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Women's NCAA basketball

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Women's NCAA basketball

With the transfer portal closed and so many players already decided on their next destinations, which teams emerged from the most chaotic part of the offseason in the best shape?

Some coaches completely remade their programs with transfers. Others supplemented and targeted needs. Both approaches found their way onto this list of the top 10 winners of the transfer portal.

The biggest names who entered the portal and have picked their next schools — Ta’Niya Latson, Olivia Miles, Cotie McMahon, MiLaysia Fulwiley — had considerable influence on the rankings and where those teams landed.

Winning the transfer portal doesn’t necessarily translate into winning championships, but more than half of this year’s Sweet 16 consisted of teams that relied heavily on the play of transfers.

Which teams might find that success in 2026?

Janiah Barker, UCLA, F
Nya Robertson, SMU, G
Jersey Wolfenbarger, LSU, F

The Lady Vols added three high-end rotational players to a roster that was already set to have most of its core back. The depth and versatility Kim Caldwell has at her disposal will be even greater in 2026. Barker began her career in the SEC with two years at Texas A&M before moving on to the Bruins this season. She brings an element of power to Tennessee’s frontcourt and can be part of Caldwell’s 3-point shooting barrage. Robertson is an all-court scorer who should fit right into the Tennessee pressing system, and Wolfenbarger adds more rim protection and rebounding in a 6-foot-5 player who can run the floor.

Denim DeShields, Mississippi State, G
Desrae Kyles, Central Michigan, C
Latasha Lattimore, Virginia, F
Cotie McMahon, Ohio State, F
Jayla Murray, Wichita State, F
Kaitlin Peterson, UCF, G
Debreasha Powe, Mississippi State, G
Tianna Thompson, Georgia Tech, G

Just one month after the Rebels’ season ended in the Sweet 16 and five key players used up their eligibility, Ole Miss has been remade. Yolett McPhee-McCuin added seven players from the portal, a diversified group that should give Ole Miss another chance at a competitive SEC season and a deep NCAA tournament run. McMahon is the headliner and could pair with rising sophomore Sira Thienou to form a duo that excels on both ends of the floor. Lattimore improved dramatically in her one year at Virginia and could provide some inside scoring, while Murray and Peterson give the Rebels some perimeter offense.

Ta’Niya Latson, Florida State, G
Madina Okot, Mississippi State, C

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As good as the Gamecocks were this season in winning the SEC and reaching the NCAA championship game, they lacked in two areas: a reliable go-to scorer and an intimidating rim protector. Both of those needs were addressed in the portal. Losing MiLaysia Fulwiley stings, but Latson is not just an offensive upgrade; she is the most productive guard Dawn Staley has ever had in Columbia and led the nation in scoring in 2024-25. The 6-6 Okot showed great growth in her one year at Mississippi State and could be the kind of defensive disruptor that all of Staley’s best teams have had.

MiLaysia Fulwiley, South Carolina, G
Amiya Joyner, East Carolina, F
Kate Koval, Notre Dame, C

This ranking would have been even higher had the Tigers not also lost six players to the portal. LSU still comes out ahead, though. Fulwiley (2023) and Koval (2024) were top-15 recruits in their respective classes. With post players Sa’Myah Smith, Jersey Wolfenbarger and Aalyah Del Rosario departing, Koval will have plenty of space and minutes to live up to the billing she wasn’t able to in one year with the Irish. Fulwiley’s arrival has two benefits: She gives coach Kim Mulkey more dynamic guard play, and her departure from South Carolina weakens the depth of LSU’s chief rival. Joyner will have to adjust to SEC play but has been a proven scorer for three years in the AAC.

Kennedy Basham, Arizona State, C
Olivia Miles, Notre Dame, G
Taliyah Parker, Texas A&M, G
Veronica Sheffey, San Diego State, G
Clara Silva, Kentucky, C
Marta Suarez, California, F

The formula worked for Mark Campbell this season and he’s going for it again with another transfer portal haul. Miles gives this group a chance to match the 34-win, Elite Eight season the Horned Frogs just had. Her ball handling, passing, excellence in transition and improved shooting make her an ideal fit for Campbell’s system. At 6-3, Suarez is a big wing who is a willing shooter, and Sheffey should benefit greatly from playing with Miles. How much the 6-7 Silva improves from her backup role in one year at Kentucky will be key to TCU’s short- and long-term success.

