NIL
Ty Simpson “not wavering” on decision to turn pro amid NIL bidding war
Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson announced last week that he was leaving school early to enter the NFL draft. But that hasn’t stopped other college programs from offering him lucrative NIL deals.
What started out in the $4 million range has reached in excess of $6 million, a source with knowledge of the situation told Bama247.
But that same source said the offers were unsolicited and that Simpson “hasn’t wavered” in his decision to enter the NFL draft. The expectation is he will not change his mind before the Wednesday deadline for underclassmen to declare.
Al.com was first to report the unrelenting interest in Simpson as the draft deadline approaches.
Simpson went 11-4 in his lone season as the starter, leading Alabama to the College Football Playoff and a come-from-behind victory at Oklahoma in the first round. But his season ended on a sour note as he threw for only 67 yards and no touchdowns in a 38-3 loss to Indiana in the Rose Bowl that saw him sidelined for much of the second half with a rib injury.
Simpson, who was named a team captain in the summer, finished the season with 3,567 passing yards, 28 passing touchdowns and five interceptions. He also ran for 93 yards and two scores.
Recent NFL mock drafts have had Simpson ranked among the top three quarterbacks — behind Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza and Oregon’s Dante Moore — and a borderline first-round pick.
Alabama 2026 NFL draft decision tracker: Who will stay in school or enter draft?
With Simpson gone, Mack and Russell are the two most experienced quarterbacks on the roster. The two were listed as co-backups this season with Mack having a 62-to-36 edge in total offensive snap over Russell.
Both Mack and Russell resigned with Alabama last week.
NIL
Coaches vote to support expansion of redshirt eligibility from four games to nine in college football
The eligibility of players has become a highly debated topic around college football in recent seasons. In particular, there has been a push to expand eligibility. Now, it looks like the redshirt rules may have taken another step toward being adjusted.
Head coaches from around the country have just finished their first meeting for the AFCA. The major point of discussion there was the four-game redshirt rule, rather than the calendar. There, director Craig Bohl, a former head coach at Wyoming and North Dakota State, shared that the coaches voted unanimously to expand the redshirt rule from four games to nine games.
“The FBS head coaches unanimously support increasing the current Division I football redshirt rule to include up to nine regular season games,” Craig Bohl said. “End of story.”
It’s important to note that this is just a recommendation. It will now be put forth to the Division I committees.
If the change from four games to nine games does occur, it would be another notable change to the redshirt rule was adjusted to allow players some leeway to play games and retain their eligibility. Previously, it had been strict that players couldn’t play at all. Then, in 2018, the four-game redshirt rule came into place. Later, players would be allowed to not count bowls towards those four games.
Andy Staples, reporting on the conversations, shared some insight into why. He wrote, “Essentially, the four-game rule incentivizes players to shut it down to get an extra year of pay. Five to play five seems the preference.”
It’s not uncommon now for players to play in four games and step away from their programs to use a redshirt and transfer. This would, potentially, incentivize them to stay with their programs longer during the season.
NIL is also a consideration in all of this. With financial incentive, players are looking to maximize their potential earning and as a response to that, coaches seem to prefer moving to five years of eligibility. If they were to do that at some point in the future, then the redshirt would be removed entirely.
In October of 2025, the NCAA had given extensive thought to the five-for-five plan on eligibility. However, at the time, it was tabled for the time being. Still, the hope for supporters of the change is that it would simplify the system and help handle legal attacks on eligibility standards.
Certainly, the NCAA is facing numerous legal battles regarding its eligibility standards. That includes the high-profile JUCO lawsuit that involves Diego Pavia and Joey Aguilar. Then, Ole Miss‘ Trinidad Chambliss recently mounted a challenge to his additional season of eligibility being denied.
NIL
Greg McElroy states Fernando Mendoza is the best college football quarterback since Joe Burrow
Former Alabama quarterback turned ESPN analyst Greg McElroy delivered one of the boldest quarterback evaluations in recent college football memory. He’s placing Fernando Mendoza in rare air during the latest episode of Always College Football.
According to McElroy, Mendoza’s current level of play puts him in a category few have reached over the past decade: “This is not the traditional Indiana football,” McElroy said.
“This is a Madden simulation that’s set on rookie difficulty. Fernando Mendoza at the center of it all. He is not just physically gifted, but he has that Ivy League processing.”
