Football 360 Show: NIL, D1 recruiting, Transfer portal, Athletic Development, Strength Training.

Football 360 Show

With Football 360, we will dive deep into American Football, from youth leagues to the pro level. Our podcast is your ultimate source for all things football with training tips, NIL discussions, D1 Recruiting, the Transfer Portal, Athletic Development, and Speed & Strength training. This podcast will feature discussions about all levels of football, including youth, middle school, high school, college, and the NFL and other pro football leagues. This podcast is for you if you are asking questions such as: -What do I need to do to get a football scholarship? -How does the transfer portal work?

  1. 10H AGO

    The Truth About Recruiting in 2026 (Most Athletes Are Doing It Wrong)

    Football 360 Show Notes Episode Title: Spring Football, Recruiting Reality & The Truth About Development 🏈 Opening Segment Welcome to the Football 360 Show — "the fastest 45–50 minutes of football talk on the planet" Spring football is officially underway across high school and college programs Midwest focus: St. Louis area leading the way with structured spring practices 🌱 Spring Football = Opportunity Season High school spring football provides: Extra development reps Early exposure opportunities Live evaluation chances for college coaches Many programs adjusting schedules (early mornings, evenings) to balance multi-sport athletes Key insight: Spring = visibility window, not just practice 🎯 Recruiting Reality in 2026 Transfer portal impact: 4,000–5,000+ athletes competing for roster spots College coaches are constantly filling gaps post-spring ball Real example: Coaches actively texting for last-minute positional needs (TE, JUCO, transfers) 👉 Takeaway: If you're not actively marketing yourself early, you're already behind. ❌ The Biggest Recruiting Mistake Waiting until senior year to start recruiting Lack of strategy or structured plan What athletes SHOULD be doing: Sending film consistently Posting weekly updates Communicating with coaches early Using tools like recruiting platforms to stay organized 👉 "Showing up is not a plan anymore." ⚠️ Busy Work vs Real Development A major theme from the episode: Not all football activity = improvement Examples: Playing 7v7 every weekend ≠ getting better Avoiding hard training (speed, strength, mechanics) 👉 Key Quote Concept: "You're not getting closer to your goal — you might actually be moving further away." 🧠 Critical Development Window Ages 10–16 = prime skill development window If mechanics are wrong early: They become harder to fix later Emphasis on: Movement quality Skill refinement Neuromuscular training 🏃 Speed Myth vs Reality Massive misconceptions around 40-yard dash times Reality Check: NFL scout insight: Fastest hand-timed 40 seen = ~4.4 Many HS athletes believe they run 4.3–4.5 (not realistic) Key Metrics That Matter More: Broad Jump (9'+) Vertical (32"+) Power output 👉 Truth: Speed = a byproduct of power and mechanics ⚡ Combine Performance Breakdown If athlete: Jumps well BUT runs slow → mechanics issue Runs fast BUT jumps poorly → likely inaccurate timing or ceiling reached Testing standards: Grass surface (not track) Laser vs hand timing differences matter Self-timing = unreliable 🧬 Power = The True Separator Power and explosiveness drive performance across all sports Example from golf: Rory McIlroy emphasized power as his biggest improvement factor 👉 Applies directly to football: Acceleration Change of direction On-field explosiveness 🏆 What Real Work Looks Like Example: Top local athletes training consistently Extra reps Structured sessions Sweating, not just showing up 👉 Key Principle: "Reps + Intentional Training = Separation" 🎯 Expectations vs Reality Athletes must evaluate: What level they realistically project to Recruiting is based on: Size benchmarks (position-specific) Production Film Measurables 📉 The "Love Football" vs "Love Being a Football Player" Problem Many athletes: Love the image, not the work Football requires: 8–9 months of training For a 3–4 month season 👉 This is why attrition is high. ⚖️ Multi-Sport Athlete Discussion Playing other sports is fine… BUT: Must prioritize: Exposure events with college coaches Recruiting windows 📅 Key Events Mentioned: SLMFCA Showcase – May 11 KC Varsity Combine – May 16 👉 If your goal is football: You cannot skip exposure opportunities 🧠 Quarterback Development Insight Huge emphasis on: Release point consistency Mechanics Repetition Advanced tech emerging: Ball tracking systems (like TrackMan for QBs) Release point Velocity Spin rate 👉 Future of QB development = data + biomechanics 🔑 Final Takeaways Recruiting is earlier, faster, and more competitive than ever Exposure + development must happen simultaneously Power > speed myths Film + production > combine hype Consistency and reps separate elite players 💬 Closing Message "There are very few athletes who don't have to work. Everyone else? You better have a plan."

