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“You can’t have a player looking at stands and wave to his wife and two kids, knowing that NIL is paying alimony for the first wife – Calipari on the biggest problem in college basketball

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“You can’t have a player looking at stands and wave to his wife and two kids, knowing that NIL is paying alimony for the first wife – Calipari on the biggest problem in college basketball originally appeared on Basketball Network.

In the evolving world of college sports, the rise of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals and the reduced transfer portal rules have reshaped the game — especially in college basketball. Even though most top players are profiting from boosted financial opportunities and career flexibility, some coaches are expressing concern over how these changes are changing the game’s identity.

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One of the most outspoken critics of the NIL culture is Naismith Hall of Fame member John Calipari, currently the head coach at the University of Arkansas. Coach Cal has always been the voice for player empowerment. With leading the way with one-and-done players, he sees a growing issue with the direction the NIL is taking college basketball.

“You can’t have a player looking at the stands and waving to his wife and two kids, knowing that NIL is paying alimony for the first wife,” Calipari said in a recent interview on “The Jim Rome Show” on YouTube.

Although the remark was quite frankly funny, Calipari wasn’t being sarcastic. He was addressing the real issue with the growing age gap and the life experience between athletes on rosters nowadays.

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A new age of college athletes

Due to COVID eligibility extensions, relaxed transfer rules, and the appeal of NIL deals, it’s normal to see college basketball players who are 24, 25, or even 26 years old playing up alongside 18-year-old freshmen. These super seniors bring experience and life circumstances that vary drastically from the standard college student experience.

For example, 26-year-old BYU player Trevin Knell was the oldest college basketball player this year. His story is a bit different from others. Knell was on a Mormon mission that made him miss two seasons, followed by a medical redshirt, which took him to seven years in college.

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While older players can offer leadership and stability, the result is a college basketball culture that mirrors the pros, although without the same structure or future goals.

“They’ve got to do something with the transfer portal, you can’t transfer to four different schools, you can’t let kids play at 26,27 and 28 against 18-year-olds,” Cal emphasized.

The gap between a 26-year-old player and a 17-year-old freshman isn’t just physical — there’s also the lack of experience for first-year prospects, one of the most important aspects of a player’s development.

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Related: “Robertson asked team officials for part ownership of the team, a private plane…” – Kawhi Leonard’s uncle demanded “illegal” benefits from the Lakers in 2019

From development to transactional

Calipari’s concern isn’t with athletes getting paid — he has long supported that. Instead, John’s issue lies in what he sees as a move away from development-focused coaching toward a more transactional, free-agent model. With players transferring multiple times and chasing better NIL offers, loyalty and continuity are becoming rare commodities.

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“I’m trying to think ahead, can I get four to five guys to return and bring in four to five freshman and do it the way I used to do it, which is freshman and returning players, that’s what I’d like to get. So everybody’s like, ‘Why do you add more guys?’ I added a couple of big guys just to say, you know what, how do we make sure next year we’ve got enough guys?” Coach Cal explained his plans for the upcoming season.

Cal is standing firm on his views and beliefs on what college basketball rosters should look like. He believes freshmen should have the most important roles to prepare them for the NBA while having a couple of experienced transfers on hand in case of injuries.

As college basketball transitions into a new era, the voices of veteran coaches like Calipari offer a clear-headed, old-school perspective. The NIL era has unlocked opportunities and enriched athletes, but has also blurred the line between college and professional sports.

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Calipari’s message is clear — protecting the soul of college basketball is a must, because if not, it will turn into a transactional league, in which 30-year-olds with families will soon enough be the stars of the college scene. Fewer and fewer incoming freshmen will make an impact, which will, in turn, lose the real meaning of “college basketball”.

Related: John Calipari details what makes Adou Thiero NBA-ready: “If you’re not physically able to go to hand-to-hand combat, you can’t play in these games”

This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jul 31, 2025, where it first appeared.



