The collegiate football roster shuffle

5Mind. The Meme Platform

Once upon a time across our pigskin plain, college football rosters operated on a much simpler playbook and timeline. The senior class either graduated or a player’s athletic eligibility had simply run out.

In most cases, 25 roster spots opened in any given year and were filled with the incoming freshman class that was comprised of high school graduates and their combined verbal/math 700-SAT score.  

Rhodes Scholarship candidates they are not.

Recruiting was focused solely on high school players. Numerous publications – many now long departed – would rank these players and the university teams they hoped to suit up and play for. Now this annual ranking has taken on even more polling given that the transfer portal opens twice a year creating its own recruiting vortex upon the college football landscape.  

Combine the transfer portal with the now ubiquitous NIL, short for Name, Image and Likeness dollars, you need the latest computer software to keep track of all the offseason roster changes that seem to transpire on an almost daily basis.

With Penn State’s home opener against a tenacious Bowling Green squad that allowed the Nittany Lions to escape with a 34-27 victory, a comparison of last year’s final home game flip card roster provided to the media by PSU’s athletic communication office revealed how this year’s opener saw 42 lettermen had returned while 18 were gone including 12 starters. New additions included seven players from the transfer portal who had starting experience with Julian Fleming of Ohio State by way of Southern Columbia being one of them. The Nittany Lions also welcomed 32 incoming freshmen and invited walk-ons that PSU labels run-ons and another eight players that arrived via the transfer portal hoping to find a role in Happy Valley.  

NFL hall of famer and now head college football coach Deion Sanders built an almost entirely new Colorado University football roster through the transfer portal last year in his debut season. That has not changed as Sanders continues to overhaul his roster in his second year in Boulder. The university has a website visited by tens of thousands that tracks the roster changes by the minute like a stock market ticker.

Between unprecedented conference realignments, the transfer portal, historic media broadcast deals worth billions, the expanding college playoff, the wild, untamed world of NIL, and the ever-growing high stakes of positioning one’s schedule (Penn State is already in a bye week even though it is week three of the season), this is not your daddy’s typical college football team and season. 

Nor will it ever be again.

The game and its approach are strictly a business proposition. The money trail is flooded with revenue streams that keep many collegiate athletic programs’ afloat.

At Penn State’s recent media day last month, I asked Special Teams Coordinator Justin Lustig if one of the most beloved storylines in the sport – the walk-on – was still a relevant part of any Division I program. He agreed it was but players today are invited by the coaching staff and are known quantities unlike before when virtual unknowns populated the ranks of the walk-on.

Talk persists that the NCAA is considering putting the brakes with establishing football roster limits that would reduce the number of players on a team from 120 to between 85-95, according to Yahoo Sports. College teams are only allowed a maximum of 85 scholarship players on a roster, which could then jeopardize any room for walk-ons.

There have been plenty of standout players who have once begun their collegiate playing careers as walk-ons. J.J. Watt went from a walk-on at Wisconsin to a future Hall-of-Fame NFL talent. Baker Mayfield was a walk-on at Texas Tech to a Heisman Trophy winner at Oklahoma and eventual No. 1 pick. Stetson Bennett walked on at hometown Georgia and took the Bulldogs to back-to-back national championships.

There are other potential roster changes that could come about as result of this proposal. The roster changes are part of an overhaul of the NCAA that could eventually see colleges paying millions to players yearly.

It sounds absurd but so is a bye week by the third game of the season.

Contact Your Elected Officials
Greg Maresca
Greg Maresca
Greg Maresca is a New York City native and U.S. Marine Corps veteran who writes for TTC. He resides in the Pennsylvania Coal Region. His work can also be found in The American Spectator, NewsBreak, Daily Item, Republican Herald, Standard Speaker, The Remnant Newspaper, Gettysburg Times, Daily Review, The News-Item, Standard Journal and more.

2026: No charge required

Republicans are famous for their ability to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory as those acquainted with history know all too well.

What if Somali Fraud is About More than Votes?

What if Somali public aid abuse is more than vote-buying? Could it be a money-laundering scheme with Democrats and mainstream media skimming profits?

Bioterror Roundup: ‘Vax Pac’

Democrat dark money machine ActBlue opened spigot, urging boosted liberals to “debunk disinformation” by donating to Democrats amid vaccine debates.

The CIA Is Manipulating Trump Against Putin

Russia’s military intelligence shared drone route data with a US attaché, saying it proves the target was Putin’s presidential residence in Novgorod.

Shirley’s Somali Fraud News Story Explodes!

Several days ago we reported on independent journalist Nick Shirley, a 23 year old man who created a viral video exposing the fraud in Minnesota.

Somali Americans Face Audits for Potential Immigration Fraud

Gaining citizenship via fraud is grounds for denaturalization, said a federal official amid investigations into scams in Minnesota.

FBI Thwarts ISIS-Inspired New Year’s Eve Terror Plot in North Carolina

The FBI said it foiled an ISIS-inspired New Year’s Eve terror attack in North Carolina. Suspect Christian Sturdivant, 18, was arrested and charged.

New Year’s Gas Prices 23 Cents Cheaper Than a Year Ago in US

American drivers began the new year with further relief at the gas pump, as national average gasoline prices continued to edge lower.

SBA Suspends 6,900 Minnesota Borrowers Over Potential COVID-19 Loan Fraud

The SBA has suspended 6,900 Minnesota borrowers amid suspected fraudulent activity in the state’s pandemic-era loan programs, SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler said.

Trump Vows to Intervene if Iran Kills Protestors

President Donald Trump on Jan. 2 vowed to come to the aid of protesters in Iran if they are killed by the regime in Tehran.

Trump Says Minnesota Fraud Investigation Only the Start, Suggests Other States Next

President Trump said his administration is going to continue to target alleged social services fraud in Minnesota, but said that it’s worse in other states.

Homeland Security Looks to Fast-Track Demolition of Dilapidated Buildings in DC

DHS is seeking an emergency demolition of historic buildings in the nation’s capital. “This is about safety,“ DHS Asst. Sec. Tricia McLaughlin said.

Trump Hosts Netanyahu at Mar-a-Lago for Bilateral Discussions

President Trump welcomed Israeli PM Netanyahu to Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, on Dec. 29 to discuss Gaza, Iran, Syria, and other matters.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central