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Which top 2025 recruits will impact the college football season

Week 0 of the 2025 college football season has arrived. That means, among plenty of other things, that the recruits atop the 2025 recruiting class are poised to get their first taste of regular-season action at the college level over the next month.
What’s in store for some of the top incoming newcomers across the country this fall?
We’re highlighting the top 10 prospects from the 2025 ESPN 300, diving into how they’ve fared across their initial months on campus, where they stand at the close of fall camp and projecting the roles they’ll fill in their debut seasons. That group of five-star newcomers is spread across eight schools, including each of the programs — Texas, Georgia, Oregon, Alabama and Ohio State — that made up the top five of ESPN’s 2025 recruiting class rankings.
Some freshmen, such as Michigan quarterback Bryce Underwood, Oregon wide receiver Dakorien Moore and Tennessee offensive tackle David Sanders Jr., are in line to step into starting roles from day one this fall. Others have the potential to be impact newcomers who could ultimately help swing the trajectories of some College Football Playoff hopefuls.
We spent the summer speaking to coaches and team personnel across the country to understand where the nation’s top freshmen stand entering the 2025 season. Here’s what we’re hearing:

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Vitals: 6-foot-4, 208 pounds
2025 ESPN 300 rank: No. 1 overall, No. 1 QB-PP, No. 1 in Michigan
Position outlook: At a bare minimum, Michigan needs more solidity at the quarterback position than it had a season ago, when the Wolverines went 8-5 with three different starters — Davis Warren, Alex Orji and Jack Tuttle.
Warren, a redshirt senior, remains on the roster this fall among Michigan’s veteran options alongside Fresno State transfer Mikey Keene and Jake Garcia, who joins this fall after stints at Miami, Missouri and East Carolina. Redshirt freshman Jadyn Davis has also been in the mix for the Wolverines. But all eyes remain on Underwood, the five-star freshman who handed Michigan a seismic in-state pledge when he flipped from LSU in November.
How he projects: For much of the offseason, the Wolverines’ quarterback battle appeared to be a two-man race between Keene and Underwood. As things stand, team sources say they view Underwood as the heavy favorite to get the start when Michigan hosts New Mexico on Aug. 30.
That’s due in part to an unspecified injury that kept Keene, a 35-game starter across stops at UCF and Fresno State since 2021, sidelined in the spring and limited in fall camp. But it’s also tied to what Underwood has shown head coach Sherrone Moore and the Wolverines’ staff since January.
With an already sturdy 6-4 frame, Underwood has wowed coaches in Ann Arbor with his arm strength and pocket awareness. The improved mobility Underwood flashed in his senior season in high school last fall has been another positive element in his acclimation to the college level, while his advanced understanding of the game and willingness to work have softened concerns surrounding his lack of experience. Moore spent the summer gushing about Underwood, noting the young quarterback’s frequent presence in the office of first-year offensive coordinator Chip Lindsey, who recently referred to Underwood as a “football junkie.”
“I think the surprise for me, [his] football knowledge is really high for a 17-year-old, high school kid that just got here,” Lindsey said of Underwood. “Pretty, pretty impressive.”
All signs point to Underwood opening the season as Michigan’s starting quarterback. He’ll get an early test in Week 2 when the Wolverines travel to face Oklahoma and one of the nation’s most experienced defenses led by head coach Brent Venables.
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Vitals: 6-foot-3, 194 pounds
2025 ESPN 300 rank: No. 2 overall, No. 1 QB-DT, No. 1 in Texas
Position outlook: Alabama has starting experience just about everywhere across its offense in 2025 … just not under center following Jalen Milroe‘s offseason departure for the NFL.
Redshirt junior Ty Simpson, who has played in 16 games since 2022, will make his first start when the Crimson Tide visit Florida State in Week 1. Third-year passer Austin Mack (no career starts) is the program’s only other returnee at the position from a season ago. He remains in competition with Russell — the reigning Gatorade National High School Football Player of the Year — for the backup job.
How he projects: With Russell working primarily with the third-string unit in Alabama’s fall camp, the Crimson Tide appear likely to lean on Mack’s (relative) experience behind Simpson, at least initially. But Russell’s overall performance since he arrived on campus as a midyear enrollee in January has only bolstered the notion that the five-star dual-threat from Duncanville, Texas, can (or will) be Alabama’s QB1 of the future.
