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Court ruling leaves Wisconsin CB Nyzier Fourqurean ineligible and in limbo

Court ruling leaves Wisconsin CB Nyzier Fourqurean ineligible and in limbo

Nyzier Fourqurean faces renewed concern around his eligibility to play for Wisconsin this season after an appeals court overturned the lower-court ruling to grant him a fifth season of eligibility in 2025.

The cornerback and returning starter for the Badgers played his first two seasons at Division II Grand Valley State, and argued successfully to follow the precedent set when Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia was permitted to strike his one season at the junior college level.

The majority opinion in the 2-1 appellate court decision said Fourqurean did not adequately show the NCAA's denial of his December 2024 waiver request "failed to show some likelihood that the (NCAA's) Five-Year Rule constitutes an unreasonable restraint of trade."

"We do not exclude the possibility that on a fuller record, Fourqurean will succeed in establishing his claim. We also recognize that the 2025-26 college football season begins soon. In this context, we encourage the parties and the district court to expediate the coming litigation."

Fourqurean started every game for Wisconsin last season, recording 51 tackles and one interception.

A two-year UW starter who was projected to enter the 2025 campaign as one of Wisconsin's starters in the secondary, Fourqurean, who played 25 games in two seasons at GVSU, passed on the chance to enter the 2025 NFL Draft and a district judge granted his injunction in February to play a third season for the Badgers this fall.

Billy Napier: Gators ready for gauntlet schedule, can 'compete with any team'

Billy Napier: Gators ready for gauntlet schedule, can 'compete with any team'

Watching his basketball counterpart cut down the nets at the Alamodome was a moment of euphoria Billy Napier wouldn't mind experiencing himself in January.

"There's a little something different in the air right now in Gainesville," Napier said, referring to his team as a "special group."

"This group believes in what we do. I think that's where we really took a big step in the right direction last year is we found a level of confidence that we could go toe to toe with any team in the country any place, anytime."

Napier said there's in-house evidence the developmental process is working in overdrive. The Gators will be asked to present evidence he's right with a gauntlet of a schedule that includes this six-game stretch: Sept. 13, at LSU, Sept. 20 at Miami, Oct. 4 vs. Texas, Oct. 11 at Texas A&M, Oct. 18 vs. Mississippi State and Nov. 1 vs. Georgia.

The Gators are counting on quarterback DJ Lagway to lift the offense after a breakout 2024 season.

"Just the competitor on game day is really unique. I think his ability to block out all the external factors and really get consumed with leading the team, playing winning football, executing," Napier said of what makes Lagway a winner. "And we've built around the guy. There's no question. Players want to play with DJ. We've built his class around that and certainly some of these guys that are in the rookie group were a part of that as well."

Outside expectations are higher for Florida, but not many are starting their SEC Championship winner projections with Napier's crew given the proven contender status of some of teams standing in the way. Napier's coaching life cycle in Gainesville has advanced rapidly, even if not always in the direction he would like.

As Todd Golden and the Gators' basketball team were starting the 2024-25 regular season in November as fringe contenders, Napier was being spared his job by athletic director Scott Stricklin.

At the time, Gator Nation was champing at the bit to have Stricklin swing the other way and take the reported offer from boosters to buy out Napier's contract. Florida was 4-4 and still had Texas, LSU, Ole Miss and the Florida State rivalry game to get through.

Napier had reason to celebrate when the Gators finished 8-5 and 4-4 in the SEC, defying expectations for a nosedive or worse. He has a 19-19 record in three seasons in Gainesville.

In the process, Napier has a bit more support and a lot bigger expectations.

"I think the important part is what we expect from each other. I think we've learned that, right? I think it's not only -- not only do you need to block out noise, but it's absolutely necessary that you do it," Napier said. "So I think we've got to have high expectations for each other. We see each other every day. I think this is player to player; it's coach to player, coach to coach, all parts of our organization."

Reports: Donald Trump to sign executive order for NIL standards

Reports: Donald Trump to sign executive order for NIL standards

President Donald Trump is set to sign an executive order setting national standards to better control the name, image and likeness landscape in college sports, according to multiple reports Wednesday.

Since 2021, and under pressure from states and the courts, the NCAA has allowed student-athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness (NIL). Student-athletes can now be compensated for merely showing up to play and can earn a profit for spokesperson gigs, clothing and autograph sales and more.

Additionally, a legal ruling on June 6 allowed colleges to directly pay players via revenue sharing for the first time. The settlement of House v. NCAA marked the end of the NCAA's previous model of amateurism, in which athletes were not allowed to earn money while in school. Schools can now share up to $20.5 million of their revenues with their athletes.

The reports of an upcoming executive order come one day after a House subcommittee advanced a bill along party lines that would establish national standards for student-athlete sponsorships. Called the SCORE Act, the proposed legislation would supersede current state laws regulating NIL.

The White House has not commented on the latest report of an NIL-related executive order, but President Trump has a long history of expressing interest in sports. He has attended many major sporting events, including several prominent college football games like the Army-Navy football game last December.

SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey said Wednesday on "SEC This Morning" that he had no details or further information about an executive order but that he believes the President is generally supportive of college sports.

