This is where to post any NFL or NCAA football franchises.
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Soapy
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by Soapy » Yesterday, 13:41
Week 13 Preview: vs. #9 Notre Dame
Record: 10-1
Head Coach: Marcus Freeman
Offensive Scheme: Power Spread
Defensive Scheme: Multiple
Team Leaders
Passing: Matt Melvin 65 cmp%, 3491 yards, 38 TD, 3 INT, 169.3 passer rating
Rushing: David Wick 1178 yards, 5.8 ypc, 15 TD
Receiving: Jack Larsen 68 receptions, 800 yards, 12 TD
Defense: Tory Willingham 61 tackles, 2 TFL, 4 INT, 6 PBU
Injuries
G Cam Hatch (Senior) Dislocated Knee (Out)
WR Dre Bagent (Junior) Dislocated Knee (Out)
WR Melvin Hoge (Junior) Foot Fracture (Out)
G Patrick Streeter (Junior) Broken Wrist (Out)
CB Brooks Lampman (Freshman) Dislocated Hip (Out)
DT Juan Arcuri (Junior) Ruptured Disk (Out)
WR Jalen Ramsay (Senior) Broken Collarbone (Out)
LB Manu Toomer (Junior) Foot Fracture (Probable)
RT Jameson Flood (Junior) Abdominal Tear (Out)
Soapy
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Soapy
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by Soapy » Yesterday, 13:49
Stanford preparing to self-impose one-year transfer portal ban amid unresolved tampering probe
Michael Harrell
November 23, 2029, 01:42 PM ET
Stanford football is preparing to self-impose a one-year transfer portal ban in an effort to conclude the ongoing NCAA and conference-led investigation into alleged tampering by head coach Bubba Mack, sources told ESPN.
The unprecedented step would prevent the Cardinal from adding any players through the transfer portal for the duration of the 2030–31 academic year — a penalty that, while self-imposed, would represent the most significant institutional restriction of the portal era.
According to multiple sources, the decision comes as the joint investigation led by the NCAA, ACC, SEC, and Conference USA has reached a standstill. The probe, focused on alleged impermissible contact with former Kennesaw State and Florida running back Jamarice Wilder, has not uncovered direct evidence of wrongdoing but remains hampered by Mack’s continued refusal to turn over his personal phone records.
Stanford, which has otherwise been fully cooperative — turning over internal emails and institutional communications — is believed to be seeking a resolution that allows the school and program to move forward while avoiding more severe sanctions from the NCAA.
“The feeling inside the building is fatigue,” said one source close to the situation. “Stanford’s been transparent at every level they can. This is their way of putting the issue to rest.”
If enacted, the self-imposed ban would mark a watershed moment for college football’s transfer era — a period that many coaches and administrators have described as the “Wild West,” defined by loose enforcement of in-season tampering and fluid player movement.
It would also underscore the growing power and cooperation of the sport’s governing bodies. The investigation into Mack and Stanford was notable for uniting the ACC and SEC in a joint compliance effort — a rare show of cross-conference coordination that, officials privately admit, may set a precedent for how future tampering claims are handled.
“Everyone’s trying to figure out where the line is,” one ACC athletic director told ESPN. “What Stanford’s doing here could end up being a turning point. They’re showing that schools can take accountability before the system has to.”
Mack, who has not been formally accused of a violation, has maintained his innocence throughout the process, calling the allegations “ridiculous” and suggesting that the relationships he built with players such as Wilder predated their transfers.
Still, his unwillingness to share phone records — the final piece requested by investigators — has left the inquiry in limbo. With the season underway and Stanford likely headed to the playoffs for the first time in school history, the school’s leadership reportedly views a proactive resolution as a necessary tradeoff.
“Stanford doesn’t want this hanging over the program for another year,” said a conference source. “Even if it’s symbolic, this is their way of moving on.”
The NCAA has yet to comment publicly on Stanford’s intentions, though multiple officials within both the ACC and SEC have privately expressed support for the move, viewing it as a potential model for institutional self-regulation in the chaotic landscape of the modern transfer portal.
Soapy
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Caesar
- Chise GOAT

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by Caesar » 19 minutes ago

We know who Bubba Mack is. He's cut from the Malcolm Francois cloth.
Caesar