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NIL

Transfer portal positions of need for Kentucky football

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When Will Stein was introduced as Kentucky football’s coach, he did not shy away from expectations for the type of quick turnaround seen at schools like Indiana after coaching changes.

“I didn’t come here to be average, to be mediocre,” Stein said. “I came here to win and win championships.

“I’ve won at every single level that I’ve been at: high school, college. Now the goal is to win here. Not to win five years down the road, 10 years down the road. Do it now.”

Step one in building a competitive 2026 roster is determining which Wildcats with remaining eligibility the new staff thinks are worth prioritizing with revenue sharing and NIL funds to keep. Stein made it most of a month without news of a major piece from the 2025 roster transferring, but that trend ended this week with announcements that quarterback Cutter Boley, cornerback DJ Waller and defensive lineman Jerod Smith were entering the portal. Boley’s departure in particular changes the staff’s portal strategy since a large portion of the roster budget must now be devoted to a new starting quarterback.

Even if Stein and his staff keep all the returning Wildcats they want to build around, they need more help. Starter-caliber transfers are clearly needed at a handful of positions even without further departures. Almost every position on the roster could use at least one addition for depth, but needs will need to be prioritized to fit within the program’s revenue-sharing and NIL budget. For instance, shortly after the portal opened Friday, UK was reported to be hosting Texas running back C.J. Baxter, a former five-star recruit, for his first visit, even though running back does not appear to be one of the bigger holes on the roster.

There will be only one transfer portal window this offseason, meaning Stein and company have to make any additions to the roster from the group of players that enters the portal between Jan. 2-16. The 16th is also the deadline for students to enroll in classes for the spring semester at UK, meaning any transfers who are planning to be on campus for spring practice must be signed by then.

The list of transfer-portal priorities could change with a key loss in the coming days, but as the portal opens, here’s a look at the positions where the new staff definitely needs to find help.

Quarterback

Stein was measured in his public comments about Boley before the transfer announcement, so it is possible the staff was always looking to add a quarterback to at least compete for the starting job. Regardless, the new coaches clearly decided not to best whatever financial package Boley has been presented by other interested programs.

Now, Stein and offensive coordinator Joe Sloan must identify and land a new starter, who will surely take a large chunk of the roster budget. Stein thrived with transfer quarterbacks at Oregon, helping turn Bo Nix, Dillon Gabriel and Dante Moore into stars, so he has plenty of evidence to show the current crop of transfers why they should pick Kentucky. The quarterback market is expensive, though, and Kentucky probably needs at least two additions.

Redshirt freshman Brennen Ward is the only quarterback remaining on the roster. Four-star signee Matt Ponatoski could join him in the summer if he does not elect to skip college altogether and sign a baseball contract as an MLB draft pick in July. Even if Ponatoski follows through on the plan to play football and baseball at UK, the Wildcats need a fourth scholarship quarterback for 2026. Does Stein try to land two quarterbacks to compete for the job or prioritize one starter and a depth option?

Possible targets: UK is a “major player” for former Arizona State quarterback Sam Leavitt, according to On3. Leavitt was considered one of the top quarterbacks in the country entering 2025 but he was limited to just seven games due to a foot injury. ESPN reported Thursday, before Boley’s announcement, that Kentucky was one of the schools pursuing former TCU quarterback Josh Hoover.

Offensive tackle

With offensive guard Jalen Farmer’s decision to enter the NFL draft, Kentucky must replace its entire starting offensive line from 2025. Filling those holes is made more difficult because the former staff rarely rotated on the line in 2025, providing little game evidence of how many backups are ready to step into larger roles. The best-case scenario for the line is left tackle Malachi Wood, center Evan Wibberley and guard Aba Selm are ready to at least compete for starting jobs. Junior college transfer Jordan Knox could add another possible starter to the mix of linemen already in the fold.

There is no clear candidate on the roster to start at right tackle, though. Darrin Strey was listed as the top backup there in 2025 but played only a smattering of snaps in blowouts as a freshman. It seems unlikely he will be ready to start in the SEC as a redshirt freshman. Kentucky must add at least one transfer tackle that can be counted on as a surefire starter. Whether multiple tackle additions are needed will depend on the staff’s evaluation of Wood and the other young tackles on the roster.

