From the Portal Noise to a Clear Path at Sam Houston
Josh Alexander-Felton’s journey hasn’t been about chasing logos or headlines. It’s been about patience, evaluation, and finding the place that actually fits who he is as a player and as a person.
For Justin R. Felton, Sr., this one is personal. Alexander-Felton isn’t just a client, he’s family. And in many ways, Josh’s path into college football helped shape Felton’s own path into athlete representation.
Before NIL, before the portal chaos, Felton came from a background in finance and marketing, working with churches and local politicians long before sports agencies entered the picture. That changed after tragedy struck Josh’s family, forcing difficult decisions earlier than expected. With Josh, his mother, and his twin brother navigating a new reality, football became more than an opportunity; it became a direction.
Coming out of Edgewater High School in Orlando, Florida, Alexander-Felton had plenty of options. Over 30 opportunities initially sat on the table, eventually narrowed through a detailed vetting process. The goal wasn’t hype, it was development. That search led Josh to North Carolina State University, where he signed and entered the program with long-term upside in mind.
His freshman year was a redshirt season, but it wasn’t quiet. Alexander-Felton appeared in three games, put valuable reps on film, and even played in the bowl game, flashes that showed why coaches believed in his ceiling.
But college football doesn’t always reward patience.
As the transfer portal reshaped rosters across the country, circumstances shifted. Despite being projected as part of the defensive line rotation, Alexander-Felton didn’t see the field during his true freshman season. For many athletes, that’s where uncertainty creeps in. For Josh, it became a reset.

Entering the portal didn’t mean a lack of interest it meant sorting through it.
Programs like the University of South Florida, Oklahoma State University, University of Memphis, Florida Atlantic University, Middle Tennessee State University, and Utah State University all expressed interest. The issue wasn’t talent it was film. In today’s landscape, projection matters, but live reps still open doors.
What coaches did see was upside.
Alexander-Felton tested as an elite-frame defensive end: explosive, powerful, and unusually mobile for his size. At 6-foot-5 and over 260 pounds, Alexander-Felton pairs length and power with rare movement ability for his size. When you factor in three full years of eligibility, evaluators saw not just upside but a long runway for development and impact.
The final decision came down to vision.
When Josh and his family visited Sam Houston State University, everything aligned. Familiar defensive staff connections, a clear development plan, and most importantly, an honest path to the field.
Sam Houston didn’t just sell opportunity. They outlined expectations.
Alexander-Felton is expected to step in immediately at defensive end, with a real chance to start during the 2026–27 season. Beyond football, the program committed to marketing him correctly, developing his body and game, and putting him in a position to help win at the conference level.
For Felton, that mattered more than the name on the helmet.
“In today’s game, it’s not about where you go, it’s about whether the place you choose actually invests in you,” he said.
Josh Alexander-Felton didn’t rush the process. He navigated it. And now, with a fresh start, a clear role, and years ahead of him, his story is less about the portal and more about what happens when preparation finally meets opportunity.