"It's not a secret, I had a chance to visit with the President ... his interest is real. My takeaway, he wants to be supportive of college athletics, make sure that it's sustainable, the Olympic program and the Olympic development," Sankey said.

"The President clearly has an interest in sports, big picture, has an interest in college sports, has been at our games. The notion of an executive order has been mentioned before. There were some reports of a commission or an executive order back to like, April, I think, is when that started to bubble. So we'll wait and see."

Reports surfaced in May that Trump had asked his aides to begin researching the idea of an executive order related to NIL after a meeting with former Alabama football coach Nick Saban in Tuscaloosa, Ala., where Trump was the school's commencement speaker.

Saban has been critical of the NIL funding in the past, largely because he was concerned about the effect on college football. The NIL era also has brought a rise to the transfer portal era, with thousands of students across all sports seeking to move schools -- some of them for bigger paydays.

"Each year, it's gotten a little worse," Saban said last December on "The Pat McAfee Show" on ESPN. "The first year we had name, image and likeness four, five years ago, we had a $3 million (roster), and everybody was happy. Then the next year it was $7 million, then the next year it's $10 million. Then this year it's $13 million. Now they're looking at $20 million. I mean, where does it end?"

Saban has previously said the current model is unsustainable for college sports, and Trump apparently agreed.

Kalen DeBoer, Crimson Tide count on continuity in 2025

Kalen DeBoer, Crimson Tide count on continuity in 2025

Kalen DeBoer begins his second season at Alabama with a tone-setting theme common from the end of the 2024 season until the Crimson Tide kick off fall camp in two weeks: Let's get physical.

"When it comes to just overall as a program, physicality is the name of the game when it comes to playing football. You wear pads for a reason, right? Physicality comes through the work to build your body, but that also comes through toughness mentally as well," DeBoer said Wednesday morning in Atlanta, the site of SEC Media Days.

"I love, again, the work that we're focused on right now is the main thing, keeping it that. I love the mindset. Doesn't guarantee anything but gives you a great chance."

Talent gives the Crimson Tide a great chance, too.

And while Alabama subtracted three prominent underclassmen to the draft -- quarterback Jalen Milroe (Seattle Seahawks), guard Tyler Booker (Dallas Cowboys) and linebacker Jihaad Campbell (Philadelphia Eagles) -- and several seniors from DeBoer's first season on the job in Tuscaloosa, he has a few players ready to pick up the hammer as tone-setters this season.

"The offensive line is where it really starts," DeBoer said. "Really six guys that are strongly in the rotation with a lot of others that are up-and-coming, developing quickly, that I can see competing for spots as the season goes along as well."

The featured talent on the line is Kadyn Proctor, an offensive tackle who can block out the sun, who is also on pace to earn his degree in December. NFL draft experts view Proctor as a likely first-round talent in the 2026 draft if he opts to leave. DeBoer said he loves everything about the 6-foot-7, 360-pounder.

"You look at the guy and he's massive. Man, just does everything on a high level when it comes to his training," said DeBoer.

Replacing Milroe is a clear focus in fall camp. DeBoer said Ty Simpson "would be the guy that would take the first snaps and be our starter" if Alabama was lining up to play a game right now.

But he kept the door open for Austin Mack, a 6-6, 235-pound redshirt freshman who followed DeBoer from Washington, and true freshman Keelon Russell to shift the depth chart in the next six weeks before Alabama begins the season at Florida State. DeBoer -- who also brought in his former offensive coordinator with the Huskies, Ryan Grubb -- said Mack and Russell are capable of "big jumps" in fall camp because of the high repetition count.

"But they have the tools. Ty throws a catchable ball. He's smart. He's been in college football now going into year four," DeBoer said. "He's seen the ups and downs. He's got great relationships with the team. He's a leader that way. He's really owned things on another level."

There might be even more talent and tenacity on DeBoer's defense in 2025.

Two fifth-year starters, linebacker Deontae Lawson and defensive tackle Tim Keenan, are geared up to boost the targeting takeaway total from 2024 when Alabama ranked fifth in the nation with 2.1 takeaways per game.

DeBoer expects to take the field with a total of 17 seniors on the roster -- up from eight last season -- but underscored their importance in maintaining continuity after a year of mass introductions in 2024.

He presented Lawson, returning from a season-ending knee injury in November, as the case in point.

"Probably thought a year ago at this time he'd be wearing an NFL jersey. Circumstances as they may be, just coming back from an injury, seeing him attack it, seeing him and his mindset ... understanding the circumstances he can't control and what he can," DeBoer said. "Man, it's just amazing seeing him take over not just the defense but be a leader on our football team.

"I walked into a meeting looking for a coach actually. I walked in. It was (Lawson) holding a meeting with the linebackers. Listened for about 30 seconds. I knew that meeting was in a good position. Coaching it like a coach. When you have guys on the field that are like him -- understand the depth, the details -- you know you're headed in the right direction and have a chance."

4-star DL James Johnson flips to Texas from Georgia

4-star DL James Johnson flips to Texas from Georgia

Four-star defensive lineman James Johnson changed his mind and said he will play at Texas instead of Georgia.

