Oregon sues Oklahoma DB Dakoda Fields over transfer's unpaid NIL contract buyout

The University of Oregon has initiated legal action against Dakoda Fields, a former defensive back, accusing him of not fulfilling a financial obligation linked to his transfer departure. The lawsuit, filed on May 15 in Lane County Circuit Court, alleges that Fields, now with Oklahoma, had agreed to pay $39,882.30 to be released from his contract with Oregon. This agreement came about after Fields chose to leave following the 2025 season, as reported by The Oregonian.

Within this agreement, the university claims there was a provision allowing for a $10,000 discount if the payment was made by April 20. However, that date came and went without Fields making the payment, according to the report. Subsequently, Fields did pay $29,882.30, but Oregon argues he still owes the remaining $10,000, plus interest and legal fees.

The lawsuit specifies, “Pursuant to section 7 of the Contract, the University is entitled to reimbursement of its attorney fees, costs, and disbursements plus statutory interest of 9% from April 21, 2026, until paid,” as noted in the filing.

The original terms of the financial agreement are not detailed in the lawsuit, as Oregon law protects various aspects of athlete revenue-sharing and NIL agreements from public disclosure.

During his tenure at Oregon, Fields had limited participation. He redshirted in 2024 and did not play in any games, while in the 2025 season, he appeared in three games and recorded a single tackle.

Meanwhile, as the Big Ten post-spring rankings emerge, Ohio State is eager to break its conference title drought, while questions loom about whether USC can make a breakthrough.

Cody Nagel

Big Ten post-spring power rankings: Ohio State looks to end conference title drought, can USC break through?

His departure became a storyline late in the 2025 season after reports surfaced in November that Fields planned to enter the transfer portal before the season had concluded. Oregon coach Dan Lanning publicly addressed the situation during a Nov. 5 press conference and indicated there had been little communication between the program and the player.

“He didn’t come to work today,” Lanning said. “I — we haven’t talked to Dakoda, so I guess that’s the way it goes nowadays.”

Fields was part of a wave of secondary departures for Oregon after the season. A former four-star prospect, Fields arrived at Oregon in the 2024 cycle as the No. 110 overall recruit nationally and No. 11 cornerback by 247Sports.

Oklahoma added Fields during a busy transfer portal cycle under coach Brent Venables. The Sooners return starters Eli Bowen, Peyton Bowen and Courtland Guillory in the secondary and are expected to have one of the more experienced defensive back groups in the SEC entering 2026, leaving Fields likely to begin in a reserve role while competing for playing time. 

He has three seasons of eligibility remaining because of his 2024 redshirt.

Oregon’s lawsuit is one of several recent disputes tied to NIL and revenue-sharing agreements as schools increasingly attempt to enforce contracts in the transfer portal era.

In February, Cincinnati sued former quarterback Brendan Sorsby after his transfer to Texas Tech, alleging he violated the terms of a revenue-sharing agreement that included a reported $1 million buyout provision if he left the program before the contract expired. According to court documents obtained by The Athletic, Cincinnati claimed Sorsby breached an 18-month agreement that ran through the 2026 season. Sorsby later signed with Texas Tech on a reported multi-million dollar NIL package following Cincinnati’s 2025 campaign, but has since taken a leave of absence from the program to enter treatment for a gambling addiction amid an NCAA investigation into sports betting allegations.

Duke also entered a legal dispute with former quarterback Darian Mensah after he sought to transfer to Miami following the 2025 season. Duke argued that Mensah violated provisions of his NIL agreement by entering the portal before arbitration proceedings outlined in the contract could take place. The two sides eventually reached a settlement that cleared the way for Mensah’s transfer.

Washington similarly threatened legal action against quarterback Demond Williams Jr. earlier this offseason after he initially intended to enter the portal before ultimately remaining with the Huskies.

The disputes have become another byproduct of college football’s evolving NIL landscape, where revenue-sharing agreements and transfer movement are increasingly intersecting with contract enforcement and legal challenges.

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