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ESPN analyst mocks SEC for rev-share failures, spares UGA, A&M, LSU, Ole Miss, Bama

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Most of the SEC didn’t get their return on rev-share investments over the past two seasons. “Pay-to-play” has been a boon for the Big Ten, which has won the last two College Football Playoff titles and has two teams remaining in this year’s field.

For the “It Just Means More” conference, though, it has evened the playing field in a way the SEC’s elite isn’t keeping up with.

ESPN LA’s Su’a Cravens, who played for the USC Trojans, owners of the No. 1 recruiting class in 2026, celebrated the sport’s massive changes and rubbed it in the SEC’s faces. Cravens did claim that five SEC schools would be able to compete “year in and year out,” though:

The Georgia Bulldogs, Texas A&M Aggies, LSU Tigers, Ole Miss Rebels, and Alabama Crimson Tide.

Cravens blamed it on NIL payments, which are a component of roster-building, but are not direct payments from schools; instead, they come from a third party.

“I absolutely love the correlation between NIL and the immediate parity in CFB! It’s hilarious to see the very theory we all knew was true come to fruition. The moment everybody could pay to play, the SEC’s dominance evaporated. And that doesn’t mean the SEC won’t have good teams, I never said that. I expect UGA, A&M, LSU, Ole Miss, and Bama to be able to compete year in and year out. But being able to compete vs juggernaut dynasties are a VAST DIFFERENCE to what the SEC is accustomed too… It’s almost like once the monopoly vanished, so did the chokehold on college football! I LOVE IT!! Justice has been served,” Cravens said.

Ole Miss, Alabama not guaranteed to be relevant in rev-share/NIL era

Truth be told, Ole Miss and Alabama’s inclusion here may be faulty. Those two programs are not flush with the kind of super-donor alums that the B1G has, and lacks the oil money that Texas A&M and the Texas Longhorns have.

Speaking of which, where is Texas on Cravens’ radar? If there’ a school that could compete when big money is being thrown around, it’s the Longhorns.

In the ever-competitive SEC, teams will shuffle in and out of relevance. Kirby Smart is likely to keep the Dawgs in the hunt, while Lane Kiffin will surely keep program-building his way deep into the CFP.

Other than those two, there are no guarantees for teams in that conference to be competitive year in and year out.

Which may have been the point of rev-share and NIL all along.



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Carius Curne accuses LSU of holding his paperwork, preventing transfer portal entry

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Back in December, LSU offensive lineman Carius Curne revealed his intentions to enter the NCAA Transfer Portal when it opened. However, he hasn’t been able to yet, and he’s blaming the Tigers for that.

In a social media post on X (formerly Twitter), Curne accused LSU of holding his paperwork, preventing his entry into the portal: “Holding my paper work trying to prevent me from opportunity is crazy work (two lagging face emojis),” Curne posted on X. ” I just want to ball out (two laughing face emojis).”

It’s certainly a large accusation from Curne. This past season the offensive lineman played in seven games as a true freshman for the Tigers. He started in five of them, earning starts at both right and left tackle.

Despite the fact that he was one of the more productive players for the Tigers in the trenches, Curne was limited to seven games in part due to injury. He made only one appearance during the month of October.

The lineman was hurt during LSU’s loss to Texas A&M on Oct. 25, suffering a leg injury during the fourth quarter. That came after he went a month without appearing in a game. He was later able to return against Alabama on Nov. 8.

What is clear, though, is that Carius Curne will be a highly sought-after player in the transfer portal, when he’s officially entered into college football’s version of free agency. SEC experience at offensive tackle does not come cheaply.

Prior to enrolling at LSU, Carius Curne was rated as a four-star prospect and the No. 49 overall player in the nation in the 2025 class. He checked in as the No. 2 interior offensive lineman and the top overall player from the state of Arkansas, hailing from Marion (AR) Marion.

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.