Five-star Keelon Russell won’t start immediately for Alabama. Gary Cosby/USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn ImagesCoaches within the program lauded the way Russell’s speed and playmaking ability has translated to the college game, and team sources suggest he has taken significant strides in his grasp of the offense during fall camp. Head coach Kalen DeBoer pointed to Russell’s on-field composure and pocket awareness as key elements of the progression the freshman quarterback has charted over the past eight months.”Keelon can anticipate,” DeBoer told ESPN this summer. “When he sees things — because he’s comfortable with the reps he’s had here at the college level and trusting what he’s seeing is really what’s happening — he can deliver for sure.”First-year offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb offered a similar sentiment when he told reporters about Russell’s ability to “just slow the game down” earlier this month, part of a skillset that will sooner or later nudge Russell toward opportunities under center with the Crimson Tide.
Vitals: 6-foot-4, 310 pounds2025 ESPN 300 rank: No. 3 overall, No. 1 DT, No. 1 in GeorgiaPosition outlook: Georgia enters 2025 uncommonly unproven along the defensive line after sending 2024 leaders Mykel Williams (first round), Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins (fifth) and Warren Brinson (sixth) to the NFL draft.
The Bulldogs return redshirt junior Christen Miller, who made 10 starts a season ago and is expected to step into a bigger role. Elsewhere, Georgia will search for production from a raw group of returners that includes junior Jordan Hall, redshirt sophomore Xzavier McLeod and redshirt freshmen Joseph Jonah-Ajonye and Nnamdi Ogboko. Griffin and fellow five-star freshman Isaiah Gibson are also both in the mix for early snaps.
How he projects: Sources within the program say they believe Griffin could be Georgia’s best defensive tackle addition since Jalen Carter arrived in 2020. There’s also a sense that ESPN’s No. 1 defender in 2025 might even already be the most talented defensive lineman on the roster.
Considering the Bulldogs’ lack of proven production up front, the opportunity is there for Griffin to assert himself early and carve a significant role within a new-look unit this fall.
Griffin arrived at Georgia with SEC-ready size, and he possesses a rare blend of quickness and physicality that could allow him to be a disruptive interior playmaker from day one. But where Griffin potentially separates himself from the long line of ultratalented Bulldogs defensive lineman is his early maturity and advanced knowledge of the game; Griffin has impressed coaches and team personnel staff this summer with his ability to absorb information and handle adversity.
“You always want to temper expectations on young players, but he has a maturity to him, a work ethic to him,” Georgia defensive coordinator Glenn Schumann said of Griffin this month. “He’s obviously a big guy with a lot of athleticism. So we hope that Elijah’s able to help us this year.”
Griffin might not be announced as a starter when the Bulldogs open against Marshall on Aug. 30. But he’s poised to compete for starter-level snaps and could cement himself as a fixture on the Bulldogs’ defensive line by the time SEC play opens in mid-September.
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Vitals: 5-foot-11, 195 pounds
2025 ESPN 300 rank: No. 4 overall, No. 1 WR, No. 2 in Texas
Position outlook: Oregon watched Tez Johnson and Traeshon Holden head to the NFL in the offseason, then lost Evan Stewart to a knee injury in June. Those developments now leave the Ducks with only one returning wide receiver who caught more than 20 passes last fall — redshirt junior Justius Lowe — surrounding first-year starting quarterback Dante Moore.
Lowe had 21 receptions for 203 yards and a touchdown, in 2024, and he’s part of a group of veterans who could help fill the production gap that also includes Gary Bryant Jr., Kyler Kasper and Florida State transfer Malik Benson. Moore, one of the nation’s most electrifying skill position talents in the 2025 class, stands alongside Jeremiah McClellan, Jurrion Dickey and fellow freshman Cooper Perry in a collection of young pass catchers who also will be called upon.
How he projects: Moore has long been viewed as one of the more college-ready prospects in ESPN’s 2025 five-star class. Given Oregon’s needs at wide receiver, he appears poised to be among the starters when the Ducks open against Montana State on Aug. 30.
Dakorien Moore is one of the best-rated wide receiver prospects since 2006. Under ArmourMoore’s elite speed — he posted a 10.4-second 100-meter time as a high school junior — is part of the explosive playmaking ability that has distinguished him since he joined Oregon in January. But team sources also point to Moore’s hands, sharp route running and impressive length relative to his 5-foot-11 build as tools that can make him an immediate focal point in 2025.”He could have a big role with our team,” Ducks head coach Dan Lanning told ESPN. “He’s done a great job since he’s been here, he had an unbelievable summer. So I have high expectations for Dakorien. I know he has high expectations for himself.”
Vitals: 6-foot-1, 195 pounds2025 ESPN 300 rank: No. 5 overall, No. 1 CB, No. 1 in AlabamaPosition outlook: Oregon enters 2025 down having lost its top seven players, in terms of snaps, from a secondary that finished 25th in pass defense a season ago. That includes All-Big Ten honorees Jabbar Muhammad and Nikko Reed and Dontae Manning at corner.
