According to a report from Fox Sports college football analyst Brock Huard, Washington State quarterback Cam Ward has 10 $1 million offers from D1 schools that want him to transfer and play for them.
Schools that have reportedly contacted him include Oregon, Washington, Notre Dame, Texas A&M, and Auburn.
Former Washington QB @BrockHuard says Wazzu star QB Cam Ward has up to ten $1mil offers to transfer.
— Jacob Davis (@JacobScottDavis) November 28, 2023
Schools that have supposedly contacted him are Oregon, Washington, Notre Dame, Texas A&M and Auburn.
If Ward decides to move on from Pullman, a school will be instant… pic.twitter.com/wrle6E4jUd
The podcast audio where Huard made the claim can be heard here.
LISTEN: https://t.co/bQHBMchREf
— Jacob Davis (@JacobScottDavis) November 28, 2023
Should he leave Washington State, this would be the second time Ward will have transferred. He has the ability to transfer again because he is a grad transfer. Any of the schools reportedly on Huard’s list would become an instant contender with Ward at the helm. Texas A&M just spent over $70 million paying Jimbo Fisher not to coach. So, one would assume the Aggies would lobby very hard for Ward.
There is no doubt Ward is a star. Chief among his accomplishments this year was an upset victory over Wisconsin and a near upset of archrival Washington in the Apple Cup.
Cam Lockridge #20 of Fresno State sacks Cameron Ward #1 of Washington State during the LA Bowl game between Washington State Cougars and Fresno State Bulldogs at SoFi Stadium on December 17, 2022, in Los Angeles, California. (Jason Allen/ISI Photos/Getty Images)
It’s beyond insane that we’re already talking about million-dollar transfers only a couple of years into the NIL era, but here we are. What’s also clear is that this isn’t going away. Desperate schools with vast financial resources will likely fuel a transfer portal arms race that will lead to 19 and 20-year-old kids getting lured to schools by multimillion-dollar NIL deals.
It’s not your daddy’s college football. Heck, it’s not even our college football. But it’s likely here to stay.