The previous commitment of Johnson, from Northwestern High School in Miami, was short-lived. He made his pledge to Georgia on June 28 and decommitted Tuesday.

He took official visits to both schools, as well as to Miami, Florida State and Florida over the past six weeks.

The 247Sports composite lists the 6-foot-2, 285-pound prospect as the No. 8 defensive lineman in the Class of 2026.

Johnson's commitment added to an already stellar week for Texas coach Steve Sarkisian.

On Tuesday, Tyler Atkinson, the No. 1 linebacker in the 2026 recruiting class, committed to Texas.

Atkinson, who plays at Grayson High School in Loganville, Ga., is ranked No. 9 overall, No. 1 at his position and No. 1 in the Peach State by the 247Sports composite.

With the commitments of Johnson and Atkinson, the Longhorns' 2026 class now ranks No. 6 in the nation, per the 247Sports composite.

Heisman whispers loom as Arch Manning takes handoff at Texas

Heisman whispers loom as Arch Manning takes handoff at Texas

Arch Manning has started a grand total of two games in two seasons at quarterback for the Texas Longhorns.

Yet, according to DraftKings, the Louisiana native and third-generation member of the Manning family is the favorite to win the Heisman Trophy.

"I'm not really sure how they got these opinions because I've only played in, what? Two games?" an incredulous Manning said at the Southeastern Conference media days on Tuesday. "I guess it's nice of them to say, but it doesn't mean anything. Talk is cheap, I've got to go prove it."

Manning's third career start is likely to take place on Aug. 30 when Texas travels to Columbus, Ohio to take on defending national champion Ohio State.

He witnessed the steamroller that Ohio State became in the 2024 postseason from the sidelines as then-Longhorns starting QB Quinn Ewers could not put enough points on the board in a 28-14 setback in the semifinals.

"We're opening with the champs," Manning said. "It's going to be a fun one. I learned a lot from Quinn; he was damn good on the road. I'm going to text him, get some of his advice, and we'll fire up. Ohio State is a really good team, so it's going to be a good challenge."

Many around college football assumed Manning would jump ship before the 2024 season with Ewers reclaiming the starting role.

"I'm not going to lie, it was pretty tough," Manning said. "The competitor in me always wants to play and be on the field to help my team out. Looking back, it definitely helped me grow as a person and a player. I'm blessed for that."

Although the competition was certainly inferior to the test he will receive from the Buckeyes, Manning showed his stuff in home starts against Louisiana-Monroe and Mississippi State last September. In the 35-13 win over Mississippi State, he completed 26 of 31 passes for 325 yards and a pair of long-range touchdown strikes.

The Longhorns are expected to contend for the national title again in 2025. Manning is confident in his own abilities, but knows he has a tremendous cast around him to help.

"We've got a good group around me. I think our defense is really good, we've got a good o-line and we've got good skill players. So, I'm going to rely on them and try to make it happen."

Tennessee looks forward, forgives QB lost to portal

Tennessee looks forward, forgives QB lost to portal

In a transfer portal plot gone wrong, Nico Iamaleava was not with the Tennessee Volunteers at SEC Media Days on Tuesday in Atlanta and head coach Josh Heupel flushed the majority of his thoughts on the matter -- for the most part.

Heupel and Tennessee reloaded since the apparent negotiating ploy by Iamaleava was flipped into a farewell letter by the Vols. And at the end of the day, as Heupel says, the Vols are just fine with the way it turned out.

"Ultimately at the end of the day, it's never about who's not in your building but about who is in your building. For us, you can lose a quarterback at a lot of different times: December transfer portal, spring transfer portal. You can lose one week 1, first quarter of the ballgame in your opener, and now you're on to number two through injury, right? You've got to have the next-man-up mentality," Heupel said Tuesday.

"At the end of the day, having guys that want to compete along with their brothers inside of that locker room, building that connection, but also having the right guys in there. At the end of the day, I'm really excited about who we have in there. The addition of Joey to who's already inside of that group, highly competitive guys that are smart, that have the physical traits to be successful. Teammates have grown to have great trust in those guys through the course of this off-season during the summer, and now it's about getting to training camp and going and competing. Somebody is going to earn the opportunity to be our starting quarterback through that process."

Heupel said expectations are unchanged even if his quarterback will be different. He also admitted losing Iamaleava was difficult "in that moment" for players.

Leadership, including from Heupel, opted for "immediate" and "transparent" communication with players about the decision to help them cope with the change and tried to answer any question for which he had answers.

Now he said he's interested in finding answers in fall camp to questions with too many variables to answer six weeks before the season kicks off.

Joey Aguilar, redshirt freshman Jake Merklinger and true freshman George MacIntyre are the competitors fighting to replace Iamaleava.

"We will have a competition at the quarterback position, three guys inside of that room, really proud of what they've done," he said. "Joey, since he got there in May, Merklinger and George MacIntyre."