Possible targets: One name to watch is former LSU tackle Carius Curne, who started five games as a freshman in 2025. UK has been listed as a contender for Curne thanks to the presence of former LSU offensive coordinator Joe Sloan on Kentucky’s staff, but there will be stiff competition for one of the most talented tackles in the portal. UK has also been linked to LSU tackles Tyree Adams and Ory Williams.

Cornerback

There was a scenario where Kentucky might have been able to build around the players already on campus at this position with four cornerbacks who started games last season having eligibility left, but that possibility was ended by the announcements that DJ Waller and Nasir Addison were entering the portal. Waller, while rarely healthy in two years at UK, was the most talented cornerback on the roster, and Addison impressed as a fill-in starter in the wins over Auburn and Florida last season.

Junior Terhyon Nichols, who has started seven games in two seasons at UK, is now the top returning cornerback. Sophomore Grant Grayton, who played more than expected as a freshman due to the injury crisis at the position, is also set to return. Nichols battled his own injury issues last season though, and Grayton did not look ready for a starting job.

Kentucky did sign junior college transfer Braxton Urquhart in December to at least boost depth at the position and has some intriguing younger cornerbacks on the roster who did not play much in 2025. Still, at least one transfer capable of competing for a starting job now looks like an essential addition.

Possible targets: Western Carolina cornerback Hasaan Sykes, who totaled three interceptions in 2025, announced a UK scholarship offer Friday and plans to visit Lexington on Jan. 3. Villanova defensive back Anthony Hawkins, who played mostly safety at his former school, is scheduled to visit UK, Iowa and Wisconsin, according to On3. Iowa State cornerback Quentin Taylor plans to visit Mississippi State, Cincinnati and Kentucky, according to On3.

Offensive guard

The former staff viewed Selm as a guard capable of stepping into a featured role next season, but an injury that made him a regular inclusion on the weekly availability report and caused him to miss the final four games prevented him from gaining valuable game experience in 2025. Knox, a former four-star recruit who played guard and tackle at Northwestern as a freshman before transferring to a junior college, was recruited by the former staff as a possible 2025 contributor too. Freshman Jay Clark is the other top returning guard.

Counting on two of those three players to turn into SEC-caliber starters is a dangerous proposition. If the new staff is impressed by the practice film of Selm and Clark available to them, perhaps it does not need to pay top dollar in the guard transfer market, but at least one addition capable of competing for a starting job is needed.

Possible targets: Centers Coleton Price (Baylor) and Delvin Morris (Akron) are reportedly visiting Kentucky this weekend. It is possible the staff envisions moving one or both to guard, or moving current center Evan Wibberley to guard if he stays at UK.

Inside linebacker

UK must replace both starting inside linebackers after Alex Afari and Daveren Rayner exhausted their eligibility in 2025. But an injury that caused Afari to miss time down the stretch gave Grant Godfrey an expanded role and a chance to prove worthy of a starting job heading into his junior season. Even if the new staff thinks Godfrey is ready to start, UK needs another inside linebacker starter.

Antwan Smith played regularly as a backup linebacker in 2025 but did not look ready to take over a featured role. Maybe he makes a big jump over the offseason, but with no proven depth behind him, finding a veteran linebacker is a must. The other four scholarship inside linebackers with eligibility left played only a handful of snaps combined last season.

Possible targets: Arkansas linebacker Tavion Wallace, a former four-star recruit and the younger brother of former UK linebacker Trevin Wallace, told On3 he would visit UK this weekend after entering the portal.

Nose guard

Kentucky’s top three nose guards from 2025 are gone, with starter David Gusta and backup Josaih Hayes having played their last college games and backup Austin Ramsey announcing plans to transfer. The hope is retaining defensive line coach Anwar Stewart will help Kentucky keep key linemen like Tavion Gadson and Mi’Quise Humphrey-Grace in the fold, but even in that scenario, UK needs a new nose guard for the base 3-4 formation.

