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What College Football and Basketball Will Look Like in 2025–26


The landscape of Division I college athletics is undergoing its most profound transformation in history. Triggered by the House v. NCAA antitrust lawsuit, the settlement approved in June 2025 by U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken officially ends the NCAA’s traditional amateurism model. Beginning July 1, 2025, institutions can compensate athletes directly, bringing monumental changes to how college football and basketball operate. This article breaks down the key shifts, legal mandates, administrative implications, and reactions from leaders shaping the new system—each backed by detailed figures, contracts, and expert commentary.
U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken
U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken played a pivotal role in solidifying the House v. NCAA settlement, which reshapes how athletes are compensated in college sports. Her court approval in June 2025 formalized the end of the NCAA’s restrictive compensation rules, transitioning to a market-driven model. This ruling marks a historic milestone in collegiate athletics, empowering athletes with economic rights and redefining compliance frameworks for over 350 Division I schools.
A Historic Change
Starting July 1, 2025, universities can directly compensate athletes, a dramatic departure from the previous amateurism doctrine. The decision is being hailed as a long-overdue recognition of student-athletes’ market value. This unprecedented change will reconfigure recruiting, budgeting, and compliance for schools competing at the highest level.
Beginning in 2025, schools may allocate up to $20.5 million annually to athletes through revenue-sharing arrangements. This cap is set to rise gradually, reaching $33 million by 2035. The model enables institutions to distribute this money across all sports programs based on roster size, performance, or internal policy, depending on institutional discretion.
One of the most staggering financial components is the agreement to pay over $2.8 billion in retroactive damages. This payout covers athletes who competed from 2016 to 2024 and will be disbursed over a ten-year period. Former players, previously restricted from NIL benefits or direct compensation, will finally receive monetary recognition for their contributions during those years.
How Does NIL Work?
Every NIL agreement exceeding $600 must now be approved through a newly formed NIL clearinghouse. This body, managed by Deloitte in coordination with Power Five conferences, ensures transparency, fairness, and regulatory compliance. The goal is to prevent pay-for-play abuses and to bring credibility and consistency across the national NIL landscape. This development, layered into the fifth paragraph of this article, reflects growing synergy between college sports governance and best football betting sites as they navigate athlete marketing deals in a more professionalized setting.
The removal of sport-specific scholarship limits represents a radical shift. Roster size, rather than rigid scholarship caps, now determines how institutions fund their athletic teams. This change allows programs to offer scholarships to as many athletes as their roster and budget can accommodate, opening up broader participation and support flexibility across all sports disciplines.
A Governing Commission
A brand-new College Sports Commission has been formed to supervise the evolving collegiate athletics structure. This body will manage compliance, enforce equitable NIL practices, and guide governance reforms. The commission will play a vital role in ensuring that financial benefits to athletes are administered fairly and without compromising the competition’s integrity.
The settlement’s successful implementation was driven by powerful advocates like Judge Wilken and legal platforms such as NIL Revolution and Athletes.org. Their persistent campaigns helped frame the legal and ethical necessity for economic justice in college sports. These groups now work closely with athletic departments to ensure legal structures align with new compensation norms.
How the Big Schools Have Transformed for the NIL
The SEC, Big Ten, ACC, Big 12, and Pac-12 have all taken concrete steps to embrace direct-pay models. Member universities are retooling administrative processes and drafting protocols to begin issuing athlete stipends based on some of the NFL mock draft. These actions cement a power shift toward conference autonomy, where each group governs its own financial interaction with student-athletes.
Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte has moved decisively to align with the new mandates. Under his guidance, Texas plans to increase total scholarships from 266 to 466 across all sports. This massive expansion reflects the strategic budget restructuring taking place within elite programs to remain competitive under the new revenue-sharing paradigm.
Law firms and consultancy giants like Deloitte are central to ensuring readiness. Legal experts are drafting institutional policies while Deloitte’s dual role as NIL clearinghouse manager and compliance architect—enables smoother transitions. Deloitte also supports educational initiatives to guide athletes in contract management, tax obligations, and financial literacy within this commercialized ecosystem.