Iamaleava gets a chance to tell his side of the story July 24 at Big Ten media days, but only if he chooses to do so. He reportedly received a $2 million per year NIL deal to transfer to UCLA. The former five-star recruit played 18 games at Tennessee. When he landed with the Bruins, it left Aguilar, who had transferred to UCLA, to go shopping for another new home.

When Tennessee starts the season in Atlanta against Syracuse on August 30, the Vols might have more than one quarterback in the mix.

"We've found a way to win with a lot of different quarterbacks throughout my career on the offensive side of the ball," Heupel said. "We're going to find a way to win with the guy that earns a starting spot as we go through training camp here in August."

Aguilar, a transfer from Appalachian State, endeared himself to team leaders quickly. He impressed junior linebacker Arion Carter in practices and workouts as decisive and willing to take risks to make plays, even if there are some tremors felt around the Tennessee program by players closest to their former quarterback.

"Having a guy like that leave with such character and such poise was a hard thing to do. But nobody's bigger than the program. We wish him the best where he is at. And I hope he has a great career and goes on to do great things," Carter said Tuesday. "I feel it didn't waiver from the agenda we had to step forward and do, especially with the new guys we have set, with the three quarterbacks in our room, with George, Jake and Joey.

"I feel we were able to crowd around those guys early and get those guys ready and prepare them over this course of these last few weeks. And these next few weeks going into fall and training camp for this 2026 season I feel very well where we're standing, but we have a lot to do and a lot to prove still."

Defensive tackle Nico Eason said he remains good friends with Iamaleava and wishes him "nothing but the best."

"His decision was his decision. I'm still rooting for him," Eason said. "I'm hoping everything goes his way. There's no hate at all toward Nico."

Hugh Freeze expects Auburn to 'get over edge' against UGA, Alabama

Hugh Freeze expects Auburn to 'get over edge' against UGA, Alabama

If Hugh Freeze is reading his reshaped roster correctly, his third season at Auburn will become the Year of the Tigers.

Freeze said Tuesday at SEC Media Days that the reshaped roster and experience on his side -- not to mention playing rivals Alabama and Georgia at home -- is enough to turn the tables in Auburn's favor in games like those against the behemoths of the Southeastern Conference.

Alabama was two scores better than the Tigers in 2024 (28-14) in the annual Iron Bowl, while Georgia beat the Tigers by 18.

Why does Freeze think this year will be different?

"Number one, playing at Jordan-Hare is a definite advantage in those games for sure," Freeze said. "And our roster is one that can compete with those teams. We've been in the games even the first two years, but we haven't found a way to win.

"And that's one of the secrets, I think, to our success this year is having guys that we think we've brought in that have the combination of all of it, not just skill set, but this guy's a winner and has been proven to win and now will help us get over the edge in all these close games like those two will be."

One of the guys Freeze views as a difference-maker is Oklahoma transfer Jackson Arnold. He's in line to be the QB1 for Auburn in the opener against Baylor and should be fully up to speed by the time the Tigers face his old team on Sept. 20.

Arnold was not viewed as the top prize in the transfer portal by every team and won few over with statistics. But Freeze said circumstances painted that picture, and it wasn't reality.

He was sacked more times than any quarterback in this SEC and sixth-most across all of college football last season.

"I loved Jackson out of high school. I think everybody did. He was a Gatorade Player of the Year, top quarterback in the country coming out. Boy, he fit everything that I believe in doing offensively, (offensive coordinator Derrick) Nix does too. We've been together a long time, and he just fits that," Freeze said.

"So I knew how I felt about him then, but of course you're doing this speed dating here and things weren't great statistically or whatever performance-wise. Then you have to do a deep dive into why was that, and can I get past whatever that was. When you evaluate it, you said it, he had several different play callers, injured offensive line and receivers, and yet when you pull all of his throws, I still saw that there it is, that's what I saw. There it is again. He still has that about him."

Freeze lauded the toughness Arnold brings at the position. He said the Tigers are offering him a needed restart to prove who he is as a player.

Arnold, also at SEC Media Days on Tuesday, said he has no ill will toward the Sooners for their decision to move in another direction. He was replaced as OU starter after only four games last season.

He wound up back in the starting lineup by the end of the season and beat then-No. 7 Alabama. That win opened Freeze's eyes because of Arnold's guts and big plays with his legs.

One of his next big chances to open some other people's eyes will be his SEC debut with Auburn -- in Norman.

"Things happen. Things happen for a reason," Arnold said. "Sometimes things work out the way it's supposed to be. You know, we're on God's timing, you know, not our timing. And, for me, I felt the best decision for me was to move on and move on somewhere else to get a fresh start, like you said, and go out and do what I know I can do with this Auburn squad this year."

Johnny Manziel believes NFL would have been 'pay cut' if NIL available

Johnny Manziel believes NFL would have been 'pay cut' if NIL available

Johnny Manziel believes he would have put the NFL off longer if Name, Image, and Likeness had been available during his career at Texas A&M.

Manziel declared for the 2014 NFL Draft after his redshirt sophomore season with the Aggies. He went on to sign a four-year, $8.2 million rookie contract with the Cleveland Browns, who selected the polarizing quarterback with the 22nd overall pick.

