Mike Gundy is finally coming around on NIL and revenue-sharing after years of hesitation, but the longtime Oklahoma State football coach didn’t have much choice. Schools are now forced to adapt to the rapidly evolving college football landscape or risk being left behind. Initially, Gundy, like many of his peers, hoped these changes were temporary — a passing trend that wouldn’t fundamentally alter how college football operates. But the momentum kept building and the landscape kept shifting.
What once seemed like a distant possibility became an urgent necessity: embracing NIL, aggressively managing transfers and investing in new strategies to keep programs competitive. The recent House v. NCAA settlement — which ushers in an era of direct revenue-sharing with athletes — only reinforced the reality that college football is now a business, and coaches like Gundy can no longer afford to sit on the sidelines.
“I almost just thought, ‘This will go away. Surely this can’t last,'” Gundy told On3 this week at Big 12 Media Days. “And then it just kept building momentum. And then after a point, about 18 months ago, I said, ‘This is not going away. We’re going to have to make some real adjustments here.'”
Oklahoma State welcomed 41 incoming transfers as part of its 2025 class. That tied for the third-largest haul of any Power Four program this cycle. And it’s more than the total number of incoming transfers Oklahoma State had across the previous six cycles since the NCAA transfer portal debuted in October 2018.
‘I get it’: Mike Gundy unfazed by pressure as grizzled Oklahoma State coach stares down make-or-break season
Shehan Jeyarajah
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Source link : https://www.cbssports.com/college-football/news/mike-gundy-points-to-moment-when-he-realized-nil-wouldnt-go-away-forcing-oklahoma-state-coach-to-adapt/
Author : Cody Nagel
Publish date : 2025-07-11 17:29:00
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