{"id":47857,"date":"2025-07-30T15:48:10","date_gmt":"2025-07-30T15:48:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/47857\/"},"modified":"2025-07-30T15:48:10","modified_gmt":"2025-07-30T15:48:10","slug":"inside-the-transfer-portal-phenomenon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/47857\/","title":{"rendered":"Inside the Transfer Portal Phenomenon"},"content":{"rendered":"<p id=\"inline-text-0\" class=\"!mt-[30px] first-letter:float-left first-letter:text-[48px] first-letter:leading-[48px] md:first-letter:text-[54px] md:first-letter:leading-[54px] first-letter:pr-1.5 mt-[18px] md:mt-0 mb-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"57\">A popular mantra of recent years is to \u201cBe where your feet are.\u201d AJ Storr is good at that, even if his feet don\u2019t stay still for very long.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-1\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5a\">\u201cI live in the moment,\u201d Storr says. \u201cI just try to enjoy where I am. It doesn\u2019t seem like I\u2019ve moved this many times.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-2\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5d\">Storr is a college basketball player. He is 21 years old and has attended eight different schools in eight different states since 2020, when he was still in high school, hopscotching across the map to chase an NBA dream. He is one of the faces of a Migration Generation of young athletes, navigating an impermanence unlike anything previously seen at the preprofessional levels. Have game, will travel.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-3\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5g\">The Migration Generation is unbound by NCAA transfer regulations and free to move about the country annually in pursuit of playing time and NIL cash. From 2019\u201320 through \u201923\u201324, when NCAA transfer limitations were struck down by the courts, Division I portal entrants nearly doubled, from 13,689 to 24,399. Football portal entries rose 138% in that span, while women\u2019s basketball increased 132% and men\u2019s hoops elevated 111%. Final figures are not in for \u201924\u201325, but the expectation is for another significant year-over-year increase in D-I transfers.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01k1cp4y6g707jfndyf5.jpg\" alt=\"AJ Storr in St. John's, Wisconsin, Kansas and Ole Miss uniforms.\" title=\"AJ Storr in St. John's, Wisconsin, Kansas and Ole Miss uniforms.\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"5p\"\/>| Photo Illustrated by SI Premedia; photo by Erick W. Rasco\/Sports Illustrated (Body, Ole Miss uniform); Mitchell Layton\/Getty Images (St. John\u2019s uniform); Michael Hickey\/Getty Images (Wisconsin uniform); Jay Biggerstaff\/Imagn Images (Kansas uniform)<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-5\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5t\">The standard line from college sports leaders for years was that athletes transfer less frequently than the general college student population. According to a 2025 study from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, transfers represented 13.1% of all continuing and returning undergraduates. In men\u2019s and women\u2019s basketball, that percentage has been surpassed.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-6\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5w\">Yet even before reaching college, many athletes are part of a culture that encourages player movement. Transfers have become routine at the high school level as well, particularly among elite prospects looking to maximize their college options\u2014and in some states to take advantage of the NIL opportunities now available. Six of the top seven men\u2019s basketball prospects in the 247 Sports rankings for the class of 2025 transferred at least once in high school, and three of them transferred three or more times. While the majority of top-50 football prospects attended just one high school (per 247 Sports), in boys\u2019 basketball the number who have transferred at least once before heading off to college is 50%. Football and especially basketball players increasingly are itinerant workers.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-7\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5z\">Within this transient ecosystem, there are rational explanations for many of the stops on Storr\u2019s journey from home in Kankakee, Ill., to Las Vegas to Chandler, Ariz., to Bradenton, Fla., to Queens, N.Y., to Madison, Wis., to Lawrence, Kan., to his present location, Oxford, Miss. The COVID-19 pandemic shut down basketball seasons at both Kankakee High and his next stop, athletic powerhouse Bishop Gorman, in Vegas, where his dad lives. Storr graduated from Compass Prep in Arizona after playing for a stacked team there in 2020\u201321, but he was only 17 so he took a postgrad year at another prep power, Florida\u2019s IMG Academy.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-8\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"62\">His first college stop was at St. John\u2019s. Coach Mike Anderson was fired after Storr\u2019s freshman season, so Storr returned to his Midwestern roots with Wisconsin. The 6&#8242; 7&#8243; wing led a 22-win NCAA tournament team with 16.8 points per game, then made a decision that ended badly: He left for blueblood Kansas. Whatever Storr might have gained in NIL money, he lost as a basketball player. His playing time and productivity plummeted as the Jayhawks struggled through their worst season since 1988\u201389.