Dubbed "Johnny Football," Manziel believes he would have stood to earn considerably more in NIL over his final two years of eligibility than going to the NFL.

After becoming the first-ever freshman to win the Heisman Trophy, the Manning Award and the Davey O'Brien Award while throwing for 3,706 yards and 26 touchdowns as a freshman, Manziel threw for 4,114 yards and 37 touchdowns the next season.

"I tell people this all the time, and they asked me this, I really feel like I would have taken a pay cut had I gone to the NFL," Manziel said on Always College Football, per On3.com. "I mean, that's really what it would have been. I mean, it is crazy times that we're living, and I think, you know, in a lot of areas, still figuring out exactly how to make it work the right way, where it's not just the biggest boosters and the richest schools. If you look at A&M, you know, I feel like we've put a ton of money in it to our NIL, and it hasn't necessarily translated onto the field.

Following two controversy-laden seasons, Manziel was released by the Browns and did not throw another pass in the NFL. After being out of football for two years, he played for Hamilton and Montreal in the Canadian Football League in 2018 and spent time with the AAF's Memphis express in 2019.

Manziel later played two seasons in the Fan Controlled Football League from 2021-22.

Tyler Atkinson, No. 1 LB in 2026 class, commits to Texas

Tyler Atkinson, No. 1 LB in 2026 class, commits to Texas

Tyler Atkinson, the No. 1 linebacker in the 2026 recruiting class, committed to Texas on Tuesday.

Appearing on "The Pat McAfee Show," the five-star prospect chose the Longhorns over finalists Clemson, Oregon and presumptive favorite Georgia.

Atkinson, who plays at Grayson High School in Loganville, Ga., is ranked No. 9 overall, No. 1 at his position and No. 1 in the Peach State by the 247 Sports composite.

The 6-foot-2, 215-pound Atkinson, who visited Georgia more than a dozen times during the recruiting process, made an official visit to Austin from June 20-22.

"I feel like I just encompass everything I want at Texas ... the way they have me playing is the best fit, and that's why I chose Texas," he said.

Atkinson recorded 174 tackles and 13 sacks while guiding Grayson to a 14-1 record and a Class 6A state title in 2024, per ESPN.

He is the third five-star pledge for Longhorns coach Steve Sarkisian, joining Florida quarterback Dia Bell and Texas athlete Jermaine Bishop. The class ranks No. 8 in the nation, per 247 Sports.

SS Georgia: QB Stockton, Smart lead Bulldogs through unfamiliar youth movement

SS Georgia: QB Stockton, Smart lead Bulldogs through unfamiliar youth movement

Georgia coach Kirby Smart transitions from one of his most experienced rosters to a full-blown youth movement as he begins Year 10 with the Bulldogs.

"Our team is going to be comprised of 54 percent first- and second-year players. Very big change for us," Smart said at SEC Media Days in Atlanta on Tuesday.

From Smart's vantage point, he has new names and faces, but the same standard and belief he brought to the Bulldogs from Alabama a decade ago. He said the program mantra in recruiting and the "strained" landscape of college football has been prioritizing relationships "over transactions."

That could mean finding an all-in freshman who fits the program over replacing a first-round pick with a high-dollar transfer.

It also gives Smart an unfamiliar baseline, going from "one of the most veteran teams I've been a part of" to the 2025 version where follow the leader might be a bit more literal than previous seasons.

"What do you get with that? You get youthful exuberance. We've had practices that have been spirited," Smart said. "We had a great spring practice that we talked about the words fire, passion and energy. I think the biggest thing that separates college football teams today is complacency among players versus fire, passion and energy among players. So we've tried to highlight those traits as much as possible with our players.

"Our players need to bring juice and energy each and every day. If they don't, they'll be confronted by the players that do. And if the players continue to do that, we'll have a successful season and a successful football team."

Smart is starting the season with a new QB1, albeit a familiar one, in Gunner Stockton. The quarterback jumped into the fray in the SEC Championship when Carson Beck was injured and then started the Sugar Bowl, a 23-10 loss to Notre Dame.

Already this offseason Smart has defended Stockton's potential with talk show host Paul Finebaum while taking multiple opportunities to remind his QB where he needs to be by the final Saturday in August.

Smart said he learned all he needed to know about Stockton being ready by watching him prepare. The line coaches commonly share about preparing like the starter is Stockton's modus operandi since he arrived in Athens.

"Gunner is a kid that leads from the front. Gunner is a winner," Smart said. "He comes from an athletic family background, his dad played at Georgia Southern, and he's the kind of kid you want at the front of the line, and he leads from the front. So I appreciate what Gunner does. He's going to be a big part of our program this year in leadership and doing that with the offensive players. He's already begun to do that in his leadership groups that he runs right now."

His sophomore quarterback is the embodiment of what Smart said the Bulldogs are trying to build around and a message to players and opponents of the complacency Georgia hopes to avoid.

"You can say what you want, but there's people more in college football today, especially in the SEC, that are comfortable with where they are," Smart said, listing examples from his coaching past from Julio Jones and Mark Ingram at Alabama to Georgia pupils such as linebackers Roquan Smith and Nolan Smith.