Perhaps new defensive coordinator Jay Bateman envisions moving one or more lineman from other positions to the nose, but for now Kalen Edwards looks like the best option there. The 6-foot-4, 328-pound lineman should be a rotation piece at least after redshirting as a freshman, but with no spring transfer window anymore, Kentucky cannot afford to wait to see if a full winter in the strength and conditioning program transforms Edwards into a starter.

Possible targets: Defensive lineman Ahmad Breaux (LSU), Ian Geffrard (Arkansas), Khalil Poteat (Temple), Michai Boireau (Florida) and Kourtney Kelly (West Georgia) were all reported to be planning visits to Kentucky on the first day the portal was open. Former Frederick Douglass star Jamarrion Harkless, who started all 12 games for Purdue in 2025, is among the early options in the portal at the position.

AUBURN, ALABAMA - NOVEMBER 22: Malcolm Simmons #4 of the Auburn Tigers breaks into the open field during the first half against the Mercer Bears at Jordan Hare Stadium on November 22, 2025 in Auburn, Alabama. (Photo by Brandon Sumrall/Getty Images)
Malcolm Simmons totaled 25 catches for 457 yards and two touchdowns as a sophomore at Auburn in 2025. He capped the season with three catches for 143 yards and one touchdown against Alabama. Brandon Sumrall Getty Images

Wide receiver

Five of the nine wide receivers listed on UK’s two-deep depth chart last season, including leading receiver Kendrick Law, are gone. If DJ and Cam Miller and Hardley Gilmore all return, that’s a decent nucleus to build around at the position, but UK needs at least one starter. The good news is wide receiver is the strength of the 2026 high school signing class, led by four-star prospect Kenny Darby, the first recruit to pledge to Stein at UK.

Stein’s high-octane offense should be attractive to any number of receivers in the portal, but Kentucky will have to consider how much of its revenue-sharing and NIL budget to devote to the position if it’s able to retain the underclassmen.

Possible targets: UK has already been linked to former Auburn wide receiver Malcolm Simmons. UTSA wide receiver Devin McCuin, who caught 65 passes for 726 yards and eight touchdowns while playing for new UK receivers coach Joe Price last season, has also announced plans to enter the portal. On3 has also listed Kentucky among the suitors for Syracue receiver Darrell Gill and Missouri receiver Marquis Johnson.

Punter

Kicker Jacob Kauwe has three years of eligibility left if he stays at UK, but the Wildcats have no punters on the roster following the graduation of Aidan Laros and Wilson Berry. With the SEC allowing teams to fund up to 110 scholarships next season, Kentucky should at least be able to offer a full scholarship to a punter from a smaller school if the staff decides to pursue a transfer.

Former special teams coordinator Jay Boulware moved UK away from its pipeline of Australian punters, but it is possible the new staff looks to Australia again for a late signee in February. Oregon, where Stein and UK’s reported new special teams coordinator Parker Fleming currently work, uses an Australian punter. Ohio State also used an Australian punter while Fleming was special teams coordinator there. Max Duffy, who won the Ray Guy Award as the nation’s top punter while playing for UK, is now a coach with ProKick Australia, the organization that sends most Australian punters to college teams.

This story was originally published January 2, 2026 at 5:00 AM.

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Jon Hale

Lexington Herald-Leader

Jon Hale is the University of Kentucky football beat writer for the Lexington Herald-Leader. He joined the Herald-Leader in 2022 but has covered UK athletics for more than 10 years. Hale was named the 2021 Kentucky Sportswriter of the Year.
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How college football’s new rules created the most unpredictable CFP final four ever

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The Athletic has live coverage of Miami vs. Ole Miss in the College Football Playoff Fiesta Bowl game.

For all the angst caused by the tumultuous evolution of college football into something that is not quite professional sports but definitely not what it used to be, the effects on what happens on the field have been all kinds of fun.

The new rules — or maybe the lack of rules — permitting players to be paid and leaving them free to move from team to team have produced a final four like never before.

