Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia led his team to seven wins last season. How will he keep poaching offers at bay while focusing on the game?
The NIL era remains an omnipresent threat to the chemistry and stability of college football programs. With so many players jumping into the transfer portal, the money used to lure them out puts smaller schools at a disadvantage. Worse, when a player is already committed to a school, programs will attempt to snare them anyway.
Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia Spurns $4 Million Offer, Focuses on Commodores
In a world of four- and five-star recruits, Pavia stands out. A player who started at New Mexico Military Institute because no FBS school wanted him. The same player who made New Mexico State football fun, winning the 2023 Conference USA Offensive Player of the Year, took his skills to Nashville.
Granted, Vanderbilt is not a football factory, by any stretch of the imagination. Long considered a glorified scrimmage, Pavia sought to change that. When his offense dropped 40 on top-ranked Alabama in a stunning victory, the world stood up and took notice.
Vanderbilt parlayed that into a good season (7-6) by their standards, culminating in a Birmingham Bowl victory over Georgia Tech.
Through a legal decision, the NCAA granted him an extra year of eligibility. Meanwhile, the bank accounts of the transfer portal grew, hoping to pay him to leave the Commodores. Pavia rebuffed their advances. Recently, he sat down with the “Bussin’ with the Boys” podcast to discuss behind-the-scenes moves by teams to procure his services.
“I never flirted with the idea (of leaving Vanderbilt),” Pavia said. “Winning is more important to me than anything, and we got the squad to go do it.
“You’ve got Coach Kill and Coach Beck relying on you to come back. But it’s all a money game. And you’ve got other schools offering you $4 million, and they (Vanderbilt) don’t want to pay me $4 million. But you took a chance on me.”
Pavia discussed two big points in that quote, each holding tremendous weight. First, he mentioned Coach Jerry Kill. When Kill served as New Mexico State’s head coach, he brought Pavia to Las Cruces and let him grow as a starter. Kill left NMSU and serves as the chief consultant to the head coach (Clark Lea).
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You can immediately tell that Pavia feels indebted and grateful to Kill for giving him an opportunity. All he seemed to ever want was a shot at playing FBS football. The fact that Kill works on the staff probably kept the graduate transfer at Vanderbilt.
Pavia’s loyalty in the age of big money became the exception rather than the rule. Players maintain the right to shop their talents for the best offer, which is not a bad thing. A football career can end in a second; why not capitalize on lucrative financial offers?
The Vanderbilt quarterback pushed money aside to return to where he feels like he can win games. Most importantly, Pavia chose the program over financial security.
The Commodore leader flashes the confidence and scrambling ability of Johnny Manziel and even wears the same jersey number. Yet, they view money differently. How that will play out remains to be seen, but it bears close watching.
