It’s here. College football’s new transfer portal window officially opened on Monday. Despite new NCAA transfer windows being adopted and put into place, many players have already announced they will be leaving their current school and looking for a new home in 2023.
Last season saw the likes of Caleb Williams, Michael Penix Jr., Bo Nix and Jahmyr Gibbs enter the transfer portal. Williams is now considered the favorite to take home this year’s Heisman Trophy in his first year at USC, while Penix Jr., Nix and Gibbs all enjoyed standout years at their new homes as well.
Who will be next year’s standout transfers?
We’re tracking the biggest names to enter the college football transfer portal.
Dec. 5: Pittsburgh QB Kedon Slovis
2022 Stats: 58.4% completion percentage, 2,391 passing yards, 10 touchdowns, 9 interceptions
Why it matters: A former three-star prospect out of Scottsdale (Ariz.) Desert Mountain, Slovis burst on the scene during his freshman season at USC in 2019, taking over after an opening-game injury to J.T. Daniels and leading the Trojans to an 8-4 regular season record. But Slovis regressed sharply and struggled with injury in 2021 and transferred to Pitt following the season. He had an up-and-down year with the 2022 Panthers, who also finished 8-4, and now enters the portal as a graduate transfer.
Dec. 5: Former Jackson State QB Shedur Sanders to Colorado
2022 stats: 70.2% completion percentage, 3,396 passing yards, 36 touchdowns, 6 interceptions
Why it matters: It was widely expected that Shedur would follow his father and new Colorado head coach Deion Sanders to Boulder, and Deion confirmed this move himself at his introductory press conference. Shedur is a dynamic passer who, along with his father, led Jackson State to a 12-0 regular season record in 2022.
Related: Prime Time in Pac-12: How Deion Sanders will impact Colorado, conference, sport
Dec. 5: North Carolina State QB Devin Leary
2022 stats: 61.1% completion percentage, 1,265 passing yards, 11 touchdowns, 4 interceptions
Why it matters: Leary missed the final six games of the 2022 season due to injury, but had 6,807 career passing yards and 62 passing touchdowns as a member of the Wolfpack. He threw for 3,433 of those yards and 35 of those touchdowns during a breakout 2021 season in which N.C. State finished 9-3.
Dec. 4: Clemson QB D.J. Uiagalelei
2022 stats: 61.9% completion percentage, 2,521 passing yards, 22 touchdowns, 7 interceptions
Why it matters: Uiagalelei entered Clemson with a mountain of expectations as a consensus five-star prospect out of Southern California powerhouse St. John Bosco, expected to carry the torch from national champions Deshaun Watson and Trevor Lawrence before him and keep the Tigers in national championship contention.
However, both he and Clemson failed to live up to expectations in the two seasons he was the team’s starting quarterback, as Clemson failed to make the ACC championship game last season after a 9-3 regular season record in 2021 and got knocked out of College Football Playoff contention in the last week of the 2022 season with a blowout loss to archrival South Carolina.
Clemson did roar back to beat North Carolina in the ACC championship — but only after Uiagalelei was benched for freshman and fellow former five-star quarterback Cade Klubnik. Where Uiagalelei lands could affect the destination of his brother, five-star edge rushier Matayo Uiagalelei, the top uncommitted college football recruit remaining in the class of 2023.
Dec. 4: University of Central Florida QB Mikey Keene
2022 stats: 72.3% completion percentage, 647 passing yards, six touchdowns, one interception.
Why it matters: This one was expected after Keene lost his job to Ole Miss transfer John Rhys Plumlee at the beginning of this season. Still, the former Chandler (Ariz.) High School standout impressed in limited action this season after excelling in 2021 following now-Oklahoma quarterback Dillon Gabriel’s season-ending shoulder injury.
Dec. 4: Wisconsin QB Graham Mertz
2022 stats: 57.3% completion percentage, 2,136 passing yards, 19 touchdowns, 10 interceptions
Why it matters: Mertz started for three seasons for the Badgers, leading them to a 6-6 record this year. He made the decision to transfer after Wisconsin announced Luke Fickell as the next head coach.
Behind Mertz, backup Chase Wolf has gone 2-for-6 for 21 yards. Myles Burkett is also on the roster as a quarterback.
Dec. 4 other notables: Indiana LB Dasan McCullough, Texas A&M WR Chase Lane, North Carolina QB Jacolby Criswell, Clemson CB Fred Davis, Alabama OL Javion Cohen
Dec. 3: Oklahoma QB Nick Evers
2022 stats: One appearance, one pass attempt, no completions
Why it matters: Evers was a four-star prospect out of Flower Mound, Texas, ranked as the No. 8 QB nationally in the Class of 2022 by 247Sports. He chose Oklahoma over Florida and Auburn, among others.