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-9\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"65\">Which is why Storr is now at Ole Miss, relocating to the Deep South for the first time after touching all the other major geographic areas of the United States. \u201cIt\u2019s a unique town,\u201d Storr says. \u201cIt\u2019s literally a college town\u2014that\u2019s all there is. But I like it. I\u2019m just trying to lock in.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-10\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"68\">Storr\u2019s latest\u2014and presumably last\u2014college coach does not want the player to be seen as a cautionary tale, pointing out the reasons for his transfers. \u201cAJ\u2019s story is one of the most misunderstood stories ever,\u201d says Chris Beard. \u201cI\u2019ll do my part, making sure everybody understands the truth. Maybe just the one transfer from Wisconsin to Kansas [was questionable], but none of us can live our lives knowing everything. And it\u2019s Kansas. So with AJ specifically, [I have] no concern, because I think he\u2019s hungry for just a home and an opportunity to thrive.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-11\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6b\">Storr has managed to do something many other members of the Migration Generation have not\u2014remain at the power-conference level with every move. A 2024 study by AD Advisors and Timark Partners concluded that 65% of D-I basketball portal entrants moved down at least one competitive level or did not find a new home.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01k1cpd0p4jtdqhy5yes.jpg\" alt=\"Ole Miss basketball player AJ Storr shoots a foul shot during a practice.\" title=\"Ole Miss basketball player AJ Storr shoots a foul shot during a practice.\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"6k\"\/>From St. John\u2019s to Wisconsin to Kansas and now to Ole Miss, Storr has managed to stay at a power-conference school with each transfer, a feat many other portal hoppers can\u2019t claim.  | Erick W. Rasco\/Sports Illustrated<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-13\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6o\">The conclusion from a white paper on the subject, by former Auburn athletic director Jay Jacobs and Mark LaBarbera of Timark Partners, states: \u201cThe data in this study reinforces a clear reality: the vast majority of NCAA Division I men\u2019s basketball players who enter the transfer portal move down or out. The portal isn\u2019t the place to rise, but it is the place to find more playing time, albeit at a lower level.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-14\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6r\">This isn\u2019t just a basketball phenomenon, though. It is a football reality as well. AD Advisors found that 60% of FBS transfers move down a level as well. For every Jared Verse, who went from FCS Albany to Florida State to the first round of the NFL draft, there is more than one Jaden Rashada, whose path has gone from commitments to Miami and Florida to suiting up at Arizona State and Georgia to his current home, FCS Sacramento State (after having attended three high schools).<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-15\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6u\">\u201cI think the issue that we miss is the number of young people lost to the system because of the transfer freedom,\u201d says SEC commissioner Greg Sankey. \u201cWe can all report stories of, \u2018Wow, wasn\u2019t it great that somebody went from Point A to Point B and it worked?\u2019 But there\u2019s attrition, and there\u2019s academic attrition\u2014lost credits that our young people talk to us about. And then there\u2019s loss of connection, loss of opportunity.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-16\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6x\">\u201cSo it\u2019s not all a bed of roses. There\u2019s a lot of people in the ears of young people telling them it\u2019s going to be better. That\u2019s not data driven. I think one of the underreported realities is really aggregating not only the data but the stories about young people who said, \u2018Well, the grass is going to be greener,\u2019 and that wasn\u2019t the case. Or promises or representations that went unfulfilled.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-17\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"70\">As Sankey notes, an axiomatic by-product of increased player movement is decreased academic progress. College sports has admirably improved its graduation rates over the last three decades, but the wide-open transfer market will inevitably lead to a statistical downturn.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-18\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"73\">The tension inherent in the current landscape stems from restraint of trade arguments vs. the educational underpinning of college sports. The NCAA has ceded ground over the years, from its longtime stance that transfers in football and basketball had to sit out a season, to a one-time free transfer rule, to the current reality of constant free agency. That was forced upon the association in December 2023, when seven state attorneys general sued for athletes to have a virtually unrestricted transfer marketplace in pursuit of NIL opportunities.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-19\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"76\">But what\u2019s theoretically good for business opportunities isn\u2019t suited for academic success\u2014which, once upon a time, was of primary concern (or at least a primary talking point). The latest academic progress rate and graduation success rate statistics from the NCAA continue to paint a positive picture, but the data for that report in November 2024 covers a six-year window that closed on Aug. 31, 2023\u2014a few months before all transfer regulations were effectively tossed out. So the largest fundamental changes have yet to be factored in.