Michigan will play in one final football game in 2025, as the Wolverines will take on the Texas Longhorns in the Citrus Bowl on New Year’s Eve (3 p.m., ABC).
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The Kicks You Wear

Subscribe to The Kicks You Wear with Mike D. Sykes, a drill down on the red hot intersection between sports and fashion.
Good morning, friends! Welcome back to The Kicks You Wear. Thanks so much for reading. Appreciate you spending some time with me this morning. Hope your week was awesome.
It’s Labor Day weekend here in the states! If I’m being honest, it’s a bit of a sad time for me because it basically means summer is over. But, hey. At least it’s college football season, right?
While you’re at it, make sure you subscribe to my friend Marc Bain’s monthly newsletter on tech and fashion.
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Let’s jump in.
Taking The Kids Back to School
For years — decades, even — Nike has been the default footwear brand for kids everywhere. We’ve all been there, right? Everyone wants that shiny new pair of Jordans.
Even if you couldn’t get your parents to pony up for the mainline models, you’d be willing to settle for an offshoot of some sort. Even if it was just a regular Nike model, it was fine, so long as it came with a swoosh or a Jumpman.
These days that doesn’t seem to be the case anymore.
What’s new: A new survey from wealth management firm Stifel shows that the kids aren’t as interested in jumping like the Jumpman.
The firm visited and called 110 footwear stores in the US to gather data on the most popular athletic footwear styles for boys and girls during the back-to-school selling season. The stores included Dick’s Sporting Goods, Academy Footwear, Foot Locker, Finish Line and JD Sports, Champs, and Hibbett Sports.
The numbers: The returns showed that Nike was still the leader in the space, but far from the margin it had been.
- Only 38.2 percent of retailers referenced Nike as their most popular brand for the 2025 back-to-school season. That’s an all-time low for Nike in the survey, per Stifel. The number was as high as 88.2 percent in 2023.
- Challenger brands struggled to establish a decent foothold in 2023. New Balance (7.7 percent) was the closest competitor then.
Two caveats: It’s worth noting that, while this survey indicates a decline in popularity for Nike, the sample size isn’t necessarily the largest. Some of the retailers included have thousands of retail locations.
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Plus, this survey strictly measures popularity in the United States. While the US market is a significant one, this is still a global marketplace. This doesn’t represent things on a global scale.
Yet, still: These numbers are notable. They match a broader trend that tells a story of Nike losing the battle for the attention of Gen Z and Gen Alpha.
- Piper Sandler’s latest Taking Stock With Teens survey backs this up. Nike held on as the most popular footwear brand for teens surveyed at 49 percent, but that number was down from 60 percent on average.
Why this is happening: The first, and arguably most important, factor here is Nike’s staleness. The brand has been clawing its way out of a rut for almost a year now. Before that, it leaned heavily on retro styles and lacked innovation at a time when most consumers were looking for newness.
But, secondly, teens are just far more willing to try new things these days. People are increasingly willing to experiment with their fashion choices across various categories these days.
Why this matters: While the demographic of kids and young teens doesn’t necessarily come with the cash older generations do, what they think of a brand is essential.
- Establishing connections with younger generations now means establishing a connection with the leading consumer of tomorrow. If they buy your brand now, they may buy it in another 10 years when their buying power has grown.
- Plus, teens are trendsetters. They’ve always set the tone for contemporary style. And, these days, they plaster it on social platforms like Instagram and TikTok.
Establishing a strong connection with this demographic means creating a brighter future for a brand.
The bottom line: For Nike, regaining the good graces of teens is important. But for companies like New Balance and Adidas, they need to do everything possible to hold the line with new styles and innovation.
Puma May Change Hands Soon
It looks like Puma will be under new ownership soon enough.
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The news: The Pinault family, which has owned Puma since 2018 through its holding company, the Artémis Groupe, is meeting with advisors to help it find potential buyers for its 29 percent stake in the company, Bloomberg reports.
Where things are: Puma’s short-term outlook seems pretty bleak.
These setbacks, coupled with headwinds from an increasingly shaky global economy thanks to the United States’ tariff policy, make it easy to see why someone might be searching for a way out of the sportswear business.
The brand has made significant investments in signature basketball athletes like LaMelo Ball, Tyrese Haliburton and Breanna Stewart. It’s poured money into a Formula One partnership with one of the sports’ most popular brands in Ferrari. Despite that, Puma hasn’t found the rising tide to raise its ships.
Don’t get it twisted: Despite the company’s current short-term outlook, there are some positives the brand has going for it.
- It may not be showing up in sales data yet, but the Puma Speedcat is growing in popularity.
- Puma also recently hired a new CEO, Arthur Hoeld, who is Adidas’ former head of global sales.
- The brand has carved out a fashionable niche for itself, working with big names in the space like A$AP Rocky and working with buzzy brands like Collina Strada and showing up on the runway at Paris Fashion Week earlier this year.
The big picture: None of those aforementioned factors will necessarily be game-changing for Puma on their own, but the brand has seemingly built a bit of momentum for itself that shouldn’t be overlooked in any potential sale.
It might be a good time for someone to buy low here.
Arch Manning x Warby Parker
We saw a ton of sports and fashion collaborations come together this week. Breitling and the NFL. Cadillac and Tommy Hilfiger. American Eagle and Travis Kelce. Out of all the deals consummated this week, though, I think Arch Manning and Warby Parker’s partnership might be the most interesting.
What’s happening: The up-and-coming Texas University football star announced a new name, image and likeness (NIL) deal with Warby this week.
- As part of the deal, Manning’s partnership will include the introduction of new eyewear collections with him as the centerpiece. He’ll also be introducing local initiatives in Austin, Texas as part of Warby Parker’s Pupils Project — a school-based vision program.
- Manning will also star in a new Warby Parker ad featuring him and his father, Cooper, in time for Texas’ first game on August 30.
Why he matters: If you’re not an American college football fan, you probably have no idea who Arch Manning is. The Texas quarterback is the nephew of Hall of Fame NFL QB Peyton Manning and former New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning. He’s a bit of a wunderkind in his sport. Think of him the same way you’d think of, say, Victor Wembanyama in the NBA or Kylian Mbappe in his early days.
The situation: NIL deals in college sports are a bit of a new phenomenon. American collegiate athletes weren’t able to capitalize on their name, image, or likeness until July 2021, meaning they couldn’t sign any brand deals while in school, no matter how popular they were.
The marketplace is the wild, wild west. There are hardly any rules or regulations. Luxury fashion brands have avoided the space so far. That’s why this deal is so striking to me.
Why this matters: Warby Parker isn’t necessarily a luxury brand, but it is luxury adjacent. It’s a premium brand exploring a space where similar brands haven’t. That’s interesting. Especially with a player like Manning, who could have a massive long tail as he advances in his career. There is a chance he doesn’t work out — sometimes, college stars flop. Regardless, it’s beneficial for brands to get on board now.
The big picture: If the NFL’s Breitling deal and this Warby Parker partnership for Arch Manning are any indication, luxury seems to see something in the relatively untapped market of American football. There are opportunities available and interesting athletes to work with.
If that’s the case, then we’ll probably see more deals like this one coming for other players soon.
Caitlin Clark’s Signature Journey Begins