Backing the Pack
The House settlement has been widely celebrated as the definitive end of exploitative amateurism. For the first time, athletes receive tangible financial returns for their time, labor, and branding power. Still, questions loom over Title IX enforcement, how funds will be divided among men’s and women’s teams, and whether athletes will be classified as employees, triggering broader labor rights.
Critics are warning that while this new structure is groundbreaking, it brings immense complexity. There are fears over how non-revenue sports will survive under tightened budgets, how schools will handle fluctuating NIL values, and how legal disputes around employment classification will evolve. Additionally, athletic departments are now faced with the herculean task of calculating fair market values while maintaining institutional balance.
Legal Advice for the NIL
Top legal advisors from firms like Greenspoon Marder LLP are now instrumental in helping universities draft compliant and defensible compensation systems. They assist schools with forming internal review boards, structuring NIL contracts, and preparing for potential litigation related to labor rights or unequal pay.
Beyond financial aspects, advocacy groups like Athletes.org are pushing for mental health resources, academic protections, and long-term retirement solutions. These organizations argue that revenue sharing must be accompanied by social safeguards, and they are lobbying for schools to commit to holistic development initiatives tied to athlete compensation.
International Influence
International student-athletes are now part of the NIL ecosystem, with deals cleared through Deloitte also required to meet visa and tax regulations. Yahoo Deportes reports a growing trend of cross-border contracts being negotiated in both English and Spanish, introducing a new layer of global financial complexity in collegiate sports administration.
This transformative ruling turns a new page in the story of college athletics, bringing with it massive financial implications, legal complexity, and long-term questions about equity, sustainability, and governance. As programs adjust, institutions, athletes, and fans alike are entering an era unlike any other in NCAA history.
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Take a bow, college sports. You are broken in almost every way possible.
It’s easy to take shots at the leaders of college athletics for letting their industry spiral to the point of all-consuming dysfunction, but give them credit for one thing.
They have managed to come up with arguably the worst business model on earth.
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Here’s how it works:
• Have an open bidding system for coaches and athletes, regulated by no one, that allows them to change jobs at will regardless of the length of their contracts and in fact encourages them to exert their leverage to obtain better deals every year.
• Do not pay the players for their ability to play football because that would make them employees. Rather, pay for their “marketing rights,” which avoids the employment conversation but complicates legal recourse in contractual disputes and ultimately leaves schools more vulnerable to chicanery and broken promises.
• Create a system that supposedly regulates payroll costs and ensures competitive balance by requiring a third-party clearinghouse to approve deals that don’t conform to their rules, only to then instruct said clearinghouse to ignore most of the rules they wrote because they’d probably lose a lawsuit.
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• Ask your most successful and loyal customers, the donors, to continue shoveling money at those players for no real benefit other than the fleeting enjoyment of watching them play, not knowing if they’ll be worth watching play in the first place. Then, after those players decide to play the leverage game again, ask your richest fans to deliver an even bigger pile of money for a new set of players who will be gone in a year.
Take a bow, college sports. This is true brilliance at work.
While the College Football Playoff and March Madness always provide compelling theater, including a highly anticipated set of semifinals Thursday and Friday, the inner workings of college sports have never looked more unpleasant, disorganized and utterly doomed to be an anvil of failure hanging around the neck of those in charge.
We have roughly one-third of college football players in the transfer portal.
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We have quarterbacks commanding $4 million and $5 million deals — essentially the equivalent of an NFL rookie salary for the No. 11 overall pick — that aren’t even guaranteed stars.
We have schools who begged for rules and guardrails to bring sanity and structure to the ecosystem using marketing companies to create financial packages for players, allowing them to exceed the revenue-share cap they negotiated just last year in the House v. NCAA settlement.
We have a situation at Washington where quarterback Demond Williams signed a revenue-sharing agreement to stay at the school, then turned around and announced he wanted to go into the transfer portal because he likely got a whiff of even bigger money somewhere else (cough, LSU, cough). Stay tuned to see how that one gets sorted out!
Demond Williams Jr.’s fight with Washington is just one of many problems with the current state of affairs in college sports. (Kevin Terrell/Getty Images)
(Kevin Terrell via Getty Images)
We have a college basketball product that is wide open for players who were professional athletes playing in the NBA G League or Europe, including former NBA draft picks. Good luck to the NCAA’s attorneys when someone who has signed an NBA contract in the past inevitably wants to come back to college for a big payday and gets denied eligibility because that’s an arbitrary bridge too far.
