Why Demond Williams Jr.’s Transfer Portal Decision Could Change College Football Forever

Demond Williams Jr. entered the transfer portal four days after signing a near-$5M NIL deal with Washington. The Huskies are preparing legal action.

Four days. That’s how long Demond Williams Jr.’s commitment to Washington lasted before the sophomore quarterback flipped the script and announced his intention to enter the transfer portal on Tuesday night.

The problem? Williams signed a new NIL deal with the Huskies on Friday, reportedly in the mid-$4 million range between revenue sharing and name-image-likeness deals. Now Washington isn’t just disappointed. They’re lawyering up.

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Will Washington Enforce Demond Williams Jr.’s NIL Contract?

Sources told ESPN’s Pete Thamel that Washington is prepared to pursue all legal avenues to enforce Williams’ contract. The school has already been in contact with Big Ten officials, and here’s where it gets interesting: the school uses a template provided by the Big Ten in signing Williams — the same type of agreement Wisconsin used last year when signing Xavier Lucas.

That Lucas situation remains unresolved. The University of Wisconsin sued the University of Miami last June over alleged tampering and tortious interference after Lucas left Madison without ever entering the portal. A Dane County judge recently ruled in Wisconsin’s favor on a preliminary discovery matter, but the lawsuit drags on.

Williams’ case could move faster — and carry bigger stakes. According to the details of Williams’ contract, Washington is not obligated to enter him into the portal or “otherwise assist or facilitate the Student-Athlete’s transfer to another college or university.”

Translation: the Huskies can dig in.

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One prominent NIL attorney told OutKick something that should give every player and agent pause: “This isn’t like it was when you were dealing with collectives and funneling money. You are now dealing with legitimate contracts and legitimate attorneys or general counsel from major universities. The stakes are larger, which means the liability is greater.”

Say what you will about Williams’ decision to leave Washington. All eyes should be on what the program, aided by the Big Ten, are able to do legally in regards to the NIL contract Williams signed. What happens next could set a precedent for all future similar situations, and there are sure to be many.

LSU Looms as Williams’ Likely Destination

The timing of Williams’ portal announcement isn’t lost on anyone paying attention. LSU is desperate for a quarterback after missing on Cincinnati’s Brendan Sorsby, who chose Texas Tech. Former Arizona State signal-caller Sam Leavitt was visiting Baton Rouge when Williams dropped his news on Tuesday night.

Early rumors are swirling that LSU could offer Williams $6 million to come to Baton Rouge, unprecedented money in college football. For context, that would top what a dozen NFL starting quarterbacks made this past season.

MORE: Lane Kiffin’s LSU Linked to Washington QB Demond Williams Jr. Amid ‘Do-Not-Contact’ Transfer Portal Entry

Williams has history with Lane Kiffin. As a four-star recruit in the Class of 2024, Williams originally committed to Ole Miss in December 2022, when Kiffin was still coaching the Rebels. That relationship apparently never faded.

The production justifies the price tag. At 5’11” and 190 pounds, Williams isn’t the biggest quarterback in the portal, but his 2025 numbers were impressive: 246-of-354 passing (69.5 percent), 3,065 yards, 25 touchdowns and eight interceptions, plus 611 rushing yards and six scores. A true dual-threat who earned All-Big Ten honorable mention as a sophomore.

Sources told OutKick that Washington is also “looking into other schools for potential tampering.”

Sound familiar? Wisconsin made the same accusations against Miami in the Lucas case—and that’s precisely why this situation could spiral into something much larger than one quarterback’s destination.

The infrastructure now exists for schools to fight back. Whether that infrastructure actually works is the billion-dollar question facing college football. We may finally get our answer.

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