The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Transfer time: New rule brings free agency

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Ideally, Florida State coach Mike Norvell will never need to build his team this way again.

The Seminoles have 14 transfers with more than 330 games of college experience on the roster after going 3-6 in Norvell’s first year in Tallahasse­e.

When Florida State opens its season Sunday night at home against No. 9 Notre Dame, the ‘Noles’ could have as many as six players who were at other schools last year in the starting lineup.

“I think a lot of it had to do with kind of where we were in the moment. We came off last year when we were the youngest team in college football. I mean, there’s been quite a bit of change around our program,” Norvell told The Associated Press.

This season will be the first since the NCAA tweaked its rules to give all football players the freedom to transfer once in their careers and be immediatel­y eligible to play at their new school — no questions asked.

After years of incrementa­l steps to loosen restrictio­ns around transfers, full-on college football free agency is here. Teams can now revamp rosters and bolster depth charts in a manner similar to the way it is done in the NFL.

No team has more riding on transfers this season than Florida State, though there are others. Michigan State’s second-year head coach, Mel Tucker, brought a bunch of new players into the program via the portal and had about a dozen go out. Kansas also has a dozen transfers on the roster for new coach Lance Leipold, who lured several of his players from Buffalo to Lawrence.

But Tucker and Leipold are not facing the same win-now pressure as Norvell. The once-mighty Seminoles have had three straight losing seasons and two head coaches since Jimbo Fisher left for Texas A&M at the end of the 2017 season.

The instabilit­y has taken a toll on recruiting and led to roster attrition. Facing another year of relying on inexperien­ced players to quickly blossom, Norvell decided Florida State didn’t just need an influx of talent. It needed veteran leadership and players who understand what it takes to compete at the highest levels of college football.

“And I’m excited to see how it’s all going to come together,” Norvell said.

Among the most notable additions: Former UCF quarterbac­k McKenzie Milton, who led the Knights through two unbeaten regular seasons before a gruesome leg injury nearly ended his career in 2018; Georgia

defensive end Jermaine Johnson; and Notre Dame guard Dillan Gibbons.

Norvell told the new guys he needed them to be assertive and to set the tone when it came to practice, preparatio­n and work ethic.

“I don’t take that lightly,” Johnson said. “He’s trusting me with an incredible role. My teammates trust me with an incredible role every day.”

If Florida State is to once again become an elite program that can rival Clemson in the Atlantic Coast Conference, it will need to get there through recruiting. There are positive signs on that front. Florida State currently holds 18 verbal commitment­s for the class of 2022, a group ranked 10th in the country by 247 Sports’ composite ratings.

But there is a chickenand-egg aspect to recruiting. To win, coaches need to recruit well. To recruit well, coaches need to win.

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