Credit Jason Hill – Co-Photo Editor // The Miami Hurricanes stand for the national anthem before their game against Ball Srate at Hard Rock Stadium on Sept. 14, 2024.
When Xavier Lucas transferred to Miami in January earlier this year, from the outside it was easy to not bat an eye.
The ‘Canes had closely missed out on the former four-star defensive back during their 2024 recruiting season, narrowly losing out to Wisconsin. And upon the completion of his freshman year, it appeared the South Florida native and former American Heritage star decided to move back home. To most, this was a no-brainer move back home to the sunshine state for the rising star.
But with that being said, the circumstances that surrounded Lucas’ departure from Wisconsin and transfer to Miami have become shrouded in controversy, and now, after much speculation, the Big Ten school announced a lawsuit against the University of Miami on June 21.
Wisconsin alleges that Miami made illegal contact with Lucas prior to his decision to transfer, allegedly days after he signed his NIL agreement with the Badgers.
Wisconsin’s issue stems from Lucas’ 2-year NIL agreement signed on December 2, 2024. Lucas then soon requested to transfer, informing his position coach. According to CBS Sports, it was also reported that his deal was among one of the highest revenue-sharing agreements on the team.
Lucas and his representation originally asked to be put into the transfer portal but claim, as Wisconsin also states, that the team did not allow for him to be officially listed as a transfer.
Wisconsin’s first official statement in response to Lucas’ decision stated, “A request to enter the transfer portal after entering such an agreement is inconsistent with the representations and mutual understanding of the agreement and explains the reason for processing a transfer portal request under these circumstances.”
Wisconsin alleges that “on multiple occasions after December 2, 2024, and continuing into January 2025, Miami had impermissible contacts with [Xavier Lucas] and his representatives.”
They list out multiple alleged meetings, including visiting a relative’s home with a coach and prominent alumni providing a compensation commitment that “included financial terms more lucrative than those included in the contracts.”
Lucas’ attorney, Darren Heitner, has fought back against these allegations, stating that they are flat-out false. He was hired in January after the team refused to terminate the agreement and allow Lucas to transfer.
When neither side could agree on terms, Lucas withdrew from the university, not officially entering the transfer portal but essentially allowing him the same opportunity to enroll at another institution, which he did with Miami. The NCAA did respond to this, stating that its rules cannot prevent a student-athlete from taking this approach and being able to compete. In the lawsuit, Wisconsin does point out, though, that Lucas was allowed to enroll well after November 1, 2024, Miami’s official deadline for spring transfer enrollment.
Miami football head coach Mario Cristobal guides players through warm-up drills before their game against Bethune-Cookman at Hard Rock Stadium on Sept. 14, 2023. Photo credit: Alexandra Fisher
What is important to note is that none of the money had been paid out to Lucas, as this was pending the final decision of House V. NCAA, so neither Miami nor Lucas is liable to return any financial compensation to Wisconsin. The Badgers, regardless, have pushed forward with the lawsuit after months of speculation if they would and are backed by the Big Ten.
They officially announced support for Wisconsin, telling Yahoo Sports, “The Big Ten Conference believes that the University of Miami’s actions are irreconcilable with a sustainable college sports framework and is supportive of UW-Madison’s efforts to preserve it.”
The lawsuit states that the Badgers saw Lucas as a cornerstone of their program, leading to their big financial commitment to Lucas. With Miami allegedly swooping in and taking him, not only did that take a big contributor, it disrupted the Badgers’ plans for building their program.
They allege even more in the lawsuit, claiming that, quote, “in late 2024, Miami continued to recruit a second student-athlete, ‘Student-Athlete B,’ even though Student-Athlete B had made a written commitment to another DI school in late 2024, which commitment had been reflected in the Transfer Portal.”
The question now is what the potential fallout could be for this case regardless of whether the courts find the allegations against Miami to be true.
For one the NCAA should watch if other student-athletes unenroll and then enroll to avoid the transfer portal. Lucas’ method of getting to Miami could be used in less reasonable circumstances, which would result in chaos between student-athlete and university. Moreover, plenty of student-athletes enter the portal with a “DNC” tag, which means do not contact. In these cases the student-athlete typically already has a school they wish to transfer to, which could lend itself to tampering as the school and athlete often make contact before the athlete enters with a “DNC” tag.