Redshirt junior Jahlil Florence made nine starts as a sophomore in 2023 and returns after sitting out all of last season because of injury. Former junior college transfer Sione Laulea and redshirt freshman Ify Obidegwu are also in the mix for Oregon’s starting cornerback spots, as is Northwestern transfer and reigning second-team All-Big 10 selection Theran Johnson. The freshman trio of Offord, Dorian Brew and Brandon Finney Jr. — three of ESPN’s top 10 cornerbacks in the 2025 class — could also factor into the Ducks’ early season rotation at the position.
How he projects: Offord’s physical profile was often compared to Ohio State star Denzel Burke before he flipped from the Buckeyes to Oregon during the early signing period. Like Burke, Offord has the physical tools to be a Year 1 contributor for the Ducks.
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Sources within the program say they see Offord’s length and versatility as two of his strongest traits but also note that Offord has room to grow as a tackler and in his positional awareness. Lanning highlighted the natural ability Offord has flashed since joining the program in January while emphasizing that the gifted freshman will need time to fully acclimate to the duties required of cornerbacks playing in defensive coordinator Tosh Lupoi’s system.
“He’s an unbelievable talent,” Lanning told ESPN. “He had a really good spring, had a lot of pick up when he got here. It’s hard to play defense with what we ask our guys to do. He’s picking it up well and he’s picked it up well, he’s working really hard.”
Still getting settled and with more experienced options in front of him, Offord might not be an immediate contributor at cornerback this fall. But he should be able to hold his own physically when he does get onto the field, and his versatility could open the door to chances at nickel back, where the Ducks are replacing eight-game starter Brandon Johnson this fall.
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Vitals: 6-foot-5, 309 pounds
2025 ESPN 300 rank: No. 6 overall, No. 1 OT, No. 3 in Texas
Position outlook: An injury-riddled campaign forced Oklahoma to field eight different starting offensive line combinations last season. In 2025, the Sooners return stronger depth up front, particularly at the tackle positions after loading up through the portal and the 2025 class.
Senior Jacob Sexton, an eight-game starter in 2024, is set to return at left tackle. On the right, Oklahoma has a range of options among redshirt sophomore Logan Howland, redshirt junior Jake Taylor and veteran transfers Derek Simmons (Western Carolina) and Luke Baklenko (Stanford). Fasusi and Ryan Fodje, another member of the 2025 ESPN 300, each appear poised to earn playing time as freshmen after turning in promising fall camp showings this month.
How he projects: Oklahoma offensive line coach Bill Bedenbaugh has made it clear Fasusi will play in 2025, and it might not be long before injury or competition pushes him into a starting role.
Fasusi was one of the most physically developed offensive tackle prospects atop the 2025 class, and he has added nearly 20 pounds to his 6-foot-5 frame since joining the Sooners. And while questions have hovered over the technical elements of his game, Bedenbaugh praised the on-field development and consistency he has seen from both Fasusi and Fodje this summer.
“We’ve had good players, really good guys that are All-Pros — I haven’t had anybody like them at that age, just overall,” Bedenbaugh said of Fasusi and Fodje earlier this month. “They aren’t afraid. They aren’t afraid [of] who they’re blocking. Whether Fasusi gets his ass kicked by R Mason [Thomas] or not, he ain’t scared. He’s going out there to win. Ryan Fodje’s the same exact way.”
Sexton sat out Oklahoma’s final four games last season because of an injury, and the overall health of the Sooners’ offensive line will be a storyline all season. If Fasusi isn’t a Week 1 starter, he’ll only be a snap away from being thrust into a prominent role as Oklahoma chases a bounce-back in 2025.
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Vitals: 6-foot-6, 305 pounds
2025 ESPN 300 rank: No. 7 overall, No. 2 OT, No. 1 in North Carolina
Position outlook: From a position group of stability a year ago, Tennessee returns only one starter this season — left tackle Lance Heard — with right tackles John Campbell Jr. (489 snaps) and Dayne Davis (368) among the prominent departures.
Heard, an 11-game starter in 2024 and a preseason All-SEC selection, is expected to hold down the left side of the Vols’ made-over offensive line with transfers Wendell Moe Jr. (Arizona) and Sam Pendleton (Notre Dame) filling the guard spots. Redshirt freshmen Bennett Warren and Jesse Perry are two others who probably will feature in Tennessee’s tackle rotation, as well, but Sanders has been repping as the first-team right tackle this month with a clear path to starting in Week 1.
