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Topic: 2022 Transfer Portal

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FearlessF

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #490 on: May 05, 2022, 10:16:31 AM »
afraid the NCAA could save them some $$$?
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

FearlessF

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #491 on: May 05, 2022, 10:19:49 AM »
Lots of investment for a team that will finish 5th in the West.


:72:
one of these days alice right to the moon
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

Mdot21

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #492 on: May 05, 2022, 03:59:44 PM »

https://twitter.com/chrissolari/status/1520248610855825408?t=3az2nZX_FGDT2iAsAp86gA&s=19
makes it hard to build a program if the break out stars just wind up transferring to helmets. kid will probably wind up at Bama. 

OrangeAfroMan

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #493 on: May 05, 2022, 04:22:58 PM »
We can't pay players, it'll be crazy like the wild wild west.
We're going to pay players.
It's crazy like the wild wild west.
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Years later...
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Maybe we should reel it in a little and figure out some parameters.
“The Swamp is where Gators live.  We feel comfortable there, but we hope our opponents feel tentative. A swamp is hot and sticky and can be dangerous." - Steve Spurrier

FearlessF

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #494 on: May 05, 2022, 04:43:02 PM »
I'm encouraged that the Husker boosters are willing to out bid the Horns for players

Oklahoma and Auburn for the Ex-Horn QB

and Illinois for the Texas Tech D-lineman Devin Drew
« Last Edit: May 05, 2022, 06:36:09 PM by FearlessF »
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FearlessF

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #495 on: May 05, 2022, 06:54:30 PM »
Former Husker defensive lineman Casey Rodgers names Oregon as his transfer destination.
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FearlessF

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #496 on: May 06, 2022, 08:37:10 AM »
More than 2,000 players entered the transfer portal during the 2021-22 school year with a large number coming during major coaching changes or system revamps. Virtually every Power Five program has taken a handful of transfers to immediately fill holes. With hundreds of players remaining in the portal, more could be making decisions on their futures soon.

Here are eight programs that stand apart as winners and losers from the 2022 transfer portal cycle.

Winners
USC: Rebuilding looks a little different these days. After spurning Oklahoma, coach Lincoln Riley nabbed the No. 1 spot in the 247Sports transfer rankings in his first offseason to quickly build a Trojans roster in his image.


Bringing quarterback Caleb Williams from Oklahoma was the headliner, but USC also added receiver Mario Williams, linebacker Eric Gentry and running back Travis Dye as sought-after playmakers. Four receivers transferred to join Riley's high-flying offense -- Biletnikoff Award winner Jordan Addison could also join the fold -- but more than half of the class's transfers came on the defensive side of the ball as defensive coordinator Alex Grinch worked to build some depth. Granted, the Trojans also lost a handful of key players to the portal, like quarterback Jaxson Dart and tight end Michael Trigg, but if the Trojans compete for a Pac-12 title right away, Riley will owe the transfer portal a debt of gratitude.

Ole Miss: Rebels coach Lane Kiffin declared himself the "Portal King" after putting together the No. 2 transfer class in the nation. Dart was the headliner to replace NFL Draft pick Matt Corral, but he was only the start. Ole Miss went to Texas and nabbed running backs Ulysses Bentley IV and Zach Evans from SMU and TCU, respectively. Safety Ladarius Tennison, tight end J.J. Pegues and receiver Malik Heath transferred from programs within the Rebels' own division. Kiffin has been perhaps the most open portal recruiter in the country and has classes that prove it.

Arizona: It's flown under the radar at a relatively anonymous program, but coach Jedd Fisch is recruiting his butt off. The Wildcats pulled in the the Pac-12's No. 3 recruiting class for 2022 and followed it up with a dynamic transfer class. Wazzu quarterback Jayden de Laura will emphatically answer the glaring question under center, and he will have the freakishly dynamic Jacob Cowing from UTEP to target. Linebacker Anthony Solomon (Michigan) and edge Hunter Echols (USC) bring some dynamic play on the defensive end. The Wildcats went 1-11 in Fisch's miserable first season, but players don't seem dissuaded from his plan. That alone makes Arizona's signing class one of the most important in the Pac-12.