    49 min
  2. APR 2

    Spring Football Chaos: Mizzou QB Decision, Viral Drill Debate & Combine Standouts

    🎙️ Football 360 Show — Episode Show Notes 🎯 Episode Overview The Football 360 Show is BACK. After a short break, Matt Biermann and JP Rock return with a new setup and a loaded episode covering: Spring football storylines Mizzou QB situation Viral SEMO drill controversy Elite Combine + UA Next Camp takeaways The truth about football camps (and what actually matters) 🏈 Key Topics & Timestamps ⏱️ 0:00 — The Show Returns New studio setup and format updates Streaming now on YouTube, X, Spotify, and Apple Why the break happened (and why this setup is better long-term) 🐯 Mizzou Football Update (QB Battle + Spring Practice) Austin Simmons emerging as QB1 (athleticism + playmaking ability) Sam Horn / Zollers discussion (more technical vs dynamic play) Transfer portal impact → "new team every year" reality Coaching staff continuity (Gus Malzahn tree influence) Junior Day observations: Talent level is tight — margins are small System + fit matters as much as ability Team chemistry is harder than ever with roster turnover 🧠 Recruiting Reality (Quarterbacks & Transfers) The "musical chairs" effect in college football NIL + transfers = constant competition Long-term roster outlook: Not everyone stays Development + timing matters more than ever 🔥 SEMO Drill Controversy (Viral Clip Breakdown) Physical drill goes viral → national backlash Debate: Building toughness vs unnecessary risk Key takeaways: Football is still a physical sport Social media amplifies everything Many critics don't understand football context Important point: Culture-building vs player safety = finding the balance 💪 Practice Philosophy Discussion Can't avoid contact entirely But can't overdo it either "Physicality removes fear" Teams that avoid hitting often struggle in games 📊 Elite Combine Recap (250+ Athletes) One of the strongest combines to date High-level performances: Multiple 4.4–4.5 athletes 10'+ broad jumps MVP: Coleman Murchison 4.07 pro agility 10' broad jump 5.8 laser 40 Big takeaway: Combine = "coming out party" for young athletes 📈 What Actually Matters in Testing Broad Jump + 40 = strong correlation Benchmarks: 9'+ = strong HS athlete 10'+ = elite Testing exposes: Real speed Explosiveness Training gaps 🏟 UA Next Camp Recap Regional talent from multiple states Invite-only = strong validation for athletes Standout points: High-level competition Real exposure Free event (gear included) 💡 Key insight: If you're invited → you're on the radar ⚠️ The Truth About Camps (IMPORTANT) Some camps cost $300–$600+ with little value What actually matters: Are college coaches there? Who is running the camp? Is it reputable? ✅ Recommended Types: Elite Combine St. Louis Metro Coaches Combine KC Varsity Combine ❌ Red Flags: No college coaches "Media exposure" only High cost, low substance 📅 Recruiting Calendar Insight April 15 → Contact period begins Coaches actively: Visiting schools Attending camps 💡 Best strategy: Be at camps where coaches are physically present 🎯 Key Takeaways for Players & Parents Exposure ≠ Social media hype Development + testing + visibility = winning combo Camps matter—but only the RIGHT ones Football is evolving fast (NIL + portal) You must be intentional with your recruiting strategy 🚀 Powered By OFFRD Football Recruiting Platform 👉 Helping athletes connect directly with college coaches 🔗 Connect With Us Matt Biermann: Elite Football / getOFFRD JP Rock: @JPRockMO / GPS Football Website: Football360Show.com 💬 Final Thought "The margin is small. Talent gets you noticed—but fit, timing, and exposure get you recruited."