Redshirt sophmore wide receiever Isaiah Horton celebrates after scoring a touchdown in Miami’s game against Virginia Tech at Hard Rock Stadium on Sept. 27, 2024. Photo Credit: Jason Hill – Co-Photo Editor
More importantly, with money officially on the board across the college football landscape, student-athletes are now closer to pros than they have ever been. While they are rightfully earning their share of the pie, the question now is whether these NIL contracts are going to be enforceable and binding. Regardless of whether Miami is at fault, the potential for any team to come in and have similar situations happen is huge for the future of college sports in general.
As for what this means for Miami, if the allegations are true, Wisconsin is asking for some sort of financial compensation and for the ‘Canes to declare their conduct to be tampering. On the larger scale, it’s uncertain if the NCAA will make an example out of Miami.
When the last situation of this scale happened with the Michigan sign-stealing allegations, the eventual champions faced no repercussions after the NCAA found them to be not guilty. But within the Big Ten, as the investigations continued, both Jim Harbaugh and current head coach Sherrone Moore faced suspensions brought forth by the Big Ten.
With no NCAA investigation currently announced and with this being between conferences, it’s unlikely that Miami, even if found at fault, will face anything more than fines. This could mean more in terms of the team’s reputation, especially at a time when rumored conference realignment or movement could have the ‘Canes looking to places like the Big Ten to get a slice of their lucrative media rights.
While Miami has yet to officially comment on these allegations, Lucas’ attorney, Heitner, has stated that the intention is still for Lucas to play for the ‘Canes this fall. For the foreseeable future it’s certain to stay that way as the Hurricanes look towards their season starting in just a couple of months.
Regardless of where this case falls, it will be one of the first big decisions in the post-House v. NCAA landscape, a landmark case in how student-athlete contracts and compensation unfold in the future.
The Miami Hurricanes take the field at Hard Rock Stadium against the Virginia Tech Hokies on Sept. 28, 2024. // Photo Credit via Emily Rice
One of college football’s most accomplished young head coaches is now among the candidates being considered by a fledgling NFL franchise for its coaching vacancy.
Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman has emerged as a candidate for the open position with the New York Giants, according to The Athletic’s Diana Russini.
Interest in Marcus Freeman is rising
New York isn’t the only place that could be taking a close look at Freeman, as the Tennessee Titans may also become interested in him, according to the report.
Freeman, who will turn 40 next month, signed a contract extension with Notre Dame last year that will lock him in with the school through the 2030 season, but if this carousel has proven anything, it’s that almost any contract can be gotten out of.
Notre Dame is a private school and is not obligated to publish its coaching salaries, but insiders contend his deal pays him $9 million per season and is worth a total of a reported $54 million.
But that raise is already somewhat out of date after Indiana recently inked Curt Cignetti to a new deal that will pay him $11.7 million per season.
Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images
Notre Dame knows Freeman is getting that interest
“Everybody has eyes on Marcus,” Notre Dame athletic director Pete Bevacqua said.
“College has eyes on Marcus. NFL has eyes on Marcus. I bet Hollywood has eyes on Marcus. I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s in the next Leo DiCaprio movie with Martin Scorsese.
“Marcus is Marcus. All the credit to him. He deserves it. He’s the absolute best coach in the country for Notre Dame, full stop. One of the greatest college coaches in the country.
“And people forget how young he is, so I get it. That’s a compliment to him and his success and the way he represents himself and the way he prepares and who he is and how he talks.”
What Freeman has done at Notre Dame
Freeman has just completed his fourth season at the helm of the Fighting Irish program and boasts a 43-12 overall record, winning more than 78 percent of his games.
Freeman led Notre Dame to a No. 2 national ranking and an appearance in the national championship game against his alma mater a year ago.
His team went 10-2 this season and seemed poised for another berth in the College Football Playoff, before the committee reversed course on Selection Day and left the Irish out of the field, leading the school to decline playing in a bowl game.
Michael Caterina-Imagn Images
Notre Dame won’t let him go
Cognizant of the talk around his head man, Bevacqua is not willing to watch from the sidelines if his successful football coach is going to be courted by opportunities in the NFL, or anywhere.
“I would never say we wouldn’t match anything when it comes to Marcus,” Bevacqua said recently.
“I make sure that he knows that he will be where he deserves to be, and that is at the top, top, top tier of college football coaches when it comes to compensation every year.
“I view his contract, although a multiyear contract, as a living, breathing document that we will revise every year as need be to make sure he’s where he deserves to be. He knows he has that commitment from me and more importantly from the university.”
