The NCAA transfer portal has become a huge thing over the past few months, allowing players to be contacted by other schools about possibly switching teams.

However, as with most things in the early stages of their development, there have been some issues that have arisen from the portal. And, this week, ESPN analyst and former Georgia star David Pollack called out the NCAA over some of those issues.

Pollack told Dawg Nation that he thinks kids need to try to compete for jobs more instead of moving schools when they don’t get their way:

“I think the people at the NCAA need to have some more consistency,” Pollack said. “The transfer thing drives me nuts.

“I’m more about stay and fight, so Justin Fields, I don’t get that. I get that Jake Fromm is really good, but I’m the type of person, I never thought about running from competition. I always thought about comping and getting better, so I think it’s kind of a strange situation.”

The big issue, Pollack continued, is that there’s no consistency from the NCAA when it comes to who gets eligibility and who doesn’t:

“Fields versus Luke Ford, guys that were at Georgia, what determines who gets it (immediate eligibility)?” Pollack said. “Somebody’s family is sick (Ford’s grandfather), or somebody has a reason to go back home and they get a ‘no,’ and somebody else that doesn’t really have a reason gets a ‘yes.’ That drives you nuts for the kids.

“Some people get waivers, some people don’t, and it makes absolutely no sense.”

Pollack stipulated that he is fine with graduate transfers, but would like to see the rest of the system tweaked to be a little more consistent.