NIL
USF
Mike Bishop holds a Brahman Golden Ale at Thirsty Buffalo Brewing Company’s 8,000 square feet production facility in Odessa. ORACLE PHOTO/CLARA ROKITA GARCIA The Thirsty Buffalo Brewing Company added a new beer to its collection in February— a USF-themed Brahman Golden Ale. Part of the beer’s proceeds go to the Fowler Avenue Collective, USF’s name, […]


The Thirsty Buffalo Brewing Company added a new beer to its collection in February— a USF-themed Brahman Golden Ale.
Part of the beer’s proceeds go to the Fowler Avenue Collective, USF’s name, image and likeness collective, in an effort to support student-athletes through NIL funds.
Two months after its launch, the beer has already generated around $2,000 for the collective, said Thirsty Buffalo co-founder Mike Bishop.
“I love USF sports,” Bishop said. “I will do anything I can do to help.”
But the brewery partnership wasn’t chosen at random — a former Bull fermented the idea.
Bishop is a USF finance alumnus who graduated in 2006 and later got a degree in brewing arts from the Siebel Institute of Technology in Chicago.
Related: USF students trade textbooks for taste tests in these classes
He founded Thirsty Buffalo with his wife Erin in 2023, with the company’s headquarters in Land O’ Lakes and a factory in Odessa.
But USF always stayed close to his heart.
A good friend of his, Andy Taylor, is a director for the USF Alumni Association.
When Taylor heard the Fowler Avenue Collective was considering a brewery partnership, he “immediately” put his friend Bishop in contact with Will Turner, the collective’s fan engagement director.
Turner said USF’s NIL collective started idealizing the project in 2023, after the University of Cincinnati’s NIL collective, Cincy Reigns, launched a light lager to support student-athletes with part of its proceeds.
The Fowler Avenue Collective gets 10% of each Brahman Golden Ale sale, he said.
All of the money the collective gets is put into a “big pot” that is distributed to student-athletes, Turner said.
The brewery and the collective worked together to negotiate the percentage, and Bishop said it was a “very fair” arrangement.
Turner said the beer, with a six-pack costing up to $13.99, is a way for the community to support student-athletes through a different avenue and at a lower price.
“The big thing is, and this is gonna sound so cliche, but people like to drink,” Turner said.
The collective sells T-shirts ranging from $25 to $75. However, Turner said not everybody wants to buy merchandise with athletes’ names, especially when they are often transferring schools.
“The beer is kind of more of a blanket way for folks to support and still put money back in the collective without necessarily having to commit to merchandise,” Turner said.
Related: USF women’s basketball loses four players to transfer portal

The can, with a bull in the center, displays the phrases “Join the stampede,” which USF uses for promoting school spirit and athletics, and “Come to the Bay,” used to recruit student-athletes.
But the USF essence didn’t stop at the can.
Bishop said the Brahman Golden Ale was “entirely” created with sports in mind.
“When you’re at a tailgate or you’re at a USF basketball game, you want something light, you want something crispy,” Bishop said. “You don’t want anything super heavy.”
Bishop said the beer has a good balance of hops and malt — making it clean, light and “easy to drink.”
“Even if you don’t necessarily drink beer all the time, you’re still very open to trying it,” he said.
Bishop said he “could have made it” a blind, white or clean ale. But he ultimately chose a golden ale for people to associate it with USF’s “green and gold” theme.
At the USF Tampa campus, the beer is “slowly growing” in distribution.
The Brahman Golden Ale has been available at the on-campus BurgerFi on tap for around a month.
Bishop said he tried getting the beer to the Yuengling Center for basketball games, but was told he had to wait until Compass Group makes its way to campus.
Last year, USF announced it would change its athletics concessions providers from Aramark to Compass Group’s Levy. The transition is set to take place over the summer.
Related: USF’s new dining, facilities partner has a checkered past
Bishop said he is also in contact with Raymond James Stadium’s representatives to get the Brahman Golden Ale available at USF football games.
“How cool is that, if you’re watching USF football and you realize you can buy this beer, and a portion of that goes towards helping the athletes there?” he said.
Bishop said he is excited to see how his product will align with school spirit in the upcoming football season.
“People are always looking for ways to feel good about what they’re purchasing,” he said. “And that sometimes is pounding a beer with the USF bull on it.”