Nike announces a new NIL venture, and it has chosen LSU as the first school to partner with.
Nike, along with other equipment manufacturers, have been partnering with university athletic departments for decades. But Nike’s Blue Ribbon Elite NIL program is the first to partner with the athletes themselves.
Zach Greenwell, LSU’s deputy athletic director for external affairs, said Nike is partnering with ten athletes on a very extensive campaign to promote Nike products.
“They brought in a very large-scale production company from out of town to work with those athletes, and it was 15-hour days with our athletes doing individual shoots,” Greenwell said. “They did a big group shot, which was a big part of our roll-out.”
Among the LSU student-athletes joining Nike’s growing roster of elite NIL athletes are: Kailin Chio, Gymnastics, Derek Curiel, Baseball, Tori Edwards, Softball, Casan Evans, Baseball, Trey’Dez Green, Football, Jayden Heavener, Softball, ZaKiyah Johnson, Basketball, DJ Pickett, Football, Jurnee Robinson, Volleyball and Dedan Thomas Jr., Basketball. Greenwell said Nike is working with them on product that they like, and they’re promoting products on the Nike store that’s specific to them and their respective sports.
“It’s a big thing for Nike to work with this demographic whether it be college kids, teenagers, so they’re going to work with all of those ten athletes across seven sports to tap into that demographic and they think LSU is a great place to start,” Greenwell said.
Greenwell said it’s a tremendous honor for LSU to be the first school that Nike selected for its new Blue Ribbon Elite NIL program.
“I think we’re the envy of a lot of people around the country to be able to launch this program with them (Nike) and we know they’ll work with other teams as they go, but our first immediate thoughts are, ‘How can we grow this? How can we take this to the next level?’” Greenwell said.
Along with the Blue Ribbon Elite NIL program, LSU Athletics and Nike have announced an extension to their five-decade long partnership through 2036.
WSU President Betsy Cantwell delivers strong appeal to Cougar fans. (Photo: WSU)
WASHINGTON STATE President Betsy Cantwell took to social media Friday evening to deliver as clear a picture as you’ll hear as to why support for NIL is critical not just to the success of Cougar football but to the entire athletic department and the broader university.
Just hours after WSU announced Kirby Moore as the new head coach of the Washington State football team with what is believed to be a five-year contract, Cantwell videotaped a two-minute message asking WSU alums and fans to help push NIL funding to new heights through the CAF’s tax-deductible coaches excellence funds.
“By now, you know we’ve announced a phenomenal new football coach,” she said. “He’s ready to lead us into winning in the new Pac-12 Conference. What will get us there and show the world that we are deadly serious about winning will be our willingness to give this coach the tools to win. And for us, that means building $5 million in new NIL support immediately to compete — a fund that acknowledges the modern world and says, we are ready. We are in it.
“We all know that NIL isn’t an option. It’s an essential tool today,” she added. “Whether we love it or not, it’s part of the game. But NIL isn’t just about keeping up. It’s about giving our Cougs every chance to excel on the field, in the classroom, and in life beyond sports. Your investment in NIL through the Cougar Athletic Fund helps us recruit, retain, and elevate our WSU student-athletes.”
Last month Cantwell told Cougfan.com that WSU Athletics needs to raise an additional $20 million per year for revenue sharing and NIL to compete at the highest levels of the new Pac-12, which kicks off in 2026.
Related: New Cougar coach Kirby Moore’s background remarkably similar to legendary Mike Price’s
“Athletics is the front porch of our university,” Cantwell noted in her Friday video. “It’s the place that draws people to us. That means that winning football leads to healthy sports across the spectrum, leads to higher enrollment, leads to a healthier WSU.
“So strong Cougar teams lift the entire WSU family. We boost pride, we boost enrollment, we boost national visibility. This is the moment for Cougs everywhere. Let’s hit $5 million together. Let’s set our new coach and our student -athletes up for success. Go to the Cougar Athletic Fund website and choose NIL. Do it now.”
You can watch her full commentary in the Twitter post embedded at the bottom of this story.
CANTWELL’S COMMENTS echoed remarks earlier in the day by former WSU and Seattle Seahawks standout Robbie Tobeck when he was asked for his reaction to Moore’s hiring.
“In this day and age, I don’t care how good your coach is, you need the resources to compete and win,” Tobeck said. “It’s imperative the university, regents and alums back up this program and give Kirby a chance to excel. If you want to boost enrollment, field a good football team. It’s time to step up to the plate and invest in winning.