This week’s College Football Playoff semifinals matching Ole Miss against Miami and Oregon against Indiana provide a fitting conclusion to what can comfortably be described as the most unpredictable season of the Playoff era. For the first time, the final four includes no recent national title winners and no preseason top-five teams.

The main criticism of the CFP’s four-team era was that the national title race had become too predictable. By expanding the field to 12, the hope was to bring some new blood beyond just the blue bloods into the spotlight.

Two years in, mission accomplished. In last week’s quarterfinals, Ohio State, Georgia and Alabama — combined 11 national titles since 2002 — were all eliminated.

The bigger field, though, is not so much the reason for the power shift as the vehicle for showcasing how much name, image and likeness compensation and unrestricted transfers have flattened the talent curve.

“Teams are built differently today than they were five years ago,” former Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby said. “There’s no question about that. I don’t know if it’s leveled the playing field, but it’s moved talent around, following money.”

The margins between top teams have shrunk, intangibles such as fit, culture and identity are more impactful than ever and the number of teams that can aspire to win a national championship seems to have expanded, fortuitously, along with the CFP.

“Well, it is the new normal,” said former Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick, who along with Bowlsby was one of the architects of the 12-team format. “Indiana, they are a new powerhouse. I would argue that some traditional powerhouses aren’t flourishing as much. You’re changing out who’s in that position but are there really more (national title contenders)? I don’t know?

“It feels like there are more teams with an opportunity to be in the top echelon.”

This newfound unpredictability comes on the heels of maybe the most predictable period in modern college football history as it relates to the national championship race: the super-team era, dominated by Nick Saban’s Alabama dynasty and a small group of challengers.

Preseason rankings of CFP semifinalists

Season Champion Runner-up Semifinalist Semifinalist

2014

Oregon (3)

Alabama (2)

Florida State (1)

2015

Clemson (12)

Michigan State (5)

Oklahoma (19)

2016

Alabama (1)

Ohio State (6)

Washington (14)

2017

Georgia (15)

Clemson (5)

Oklahoma (7)

2018

Alabama (1)

Notre Dame (12)

Oklahoma (7)

2019

Clemson (1)

Ohio State (2)

Oklahoma (4)

2020

Ohio State (2)

Clemson (1)

Notre Dame (10)

2021

Alabama (1)

Michigan (NR)

Cincinnati (8)

2022

TCU (NR)

Michigan (8)

Ohio State (2)

2023

Washington (10)

Texas (11)

Alabama (4)

2024

Notre Dame (7)

Texas (4)

Penn State (8)

Semifinalists

2025

Oregon (7)

Ole Miss (21)

Miami (10)

From 2009 to 2022, the Crimson Tide won six national titles and lost three championship games in the Bowl Championship Series and the four-team CFP. Clemson broke up Bama’s run by winning two CFP championships. There was a streak of four consecutive seasons in which Dabo Swinney’s Tigers and Saban’s Tide played in the CFP (they split those games). Kirby Smart and Georgia finally displaced Alabama and won two straight titles in 2021 and ‘22.

Sprinkle in titles for loaded Florida State (2013), Ohio State (2014) and LSU (2019), and the only national champion that could be viewed as legitimately surprising during Saban’s 17 seasons at Alabama was Auburn in 2010. The Tigers were ranked No. 22 in the AP poll to start the season and went undefeated behind the force of nature that was Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton.

Since the CFP started in 2014, the lowest preseason ranking of any national champion is No. 6 by LSU and Joe Burrow in 2019.

Every previous CFP semifinal has had at least two preseason top-five teams. All but one CFP semifinal (2015) had at least three preseason top-10 teams. Last year, the 12-team CFP debuted with four preseason top-10 teams in the semifinals.

This year’s CFP final four has no team that was ranked better than No. 7 (Oregon) in the preseason AP poll. Miami started 10th; Indiana was No. 20 and Ole Miss was No. 21. Meanwhile, three of the preseason AP top five (Texas, Penn State and Clemson) did not even make the CFP. The Tigers and Nittany Lions will finish the season unranked.

The combined average ranking of the semifinal teams is 12.6, the second-highest of any final four — with a caveat.

