Advertisement

Texas QB Maalik Murphy is the perfect example of college football's chaotic December calendar

Murphy is entering the transfer portal ahead of the College Football Playoff

If the college football calendar made some sense, Texas QB Maalik Murphy would likely be in uniform for the Longhorns as they play Washington in the College Football Playoff.

Instead, Murphy won’t be with the Longhorns at the Sugar Bowl. Heck, he might even have a new team by that point.

Murphy announced Wednesday that he is entering the transfer portal. The announcement wasn’t much of a surprise; starting QB Quinn Ewers hasn’t made a decision on the 2024 NFL Draft, and former five-star recruit Arch Manning is waiting in the wings in Austin.

With Manning redshirting in 2023, Murphy started two games for the Longhorns this season. Texas went 2-0, and he showed plenty of promise. The former four-star recruit in the class of 2022 is immediately one of the most coveted QBs available in the portal and will have no shortage of schools chasing after him.

Murphy told ESPN Wednesday night that he had the option of staying with the Longhorns for the College Football Playoff and hated having to start looking for schools as Texas is two wins away from a national title.

“I hate it, I hate it,” Murphy said to ESPN. “I’m super invested in this team. Everything that we’ve done along the way and all the work we’ve put in together, it’s hard to walk away, especially at this point in the season.”

Texas coach Steve Sarkisian was understanding of Murphy's plight and said he held no ill will toward his No. 2 QB's decision.

Murphy has to do what’s best for him. And thanks to the ridiculousness of December in college football, staying with Texas for the Sugar Bowl and a possible national championship game is simply not feasible.

"It's nothing against Texas at all," Murphy said. "I'm doing this purely for me and my future. In my eyes, I'll always be a Longhorn and a part of this great team."

You can thank the timing of the end-of-season transfer portal and the early signing period for that lack of feasibility. The transfer portal opened Dec. 4, and many players found schools within a week of officially opening their transfer options. Oklahoma QB Dillon Gabriel committed to Oregon less than a week after he said he was looking for a new school. Georgia QB Brock Vandagriff’s move to Kentucky took days, and quarterbacks such as Taylen Green (Boise State to Arkansas) and Tyler Van Dyke (Miami to Wisconsin) also quickly found new schools.

Many players want to find their new schools as quickly as possible so they can enroll for the upcoming semester and participate in spring practices. Schools want to get transfers in the door as soon as possible to help manage their rosters.

AUSTIN, TEXAS - NOVEMBER 24: Maalik Murphy #6 of the Texas Longhorns warms up before the game against the Texas Longhorns at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium on November 24, 2023 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images)
Texas QB Maalik Murphy is entering the transfer portal. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images)

There are just 16 days this year between the opening of the transfer portal and the beginning of the early signing period. Recruits can sign with schools on Dec. 20, meaning coaches are not only hard at work recruiting transfers to fill immediate needs but also pushing hard to get as many high school players to sign as early as possible.

The limited time between the portal opening and the beginning of the early signing period leads to a chaotic December across college football as more than 80 teams are also preparing for bowl games. It’s why so many players, including Murphy, are opting out of bowl games. Many want to open their options as quickly as possible with the early signing period looming.

The early signing period, created in 2017, was implemented before the transfer portal and the NCAA’s one-time immediate transfer rules were a reality. Six years ago, the timing wasn’t a bad idea. Now, it might be more of a burden than an asset.

But there are also no public and substantive discussions about how college football could change the way December is currently structured. Opening the transfer portal at the end of the regular season makes sense. Is the easiest fix pushing the early signing period back a month?

Signing day has traditionally been held in early February, a signing period that has been made all but obsolete as many top recruits now make their decisions in December. Could college football have an early signing period in late January before signing day in late February or early March?

That would give players such as Murphy more time to transfer and potentially be in uniform for their teams' bowl games. While there would still be a rush of players entering the portal as soon as it opens, perhaps the transfer process wouldn’t be as hurried as it is now for players and teams.

Moving the early signing period back could also lead to fewer players opting out of bowl games ahead of transfers. While opt-outs wouldn’t stop entirely, more teams could keep their rosters mostly intact through the postseason.

Whatever the solution is, it’s clear that the status quo is suboptimal. And it negatively affects players such as Murphy, who are caught between trying to do what’s best for themselves and trying to be great teammates.