How he projects: Sanders was ahead of schedule from a technique and agility standpoint when he joined the Vols in January. Given the offseason turnover on Tennessee’s offensive line, he has long been projected to be part of the program’s starting unit against Syracuse in Week 1.
Five-star offensive lineman David Sanders Jr. could be an immediate starter for Tennessee. Bryan Lynn/Icon SportswireWhile rival SEC scouts love Sanders’ overall ceiling, many questioned his size and ability to contribute early when Sanders signed with the Vols at 270 pounds in December. Sanders has tacked on nearly 40 pounds since then, leaving Tennessee offensive line coach Glen Elarbee and other team sources confident that Sanders will be SEC-ready physically this fall.”One, just his body: the guy has done an incredible job of putting on weight and getting to function here in the SEC,” Elarbee told reporters on Aug. 5. “Two, mentally, he’s spent as much time or more time than anybody meeting, walking through and understanding there’s still way way more to keep going. But from where he was to where he is now? Unreal and credit to him.”The overall development of Tennessee’s renovated offensive line will play a significant part in defining the Vols’ 2025 season. Sanders’ acclimation to life in the SEC, with matchups against the high-level fronts of Georgia, Alabama and Oklahoma on the schedule should be especially intriguing.
Vitals: 6-foot-5, 268 pounds2025 ESPN 300 rank: No. 8 overall, No. 2 DT, No. 2 in GeorgiaPosition outlook: The bulk of the defensive line unit that helped carry Texas to a national semifinal last season is gone with 2024 leaders Alfred Collins, Vernon Broughton, Barryn Sorrell, Jermayne Lole and Bill Norton all out of eligibility or off to the NFL.
Syracuse transfer Maraad Watson, an 11-game starter as a freshman last fall, and Purdue transfer Cole Brevard lead a deep group of portal newcomers at defensive tackle that includes Travis Shaw (North Carolina), Hero Kanu (Ohio State) and Lavon Johnson (Maryland). Sophomore Alex January and Terry will also factor into the interior rotation, while Terry is also expected to get snaps on the edge alongside senior Ethan Burke and redshirt sophomore Colton Vasek.
How he projects: Terry’s size and ability to play across the defensive line will get him on the field in 2025. The question is where and just how significant of a role he can forge this fall.
A powerful interior talent at Manchester (Georgia) High School, team sources told ESPN that Terry carries immediate potential as a pass-rush option up the middle, but questions hover over his readiness to contribute as an impact run stopper as a freshman. Terry’s ultimate positional landing spot at the college level will hinge on the development of his range of pass-rush moves.
First-year Longhorns defensive line coach Kenny Baker said earlier this month that Texas was working Terry at both defensive tackle and on the edge, and team sources suggest that Terry’s optimal role in Year 1 with Texas would come as a situational mismatch option in either spot.
“He can do multiple things,” Baker said. “He’s been blessed and gifted with that type of ability and talent. But on the flip side, you have to make sure you’re not giving him too much. We want this guy to be able to settle a little bit, experience a little bit of success. It’s not a perfect balance, but then it’s also continuing to poke and prod and get him going in another direction, as well.”
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Vitals: 6-foot-3, 213 pounds
2025 ESPN 300 rank: No. 9 overall, No. 1 safety, No. 4 in Texas
Position outlook: Texas returns 2024 second-team All-American Michael Taaffe but has a major hole to fill at the other starting safety spot following Andrew Mukuba‘s jump to the NFL.
Third-year defensive back Derek Williams Jr. is back after a season-ending knee injury kept him from the Longhorns’ final 12 games a year ago. He’s the most likely contender to claim the starting job alongside Taaffe. Junior Jelani McDonald — who is expected to feature elsewhere in the secondary — and sophomores Xavier Filsaime and Jordon Johnson-Rubell are among the experienced returners also in the mix. Williams and fellow freshman Zelus Hicks are a pair of intriguing unknowns at the position who could feature in Texas’ early season safety rotation.
How he projects: Williams joined the Longhorns’ football program in June after hitting .327 with eight RBIs over 20 games in his debut season with the school’s baseball program this spring. He projects as a potentially special secondary talent for the future, but Williams had ground to make up this summer and patience might be required before Texas sees his best on the football field.
Connelly’s conference previews
Bill Connelly gets you ready for the 2025 season by breaking down a different conference every week of the summer. Previews
“We’ll just kind of wait and see because we missed a lot of spring ball and all that,” Longhorns safeties coach Duane Akina told reporters of Williams’ progress earlier this month. “So I haven’t really had a chance to work with him. He’s intent in meetings and that’s a good start.”
