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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

January 2, 2026

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The NCAA promised calmer waters with new transfer portal rules, but the chaos—and the spending—has only intensified.

Meanwhile, Miami, Oregon, Indiana, and Ole Miss have all punched their tickets to next weekend’s College Football Playoff semifinals.

—Amanda Christovich and Meredith Turits

Football Transfer Portal Chaos Continues Despite New Rules

Danny Wild-Imagn Images

On Dec. 30, the football transfer portal was still a few days from opening. But the head of a power conference school’s NIL collective was already pacing outside in his backyard, taking nonstop calls about an ever-changing football roster. “I’m on the phone almost every minute of the day and into the midnight hour of the night—abandoning our families and friends,” the collective’s head said. Another collective head said they had close to 100 unread text messages by 11 a.m. one morning this week.

A shorter transfer portal window and new restrictions on athlete pay, thanks to the House v. NCAA settlement, were billed as ways to calm the chaotic football transfer portal—the notification system college athletes use to declare their intention to leave for a new program. 

But this year, the portal window is expected to be as wild as ever—and the price tags have never been higher.

Agents have been sending “grocery lists” of players planning to hit the portal Friday to NIL collective heads, the second head said. Already, more than two dozen quarterbacks reportedly plan to hit the portal, and the collective heads told Front Office Sports that players on teams still competing in the Playoff are on these lists, too. The coaching carousel has contributed, too, with players following their coaches out the door.

In many cases, schools are putting together football rosters that cost well over $20 million—including a combination of rev-share and guaranteed NIL opportunities for players. That second collective head noted the compensation packages include name, image, and likeness deals offering cars and luxury apartment rentals worth tens of thousands of dollars.

Shrinking Windows

This past fall, the NCAA implemented a few changes to the transfer portal window. Last year, there were two windows for football. The first opened in December, running from Dec. 9–28, and the second ran from April 16–25. But this year, there’s only one window: Jan. 2–16.

The elimination of the spring portal window will undoubtedly ease the burden come April. But coaches have continued to lament having to re-recruit their entire rosters, as players can still transfer as many times as they want without penalty. 

And the timing still causes major issues.

The second collective head told FOS they actually preferred the December timing, given that it lined up with the academic calendar. Now, players who enter the portal will be arriving at their new schools mid-semester, causing a host of logistical problems. 

The first head, on the other hand, said the January portal window still wasn’t moved far enough to accommodate Playoff programs. “If you’re in a Playoff—God knows what they’re doing,” they said. “The better your team is, the bigger chance you have to lose in the portal unless you have a robust infrastructure.” 

The portal window also incentivized coaches to abandon ship before their seasons ended. Before the CFP even began, Tulane, JMU, and Ole Miss all learned their head coaches would be departing (or, in the case of Ole Miss, already had). That also impacts players, who in many cases follow coaches to new campuses. (The NCAA also revised a rule allowing players to transfer after their coach leaves, shortening the window from 30 days to 15 and making them wait until a new coach has been hired.)

Ballooning Budgets

The House v. NCAA settlement was supposed to create new guardrails for athlete compensation. It allows all Division I schools to pay up to $20.5 million to players in revenue-sharing across the athletic department and requires third-party NIL deals to be scrutinized to ensure they aren’t “pay-for-play” in disguise. 

The revenue-sharing only raised the floor for athlete compensation, as the new College Sports Commission lacks the power to enforce rules regarding pay-for-play NIL deals. Schools can bring players third-party NIL deals beyond the revenue-sharing cap. To do that, schools and collectives can source legitimate deals for players, from endorsements to event appearances, as if they were agents themselves—and schools can add that as part of the overall compensation package.

“The idea that the House settlement was going to help this space was absolutely asinine,” the first collective head said.

For power conference football rosters, the magic number is $25 million, according to the two heads—though one described the number as the bare minimum, with some programs reaching $35 million, and the other said it’s what it could take to be successful in the postseason. (Some of the top quarterbacks in the portal are reportedly asking for as much as $4 million to $5 million this year.)

Some schools are attempting to include buyout clauses or damages if players decide to leave before their contracts expire. But because of the volatility of the portal, the vast majority of deals continue to just be one-year contracts. After all, they expect to have to do this all again next year.

SPONSORED BY TICKPICK

Inside the CFP Ticket Market

The College Football Playoff is full of big storylines—and so is the ticket market. New TickPick data reveals where fans are paying premiums, where prices have dropped, and which quarterfinal is trending hottest heading into the big bowl games.

In the first round, Miami–Texas A&M commanded a $684 average price, nearly 289% higher than JMU-Oregon. Quarterfinal prices shift the story: Ohio State–Miami was the most expensive ticket early on, but the get-in price for yesterday’s game fell to $103, while Ole Miss–Georgia was the only game trending up (+31%).

Front Office Sports breaks down demand by matchup and documents the price swings in this week’s trend report, presented by TickPick.

Use code FOS10 for $10 off $99+ when you download the TickPick app.

Miami’s CFP Run Nets $14M So Far—and Canes Keep It All

The Columbus Dispatch

No. 10 Miami earned far more than just bragging rights by upsetting No. 2 Ohio State 24-14 in the Cotton Bowl on New Year’s Eve. The Hurricanes will also walk away with $6 million in College Football Playoff prize money for advancing to the CFP semifinals, bringing their total prize money from this year’s postseason to $14 million. 