Yarden Garzon, Indiana, G
Gracie Merkle, Penn State, C
Oluchi Okananwa, Duke, G

Since the advent of the transfer portal, no coach has consistently used it to remake her teams as quickly as Brenda Frese. She loses program mainstay Shyanne Sellers to the draft and immediately gets Garzon. Merkle enters the program just as Allie Kubek elects to leave. Sarah Te-Biasu has one successful season with the Terps from VCU and then in comes Okananwa to fill that spot. Garzon’s size at 6-3, plus her point guard and shooting skills, will make her the centerpiece of a Maryland offense that might be even better than the one that was just the second-highest scoring team in the Big Ten.

Faith Acker, Tarleton State, C
Achol Akot, UCF, F
Tyla Heard, Oral Roberts, G
Haleigh Timmer, South Dakota State, G
Amari Whiting, BYU, G

The Cowgirls were one of the season’s surprise teams in 2024-25, but Jacie Hoyt was left with some holes to fill. She did just that in the portal. Whiting and Timmer should fit well with Micah Gray and Stailee Heard in what is now a deep and talented backcourt, and Heard now also gets to play with her younger sister Tyla. Akot provides some missing size as well as a familiarity with the Big 12. All but Timmer in this group have multiple years of eligibility remaining.

Ella Brow, SMU, G
Yuting Deng, Auburn, G
Kiersten Johnson, Oklahoma, F
Kiera Pemberton, North Dakota, F
Taliah Scott, Auburn, G

Scott made the jump from Auburn to Baylor early in the transfer portal window and the Bears will be her third team in three years. If healthy, Scott is the firepower that Baylor needs after four of the Bears’ top five scorers graduated. Nicki Collen added another Auburn guard in Deng who might be the wild card to Baylor’s entire offseason. Deng showed flashes of brilliance as the Tigers’ point guard, but she played only 12 games after joining the team at midseason. Pemberton, one of the Summit League’s best players as a sophomore, is an unheralded but important portal acquisition and rounds out a complete rebuild of Baylor’s backcourt.

Skylar Jones, Arizona, G
Reyna Scott, Oklahoma, G
Laura Ziegler, Saint Joseph’s, F

Landing Ziegler elevated the Cardinals into this top 10. She is the inside scorer that Jeff Walz hasn’t had the past few seasons. The ACC will provide new challenges, but her production should eventually get near the level that produced 20 double-doubles with the Hawks this season. Jones should help offset the loss of leading scorer Jayda Curry. Scott will get more opportunity than was likely to come at Oklahoma and adds backcourt depth behind Imari Berry at the point and Tajianna Roberts on the wing.

Anaya Brown, Tennessee-Martin, F
Grace Hall, Penn State, F
Jzaniya Harriel, Stanford, G
Elise Hill, Tulsa, G
Sahnya Jah, Arizona, G
Zahra King, California, G
Paulina Paris, Arizona, G
Mailien Rolf, Arizona, G
Tyi Skinner, Arizona State, G
Ayanna Thompson, Ole Miss, F

SMU decided it needed to make some changes to better compete in the ACC and brought in Adia Barnes from Arizona to take over the program. And then she made changes of her own. No program gained more (10 players) and lost more (nine players) in the portal than the Mustangs. The result is a completely new team. Barnes will have former Wildcats in Jah, Paris and Rolf to lean on early next season. Harriel and King have spent a year in the ACC and can help teammates such as Brown, who led UT Martin in scoring and rebounding, and Hill adjust to the new surroundings.

Honorable mention: Illinois Fighting Illini, Virginia Cavaliers, Miami Hurricanes

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How Kyle Whittingham has previously attacked the transfer portal

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Now that everyone has had some time to process the hiring of former Utah head coach Kyle Whittingham, it is time to turn our attention to business.

Whittingham agreed to a five-year contract on Friday and was put on a plane straight to Orlando to start building relationships with the players. He’s got to act fast, as the transfer portal opens on Jan. 2 and players will have some quick decisions to make.