Williams’ ability to get onto the field this fall will be dictated by the pace at which he picks up the defense and the speed of the college game after sitting out the back half of his senior football season last fall because of an injury. A big-bodied safety, team sources say they believe Williams will ultimately become a multipositional defensive weapon whose earliest opportunities might come on special teams in 2025.
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Vitals: 6-foot-4, 230 pounds
2025 ESPN 300 rank: No. 10 overall, No. 2 QB-PP, No. 1 in Ohio
Position outlook: Rather than turning to the transfer portal, the reigning national champions kept their search to replace Will Howard in-house this offseason. Ohio State head coach announced sophomore Julian Sayin as the program’s starting quarterback on Aug. 18 after a two-man position battle between the former five-star recruit and junior Lincoln Kienholz.
Per coach Ryan Day, St. Clair — the coveted 2025 signee from Bellefontaine, Ohio — enters his freshman season firmly behind Kienholz as the Buckeyes’ QB3.
How he projects: The 2025 season looks as if it’ll be a developmental year for St. Clair, who might find a more competitive path playing time in 2026 without another underclassmen passer on the roster or a top 300 quarterback committed to the program’s 2026 class, as things stand.
“He has all the traits,” Day told reporters this week. “He has the tools. We think he can absolutely be the quarterback of our future.”
Coaches have been impressed with St. Clair’s arm strength, mobility and throwing accuracy on the run, the same tools that turned him into one of the nation’s top quarterback prospects from the lower classification ranks of 3A football in Ohio. But team sources suggest that uneven performances and struggles reading the game from the pocket in fall camp exposed the learning curve still in front of St. Clair as he settles in as one for the future at the college level.
“He’s not there right now,” Day said. “But he has made progress. I think he knows where his deficiencies are right now, and he’s been told those. … He knows what he needs to work on.”
ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg contributed to this report.
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Tennessee safety Boo Carter commits to Colorado out of NCAA transfer portal
Tennessee safety Boo Carter has committed to Colorado out of the NCAA transfer portal, On3 has learned. Carter had a bit of a rocky relationship with the Volunteers, ultimately departing the program before the 2025 campaign had finished.
In two seasons at Tennessee, Carter recorded 63 tackles. He also notched two sacks, three forced fumbles, an interception and three passes defended.
Carter earned numerous SEC-related honors stemming from the 2024 season. He was a 2024 SEC All-Freshman team selection. He was also a 2025 preseason All-SEC third-team selection by the league’s coaches.
Boo Carter was arguably his most productive in terms of getting his hands on the ball in 2025. He logged 25 tackles, a sack, three forced fumbles and three passes defended this season.
But Carter didn’t stick around for the full season at Tennessee. He did not play in the team’s 42-9 win over New Mexico State in November. That absence was conspicuous.
Coach Josh Heupel expressed some disappointment in Boo Carter after the game. He shed a little light on the situation.
“At the end of the day, there’s a standard you’ve gotta meet to be in that locker room,” Heupel said. “So he was not out on the field with us. That will be my last response to anything related to that for right now.”
Boo Carter also missed several days with the team in July and went into call camp with questions about his availability. But he was able to work his way back into the good graces of the staff.
Ultimately, things didn’t end up working out at Tennessee. Shortly after that New Mexico State game, it was reported that Carter was splitting with the program.
“No, not regretful,” Heupel said. “At the end of the day, it’s our job as coaches to try to mold these guys, and that’s a part of the commitment that you make, you know, in the recruiting process and when they decide to come. You know, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t. And, you know, at the end of the day, we’re moving forward.”
Prior to enrolling at Tennessee, Boo Carter was ranked as a four-star prospect and the No. 111 overall recruit in the nation, according to the Rivals Industry Rankings. He also checked in as the No. 3 athlete in the class and the No. 3 overall player from the state of Tennessee, hailing from Chattanooga (TN) Bradley Central.
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Is college football broken, or the best it’s ever been? Yes
Indiana football is everything right now, representing at once the enhancement of the college football product on the field and the unsustainable reality off it.
No, Indiana didn’t do anything wrong — that we know of, anyway, though I’m sure other coaches would like to investigate Curt Cignetti and his players for spyware or cyborg blood or something. But as we wrap up a week that had the absolute best and worst of the sport clawing at each other for top billing, the Hoosiers should know they’ve made it so much harder for so many people.
Not that they should care. Go destroy Miami after people spend the week talking themselves back into why you can’t really be this good, then celebrate a national championship that would represent one of the most unforeseen, inexplicable, glorious stories in American sports history.
Indiana, even while making Friday night more boring than we wanted with a 56-22 semifinal thrashing of Oregon, is the prevailing example of why college football is in a great place as a product.