NIL
Oregon Ducks, Ohio State Surprising Rankings
On the 2025 Oregon Ducks football team, senior wide receiver Evan Stewart looks to be the biggest Name, Image, Likeness (NIL) earner. The six-foot Texas native has a valuation worth $1.7 million and roster value placed at $761K which ranks as the No. 26 highest from a recruit in the country, on On3 NIL Valuations. […]

On the 2025 Oregon Ducks football team, senior wide receiver Evan Stewart looks to be the biggest Name, Image, Likeness (NIL) earner. The six-foot Texas native has a valuation worth $1.7 million and roster value placed at $761K which ranks as the No. 26 highest from a recruit in the country, on On3 NIL Valuations.
Next for the Ducks is Tulane Green Wave transfer running back Makhi Hughes. The redshirt junior is ranked No. 58 among his peers with both an NIL valuation and roster value of $1.1 million.
Across the Big Ten Conference’s NIL average per recruit in the 2026 class, Oregon coach Dan Lanning’s team is ranked No. 3. A surprising team is No. 1, topping Oregon and College Football Playoff National Champions Ohio State Buckeyes.
Here are how the 18 college football programs stack up with each other:
No. 1 Maryland Terrapins ($190K)
No. 2 Ohio State Buckeyes ($158K)
No. 3 Oregon Ducks ($152K)
“I think it’s impressive that guys like Kirby (Smart) have been signing the number one class in the nation without any NIL money this entire time… But if you want to be a top 10 team in college football, you better have great support. We have that. It’s our alignment with our entire university that makes our recruiting work.”
– Dan Lanning via The Pat McAfee Show
No. 4 USC Trojans ($143K)
No. 5 Michigan Wolverines ($134K)
No. 6 Washington Huskies ($95K)
No. 7 Penn State Nittany Lions ($70K)
Tied for No. 8 Rutgers Scarlet Knights ($40K)
Tied for No. 8 Nebraska Cornhuskers ($40K)
No. 10 UCLA Bruins ($39K)
No. 11 Michigan State Spartans ($38K)
No. 12 Iowa Hawkeyes ($37K)
No. 13 Minnesota Golden Gophers ($25K)
Tied for No. 134 Illinois Fighting Illini ($22K)
Tied for No. 13 Northwestern Wildcats ($22K)
No. 16 Indiana Hoosiers ($19.6K)
No. 17 Wisconsin Badgers ($13.9K)
No. 18 Purdue Boilermakers ($13.3K)
MORE: Dallas Cowboys Wide Receiver Traeshon Holden ‘Hurt’ After Going Undrafted
MORE: 5-Star Quarterback Jared Curtis To Commit To Oregon Ducks, Georgia Bulldogs?
MORE: Best Uniforms In Big Ten Ranked: Oregon Ducks, Michigan Wolverines, Ohio State Snubbed?
The Big Ten was arguably the most competitive league in college football in 2024, ahead of the Southeastern Conference. That’s simply based on the fact that the Big Ten had four teams invited into the 2024 College Football Playoff field (No. 1 Oregon, No. 6 Penn State, No. 8 Ohio State, No. 10 Indiana), one more than the SEC’s three teams (No. 2 Georgia Bulldogs, No. 5 Texas Longhorns, No. 9 Tennessee Volunteers).
Within On3’s top 100 NIL valuations, 23 total recruits come from the Big Ten. The SEC has 37 total recruits. Texas junior quarterback Arch Manning of the SEC is the No. 1 ranked player with a valuation worth a whooping $6.6 million and roster value placed at $4.2 million. Ohio State sophomore wide receiver Jeremiah Smith of the Big Ten stands at $4 million and $3.2 million, respectively.
The Buckeyes and coach Ryan Day won the national championship after an opening round win by taking care of the No. 12 Clemson Tigers, upsetting the Ducks at the Rose Bowl in the next round, then beating the Longhorns at the Cotton Bowl, and finally overcoming the No. 7 Notre Dame Fighting Irish to win it all.
NIL
Report: Saban expected to co-chair Trump’s commission on college sports
Former Alabama head coach Nick Saban is expected to co-chair President Donald Trump’s commission on college sports, a source told Sam Khan Jr. of The Athletic. The commission would examine issues surrounding college sports, including NIL payments, conference alignment, and more, Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger reports. Trump is also considering an executive order to scrutinize […]

Former Alabama head coach Nick Saban is expected to co-chair President Donald Trump’s commission on college sports, a source told Sam Khan Jr. of The Athletic.