TCU in 2022 was one of two teams during the four-team CFP to make the field after starting the season unranked, along with Michigan in 2021. The Horned Frogs were not even among the others receiving votes in the preseason poll, so counting their ranking as 49th (48 teams received votes) skews the number for a group that otherwise included three preseason top-eight teams.

Every previous CFP semifinal has also included at least three teams that claim at least one national title from a major poll (AP or coaches), BCS or CFP. Miami is the only program among the four still remaining that has even one of those. The Hurricanes stacked five titles from 1983 to 2001 but haven’t sniffed one since.

It has been well-established that the very best teams now are not as good as the juggernauts that typically won national titles during the four-team CFP. The difference is especially noticeable in the SEC, which could be looking at three straight seasons without a team in the title game if Ole Miss loses.

In lieu of stacked teams that overwhelm opponents with talent, and with rosters turning over quicker than ever, everything else that helps determine success is amplified.

“Vibes is probably as good a way to go about describing it as any,” ESPN analyst and former Georgia Tech running back Roddy Jones said. “What’s the motivation? What’s the culture? How well coached are you?”

Stacking highly ranked high school recruiting classes remains the best way to get good and stay good in college football, but it is no longer the only way to compete for a national championship.

All of the remaining CFP teams have a starting lineup of at least 42 percent transfers. The four CFP teams with the most homegrown starters (Georgia, Ohio State, Oklahoma and Alabama) were knocked out in the first two rounds.

An Indiana-Ole Miss national title game would match the teams in the field with the highest percentage of transfer starters. The Hoosiers check in at 65.4 percent, and the Rebels lead the pack at 66.3 percent.

“If you look at the four teams that are remaining, they all know exactly who they are,” ESPN analyst Greg McElroy said. “That’s really helpful, and they all know how to recruit exactly to what they need. So I think that it allows them to be hyper-focused on the players in the portal that can help them win.”

Players getting paid can also affect locker room chemistry and become another variable to be managed.

“I think it is all of the intangible things that become more important,” Jones said. “That’s not to say one school just because they have it one year will have it the next. I think it is so team dependent. Leadership dependent. It is circumstance dependent.”

So this is a good thing for college football, right?

Prepare for TV ratings to possibly say otherwise. The lack of traditional powers in this year’s semifinals — unlike last year, when Texas played Ohio State and Penn State played Notre Dame — might not draw in as many casual fans.

“I think it’s always helpful to have, like, the Death Star,” said McElroy, who was the quarterback of Saban’s first championship Alabama team in 2009. “It’s always helpful to have the team that everybody hates for just the sport’s consumability.”

Still, it might be a trade-off worth making in the long run.

“The engagement of fan bases and believing that they have a legitimate shot to win a championship is greater than ever,” Jones said.

Of course, Indiana’s meteoric and unprecedented rise under coach Curt Cignetti might just lead to more frustration among fans as schools unsuccessfully chase a Hoosier-esque turnaround.

“I think the trend is that there will be more schools among the willing to throw money at NIL, and in doing so, attract good players,” Bowlsby said. “And if you can more broadly distribute the best players, you will have more upsets and more of the (previously) downtrodden playing deep into the tournament.”

On the flip side, many schools are likely to get priced out as the ante to get in the game goes up. And the current administration and oversight of college football has never been more discombobulated. The current structure is tenuous, and the future is uncertain.

“It’s a little crazy right now, but you know, the college football fan that wants to watch whatever’s on and be dazzled by what happens in the end of the game, I don’t know that it could be any better than it is right now,” Bowlsby said.



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No. 1 ranked transfer portal QB medically evaluated by major college football programs

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The modern landscape of college football often focuses on Name, Image and Likeness valuations or immediate playing time when top prospects enter the transfer portal. Yet for the nation’s highest-ranked available quarterback, the recruitment process has taken a clinical turn, prioritizing long-term health over immediate impact. Programs chasing the most coveted arm on the market are pausing to ensure his physical durability matches his statistical production.