Transfer portal. Contracts. No loyalty. Whatever. Inject this stuff into MY VEINS!!!!!
— Dari Nowkhah (@ESPNDari) January 9, 2026
Never has there been more hope for so many. Membership in the exclusive club of heritage and built-in advantages is no longer required. A tallying of the recruiting stars next to names on a roster no longer produces a long and accurate list of programs with no shot of winning it all.
The landscape is always changing, never boring. Vanderbilt, Texas Tech, Ole Miss and Arizona State are among Indiana’s party-crashing undercards. The College Football Playoff is compelling. The games aren’t all thrillers, but enough of them are.
I would, though, like us to get through one of those good games without half of college sports media crowing on some app: “OH THAT’S WEIRD, I THOUGHT COLLEGE FOOTBALL WAS BROKEN.”
Because we all know darn well that, in ways, it is. Or maybe fractured sounds less dramatic. Chaotic. Problematic? Whatever makes you feel less bad. In the same week we’re enjoying the CFP semifinals, including an Ole Miss-Miami classic, we’ve got the former coach of Ole Miss keeping assistant coaches from attending the ball like he’s Cinderella’s stepmother.
We’ve got that same coach, LSU’s Lane Kiffin, courting one quarterback (Arizona State transfer Sam Leavitt) at a basketball game while another (Washington’s Demond Williams Jr.) announces he’s in the portal, apparently with the idea of joining Kiffin, except he had already signed to stay on with Washington. Except we have contracts in college sports that seek to sort of bind, while being careful not to make the person being paid sound as if he or she is being paid to play. Even though that’s exactly what’s happening.
So it’s the latest but far from the last “contract dispute,” this one finishing with Williams deciding to return to Washington. And hey, look, here comes the College Sports Commission promising to start cracking down on these predictable workarounds to pay enough to land top players in a market that is rising.
Which, at best, means an example made of a program or two, and in no way means any chance for the CSC to get its arms around things. Men and women with gavels and long, black robes will continue seeing to that. Lawmakers aren’t changing it.
Collective bargaining, in some form, is the only answer, and more and more people in the industry are coming around on that. The painful, inevitable journey continues. Hopefully, the past week serves as a bit of a jolt. I talked to an administrator who has been in that camp for a while and believes the athletic director and president levels are getting there.
But that will have unintended consequences, too. Go back and read what a lot of us were writing about name, image and likeness rights 10 or 15 years ago. I don’t recall anyone coming close to predicting all that has come with it.
And I must wonder how, with a cap of some sort in place while athletes get a bigger chunk of the revenue overall, the boosters at Ohio State, Alabama and Georgia are going to feel about officially being like everyone else, about parity as league design — about the caddies getting full-time access to the pool and golf course.
Which brings us to the thing I hear the most from folks in college sports in terms of long-term concerns. And this is where Indiana re-enters the discussion, in three words: return on investment. Indiana AD Scott Dolson has made what must be considered, two years later, one of the great hires in modern college football history. As hyperbolic as that may sound.
And for as much as this should be seen as an outlier that will spawn books and documentaries, it only serves to intensify the pressure elsewhere. All your resources, all that time, and you couldn’t figure this out, Penn State? Steve Sarkisian and Arch Manning can’t match this James Madison dude and Fernando Mendoza? Wasn’t USC the program with the great quarterback developer and offensive designer?
Those programs are at least having some success. All of them are begging the millionaires and billionaires who have helped build a facility or throw some nice cars at recruits of the past to sustain competitive payrolls. The TV money is good, but check the expenses. Colleague Seth Emerson wrote about “donor fatigue” in 2024 and, spoiler alert: No one has gotten any rest.
The wealthy folks who pay NFL players are called owners, and their investments are being multiplied many times over. The wealthy folks who pay college players get names on buildings, seats on the team plane and games of catch between the star quarterback and their grandkids. NFL owners lose, fire people, draft high and continue to profit; college boosters increasingly feel like they’re setting large piles of money on fire.
Which is why private equity looks as inevitable as collective bargaining. This is more than just a slight hairline fracture that will heal on its own.
I hope you can enjoy the college football right now. The product is soaring. Also, I hope anyone who cares about it understands that it can plummet without improved leadership that values common sense, the greater good of the industry and all of its employees.
If you’re an Indiana fan, soak in these experiences that are Cignetti-driven but still possible only because of NIL and the transfer portal. And plan to stay for a while. Cignetti never looks like he’s satisfied, and Mark Cuban is looking awfully happy right now.