The commission would examine issues surrounding college sports, including NIL payments, conference alignment, and more, Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger reports.
Trump is also considering an executive order to scrutinize NIL that could involve Saban, according to Josh Dawsey, Rachel Bachman, and Laine Higgins of the Wall Street Journal. Saban and Trump met late last week as the ex-Crimson Tide coach delivered a commencement speech at Alabama.
The potential commission and executive order are being discussed as the House v. NCAA settlement is expected to be entering its final stages.
Saban spent 28 seasons as an NCAA head coach, 17 of which were spent with Alabama. The 73-year-old amassed a 297-71-1 record with Toledo, Michigan State, LSU, and the Crimson Tide. He also won seven national championships.
Texas Tech board chair Cody Campbell is also expected to lead the commission, sources told Dellenger. Campbell’s previous business ventures include selling an oil gas company for $4.1 billion, according to On3’s Pete Nakos.
NIL
Compton’s Home Run Sends Shockers to Quarterfinals
Story Links Next Game: vs. North Texas 5/8/2025 | 11:00 A.M. May. 08 (Thu) / 11:00 A.M. vs. North Texas History TAMPA, Fla. – Camryn Compton’s three-run home run in the bottom of the sixth pushed No. 5 seed Wichita State to a […]

TAMPA, Fla. – Camryn Compton’s three-run home run in the bottom of the sixth pushed No. 5 seed Wichita State to a 5-2 win over No. 8 seed Tulsa in the second round of the American Athletic Conference Championship Wednesday afternoon.
Wichita State (29-24-1) advances to Thursday’s American quarterfinals where they will face No. 4 North Texas at 11 a.m. CT on ESPN+.
The Shockers were limited to just four hits in the game, but Compton’s 12th home run of the season proved to be the difference. Taylor Sedlacek doubled and scored two runs, Ellee Eck singled and drove in a run and Brookelyn Livanec singled to round out the hits.
Co-Freshman of the Year Ryley Nihart (11-7) went the distance in the circle, allowing only one earned run on seven hits and three walks.
A leadoff double to start the game turned into an early run on a Camryn Compton throwing error, giving Tulsa a 1-0 lead after the first inning.
Tulsa doubled its lead to 2-0 in the top of the second on a one-out, solo home run.
Wichita State cut the deficit in half in the bottom of the third on Eck’s RBI single after a Livanec single and Sami Hood sac bunt.
In the bottom of the fourth, the Shockers tied the game at 2-2 on Jodie Epperson’s sac fly. Sedlacek led off the inning with a double and then moved up to third on Compton’s sac bunt.
To open the bottom of the sixth, Eck and Sedlacek both reached on hit by pitches to set the scene for Compton. On the very first pitch of the at bat, Compton smashed a no-doubter over the wall in left.
NIL
Nick Saban Joins Donald Trump In Move To Back Up NIL Claims
© Gary Cosby Jr./Imagn Nick Saban believes the college athletics landscape, particularly in college football, is broken. The legendary Alabama head coach believes NIL is a large reason that it is broken. He believes that someone needs to step in quickly in order to fix it, lest we risk the sport imploding altogether. And as the saying […]


© Gary Cosby Jr./Imagn
Nick Saban believes the college athletics landscape, particularly in college football, is broken. The legendary Alabama head coach believes NIL is a large reason that it is broken. He believes that someone needs to step in quickly in order to fix it, lest we risk the sport imploding altogether. And as the saying goes, if you want something done right, sometimes you have to do it yourself.
Ralph Russo of The Athletic reports that Saban will serve as the co-chair of the President Donald Trump’s commission for college sports. Saban is expected to serve alongside Texas Tech board of regents chairman Cody Campbell in the position. The commission is expected to examine several issues facing the future of college sports, not the least of which is how NIL is regulated.
Back in January, Saban spoke passionately about his concern for the future of college athletics should NIL continue to go unregulated.
Nick Saban Expressed Concerns About Unregulated NIL Prior To Taking New Position
“All I’m saying? The people out there need to know this model is unsustainable,” he said during an appearance on the Pat McAfee Show ahead of Monday’s national championship game. “It’s not good for players.”