While the CFP distributes those funds to conferences, the ACC will give Miami the full amount, Front Office Sports confirmed Thursday. 

Playoff Payoff

Every year, the CFP distributes more than $100 million in prize payouts to conferences based on how far their respective teams advance. This year, schools can earn up to $20 million each for their conferences.

For every team that made it into the 12-team field, conferences receive $4 million this year. They received another $4 million for making it to the quarterfinals. The payouts go up to $6 million for making it to the semifinals and national championship. (Notre Dame also gets these same prize payouts and keeps them all for itself; the Irish went all the way to the championship last year, but this year missed the Playoff.)

Conferences can distribute payouts as they see fit. The ACC will allow the Hurricanes to keep all $14 million they’ve earned so far, FOS confirmed Thursday. Miami will also be able to keep the $3 million it receives in Playoff travel expenses for each round.

New Incentives

The ACC’s distribution system is part of the conference’s new success incentives program, which ACC presidents voted on in May 2023. The program allows schools to earn extra conference revenue based on their performance in postseason tournaments in football and men’s and women’s basketball—all of which distribute prize payouts.

The ACC also offers success initiatives based on television ratings—a stipulation of the conference’s settlement with FSU and Clemson in 2024 that resolved litigation resulting from the two schools exploring leaving the conference.

The ACC’s success incentives have been discussed as a model for other conferences, particularly as conference realignment has made conferences bigger, while few marquee brands often continue to earn the lion’s share of revenue for all of the schools.

$6 Million Prize

The first game on New Year’s Day—the Orange Bowl between No. 4 Texas Tech and No. 5 Oregon—also yielded an upset as the Ducks knocked out the Red Raiders behind a dominant defense. Top-seeded Indiana cruised past No. 9 Alabama in the Rose Bowl, despite a major rainstorm in Pasadena before kickoff. And No. 3 Georgia fell to No. 6 Ole Miss in the Sugar Bowl. 

The semifinal slate: Miami vs. Ole Miss on Jan. 8 in the Fiesta Bowl, and Oregon vs. Indiana in the Peach Bowl on Jan. 9. 

The CFP awards $6 million for each team that makes the semifinals.

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS LIVE

Don’t Miss This in 2026

In 2025, Front Office Sports brought the energy. 

We hit the Super Bowl, the Hamptons, the Times Center, the New York Stock Exchange, and more—hosting 14 events that connected more than 4,000 leaders across sports, entertainment, media, tech, and finance.

From college athletics and NIL (name, image, and likeness) to private equity, media rights, and women’s sports, we broke down the hottest topics in sports and brought out some of the biggest names in the industry for conversations, cocktails, and friendly competitions.

In 2026, we’ll be running back favorites like Breakfast Ball, Huddle in the Hamptons, Tuned In, and Asset Class—plus, new events to be announced. 

Sign up for Front Office Sports Live email updates and follow us on LinkedIn to be the first to know about new events, programming updates, and exclusive offers to attend. 

Don’t miss your chance to connect, learn, and lead in 2026.

NHL Winter Classic

What It Takes to Pull Off Florida’s First Outdoor NHL Game

NHL/Fanatics

MIAMI — On Friday, the puck will drop on the first-ever outdoor NHL game in Florida. loanDepot park, home of the Marlins, will host the Rangers and Panthers for the 2026 NHL Winter Classic, one of the league’s two signature annual outdoor events.

Miami? Yes.

“Many years ago, the answer was, ‘Are you guys crazy? It’s Florida,’” NHL EVP of events Dean Matsuzaki tells FOS. “But with some of the technology that has come a long way … gradually, the confidence got more and more to further exploring going into Florida.”

The league has spent a year getting comfortable with the ballpark and figuring out what it will uniquely need to hold an outdoor hockey game in a city where the average January temperature is about 76 degrees.

First, air conditioning in the 37,000-seat venue enables them to construct the rink in a temperature-controlled environment, with the roof closed; plus, the synthetic-turf field allows the ballpark to have a rink sit on it for weeks without destroying the baseball playing surface.

The NHL crew is also bringing two 300-ton ice plants—the refrigeration vehicles that cool ice rinks—instead of one, and also laying a thicker sheet of ice than usual. They have also found new ways to push water off the ice instead of trying to freeze it in by using plow attachments on ice-crew vehicles to help temper excess moisture.

There’s lots more. FOS’s Meredith Turits wrote about how the NHL is pulling off its Winter Classic in South Florida.

Editors’ Picks

Lane Kiffin Earns $500K Bonus From Ole Miss Win Over Georgia

by Daniel Roberts and Amanda Christovich
LSU is paying Kiffin’s full bonus structure from his Ole Miss contract.

The Pac-12 Shrank to Pac-2. In 2026, It Returns With 9 Members

by Amanda Christovich
The league was decimated in 2023 during a vicious round of realignment.

College Football GMs Became Must-Have in 2025

by David Rumsey
College front offices got corporatized in 2025.

Question of the Day

Do you think the NCAA’s new transfer portal rules have reduced the chaos in college football?

 YES   NO 

Wednesday’s result: 0.2% of respondents think no NFL coaches will be fired on Black Monday. 18.2% think it will be 1–2. 56.8% think it will be 3–4. And 24.8% think it will be more than 4.

Advertise Awards Learning Events Video Show
Written by Amanda Christovich, Meredith Turits
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Matthew Tabeek

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