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What if Not NIL but Hit the Road Jack
I for sure have been concerned about all the players abandoning the ship, but what if they were talked to about not doing their jobs. What if they were given the option of either putting in the work or finding a new home. Could we have been wrong in some cases thinking the player was looking for more $ rather than putting the work in. Some players, as you know, don’t live up to their billing. OSU is one of the premier colleges for education and sports. I think when the players were recruited out of HS, they jumped at the chance to be a Buckeye. Now, the players see how difficult it is to live up to the expectations that is required to be a Buckeye. This is just a different take on what we have witnessed so far with the transfer portal. I what to find out how 11W members feel about this.
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Sports broadcasting’s parroting problem is bordering on the shameful
OK, time’s up. After 30 or so years, it’s time to end the Idiots’ Picnic, time to go home, time to remove the rehearsed-then-parroted nonsense from sports telecasts.
First one that must go is transfer portal. That’s a crock. Those are, in fact, mostly NIL price-tagged signings of college athletes without academic credentials. They are free agents, too many without the ability to read or write functional English.
In 2012, Ohio State QB Cardale Jones presaged the NIL scene when he tweeted, “Why should we have to go to class if we came here to play FOOTBALL, we ain’t come to play SCHOOL, classes are POINTLESS.”
That sad, shameful and nationally ridiculed message is now the daily reality!
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CFP overreactions: Miami discipline issues will prove costly vs. Indiana
And then there were two. The 2026 college football season has led to this: No. 1 Indiana and No. 10 Miami will meet in the College Football Playoff National Championship Game to decide the best team in the country.
In most years, the Hurricanes would be seen as an overwhelming favorite against Indiana. But Miami has gone on an underdog run of its own after making the playoff as the last at-large team.
Indiana, meanwhile, has bowled over opposing teams en route to a 15-0 record. The Hoosiers are 2025’s hegemon and it appears as if they aren’t going away anytime soon.
They handled their semifinal game against Oregon with ease, downing the Ducks 56-22. Miami, meanwhile, triumphed over Ole Miss in a 31-27 thriller that ranks as one of the best postseason games of the CFP era.
Those semifinal games, of course, provided plenty of material to overreact to as the 2025 season nears its conclusion.
Indiana is the best team of the CFP era
Yes, better than 2019 LSU. The Hoosiers may not have as much elite NFL talent — though quarterback Fernando Mendoza is a shoe-in to go first overall in the 2026 draft — and the offense isn’t quite as explosive, but they are a more complete team.
Indiana’s +473 point differential ranks first among schools in the playoff era (hat tip to my CBS Sports colleague Tom Fornelli). The Hoosiers have bludgeoned opposing teams by an average of 31.5 points per contest. Their last three wins against blue bloods Ohio State and Alabama and new blood Oregon have come by a combined score of 107-35.
Curt Cignetti’s squad has won all but one of its games against ranked opponents by at least 10 points. And Indiana is doing this in the Big Ten, one of the nation’s premier conferences.
The Hoosiers are also on the precipice of becoming the first college football program to ever go 16-0. Of course, they have the benefit of playing in the expanded playoff years, but an undefeated season in the modern era of college football, when parity is at an all-time high thanks to NIL, seems like an accomplishment that won’t be easily repeated.
After all, only four NFL teams have ever completed undefeated seasons and it only happened once after the league went to a 16-game schedule.
Indiana vs. Miami: Early preview, odds, picks as Hoosiers will meet Hurricanes in CFP National Championship
Chip Patterson

Miami’s discipline issues will doom it against Indiana
Miami was, somehow, able to overcome itself in the Fiesta Bowl against Ole Miss. The Hurricanes committed 10 penalties for a total of 74 yards, including a targeting foul that resulted in the ejection of cornerback Xavier Lucas. They dropped four potential interceptions.
Those fouls allowed Ole Miss to hang around and even take the lead at certain points. Ultimately, the Rebels made a few crucial mistakes of their own — and were pitiful on third down — which allowed the Hurricanes to outlast Ole Miss.
That won’t do against the well-oiled Indiana machine. The Hoosiers rank third nationally with just 3.57 penalties per game. They’re smart, they’re disciplined and — as was seen with D’Angelo Ponds’ pick six to open Indiana’s semifinal win over Oregon — they will pounce all over any mistakes the opponent makes.
Ultimately, discipline will make the difference in a battle between two teams that stack up fairly well otherwise.
Oregon is in trouble
You’ve certainly heard of a clutch gene if you’re a fan of sports. Oregon coach Dan Lanning has the opposite.
In their last three playoff games against Power Four opponents, the Ducks have been outscored 97-66. That includes a 23-0 romp against Big 12 champion Texas Tech this season.
