Eligibility issues and the NCAA. According to this it's not over. Although I find the conclusion that if Louis Moore (IU player) is found to be ineligible retroactively that it won't cost IU it's Championship, very interesting. Report: NCAA Threatens to Vacate Wins and Erase Stats as Eligibility Lawsuits Escalate
It appears that Joey Agular has lost his attempt to play another year at Tenn, and will enter the NFL draft and that is a win for sanity. But it wasn't the NCAA that stopped him, it was a Judge.
Very sad news. Rondale Moore died. Apparently a suicide. "Rondale Moore was a complete joy to coach," said Louisville's Jeff Brohm, who coached Moore at Purdue. "The ultimate competitor that wouldn't back down from any challenge. Rondale had a work ethic unmatched by anyone. A great teammate that would come through in any situation. We all loved Rondale, we loved his smile and competitive edge that always wanted to please everyone he came in contact with. We offer all of our thoughts and prayers to Rondale and his family, we love him very much."
That is really sad. I remember him as a freshman literally bursting on the scene. He was so talented. I guess injuries derailed his Pro career. RIP.
So very, very sad, such a gifted kid. His performance against us as a freshman was one of the great individual performances that I ever saw. He put that team on his back as a freshman against Goliath under the lights in prime time and dominated the bully. Kid was an incredible talent....God bless and RIP young man, you were special
I got this off another board...sign of the times. Interesting sidenote, I have a close friend whose father-in-law is a big Arkansas booster. The A.D. recently told a group of boosters that basically they weren’t going to try to compete at the highest level in football that they were going to focus their NIL efforts on basketball and baseball. The message was not well received.
More interesting developments in the free for all portal. Schools fighting back. Cincinnati sued former quarterback Brendan Sorsby in federal court Wednesday, alleging he breached his NIL contract with the Bearcats when he refused to pay a $1 million exit fee after he transferred to Texas Tech. The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, seeks $1 million in liquidated damages, which the school said Sorsby was contractually obligated to pay within 30 days of transferring. In the complaint, Cincinnati's attorneys said the quarterback's representative "advised that Sorsby refuses to pay the University anything." Cincinnati sues Sorsby over $1M exit fee after Texas Tech transfer
Not exactly College Football....but Chris Collinsworth just got a bit richer. Former NFL wide receiver turned announcer Cris Collinsworth is landing a huge payday. Pro Football Focus, the company owned by Collinsworth, is being sold for a hefty price. According to a report by Arif Hasan in his Wide Left Substack, the company is being sold for between $130 million and $140 million. It's being sold to software and analytics company Teamworks. "The sale is moving forward after PFF initially opened itself up to private investment several years ago, securing a $50 million investment from private equity firm Silver Lake. Collinsworth purchased a majority stake in PFF back in 2014. Per Hasan, Silver Lake’s investment valued PFF at $160 million, with one source saying the company was valued at $223 million at its peak," Awful Announcing reported. Collinsworth's company and its player grades have been featured on NBC's "Sunday Night Football" for several years.
Young man from California coming to grips with how Midwest weather in spring can go from sunny & 70 degrees on Monday to an ice storm on Tuesday.
I see that the Big 10 and SEC want to suspend enforcement of Tampering penalties. Wild West rules I guess.
A list!! Cignetti has rocketed up in the world that's for sure!! Sark has dropped like a rock though. Bruce Feldman's Power Ranking of College Football's Top 25 Coaches in 2026 No. 1 Curt Cignetti, Indiana No. 2 Kirby Smart, Georgia No. 3 Ryan Day, Ohio State No. 4 Kalen DeBoer, Alabama No. 5 Mario Cristobal, Miami No. 6 Dan Lanning, Oregon No. 7 Marcus Freeman, Notre Dame No. 8 Dabo Swinney, Clemson No. 9 Kyle Whittingham, Michigan No. 10 Mike Elko, Texas A&M No. 11 Matt Campbell, Penn State No. 12 Jeff Brohm, Louisville No. 13 Steve Sarkisian, Texas No. 14 James Franklin, Virginia Tech No. 15 Lane Kiffin, LSU No. 16 Willie Fritz, Houston No. 17 Kalani Sitake, BYU No. 18 Jon Sumrall, Florida No. 19 Lincoln Riley, USC No. 20 Kirk Ferentz, Iowa No. 21 Kenny Dillingham, ASU No. 22 Bret Bielema, Illinois No. 23 Josh Heupel, Tennessee No. 24 Rhett Lashlee, SMU No. 25 Clark Lea, Vanderbilt