focus on international pros — HBCU hopefuls face “even more difficulty,” Jones said.

“I just think it’s going to have to be one of those guys that come up and have an exceptional season and get a great deal of exposure from that season that they’re at the school because if they last, unfortunately, if they’re good enough, they certainly won’t be at the school for two years because you get that type of exposure because of the new age of NIL.”

The NBA’s widening global approach is yet another obstacle. Jones noted that international players often face a different development curve—many play professional-level basketball as teenagers, giving them an advantage in terms of maturity and skill.  

“You had some guys opt not to even put their name in the draft this year because they have an opportunity to excel and do well at the colleges that they’re at, especially if it’s one that have the ability to take care of guys with the NIL that they have available to them now.” – Johnny Jones

With the lure of NIL deals, international players now even come stateside to play college basketball before hopping into the draft, squeezing an already bottlenecked pipeline even tighter for HBCU players.

Blake Harper

Blake Harper / Credit: Creighton Athletics

NIL rules have revolutionized the college sports landscape, but for HBCUs, it’s a double-edged sword. Years ago, an athlete might have stayed and built a name and legendary career at one school. Today, if an HBCU player has a breakout year, it’s likely major programs with deeper NIL pockets will woo them.

One recent case study is Blake Harper at Howard University. Harper was a phenomenal player during his freshman season in 2024-25, making it almost impossible for the Bison to keep him in their locker room.   

Creighton won the sweepstakes for his services, and Harper is headed to Nebraska.

“It’s extremely difficult,” Jones admitted, to keep top talent. Yet, he also sees these transfers as opportunities to showcase HBCU development success, which can help attract the next wave of recruits.  

“Programs got to be proactive and I think at the same time be creative in a sense of what they can do to try and have the ability to have some type of NIL or collective, so to speak, at their representative at certain schools,” Coach Jones shared.

Kavion McClain - Texas Southern Tigers Guard

Kavion McClain – Texas Southern Tigers Guard / Credit: TSU Athletics

Coach Jones emphasizes that academics remain the priority for the student-athlete. The “main thing is still the main thing,” he noted. The percentages are low for most collegiate athletes to transition to the NBA as professionals. Thus, how are the coaches preparing their players for life after collegiate sports? Leveraging the surrounding community and networking.

“People come to Houston to make it their home. It’s not one of those places you pass through,” Jones stated.

Leveraging Houston’s rich network of professional athletes and business leaders, Texas Southern, for example, is committed to exposing students to real career possibilities—before and after their playing days.

Texas Southern Vs. Prairie View - Game 1 - 2025

Texas Southern Vs. Prairie View – Game 1 – 2025 / Credit: Kyle T. Mosley, HBCU Legends

Looking ahead to the 2025–26 season, Jones expresses optimism about his new recruits and returning players. Even as they fill gaps left by key losses and brace for a demanding non-conference schedule — including heavyweights like Gonzaga and Texas A&M — he believes the team’s chemistry and collective ethos will be a difference-maker.  

“We couldn’t be happier. You know, a lot of times it’s hard and difficult to get high school kids, but when you get a kid on that level that is making that type of impact and in high school come from a very short high school program, had a teammate that was obviously being looked at a lot of coaches in their gym night in and night out. And LJ was one of those guys that did a tremendous job of holding his own in every game.”

The Texas Southern basketball staff’s commitment extends beyond the court to include professional development, with initiatives focused on social media branding, NIL education, and post-basketball career guidance.

It’s a complex tapestry of issues HBCU basketball faces. The fierce competition for talent and the lack of resources to remain competitive will always be a challenge for our HBCU student-athletes.  

However, through ingenuity, visibility campaigns, and a relentless focus on education, HBCUs can remain a beacon for student-athletes with big dreams—on and off the basketball court.

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Phil Steele predicts order of finish for ACC Football in 2025

College football writer Phil Steele predicted his order of finish for the ACC ahead of the 2025 college football season. It should be a competitive race for the conference crown and some College Football Playoff spots. Clemson returns as the defending ACC champions and is projected to perhaps do so again. SMU, Miami and maybe […]

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College football writer Phil Steele predicted his order of finish for the ACC ahead of the 2025 college football season. It should be a competitive race for the conference crown and some College Football Playoff spots.

Clemson returns as the defending ACC champions and is projected to perhaps do so again. SMU, Miami and maybe a couple of other teams could have something to say about that.

Without further ado, let’s dive into how the ACC could wind up this year. We start at the top!

Clemson is the favorite in the ACC and the projected top team per Steele. Cade Klubnik is back under center following a career year.

Sure, he’s the headliner on the team in 2025, but Dabo Swinney has a solid defense. There are two potential first round picks on the defense line: TJ Parker and Peter Woods.

(Jordan Hofeditz/On3)

SMU made the ACC title game last season against Clemson, lost, but still made the College Football Playoff. We’ll see if that’s still the case this coming season.

Kevin Jennings returns as the QB and it’ll help to have WR Jordan Hudson (no, not the one you’re thinking of), TE RJ Maryland and offensive linemen such as Addison Nichols, Logan Parr and PJ Williams up front.

Miami landed Carson Beck in the transfer portal from Georgia to replace Cam Ward at QB. That was the biggest get for their offseason and they are squarely in the ACC title mix.