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-20\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"79\">Sources at the national and campus levels in college athletics who have access to some more recent academic data for transfers say a single change of schools usually slows progress toward a degree. Additional changes compound the slowdown, as difficulties transferring class credits multiply. \u201cA second or third transfer can only exacerbate the situation,\u201d one source says. \u201cIt can\u2019t make things better.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-21\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7c\">Storr says a second transfer meant changing his major from communications at Wisconsin to liberal arts at Kansas. Now he\u2019s \u201cstill figuring out\u201d what his major will be at Ole Miss. He\u2019s hoping to graduate in the spring of 2026.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-22\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7f\">Villanova guard Devin Askew, who is embarking upon his sixth college season at five different schools, received his undergraduate degree in interdisciplinary studies at his third stop, Cal. He studied consumer affairs in 2024\u201325 at Long Beach State but is vague about his course of postgrad studies at Villanova. \u201cI\u2019m in a certificate program in, uh, I want to say communications?\u201d says Askew.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01k1cpgf71v2hap6649f.jpg\" alt=\"Devin Askew with a basketball in his hands.\" title=\"Devin Askew with a basketball in his hands.\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"7o\"\/>Devin Askew, the peripatetic Nova forward, who\u2019s entering his sixth season at his fifth school, is coming off his best year on the court, averaging 18.9 ppg at Long Beach State. | Villanova Athletics<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-24\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7s\">Speeding down the no-limits autobahn to more revenue, college sports remain tethered to higher education, which sometimes seems like an inconvenient add-on that interferes with aerodynamics. But many athletes, their parents and anyone else in their ear might well be steering along an unrealistic career path long before college.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-25\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7v\">This spring Project Play, an initiative from the Aspen Institute\u2019s Sports &amp; Society Program, released findings from a survey of youth-sports parents, showing that 22% believe their children will compete in college sports and 11% believe their children will compete professionally and\/or at the Olympic level. The reality is that a tiny fraction of those kids will advance that far athletically, but that belief can help fuel a huge investment of time, money and emotion on youth sports.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-26\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7y\">\u201cThere\u2019s nothing wrong with dreaming, right?\u201d says Jon Solomon of Project Play. \u201cBut what happens when reality sets in? Especially when there\u2019s this idea of wanting a return on investment over the years? The vast majority of high school athletes aren\u2019t going to reach the next level.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-27\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"81\">Sometimes, the response to a lack of success is neither to accept a lesser role at a current school nor to refocus on a different activity. It\u2019s to change schools, change coaches, find some other reason why little Johnny isn\u2019t the starting quarterback or little Janie isn\u2019t the starting point guard.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-28\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"84\">For high-level prospects in football and basketball, a move doesn\u2019t necessarily mean going to a neighboring school. It means uprooting to attend one of the major prep schools or athletic academies that dot the landscape. In previous decades, boarding schools like Oak Hill Academy in Virginia and a handful in the Northeast were talent magnets. Now it\u2019s the likes of IMG and Montverde in Florida; Link Academy in Branson, Mo.; Sunrise Christian in Bel Aire, Kan.; Wasatch Academy in Utah; and Prolific Prep in Napa, Calif. (which is relocating to Florida).<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-29\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"87\">Here\u2019s the problem: School connectedness, defined as the \u201cbelief by students that adults and peers in the school care about their learning as well as about them as persons,\u201d was associated with lower prevalence of every risk behavior and experience examined in a 2021 study conducted by the CDC. While data specifically addressing the high school athlete transfer situation is sparse, it stands to reason that a school change could endanger an athlete\u2019s sense of belonging every bit as much as a student in the general population.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-30\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8a\">Research indicates that may be the case at the college level. In a 2020 paper titled \u201cCollege Athletes and the Influence of Academic and Athletic Investment on Sense of Belonging,\u201d researchers from VCU and Cincinnati found transfer athletes \u201cfeel a lower sense of belonging on campus than non-transfer student-athletes.