Nobody said it was easy
From The GIST College Sports (hi@thegistsports.com)
Welcome back!
Today we’re continuing our deep dive into the transfer portal by examining the good and the bad about free agency (NCAA’s Version).
- But first, an FYI: We’ll miss you on Friday as we celebrate the long Fourth of July weekend. Catch you back here post-barbecue.
— Dan Hurley, head coach (HC) of the reigning back-to-back national champion UConn men’s basketball team, commenting on the transfer portal’s downside. PSA: No matter what you think of the portal, you should definitely change your underwear every day.
The Great Portal Debate
👍 The pros
The GIST: Like it or not, the transfer portal is here to stay. But with the debate still raging about its effect on athletes and college sports in general, it’s crucial to understand all sides of the portal’s impact. Let’s start with what supporters like about the portal:
💪 Athlete empowerment: As discussed on Monday, it was way harder for athletes to transfer schools before 2018. By opening up and simplifying the process, the portal has given student-athletes significantly more power over their college education and playing careers, allowing them to seek the best opportunities and fit as their needs evolve.
- Whether that means chasing a more lucrative NIL payday, proactively choosing their coach, or simply moving closer to home, student-athletes are no longer trapped in situations that aren’t serving them.
🌱 Growth opportunities: Allowing players to hunt the best available team, competition, and scholarship opportunity isn’t inherently bad. Athletes who didn’t have elite options out of high school can later develop and improve to the point that their dream team comes knocking — and why shouldn’t they level up?
- Take last season’s breakout men’s basketball star Dalton Knecht, who went from a virtual unknown at Northern Colorado to powerhouse Tennessee’s overnight sensation and last week’s No. 17 pick in the NBA Draft. An epic glow-up.
👭 Reloading rosters: NCAA dynasties no longer need to rise and fall with superstar classes — top-tier teams can replace graduating seniors with portal talent to stay competitive year after year. Case in point? Oklahoma softball, who graduated nearly half its 2024 roster and must reload from the portal to take aim at their fifth straight natty.
👎 The cons
The GIST: Despite all those benefits, the portal has some serious trade-offs, too. Here are a few of the reasons critics are wary of the non-stop transfer train.
😵💫Roster management: The portal creates ongoing, unique challenges for coaching staffs, who must balance traditional recruiting with portal pick-ups — not to mention contending with the ever-present threat of bolting players. Add in the delicate dance of avoiding impermissible contact, tampering, and inducements, and roster management has become a massive undertaking.
- HC legends like Villanova men’s basketball’s Jay Wright and Alabama football’s Nick Saban cited the lethal combo of the portal and NIL incentives as part of their motivation to retire. Not everyone wants to be HC and roster math lady.
🎯 Poaching and parity: The flipside of individuals’ aforementioned growth moves is the damage to the programs they leave behind. It’s exceptionally difficult for smaller, less affluent schools to compete when their homegrown stars seek bigger, richer pastures, further deepening the NCAA’s have and have-not divide.
🤑 NIL chasing: Elite athletes transferring to bank more NIL money has become standard practice, and whether that’s good or bad depends on how you feel about players prioritizing finances over program loyalty. But in an NCAA culture with deep roots in tradition and devotion to one’s alma mater, bailing for bigger bucks can leave a bitter taste in fans’ mouths.
- This also compounds the poaching and parity problem, since the most prestigious programs have more financial resources to lure top athletes than the rest of the collegiate pack.
👋 Character-building: Both coaches and players are incentivized to constantly seek the next best thing, which means they could fail to invest in what’s already in front of them. As Texas women’s basketball director of player development Sydney Carter says, “Transferring is not always the answer.”
- “[Having] discipline and perseverance through times when you’ve reached adversity is only gonna build that character up for you later on in life,” she explained. “Don’t run from things being hard, and learn how to handle hard, because life is hard.”
⏭️ What’s next
The GIST: College sports are in their reinvention era, and the transfer portal is no exception, so we’re eyeing the following as the landscape continues to shift.
Window shortens for revenue sports: Last Tuesday, the Division I Council approved a proposal to decrease transfer portal windows for football and women’s and men’s basketball from 45 days to 30. The goal? To “[provide] coaches with more information about roster stability before students leave campus at the end of the academic year.” The council could officially enact the change in October.
Conference realignment alters athlete experience: Former Pac-12 athletes will soon find themselves regularly traveling cross-country for conference games, potentially degrading their college experience and jeopardizing their academics — likely triggering more transfers.
- Arizona State softball player and LA native Shannon Cunningham’s viral August 2023 X post demonstrates how realignment will strain some athletes. As new Big 12 members, Cunningham’s Sun Devils could have to travel as far as Orlando, FL, to play UCF next season.
NCAA seeks congressional NIL help: College sports’ organizing body is hoping to leave the governing to Congress as the NIL/transfer portal dynamic spins out of its control. Whether legislators step in or not, the NCAA is taking action to reign in the portal’s perceived negative effects as we speak.
⭐ The year’s biggest transfers
The GIST: Some massive names have rocked the college sports world with portal jumps in the last academic year — here’s who could most impact their new squads in 2024–25.
🏀 Hailey Van Lith, LSU to TCU: Just one season after leaving Louisville for LSU, women’s hooper (and soon-to-be Olympian) Van Lith is on the move again — this time to the Horned Frogs, where she hopes to sharpen her skills and increase her 2025 WNBA Draft stock. After last season’s injury-induced disaster, TCU could certainly use her.
🏈 Dillon Gabriel, Oklahoma to Oregon: Another two-time transfer, Gabriel left the Sooners’s gridiron after two standout seasons. The Heisman hopeful was a top-10 quarterback in last year’s crowded field, and he’ll be crucial to Oregon’s game plan as they try to fill a Bo Nix–shaped hole.
🥎 NiJaree Canady, Stanford to TBD: Softball’s reigning Player of the Year is the best pitcher in the game, and with two years of eligibility left, she can pretty much go wherever she wants — programs will be salivating to have her in their circle. Hey, rumor has it that Oklahoma is looking for talent…
🏀 Everyone from Kentucky men’s basketball: HC John Calipari’s bombshell exit from the blue blood program triggered a mass exodus from Lexington as several Kentucky players followed him to new home Arkansas. New HC Mark Pope has been diligently filling the roster with portal talent, but time will tell if he can stabilize the squad and meet Big Blue Nation’s sky-high expectations.
🏈 Everyone from Colorado football…again: The Deion Sanders Experience continues: The Buffs’ sometimes controversial but always charismatic HC is rebuilding his roster nearly from scratch for the second straight year. Whether it pays off this time will be one of the season’s most intriguing storylines.
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Here’s what has The GIST team currently hyped:
🎧 What to listen to
Last year's episode of The GIST of It, in which co-hosts Ellen Hyslop and Steph Rotz break down the transfer portal’s pros and cons. We’ve got you covered in audio form, too.
🎶 What to obsess over
Normani’s new album. The pop icon, who’s dating Seattle Seahawks star DK Metcalf, has created the perfect soundtrack for your next workout or dance-off.
🇺🇸 Who to watch
The Walsh sisters. The Virginia swimmers are making big waves as the first sisters to compete for Team USA since 1948. Plus, their Sporti swimwear collection is a poolside must.
Today's email was brought to you by Katie Kehoe Foster and Briana Ekanem. Fact checking by Mikaela Perez. Ops by Lisa Minutillo and Elisha Gunaratnam. Ads by Katie Kehoe Foster and Alessandra Puccio. Managing edits by Dee Lab. Head of Content Ellen Hyslop.