Talent isn’t the issue with Oregon. The Phil Knight money certainly helps, but the Ducks have always recruited at a high clip. Coach Dan Lanning has done a good job at the high school level and in the portal.
But there’s plenty of reason to be concerned about the path that Oregon is walking with Lanning, especially given the recent postseason results. This will be a big offseason for him.
The Ducks are set to lose both of their bright young coordinators. Will Stein is headed to coach Kentucky while Tosh Lupoi will lead former Pac-12 foe California.
It is a good sign for a program’s health when assistants get head coaching jobs, and it’s a testament to what Lanning has built at the young age of 39. The next few months will be a huge test of his ability to keep the ship steady.
Ole Miss is bigger than Lane Kiffin
It was time to stop talking about Kiffin’s move to LSU once the playoff began, but the two will always be intrinsically linked given the time that Kiffin had in Oxford and the messy nature in which he departed. While Kiffin deserves his flowers for elevating the standard at Ole Miss, it’s clear that the Rebels have outgrown the need for him.
His departure didn’t do the program any favors or anything like that. Pete Golding has shown, in short order, that he can at least maintain the level of success that Kiffin established — if not exceed it. Golding, after all, has more playoff wins than Kiffin at this point, and he’s only been a head coach for three games.
Kiffin was certainly hoping that he’d be able to drag some of Ole Miss’ top stars with him, but his decision instead galvanized the Rebels. Top running back Kewan Lacy, top linebacker Suntarine Perkins and edge rusher Princewill Umanmielen, along with a bevy of other key players, have already committed to returning.
On top of that, Ole Miss is off to an incredible start in the transfer portal. The Rebels currently sit seventh in 247Sports’ Team Transfer Rankings. They’re one of just two schools in the top 10 with less than 10 commits thus far and their average prospect grade of 89.22 is first among top-15 transfer classes.
Four of Ole Miss’ nine transfer additions hold at least a four-star ranking. That includes LSU transfer Carius Curne, the No. 1 offensive tackle in the transfer portal, who spurned Kiffin for the Rebels.
NIL
Ticket prices soar for Indiana-Miami College Football Playoff national championship game
Tickets for the Indiana-Miami College Football Playoff national championship game are available, but they come with a hefty price tag. After Indiana’s win over…
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla.(AP) — The good news: There are tickets out there for the Indiana-Miami matchup in the College Football Playoff national championship game.
The bad news: They’ll cost you. A lot. A whole lot.
In the moments after Indiana finished rolling past Oregon on Friday to win the Peach Bowl 56-22, clinching a spot in the CFP title game on Jan. 19 against Miami — on Miami’s home field, no less — ticket prices for the matchup soared.
The cheapest tickets available entering Friday on the secondary markets were around $2,800. After Friday’s game, those in-the-door prices soared to around $3,800 — and that was for seats in the final rows of the upper deck of Hard Rock Stadium.
By Saturday afternoon, TicketData — which tracks activity across a number of sites — said the lowest get-in price was just under $3,600 per ticket, including fees.
Some seats available on sites like StubHub, TickPick and Ticketmaster were offered for more than $10,000 on Saturday. Numbers like those will fluctuate considerably in the coming days, but it’s already clear that this matchup will be a pricey one. It’s a perfect formula for wild demand: Miami playing a home game and seeking its sixth national title (albeit as the “visiting” team, technically) against an Indiana team on this stage for the first time.
“To see Miami galvanizing like it is right now, it’s awesome,” Hurricanes coach Mario Cristobal said Friday after he and his team arrived home from Thursday night’s win in the Fiesta Bowl over Mississippi. “And we need everybody in that stadium going absolutely bananas.”
Miami sold more than 500,000 tickets this season for its eight home regular-season games, the most in program history. And Indiana fans showed once again in the Peach Bowl that they’ll travel to support their Hoosiers; the stadium in Atlanta was overwhelmingly crimson, swallowing up whatever Oregon green was in the crowd.
“There’s nothing like having a home semifinal game,” Indiana coach Curt Cignetti said in the on-field celebration on Friday night. “There are no fans like Indiana Hoosier fans.”
Not everyone at the game will have to pay the big, big, big prices. Indiana and Miami both receive an allotment of tickets that they can sell — at face value — to season-ticket holders, donors, students and others.
And it appeared Saturday, based on what was showing online, that most of the early sales were for tickets on the “visitor” sideline — because that’s where Miami will be for the game. The CFP predetermined that the Fiesta Bowl winner would be the road team and the Peach Bowl winner would be the home team, meaning Indiana will be on the sideline that the Hurricanes typically occupy.
Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football
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