Transfer Portal Will Only Get Bigger, However … 22 Thoughts For 2022, No. 17

The transfer portal will be a bigger and more prominent part of college football, and that’s a problem. 22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 17

22 College Football Thoughts for 2022, No. 17: The transfer portal will only get bigger and more prominent, and that’s going to be a problem.


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22 College Football Thoughts For 2022

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17. The transfer portal will only become more important. However …

Don’t be stunned if the NCAA comes up with a way to clamp down a bit on how easy it is for the players to move around.

The NCAA and Mark Emmert might be going all Chicken Little on the Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals, but that’s one cat that’s not going back into the bag. However, what they can start to work on and tweak is the transfer portal that might be a positive overall, but quickly went rogue.

Here’s the problem – now everyone has to recruit players from other schools all the time, all while coaches have to keep wooing their own guys. And if you’re not pinging around to see who might not be totally happy at whether they’re at, you’re not doing your job.

The transfer portal is the new recruiting. Outside of the elite prospects, why mess around with a guess when you can bring in ready-made men ready to play?

You ready to have some transfer portal fun? Wait until the depth charts start to come out – if they come out.

That’s like a list of Glengarry leads for a salesman – every No. 2 on the chart, especially at quarterback, will be offered the world. But coaches are going to wise up to this fast.

Get ready for this phrase over and over again …

“We’ll settle it in fall camp.”

You have to be insane if you come out with a depth chart that say anything but OR after every player’s name.

I’m a full proponent of players’ rights in every way, shape, and form, but on this I do get how there has to be something to tone this down, because it’s not fair.

It’s not fair to the coaches, it’s not fair to the players who might transfer to a school for an opportunity only to get shoved out when someone else wants to transfer in, and it’s not fair to the entire process when the big schools can go vulture away the best players from the smaller ones.

Oh yeah, and there’s that silly little thing about, you know, college. Yeah, go play football and go have fun, but maybe do a little of that learning thing along the way. That goes all out the window when players transfer just so they might be able to see the football field.

So how does this get fixed? Does it need to be fixed, since regular students can transfer at any time, so why not football players?

Maybe limit the number of transfers a school can bring in to be eligible for a given year. Maybe limit the transfer time to a fixed number of weeks – but make sure it’s not set up so players can get screwed over by depth chart manipulation.

Maybe limit the number of games a transfer can play – if a kid wants to actually go to a school to go to school, then not getting to play a few games shouldn’t matter. But, of course, that’s totally naive.

Where this gets even trickier is with the NIL deals. If a kid has a deal, and he’s all of a sudden the second string quarterback, then the entire world changes and moves will be based on whatever contracts and deals are set up and which states have the right rules to keep it all going.

But for now, the changes will likely come flying fast and furious very, very soon.

Pray for the coaches who’ll spend way too much time trying to keep everyone happy, and God bless those poor souls who keep putting out a print version of a preview that – thanks to the on-the-fly changes – will be worthless the second it’s off the presses.

Speaking of stealing talent …

22 College Football Thoughts For 2022
22, College football is changing, and it’s okay
21, Texas & Oklahoma, you really want the SEC?
20. SEC is really, really good if you like it or not
19. James Madison, welcome to the show
18. Sun Belt is the cool conference

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2022 College Football Schedules: All 131 Teams

Lakers player grades: L.A. gets outmanned by Utah Jazz

With LeBron James, the lakers were just too ill-equipped to give themselves a chance to beat the Jazz in Salt Lake City.

Without LeBron James once again, the Los Angeles Lakers fought hard against the Utah Jazz, but they simply lacked the firepower and manpower to mount a serious challenge on Thursday.

At times, L.A. looked competitive, as it did some things somewhat well, but it never held a lead in 48 minutes at Vivant Arena in Salt Lake City and ended up losing 122-109.

Yet again, defense was where the Lakers fell short, as they allowed Utah to shoot 51.1 percent from the field and Donovan Mitchell to score 29 points with seven assists in 32 minutes.

Perhaps James and even Anthony Davis will return tomorrow when the Lakers play the New Orleans Pelicans at home, but each loss is extremely costly at this point.

Kliff Kingsbury says A.J. Green ‘definitely’ could return in 2022

“I think another year in our system, Kyler and him building his relationship, will be really good,” Kingsbury said at the NFL annual meeting.

The Arizona Cardinals have not made any significant moves in free agency at wide receiver. Christian Kirk signed with the Jacksonville Jaguars and A.J. Green is still unsigned. They brought in former Cowboys and Seahawks wideout Malik Turner, but there has been no movement beyond that.

Arizona Sports’ John Gambadoro has reported there is interest in re-signing Green. Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury confirms this notion.