    50 min
  3. FEB 18

    Recruiting Isn't Fair - It's Competitive

    🎧 Show Overview On this episode of the Football 360 Show, J.P. Rock and Matt Biermann dive deep into the realities of football recruiting, the mindset required for long-term success, and why families must take ownership of the process instead of hoping it "just happens." From middle school combines to NIL economics, this episode pulls back the curtain on what athletes and parents are truly up against. 🔗 Where to Listen 🌐 football360show.com 🎥 Live on X & YouTube 🎙️ Podcast on Spotify & Apple Podcasts 🧭 Main Topics & Takeaways 1️⃣ Recruiting Is NOT Automatic Playing high school football does not guarantee a college opportunity. Many families underestimate the time commitment required. Some athletes who sign D1 scholarships have families investing 20–40 hours per month into promotion, communication, and strategy. You need: A plan A framework Consistent outreach Accountability "Hope is not a strategy." 2️⃣ Truth Over Comfort Coaches evaluate players harshly. There is no "parent bias" at the college level. Families need honest assessments — even when uncomfortable. Many people in the recruiting space tell athletes what they want to hear, not what they need to hear. 3️⃣ The Push & Pull Recruiting Strategy Success requires: 📤 Proactive outreach (emails, follow-ups, camp invites) 📥 Tracking engagement (who opened emails, who responded) 📊 Organization of communication 📅 Understanding NCAA contact timelines For example: Coaches cannot respond to freshmen/sophomores during certain periods. Communication opens up significantly after sophomore summer. If you don't understand timing, you're already behind. 🏈 Middle School Combine Insights Matt discusses the recent Elite Football Middle School Combine and why events like this matter early. Why It Matters: Kids learn how to test. They get comfortable competing. They build resiliency. They establish benchmarks. Unlike high school events, middle school athletes: Show up Run their times Compete Don't hide from testing "At some point, you have to run." 📊 Benchmarking & Development Athletes were encouraged to: Compare results within their grade. Compare results to older athletes. Set goals based on real data. Use testing as a development tool — not a fear trigger. Testing reveals truth. Avoiding it delays growth. ⭐ Player Examples: Different Paths to Success Two former Elite athletes illustrate the spectrum of elite performance: 🏃‍♂️ Kyren Williams Not the biggest. Not a pure straight-line burner. Extremely elusive. Elite agility & vision. Now a Pro Bowl-level NFL player. 🏃‍♂️ Jeremiah Love Bigger frame. True sprinter. Explosive and dynamic. Also thriving at Notre Dame. Lesson: There is no single prototype. But you must fit someone's evaluation criteria. 🧠 Mindset Wins Long-Term Resiliency is mandatory. You will get beat on reps. You will throw bad passes. You will fail tests. You will be mis-evaluated. What matters: Do you respond? Do you improve? Do you compete again? 🔄 Position Reality Check Many athletes lock into a position identity too early. Common example: Athlete insists on playing defensive line. Body type, movement, and mindset scream offensive line. Coaches will project you where they see value — not where you prefer. "You play where coaches want you to play." 💰 The Business of College Football Discussion turns toward the economics of college athletics: Football and basketball generate revenue. Many other sports operate at losses. NIL and revenue distribution are reshaping the landscape. The gap between football and other sports continues to widen. A semi-professional licensing model similar to MLS may eventually emerge. College football is becoming a business model first, educational model second. 📈 Early Exposure Creates Advantage Athletes attending combines from: 6th grade 7th grade 8th grade …will be exponentially ahead as juniors and seniors because: They understand the testing process. They're comfortable competing. They've benchmarked themselves for years. They're not overwhelmed when it "counts." Repetition removes fear. 🧱 Core Message of the Episode If your child says: "I want to play college football." Then the next question must be: "Are you willing to prepare like a college football player?" That preparation includes: Skill development Athletic testing Honest evaluation Recruiting education Organized communication Mental toughness Realistic projection 🔥 Quote of the Episode "You're never a finished product. But you can't improve what you refuse to measure." 📅 Upcoming Event 🏈 Elite High School Combine – March 14 Open to high school athletes 8th graders entering freshman year may participate Full testing + competitive drills Benchmarking opportunity 🎯 Final Takeaway Recruiting is: Strategic. Measured. Competitive. Unforgiving. Honest. And success belongs to: Families who seek truth. Athletes who embrace discomfort. Players who test, fail, improve, repeat.

