The legal fight between Duke and Darian Mensah is over. Now the quarterback can transfer elsewhere after bringing the Blue Devils an unexpected Atlantic Coast Conference title.
The school and Mensah's agency released statements Tuesday confirming they had reached settlement without providing any details. It came roughly a week after Duke filed a lawsuit seeking to block Mensah's efforts to transfer and reach a contract with another school to play elsewhere next season.
The case was scheduled for a hearing Thursday in Durham County Superior Court, with a judge having granted Duke's request for a temporary restraining order (TRO) blocking Mensah from doing anything beyond entering his name into the transfer portal.
Attorneys for both sides filed a joint motion with the court Tuesday morning for dismissal, citing a ''confidential agreement'' reached to resolve the case.
Mensah, who transferred from Tulane and led the Blue Devils to their first outright ACC title since 1962, had signed a two-season contract in July 2025 running through 2026 that paid him for exclusive rights to market his name, image and likeness (NIL) tied to playing college football.
Resolution and next moves
''We are committed to fulfilling all promises and obligations Duke makes to our student-athletes when we enter into contractual agreements with them, and we expect the same in return,'' the school said in a statement. ''Enforcing those agreements is a necessary element of ensuring predictability and structure for athletic programs.
''It is nonetheless a difficult choice to pursue legal action against a student and teammate; for this reason we sought to resolve the matter fairly and quickly.''