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We have the NCAA throwing its hands up in the air on most of this stuff, waiting for Congress to pass legislation that gives it legal protection to enforce its rules. Given that the congressional lobbying effort hasn’t borne fruit since former NCAA president Mark Emmert started it more than six years ago, good luck getting that to the finish line now that we’re in another midterm election year and there are various domestic and international crises that will likely command most of their time.
Oh, and as bad as it looks based on stuff that’s public, the environment is so much more chaotic and distrustful behind the scenes.
Here’s an example.
A power conference administrator passed along a document signed on Dec. 3 — national signing day for high school recruits — that looked like an NIL deal between Tennessee’s Volunteer Club and a recruit that had flipped to the Vols that day.
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But the reason the contract had been floating around among outraged administrative types was that the contract offering $85,000 worth of stipends, a paid apartment in Knoxville and $25,000 to pay the agent’s fees — while requiring nothing in return — was allegedly signed by the athlete’s grandmother.
Tennessee’s competitors felt it was a blatant attempt to circumvent the revenue-sharing cap. The document was sent to the NCAA, the SEC and the College Sports Commission, which is now the responsible party for policing this stuff. Nobody knew quite what to make of it.
Sources connected to the deal told Yahoo Sports the document was written in error by an inexperienced agent who didn’t know if a minor was allowed to sign a contract in that state and terminated it later in the day. Yahoo Sports has reviewed copies of the termination letter and a more standard NIL agreement with the player dated Dec. 5.
The point here is not that anybody did anything wrong. But it does provide a look into the inner workings of a business that is so unregulated that it would allow for such a mistake to happen in the first place while at the same time being such a believable story of potential cheating that other schools were actively trying to sic the CSC enforcement staff on Tennessee.
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And, again, it’s worth emphasizing that the entire point of the House settlement and the creation of the CSC was to put entities like the Volunteer Club out of business and prevent these kinds of deals, or at the very least, construct a solid wall between recruiting activity and money flowing through booster-funded collectives.
After millions in legal fees, the power conferences couldn’t even get that part right once the lawyers started pushing back and accusing them of colluding to restrict earnings.
So what do you have now? A system of talent procurement where some people are abiding by the rules, some are finding loopholes to do what they believe they can defend in court and others are completely ignoring the rules while daring a weakened NCAA/CSC to come get them.
And because it’s so vague who’s paying players through revenue share and who’s promising payments through third parties that may or may not entirely be within the rules, coaches and administrators at a lot of schools feel that their only choices are to use the flimsiness of the system to their advantage or be taken advantage of.
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Nobody should want this.
But it is the product of many choices over many years made by university presidents, athletic administrators and NCAA leadership to avoid confronting the reality that they need to tear the amateurism model down to its studs and start over.
It’s now clear they would rather have this chaos than the thorny work of building a system that pays players fairly, treats them as professionals and makes everyone accountable to the contracts they sign through collective bargaining.
It’s just one more choice, and both paths are hard. There would be real challenges trying to build that system for college sports, but as we can plainly see now, there are no magic solutions as things stand.
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Every time they try to fix a leak, six more spring up from the bottom of the boat. So each year they just accept sinking a little deeper into the abyss, hoping for a bottom that never seems within sight.
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Wetzel: How NIL, transfers and rev share brought the SEC back to the pack
Before the Rose Bowl, Indiana coach Curt Cignetti was asked about preparing his players to face Alabama and its considerable “mystique.”
“Our guys just know what they see on tape,” Cignetti said.
Translation: This Alabama team just isn’t that good.
Indiana would go on to dominate the Tide 38-3. The win not only propelled the Hoosiers to the national semifinals to play Oregon but also left college football to wonder what had happened not merely to the once-mighty Crimson Tide but to the SEC as a whole.
After decades of clearly establishing itself as the nation’s best conference, both the top-end excellence and the depth of the league have fallen. The SEC’s hopes now rest with Ole Miss, which is still going through coaching shake-ups and distractions heading into its semifinal matchup with Miami.