The 2025-26 college football transfer portal will last 15 days, spanning from Jan. 2 to Jan. 16, the NCAA decided. While players have just over two weeks  to enter the portal, they’re not under a deadline to commit when they enter. Traditionally, the cut-off for committing has been how late a school can enroll a player through admissions, so it varies throughout the sport.

On3’s Thomas Goldkamp contributed to this article..





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Gophers can’t spin Koi Perich’s decision to enter portal – Twin Cities

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Koi Perich has thrown his hat into the NCAA transfer portal and there’s no way to spin this as a positive for the University of Minnesota’s football program.

Or college football.

John ShipleyEven if he wasn’t the Gophers’ best safety this season — that was Kerry Brown — and coach P.J. Fleck can use the money the U was paying Perich on more than one transfer who can help next season, the fact is, the best in-state prospect to buy into P.J. Fleck’s row-the-boat paradigm has taken a long look and decided he’s more interested in the big-time NIL paradigm.

Whether it’s more money, more national exposure or a more likely path to the NFL — debatable — Perich has decided it won’t happen at Minnesota.

As a college football fan, one has to wonder if watching most of your school’s best players go look for the bigger, better thing after every season is palatable. And as a Gophers’ fan, one has to accept that this just doesn’t bode well for the program’s viability as, for all intents and purposes, a small-market professional football franchise.

One could look at what Indiana has done the past two seasons and see a crack under the fence just big enough for those without a ticket to crawl through. We know that, for now, it’s possible for an also-ran Power Four program to genuinely contend for a national championship. But Minnesota appears to be moving the other way at an inopportune time.

The Gophers went 8-5 after beating New Mexico in the Rate Bowl in Phoenix. The Lobos were one of two bowl teams they beat this season, and Minnesota was 0-3 against the best Big Ten teams they played — Ohio State, Iowa and Oregon — and was outscored 123-19.

With talented young quarterback Drake Lindsey under center and what they believed would be a prolific running game — it wasn’t — the Gophers had their eyes on another move up the conference ladder. Instead, it was a typically OK season.

P.J. Fleck and his team run onto the field.
Minnesota Gophers head coach P.J. Fleck leads his team onto the field at the start of an NCAA football game against the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Huntington Bank Stadium in Minneapolis on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

It’s probably not lost on longtime Gophers fans that Indiana started the season as the only other OG Big Ten school with a Rose Bowl drought (1968) nearly as long as Minnesota’s (1962). And the Hoosiers just humiliated Alabama in Pasadena on New Year’s Day to advance to the College Football Playoff semifinals.

This space has been used, fairly recently, to praise the job that Fleck has done in his nine seasons in Dinkytown. A large reason for that is the way he cleaned up an ugly culture fomented by former coach Jerry Kill that later exploded into ugly, and very public, behavior under replacement Tracy Claeys.

What was once a national embarrassment for the Gophers has changed for the better under Fleck. Against most odds, his dedication to teaching his players how to meditate and where to place the salad fork has, in fact, resulted in a program that Minnesota can be proud of off and, largely, on the field.

When, for instance, they were short of the six wins required to earn a berth in one of 41 bowl games in 2023, they became eligible because they had the best graduation rate of available teams. That matters, or used to, anyway.

Further, Fleck’s teams are 7-0 in bowl games, including a victory over a then-Top 10 Auburn team in the 2019 Outback Bowl that pushed them to a program-record 11 wins and No. 10 in the final Associated Press poll. The Gophers also have been sending more players to the NFL, a recruiting point that could help build the talent coffers.

Landing Perich, a four-star recruit from Esko who turned down 2025 national champion Ohio State to stay home, was another positive step. Losing him, as seems inevitable, is two steps back, because whatever the safety and kick returner’s goals are, he’s convinced they will be easier to meet elsewhere.

Even Darius Taylor, a talented but oft-injured tailback, who will no doubt be the Gophers’ starter next season, waited until the last moment — at least publicly — to renew his vows with Minnesota.

