06/05/2026
College football is at a crossroads.
For decades, the sport thrived because it was built on tradition, rivalries, school pride, and the unique connection between players, universities, and fan bases. Today, however, the game is changing at a pace that threatens its very foundation.
Let me be clear: I believe players should be able to profit from their Name, Image, and Likeness. If a coach, university, television network, or apparel company can make millions from college football, players deserve an opportunity to benefit as well.
But what we have now isn't a system.
It's chaos.
The transfer portal has essentially created unrestricted free agency. NIL has become recruiting inducement in many cases. Rosters are rebuilt every offseason. Coaches are forced to spend as much time retaining their own players as they do recruiting new ones. Fans struggle to form connections with athletes who may be gone a year later.
What college football desperately needs is leadership.
The sport needs a commissioner.
Not a conference commissioner. Not another committee. One commissioner with the authority to establish and enforce rules that apply across the sport.
A commissioner could help create:
• Standardized transfer windows
• Clear NIL regulations
• Revenue-sharing guidelines
• Contract structures for players
• Competitive balance measures
• Uniform eligibility standards
• Enforcement mechanisms with real consequences
Most importantly, college football needs a collective bargaining agreement between the athletes and the institutions. The reality is that players are no longer operating in the same environment that existed ten years ago. The rules must evolve to reflect that reality while still protecting the traditions that make college football special.
Without structure, the gap between the richest programs and everyone else will continue to grow. Smaller schools will become little more than developmental programs for larger schools. Rivalries, loyalty, and continuity will continue to erode.
As for who should lead it?
I believe Nick Saban would be an outstanding choice.
He understands the old model. He understands the new model. He commands respect from coaches, administrators, television executives, and players alike. More importantly, he's one of the few voices in the sport who has consistently spoken about preserving college football while adapting to change.
The goal shouldn't be to turn back the clock.
The goal should be to save college football from becoming something its fans no longer recognize.
Because if we don't establish leadership and structure soon, NIL and the transfer portal won't destroy the game overnight.
They'll slowly change it into something entirely different.
And that would be a loss for everyone who loves college football.