What makes Whittingham a fascinating hire is his ability to do more with less. Coming into the 2025 season, Utah was expected to be working with an NIL operating budget of $8 million. For comparison, according to On3’s Pete Nakos, the Wolverines were expected to cross the $20 million threshold.

Obviously, a lot of that money is allocated to high school recruits, but with the wild west that is the transfer portal, Whittingham could be looking to fill his roster via the portal to compliment the young roster Michigan put on the field last season.

In 2025, Utah was ranked 37th in national transfer portal rankings, according to 247Sports, bringing in 22 new players. He also lost 31 players. For reference, Michigan was ranked 30th with 17 incoming transfers.

The highlights of the portal for the Utes’ was former New Mexico quarterback Devon Dampier and Washington State running back Wayshawn Parker, who both helped Utah’s offense drastically. Dampier followed offensive coordinator Jason Beck to Salt Lake City and was the Big 12 Newcomer of the Year after throwing for 2,768 yards and 12 touchdowns.

Meanwhile, Parker was ranked the No. 2 running back in the portal after a terrific 2024 season at Washington State where he rushed for 735 yards (5.4 yards per carry) and four touchdowns. With the Utes this year, Parker ran for 931 yards and six touchdowns.

On defense, Utah received solid play from UC Davis transfer cornerback Blake Cotton. In seven starts, he totaled 25 tackles (two for loss) and seven pass breakups.

However, outside of those three, there was not much other production. The year before showed a similar trend, as Whittingham brought in 12 transfers via the portal while losing 25. Utah was ranked 32nd in the country in transfer portal rankings, with the biggest get being wide receiver Dorian Singer. The former 1,000-yard receiver started all 12 games in 2024, leading Utah with 53 catches and 702 yards to go along with one touchdown.

Most interestingly, of the 22 commits in 2025, six were wide receivers, four were running backs and four were cornerbacks. Of the 12 2024 commits, three were wide receivers, three were edge rushers and three played in the secondary. With a majority of the transfers coming at the same few positions, it appears Whittingham uses the portal to fill holes and build depth more so than just getting the best guys available.

It will be interesting to see how Whittingham plans to utilize the portal in his first season at Michigan, especially with the expectation the Wolverines will lose some of their roster once the coaching staff appears to form. At the very minimum, he will need to replace some of Michigan’s receiving corps, tight end room and secondary with players leaving and those being weak spots on the team this past season.

But with a larger NIL budget and resources, the Michigan brand and the desire to make a splash right away, Whittingham could go away from his typical playbook and hit the portal hard.



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Bowl game star leaving team to enter college football transfer portal

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College football bowl season isn’t what it was a decade ago. In the modern age of the sport, most of the significance and attention sits on the 12-team College Football Playoff.

That hasn’t stopped the postseason from delivering plenty of exciting moments and some very competitive games. Look no further than Saturday’s slate. Five of the eight matchups came down to a single possession.

One of the comebacks of the year fell just short in the Isleta New Mexico Bowl. North Texas prevailed over San Diego State, 49-47, but not without plenty of drama. Trailing 49-20 entering the fourth quarter, the Aztecs went on a 27-7 run, including a punt return for a touchdown.

San Diego State’s final score came with just one second remaining, allowing North Texas to run out the clock on the ensuing onside kick. The result moved the Mean Green to 12-2, the best record in program history, and more wins than in their last two years combined.

Coming out of the game, North Texas is having a hard time celebrating after taking a few transfer portal hits. The school previously lost its head coach, Eric Morris, to Oklahoma State.

Breakout Running Back Moving On To Transfer Portal

On Saturday evening, redshirt freshman running back Ashton Gray announced his decision to transfer after two seasons at North Texas, per On3’s Hayes Fawcett.

Gray came out of nowhere to play a big role in the New Mexico Bowl. He saw increased playing time with Makenzie McGill and Kiefer Sibley unavailable. Gray finished the game with a career-high 16 carries for 152 yards and 2 touchdowns, while adding one reception for nine yards.

The Arkansas native scored twice in the first half, including a 51-yard scamper early in the second quarter that put North Texas up 28-13. His first touchdown gave the Mean Green a 14-7 advantage that they would never relinquish despite San Diego State’s late rally.