“I’m talking about dominating the new conference and going to the playoffs. We have an opportunity at WSU if we invest. We should be the bell cow of this new conference and we need to come out of the gate quickly.”
Related: Instant reaction from WSU luminaries to Kirby Moore’s hiring at WSU
INSUFFICIENT NIL SUPPORT was a growing frustration for former WSU coach Jimmy Rogers and his staff. While WSU has kept the numbers tight, Rogers apparently shared them with his new athletic director at Iowa State, Jamie Pollard, who somehow felt at liberty this week to disclose that Rogers told him WSU had a $2.5 million NIL budget in 2025. That number is believed to be the combined total of WSU’s revenue sharing program and the fundraising efforts of the independent NIL organization Cougar Collective.
At the CougsFirst! Show in Spokane last month, Cantwell told WSU partisans that “we’re at the bottom of every team coming into the Pac for football in NIL. We’re at the bottom. We cannot stay there and compete and win.”
She added, “We must be winners, we must, in football, within four years (sit atop the Pac-12) because that is the time that every single media rights contract across all of college football, every conference, is up for grabs again,” she said.
Cougar Nation, the time is now! Success starts with $5M in NIL support to recruit, retain, and elevate student-athletes—setting the stage for a winning future in the Pac-12. #GoCougs
After Michigan terminated head coach Sherrone Moore “for cause,” the program now faces immediate roster and reputation questions, most pressingly the status of true-freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood.
Underwood, the class of 2025 No. 1 recruit, committed to Michigan in December 2024 with an NIL package reportedly valued at around $3 million, among the largest in college football, helping swing national recruiting attention to Ann Arbor.
Moore’s firing followed an internal investigation that the athletic department said found “credible evidence” of an inappropriate relationship; Michigan named associate head coach Biff Poggi interim head coach for the Wolverines’ Dec. 31 Cheez-It Citrus Bowl.
On CBS Sports HQ, Chris Hummer suggested that Moore’s dismissal creates an opening to “reset” the quarterback-staff relationship, arguing a coaching change could be a good thing for Underwood’s development and future at Michigan.
“There was an awareness around Michigan that Bryce Underwood had a bit of discontentment with the offense. So, this change might actually provide an opportunity for Michigan to reset that relationship a little bit and find something that fits for Bryce Underwood’s vision of offense and also fits for the future of Michigan football.”
Michigan quarterback Bryce Underwood (19) looks on after warms up at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor. | Junfu Han / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Underwood started as a true freshman and posted 2,229 passing yards, nine passing TDs, and six interceptions during the 2025 regular season, while adding 323 rushing yards and five rushing TDs.
His dual-threat ability was a key factor in Michigan’s 9-3 (7-2 Big Ten) finish, highlighted by a five-game win streak before a 27–9 loss to rival Ohio State to close the regular season.
Underwood flipped his high-profile recruitment from LSU to Michigan in November 2024 and signed in the early period, a move widely reported to be tied to a historic NIL package orchestrated by Michigan’s primary collective.
As for who might replace Moore, national outlets have floated a wide board of potential candidates, including established Power Five coaches such as Alabama’s Kalen DeBoer, as well as offensive architects known for quarterback development, like Arizona State’s Kenny Dillingham.
Whoever’s hired will need to sell both winning and a clear developmental plan to keep Underwood from entertaining portal approaches, notably reported interest from LSU and others.
Read More at College Football HQ
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The decision by Notre Dame to decline playing in a bowl game turned out to be one of the most-discussed choices made by any school in the 2025 college football season.
Now, one of the team’s most talented players is going public with why they decided to forgo the postseason entirely after missing the College Football Playoff.
Notre Dame running back and Heisman Trophy finalist Jeremiyah Love says the players were the deciding factor in ending their season.
Notre Dame made a team decision
“It was kind of a full team decision, full consensus decision,” Love said on SportsCenter.
“Our captains asked all of the players that they could, you know, what they think about the bowl games and things like that. And we all came to a consensus, or final decision, that we didn’t think that playing in that bowl game would really represent our 2025 football team in the right way.
“Because we feel like our team was just very special throughout the year, we did a lot of great things, and in that bowl game, a lot of people are going to opt out. A lot of people are just going to not play, or have their own plans … which, rightfully so. They have that right.”