The wait is over. Nike has officially made Caitlin Clark one of its signature athletes. On Monday, the brand unveiled her logo publicly for the first time.
Gotta say, guys. I think this looks great.
My thoughts: There’s a clear luxury inspiration with this. The CC obviously reminds you of Chanel, but I think the clearest inspiration for this one is Gucci’s current interlocking Gs logo. It’s almost identical.
Why this matters: Caitlin Clark is the WNBA’s most popular player. Fans have been clamoring for a signature shoe from Nike from the moment she was drafted by the Indiana Fever. While this isn’t Nike presenting the shoe itself, we do know that the process is at least underway and we’re a step closer.
Nike is set up to dominate women’s basketball. Its roster signature includes Sabrina Ionescu, A’ja Wilson and, now, Caitlin Clark — easily three of the most popular players in the league.
If the brand plays things right, it should run this space for the next decade.
#TheKicksWeWear
This is the section where we share our favorite sneakers and favorite outfits from the week. If you have anything you’d like to send, you can forward it to me at michael.sykes@businessoffashion.com or shoot me something on Instagram, X or BlueSky at @MikeDSykes.
Enjoy!!!
First the homie Yosh got us started with the Shattered Backboards. Love these. Glad everyone is getting pairs.

Then the homie Trudy came through with these Icy AE1s. SOTY 2024.