Gray entered the game with 42 carries for 225 yards and 3 touchdowns on the season. That just goes to show how impressive his final outing of the fall truly was.

Including the bowl game, Gray totaled 40 carries for 283 yards and 4 touchdowns in his last four appearances.

Gray signed with North Texas as a three-star prospect in the 2024 class. He redshirted during his first season with the program. Gray was recruited by former head coach Eric Morris and could potentially fit in at Oklahoma State.

The 6-foot-0, 208-pound running back will have three seasons of eligibility remaining.

Gray was the Little Rock Touchdown Club State Player of the Year and an all-state selection during his senior season at Marion High School in 2023.

North Texas has multiple starters expected to enter the portal, including quarterback Drew Mestemaker and running back Caleb Hawkins.

Read more on College Football HQ

• College Football Playoff team loses key starter to NCAA transfer portal

• College Football Playoff team loses former starter to transfer portal

• College Football Playoff team has taken 3 major hits in trenches via transfer portal

• College football team set to be without nearly 20 players for upcoming bowl game



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Major college football program surges as candidate for 4,000-yard QB

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Tennessee finished the 2025 season 8–4 (4–4 SEC) under fifth-year head coach Josh Heupel, a sharp drop-off from its 10–3 finish and College Football Playoff appearance in 2024.

Starting quarterback Joey Aguilar threw for 3,444 yards with 24 touchdowns and 10 interceptions, while backup Jake Merklinger has publicly indicated he plans to enter the transfer portal when it opens.

With Aguilar’s future at Tennessee up in the air, Merklinger’s departure would remove an experienced depth option and leave the Volunteers primed to add a quarterback from the transfer portal for 2026.

On3’s Pete Nakos reported Saturday that UNLV quarterback Anthony Colandrea is expected to enter the NCAA transfer portal, with Tennessee already emerging as one of the programs being linked to him.

UNLV Rebels quarterback Anthony Colandrea.

UNLV Rebels quarterback Anthony Colandrea (10) stands in the pocket as Ohio Bobcats linebacker Charlie Christopher (30) defends | Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images

Colandrea enjoyed a breakout 2025 at UNLV, being named the Mountain West Offensive Player of the Year after throwing for 3,459 yards with 23 passing TDs and nine interceptions, adding 649 rushing yards and 10 rushing TDs.

He started for UNLV during its run to the Mountain West title game and a postseason bowl appearance, finishing 19 of 30 for 184 yards and one interception with 28 rushing yards and a rushing touchdown in the Rebels’ 17–10 Scooter’s Coffee Frisco Bowl loss to Ohio.

A Lakewood (St. Petersburg, Fla.) product and consensus three-star recruit, Colandrea began his career at Virginia before transferring to UNLV ahead of the 2025 campaign.

Ranked as 247Sports’ No. 72 quarterback in the 2023 class, he drew nearly two dozen offers, including Kentucky, Florida Atlantic, Hawaii, South Florida, Troy, and Georgia State.

Throughout his collegiate career, Colandrea has amassed 7,542 passing yards and 1,151 rushing yards, totaling 61 touchdowns and a career completion rate of 63.8%.

As a dual-threat, experienced starter with a proven track record of high-volume production, he fits Tennessee’s pass-heavy offense and addresses a clear need for depth and competition at quarterback amid roster turnover.

Read More at College Football HQ

  • $2.4 million QB emerges as transfer portal candidate for SEC program

  • Major college football program ‘expected to hire’ 66-year-old head coach

  • College Football Playoff team loses player to transfer portal

  • College Football Playoff team loses starting QB to transfer portal



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Athletic Director Confident Wyoming is ‘Catching Up’ in NIL Game

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LARAMIE — When it comes to the controversial subject of Name, Image and Likeness in college sports, Tom Burman will be the first to tell you Wyoming has been playing catch up.

That doesn’t mean a solution isn’t on the horizon.

“We need to grow it quickly,” the school’s longtime athletics director admitted on Saturday night.

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A report by the Cowboy State Daily earlier in the day stated the department is only allocating $1.4 million annually in NIL funds, $800,000 less per year than regional programs Montana and Montana State, which compete in the FCS.