Nebraska: The Cornhuskers needed quick fixes and found some answers in the portal. Quarterbacks Casey Thompson and Chubba Purdy will compete for the starting job to replace Adrian Martinez. Receivers Trey Palmer and Isaiah Garcia-Castaneda add some much-needed athleticism outside. Defensively, Nebraska nabbed blue-chip transfers Ochaun Mathis (TCU) and Tommi Hill (Arizona State) to bolster an already solid unit. Offensive lineman Hunter Anthony will add some much-needed depth. Scott Frost's additions weren't especially flashy, but the transfer class will hopefully make a difference in some of those close games.

Losers
Arizona State: The Sun Devils might as well put up a "Help Wanted" sign after the vast majority of their top players decided to leave the program in the midst of NCAA troubles. Quarterback Jayden Daniels left the program for LSU in a surprising decision, which set off another round of transfers. Top receiver Ricky Pearsall and star defender Eric Gentry were expected to play central roles, while DeaMonte Trayanum left for Ohio State. Linemen Spencer Lovell, Ezra Dotson-Oyetade and Jermayne Lole all entered the portal in the last weekend.

In all, 14 key scholarship players entered the portal. Granted, the Sun Devils got some help back in the form of a top-15 transfer class, but it features only one blue-chip transfer prospect (Miami DL Nesta Jade Silvera). Ultimately, the transfer portal was a net loss for ASU.


Virginia: The Cavaliers were in a strange spot after suddenly losing coach Bronco Mendenhall, but the mass exodus of linemen after his retirement is hard to ignore. Four different offensive linemen who started games left, including All-American center Victor Oluwatimi. Ultimately, 20 players transferred from Virginia during the transition to new coach Tony Elliott with a number coming in the trenches. Luckily, star quarterback Brennan Armstrong is back, but Elliott has his work cut out to fill all the holes.

West Virginia: The Mountaineers added quarterback JT Daniels late in the cycle, but it doesn't eliminate the obscene amount of talent they lost. Twenty players entered the transfer portal, including key starters DT Akheem Mesidor, LB Josh Chandler, quarterback Jarret Doege, top receiver Winston Wright and both starting cornerbacks. Along with losing a number of contributors to graduation, WVU will look very different next season. The Mountaineers are staying active in the transfer portal to try and recoup some of the losses, but they're still in a tenuous spot heading into a make-or-break season for coach Neal Brown.

Colorado: The Buffaloes roster seems to think the 4-2 season during Karl Dorrell's debut was a fluke, as more than 20 key players from that squad entered the portal.
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

CatsbyAZ

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #497 on: May 06, 2022, 09:01:41 AM »
More than 2,000 players entered the transfer portal during the 2021-22 school year with a large number coming during major coaching changes or system revamps. Virtually every Power Five program has taken a handful of transfers to immediately fill holes. With hundreds of players remaining in the portal, more could be making decisions on their futures soon.


Will piecemeal their Transfer Portal discussion across several posts because it's a bit lengthy, but Fox Sports’ Brady Quinn and Lavar Arrington had plenty of lamenting over the recent Transfer Portal chaos on their morning radio show earlier this week:

Pt 1
Brady Quinn:
“Here’s the problem with college football, and I do think we’re at an inflection point where if someone doesn’t step in and do something we’re going to start to tarnish the sport…this sport has been built up for the fans…it hasn’t been for the players. Because the players are now finally able to capitalize off of their name image and likeness…now we’re moving closer to a model where you’re going to see these players become employees of these universities. But NIL has not created what’s happening right now in college football…it’s the transfer portal. And it’s how we’re allowing these young men to be able to get out of any commitment whatsoever…it is as simple as saying this: let’s provide a one month window where these young men have the opportunity to transfer if they want…and they get one freebie at it just like now. Instead you’ve got this yearlong ability for any kid at any point to jump onto a roster and go ‘I don’t like it here!’ Or someone calls up, let’s just say a coach from another team…and says ‘hey we’d love to have you here.’ And they sell you on an NIL deal. Even if that NIL deal was there, if you shut off the ability of a student athlete to just up and leave at any time during the season, he’ll at least commit for a year until that next window opens up. So that there’s some sort of sense of commitment by that player for at least that year. And so right now that inflection point has gotten to a point where a college level game of football is being orchestrated like a professional league. However we don’t have the safeguards. We don’t have a union. We have a structure where there’s black and white instead of gray area…now teams are tampering and they’re using NIL money which is above board to do it. And the only problem with that is it’s considered inducement. And right now there’s nobody cracking down on inducement. There’s really no governance over any of this so it feels like the wild wild west and that’s how things are operating right now.”