McElroy went a step further, comparing Mendoza’s efficiency and command of the offense to the very best quarterback season of the modern era: “I look at him and I know there’ve been some great quarterbacks in the last five years, like Caleb Williams, Bryce Young. A bunch of incredible football players,” McElroy added.
“But this to me feels like one of, if not the best quarterbacks we’ve seen in college football since Joe Burrow.”
Of course, that’s a lofty comparison. Burrow’s rise at LSU was well documented, but Mendoza’s rise has been one of the most compelling storylines in the sport.
After transferring from Cal to Indiana, he immediately took control of the Hoosiers’ offense, leading it with surgical precision. McElroy highlighted Mendoza’s completion percentage north of 73 percent as evidence of his elite efficiency and decision-making.
“He becomes the CEO of the offense,” McElroy explained. “His story is kind of Shakespearean in some ways.”
That efficiency was on full display in Indiana’s Peach Bowl matchup against Oregon, one of the nation’s top defenses. Facing a unit ranked among the best in pass defense, Mendoza delivered a near-perfect performance.
“He was a cool 17-for-20 for five touchdowns,” McElroy delineated. “That is clinical execution and it just kills you every single snap.”
Moreover, McElroy emphasized Mendoza’s ability to diagnose defenses before the snap, punish coverage mistakes instantly and anticipate windows before they open. Things that have the Indiana offense rolling at the moment.
“He anticipates your move and then boom. He punishes you before the ball even leaves his hand,” McElroy explained.
Beyond the arm talent, McElroy also pointed to an underrated aspect of Mendoza’s game in his mobility. With 429 rushing yards and six touchdowns this season (excluding sack yardage), Mendoza has consistently extended drives with his legs.
“He’s not a burner, but he’s football fast,” McElroy stated. “He’s slippery. You think you’ve got him bottled up on third-and-three, and then boom, he falls forward and it’s a first down.”
As Mendoza continues to carve up defenses, McElroy’s assessment underscores just how special Indiana’s quarterback has become. His name is now being mentioned alongside the very best the sport has seen in the past decade, but we’ll see if he can cap off this run with a national title next week.
NIL
Indiana football roster too old? No, Hoosiers just have better players
Updated Jan. 13, 2026, 7:53 a.m. ET
- Coach Curt Cignetti credits the team’s success to veteran players with strong character and leadership.
- Multiple Indiana players, including quarterback Fernando Mendoza, are projected to be high NFL draft picks.
Now that there’s no doubt remaining, seedy skepticism has arrived.
So before we dive into more nonsense and deconstruct more lunacy, let’s begin where all elite teams do: players.
Indiana has better players than just about every team in college football.
Better than Ole Miss and Alabama. Better than Oregon and Texas and USC and Michigan and yep — hold onto your Bucknuts — maybe even better than Ohio State.
Soon enough, we’ll add Miami to the list.
“We’ve got a lot of veteran guys that have strong character,” said Indiana coach Curt Cignetti. “Great leaders, great players.”
What Indiana has is a bunch of players who will have long careers in the NFL. It’s so much more than just the perfect storm of motivated outcasts brought together by the coach finally getting his shot.
This is about talented players, and one the undeniable truth that underscores it all: it’s impossible to hide on a football field ― especially in big games and big moments. Great players rise to it, flawed players wilt in it.
Cignetti, who coached at Alabama under Nick Saban and has seen the overwhelming blue-chip train firsthand, will be the first to tell you this Indiana group is built different. But it doesn’t mean they’re any less talented.
Quarterback Fernando Mendoza could be the first overall pick in April’s NFL draft, and will go no lower than Top 5 overall. Wideout Elijah Sarratt is a projected first round pick, as is cornerback De’Angelo Ponds.
One AFC scout, speaking on the condition of anonymity to protect his team’s draft process, told USA TODAY Sports the Indiana roster is, “A bunch of guys who will play a long time in this league. Football players, guys who love the game. It will be the most Indiana players ever drafted by a long way.”
Like left tackle Carter Smith, who has handled every team’s best edge rusher, and will do so again in the national championship game against Miami’s Rueben Bain — a projected Top 10 pick.
Like wideout Omar Cooper, who has 22 career touchdown catches. Or linebacker Aiden Fisher, who arrived with Cignetti from James Madison with little hype, and developed into an All-American.
Or center Pat Coogan, edge Mikail Kamara and running back Roman Hemby. By the time the third day of the NFL draft is complete, Indiana will have more players drafted in the Top 100 picks than a majority of FBS schools.
