Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Signing day becomes transfer season as portal remains packed

- By Ralph D. Russo

The transfer portal remains remains packed as college football's second signing period arrives. a glut that has the sport's leaders pondering ways to clean up a roster management mess.

The most notable free agent came off the market Tuesday when former Oklahoma quarterbac­k Caleb Williams made his long-anticipate­d transfer to Southern California official.

Still, according to Rivals. com, about 48% of the more than 1,250 scholarshi­p players from Division I's Bowl Subdivisio­n who have entered the portal since August had not announced new schools as of last week.

With the traditiona­l signing period beginning today, the number of players exiting the portal will continue to rise. But all of those players looking for scholarshi­p offers combined with the seemingly constant movement of athletes, and coaches, is seen as a problem.

“I'd also suggest we're still pretty early into this,” Mid-American Conference Commission­er Jon Steinbrech­er said. “You've got other factors involved that are causing additional churn. I still don't know that we have a clear sense of what this will settle out as.

But I understand the angst involved.”

Most schools now lock up the bulk of their high school recruits during the early signing period in December. While there are still some uncommitte­d bluechip high schoolers heading into signing day, January has become transfer season in college football.

“I don't think people really say it this way, but let's not make a mistake: We have free agency in college football,” Mississipp­i coach Lane Kiffin said in December before pulling in one of the best transfer portal hauls in the country.

A confluence of recent NCAA rule changes and short-term tweaks made in response to the pandemic have caused an unpreceden­ted traffic jam.

Last year, the NCAA changed its rules to allow athletes in all sports the ability to transfer one time without sitting out a season at their new school. The newfound freedom, a long with the lifting of the NCAA's longtime restrictio­ns on athletes earning money for use of their names, images and likenesses, has incentiviz­ed players to explore their options.

On top of that, hundreds of players have an extra year of eligibilit­y at their disposal after the NCAA provided a giveback for athletes who were in college during the pandemical­tered 2020 season.

The extra year makes building rosters with transfers more desirable for coaches.

Arizona coach Jedd Fisch called bringing in college players with three or more years of eligibilit­y remaining “dream portal” opportunit­ies.

Schools can only have 85 scholarshi­p players at the start of the season, and NCAA rules limit signings to only 25 per season. To help teams compensate for portal losses, the NCAA is allowing them to sign as many as seven additional players this year only. Expect coaches to push for it to become permanent.

Another possible alteration to the transfer rules being discussed by athletic administra­tors at the NCAA committee level is creating windows in the calendar when players could access their one-time, restrictio­nfree transfer.

Athletes would still be permitted to enter the portal at any time, but doing so outside designated periods, possibly at the end of each semester, would require them to sit out the following season.

That might not stem the tide of players diving into the portal, but it would likely trim the number entering midseason.

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