    47 min
  4. FEB 11

    Ready-Made or Replaced: The New Reality of College Football

    🏈 Football 360 Show — Feb 10, 2026 (Restream) 🎙️ Hosts: JP Rock & Matt Biermann ⚡ Tagline: "The fastest 48 minutes of football talk on the planet." 📍 Watch/Listen: YouTube + X (live) | Spotify + Apple Podcasts (audio) 🔗 Where to Find Football 360 🌐 Website: Football360Show.com (past episodes + more) 📺 YouTube: Like • Subscribe • Share 🐦 X: Share the stream + follow along 🎧 Podcast: Available on Spotify + Apple Podcasts 👤 Follow the Hosts ✅ Matt Biermann 🐦 X: EliteFootball 📸 IG: EliteFootballAcademy ✅ JP Rock 🐦 X: JPRockMO 📸 IG: JPRockScoutsU 🤝 Sponsors 📲 OFFRD — getoffrd.com A one-stop recruiting platform to: ✅ Build a digital recruiting profile ✅ Learn the process ✅ Research schools + find fit ✅ Message coaches + complete questionnaires ✅ Track outreach & engagement 🧭 Game Plan Strategies — gpsfootball.org ✅ Free recruiting consultation ✅ Personalized strategy + roadmap ✅ Development + marketing/branding guidance ✅ Help navigating portal-era recruiting realities 🧠 Episode Summary JP and Matt break down the modern recruiting landscape and why families need a real strategy in today's portal-driven era. They explain how recruiting has become more opaque, how evaluations (especially at QB) are often flawed, and why athletes must treat development + visibility as a year-round job. 🧩 Topics Covered 📌 Recruiting isn't "send it and hope" Getting your info to coaches is necessary, but doesn't guarantee feedback Coaches may like you and stash you for later The process is opaque — even coaches feel it 🏗️ "Build the house… then tell people it's for sale" You can't sit back and wait But don't market a "half-built house" either Balance: development + exposure 🔁 Transfer portal impact on recruiting Coaches want relationships but know kids can leave quickly Players feel the same instability on their end Less long-term development, more "ready-made" demand 📏 QB evaluation is too obsessed with height Many youth QB rankings heavily weight height over actual QB play Some "top" kids just look advanced because they're older/bigger Reference example: Diego Pavia as proof that production can beat measurables 🧭 Why families need a plan (Game Plan Strategies) Many parents are uninformed about cost, timelines, and realistic options Example: families reaching out too late (even day before signing day) ✅ What athletes should prioritize (the framework) 📚 Grades + school responsibilities 💪 Physical development (beyond school lifting) 🏈 Skill development (year-round) 📣 Branding/marketing (visibility matters) 🧠 Development is shrinking in the portal era Players are learning systems faster, but developing less Transfers create constant turnover across position groups Less time to build high-level processing and full-field QB skills 🏒 Multi-sport narrative vs reality Coaches say they like multi-sport athletes, but often only value football output Multi-sport can help athleticism — but can also become a distraction if football development stops Example: Layton Usry discussion (elite athlete + huge production) 🔥 Key Takeaways ✅ Recruiting is earlier, faster, and more competitive than ever ✅ Athletes must own development — nobody will "build you" in college anymore ✅ Visibility matters: you can't be shy ✅ Choose camps/combines strategically ✅ Skill + football IQ + consistency beat hype 🎬 Next Up (Teased) 📍 Camp & combine season talk (Elite Middle School Combine) 🧩 UC Report / national traveling camp discussion ⭐ Why invites often reflect years of development, not overnight hype

    49 min
  5. FEB 5

    College Football Recruiting Is a Business - Not a Dream

    🏈 Football 360 Show — Episode Notes Hosts: JP Rock & Matt Biermann Platforms: YouTube, X (Twitter), Apple Podcasts, Spotify Website: football360show.com 🎙️ Episode Overview JP Rock and Matt Biermann break down the realities of college football recruiting on the eve of Signing Day, pulling back the curtain on how offers actually happen, why patience matters, and how the modern system impacts high school athletes. This episode is a must-listen for players, parents, and coaches navigating today's chaotic recruiting landscape. 📍 Where to Find the Hosts Matt Biermann: @EliteFootball on X | @EliteFootballAcademy on Instagram JP Rock: @JPRockMO on X | @JPRockScoutU on Instagram 📝 Key Topics & Takeaways ⏳ Recruiting Is a Marathon — Not a Sprint Early offers to middle school athletes create unrealistic expectations. Many players don't see real recruiting traction until late senior year — sometimes days before signing. Patience and persistence are critical; timing matters more than hype. ✍️ Signing Day Stories: Late Offers That Paid Off Malachi Lewis (Webster Groves HS) — Missouri State signee who earned his offer just days before signing. Multiple Missouri athletes securing Power 4 and FCS opportunities late in the process. Proof that continued effort, camps, showcases, and communication matter. 🔄 The Transfer Portal Reality College football is now professional football in structure and behavior. Signing an NLI is effectively a one-year contract. Portal movement is constant — announced windows don't tell the full story. Players can effectively become free agents by unenrolling or graduating. ⚠️ Coaching Changes & Roster Chaos Early signees often commit to staffs that don't exist weeks later. New staffs inherit players they didn't recruit. Verbal commitments can carry legal and ethical implications. Many players lose leverage once they commit early and spots fill elsewhere. 🎯 Who Wins in the Current System? Players with multiple offers and leverage. Everyone else is often at the mercy of roster math, staff turnover, and portal timing. Smaller programs are capitalizing on portal fallout and landing high-level talent. 🧠 Fit Over Flash: Choosing the Right Situation Programs differ wildly in competitiveness and intent to win. Warning signs include: "You'll work in slowly" despite clear talent advantages Guaranteed senior priority regardless of performance Players should seek environments that allow them to play early and grow. 🏫 D2, FCS, & D3 Opportunities Are Real Opportunities Schools like Truman State, Missouri Baptist, Lindenwood, Western Illinois benefiting from portal trickle-down. High-level players can dominate early, then re-enter the portal from a position of strength. 🗣️ Coach Speak & Recruiting Red Flags Most recruiters are not the final decision-makers. Position-coach offers carry more weight than area recruiters. Junior Days ≠ Offers — context matters. Being taken through the head coach's office is a strong indicator of real interest. 🧩 Understanding the Power Structure Head coaches are CEOs — assistants gather intel. Recruiting decisions are layered and political. Parents and players must learn to read between the lines. ⚖️ Ethics, Transparency & Reality Not all coaches operate honorably. Players are often strung along without clear answers. In a real business environment, many recruiting practices wouldn't survive. Athletes must protect themselves and treat recruiting as a business. 💡 Final Message Keep working. Keep training. Keep communicating. Recruiting is unpredictable, emotional, and imperfect — but opportunity exists longer than most people think. The right fit, at the right time, in the right environment matters more than the logo.