Evers found himself buried behind Dillon Gabriel (still a junior), Davis Beville (also a junior) and others on the depth chart. Both Gabriel and Beville came to Oklahoma through the transfer portal.
Dec. 2: Texas A&M QB Haynes King
2022 stats: 55.6% completion percentage, 1,220 passing yards, seven touchdowns, six interceptions
Why it matters: King was a former four-star prospect who appeared in 10 games in three years at Texas A&M, making seven career starts. He began the 2022 season as the team’s starting quarterback and played well in a season-opening victory over Sam Houston. He finished with three touchdowns on 20-of-31 passing for 364 yards, the most by an Aggie in a season opener since 2009.
The Aggies finished 1-5 in games King played in this season.
Dec. 2: Notre Dame QB Drew Pyne
2022 stats: 64.6% completion percentage, 2,021 passing yards, 22 touchdowns, six interceptions
Why it matters: Pyne is a three-year player who started 10 games for the Fighting Irish this year. He went 8-2 in his 10 starts, and 4-1 against Top 25 teams. His lone loss to a Top 25 team came this past weekend against USC, where he completed 23 of 26 passes for a career-high 318 yards and three passing touchdowns.
Pyne, who was a four-star prospect coming out of high school, has three years of playing eligibility remaining.
Dec 2: Boston College QB Phil Jurkovec
2022 stats: 59.5% competition percentage, 1,711 passing yards, 11 touchdowns, eight interceptions
Why it matters: Jurkovec is one of the most experienced and productive quarterbacks to hit the transfer portal up to this point. After spending his first two years at Notre Dame, he transferred to Boston College, where he has served as the Eagles starting quarterback the past three seasons. Jurkovec started 23 games in his three seasons at Boston College, totaling over 5,000 passing yards and 35 passing touchdowns. He has also added 429 yards rushing and nine scores on the ground.
Jurkovec hasn’t played since Boston College’s 13-3 loss to UConn back on Oct. 29, when he suffered knee and rib injuries. However, he is expected to make a full recovery. He will enter the portal as a graduate transfer and have one season remaining of playing eligibility.
Dec. 1: Former Michigan QB Cade McNamara to Iowa
2022 stats: 56% completion percentage, 180 passing yards, one passing touchdown, one interception
Why it matters: McNamara helped lead Michigan to a Big Ten championship and its first-ever appearance in the College Football Playoff in 2021. He started all 14 games for the Wolverines that season, throwing for 2,470 yards and 15 touchdowns, with just four interceptions.
He began the 2022 campaign in a QB battle with J.J. McCarthy. McNamara ultimately lost the QB competition and then suffered a season-ending leg injury in the Wolverines’ 59-0 win over UConn in Week 3.
Iowa had one of the worst offenses in college football in 2022, ranking 123rd out of 131 FBS teams with just 17.4 points per game. The Hawkeyes will now hope to turn that around with McNamara.
Dec. 1: Oregon State QB Chance Nolan
2022 stats (five games): 59.4% completion percentage, 939 passing yards, seven touchdowns, eight interceptions
Why it matters: The No. 15 Beavers are coming off a 9-3 regular season record, their best mark in a decade. Even more impressively, they finished the regular season 6-1 behind backup quarterback Ben Gulbranson after Nolan exited Oregon State’s Oct. 1 loss to Utah with a neck injury. Beavers head coach Jonathan Smith uses a run-heavy attack, but Gulbranson acquitted himself well when Oregon State needed to pass, throwing for 1,290 yards, eight touchdowns and five interceptions.
Nolan threw for 2,677 yards, 19 touchdowns and 10 interceptions in 2021, but took a step back in 2022 before his injury, throwing four interceptions in a close 20-17 loss to now-No. 4 USC in September.
No. 21 Oregon State stuns No. 9 Oregon
RJ Young reacts to the Oregon State Beavers stunning the Oregon Ducks 38-34.
Dec. 1: Virginia QB Brennan Armstrong
2022 stats: 54.7% completion percentage, 2210 passing yards, seven touchdowns, 12 interceptions
Why it matters: To understand Armstrong’s appeal, you have to go back to his 2021 statistics under former Virginia head coach Bronco Mendenhall and offensive coordinator Robert Anae. That year, Armstrong had a 65.2% completion percentage, 4,449 passing yards, 31 touchdowns and 10 interceptions, and was a Davey O’Brien Award semifinalist. Virginia’s all-time passing yards leader could be staying in the ACC — Syracuse, where Anae now coaches, would be a natural landing place for Armstrong depending on what current Orange quarterback Garrett Shrader decides with his future.
