Miami Herald (Sunday)

NIL in college football is making a big impact on NFL Draft

- BY SAM FARMER

The shakeup in college football is having an impact on the NFL Draft.

Now that college players can make money on their name, image and likeness, without losing their eligibilit­y, there isn’t the same urgency to leave for the pros.

Many NFL evaluators say that has impacted the Draft, which wrapped up Saturday, in some cases diluting the caliber of players available in the later rounds.

“It’s a real issue,” said a longtime NFL team personnel executive, noting the talent drop was more precipitou­s this year than in prior later rounds.

“People are being talked into staying in college, because you’re making reasonable money, and money that’s newly found, and you’ve got a chance to continue to get better,” CBS college football analyst Rick Neuheisel said. “Coaches can say, ‘You could stay around and go up two rounds next year.’ That’s a lot, if you’re just talking dollars and cents, not to mention the fun of having another year of college.

“There’s not that pressure to be a breadwinne­r from families that are in that socio-economic climate, because you are earning money.”

Noted quarterbac­k evaluator Greg Cosell said it’s a trend that’s going to continue in years to come.

“The lesser kids who research where they’re going to be drafted, because you can research that, are far more likely to stay in college,” Cosell said. “What they’ll do is look for their best opportunit­y to make the most NIL money. Now you’re seeing kids transfer three times, four times, because it’s all about that NIL money.”

That has a reverberat­ing effect on the draft.

Even though the Chicago Bears have spent decades wandering the quarterbac­k desert, looking for their next Sid Luckman, there’s ample reason for optimism with No. 1 pick Caleb Williams.

First, the former USC star is tremendous­ly talented, but he also has some exceptiona­l receivers in Keenan Allen, D.J. Moore and No. 9 selection Rome Odunze.

The shelves are stocked, and that wasn’t the case when the Bears drafted Justin Fields.

In the fourth round Saturday, the Chicago selected Iowa punter Tory Taylor. He told reporters that soon after he was drafted, he got a simple, direct text message from Williams:

“Hey, you’re not going to punt too much.”

Pretty amazing culture that Jim Harbaugh built at Michigan, and it showed with so many teams drafting those Wolverines — including running back Blake Corum to the Rams, and linebacker Junior Colson to Harbaugh’s Chargers.

Beginning with quarterbac­k J.J. McCarthy going to Minnesota with the

10th pick, nine former Michigan players were taken in the first five rounds.

The New Orleans Saints ended the quarterbac­k drought Saturday, by using the 150th pick on South Carolina’s Spencer Rattler.

There were 137 selections made between Denver taking Oregon’s Bo

Nix and the Saints taking Rattler. That was the longest stretch between quarterbac­ks in draft history.

Funny, because the first half of the first round was all about that position. There were six quarterbac­ks drafted among the first 12 picks, tying the six-quarterbac­k record set in 1983.

Rattler has an outstandin­g arm but played behind a porous offensive line last season and forced a lot of throws. That got him into trouble.

He becomes the fifth quarterbac­k on the Saints roster, along with starter Derek Carr, and reserves Jake Haener, Kellen Mond and Nathan Peterman.

Neuheisel said Nix will need to prove he has the cool-under-pressure composure to succeed in the NFL.

“It’s nothing from an athletic standpoint that bothers me,” said Neuheisel, a former college head coach and NFL offensive coordinato­r. “I just see that when the house is burning there’s a panic reflex.

“Whereas the great ones just kind of find their way out of trouble, it’s like they’re superheroe­s putting on a cape — Elway going to the far stretches of the sideline, throwing across the body and everybody’s in wow mode — I see that in Nix, his escape mode is always backwards, and when he throws he throws quickly and sometimes it’s, ‘Oh, no,’ which can result in

turnovers.”

When it comes to headscratc­hing decisions, the Atlanta Falcons retired the trophy when they used the No. 8 pick on Washington quarterbac­k Michael Penix. This after last month signing Kirk Cousins to a four-year deal worth $180 million.

The Falcons could have used help with their pass rush, receivers, offensive line, on and on…

The bright side for them, though, is they’re going to have answers at quarterbac­k. Lots of teams are unable to say the same.

Especially when it comes to late-round selections and rookie free agents, the clearest path to making an NFL roster is often contributi­ng on special teams.

The emphasis on that is even greater now that new kickoff rules are in place for the 2024 NFL season. The new alignment will put the coverage and return teams much closer together at the kick, curtailing those violent collisions when players have long runways before crashing into each other. Touchbacks have become the norm in recent years. Only 22 percent of kickoffs were returned last season.

So there’s even more of a premium on kick returners. Philadelph­ia got at least three excellent ones in cornerback Cooper DeJean (second round), Clemson running back

Will Shipley (fourth) and Texas A&M receiver Ainias Smith (fifth).

The Eagles used a fifthround pick on Clemson linebacker Jeremiah Trotter Jr., 26 years after taking his father in the third.

The elder Trotter is a member of the club’s Hall of Fame.

A pair of Calabasas High teammates are headed to the NFL, and both are receivers. Alabama’s Jermaine Burton was picked in the third round by Cincinnati, and Florida State’s Johnny Wilson went in the sixth to Philadelph­ia.

 ?? JAMIE SABAU Getty Images ?? Quarterbac­k Michael Penix Jr. was drafted by Atlanta.
JAMIE SABAU Getty Images Quarterbac­k Michael Penix Jr. was drafted by Atlanta.

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