    48 min
  6. FEB 1

    if You Can Play, You Can Play: The Truth About College Football Evaluation

    🏈 Football 360 Show — Episode Notes Hosts: JP Rock & Matt Biermann Platform: X (Twitter) & YouTube — Football 360 Show Website: football360show.com 🎙️ Episode Overview JP Rock and Matt Biermann kick off the Football 360 Show from the middle of a brutal Midwest snowstorm, mixing lighthearted weather talk with deep, real-world football analysis. From facility operations during winter weather to the evolving realities of college football recruiting, this episode dives into what actually matters when evaluating players — beyond height, weight, and hype. ❄️ Opening Segment: Weather, Training & Facility Operations Snow totals across the St. Louis area varied widely (up to ~11 inches in some areas). Discussion on closing vs. staying open during winter storms and erring on the side of athlete safety. Elite Football Academy operations during snow days, including unexpected high attendance once facilities reopened. Behind-the-scenes look at landlord maintenance, turf clearing, and winter logistics. Youth birthday parties during snowstorms — hardcore parents showed up anyway. 🏈 College Football Landscape & Roster Trends College football season recap and reflections on the modern playoff era. Discussion on the average age of college football rosters creeping toward 22–23 years old. NIL, extra eligibility, medical redshirts, and transfers have made roster projections far more complex. Matt explains current work scraping and analyzing FBS rosters to better predict real opportunity and depth chart movement. 📏 Height, Weight & the "Myth" of Measurements Breakdown of inaccurate roster measurements vs. verified NFL measurements. Example: quarterbacks listed at 6'0" in college measuring closer to 5'9" at NFL events. Key point: Height discrepancies rarely correlate with actual performance. If a player can play, size becomes secondary. 🧠 Quarterback Evaluation: What Actually Matters Trend toward smaller, more compact quarterbacks with quick mechanics. Shotgun-heavy offenses have changed pocket dynamics. Faster decision-making > leverage throwing. Compact mechanics reduce fumbles and strip sacks in tight pockets. Real-world examples of shorter QBs succeeding at high levels. 🥊 Football Meets Boxing: The Mike Tyson Analogy Compact, explosive athletes beating longer, "ideal-measurement" players. Once a compact athlete gets inside leverage, size advantages disappear. Applied to quarterbacks, defensive linemen, and skill positions. Technique, violence, and timing beat measurables. 🏋️ Offensive & Defensive Line Evolution Prediction: offensive line recruiting may shift away from extreme length. Defensive linemen are becoming more compact, faster, and more technically refined. Holding penalties and inside moves expose oversized linemen. Example: compact interior disruptors consistently outperform "prototype" builds. 🔁 Transfer Portal: Gift and Curse Transfer portal allows coaches to correct recruiting misses quickly. Benefits players who use it wisely. High school recruiting has become more volatile and less patient. Roster churn has replaced long-term program development. 🎓 Recruiting Reality Check College coaches juggle coaching, recruiting, administration, and survival. Many rely heavily on measurables to avoid "risk." NFL scouts have openly criticized college coaches as inconsistent evaluators. Recruiting departments are becoming more NFL-style to manage complexity. 🧠 The Missing Piece: Mental & Emotional Buy-In Biggest recruiting separator: does the player love football or love the idea of football? Warning sign: players who stop training after committing. Commitment is the beginning, not the finish line. Mental disengagement leads to stalled development and early transfers. Agents and outside noise often oversell average players. 🏁 Closing Thoughts Modern college football is faster, more transactional, and less stable. Player development still rewards those who love the process. Measurables don't win games — execution, toughness, and mindset do. The system is changing, but football truths remain the same.