According to AZCentral Sports’ Bob McManaman, Kingsbury, at the NFL annual meeting this week, said Green “definitely” could be back in 2022.

He sees it as a positive thing.

“We love what he brought to us last year,” he said, “and I think another year in our system, Kyler and him building his relationship, will be really good.”

Green was both better than expected and also frustrating. He had 54 receptions for 848 yards and three scores. It was his best season since 2017. He made big plays. He also was the reason for the loss against the Green Bay Packers when he didn’t turn around in the end zone, and his effort on the field sometimes looked less than ideal.

But if he returns, he does give the Cardinals a great option outside opposite DeAndre Hopkins, allowing Rondale Moore to be used in the slot.

Kingsbury has consistently sounded like a coach who wanted more Green. He lamented not using him more.

The Cardinals have focused on re-signing their own free agents. Adding Green again makes sense, even if it isn’t a popular move.

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Report: Cowboys’ Jerry Jones has paid $3M to woman in paternity claim; she asked for $20M to stay quiet

The 25-year-old has said she doesn’t want money from Jones, but the owner’s lawyers paint a very different picture of Alexandra Davis. | From @Cdburnett7 and @ToddBrock24f7

The 25-year-old woman at the center of a paternity lawsuit filed against Jerry Jones has claimed that she is not seeking money from the Cowboys owner.

But three weeks after the case became public, ESPN’s Don Van Natta Jr. is reporting that Jones’s lawyer claims Alexandra Davis has already received nearly $3 million over the years. That money was used to pay for her full college tuition, a sport utility vehicle, a “Sweet 16” birthday party, and trips abroad.

But it’s just a drop in the bucket compared to the $20 million that a dissatisfied Davis reportedly asked Jones for, with the promise of remaining silent about her alleged identity as the billionaire’s daughter.

Don Jack is the Little Rock, Arkansas lawyer representing Jones.

“On numerous occasions I have made payments on behalf of Mr. Jones to Cindy and Alex Davis,” Jack said in a statement to ESPN.

The first payment came in 1995, when Jack struck an agreement on Jones’s behalf with Cynthia Spencer Davis to pay her $375,000 and provide monthly child support payments out of two trusts “which ultimately totaled over $2 million,” he said.

Jones has not acknowledged Davis as his biological daughter; a condition of the payouts (two more lump sum payments are due when Davis turns 26 and 28) has been that Davis not try to establish legal paternity.

Now Davis has requested for the court to revoke the agreement. Her lawyer has insisted that she is not seeking money, but is instead asking that Davis be allowed to name Jones on her birth certificate as her true father.

Jack tells a different story, though, recalling a dinner with Davis and her mother at a Dallas area restaurant several years ago.

“In that meeting, Alex read to me a personal letter she had drafted to Jerry Jones in which she expressed her dissatisfaction with what she had received and sought $20 million,” Jack said. “She stated that if that amount was paid, she would not bother Mr. Jones again and would keep their relationship confidential.”

Neither Jack nor a Jones spokesperson could provide proof of that letter, Van Natta reports.

This week, though, Jones asked for a judge to dismiss the lawsuit, claiming that Davis is a part of “multiple monetary extortion attempts” against the Cowboys owner.

Jack told ESPN that Davis and her mother have repeatedly asked for additional money and other expenses over the years, exceeding the trust payouts by nearly $1 million dollars.

Those expenses included $33,000 for a “Sweet 16” birthday party that was featured on Big Rich Texas (Davis and her mother appeared on the reality series), a Range Rover, Davis’s four years at SMU, a $24,000 trip abroad for Davis after graduation, and a $25,000 Christmas trip for Davis and her mother to Paris.

“This clearly demonstrates that money has always been the ultimate goal here,” Jones spokesperson Jim Wilkinson said. “And sadly this is just one part of a more broad calculated and concerted effort that has been going on for some time by multiple people with various different agendas.”

One of those people may be Shy Anderson, the now-ex-husband of Charlotte Jones, Jerry’s daughter and chief brand officer of the Cowboys.

As the former couple goes through a “contentious divorce battle,” Anderson has been instructed to preserve documents “to determine whether a conspiracy exists among yourself and others” in several different areas of Jones family and Cowboys team interests, including communications Anderson may have had with Davis and her mother.

According to Wilkinson, Davis’s lawyer invoked the name of two high-salaried Cowboys players at a meeting between the two sides in early March.

“If you want this just to go away,” lawyer Andrew Bergman said, as per Wilkinson, “it’s going to cost you Zeke or Dak money.”

Bergman denies that claim, countering that Jones lawyer Levi McCathern was adamant that the Cowboys owner would never allow Davis to be portrayed as part of the Jones family.