Notre Dame was left out of the playoff
Notre Dame looked poised to take one of the dozen places in the College Football Playoff, but the selection committee reversed course on the last day, and swapped it out for Miami instead.
While most observers agreed in theory with that move since Miami beat Notre Dame this season, the timing of the decision and perceived lack of an explanation as to why then and not before, left the Irish enraged.
Enough to decline playing any bowl game at all.
“We didn’t feel like that team that would go into that bowl game was a great representation of how special this 2025 football team was,” Love said.
“So we all came to a consensus of, you know, we don’t want to put this team in a bad light because we feel like it was a great team.”
He added: “We’re not saying playing in a bowl game would put us in a bad light, but it just wouldn’t be the best representation of our team. So that ultimately led us to come into that decision.”
What Jeremiyah Love has done for Notre Dame
Love was a crucial element in the success Notre Dame had on the field that put them in playoff contention in the first place.
The running back had 199 carries for 1,372 yards and 18 touchdowns on the ground, catching 27 passes for 280 more yards and another 3 touchdowns.
His 21 total touchdowns set a new single-season Notre Dame record, surpassing Jerome Bettis.
But that could be the last time we see him on the field in the gold helmet given the Irish will not play again this season, and if he decides to enter the NFL Draft this spring.
Scandal is an inevitable thread in the fabric of college football. Pretty much every major school as waded through one or two notable scandals involving administrators, coaches or players on a particular team. But there’s one Big Ten school, and college football program, who might be the new “Scandal U.”
That was a popular phrase around Louisville, KY in regard to the Cardinals’ run of scandals that included mismanaged funds by a university president, a strippers-in-the-dorms basketball scandal, an FBI probe, a playbook-stealing scandal called Wakey-Leaks (after Wake Forest) and the list goes on. Well, the Ville can now mover over after getting their act together in the 2020s, because Michigan is the new big bad rulebreaker in college athletics.
In light of Michigan head football coach Sherrone Moore’s firing this week, one of the largest news outlets in America, CNN, decided to do dig into the noticeably high number of scandals that have rocked Michigan of late. Of course, Moore was fired, for cause, do to an inappropriate relationship with a staffer. But he’s only the latest in a long line of Michigan men who’ve gotten their hands a bit dirty.
CNN noted the following occurrences all within the Michigan athletics department over the last few years:
Michigan Scandal Rundown
Head football coach Sherrone Moore was fired over an inappropriate relationship with a staffer, then later arrested the same night he was fired.
Head football coach Jim Harbaugh was suspended for several games during the 2023 national championship season over recruiting violations.
Head football coach Jim Harbaugh left college football after 2023 with a 10-year show cause, four years of probation for Michigan, plus millions in fines over a sign-stealing scandal that dominated the entire 2023 college football news cycle.
Football assistant Connor Stalions was let go for his very direct involvement in organizing and enacting the sign-stealing scandal.
Head basketball coach Juwan Howard was suspended for slapping an opposing assistant coach during a handshake line and then fired after that season.
Head hockey coach Mel Pearson, was not retained after investigations discovered the program urged athletes to lie on COVID tests and also had reports of verbal assaults on female staff members.
Football assistant Matt Weiss was let go after it was discovered that he was hacking into students’ accounts to steal private photos of them.
That’s a tornado of bad ripping through Ann Arbor over just a couple of seasons. And while the basketball and hockey stories were tough situations, most of these scandalous missteps have come from the football program. According to CNN, there’s just one big culture problem under athletic director Warde Manuel.
CNN notes deeper problems with UM athletics
Michigan Wolverines’ Sherrone Moore (left), head coach Jim Harbaugh (center) and special teams coordinator Jay Harbaugh | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
“People associated with Michigan athletics have told CNN that they believe there is a cultural problem, if not of indifference, certainly of arrogance,” they wrote. Going beyond just the bad behavior from people hired by Michigan, CNN reports that the school’s firing process itself raises major red flags.
“A source familiar with the matter said that Manuel dismissed Moore without anyone from human resources present, and – while that is not required – it is standard behavior at most companies,” CNN added, which is true, especially for a situation like Moore. In fact, he’s the example of why HR is used in that capacity, to maybe prevent something messy from transpiring afterward, which is exactly what happened.
Perhaps 2026 can offer a new day for Michigan. The Jim Harbaugh era ended with raging success on the field but has left a disastrous wake. With Moore now out, the Wolverines can start anew and bring in a head coach completely severed from the Harbaugh era and the baggage it brought.