    50 min
  7. JAN 19

    Built, Not Posted: The Reality of Player Development

    *]:pointer-events-auto scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" tabindex="-1" data-turn-id= "2f8c84ec-db8b-4e75-b714-7a49d5518c85" data-testid= "conversation-turn-6" data-scroll-anchor="false" data-turn= "assistant"> Football 360 Show Notes (Segment: Social plugs → Training/Development → QBs) 📺 Where to Watch + Follow (Opening) Live on YouTube + X: "Football 360 Show" Call-to-action: follow, like, share, subscribe, tell your friends Also on Instagram, football360show.com, Apple Podcasts, Spotify Radio: KLIS 590 AM (St. Louis) + looinfo.com Hosts: JP Rock + Matt Bierman 🏈 Segment 1 — "What's New?" + Training Life (Early) Matt: "What's new? Football. A lot of football every day." Quick behind-the-scenes: Matt multitasking, getting the show posted online. Training recap: Busy Sunday at the facility Strong turnout across youth / middle school / high school Encouraging: lots of middle school participation 🧱 Segment 2 — The "Big John" Moment (Size, Growth, & Why Football is Unique) JP describes a massive 8th grader who "looked like Big John." "Big John" context: Roughly 6'10.5 (measured at Elite Combine) Was 360 lbs in 8th grade, now joked closer to 450 "Big John is truly Big John… really Giant John." Fun anecdote: Lawrence Maroney (Normandy → Minnesota → Patriots) reacted: "He is huge… you've got to run around him." Point: his arm length + mass changes pass-rush strategy. Coaching note: Big-bodied 8th graders (especially 6'1–6'4+) often struggle with movement due to growth, joints, coordination. Big takeaway: football fits every body type You can have a 5'2 kid and a 6'10 kid—and both have a position "Football is a conglomerate of positions" with different attributes and mentalities Elite skills training is organized by position for that reason Mention: big-lineman pipelines at Francis Howell and Eureka 🧢 Segment 3 — Coaches as Dads + Letting Others Pour Into Your Kid Matt talks about seeing high school coaches bring their kids in (ex: Coach Brian Cook + son Ty). Personal parenting lens: Matt enjoys coaching his son, but also enjoys watching others coach him. Manning Camp example: he intentionally chose to be dad, not coach for once. "There's 363 other days where you are literally coach." 🏟️ Segment 4 — Development vs Social Media "Proof" Matt addresses criticism (from social) about whether Elite "developed" certain players: Mentions Brady Cook, Isaiah Williams, Tony Adams, Marquis Hayes and the thousands of hours spent training. Point: results and relationship depth matter more than posting workouts. Critique of "new-age coaching" culture: Work with a kid 2–3 times → post cone drills → claim development Real development includes: long-term training adversity conversations progress across HS → college → pro transitions Matt notes a moment where Brady publicly responded online to defend the work. 🎯 Segment 5 — Real Recruiting Truth: "Help" vs Guarantees Both emphasize: nobody can guarantee a scholarship except college coaches Families should look for help, not sales pitches. JP's point: people selling "guarantees" are selling you—guarantees are "worthless" Scouting lens: JP mentions he can often identify "automatic scholarship guys" the real value is helping the "dream guys" who need: the plan the performance work skills work guidance + answers at key decision points Shared belief: "The cream rises to the top," even if some pathways now lead to lower levels first. 