Then the homie Mark came through with these SICK Salomon x Ama Lou Void XT-Whispers. Get hip to these, guys.

Then Matt took us home with the Chlorine Blue Air Max 97. This is one of my FAVORITE pairs of Maxes. That color is so good.

Greaaaaat stuff, you guys. Bravo.
That’s a wrap, gang. Thanks so much for reading today. Have a fantastic weekend. If you’re reading this from the US, have a great Labor Day weekend. Hope you enjoy some much-deserved time off.
If you have any questions, comments or concerns, feel free to hit me at michael.sykes@businessoffashion.com or tap me on the socials @mikedsykes.
Until next time. Peace and love. Be safe, be easy, be kind. We out.
-Sykes 💯
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Shane Beamer blasts report surrounding cost of deals signed by LaNorris Sellers, Dylan Stewart
South Carolina fans received an early Christmas present this week when superstar quarterback LaNorris Sellers and star pass rusher Dylan Stewart both inked new rev-share/NIL deals with the Gamecocks to return for the 2026 season. Sellers announced his plan to return on Monday on X/Twitter, while Stewart confirmed his return Tuesday on Instagram.
And while South Carolina’s Shane Beamer undoubtedly welcomed both back with open arms, the fifth-year Gamecocks head football coach shot down a Tuesday night report from Columbia’s SportsTalk Media Network suggesting the price tag for the two Gamecocks stars was “in the neighborhood of $5 million from the school’s rev share total.”
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“Sounds to me like you need some much better sources,” Beamer reponded on X/Twitter on Christmas Eve. “This isn’t even remotely close to being true. #AnythingForClicks #Merry Christmas”
Sellers has been one of the top dual-threat quarterbacks in college football the past two seasons, combining on 5,915 total yards and 43 touchdowns as South Carolina’s starter in 2024-25. That included more than 2,700 yards and 18 touchdowns in a difficult 2025 season that saw Beamer part ways with offensive coordinator Mike Shula in early November. Beamer has since hired former Arkansas, FSU and TCU offensive coordinator Kendal Briles as the Gamecocks’ new OC ahead of Sellers’ third season as QB1.
“He’ll be the first to tell you he needs to play better, and we’ve got to coach him better,” Beamer said earlier this month, according to On3’s Gamecock Central. “We’ve got to be better around him, and we all have to be accountable. He understands that. … (And) all indications I’ve had from LaNorris are that he wants to be here. … He knows that the job is not finished, and there’s a lot of excitement about ’26, and he and a lot of our other players that are returning feel that same way.”
Meanwhile, the 6-foot-5 and 250-pound Stewart has totaled six forced fumbles, 11 sacks, 22.5 tackles for loss and 56 total tackles in 24 career games across his first two seasons in Columbia. Stewart is a former Five-Star Plus+ signee in the 2024 recruiting class as the nation’s No. 3 EDGE rusher and No. 17 overall player, according to the Rivals Industry Ranking.
“They’re extremely excited about what this team could be in 2026, and they’re a big part of that. There’s no question,” Beamer said on National Signing Day earlier this month. “I know there’s no sense of, ‘I’m not really sure South Carolina’s where I want to be.’ It’s them making the best decisions for them and their families and their futures.”
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Alabama football: Parker Brailsford spreads cheer, DeBoer talks Indiana
DeBoer spent one year as Tom Allen’s offensive coordinator, helping Indiana reach its first Florida-based January bowl game (at a time when that still carried greater meaning) in 2019.
And Cignetti spent four years as part of Nick Saban’s first Alabama staff, coaching wide receivers and coordinating recruiting for the program Cignetti eventually helped win a national championship.
But they’ve both distinguished themselves in their profession through their willingness to climb the coaching pyramid: From outside Division I, through lower levels as either a head coach or coordinator, all the way up to the sport’s biggest stage.
“Knowing coach Cignetti and — you referred to it — his path, nothing but respect for how he’s done it, how he’s gotten to this spot,” DeBoer said.
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Surprising List Of Colorado Buffaloes’ Biggest NIL Valuations
The Colorado Buffaloes are facing a mass exodus through the NCAA Transfer Portal. One reason that players enter the portal in the current college football landscape is due to Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals.
The current Colorado Buffaloes players with the highest NIL Valuation according to On3 are notable when evaluating who will be on the team next season.