Fleck did something smart when this season ended, when he publicly revealed that he was allowing Lindsey to help him target receivers in the next recruiting class. In the absence of the big, big money, giving a promising QB like Lindsey that kind of ownership is the next best thing to the bigger, better thing.

But isn’t it exhausting? Not just for Fleck, or athletics director Mark Coyle, but everyone with an emotional stake in the Gophers’ success.

Fleck has been conspicuously tied to just about every coaching opening that appears to be a step up from Minnesota. If any of that was real, and those offers come again, he might want to finally take one with more money in the slush fund.



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North Texas QB Drew Mestemaker transfers to Oklahoma State in big portal splash

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Oklahoma State just got itself a boost at the quarterback position.

Drew Mestemaker, who led all of FBS college football in passing yards with North Texas this season, will be transferring to Oklahoma State next season, according to multiple reports.

According to On3, Mestemaker also has a “two-year deal” worth $7 million attached to his commitment to Oklahoma State, which is seemingly connected to an NIL contract.


North Texas quarterback Drew Mestemaker (17) looks to throw during the American Conference championship.
North Texas quarterback Drew Mestemaker (17) looks to throw against Tulane during the first half of the American Conference championship NCAA college football game in New Orleans, Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. AP

Mestemaker, who just completed his freshman season with the Mean Green, will be joining former North Texas coach Eric Morris, who signed a five-year deal with Oklahoma State to replace Mike Gundy in December.

“I think just the relationships that I’ve built there with Coach Morris, Coach [Sean] Brophy and that whole staff, offense and defense,” Mestemaker said to ESPN. “I think Coach Morris is the best play-caller in the nation. The insight he has, and the way he sees offense, and the way he makes me at quarterback comfortable in everything we are running.

“I feel like sets me up for success in everything that he calls.”

Mestemaker led the FBS by throwing for 4,379 yards and 34 touchdowns while completing 68.9 percent of his passes, helping lead North Texas to a 12-2 record and a bowl win over San Diego State.


North Texas Mean Green head coach Eric Morris talks to an official during the 2025 American Conference Football Championship against the Tulane Green Wave.
Head coach Eric Morris of the North Texas Mean Green talks to an official during the 2025 American Conference Football Championship against the Tulane Green Wave at Yulman Stadium on December 5, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. Getty Images

The 20-year-old chose to remain loyal to Morris, saying that he is excited to continue playing under him in Stillwater.

“To be the starting point of it all, and the one that’s locked in first, I hope getting that out there will help more name [players] realize how special this staff really is,” Mestemaker added. “If I didn’t 100 percent trust these guys with my career, I’d take longer to see what’s out there and test out the waters.”

The move comes following another underwhelming season for the Cowboys, who finished with a 1-11 record, failing to land a win in the Big 12.

Mestemaker acknowledged that there is a lot of work to do in Stillwater for a potential turnaround.

“I know Coach Morris knows there’s work to do,” he said. “But he’s never shied from that. We knew last year, there was work to do. People thought we’d be struggling to make a bowl game again.

“I know this staff on offense and defense never shied away from a challenge.”



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Bruce Pearl calls for collective bargaining, multi-year contracts in college sports

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With collective bargaining at the forefront of the college sports conversation, former Auburn coach Bruce Pearl voiced his support. He discussed his plan to help try and settle the landscape.

Pearl, now an analyst for TNT Sports, broke down four things he would do differently. One would be to pave the way for collective bargaining, allowing for the players to be involved in talks about the rules. That, he argued, would take the courts out of the equation.

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Pearl then argued for multi-year contracts and a new approach to revenue-sharing with different funds for football and basketball. Finally, he said players should get five years of eligibility without the ability to appeal.

“No. 1, we’ve got to get Congress to help us establish some collective bargaining,” Pearl said Saturday. “What that would do is, that would have the players and both parties be able to agree. That’s where the courts would have no say. We’d have to adjust the transfer portal. My idea is to let the kids sign two- or three-year contracts. If you want out of a two-year contract, both have to agree.