“Players need to get compensated, no doubt. But it has to be done in a way where, you know, in some kind of way, have competitive balance, you know, and that every school has the same thing,” he continued. “One school can’t spend $30 million for players while another school’s spending $3 million.”
His comments drew criticism from fans who believed he enjoyed a similar advantage while at Alabama. But they’re also not without merit. Administrators at several universities have expressed concerns about the future viability of their programs. Ohio State president Ted Carter already acknowledged his intent to cut programs in order to further spend on revenue sports, and other schools are widely expected to follow suit.
Who knows whether Saban and the commission find a solution within the law? But it’s nice to see that someone is at least trying.
NIL
What Can Come From The New College Sports Commission?
In a move that could reshape the landscape of college athletics, Texas Tech collective founder Cody Campbell is stepping into a new role alongside legendary football coach Nick Saban. The two will serve as co-chairs of President Donald Trump’s college sports commission. This panel is designed to tackle the evolving challenges of collegiate athletics. The […]

In a move that could reshape the landscape of college athletics, Texas Tech collective founder Cody Campbell is stepping into a new role alongside legendary football coach Nick Saban. The two will serve as co-chairs of President Donald Trump’s college sports commission. This panel is designed to tackle the evolving challenges of collegiate athletics. The most important topic they hope to address is Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals and other financial deals for college athletes.
A Powerhouse Duo
Campbell is a former Texas Tech football player and current Board of Regents chairman. He is also one of the most prominent donors for the Red Raiders. He is the co-founder and co-executive of Double Eagle Energy Holdings. It is an oil and gas company that operates extensively in the Permian Basin region of West Texas. Campbell made headlines when he sold Double Eagle for a staggering $4.1 billion in April of this year. His contributions financial to the school have landed his name on the field at Jones AT&T Stadium in Lubbock.
Meanwhile, Saban, the former LSU and Alabama head football coach, has been a vocal critic of the current state of college athletics. Specifically, he has been advocating for more structure and regulation in the NIL era. It’s become commonplace to see Saban ranting about the need for change on College GameDay in the fall. Together, these two figures bring a unique blend of business acumen and coaching expertise. Campbell’s experience in high-stakes financial deals and Saban’s deep understanding of college athletics could prove instrumental in shaping policies that ensure fairness, sustainability, and competitive balance.

The Commission’s Mission
The commission, spearheaded by President Trump, aims to address key issues plaguing college sports. This includes unrestricted player movement via the NCAA transfer portal, unregulated booster payments, athlete employment status, and Title IX implications. Calls on Congress to get involved are not new to any of these situations in the history of college athletics. But once NIL deals became a part of the landscape, the calls to D.C. grew in number and volume. The commission’s work could set the foundation for a more structured approach to collegiate sports governance.
Why Would Campbell Join?
It’s no secret that the wild, wild West nature of NIL and collectives has greatly benefited Texas Tech. Campbell, head football coach Joey McGuire, and his Red Raider team have burst into the national landscape. After seemingly coming out of nowhere to be the most active team in the fall portal window, Texas Tech has continued to add key pieces in the spring window. So why would Campbell want to actively corral the NIL landscape. Why change when it has positioned his alma mater in a position it’s never been in before? Campbell has called for reform publicly multiple times in the past. His most recent came in light of the Nico Iamaleva unceremonious exit from Tennessee. Campbell’s public comments appear to be looking out for the rest of college athletics beyond the big revenue sports (football and men’s basketball).
In a piece penned on The Federalist on April 14th, Campbell said, “Lost in all of this are the 500,000+ student athletes who are not receiving multi-million dollar deals and have no voice at the table”. Campbell is calling for rules that allow NIL contracts to be enforced. In addition, he is seeking one set of laws to be followed, and not state legislature ruling the day. He also wants to ensure athletes remain student-athletes and not employees. Campbell argues, “establishing this non-employee status will help to limit the cost burden of sponsoring an intercollegiate sport, and ensure that benefits like a scholarship are not taxable as income.” Perhaps the most significant reason, though he is calling on action, is to get everyone to play on the same money field.
Searching For Equal Money Sharing
“College sports do not currently have the right to take the same approach [as the NFL], as they do not have protection under the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961, as do the professional leagues. Through inclusion in the Sports Broadcasting Act, colleges would gain the right to pool and jointly market their media rights, and install a media revenue distribution system that would significantly increase total revenue and would promote parity.” Campbell’s quest to protect all of college athletics appears noble. The cynic would argue that if Campbell played is football at a Big 10/SEC school, he would not have this same stance.