This rise from the worst program in college football to the very blueprint of how to build a roster in the NIL era hasn’t been accomplished with illegal recruiting or scouting or roster manipulation. Like every other championship team, it revolves around elite players.
Order commemorative book about IU’s epic season
Not with ridiculous internet allegations of cheating or stealing practice video or — I just love this one — a roster that’s full of grown men older than a majority of the rest of college football.
I don’t know if internet sleuths are aware, but Vanderbilt and Wake Forest and Northwestern and Oregon State (among others in Indiana’s previous zip code) all routinely had the oldest teams in college football prior to the explosion of NIL. And all — but for a scant breakout season here and there — struggled annually to reach bowl eligibility.
More to the point: Indiana had old(er) teams in the past, and couldn’t bust a grape.
I’m just throwing this out there: maybe it has something to do with talent level of the players this time around, and the men coaching them. Not some 15-second graphic in a weekly three-hour pregame show desperate for content.
Arkansas had 17 fourth- of fifth-year starters in 2025, won two games and fired its coach. Penn State? Loaded with fourth- and fifth-year players.
So were Nebraska and Arizona State and Wisconsin.
Weird how no one complained about Ohio State’s loaded, experienced roster in 2024. You remember that roster, right?
The Buckeyes spent $20 million to build it, including paying stay home money to a handful of critical starters on defense that could’ve left for the NFL. They also paid for a starting senior center, and a fifth-year starting quarterback — because coach Ryan Day wasn’t convinced he had a quarterback on his roster who could win a championship.
Then they went out and did it with an old roster, and the best freshman in the country.
That team was celebrated as an “all-in” moment. This Indiana team may as well be a bunch of NFL rejects who have returned to the college game to play under their weight class.
This is what happens when you upset the norms, when what should be suddenly becomes what’s old and slow and yesterday. Like LSU, which went all-in by constructing a roster full of fourth- and fifth-year players — and fired its coach before a disastrous season ended.
The one lasting takeaway from the NIL era is the systematic dismantling of norms. Nobody cares about your blue-blood status anymore.
Certainly not Ole Miss, which built a roster with 15 starters who were four- or fifth-year players, and was a defensive stop away from reaching the CFP national championship game.
There were no grassy knolls with the Ole Miss buildout, only the concrete fact of a dumb move by a self-centered coach that galvanized the entirety of college football around a team that prior to 2020, was an historical loser in the modern era of the sport.
Sort of like Indiana before Cignetti arrived and changed everything.
“There was a lot of skepticism last year, that we were a fluke,” Cignetti said. “That team did a lot of great things and got it all started.”
This one will finish it.
Want to know why Indiana will win the national title, and complete the greatest zero to hero rise in the history of college football? Check out the NFL draft in four months.
Elite players win games.
Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.
NIL
Illinois, Daktronics Install Largest Video Display in College Football

The following release is courtesy of Daktronics.
BROOKINGS, S.D. – The Fighting Illini turned to Daktronics (NASDAQ-DAKT) of Brookings, South Dakota, to design, manufacture and install the largest main video display in college football, totaling 17,300+ square feet. The project includes 16 LED displays that combine for more than 26,750 square feet and 30 million pixels at Gies Memorial Stadium on campus at the University of Illinois in Champaign. The project will be completed ahead of the 2026 college football season.
“We are excited to partner with Daktronics to bring the largest videoboard in college football to Gies Memorial Stadium,” said Director of Athletics Josh Whitman. “These new visual resources reflect our commitment to providing one of the nation’s best game day experiences. Under Coach Bielema’s leadership, and with an electric fan base that is now filling our stadium to near capacity, our program has become one of the most successful and exciting in major college football. We are thrilled to make this major investment in our historic stadium – one of the sport’s great venues – as we continue our efforts to enhance the experience for our fans, student-athletes, and others, all with an eye toward building a championship program.”
Main Video Display Details
The new south end zone display will measure approximately 69 feet high by 250 feet wide and will feature a 10-millimeter pixel spacing for high-resolution imagery and improved contrast. The size of the display will allow for larger-than-life content, including live video, instant replays, graphics, animations, game statistics and sponsorship messages.
The display features 16 million pixels and would be the fifth-largest display in professional football. It is roughly the same size as the main outfield display at Citi Field in New York and 3.4 times the size of the main display at Soldier Field in Chicago. For reference, it would take 1,621 60-inch televisions to cover the entire display.