While the latter dollar amount could not be substantiated, Burman said the initial figure for UW is now at $1.5 million, adding that number only illustrates the revenue sharing monies between the school’s two largest income generating programs, football and men’s basketball. An additional $200,000 is being divvied up between women’s basketball, volleyball and wrestling, he added.

“This does not include any third-party NIL dollars or Learfield NIL partnerships, which are likely another $500,000 total,” he continued. “This also does not include Alston Scholarship dollars, which is $1.1 million, and are included as revenue sharing as part of the House Settlement analysis.”

There are other future plans in place to bring in additional revenue, Burman said. including jersey patches, field and court logos and venue naming opportunities.

UNLV, one of the Cowboys’ current Mountain West foes, recently announced a 5-year, $11 million deal to promote a local Las Vegas company on its uniforms in football, men’s and women’s basketball and baseball. That is expected to be approved in August.

Burman said this will happen at UW, but added, “We’re not going to give it away.”

The same can be said for a permanent field sponsor inside War Memorial Stadium.

Ramos Law, a firm based out of Colorado, purchased that space for the Cowboys’ home finale last month against Nevada — the “Josh Allen game” — for a reported $90,000-plus. The company logo was placed at both 25 yards lines.

 

MORE UW FOOTBALL NEWS VIA 7220SPORTS:

* Burman, UW Athletics Seeking Additional Revenue Streams

* Recruiting, Portal Misses Have Lasting Impact in Laramie

* Injured Wyoming Running Back Says He’s Entering Portal

* Wyoming Inks 20 Freshmen in 2026 Recruiting Class

* Wyoming in the Market for New Offensive Coordinator

* PODCAST: Offseason ‘Rework’ Underway in Laramie

* Running Back Terron Kellman Again Looking for New Home

* Wyoming’s Leading Receiver Entering NCAA Transfer Portal

 

There are other potential avenues that could help Wyoming gain ground on the competition.

“If we get support from the state — and not a budget cut, also — and continued investment from the private sector, coupled with support from campus, we will be in a good place in short order,” Burman said.

The department earlier this month asked the joint appropriations committee of the Wyoming Legislature for an additional $3 million on top of the annual $11.2 it receives annually through the school’s block grant. The state will also match up to $5 million a year in private donations.

The grand total is just over $19 million.

Though the $3 million, annually, wouldn’t go directly to NIL and revenue sharing, Burman said, it will help UW to handle other escalating costs that have occurred due to inflation and additional costs related to the NCAA House settlement and Mountain West membership changes.

The university is now on the hook for reimbursements to former student-athletes. That number totals $2.8 billion in damages. Over the next 10 years, Burman added, Wyoming will lose funding to the tune of $550,000, annually.

The current media rights deal with the conference, which currently brings in $3.7 million a year, is also likely to take a hit.

San Diego State, Fresno State, Utah State, Boise State and the Cowboys’ Border War rival, Colorado State, are departing in July for the new-look Pac-12. The league is adding UTEP and Northern Illinois, the latter in football only. UC Davis and Grand Canyon have joined on the basketball side. Hawaii is also now a full member.

The department, though, could soon see an influx of cash once the legal battle between the Mountain West and Pac-12 is finalized. Poaching fees and exit fees are at the heart of the litigation. The next hearing in that case is set for Sept. 9.

Donations to the Cowboy Joe Club, the department’s lead fundraising arm, will also open up additional opportunities to retain and lure future student-athletes, Burman added.

“We are starting to see people donate,” he said. “That frees up money for revenue sharing through ticket sales, media rights, corporate dollars, television, etc.

“We are just getting started.”

University of Wyoming’s Top 50 Football Players

The rules are simple: What was the player’s impact while in Laramie? That means NFL stats, draft status or any other accolade earned outside of UW is irrelevant when it comes to this list.

This isn’t a one-man job. This task called for a panel of experts. Joining 7220’s Cody Tucker are Robert GagliardiJared NewlandRyan Thorburn, and Kevin McKinney.

We all compiled our own list of 50 and let computer averages do the work. Think BCS — only we hope this catalog is fairer.

Don’t agree with a selection? Feel free to sound off on our Twitter: @7220sports – #Top50UWFB

Gallery Credit: 7220Sports.com

– University of Wyoming’s Top 50 Football Players





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Clemson Fans Want Dabo Swinney Fired Immediately After Bowl Game

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It’s getting hard for Clemson to ignore the downfall of Dabo Swinney.

