With the news that Naeshaun Montgomery is off to the transfer portal, Florida fans are disappointed but also not shocked by the move. Montgomery had taken part in the Under Armour All-America game, was a composite top 200 overall prospect, but was also in a logjam at wide receiver in Gainesville.
In a pre-NIL Era, Montgomery would have been a building block to develop. In this era, Montgomery is a harsh casualty of modern roster building in college football.
Naeshaun Montgomery is off to the transfer portal
Now that players are essentially on one-year contracts and money is a driving factor for which players stay and which players go, the unfortunate truth is that teams are going to have to pick and choose who to prioritize, who to keep, and who to send on their way.
And while a college roster may be 85 scholarship players, the number of players who are actually needed in a given year is far less. This year alone, the Gators had a grand total of 19 players on offense and 24 players on defense take at least 100 snaps in 2025. Throw in your punter, kicker, and long snapper, and of the 85 guys on the roster, only 46 were used in any real capacity by Florida in 2025.
That is almost a mirror image of the roster construction that happens in the NFL. The 12-3 New England Patriots, for example, have had 18 players on offense and 21 players on defense take at least 100 snaps this point of the season.
They have had a grand total of five players listed as a wide receiver catch a pass this year.
So what does this have to do with Montgomery?
Start doing the math.
If Dallas Wilson, Tre Wilson, and Vernell Brown III come back (and that is still to be determined), throw in incoming freshman and top 100 prospect Davian Groce, along with a potential transfer portal wide receiver to be named, and there are your five potential wide receivers Florida needs for 2026.
Modern NFL salary cap math dictates you do whatever it takes to lock up your top two wide receivers and just hope you scout well to fill the back end of the rotation. And just like in the NFL, sometimes a player like Montgomery comes along who has all the potential to move on and be a great player, but the salary cap math just doesn’t enable him to stay.
It’s the same math that jettisoned Aidan Mizell and Tank Hawkins, even though they were also two players we really liked.
Could injuries derail the wide receiver room and make a guy like Montgomery needed?
Of course, but the reality is you have to just take your chance on your core five and let the chips fall as they may.
Such is life in the modern era of college football.