847badgerfan

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #498 on: May 07, 2022, 06:09:35 AM »
UW picked up a safety from Utah. 3 years remaining. From Hawaii and played HS with current UW OLB Nick Herbig.
U RAH RAH! WIS CON SIN!

bayareabadger

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #499 on: May 07, 2022, 08:47:46 AM »
UW picked up a safety from Utah. 3 years remaining. From Hawaii and played HS with current UW OLB Nick Herbig.
Big depth piece. Can never have enough competent safeties

CatsbyAZ

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #500 on: May 07, 2022, 10:22:17 AM »
Will piecemeal their Transfer Portal discussion across several posts because it's a bit lengthy, but Fox Sports’ Brady Quinn and Lavar Arrington had plenty of lamenting over the recent Transfer Portal chaos on their morning radio show earlier this week:



Transfer Portal Pt 2
Lavar Arrington:
"…there’s so many moving parts…people have made the argument that coaches have been able to leverage the college system…to use it like a transfer portal or like an NIL…look at what Lincoln Riley just did. Look at how USC is approaching the whole Lincoln Riley hiring. And one of the things I’m seeing with all these kids – because I work with a lot of these kids on a daily basis – the portal is further perpetuating the feeling of entitlement. In a lot of cases they’re delusional. College athletes are a little delusional…for all the big stories we see with the Caleb Williams and the Spencer Rattlers there are a whole bunch of other names that entered the transfer portal and are sitting at home right now on their coach. Or going to a junior college because no one picked them up. We’re not hearing about the horror stories yet. We haven’t seen anybody addicted to pain killers yet, attributed to sitting and home and not getting another opportunity. There’s a very dark side to this transfer portal. While I will agree the NIL is not the direct problem to all of this, I will say having this whole transfer portal and being able to leverage the NIL to get the kids you want into the transfer portal is quickly becoming the issue that’s coming to a head as an issue that’s possibly monitored and regulated because there’s no slowing this freight train down." 

Fox Sports' Brady Quinn:
“And that’s the hard part. I don’t know anyone in congress who wants to run on this platform. You’ve got a stock market that’s taken on the worst month we’ve seen since 2008 back when the housing market crashed. And there’s a lot of people out there watching inflation and just trying to fill up their gas tank…you’ve got a war in Ukraine…is Russia using chemical weapons?…does the U.S. have to get involved because of that?…congress isn’t going to come in a save college football. I think it’s going to collectively take the Power 5 conferences and their commissioners to come together and figure out a common ground…I think every school is trying to abide by what they believe the rules are but that’s a different interpretation depending on where you are. And if you’re a desperate blue blood you’ll do anything to make it work, like calling up some of the best players around the country and using NIL money to induce them to come to your school. Tampering, whatever you want to call it – when you’re a desperate blue blood you’ll push whatever envelope you can.”

CatsbyAZ

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #501 on: May 08, 2022, 10:38:15 AM »
Will piecemeal their Transfer Portal discussion across several posts because it's a bit lengthy, but Fox Sports’ Brady Quinn and Lavar Arrington had plenty of lamenting over the recent Transfer Portal chaos on their morning radio show earlier this week:


Pt 3
Lavar Arrington:
“If you think about it you can wait for another program to develop a kid and then just go outbid them for a kid. So now you’re not recruiting high school anymore, you’re recruiting college.”

Fox Sports' Brady Quinn:
“Forget about the money. The money has always been there. There’ve been kids being paid by schools coming out of high school. I remember hearing on one of my stops ‘well, we tried to recruit that kid but we didn’t offer him the going rate for a five star quarterback.’ The NIL stuff has brought on its own issues and it’s not the kids. It’s all the adults in the room who try to take advantage of what they see as an opportunity…and the reason why this is able to take place is because kids can up and leave. And so unless they do something about the transfer portal this’ll continue to be an issue.”