Dec. 1 other notables: Nebraska LB Ernest Hausmann, Nebraska WR Decoldest Crawford, Kentucky RB Kavosiey Smoke, Arizona State DL Anthonie Cooper
Nov. 30: Alabama WR Traeshon Holden
2022 stats: 25 catches, 331 yards, six touchdowns.
Why it matters: Unlike past years, Alabama did not have a clear-cut go-to wide receiver on the roster this year. Holden was one of several pass-catchers to play an important role in the Crimson Tide’s offense this season. He ranked third among wide receivers with 331 yards and second in touchdown catches with six.
The former four-star prospect from Florida saw his production increase greatly over the past two seasons. He will be a coveted target for teams across the country this offseason.
Nov. 30: Oklahoma WR Theo Wease
2022 stats: 19 catches, 378 receiving yards, four touchdowns.
Why it matters: Wease is the latest Oklahoma wide receiver to enter the transfer portal, following the same path as Mario Williams (USC) and Jadon Haselwood (Arkansas). All three were mega recruits when they arrived on campus, as Wease was a former five-star prospect out of Allen, Texas. He leaves Oklahoma having recorded 64 catches for 1,044 yards and 10 touchdowns over three seasons.
Wease enters the portal as a graduate transfer and will have two years of playing eligibility left.
Oklahoma QB Dillion Gabriel hits Theo Wease
Oklahoma retakes the lead after Dillion Gabriel hits Theo Wease for a 61-yard touchdown against Texas Tech.
Nov. 30: Western Michigan RB Sean Tyler
2022 stats: 209 carries, 1,027 rushing yards, seven rushing touchdowns, 12 catches, 111 receiving yards, one receiving touchdown.
Why it matters: Tyler was one of the most productive rushers in college football throughout the past two seasons. He leaves Western Michigan having totaled 2,830 yards and 23 touchdowns on the ground. He topped the 1,000-yard mark in back-to-back seasons in 2021 and 2022. He is also a solid receiver out of the backfield, racking up 338 yards and three receiving touchdowns during his time at WMU.
Nov. 29: Texas QB Hudson Card
2022 stats: 68.4% completion percentage, 928 passing yards, six passing touchdowns, one interception.
Why it matters: Card was a highly-touted recruit coming out of high school, ranked as the No. 59 prospect overall in the 2020 class and the No. 2 dual-threat quarterback, per 247Sports.com. He redshirted as a true freshman and then played behind Casey Thompson in 2021, appearing in eight games and making two starts under center.
Card lost the Longhorns’ QB battle with Quinn Ewers this past offseason but filled in admirably when Ewers was hurt. He played well against Alabama in Texas’ 20-19 Week 2 loss, and enjoyed his best game of the season against West Virginia on Oct. 1, completing 21 of 27 passes for 303 yards and three touchdowns in a 38-20 win.
Whoever lands Card is getting a talented quarterback that has plenty of big-game experience.
Texas’ Hudson Card connects with Xavier Worthy
Hudson Card connects with Xavier Worthy for a 10-yard touchdown to give the Texas Longhorns a 7-0 lead over the West Virginia Mountaineers.
Nov. 29: Indiana QB Connor Bazelak
2022 stats: 62.2% completion percentage, 2,312 passing yards, 13 passing touchdowns.
Why it matters: Bazelak is moving on to his third school in three years. The former four-star recruit spent his first three years at Missouri, where he was the team’s starter in 2020 and 2021. He transferred to Indiana before the 2022 season and had a solid season for the Hoosiers, throwing for 2,312 yards and 13 touchdowns.
Bazelak is a talented QB with three years of starting experience. He has had a productive career, throwing for more than 7,000 yards and 36 touchdowns since 2019.
Indiana QB Connor Bazelak finds D.J. Matthews Jr.
Indiana took a 10-7 lead over Illinois after Connor Bazelak connected with D.J. Matthews Jr. on a 52-yard touchdown pass.
Nov. 27: Georgia Tech QB Jeff Sims
2022 stats: 58.5% completion percentage, 1,115 passing yards, five passing touchdowns, three interceptions, 302 rushing yards, one rushing touchdown.
Why it matters: Sims was a three-year starter at Georgia Tech who has thrown for more than 4,000 yards and 30 touchdowns in his collegiate career. He can also get it done with his legs, totaling more than 1,000 rushing yards and 11 scores on the ground.
Sims started the first seven games of the 2022 campaign under center for the Yellowjackets but suffered a foot injury in a 16-9 loss to Virginia on Oct. 20.
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