“We’re excited to partner with the University of Illinois on this project to bring the largest display in college football to life,” said Daktronics Vice President of Live Events Jay Parker. “College football is a tradition that brings people together and creates unforgettable moments. This project reflects the passion and scale of college football, and we’re proud to help make those memories even more impactful in Champaign, Illinois.”
Top 10 Largest Displays in College Football
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1. Illinois
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17,315 sq. ft.
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2. Auburn
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10,690 sq. ft.
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3. Purdue
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8,461 sq. ft.
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4. Oregon
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8,208 sq. ft.
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5. Michigan
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8,165 sq. ft.
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6. Wisconsin
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7,941 sq. ft.
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7. Utah
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7,808 sq. ft.
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8. Oklahoma
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7,803 sq. ft
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9. Mississippi State
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7,777 sq. ft.
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10. Texas A&M
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7,635 sq. ft.
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Additional LED Display Details
Supplementing the in-bowl experience, a super ribbon in the north end zone and two sideline ribbon displays are being installed along the seating fascia as well as two field-level displays and eight bleacher displays being installed as well. The north end zone super ribbon measures roughly 12.5 feet high by 180 feet wide and each sideline ribbon measures roughly 4 feet high by 427 feet wide. Both field level displays measure nearly 5.5 feet high by 34 feet wide. All three ribbon displays and both field-level displays feature 10-millimeter pixel spacing.
The eight bleacher displays each measure roughly 5.5 feet high by 12 feet wide and feature a tight 2.9-millimeter pixel spacing. These displays deliver additional statistics, graphics and sponsorship messaging throughout events.
On the backside of the main video display, two video displays face outside of the stadium to connect with fans as they arrive and experience the game-day atmosphere. These displays each measure 29.5 feet high by 52.5 feet wide, feature 10-millimeter pixel spacings and are some of the largest backside displays in college football. Its flexibility allows for pre-game hype videos, post-game victory animations showcasing the score for fans to celebrate, promotional opportunities for upcoming games and university events, and sponsorship or university messaging needs.
Daktronics is also including a complete Show Control solution including Camino with this installation. This industry-leading control system provides a combination of display control software, world-class video processing, data integration and playback hardware that forms a powerful yet user-friendly production solution. The addition of Camino to the control system will provide a new level of functionality to create dynamic, real-time rendered content never before possible in a Daktronics system.
Camino opens up creative possibilities to display visuals in a 2D/3D space, incorporating data-based logic to automate production elements, and developing timelines within a single piece of content so it can react in real time as the event unfolds.
In addition to the equipment installation, the Fighting Illini will also receive a content package that will be produced and delivered by Daktronics Creative Services.
Daktronics has grown with the sports industry from the company’s beginnings in 1968. Today, the company has LED video display installations at hundreds of colleges and universities across the United States. For more information on what Daktronics can provide for the collegiate market, visit www.daktronics.com/college.
About Daktronics
Daktronics helps its customers to impact their audiences throughout the world with large-format LED video displays, message displays, scoreboards, digital billboards, audio systems and control systems in sport, business and transportation applications. Founded in 1968 as a USA-based manufacturing company, Daktronics has grown into the world leader in audiovisual systems and implementation with offices around the globe. Discover more at www.daktronics.com.
Safe Harbor Statement
Cautionary Notice: In addition to statements of historical fact, this news release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and is intended to enjoy the protection of that Act. These forward-looking statements reflect the Company’s expectations or beliefs concerning future events. The Company cautions that these and similar statements involve risk and uncertainties which could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations, including, but not limited to, changes in economic and market conditions, management of growth, timing and magnitude of future contracts and orders, fluctuations in margins, the introduction of new products and technology, the impact of adverse weather conditions, increased regulation and other risks described in the company’s SEC filings, including its Annual Report on Form 10-K for its 2025 fiscal year. Forward-looking statements are made in the context of information available as of the date stated. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise such statements to reflect new circumstances or unanticipated events as they occur.
NIL
Jordan Seaton enters transfer portal: Colorado OT can expect NIL bidding war

Colorado offensive tackle Jordan Seaton is the college football transfer portal’s best-available prospect after announcing entry with a goodbye letter. The 6-foot-5, 330-pounder was a five-star signee for Deion Sanders and Colorado as the gem of its 2024 recruiting cycle. He projects as one of the 2027 NFL Draft’s top prospects.