"(Thinking) 'This is a pretty good life. I'm earning 200K a year. I'm very comfortable.'

"You don't reach your goals being comfortable. You don't attain great success -- none of those people I mentioned before were ever comfortable. They were aiming at something. They had a goal. They wanted to go achieve it.

Kirby Smart: Nick Saban returns in '26 only if wife OKs

Kirby Smart: Nick Saban returns in '26 only if wife OKs

Rumors of a certain former Alabama coach coming out of retirement next season sparked many reactions, but surprise was not one of them when Georgia coach Kirby Smart first heard Nick Saban could return to the sidelines in 2026.

"I called and offered him (Will) Muschamp's (analyst) job, but he was overqualified," Smart said at SEC Media Days on Tuesday of his old boss at Alabama, who retired with six national championships in 17 seasons with the Crimson Tide in January 2024.

Saban worked as an analyst for ESPN and appeared on "College GameDay" last season while the Bulldogs were fighting their way into another SEC title game.

Smart, defensive coordinator under Saban in Tuscaloosa at the end of his time on the Alabama staff (2007-15) before taking over at Georgia, said he "almost laughed" when he first heard former Tide quarterback Greg McElroy fire up the rumor mill on Monday with the suggestion Saban would coach after this season. Not because it's unrealistic for the 73-year-old to take another job, but relationship dynamics might take the call out of his hands.

"Make no mistake about it -- the boss at home (Saban's wife, Terry) is going to make that call for him, not him," Smart said with a chuckle.

Smart isn't the only Saban associate speculating on the coach's comeback.

Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin, who worked for Saban as offensive coordinator (2014-16), said he suspected that the coaching legend would do a prompt U-turn after announcing retirement plans.

"I kind of thought it would happen after one year," Kiffin said.

Brian Kelly: Transparency, consistency key for college sports' future

Brian Kelly: Transparency, consistency key for college sports' future

When asked about the leadership governing college sports, LSU head coach Brian Kelly highlighted "transparency and consistency" as paramount.

"Those two words are probably the most important thing as we continue to move forward," Kelly said at Southeastern Conference media days on Monday.

The 63-year-old also placed responsibility on coaches and emphasized the moral aspect of NIL and the evolving landscape of college athletics.

"It's got to start with us. I mean, we have to be the stewards of this. There has to be a moral high ground," Kelly said. "I was at a speaking engagement a few weeks back, and every question about the NIL was trying to find a way around it, trying to find a way to bring in revenue in some other way.

"Sooner or later, we have to take a stand that transparency, consistency, ethics and morality are at the core of this."

LSU faced this reality firsthand when Bryce Underwood, the No. 1 overall recruit in the Class of 2025, flipped his commitment from the Tigers to Michigan in December. The quarterback will reportedly receive an NIL deal worth between $10.5 million and $12 million over four years.

Conversely, Kelly and his wife, Paqui, donated $1 million to LSU's NIL collective Monday as part of their "Kelly Family Million Dollar Match Fund." The Kellys launched this initiative shortly after Underwood's flip and pledged to match fan donations to the school's NIL collective up to $1 million.

While the Tigers lost out on their potential quarterback of the future, Kelly is focused on the man under center this season.

Garrett Nussmeier is entering his fifth season and second year as LSU's starting quarterback. He produced 4,052 passing yards and 29 touchdowns last season, but led the SEC with 12 interceptions thrown.

Kelly is confident Nussmeier will take a leap, but recognized that comparing him to the Heisman-winning LSU quarterbacks of the past sets lofty expectations.

"When you're comparing (Nussmeier) to Jayden Daniels and Joe Burrow, that's a high bar for anybody, right?" Kelly said. "Garrett is at LSU because he loves LSU. He wants to lead our football team to a championship. If the Heisman follows with that, I think he's good with that."

One of Kelly's primary goals is to set the tone for the season in the first week. During his team at LSU, Kelly is 0-3 in season openers. The Tigers kick off the 2025 season at Clemson.

"We needed to do some things differently this year. That is embrace the opener. Embracing it in the manner that this is a big game," Kelly said. "It's a tangible goal for our football team to want to be 1-0. That's not, ‘Let's warm up into the season.' We want to be ready for this football game."

LaNorris Sellers: South Carolina had ‘everything I needed’ as rivals pursued

LaNorris Sellers: South Carolina had ‘everything I needed’ as rivals pursued

To LaNorris Sellers, the idea of entering the transfer portal wasn't one worth overthinking.

The fast-rising quarterback is now considered one of the top prospects for next year's NFL Draft, and with that national profile came attention from rival teams. Sellers' father told The Athletic last month that the family heard offers as high as a two-year, $8 million deal to transfer to another school.

But Sellers, a native of Florence, S.C., didn't budge.

"Everything I needed was in South Carolina," Sellers said at Southeastern Conference media days Monday. "Like I grew up there. My family's there. Anything I needed was an hour and five up the road for me. School pretty much takes care of rent and all that. So it's not like you really need too much. You know what I'm saying? ... There's no point in me starting over."

