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Thoughts on Duke and Mensah's Options
Option 1: Return to Duke
Theoretically available but practically dead. Duke can't afford to be seen as a paper tiger. If Mensah comes back and plays out 2026 like nothing happened, every future NIL negotiation at Duke starts with the other side knowing that breach is costless. Duke has institutional interests beyond this one quarterback. The precedent matters more than the player.
There's also a contractual wrinkle: Mensah entered the portal, which triggered Duke's termination right under Section III.2(h) of the Duke-Mensah deal. Duke could simply refuse to take him back. The door may already be closed. For heaven's sake, if contracts are going to matter in this new NIL world, it should be.
Option 2: Declare for the NFL Draft
This is where it gets interesting, and I think it's Mensah's most viable path, but it's not clean.
Section III.2(h) gives Duke the right, but not the obligation, to terminate if Mensah "enters into the DRAFT or decides to sign a professional contract." If Mensah declares and Duke terminates, he's free. Contract over. NIL restrictions gone. He enters the draft unencumbered.
But Duke holds that key. If Duke refuses to terminate, Mensah is in limbo. He could be drafted. He could sign a rookie contract— unless I am missing something, nothing in Section VII.3(a) of the Duke-Mensah deal prohibits playing in the NFL; that covenant only covers "collegiate institutions." But the NIL exclusivity in Section I.2 covers "(a) institutions of higher education and (b) the Sport." The Sport is defined as "Football" in the contract. Not college football. Football.
If Duke doesn't terminate, Mensah could theoretically play in the NFL while Duke still holds exclusive rights to his NIL in football through December 31, 2026. Could an NFL team live with that? Probably. They would pay his salary regardless. But Mensah's marketing value, his endorsement deals, his rookie visibility campaign are all complicated by a license that sits in Durham and that belongs to Duke University.
Would Duke actually refuse to terminate just to spite him? I have no idea. I doubt it. But Duke could use that leverage to extract a settlement— return of payments, fees, at least, and probably more.Option
3: Sit Out 2026Mensah could simply wait.
The contract expires December 31, 2026. He enters the 2027 NFL Draft. He loses a year of tape, a year of development, a year of visibility. But he's a redshirt sophomore. He's young. Players have sat out for less.
This is the cleanest exit if Mensah refuses to negotiate and Duke refuses to release him. It's also seemingly the most expensive for Mensah in career terms.
Option 4: Transfer Without NIL
Off hand, this is easily the most legally interesting question. Here, Mensah has room to argue, IMO. Section VII.3(a) includes a covenant against enrolling or competing at another collegiate institution; it is written broadly. It doesn't say "enroll and receive NIL compensation." It says "enroll at or compete in athletics for another collegiate institution." Period. A court could read that as prohibiting any transfer, NIL or not.
But a court might also read the covenant in light of its purpose: protecting Duke's exclusive NIL license. If Mensah transfers but signs no NIL deal with the new school, Duke's exclusive license isn't being infringed— it's just not being exploited by the next school. The harm Duke suffers is reputational and competitive, not contractual.
But here's the practical problem: why would, SAY, Miami want Mensah without his NIL? Any Mensah deal must include his NIL value, not just his arm. If, SAY, Miami can't market him, can't put him in Adidas campaigns, can't use his name and likeness in recruiting materials, what are they paying for? A quarterback they can't promote is worth a lot less than a quarterback they can put on billboards.
So yes, theoretically Mensah could go to Miami and play football while Duke retains his NIL rights through December 31, 2026.
Option 5: Negotiate a Buyout
This is probably where this ends. Duke doesn't want Mensah back. Mensah doesn't want to sit out. The NFL is a maybe. Another school, SAY MIAMI, wants him and allegedly has money to spend.
The question is price. Duke's damages are approximately $4 million AND the value of his NIL. But Duke might demand more: attorneys' fees, reputational harm, a premium for releasing a player mid-contract. Another school might pay it. Or Mensah might pay it from whatever, SAY MIAMI, gives him.Duke's leverage is the injunction. As long as that's in place, Mensah can't go anywhere meaningful. That leverage has a price.
The Bottom Line
Mensah's realistic options are:
1. Declare for the draft and hope Duke terminates (or negotiate a termination)
2. Sit out 2026 and wait for the contract to expire
3. Negotiate a buyout
Returning to Duke is off the table (or should be, IMO). Transferring to another school is blocked by the injunction— and even if a court allowed enrollment without NIL, it would seem like no school would want Mensah on those terms. Correct me if I am wrong.
Regardless, Duke holds the cards. This is Big Game Hunting. Millions are being paid. The words to a contract do matter as do the signatures.