🧩 Segment 6 — Example: Tion Gray + How Exposure Happens Matt tells the story of Tion Gray (seen as a freshman): Invited into training A D1 coach happened to be present (Barry Odom, Arkansas DC at the time) Coach saw him, trusted recommendation, and offered on the spot Key lesson: Talent matters, but being seen matters Athletes must take initiative to put themselves in the right environments 💸 Segment 7 — Football Money + Combine Reality Check Matt notes how training → confidence/skill → exposure can now lead to athletes earning money (college NIL and beyond). Shares NIL portal example: player with limited production (7 catches last year) tests portal and ends up at $675k. Combine discussion (US Army Combine, Elite Combine, KC Varsity): "You don't get there just by showing up." Combine prep is training-dependent: 5-10-5 shuttle times discussed (some around 4.25) now focusing on 40 times Point: many athletes are fast, but combines reveal where speed training is missing. Wrestler example: a top wrestler chooses to skip wrestling season because football is his future dedicates ~6 months to get ready for camps → KC Varsity → college camps 🔁 Segment 8 — Portal Local Notes: Tion Gray + Others Quick portal updates mentioned: Tion Gray is now in the portal J. Harris referenced as Kansas State Robert Kind (Robert "Kinda"?) referenced as being in the portal too (Elite Combine MVP) Background on Tion: Carnahan HS (now closed) early invite → developed through years with coaches and Boom lineman work now around 6'5, 330+ (as discussed), previously 6'4 225–230 as a freshman Big point: he "put in the work" — drenched in sweat, consistent effort, coached hard. 🧠 Segment 9 — Quarterback Development: Midwest Misconceptions + Age Advantage They shift to quarterback talent: Sunday had a strong QB group, including freshmen who "don't know how good they are yet." Compares current QB group to past elite classes (Dalton Deimos, Trevor McDonough, etc.). Challenge today is tougher: becoming the "anointed" QB recruit is harder now than it used to be exposure hotbeds influence perception (CA/FL/GA pipelines) Midwest QB argument: Missouri QBs can match the national level—often underrated due to "not a QB hotbed" narrative. Midwest football overall is strong (teams like Ferris State, Illinois State, Indiana, North Central mentioned) Major differentiator discussed: age Missouri kids often: freshmen 14 → seniors 17 turning 18 other regions: seniors 18 turning 19 That 1-year maturity gap = massive physical development difference. 📻 Mid-Show Plug (Radio) Reminder: Saturdays 11 AM on KLIS 590 AM Website: looinfo.com "Your loo info station" 🧱 Segment 10 — QB Archetype Shift: Size vs Mobility JP mentions Mizzou's 2027 QB commit from Omaha (camp sighting): around 6'0–6'1, thick build, good arm (as discussed) Matt's trend take: "Sweet spot" may be 5'10 to 6'1 now because those guys can run and escape. With today's defensive line speed/athleticism, being 6'5 isn't the advantage it used to be. Old-school QB myths challenged: "Tall QB sees over the line" — but you're still looking past 6'7 tackles. "QB on toes" — Matt argues force production requires grounding (compares to golf/baseball/basketball mechanics). Notes a smaller QB example (Washington commitment who considered flipping then stayed; name not confirmed in transcript) Around 5'10, dynamic runner and passer Reinforces belief: smaller QBs can absolutely play. *]:pointer-events-auto scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" tabindex="-1" data-turn-id= "90233a61-b82c-452a-9f43-49d112acefa0" data-testid= "conversation-turn-8" data-scroll-anchor="false" data-turn= "assistant"> ✅ Wrap-Up The guys close this segment by tying everything back to real development: it's not social media posts or hype videos — it's years of reps, coaching, adversity, and consistent work. They highlight how football is uniquely built for all body types and skill sets, and why position-specific training matters. The conversation shifts into a quarterback development deep-dive, pushing back on outdated myths (QB height, "playing on toes") and arguing today's game rewards mobility, efficiency, and real throwing mechanics. They emphasize that Missouri/Midwest QBs are undervalued, and one of the biggest hidden advantages in other regions is simply age/maturity (18–19 year-old seniors vs 17–18). Overall message: exposure + preparation = opportunity — the kids who train, test, and put themselves in the right environments give coaches a reason to find them.

