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Mike Elko, Deion Sanders fuel growing call for college football commissioner
Colorado Buffaloes head coach Deion Sanders Scott Sewell-Imagn Images

Mike Elko, Deion Sanders fuel growing call for college football commissioner

Mike Elko and Deion Sanders have both recently gone on record advocating for a college football commissioner. With NIL tampering, transfer portal, and eligibility controversies creating a Wild West environment, coaches are increasingly concerned that the sport is drifting toward an unsustainable future.  

In an interview with J.D. PicKell of On3, Elko said, "Put somebody in charge. It's a $ 1.2-billion-dollar industry with no singular voice in charge making decisions for the betterment of college football." 

Elko's point underscores the high stakes of operating without authority to enforce rules, protect the integrity of competition, or safeguard athletes. 

Deion Sanders examines college football from a different angle, warning that the transfer portal is undermining the very notion of 'student' in 'student athlete'. The portal allows athletes to transfer freely, even as many schools across the country are starting their spring semester.

In a Feb. 6 segment on First Take, Sanders said, "Now our academic departments have to work their butts off even to get all these kids enrolled. That was tremendous. That was a tremendous task. And I thank our CU department for doing that. But (the NCAA) not thinking about the academic part of the students." 

While Elko focuses on the financial and regulatory chaos, Sanders points to how the system is affecting the students themselves. The transfer disputes, tampering, and eligibility controversies are symptoms, not causes. 

  • 55 eligibility lawsuits filed against the NCAA
  • 10,965 players entered the 2026 transfer portal
  • 0 ability to enforce rules against tampering

The coaches are seeing problems that are systemic, and without a centralized voice, these issues will continue to grow. 

Why a commissioner could solve this

If the schools can agree on a rulebook, a commissioner would finally be able to serve as the sport's central authority, translating those agreements into consistent enforcement and accountability. 

A commissioner would also bridge the gap between money and mission. Establishing a hard cap on NIL and cracking down on tampering would bring balance to competitive fairness and academic priorities. 

Having a singular public voice to address scandals, disputes, and governance issues would instantly boost the NCAA's public relations. Currently, the sport is seen as four entities, and conferences issue statements that protect their own interests. The sport struggles to find common ground among its members, and it looks like a breakaway is on the horizon. A commissioner gives fans and media a clear face to look toward for accountability and consistency. 

College football is bigger and more lucrative than ever, but the sport is operating without an authority that enforces rules, protects athletes, and maintains integrity. A commissioner would not only standardize rules but also serve as a public voice that provides accountability and consistency, restoring trust in the game. Without leadership, college football risks continuing down the risky path of uncertainty, where billions of dollars and thousands of athletes hang in the balance. 

Benji Haire

My name is Benji Haire, and I am a sports writer covering college football and SEC athletics. As a former football and track coach, who transitioned to covering the sport in 2025. I hope to use podcasting and writing to bring a different perspective through podcasting and writing. My Twitter is @HaireRaid. 

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