Lavar Arrington:
“And if people don’t understand what up and leave means, there was a time where you had to get cleared by the coaches to leave the school and go transfer somewhere else. Then you’d have to sit out a season. Generally speaking these were guys already having other schools to go to…these were guys seeking bids to play for a place that they were already aware of. The problem that is surmounting right now and kind of continuing to develop is that you’re not allowed to coach these kids anymore. Listen, me and Joe’s [Paterno] relationship played out very publicly. People knew that we didn’t care for each other. And it was always in the media. But one thing is certain – I still learned so much from trying to navigate and be a college student athlete and fitting into the fabric of the culture I was a part of. I had to be ten minutes early to everything. I had to make it to classes. I had to maintain a certain GPA. I couldn’t where jewelry around certain places. These are all things that people would now balk at and say that’s not me. Tattoos were frowned upon. And whether you like it or not, living in those conditions taught you – and I’m not going to be apologetic about this – how to be a man. It taught you how to be a man to this day. To this day I don’t miss work. To this day I’m not late. I structure my home and my business that way. Those are things that if I had a transfer portal I would not have had to go through fire and iron sharpens iron because it would’ve been for someone like myself too easy to go somewhere else. And the problem they’re going to run into is you’re going to go to that somewhere else and they’re still gonna wanna coach you. And you’re still gonna have to be coachable. And then what do you do? So now you’re creating a bad habit of ‘OK, I came here, I got this NIL money but what I didn’t think about was they’re still going to coach me, they’re still going to be rules, they’re still going to be discipline – we’ll I don’t like being treated that way. You pay me too much and I’m too important, so if you don’t treat me this way I’m going somewhere else.’ The problem we’re running into with that is it’s a delusional approach, it is a lack of development approach, and that’s going to mess with the development of this next generation of college athletes. It’s not conducive to an environment where you can raise and develop young adult for real world demands.”


bayareabadger

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #502 on: May 08, 2022, 01:22:56 PM »
The thing this current arrangement lacks is a speed bump. I think the one-year break had its issue, but it was a solid speed bump. And it's hard to figure out a way for kids to speed bump themselves. You can't rely on "they just want to be there" as a reason kids stay. 

There might also be a simple reality that the luxuries afforded to student athletes (the recruiting inducements of yesteryear) make the transition easier too. Part of the reason many kids don't transfer isn't because they're loving school, it's because transferring is a tremendous pain in the ass. In this world, it seems it's not (perhaps the world these kids come up in is more prone to change, which means they're better handling it).

I was a a reunion with some college friends a few months back, and at some point, when we were quite drunk, we got on the subject of being underclassmen and how it's often profoundly lonely. Networks of support you've built up aren't there. You're sort of hastily assembling friend groups on the fly. The way you're socializing is often not conducive to something that's really fulfilling. Three of us were chatting, the other two has said they considered transferring to a smaller place. I had tried to transfer in HS, which didn't work, and I realized that if I wanted to leave college, I had nowhere to go that I assumed would feel comfortable (i.e., everyone I knew didn't go to one place) and quitting meant a life pivot I was almost assuredly not ready for. Since these teams are so supportive, their coaches such good salesmen, I'd bet it means that with the lonely reality, there's always someone who can make the next place sounds good, wholesome and comfortable. 

CatsbyAZ

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Re: 2022 Transfer Portal
« Reply #503 on: May 09, 2022, 09:00:30 AM »
Pt 4 last

Fox Sports' Brady Quinn:
“And here’s the other issue with right now – the transfer portal – the rule is you get one freebie and then you’d have to lose eligibility, but here’s what happens: these kids days nowadays, between summer school and from what they’ll come in with from high school, they are graduating in three or three and a half years. So they’re on an accelerated path. And what that means is – let’s say I start off at one school my freshman year and I didn’t get any playing time so now I’m in the transfer portal. By junior year I’m balling out and now I’m graduating. Oh, now I get to be a grad transfer. There’s no penalty for me leaving again. So think about that. Based on how it’s currently constructed, these kids can transfer twice if they wanted…it’s fascinating because you can’t move around like that at the NFL level. Think about that. When you sign a contract, which is what these kids are asked to do now at the college level, they commit, they sign their letter of intent, you basically sign like a one year agreement with the school. These kids are able to bounce twice within the timeframe of their letter of intent. You know how many pros wish they had the opportunity to hit free agency twice within a four or five year period? …But the Pac 12 isn’t going to step in. You wanna know why? Because they need Southern Cal to win. They’re irrelevant right now. It’s one of the reason why I picked the under on how many players were going to get drafted out of the Pac 12. No disrespect, but those players on the west coast are largely going somewhere else. They aren’t staying in the Pac 12."


 

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