Prior to the start of the 2025 season, Clemson was a trendy pick to make the national championship game. The program’s hopes of making a run in the College Football Playoff were destroyed once Swinney’s squad fell to 1-3 on Sept. 20. Although the Tigers finished the regular season with a 7-5 record, the reality is they underachieved this year.

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As if this season wasn’t brutal enough for Clemson fans, they had to watch their team get dismantled by Penn State in the Bad Boy Mowers Pinstripe Bowl.

Clemson’s offense was neutralized by Penn State’s defense. On the flip side, the Nittany Lions received a sharp performance from quarterback Ethan Grunkemeyer.

Before Penn State even put the finishing touches on its bowl victory over Clemson, people voiced their complaints about Swinney online. Most of them believe he should be fired this offseason.

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Nov 14, 2025; Louisville, Kentucky, USA; Clemson Tigers head coach Dabo Swinney talks with the officials during the first half against the Louisville Cardinals at L&N Federal Credit Union Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Rhodes-Imagn Images

Nov 14, 2025; Louisville, Kentucky, USA; Clemson Tigers head coach Dabo Swinney talks with the officials during the first half against the Louisville Cardinals at L&N Federal Credit Union Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Rhodes-Imagn Images

Dabo on the hot seat.

“Fire Dabo, fire the whole staff, cut the entire team. Losing to a piss poor Penn State team is unacceptable,” one fan said.

“Please fire Dabo..it’s time,” a second fan wrote. “I’m sorry but it’s time.”

“Fire Dabo NOW,” a third fan commented.

“Dabo Swinney has stated numerous times that he’s against NIL If he can’t adapt then Clemson needs to fire him,” another fan argued. “I think he’s a great football coach and would have success in the NFL, but the college game is a lot different now.”

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Swinney, a two-time national champion, has accomplished remarkable things at Clemson since taking over the program in 2009.

At the end of the day though, Swinney has struggled to adapt in the NIL era of college football.

Should Clemson fire Swinney this offseason?

This story was originally published by The Spun on Dec 27, 2025, where it first appeared in the College Football section. Add The Spun as a Preferred Source by clicking here.



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Oregon QB Austin Novosad plans to enter NCAA Transfer Portal

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Oregon redshirt sophomore quarterback Austin Novosad plans to enter the NCAA transfer portal, according to a report from ESPN’s Pete Thamel on Saturday afternoon.

Novosad, a native of Dripping Springs, Texas, spent three seasons at Oregon and appeared in seven games. During that span, he completed 12 of 15 passes for 99 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions.

Novosad waited his turn in Eugene throughout that time. He learned behind Bo Nix during his true freshman season in 2023 and Dillon Gabriel in 2024. Novosad remained with the program losing the spring quarterback competition to Dante Moore, and played very little during his third season with the program.

A member of the 2023 recruiting class, he was the No. 113 overall prospect and the No. 10 quarterback in the cycle, per the Rivals Industry Ranking, a proprietary algorithm that compiles ratings and rankings from all of the primary recruiting media services. He was the No. 21 player from the state of Texas that year.

Novosad is set to have have two years of eligibility at the next school he attends. He used a redshirt during his true freshman season.

As a high schooler, he completed 563-of-873 passes (64.5%) for 8,983 yards and 114 touchdowns compared to 18 interceptions during a three-year career at the varsity level. He had three games where he finished with seven touchdowns, as well as one six-touchdown game, and six separate games where he threw five touchdowns. Novosad was recruited by the likes of Ohio State, Texas A&M and Baylor, among others. A one-time Baylor commit, he flipped late to the Ducks before National Signing Day.

More on the NCAA Transfer Portal

Once the NCAA transfer portal opens on Jan. 2, players can officially enter their names in the NCAA transfer portal and go on to initiate contact with their preferred schools. The portal will be open for 15 days and close on Jan. 16.

Notably, players who are on teams competing in the national championship game are allowed five extra days to make their portal decision. The College Football Playoff championship game will be played on Jan. 19, so the players on those teams will be allowed until Jan. 24 to enter the portal and choose their next school.

To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire. The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.





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