Running back Mark Fletcher will be key in the backfield, as well as WR CJ Daniels. On defense, DE Rueben Bain, CB OJ Frederique and LB Wesley Bissainthe will be key to the entire unit.

Steele likes what Brent Key is doing at Georgia Tech and has them in the upper tier of the ACC this season. On offense, WR Eric Rivers and offensive lineman Keylan Rutledge are stars to watch, with QB Haynes King getting them the ball.

Not to mention, RB Jamal Haynes is a stud as well. Defensive tackle Jordan van der Berg should be a problem for opposing offensive lines as well.

Florida State football coach Mike Norvell had a surplus of receivers this spring, leading to some tough roster decisions.
Melina Myers-Imagn Images

Florida State was a disaster last year, but Steele likes them to finish within the top five of the ACC this season. QB Thomas Castellanos has the talent, but also a ton of confidence that some are hoping won’t backfire when FSU plays Alabama to open the year.

Some other playmakers include WR Duce Robinson and CB Jeremiah Wilson. Head coach Mike Norvell really needs a bounce back campaign.

Jeff Brohm and company were picked to finish in the top half of the ACC by Steele for the 2025 season. Isaac Brown and Caullin Lacy should be fun to watch at RB and WR. Transfer QB Miller Moss has a lot of eyes on him after leaving USC.

Linebacker Stanquan Clark leads the defense for the Cardinals this season. Defensive linemen Clev Lubin, Rene Konga and TJ Quinn should be circled on the film too.

The ACC gets some new blood with Bill Belichick this season. The Tar Heels are like Colorado when Deion Sanders took over in 2023: everything will be microanalyzed.

As far as what the Tar Heels have, RB Davion Gause will be interesting to watch, as well as offensive lineman Daniel King. On defense, watch out for CB Thaddeus Dixon.

Desmond Reid, Pitt
Desmond Reid, Pitt – © Kimberly P. Mitchell / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Pitt is projected to be just above the middle of the ACC this coming season, per Steele. They’re coming off a 7-6 season, losing to Toledo in the GameAbove Sports Bowl.

RB Desmond Reid is back in the fold, along with center Lyndon Cooper leading the charge up front on the offensive line. Kenny Johnson will add to the skill on offense at WR and linebacker Kyle Lewis will be one to watch on the opposite side of the ball. Oh yeah, Reid is one of the best returnmen in the country too.

NC State is projected to finish in the middle of the pack, per Steele. Can they rise up the ACC this season? It remains to be seen.

TE Justin Joly might be flying under the radar outside the conference, but Steele has him on his preseason first-team. Linebacker Sean Brown is also a stud and should be a menace for opposing defenses.

Duke played really well under Manny Diaz last season. However, Steele has the Blue Devils in the middle tier of the ACC going into 2025.

There are some preseason first-team players though, such as OT Brian Parker and DB Chandler Rivers. Perhaps the Blue Devils are under the radar.

Brent Pry-Virginia Tech-ACC
Rob Kinnan-USA TODAY Sports

Brent Pry seems to be pushing some right buttons, but the Hokies have yet to get over that hump. Steele has them below the median in the ACC.

As far as the players on Steele’s All-ACC list, it starts at the second-team with offensive lineman Tomas Rimac. TE Benji Gosnell is also a player to watch for the Hokies this season.

Fran Brown had an awesome debut season with the Orange. It helped that QB Kyle McCord was under center, but now he’s off to the NFL.

Steele has Syracuse taking a step back in the ACC this coming season. Still, with the way Brown coaches and recruits, don’t be surprised if this time stuns a few people.

Tony Elliott needs a breakthrough year and to get to the postseason. Steele thinks they can do it in this year’s ACC, but it won’t mean much in terms of the race for the conference crown.

There are nine returning starters for the Cavaliers this season. At some point, something has to give, whether Elliott takes a step forward with the program or not.

(Michigan State) Boston College Eagles head coach Bill O'Brien watches the replay board against the Missouri Tigers during the first half at Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium. - Danny Medley, USA TODAY Sports
Danny Medley, USA TODAY Sports

O’Brien had a great debut season with Boston College, going 7-6. However, Steele doesn’t like them to finish too far out of the basement of the ACC this year.

According to Steele, there’s 12 returning starters, but BC has the third toughest schedule in the conference. Some players to watch for are OL Logan Taylor and safety KP Price, named to Steele’s preseason All-ACC teams.

Justin Wilcox is on the hot seat, Steele writes. Finishing near the bottom of the ACC won’t help that narrative either.

The Bears felt some losses in the transfer portal and don’t have much star power represented in the preseason right now. We’ll see if Cal can surprise some people this fall.

Jake Dickert takes over as head coach after coming over from Washington State. He did a solid job out west but it might take some time to get it going in the ACC.

The good news is, Dickert and Wake had 11 returning starters and attacked the transfer portal. So maybe some good news is on the way in Year 1.

Stanford football head coach Frank Reich.
Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

At the bottom of the ACC for Steele is Stanford, which goes into 2025 with Frank Reich as the interim head coach and former QB Andrew Luck in his role as GM, looking to resurrect the program. How this goes is anyone’s guess, but Steele maintained he wasn’t the only one to pick Stanford to finish last.

Tight end Sam Roush should be a player to watch out for on offense. Others are offensive lineman Simione Pale and kicker Emmet Kenney.



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