“They said, ‘What does she want?'” Bergman said. “And I said she wants to establish parentage, and Jerry can do it cooperatively or not. Levi said Jerry’s not going to do that because of Mama Gene. Levi said Jerry said Alex will never be part of our family in a picture when we raise money for the Salvation Army.”

Jones’s side maintains those words were never spoken.

A Thursday hearing to determine if the original file would remain sealed was canceled after Jones’s lawyers withdrew the request.

The next steps in the rollercoaster case are unknown at this time.

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Standout in-state OL set for two Clemson visits next week

Clemson is showing interest in a standout in-state offensive lineman who is set for a couple of visits to campus next week. Dorman High School (Roebuck, S.C.)’s D.J. Geth – a 6-foot-6, 310-pound junior in the 2023 class – plans to take in the …

Clemson is showing interest in a standout in-state offensive lineman who is set for a couple of visits to campus next week.

Dorman High School (Roebuck, S.C.)’s D.J. Geth – a 6-foot-6, 310-pound junior in the 2023 class – plans to take in the Tigers’ spring practice on Monday, then will make a second trip to Tiger Town for the spring game on Saturday, April 9.

“I will be visiting Clemson during my spring break for a practice,” he said. “I am planning on going to the spring game, too, and I am really looking forward to that to feel that experience!”

Geth is teammates at Dorman with fellow class of 2023 offensive lineman Markee Anderson, who received an offer from Clemson last September, and the two are good friends.

Though the Tigers haven’t yet offered Geth, he is garnering interest from Thomas Austin and has been communicating with Clemson’s new offensive line coach.

Geth, who plays tackle at Dorman, intrigues Austin and the Tigers with his ability to man multiple positions on the O-line and his potential as a center.

“I’ve been talking to Coach Austin,” Geth said. “I’ve been hearing they really like me and how versatile I am. They like me at center, too.”

Geth is building a solid bond with Austin and said “it feels awesome” to be attracting attention from a school like Clemson.

“I love the feeling,” he added, “and me and Coach Austin have a pretty good relationship, he’s a good coach! He’s a cool, chill coach.”

Geth made visits to Coastal Carolina and LSU in March and is slated visit Louisville on Sunday, while he’s planning to visit Appalachian State as well. App State, Coastal Carolina and Louisville have all offered him, along with Georgia State, UNC Charlotte, Marshall, Old Dominion, South Florida, Tulane, James Madison and Delaware State.

The recruiting process is starting to pick up for Geth, who is also getting interest from schools such as LSU, Georgia and NC State, along with Clemson.

Geth grew up a fan of the Tigers, so an offer from Clemson, should he receive one in the future, would obviously mean a lot to him.

“I like how many of their players make it to the next level,” he said of what stands out to him about Clemson’s program, “and I know they care a lot (about) their players and want them to do good!”

Geth, who competed at the Dabo Swinney Camp last summer, also visited Clemson for the UConn game last November.

He’s the son of Ed Geth, who played basketball at North Carolina and was a member of the Tar Heels’ 1993 national championship team.

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Malik Willis agrees that the Panthers need a starting QB

A pretty important person involved with the 2022 NFL draft thinks the Panthers should pick a worthwhile QB. And that pretty important person is Malik Willis.

Not since the heyday of Cam Newton have the Carolina Panthers been relevant. It’s been three years of just 15 wins, seven different starting quarterbacks and a limitless supply of misery.

So, this franchise needs more than just a stable presence under center.

It needs energy. It needs excitement. It needs hope.

Luckily—that energy, that excitement and that hope could be available to them very soon. And, coincidentally, it can all come in one dynamic—and very aware—package.

Through an impressive string of performances this offseason—from the Senior Bowl to the NFL Scouting Combine to his pro day—Liberty University’s Malik Willis has gained enough steam to move into consideration for the Panthers’ first-round pick. He’s also, apparently, moved into the Panthers’ Twittersphere . . .

Perhaps the most polarizing quarterback class in recent memory, the 2022 crop of prospects really hasn’t had a clear-cut No. 1 emerge among them. That’s why a decent segment of the Carolina faithful, like our friend James up there, believes it’s not particularly wise to spend the sixth overall selection on a passer.

And while that argument may hold some merit, Matt Rhule’s reign atop the organization holds even less. Due primarily to his follies at evaluating the quarterback position, Rhule has driven the Panthers to two straight uninspiring five-win campaigns and has his back up against the wall in 2022.

So even though Willis—like his fellow soon-to-be draftees—isn’t a surefire bet, he may be the best one this team has left. Plus, not only does he have the sky-high potential and sparkling personality—but he has some slick Twitter fingers to boot.

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