It’s not that the SEC isn’t still “good” or even capable of winning a national championship — Ole Miss might very well do it. Top to bottom, it might still be the best league, with the majority of schools all-in on football.
That said, the days of complete domination, all-SEC national title games or deep, juggernaut teams are clearly gone, perhaps forever. This isn’t the same.
The SEC ruled the old era of college football, when rosters were built through high school recruiting that favored proximity first, followed by opulent facilities and rabid fan bases.
It was perfect for the SEC since the Southeast was rich with talent and league schools invested heavily in infrastructure while playing in front of massive crowds (some of whom might have been willing to offer some under-the-table sweeteners).
The new era of direct revenue sharing, the transfer portal and NIL possibilities, has caused talent to disperse, weakening depth as athletes seek playing time, opportunity and out-in-the-open money.
Suddenly the great teams aren’t as great, and the rest of the teams are better.
“This is the most fun I’ve ever had in coaching because you know you’re on a more equal playing field,” Illinois coach Bret Bielema told ESPN on Tuesday. “The introduction of the portal, NIL and revenue sharing, is the most game-changing development in my 32 years of coaching.”
Bielema took over at Illinois in 2021 after previous stops at Arkansas (2013-17) in the SEC and Wisconsin (2006-12) in the Big Ten. He has won 19 games during the past two seasons.
“It’s hard when you would do what you have to do as long as you possibly could and in the end, sometimes it just didn’t matter,” Bielema said of trying to recruit back in the day. “Now you just come to work every day knowing that blue blood, red blood, orange blood, whatever, everybody’s got a chance, man.”
That’s why Bielema says that while he understands why so much focus is on the SEC stepping back of late, this really applies to everyone.
He notes that he just signed the best recruiting class of his entire career, including when he led Wisconsin to three league titles. He even flipped a running back away from Alabama on signing day. “I’ve never been able to do that,” he said.
Where power programs — and the SEC had more than any other league — could once hoard talent, both improving their roster and starving others, now the gap is smaller. Almost anyone can pick off a high school recruit or two. Then the transfer portal steps in. The days of Alabama having four eventual first-round wide receivers, as it did in 2019, are over. Kirby Smart and Georgia can’t have a two-deep defense full of future NFL stars like the one during the Bulldogs’ back-to-back titles.
“The second[-string] guard at a university doesn’t want to be the No. 2 anymore,” Bielema said. “He wants to be a starter, so he’ll leave. That is unprecedented.”
During the BCS era (1998-2013), the SEC won nine of the 16 championships, including seven in a row 2006-12. In the 10 years of the four-team playoff, the SEC went 16-6, with two of those losses coming in SEC vs. SEC title games. Alabama, Georgia and LSU combined to win six championships.
The past two national champions (Michigan and Ohio State), however, hail from the Big Ten. With Oregon and Indiana matching up in one semifinal, that league is guaranteed a spot in a third consecutive title game. Penn State, meanwhile, reached the semis last season.
The SEC is just 4-9 this postseason (other bowls included) and just 2-7 against teams from other conferences. The Big Ten is 9-4. The ACC is 8-4. While bowl results carry only so much meaning these days, the starkness of the numbers is notable.
After all, the SEC has built much of its brand on being superior to all others — commissioner Greg Sankey was lobbying for seven SEC schools to appear in this year’s playoff (five got in). Postseason losses suggest perception wasn’t reality — middle-of-the-pack SEC teams such as Vanderbilt, Missouri and Tennessee all went down.
The SEC has benefited from circular reasoning (when top SEC teams win league games, it’s a sign of strength at the top; when they lose league games, it is a sign of the conference’s unmatched depth). But the most undervalued segment of the sport might have been the middle of the Big Ten and ACC, notably Big Ten teams Iowa (which defeated Vanderbilt) and Illinois (which beat Tennessee).
No one would dare suggest that the SEC is doomed. If anything, it is just doubling down, even in unlikely places.
Former also-ran Vanderbilt is fully committed to winning now, for example. Kentucky, which once saw football as a way to pass the time before basketball, just spent $37 million to fire its coach and is investing heavily in the portal, including flipping Notre Dame quarterback Kenny Minchey from Nebraska.