\u201d Transferring isn\u2019t a simple process, either: A survey published by Public Agenda in February found that more than half of respondents who have tried to transfer credits reported some degree of credit loss.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-31\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8d\">Multiple transfers can also disconnect athletes from other advantages to be gained from putting down roots on a college campus such as a friend group built on relationships developed over time and a familiar support network. NCAA literature on mental-health best practices stresses the need for professionals to \u201cfoster trust with athletes,\u201d which can be difficult if they are moving from school to school.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-32\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8g\">\u201cSooner or later in life, you\u2019re going to need your buddies,\u201d says Michigan State men\u2019s basketball coach Tom Izzo. \u201cYou\u2019re going to need your friends. I am worried about mental health. I\u2019m worried about what these [transferring] players are going to do in a year or two. If I\u2019m wrong, that\u2019s a good thing. But if I\u2019m right, that\u2019s sad.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI am worried about mental health. I\u2019m worried about what these [transferring] players are going to do in a year or two. If I\u2019m wrong, that\u2019s a good thing. But if I\u2019m right, that\u2019s sad.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Michigan State coach Tom Izzo<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-34\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8m\">At many of the bigger athletic programs with successful teams, loyal alums are willing to extend job opportunities to former athletes\u2014not necessarily stars, but those who put in four years at their shared alma mater.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-35\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8p\">\u201cYou\u2019re going to be a former player for 50 years, don\u2019t be a fool,\u201d Purdue men\u2019s basketball coach Matt Painter said at the 2024 Final Four. \u201cUnderstand that your education from Purdue will take you a long way. But also the contacts that you will make and how you treat people will take you a long way.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-36\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8s\">\u201cIf you change [schools] three or four times, you don\u2019t get your degree, don\u2019t become a pro, don\u2019t have any contacts, you didn\u2019t take that opportunity and get any better, then what are we doing for young people?\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-37\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8v\">For all their movement, both Askew and Storr say they wouldn\u2019t change their paths. Askew entered college young, reclassifying in high school and skipping his senior year to enroll at Kentucky amid the tumult of COVID-19\u2014a time when in-person recruiting was difficult, and many initial prospect evaluations were misguided. He was thrust into a starting role on John Calipari\u2019s worst team and was overwhelmed, then spent a year at Texas before returning to his home state of California. \u201cI\u2019ve learned something every place I\u2019ve been,\u201d Askew says. \u201cI definitely feel older and wiser.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-38\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8y\">Storr feels largely the same. He says he doesn\u2019t regret any of his transfers\u2014not even from a starring role at Wisconsin to being the target of fan criticism as a well-paid backup at Kansas. What looked like a one-season springboard to the NBA instead led to a fourth stop in college. Like many other members of the Migration Generation, big dreams have been deferred as the search for the right fit goes on.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-39\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"91\">\u201cI\u2019ve learned from every step I\u2019ve made,\u201d he says. \u201cEveryone has something to say about it, but it\u2019s cool. It\u2019s totally fine with me.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-40\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"94\">Asked what his best move has been so far, Storr laughs and says, \u201cTo be continued.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>More College Basketball on Sports Illustrated<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"A popular mantra of recent years is to \u201cBe where your feet are.\u201d AJ Storr is good at&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":47858,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[68],"tags":[402,398,400,401,99],"class_list":{"0":"post-47857","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-ncaa-basketball","8":"tag-basketball","9":"tag-ncaa","10":"tag-ncaa-basketball","11":"tag-ncaabasketball","12":"tag-sports"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/47857","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=47857"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/47857\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/47858"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=47857"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=47857"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=47857"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}