“I think we’ve got to decide what the rev-share is going to be. … The last thing is, five years of eligibility, no appeals. That takes a lot of the legislation out of it.”

Bruce Pearl: Collective bargaining is ‘where we need to go’

While there’s still a debate around whether college athletes could be considered employees, collective bargaining continues to be floated as a potential answer. Tennessee athletics director Danny White most recently spoke in support of the idea, and ESPN analyst Jay Bilas – a practicing attorney – has done so, as well.

In August, On3’s Pete Nakos reported 23 Power Four football general managers also backed collective bargaining in a closed-door meeting. Bruce Pearl is also among those in favor of the move, calling the current off-court situation “out of control.”

“Guys, collective bargaining, for me, is where we need to go,” Pearl said. “I just don’t see Congress fixing it. In other words, somebody representing college basketball, college football. Somebody representing the players. Have them get together, decide what the rules are going to be. Agree to it, then the courts are out of it.

:Right now, the game is terrific on the court. But it’s completely out of control off the court.”



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College football’s top 5 transfer portal commitments so far

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Less than 48 hours into the transfer portal window, there’s already been a handful of top talents who have found landing spots. While many of the nation’s top players are just starting to figure out visits, others have the portal decision completely wrapped up.

According to On3’s rankings, here are the top five transfer portal commitments who made near-instant decisions on their portal destination.

Drew Mestemaker, North Texas QB to Oklahoma State

A nearly out-of-nowhere star at North Texas, Mestemaker passed for 4,379 yards and 34 touchdowns for the Mean Green and coach Chad Morris. So when Morris hit the road for a new job following Oklahoma State legend Mike Gundy, Mestemaker didn’t need much time to make his decision. He’s got three seasons to play and is now the presumptive starter at an Oklahoma State team that will need plenty of help to rebuild off a 1-11 season in 2025.

Benjamin Brahmer, Iowa State TE to Penn State

Brahmer

Iowa State tight end Benjamin Brahmer is one of the best early commitments of the early days of the transfer portal window. | Reese Strickland-Imagn Images

A 6’6″ middle of the field target, Brahmer had a quick jaunt in the portal. Last year, he snagged 37 passes for 446 yards and six touchdowns. He also had a big 2023 season with an injury-plagued 2024 in between. Brahmer’s coach, Matt Campbell took the Penn State job following the departure of James Franklin. Brahmer followed him to State College and should help Penn State’s passing game in 2026, which will be his final year of eligibility.

Abu Sama, Iowa State RB to Wisconsin

A 5’11” back, Sama has been a steady contributor through three seasons of college football. He ran for 732 yards and five scores in 2025 at Iowa State, which brought his career numbers to 1,933 yards and 13 touchdowns. Like Brahmer above, Sama had played for Matt Campbell. But he didn’t follow his prior coach, instead moving on to Wisconsin, where Luke Fickell needs to juice up a ground game that had no back running for more than 363 yards in 2025.

Noah McKinney, Oklahoma State OL to TCU

McKinney started his career at UNLV and saw extensive action there in 2023 before missing most of the season in 2024. He came to Oklahoma State and was part of the disastrous 1-11 season in 2025. McKinney has now left OSU to finish up his college career with a season at TCU. The Horned Frogs averaged 30.7 points per game in a nine-win season in 2025 and McKinney should see early time there.

Houston Thomas, Texas-San Antonio TE to Texas A&M

Thomas posted back-to-back seasons with 34 receptions for UTSA in 2024 and 2025. For his career, he has 78 catches for 918 yards and five touchdowns. The 6’4″, 245 pound target is moving on from UTSA for his final college season at Texas A&M. Two of A&M’s top three pass-catching tight ends in 2025 were seniors, so Thomas should get a shot.



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