Recruiting visits typically revolve around photo shoots, steak dinners and campus tours designed to woo elite talent. In this specific high-stakes recruitment, however, the itinerary includes mandatory stops with team physicians and athletic trainers.

Coaching staffs are exercising caution as they attempt to secure a commitment from a player who could redefine their offense if he can stay on the field.

A new report indicates that every university hosting this prospect is conducting thorough physicals to gauge a recovery timeline. The concern centers on availability for spring practice, a crucial period for any transfer trying to learn a new playbook and build chemistry with receivers. While the talent is undeniable, the medical reality has added a layer of complexity to a frenzied race for his signature.

Medical clearance becomes primary hurdle for Sam Leavitt

Sam Leavitt, the former Arizona State standout and the top-ranked quarterback in the transfer portal according to On3, is undergoing medical evaluations at each of his campus visits. The scrutiny stems from a foot injury that ended his 2025 season prematurely.

During an appearance on the Crain & Company Podcast, Pete Nakos of On3 emphasized the uncertainty surrounding the timeline, stating that “every school that’s bringing him in on a visit is doing a medical evaluation to understand what his timeline looks like for recovery.”

Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Sam Leavitt (10)

Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Sam Leavitt (10) passed for 1,628 yards, 10 touchdowns and three interceptions across seven games in 2025. A Lisfranc injury ended his season early. | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The timeline for Leavitt remains murky following surgery for a Lisfranc ligament tear he suffered in October. While schools are eager to sign the talented passer, Nakos added that “it is unclear if he’d be available for spring football” after missing the back half of the season. It is currently unclear if Leavitt will be ready to take snaps when spring camps open across the country.

This medical uncertainty hovered over his recent trip to Baton Rouge. Leavitt visited LSU earlier this week and was spotted at a basketball game with head coach Lane Kiffin.

LSU Tigers head coach Lane Kiffin

LSU head coach Lane Kiffin and the Tigers are considering Sam Leavitt as a transfer portal addition. | Maria Lysaker-Imagn Images

Despite the hospitality, the Tigers’ medical staff likely spent significant time assessing his surgically repaired right foot. The evaluation process is standard protocol, but carries greater weight given the severity of Lisfranc injuries.

The rigorous testing continues as Leavitt heads to Knoxville. Tennessee is the latest program to host the quarterback, hoping to add his experience to its roster. The Volunteers are in the market for a proven starter, but, like LSU, they must weigh his rehabilitation schedule against their need for immediate competition at quarterback. Kentucky also shared a visit with Leavitt.

Read more on College Football HQ



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NIL

Washington QB Demond Williams Jr. Reverses Course, Returns to Huskies

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After a hectic 48 hours, quarterback Demond Williams Jr. is staying put at Washington.

Williams announced Tuesday that he intended to enter the transfer portal, but reversed course Thursday night, revealing on social media that he will remain with the Huskies.

“After thoughtful reflection with my family, I am excited to announce that I will continue my football journey at the University of Washington,” Williams wrote. “I am fully committed and focused on contributing to what we are building.”

The standout quarterback became the latest face of the debate surrounding name, image and likeness (NIL) and its enforcement when he announced that he was entering the transfer portal. Williams’ announcement came just four days after he signed an NIL deal to remain at Washington that was reportedly worth $4 million for one season. 

It was reported shortly after that Washington planned to pursue legal action against Williams for breach of contract. Williams’ agent, Doug Hendrickson, dropped him as a client on Thursday. 

“I have made the decision to end my representation of Demond Williams Jr. effective immediately due to philosophical differences,” Hendrickson wrote in a social media post. “Demond is an incredible talent and we wish him and his family the best in their future endeavors.”

Hendrickson is also the agent for Washington head coach Jedd Fisch. 

Williams just completed his sophomore season at Washington, which was his first as the Huskies’ full-time starter. He helped Washington go 9-4, completing 69.5% of his passes for 3,065 yards, 25 touchdowns and eight interceptions. He also proved to be one of the top dual-threat quarterbacks in the country, rushing for 611 yards and six touchdowns. 

