Darian Mensah shocked the college football world this offseason with his transfer from the Duke Blue Devils to the Miami Hurricanes.

It wasn’t the transfer itself that was necessarily shocking. They happen all the time nowadays.

It wasn’t even the intraconference drama. That happens all the time nowadays as well.

No … it was the way things went down.

Mensah had a tremendous 2025 season for Duke and helped lead the Blue Devils to their first outright ACC title win since 1962. In the process, he threw for 3,937 yards and 34 touchdowns. 

Mensah was expected to be a hot target on the transfer portal or a 2026 NFL Draft prospect, but he didn’t want to leave Durham. In fact, he decided to bypass the NFL Draft and he re-committed to Duke on Dec. 19 in an Instagram video.

“Let’s run this back,” Mensah had said.

Then, on the last day of the transfer portal being open in January, the Hurricanes came calling with an offer.

Mensah is now expected to make $6.5 million in 2026 as the starting quarterback of the Hurricanes, and that includes money that must go to Duke for a settlement. 

The Blue Devils had signed a two-year contract worth $8 million with Mensah when they got him to transfer from Tulane. They sued him upon his entrance into the transfer portal to try to stop his transfer and to enforce that multiyear NIL deal.

Things got messy, but Mensah told reporters at ACC football media days on Wednesday that he isn’t worried about all the controversy that surrounded his transfer and what anybody may think of it.

“Business is business,” he said, according to Ross Dellenger of Yahoo.

Darian Mensah paid a personal price for transfer to Miami

That’s the world we live in nowadays, and Mensah’s thoughts are the perfect encapsulation of where college sports are at right now.

Forget things like school pride, existing relationships, and … you know … academics.

It’s all about business in the NIL and transfer portal era, and there’s a ton of money flowing in all directions.

Ironically, though, Mensah’s mother, Naomi, told Dellenger that money was not a factor in Mensah’s decision to leave Duke high and dry.

“People were dragging Darian for thinking it was all about money. It wasn’t. There was money either way,” she said. “We looked at the big picture of where Darian wants to go. That ultimately was the choice. What was going to get him to his end goal? He could go and win the ACC again but could he get to a natty and win the Heisman?”

Mensah will have a chance to do both at Miami. The Hurricanes will be one of the favorites to win the College Football Playoff and Mensah is currently one of the betting favorites to win the Heisman.

The quarterback from San Luis Obispo, California, is certainly in a better position now, but it came with a price.

Speaking of price tags, his mom was very open as to the personal price Mensah has paid in the court of public opinion.

“I’d see people saying he is a traitor and has no heart and he’s not loyal and jumping from school to school,” Naomi said. “There was hate like, ‘(bleep) that guy.’ It was hard to see. The people who really matter understood his reasoning and were actually encouraging him to go.”