    48 min
  8. JAN 7

    5,000+ Players in the Portal: Chaos or the Market Working?

    Football 360 Show Notes  🎙️ Intro + Welcome (0:00–1:34) Show open: "Welcome to the Football 360 Show — the fastest 48 minutes football talk on the planet." Hosts introduced: JP Rock + Matt Beerman. Back after a couple weeks off — holiday season schedule + time away. JP talks about how he "gets lost in the holidays" and has a hard time returning to normal. JP's holiday chaos: flu + COVID + bacterial/viral infection and a new baby. New addition: CROI, 8 lbs 9 oz — "that's a football name." Matt's holiday recap: time off for Christmas + New Year's, no travel this year (no Utah). Quick shoutout: Merry Christmas / Happy New Year to listeners. 🏈 Big Picture: College Football = Pro Football Now Tons of football happened; "interesting times" — Mizzou, transfer portal, and the bigger ecosystem. Transfer portal reality: ~4,000 players in the portal. Many may never play again. Many are entering because they're being nudged out of programs. Concern raised: Are we setting athletes up for academic success with multiple transfers? Transferring once was hard enough — now it's common to transfer 3–4 times. 🏛️ Congress / NCAA / "Let It Burn" Theory JP + Matt discuss how Congress and the Senate are now engaged in "fixing" college football. A conspiracy-ish idea discussed: NCAA may be letting chaos grow because they're tired of losing court cases hoping Congress steps in and grants antitrust protection. Matt's concern: If NCAA gets antitrust protection, it could be bad for athletes NCAA would regain leverage and return to controlling decisions in harmful ways. Key reminder: don't ignore how we got here — athletes used to be trapped by transfer restrictions. ⛓️ "Dark Days" of Transfers + Power Imbalance  Example referenced: players previously denied transfers and forced to sit even if dropping levels. Mentions "blacklisting" and the old system where schools had full control. Tommy Tuberville mentioned as a Senator involved in the discussion. Core thesis: It's always been professional football but only for TV networks, universities, and coaches. Now athletes have "skin in the game," and people want to "pump the brakes." 💰 Revenue Share + Who Wants the Money  The schools are angry because now they must pay athletes: ~$20–22M/year (revenue share baseline discussed) which creates shortfalls, job losses, belt tightening. Schools don't want collectives controlling NIL money — they want universities/NCAA to control it. Discussion of NIL clearinghouse concept (anything over ~$600 being reviewed): "third party intermediary" but funded/controlled by NCAA. Major point: "Fair market value" is set by two parties agreeing — not a third party. Predicts this becomes the next major lawsuit. 👷 Athlete "Employee" Argument  Matt argues the "athletes aren't employees" stance is weak: athletes are told when to show up, what to wear, schedules, responsibilities — that's employment structure. Trading "education" for labor wouldn't fly elsewhere. The current chaos is framed as the market sorting itself out: previously it should've been like this, but athletes had no agency. 🧨 Competitive Shake-Up + Super League Direction  Schools that used to pay under the table don't like that everyone can pay openly now. "That's how you get Indiana rising" (example used to show new parity possibilities). Matt + JP repeat the idea: we're heading toward a super league reality. If programs can't keep up financially, it'll show on the field. "Base layer" is revenue share; NIL becomes the differentiator beyond that. 📉 NIL "Go" + Contract Front-Loading + Future Pay Cuts  Matt notes many deals were front-loaded before NIL enforcement tightened. Players may be living on "last year's contract reality" — and next year money could tighten. Reiterates: denying NIL deals as "not fair market value" invites antitrust/commerce lawsuits. Emphasis: NCAA wants control back; toothpaste isn't going back in the tube. 🚨 Tampering + "Do Not Contact" Portal Entries  Predicts lawsuits around tampering. Portal entries with "do not contact" strongly imply backchannel communication already happened. Example: Mizzou player referenced (Bo Pribula mentioned) — didn't play bowl, then gone. Matt describes the new ecosystem: agents, reps, handlers — "a whole industry now." 📞 Real-World Example: Coaches Calling About Portal Players  Matt shares a story: one of their coaches got a call from a college coach asking about a portal kid. Their stance: "We don't represent them." "We train and develop athletes." Goal is athlete success, not making money off transfers or NIL. Advice for families: If you're a high-profile starter with real market value, an agent may help. But it should be someone legit (e.g., lawyer/true negotiator), not a "wannabe." 📺 Where to Watch / Follow the Show  Platforms mentioned: YouTube + X Football360Show.com Saturday mornings 11 AM on KLS 590 AM (St. Louis) + "lootinfo.com" referenced 🏟️ Portal Talk: Local Names + Coaching Threads  Portal remains the focus: 4,000 players, including local names. Jacobi Oliphant: Oklahoma State → Kansas State now ~6'4"/6'5", 230 connection thread: familiar coach relationships Portal recruiting compared to the NFL: players follow coaches, coaches bring known fits into systems. Example: Iowa State roster attrition referenced (down to very low numbers at one point). Washington State pipeline example mentioned; a cycle of roster stripping/refilling. Timing debate: some say portal should be spring coaches want January entries to get them through spring ball and install. Notes on "re-signing announcements": signals stability to fans also reflects that staying is now a two-way agreement many kids are "encouraged" into portal without being officially cut. Austin Romain: Kansas State → Texas Tech former Elite Football Combine MVP described as 6'6", 235, 4.6 forty, 35" vertical (as discussed) Closing theme of the segment: don't let NCAA off the hook — they helped create the chaotic system; coaches and athletes are now living inside it. 5,000 in the Portal: Chaos or the Market Working?

    49 min

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About

With Football 360, we will dive deep into American Football, from youth leagues to the pro level. Our podcast is your ultimate source for all things football with training tips, NIL discussions, D1 Recruiting, the Transfer Portal, Athletic Development, and Speed & Strength training. This podcast will feature discussions about all levels of football, including youth, middle school, high school, college, and the NFL and other pro football leagues. This podcast is for you if you are asking questions such as: -What do I need to do to get a football scholarship? -How does the transfer portal work?