The SEC remains the most popular league and the most watched on television. The passion is there. The investment is there.
It’s just that the new rules provide more opportunity at more places. Competition is fiercer, inside the league and out, which means the days of domination are likely over.
“Anybody can beat anybody these days,” Bielema said.
Even the SEC.
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McGuire one of eight finalists for Bear Bryant Award
LUBBOCK, Texas – Texas Tech head coach Joey McGuire was named one of eight finalists Wednesday for the Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award after leading the Red Raiders to their first Big 12 Conference title and an appearance in the College Football Playoff.
The award, now in its 40th year, is given annually to the college football coach for contributions that make the sport better for athletes and fans alike by demonstrating grit, integrity and a winning approach to coaching and life – both on and off the field. McGuire was joined as a finalist by Indiana’s Curt Cignetti, James Madison’s Bob Chesney, Miami’s Mario Cristobal, Texas A&M’s Mike Elko, Virginia’s Tony Elliott, Oregon’s Dan Lanning and Vanderbilt’s Clark Lea.
The Bear Bryant Award is the only college football coaching honor given after the National Champion has been determined. It will be presented Jan. 21 during an awards ceremony hosted at the Post Oak Hotel in Houston. The event will be broadcast by CBS Sports Network on a tape-delayed basis beginning at 12:30 a.m. on Jan. 22.
In addition to being named a finalist for the Bear Bryant National Coach of the Year Award, McGuire was also named Wednesday the Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year by the organization. The finalists and Coach of the Year recipient are voted on by members of the National Sports Media Association, the Bryant Awards’ executive leadership team and the Bryant family.
This is the fourth national coaching award to name McGuire as a finalist this season as he was previously one of the final candidates for the George Munger College Coach of the Year Award, the Eddie Robinson Award and the Dodd Trophy. It is the first time in his career McGuire has been a finalist for any of the national coaching awards.
The Red Raiders reached new heights this past season under McGuire, who pushed Texas Tech to a school-record 12 wins and its first Big 12 title. McGuire led the Red Raiders to their first College Football Playoff appearance at the Capital One Orange Bowl after downing BYU, 34-7, in the Edward Jones Big 12 Championship, securing Texas Tech’s first outright conference crown since 1955.
Texas Tech proved to be one of the most-dominant teams in recent history on its way to a 12-2 record, with all 12 wins coming by at least 20 points. The Red Raiders are joined by Alabama in 2018 as the only teams in the Associated Press era (since 1936) to record 12 or more wins by 20-plus points prior to a bowl game. Texas Tech is just the fifth FBS team with 12 wins by 20-plus points in a season period during that span.
Despite a loss to No. 5 Oregon in the Orange Bowl, Texas Tech will likely end its season ranked in the top 10 of both the Associated Press and USA Today Coaches’ polls for the first time in history behind one of the most-balanced rosters in college football. Texas Tech currently ranks in the top-11 of several statistical categories, namely rushing defense (1st), scoring defense (3rd), total defense (4th), scoring offense (7th) and total offense (11th).
The Red Raiders have been the winningest Big 12 program under McGuire as Texas Tech has won 25 conference games in his four seasons, the most for any league school during that span. The Red Raiders are 35-18 overall under McGuire, which is the most wins by a Texas Tech head coach through 53 games since Jim Carlen was 35-17-1 midway through his final season of his five-year tenure from 1970-74.
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NIL a factor in Arch Manning losing Texas roommate, WR Parker Livingstone to rival Oklahoma in transfer portal
Former Texas wide receiver Parker Livingstone crossed a Red River Rivalry line this week, committing to Oklahoma via the 2026 college football transfer portal. Livingstone, who roomed with quarterback Arch Manning and became one of his favorite targets during the 2025 season, ranked No. 3 on the Longhorns with 516 receiving yards and No. 2 with six touchdown receptions.
247Sports college football and transfer portal analysts Chris Hummer and Cooper Petagna provided insights into the breakup between Manning and Livingstone, detailing how NIL money and agent involvement played a significant role in the decision.
“It’s a surprising situation,” Hummer said Wednesday on CBSSports HQ.