Head coach Shane Beamer added that Sellers is doing a summer internship in Columbia for his sport and entertainment management major. Sellers received high praise from Beamer, who said the quarterback "has not changed" since his ascent on the field.

"His life, his world has changed from last year at this time to right now because of what he did last season," Beamer said. "But he's got a great family around him. He came back in January knowing the things he needed to work on to get better at. He's done a great job of working hard and improving, all while staying grounded and staying the same person.

"I think we're going to be better around LaNorris as well on the offense, more depth and competition at pretty much every position I feel like. That's going to help him. He doesn't have to be Superman for us. Just continue to be the person he is, the leader that he is, and the player that he is, and watch him continue to take the next step."

In his sophomore season -- his first as a starter -- Sellers completed 65.6 percent of his passes for 2,534 yards, 18 touchdowns and seven interceptions. He added 674 yards and seven scores on the ground.

Most notably, Sellers helped the Gamecocks upset intrastate rival Clemson 17-14 on Nov. 30. He threw for 164 yards and rushed for 166 yards and two touchdowns, including the game-winning score on a third-and-16 play with 1:08 to go. The Gamecocks went 9-3 in the regular season before a Citrus Bowl loss to Illinois.

Beamer promoted Mike Shula to offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach, noting Monday that Shula has "literally been in the shoes that LaNorris is in as he was a starting quarterback in this conference ... He's already made us better as an offense on and off the field."

Sellers will have some family even closer than Florence this year, as his younger brother, wide receiver Jayden Sellers, is a freshman on the 2025 team.

"Super excited to play with him," LaNorris Sellers said. "Last time we played together with him was my senior (year of high school), which was year three years ago.

"I was always quarterback. He played pretty much everywhere. And in rec league he played running back, receiver, DB. He played that up until last year, senior year. I think he's fully receiver now. But that's all we used to do, throw a deep field run and he'd catch it."

SEC's Greg Sankey: CFP expansion not a done deal

SEC's Greg Sankey: CFP expansion not a done deal

The College Football Playoff could remain at 12 teams if the Southeastern Conference and Big Ten can't come to an agreement, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said Monday.

"That's fine," Sankey said as SEC media days kicked off in Atlanta. "We have a 12-team playoff, five conference champions. That can stay if we can't agree."

Coaches in the SEC would like to see a 16-team playoff that follows the "5+11" model, made up of the five highest-ranked conference champions and 11 at-large bids.

The Big Ten has proposed a format where the Big Ten and SEC would each get four automatic bids, with two going to both the ACC and Big 12 and one more to the highest-ranked champion of another conference. The rest of the field -- either 14 or 16 teams -- would come from at-large bids.

"We had a different view coming out of (SEC meetings) around the notion of allocations, if you will," Sankey said, referring to automatic bids. "I think you'll probably hear that again from our coaches. The Big Ten has a different view, that's fine."

Although all sides at least seem to favor increasing the size of the field, Sankey said it's not a foregone conclusion.

"I think there's this notion that there has to be this magic moment and something has to happen with expansion, and it has to be forced," he said.

There is a Dec. 1 deadline to determine a format for the CFP in 2026 and beyond.

LSU WR Nic Anderson injured in car crash

LSU WR Nic Anderson injured in car crash

LSU transfer wide receiver Nic Anderson spent one night in a hospital this past weekend after he sustained unspecified injuries in a car crash, head coach Brian Kelly said, according to The Advocate.

Anderson committed to LSU in December after he transferred from Oklahoma. He appeared in one game for the Sooners last season and did not have a catch, missing time with an undisclosed lower-body injury.

As a freshman in 2023, Anderson had 38 receptions for 798 yards and 10 touchdowns over 13 games (six starts) for the Sooners.

News of Anderson's involvement in an auto accident comes six months after Tigers quarterback Colin Hurley was seriously injured after a one-car crash near campus in January. Hurley has returned and participated in spring practice in April.

"It wasn't quite as bad as Colin Hurley's, which was life-threatening, but enough that he had to get checked in and stayed overnight for observations," Kelly said of Anderson at SEC Media Days. "But he comes out of it really good."

Anderson is expected to be available when LSU starts training camp.

Report: Louisiana Tech leaving CUSA for Sun Belt

Report: Louisiana Tech leaving CUSA for Sun Belt

Louisiana Tech is leaving Conference USA to become the 14th member of the Sun Belt Conference, ESPN reported.

Sun Belt officials reportedly approved the move on Monday to replace Texas State, which recently jumped to the Pac-12.

Louisiana Tech has been with Conference USA since 2013. The Bulldogs' basketball programs and other sports besides football previously were part of the Sun Belt from 1991-2001 before joining the Western Athletic Conference from 2001-13.

The earliest date Louisiana Tech can join the Sun Belt is 2026. It reportedly will cost the school at least $5 million to negotiate an exit from Conference USA.

The Bulldogs' football program has not finished above .500 since going 10-3 under former coach Skip Holtz in 2019. They were 5-8 last season under Sonny Cumbie.

The Louisiana Tech men's basketball team has topped 20 wins in 11 of the past 13 seasons but has not been to the NCAA Tournament since 1991.

