BREAKING šŸ”„ā€¼ļø: Bear Bachmeier Rejects Multi-Million NIL Bids, Stays Loyal to BYU Amid Turmoil

The BYU Cougars’ 2025 season has been a rollercoaster scripted by a Provo playwright: a blistering 10-1 start that vaulted them to No. 7 in the CFP rankings, only to screech into a pair of gut-wrenching losses—to Oklahoma State in a November hail-mary hailstorm and a 29-7 demolition by Texas Tech that felt like a Big 12 gut punch. Personnel shake-ups followed like thunder: starting QB Jake Retzlaff’s suspension-turned-transfer in July (amid off-field whispers that never fully surfaced), defensive coordinator Jay Hill’s abrupt exit for a ā€œfamily sabbatical,ā€ and whispers of AD Tom Holmoe eyeing a coordinator reshuffle. LaVell Edwards Stadium, still buzzing from Bear Bachmeier’s freshman fireworks, suddenly felt like a pressure cooker. Enter the 18-year-old phenom himself: Bear Bachmeier, the true freshman slinger who’s thrown for 2,593 yards and 14 TDs while scampering for 529 yards and 11 scores, just swatted away a swarm of seven-figure NIL offers from Powerhouse programs. He’s staying. Bold. Loyal. And after a locked-down summit with coach Kalani Sitake and the brass Thursday afternoon, that serene exit masked eyes gleaming with intel that could upend the entire NCAA landscape.

 

Insiders (chatting off the record, naturally—NIL’s a black box even for boosters) spill that Bachmeier’s phone lit up like a slot machine post-Tech loss. Informal probes from at least four SEC blue-bloods and a Big Ten giant since Week 11: $3-5 million guarantees, equity in collectives, even NIL-backed NIL (private tutors, jet shares) from schools like LSU (post-Garrett Nussmeier reset), Florida (needing a dual-threat savior), and Penn State (James Franklin’s shadow still looming). ā€œIt tested his faith,ā€ one source close to the family texted. ā€œBear’s pulling $2.2 million here already—top-10 for freshmen per On3. This was about Zion. Provo’s home now, with brother Tiger catching his fades.ā€ The Murrieta, Calif., gunslinger—four-star recruit who flipped from Stanford in May after a coaching purge, then seized the starting gig in August as the first true frosh in BYU history—bet on blue over bags. His 144.1 passer rating, 79.6 QBR (12th nationally), and that ā€œGosh Dang Centaurā€ mobility? It’s the spark behind BYU’s 11th win (a 41-27 clinic over Iowa State last Saturday), clinching the No. 2 Big 12 seed and a rematch date with Tech in Arlington tomorrow. Ā 

But the real electricity? That ā€œprivate meetingā€ā€”a 90-minute, no-leak huddle in Sitake’s office at 1 p.m., extending to the LDS Family Services suite by 2:15. Attendees: Sitake, offensive coordinator Aaron Roderick (the Bachmeier whisperer who’s scripted those short-intermediate dinks into gold), AD Holmoe, and Bachmeier’s dad Michael as family anchor. On the docket: contract tweaks (hello, revenue-share infusion from the House v. NCAA settlement, bumping Bear’s deal toward $4 million with TD ladders), role lockdown (unrivaled alpha in ā€˜26, even with McCae Hillstead lurking), and the program’s North Star—portal reinforcements (targeting EDGE rushers and OL bricks), staff stability vows, and a ā€œCougars Covenantā€ for sibling recruits (Tiger’s locked, but eyes on younger bro Buck). Eyewitnesses (a janitor who ā€œdidn’t see nothinā€™ā€) pegged Bear entering focused, fresh from film on Tech’s secondary, his No. 47 jersey slung over one shoulder. He strolled out at 2:45, navy hoodie shadowing that baby face, flashing a peace sign to hovering media with a half-grin. Serene? Absolutely. But those eyes—sharp as a deep post, with that Bachmeier family fire—hinted at secrets. Like he’d glimpsed the matrix.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*