What’s Next?
There is no way to determine the exact impact the commission would have on the college sports landscape. After all, there are still potential landmark agreements to settle in a trio of antitrust lawsuits facing the NCAA. Most notably, it would allow for the first time a system of direct payments from schools to athletes.
Campbell and Saban’s leadership will be pivotal in shaping the future of college athletics. As the commission begins its work, all eyes will be on these two. College athletics will see how, or even if, they can properly steer the future of college athletics in a direction that works for all.
Main Image: Gary Cosby Jr.-Tuscaloosa News
NIL
Season of major parity for college football in 2025? Deep contender field looks to break glass ceiling
There’s a better-than-decent chance the preseason AP Top 25’s release will represent a shift in the college football landscape. The last decade has seen only four teams — Ohio State (1), Alabama (5), Clemson (2), Georgia (2) — hold the distinction of preseason No. 1. That’s likely to change in a few months. Texas is […]

There’s a better-than-decent chance the preseason AP Top 25’s release will represent a shift in the college football landscape. The last decade has seen only four teams — Ohio State (1), Alabama (5), Clemson (2), Georgia (2) — hold the distinction of preseason No. 1. That’s likely to change in a few months.
Texas is the favorite to start in the top spot. It did so in 247Sports’ post-spring Top 25. CBS Sports’ Brandon Marcello has Ohio State at No. 1 in his post-spring top 25. Penn State could find itself ranked No. 1 like it did in Joel Klatt’s post-spring Top 25.
LSU, Oregon, and Notre Dame at least belong in the conversation. Clemson, which hasn’t really been part of the national title discussion since the advent of NIL, got my vote for preseason No. 1 in 247Sports’ too-early Top 25 voting.
There’s a fluidity among the 2025 projected contenders we haven’t seen in the last decade. Obviously, Ohio State, Georgia and Alabama haven’t gone away. But it no longer feels obvious that one of those recruiting juggernauts — they’ve made up the top three of the 247Sports Team Talent Composite rankings for seven straight years — is destined to win the national championship.
There’s a new era of parity in college football … sort of.
Parity to a degree
Yes, NIL and the transfer portal have closed the gap in college football. But it also depends on what gap you’re talking about. In the end, high school recruiting remains the ultimate separator.
Have portal boons led to leaps in talent level for teams like Arizona State or Texas Tech? Absolutely. But there’s a reason why every national champion since 2013 reached Bud Elliott’s Blue Chip Ratio (in which 50% of its roster made up of four-star recruits or better). There’s a baseline of talent required to win in college football, especially in an era where teams must win three or four playoff games to earn a national title. Last year, Arizona State came within an eyelash of upsetting Texas, but the Sun Devils still had Ohio State and Notre Dame between them and a national title.
But it’s worth noting the difference between Georgia at No. 2 in the 2024 Team Talent Composite and say, Penn State at No. 11, is smaller than it’s ever been. That’s not because of the number of five-stars on each roster. Georgia is still more top heavy. Instead, it’s about depth.
Blue Chip Ratio for 2024 season
Take Texas, for example.
The Longhorns — which came in at No. 4 in the 2024 Team Talent Composite — had two defensive tackles drafted on Day 2 of the 2025 NFL Draft. No problem, right? Just plug and go thanks to your recruiting wins.
Not so fast.
Seven DTs played 10-plus snaps behind that drafted pair for Texas last season. Two graduated. Four entered the transfer portal.
That’s how you get to a place where Texas, after four straight top-six recruiting classes, must sign FIVE defensive tackles in the portal.
You can see examples like that across all the top rosters. Georgia lost the No. 3 player in the portal, Damon Wilson, to Missouri. Alabama lost its starting right tackle Elijah Pritchett to Nebraska. Clemson lost part-time starting DT Tre Williams to Michigan.
The top programs still have more talent than anyone, but other teams spend big to upgrade their rosters through the transfer portal. That makes keeping
depth pieces happy more difficult than it was a decade ago — when Nick Saban could basically stash a high-profile recruit for two or three years before they emerged as fully formed monsters. In this era, those players transfer after a season or two to get on the field.