Colorado Players With Highest NIL Valuation
- Jordan Seaton: $1.7M
- Julian Lewis: $1.1M
- Omarion Miller: $570K
- Jehiem Oatis: $390K
- Tawfiq Byard: $358K
- Dre’lon Miller: $321K
- Noah King: $315K
- Christian Hudson: $312K
- Carde Smith: $311K
- Zarian McGill: $119K
NIL valuations are not how much players are earning, but On3’s way of measuring a player’s projected annual value. It combines roster value and NIL value.

One of the most significant aspects of the top 10 Colorado players is that only two are set to return to the team in 2026: offensive tackle Jordan Seaton and quarterback Julian Lewis. Offensive lineman Zarian McGill is also in the top 10, but is headed to the NFL in 2026.
The remainder of the top 10 in NIL valuation have announced their intention to enter the portal. With the number of players set to leave the team, the Buffaloes will lose several highly valued players.
MORE: Deion Sanders Reportedly Hires Familiar Name As Colorado Running Backs Coach
MORE: Why Shedeur Sanders Will Bounce Back From Late-Season Struggles
MORE: Insider Reveals Biggest Reason Behind Colorado’s Transfer Portal Mass Exodus
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Jordan Seaton Highest NIL Valuation On Colorado
Seaton has the highest NIL valuation and is one of the most critical players on the Buffaloes. Seaton has been with the program for two years, both of which have been dominant. He missed three games due to a foot injury, but allowed just two sacks and five quarterback hurries over 328 pass protection snaps.
Seaton will be entering his third year with the program, which will likely be his last, as he could declare for the NFL draft after the 2026 season.

After a 3-9 season, it was possible Seaton would enter the portal, but he is expected to return to the Buffaloes in 2026. Seaton will play a prominent role in Colorado’s offense next season, with Lewis set to be the team’s week 1 starter. As Colorado looks to take a step forward, having an elite player on the offensive line who is also a veteran on the team will be crucial.
Julian Lewis Ready To Lead The Buffaloes
Lewis is preparing for a big year with the Buffaloes after developing throughout the 2025 season. He was a big pickup in the 2025 recruiting class, initially committed to the USC Trojans before flipping to Colorado.
Lewis started in three games this season, his first being against the West Virginia Mountaineers on Nov. 8. Colorado coach Deion Sanders decided to redshirt Lewis, which meant the quarterback did not play in the final game of the season.