The women's basketball team finished 18-16 last season and has not been to the NCAA Tournament since 2011.

Five-star TE recruit Kaiden Prothro stays in-state with Georgia

Five-star TE recruit Kaiden Prothro stays in-state with Georgia

Georgia and head football coach Kirby Smart added to a vaunted recruiting haul for the Class of 2026 with the verbal commitment on Saturday from five-star tight end Kaiden Prothro.

The rising senior at Bowdon (Ga.) High School decided to stay in-state after making official visits to the Athens campus and his other finalists Florida and Texas as well as to Alabama and Auburn.

Listed at 6-foot-6 and 210 pounds, Prothro is ranked the No. 25 player in the country, the No. 3 tight end and the No. 3 player in Georgia, according to 247Sports' composite rankings.

As a junior, Prothro primarily played wide receiver and caught 56 passes for 1,203 yards (21.5 yards per catch) and 22 touchdowns as Bowdon won its third consecutive state championship in Class A Division II.

He also played safety and is a standout baseball and basketball player.

Prothro said he was impressed with UGA assistant head coach/tight ends coach Todd Hartley and the players he has met.

"It was really just Coach Hartley breaking down the film and making me feel at home," Prothro told DawgNation following his commitment ceremony. "As well as spending time with a bunch of the players and being around some of the tight ends in the room."

Georgia has the No. 2 recruiting class for 2026, per 247Sports, with 29 commitments, including two five-star, 20 four-star and seven three-star recruits. UGA got its quarterback of the future in five-star Jared Curtis of Nashville Christian School. He is the No. 4 player, No. 1 QB and No. 1 player in Tennessee, per the 247Sports composite.

Facing suspension, Jake Retzlaff withdraws from BYU

Facing suspension, Jake Retzlaff withdraws from BYU

Embattled quarterback Jake Retzlaff announced Friday that he is withdrawing from BYU, a move that comes after he was recently accused of sexual assault in a civil lawsuit.

Retzlaff contended the sex was consensual. The suit was dismissed June 30 but Retzlaff still faced a seven-game suspension for violating the school's honor code that prohibits premarital sex.

"After a lot of prayer, reflection, and conversations with those I trust, I've made the difficult decision to officially withdraw from BYU and step away from the BYU Football program," Retzlaff said on Instagram.

"BYU has meant more to me than just football. It's been a place of growth -- spiritually, mentally and physically. I'm grateful for every teammate, coach, staff member and fan who's supported me along the way. The relationships and memories I've made in Provo will always be a part of me."

Retzlaff will likely walk on to another program in coming weeks.

Retzlaff emerged as a star last season and the school has no clear-cut replacement for the 2025 campaign.

"We are grateful for the time Jake Retzlaff has spent at BYU," the school's athletic department said in a statement. "As he moves forward, BYU Athletics understands and respects Jake's decision to withdraw from BYU, and we wish him all the best as he enters the next phase of his career."

At this week's Big 12 media days, coach Kalani Sitake had little to say about Retzlaff.

"We love Jake Retzlaff and appreciate all that he's done for our program," Sitake said on Tuesday. "... It would be inappropriate for me to make a statement in his situation."

The lawsuit alleged that Retzlaff committed the assault in November 2023 at his home in Provo, Utah.

According to the suit, Retzlaff and Jane Doe started to watch a movie in his room and began kissing. The lawsuit says Jane Doe did not want to go any further and asked him to "stop," but Retzlaff eventually found a condom and assaulted her.

Retzlaff, a California native who began his career playing for Riverside (Calif.) City College, transferred to BYU prior to the 2023 season. After starting the final four games in 2023, he won a training-camp battle to become the Cougars' regular quarterback in 2024. He led them to an 11-2 record and an Alamo Bowl win over Colorado.

He finished the campaign with 2,947 passing yards, 20 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. The 6-foot-1, 205-pound redshirt senior had been expected to reprise his role this fall.

Now Retzlaff will seek to make an impact at another school.

"I'm excited to turn the page and embrace the next chapter," Retzlaff said. "My journey is far from over -- and I'm more motivated than ever to keep chasing my goals."

BYU opens the season Aug. 30 against visiting Portland State.

Report: USC OL DJ Wingfield hires attorney in NCAA eligibility battle

Report: USC OL DJ Wingfield hires attorney in NCAA eligibility battle

Southern California offensive lineman DJ Wingfield is hiring an attorney to contest his eligibility for the 2025 season, On3 reported Thursday.

Wingfield transferred from Purdue to USC after the 2024 season, believing he could play one more season due to an NCAA waiver for players with at least one season at a non-NCAA program. He has been unable to secure that waiver, per the report.

The 6-foot-4, 320-pound lineman began his career at El Camino Junior College, playing 22 games there from 2020-21 before competing at New Mexico (2022-23) and Purdue. His 2022 campaign ended with an injury in the season opener. He started all 12 games at right guard for the Boilermakers.

Wingfield is hiring attorney Darren Heitner and is expected to file a lawsuit for an injunction that would allow him to play this fall, per On3.

Wingfield originally declared for the 2025 NFL Draft before entering the portal and committing to the Trojans in January.