NCAA Football Roster Management, Part 1: Quick Takes
How do you distribute NIL and shared revenue funds in a modern NCAA Football roster? Note: this is the first in a four-part series from longtime OTE reader and commenter ProveIt on roster management, revenue sharing, and NIL distribution in our new era of college football. One of these will run every couple days for […]
ORLANDO, FLORIDA - DECEMBER 31: Bryce Underwood #19 of the Michigan Wolverines warms up before the 2025 Cheez-It Citrus Bowl between the Texas Longhorns and Michigan Wolverines at Camping World Stadium on December 31, 2025 in Orlando, Florida. (Photo by Dustin Markland/Getty Images) | Getty Images How do you distribute NIL and shared revenue funds in a modern NCAA Football roster? Note: this is the first in a four-part series from longtime OTE reader and commenter ProveIt on roster management, revenue sharing, and NIL distribution in our new era of college football.
One of these will run every couple days for the next week or two. I’m very grateful to ProveIt for helping us out in the doldrum months. If YOU’D like to have articles like this published, feel free to email them to minnesotawildcat at gmail dot com — I may have a little back-and-forth if needed, but I’ll get them polished up and published here.
And, if you’re interested in writing more full-time for OTE, please feel free to contact me at that same email. —MNW ESPN investigated P4 player compensation by position: College football 2025: How much does each position cost? It is a small sampling of 20 P4 agents and programs.
These only provide ranges of what programs say they will typically offer, and what agents claim they expect to get for their clients. It ignores outliers like Michigan QB Bryce Underwood and OSU’s transfer portal RB Quinshon Judkins. Statements made on the record by agents tend to exaggerate the compensation to push the market up.
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