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Mark Cuban makes donation to Indiana for 2026 transfer portal cycle, claims Hoosiers are ‘happier this year’
Mark Cuban reportedly made a donation to Indiana football for the 2026 transfer portal cycle, according to Alex Schiffer of Front Office Sports. The billionaire most known for his time as the majority owner of the Dallas Mavericks is a 1981 graduate of the school.
“Already committed for this portal,” Cuban wrote to FOS in an email. “Let’s just say they are happier this year than last year.”
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Indiana already made splashes in the transfer portal, such as TCU QB Josh Hoover committing for the 2026 season. They also landed Michigan State WR Nick Marsh and Boston College RB Turbo Richard. That’s only the tip of the iceberg and Indiana is still playing in the College Football Playoff!
Cuban reportedly gave a “big number” to the Indiana athletic department in the past, as he told CBS Sports in October. He cited his connection with head coach Curt Cignetti as the biggest factor.
Cuban is also no stranger to donating to his alma mater. In 2015, he gave the school around $5 million for a sports media center and gave $6 million to fund Indiana’s rugby club.
But first thing’s first, Cuban will be watching Indiana play Oregon in the Peach Bowl in the CFP semifinals. It’s all about what’s in front of them and nothing’s changed for Cignetti and IU.
“Yeah, excited to be a part of the Peach Bowl,” Cignetti said. “Playing a great opponent in Oregon, Coach Lanning. Like I said so before we played earlier in the year, one of the young superstars you know in the coaching profession. I think they’re 26-2 the last two years.
“And, you know, really an excellent football team, offense, defense, and special teams. Do a great job of coaching. Be a big challenge. We were fortunate, you know, to win the game out in Eugene. It’s hard to beat a great team twice. You know, very difficult. So, edge to Oregon there. But tough to be a great team twice. Looking forward to the challenge.”
Indiana and Oregon are set to square off Friday night in the Peach Bowl. Kickoff is set for 7:30 p.m. ET and the winner will play for the College Football Playoff National Championship.
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ESPN predicts outcomes of both College Football Playoff Semifinal games
ESPN predicted the outcomes of both College Football Playoff semifinal games coming Thursday and Friday. Now down to the final four teams, we are that much closer to crowning this year’s national champion.
Miami, Ole Miss, Indiana and Oregon are the last teams standing following two rounds of competitive and dominant football. But what do ESPN’s metrics say, specifically their SP+ projections?
Putting player rankings, strength of schedule, game projection and everything else under the sun together, ESPN put out its College Football Playoff predictions for the semifinals. Let’s start at the Fiesta Bowl.
No. 6 Ole Miss vs. No. 10 Miami (Fiesta Bowl)

SP+ Projection: Ole Miss 28.1, Miami 25.2
Ole Miss seemingly has the quarterback advantage with Trinidad Chambliss over Carson Beck in this one. He’s played at a different level over the last two weeks and found a new gear in the upset over Georgia. With Kewan Lacy helping the cause at running back, Ole Miss has a dynamic offense to deal with.
But defense wins championships, right? At least that is what Miami hopes for in this College Football Playoff. They stifled explosive offenses in Texas A&M and Ohio State to get to this point. Mario Cristobal will look for his team to grind it out. But ESPN projects Pete Golding and crew to get to the national title game.
No. 1 Indiana vs. No. 5 Oregon (Peach Bowl)

SP+ Projection: Indiana 26.7, Oregon 23.7
Indiana keeps winning, make sure you Google it. Curt Cignetti and crew learned from last year’s College Football Playoff mistakes and dominated Alabama in the Rose Bowl, 38-3. The Hoosiers are two wins away from the program’s first national title and have a Heisman QB in Fernando Mendoza to boot. On paper, especially with a win over the Ducks already, Indiana is rightly favored.
But Oregon is coming in guns blazing. Dan Lanning, like Cignetti, preaches toughness and grittiness. That’s exactly what Oregon is going to do and it has a pretty darn good quarterback, too, in Dante Moore. Which Nick Saban disciple is going to end up on top? The metrics say Indiana, again, by a hair.
Based on ESPN’s SP+ projections, No. 1 Indiana and No. 6 Ole Miss will square off for the College Football Playoff national championship. The game is scheduled for January 19th in Miami.
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