“I’ve made a decision that JuJu is going to redshirt,” Sanders told the media when announcing the decision. “That’s my decision. I want what’s best for the kid, what’s best for his family, what’s best for this wonderful university that has given me the tremendous opportunity and given him the opportunity. I think for the program, it’s best for everyone, but mainly it’s great for him.”
Lewis passed for 589 yards, four touchdowns, and no interceptions. The Buffaloes hired offensive coordinator Brennan Marion, who helped turn programs around by fixing the offense. With Marion and Seaton’s return, Lewis is set up for success in 2026 and beyond.
Though four games are a small sample size, the young quarterback has a high ceiling. He made some big throws, and with Marion, Lewis has the chance to take off in 2026.
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Biff Poggi should no longer be considered for Michigan’s HC job
The team will be without at least three players, as Derrick Moore, Jaishawn Barham and Giovanni El-Hadi are all skipping the game to prepare for the NFL Draft. Speaking to the media on Monday, interim head coach Biff Poggi didn’t think anyone else on the team would opt out of the game. However, his tune changed quite a bit just two days later, as he speculated on a Texas-based podcast called “The Stampede” that he may be down even more guys than that.
Players on the team were sent home to be with family for Christmas earlier this week, but Poggi doesn’t know how many of those players will come back on Friday when the team is slated to leave for Orlando.
“I think there’s a really good chance that we’re going to have many more opt outs for the game, unfortunately, because we’re in such a stat of flux,” Poggi said. “And when they get to the business side of it, they think, ‘Well, we don’t have a coach,’ or, ‘We’ve had this situation with our former coach, there’s investigations and all these things, I don’t know who’s going to coach me. Why do I want to play in that game?’ So I can see some of that happening, too. And I would tell you on (December) 26th, we’re probably going to have a significantly different roster than we had yesterday when we sent them home.”
Poggi also mentioned how he thinks “most of the guys opting out need to play … they need the film, and they need to play well,” and that “team the way you and I knew it is gone now. And now it is strictly a financial and a business decision, and the head coach and the position coaches really are not players in that discussion.”
In other words, the decisions the players are making are based on what their families and agent are telling them, and they are not consulting with their coaches one bit. And in other words — players are doing what’s in their best interest.
As a former hedge fund manager, Poggi should understand risk management and trying to generate the best returns possible. That’s why Poggi said he doesn’t want to “be the guy that talks them into (playing a bowl game), and then something happens.” So while he understands why the players are doing what they are doing, he isn’t exactly onboard with how the decisions are being made.
There’s a lot to digest in this podcast, and I think the main takeaway for me is that Poggi is not made to be a head coach in college football. And that’s fine — he’s been very successful and has made a lot of money doing other things. And if he wants to continue making an impact in the lives of young adults, he can still do that, but he should by no means be doing that in the position of head coach at the University of Michigan.
And if you need one more quote as far as why Poggi should not be considered any longer for this position — and this is a real quote, by the way — here you go:
“I would ask one thing, and I’m being very serious — you need to pray for us,” Poggi said. “Because we are going through things that no young kid should have to go through … just when you hit your knees tonight, you don’t have to pray that we win, I know that ain’t gonna happen, just pray that the good lord will give me the right wisdom to do this the way it needs to be done.”
Update: Some people are interpreting this as Biff saying he knows the Texas podcasters wouldn’t pray for Michigan since they’re playing in the bowl game, while others are interpreting it as Biff saying they won’t win the game. If he meant the former, I do sincerely apologize, but the way I initially interpreted it while listening to the podcast, it sounded like he was saying the latter, especially given other comments he’s made about how he was hoping to not play against Texas because they’re a good team.
With it being the holiday season, Coach Poggi, I will give you what you are requesting and I will pray for you and the players to get through this. You’re right — no young person should have to endure the things that they have endured over the last couple weeks. I can’t imagine being in college and having all that happen at once.
However, to go on an opponent’s podcast and air Michigan’s dirty laundry publicly is not something an interim head coach should be doing. Whether you realize it or not, you have given the players that are on the fence a reason to not come back for the bowl game (and beyond that).
If this podcast appearance didn’t eliminate Biff from consideration, I don’t know what will. But under no circumstances should he be legitimately be considered for this job any longer.
Merry Christmas, and thank God for Dusty May, Kim Barnes Arico and Brandon Naurato.
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The College Football Playoff Is Mostly About Who Spent the Most
The winter holidays mark a time of joy and celebration for some, but are more defined by anxiety for others. Amid college football’s annual holiday-season tradition of bowls games, the sport’s shift from the long-held postseason customs to an expanded playoff heightens anxiety.
Regardless if one falls in the category of joyful reveler or cantankerous Scrooge, consumerism plays a critical role in the season. College football is no different, with the recent advent of NIL becoming a foundational element of the game evident in the remaining Playoff field.
As the bracket whittled down from 12 to eight with last weekend’s opening-round games, the College Football Playoff demonstrated an exercise comparable to Eddie Murphy’s monologue about Christmastime spending in the seasonal classic Trading Places: “I ain’t gonna have money to buy my son the G.I. Joe with the kung-fu grip, and my wife ain’t going to make love to me ‘cause I got no money.”