Demond Williams Jr. finds Denzel Boston for a 23-yard TD

Demond Williams Jr. finds Denzel Boston for a 23-yard TD

Following a strong first season as a starter, Williams has been viewed as a potential Heisman candidate for the 2026 season. FOX Sports lead college football analyst Joel Klatt placed Williams fifth in his initial Heisman rankings for next season. 

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Demond Williams Will Return to Washington Despite Contract Dispute

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Washington quarterback Demond Williams shook the college football world on Tuesday night, as ESPN’s Pete Thamel reported that the dynamic dual-threat quarterback was set to enter the transfer portal just a week after signing a lucrative NIL agreement to remain at Washington. Now, after days of controversy surrounding his next career move, Williams will remain with the Huskies after all.

Williams announced his return via social media, just minutes after a report by ESPN’s Pete Thamel that he was leaning towards remaining at the school.

“After thoughtful reflection with my family, I am excited to announce that I will continue my football journey at the University of Washington,” Williams wrote. “I am deeply grateful to my coaches, teammates, and everyone in the program for fostering an environment where I can thrive both as an athlete and as an individual.

“I am full committed and focused on contributing to what we are building.”

In his statement, Williams also apologized for the timing of Tuesday’s decision to enter the transfer portal, which took place while much of the football team was attending a celebration of life for Huskies soccer player Mia Hamant, who died from a rare form of kidney cancer in November.

Forde: Lane Kiffin Once Again Pushes Boundaries in Demond Williams Jr. Saga

“Over the last few days, Demond and I have engaged in very honest and heartfelt conversations about his present and future,” Washington coach Jedd Fisch said in a statement. “We both agree that the University of Washington is the best place for him to continue his academic, athletic and social development.”

Williams’s agreement with the Huskies is reportedly worth around $4.5 million, and Washington was reportedly prepared to pursue legal recourse if he did not honor the deal. Lane Kiffin’s LSU program was the program most frequently attached to Williams, but now will look elsewhere to fill its quarterback position for 2026.

The decision comes hours after Williams was dropped by his agent, Doug Hendrickson of Wasserman Football. He also retained lawyer Darren Heitner, who has become a regular figure in college athletics eligibility cases during the NIL and transfer portal era.

GameDay host Rece Davis mentioned that there will have to be some fences mended between Williams and Washington. Before Williams’s ultimate decision to return, Matt Zenitz of CBS Sports reported that the program “would still welcome Demond Williams back to the team and is still hoping for him to remain with the program.”

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Williams committed to play for Fisch at his home-state program Arizona, transferring to Washington when Fisch took the job following the departure of Kalen DeBoer. He played in 13 games as a freshman, accounting for 1,226 total yards and 11 touchdowns before taking over as full-time starter in 2025.

Williams totaled over 3,600 yards and 31 touchdowns as a sophomore under Fisch.

Season

Comp %

Pass Yards

YPA

TD

Int

Rush Yards

TD

2024

78.1

944

9.0

8

1

282

2

2025

69.5

3,065

8.7

25

8

611

6

Williams was an honorable mention All-Big Ten selection behind Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza, Ohio State’s Julian Sayin and USC’s Jayden Maiava in a conference stocked with passing talent.

Now, he will be back for a third Big Ten season rather than make a controversial jump to LSU or another program.

More College Football on Sports Illustrated

Listen to SI’s new college sports podcast, Others Receiving Votes, below or on Apple and Spotify. Watch the show on SI’s YouTube channel.






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Transfer portal drama is overshadowing the actual College Football Playoff

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Miami vs. Ole Miss score, live updates: Trinidad Chambliss puts Rebels ahead with TD pass

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Q4 3:13 – Ole Miss 27, Miami 24

Huge mistake by Miami again. Trinidad Chambliss fires incomplete toward Harrison Wallace III but Ja’Boree Antoine had a hand full of jersey, drawing a pass interference penalty.

Three plays later, after a 19-yard scramble by Chambliss, Ole Miss finds the end zone. Chambliss calmly connects with Dae’Quan Wright for a 24-yard touchdown to put the Rebels up by a point.

The two-point conversion is good too as Chambliss finds Caleb Odom wide open.



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