Seaton, the No. 4 overall transfer per 247Sports and the top offensive tackle, can expect quite the bidding war with NIL money.
“(His) reported asking price is around $2.5M,” 247Sports’ college football and transfer portal analyst Cooper Petagna said. “I would expect him to receive north of $3 million considering the number of tackle needy contenders.”
During his high-school recruitment, Maryland was in the mix for Seaton, a former Washington (D.C.) St. John’s College High star, as coach Mike Locksley developed a relationship with the massive blocker. The third highest-rated recruit in Colorado history, Seaton started all 22 games during which he appeared with the Buffalos.
Seaton’s exit is Colorado’s biggest loss this offseason. Seaton played 1,421 offensive snaps over his two-year stint, grading out at 67.2 as a true freshman in 2024 and 65.8 as a sophomore this season, via Pro Football Focus.
The Buffaloes lost more than three dozen players to the portal since their season-ending loss at Utah to finish 3-9.
“The thing about these guys man, you’ve got to understand when a guy leaves a program that selected him or picked him out of the portal, he leaves for a multitude of reasons,” Sanders said about Colorado’s expected roster changes. “The No. 1 reason people leave is money. It’s not a disdain for staff or a disdain for player, it’s money. Let’s just be honest man and stop sugar-coating this foolishness. That’s why most people leave.
“I admire the guys that want to go for another opportunity or bigger opportunity and play for a national championship … I applaud that, but that’s not the No. 1 reason people leave programs.”
NIL
Arizona State football ranks in middle of Big 12 in NIL dollars, agent says
TEMPE, AZ (AZFamily) — Arizona State ranks somewhere in the middle of the Big 12 Conference for football name, image and likeness (NIL) spending, according to a Tempe-based agent.
Peter Boyle, founder and CEO of Activate Sports Management, said ASU has made significant progress since NIL rules were implemented in July 2021.
“If I were to guess based off what I see when you’re talking about football, which is primarily what people are talking, and men’s basketball,” Boyle said. “Keep in mind, there’s baseball NIL and softball NIL and volleyball. Those programs also have revenue share, although to a much lesser degree. But when it comes to football, I would put ASU somewhere in the middle of the Big 12.”
NIL transforms college sports
More than four years after NIL rules were first put in place, the impacts on college sports are becoming clear.
“It’s professional sports now,” Boyle said. “I have a kind of thing where, when my clients sign their first deal, I say welcome to professional sports. Like it is that.”
Boyle said contracts from some schools include incentive-based payments.
“You literally see contracts from some schools, not the Big 12, but I have clients across all different Power 4 schools that have, like, incentive-based payments in them,” he said. “Like, if you are the Big Ten Player of the Week, that’s another $10,000. So, these are professional sports contracts.”
When it comes to quarterback Sam Leavitt, Boyle believes his move to LSU is largely about money.
ASU’s NIL progress
Universities do not report their NIL dollars publicly, making exact comparisons difficult. However, Boyle said he has insight from running a NIL agency based in Tempe.
Three years ago, Boyle would have ranked ASU at the bottom of the pack. NIL dollars differ by conference, with SEC and Big Ten deals typically exceeding Big 12 amounts, though the gap has narrowed.
Boyle has insider knowledge from ASU athletes he represents.
“What they were making three years ago is what a lot of the roster makes now. And those are the top paid guys,” he said. “So it’s a notable difference for sure.”
Donations versus business deals
ASU football coach Kenny Dillingham recently spoke at Mountain America Stadium about finding a wealthy person in Phoenix who could give the football program $20 million. However, Boyle said large donations are not the answer.
“If a donor gives $20 million today, what does that do? It’s monopoly money,” Boyle said. “Because that’s not a business deal that has true business value that can be put into NIL go and pass the CSC. That’s a donation. That’s the old model.”
Boyle said a large donation could help offset revenue share costs and provide ASU more money for facilities, but if the university is playing by the rules, such a donation would not help with NIL deals.
Business deals are more important in college sports, according to Boyle.
“I think if businesses get involved and they can pass through the CSC and be true NIL deals, then there are certainly businesses that hopefully would get involved that would significantly increase ASU’s value provide above cap or above market deals,” he said.
Boyle said he expects the current NIL system to continue without significant changes and that fans should get used to the new landscape.
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