Well, reaching the Playoff and advancing are similar. The eight quarterfinalists stand as testament to spending power — though it’s difficult to pinpoint exactly how much, which contributes to rising anxieties.
A CBS Sports article ahead of the 1st Round broke down the tournament into NIL-spending tiers, with five of the 12 labeled “elite spenders.” Four of those play on in the round of eight: reigning national champion Ohio State, Oregon, Texas Tech and Miami, which outlasted fellow elite spender Texas A&M in what was perhaps uncoincidentally the most competitive of the four opening-round games.
James Madison and Tulane were both routed against deep-pocketed opponents in Oregon and Ole Miss, which isn’t necessarily a data point worth applying to any NIL discussion. Athletic departments with more funds through television revenue, merchandising, etc. have long had advantages against their counterparts from conferences with fewer resources, and that disparity is a defining trait of the underdog stories fans love.
In the case of this year’s Playoff other historical underdogs, however, NIL spending is an undeniably crucial factor in Indiana and Texas Tech pursuing the national championship.
The top-seeded, undefeated Hoosiers head into their first Rose Bowl Game in almost six decades behind the Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza. The Indiana quarterback has an NIL valuation of $2.6 million per On3.com estimates, up from the $1.6 million estimate shortly after Mendoza’s transfer from Cal.
And while less dramatic in a historical context than Indiana’s rise to prominence, Texas Tech competing for the national championship is a significant jump for a program previously destined to also-ran status. The Red Raiders are underdogs in the sense that they were rarely competitive on a national level previously, but Texas Tech reportedly spends on NIL with a fervor comparable to top-tier soccer clubs.
The soccer parallel works in part because, like a once-middling Manchester City became an English Premier League powerhouse coinciding with an infusion of cash, Texas Tech owes much of its rise to oil money.
On3 reported Texas Tech spent a whopping $28 million on its 2025 roster, making it one of the highest-priced lineups in college football. The public face of Tech’s NIL collective, former Red Raiders lineman Cody Campbell, sold his energy company Double Eagle for a reported $4.1 billion earlier this year.
So does this year’s Playoff foreshadow all our football holiday seasons to come? Does a program need its own version of Landman to strike it rich in order to compete?
Looking at the other closely contested 1st-Round matchup — Alabama’s comeback win at Oklahoma — offers fascinating perspective. It pit against one another two historically outstanding programs that CBS Sports designated as “good, but not as elite as you think” spenders.
That’s an interesting description, as it aligns particularly with Alabama’s drop-off from the most dominant program in the sport in the years just before the Supreme Court allowed NIL payments in 2021, to the Crimson Tide’s current positioning as a consistent winner but hardly a world-beater.
Now, it’s overly simplistic to credit Alabama’s marginal slide to NIL spending and discredits just how remarkable Nick Saban was as the Tide’s head coach. But it is noteworthy that Saban has been an outspoken critic not of NIL, but its lack of structure.
“I’m all for the players making money,” [but] I don’t think we have a sustainable system right now,” Saban said last spring. I think a lot of people would agree with that. In terms of the future of college athletics period, not just football, how do we sustain 20 other non-revenue sports that create lots of other opportunities for people in the future?”
In its parallel with the holiday season, Saban’s comments about the long-term health of college athletics during this present-day era of unregulated spending might bring to mind nightmares of credit-card bills coming due after a gift-buying spree.
You have perhaps noticed much of the information on NIL spending is presented in estimates. The lack of concrete oversight or regulation makes evaluating the landscape difficult, and only adds to the anxiety surrounding NIL.
NIL
College Football Playoff team loses two-time All-American to transfer portal
Tulane finished the regular season as American Athletic Conference champion and secured the AAC’s automatic berth into the expanded 12-team College Football Playoff, closing the year with a 12–1 record.
Unfortunately, the Green Wave’s historic season ended with a 41–10 loss to Ole Miss in the first round, as the Rebels dominated from the opening kickoff and advanced to face No. 3 Georgia in the Allstate Sugar Bowl.
Jon Sumrall, Tulane’s head coach since December 2023, guided the program to consecutive conference-title contention and the 2025 AAC crown before taking the open Florida job on November 30, agreeing to a six-year deal worth nearly $7.5 million annually.
Now, one of the Green Wave’s cornerstone players is set to leave alongside him.
On Wednesday, Rivals’ Hayes Fawcett reported that Tulane All-American interior offensive lineman Shadre Hurst is entering the NCAA transfer portal.
Hurst is a redshirt junior interior lineman who has started 36 career games for the Green Wave, earning First-Team All-AAC honors and All-American recognition in both 2024 and 2025.
Tulane’s athletic department also placed Hurst on multiple preseason national watch lists in 2025, including the Outland Trophy Preseason Watch List.
Pro Football Focus graded Hurst with a 90.5 pass-blocking mark, placing him among the nation’s highest-rated pass protectors at his position.

Before arriving at Tulane, Hurst was a Cartersville (Georgia) high-school product who earned First Team All-State honors from the AJC and First Team All-Region 7-AAAAA recognition.
He also emerged as one of the Southeast’s top heavyweight wrestlers, finishing state runner-up as a junior before winning a state championship as a senior.
Despite those accolades, Hurst was an unranked prospect who held just five offers—Tulane, UMass, Washington State, Chattanooga, and Southeast Missouri State.
Now, he is widely viewed as both an NFL prospect (projected third- to fourth-round pick) and a highly attractive Power Four transfer target in need of experienced interior offensive line help.
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