So, yes, there’s a still a gap in talent between Georgia and Penn State. But it’s a lot smaller than it was five years ago.
Legit roster questions for the usual favorites
Let’s run through the usual list of favorites — all of which ranked in the top five of the 2024 Team Talent Composite — and poke some holes in their 2025 chances.
Ohio State: The Buckeyes will either start Julian Sayin (12 career pass attempts) or Lincoln Kienholz (22 career pass attempts) at quarterback. They’re replacing two first-round picks on the offensive line, two Day 2 picks at running back and eight draft picks on defense. I haven’t even mentioned the loss of offensive coordinator Chip Kelly and defensive coordinator Jim Knowles. That’s a lot!
Georgia: Gunner Stockton solidified the starting QB role for Georgia in the Sugar Bowl. But it’s worth noting the Bulldogs were hunting transfer portal quarterbacks before that performance. He’s got a lot to prove. So do his receivers in a reworked room that suffered from drop issues a season ago.
Georgia faces questions along its defensive front after losing four starters to the NFL. The Bulldogs also produced their worst pass defense since 2020 last season and lost starting safeties Malaki Starks and Dan Jackson to the draft.
Alabama: We all watched the Vanderbilt and Georgia games from last season. Alabama, despite returning the 35th most production in the FBS, has a ton to prove next season in Year 2 under Kalen DeBoer.
Texas: Yep, the Longhorns belong here after two straight trips to the CFB semifinals. But Arch Manning, despite all the hype, has only really played significant snaps against UTSA, ULM and Mississippi State. His receivers are unproven. Both Texas’ offensive tackles got drafted. The defensive tackle room — the source of Texas’ defensive dominance the last two years — is completely reworked.
Will those teams be fine? Probably! I’d be shocked if any won fewer than nine or 10 games. But their rosters present enough questions to ponder some teams outside the usual suspects.
Getty Images
The other options
Penn State: NIL usually is mentioned with roster acquisitions: “Who can my favorite team go out and buy in the portal?” But Michigan and Ohio State have shown retention is the key over the past two seasons. Not necessarily retention with portal, though that’s important. Instead, retention with the NFL Draft.
Both Michigan and Ohio State convinced critical starters to return to school, largely because the NIL dollars they received were comparable to what they could have earned in the pros. This year Penn State quarterback Drew Allar, running backs Nicholas Singleton and Kaytron Allen and defensive lineman Dani Dennis-Sutton and Zane Durant all passed on the draft.
Thus, Penn State has the 33rd-most returning production in college football coming off a season where they were a few snaps away from a national title berth. Throw in a few key acquisitions in the portal, particularly at wide receiver, and the Nittany LIons are in the best position they has ever been under James Franklin.
Clemson: The latest CBS Sports mock draft has two Clemson players going in the top 10 next year, and other outlets have as many as six Tigers going in the first round. That shows the level of talent in Death Valley for a program brings back the most production of any team in the FBS. Throw in a few key portal additions — Dabo Swinney’s first ever non-walk-on-QB transfer takes — and the Tigers have the most proven roster in college football, including the potential No.1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft in Cade Klubnik.
Again, I have Clemson right now as the best team in college football and believe the Tigers are a strong favorite to win the ACC. Clemson being +1400 to win the national championship is tasty. There’s great value there. The Tigers are also +145 to win the ACC, per FanDuel Sportsbook.
LSU: There’s an argument that Garrett Nussmeier is the top returning quarterback in college football this season. Add his presence to the No. 1 transfer portal class in the country, and the Tigers have filled almost every roster hole you can think of this offseason. If a re-armed defense can take a step forward, Brian Kelly will have a playoff team (and maybe much more) in Year 4.
Meanwhile, Oregon and Notre Dame both also profile as contenders once again if their new QBs pan out the way the recruiting industry expects them to. That’s nine legit contenders entering 2025, and that’s not even counting teams like Auburn, Florida, Miami, Michigan and Texas A&M that all have an outside chance to force their way into the conversation if things break right.
The run up to the preseason feels different for a reason. For the first time in a decade, more than just a handful of teams profile as contenders. It’s not true parity. It’s still very difficult to imagine a team outside the top 20 of the Team Talent Composite winning a national title. But for a sport so long occupied by just a handful of programs, the door finally feels like it’s cracked open for a few more.
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