Sports
36 games you need to follow during a hectic Week 13
The college football season is teetering between order and chaos. On one hand, we basically have three teams guaranteed a playoff bid at this point (Ohio State, Indiana, Texas A&M) and another few that simply need to win games in which they’re heavily favored to wrap things up (Texas Tech, Georgia, Ole Miss, Notre Dame, maybe Alabama). That doesn’t leave many open spots.
On the other hand, those open spots have tons of semi-realistic contenders — at least 22 teams still have a puncher’s chance — and the ACC and American conference races could still be blown open again. The Big 12, Conference USA, Mountain West, MAC and SEC races are far from settled too. (And then there’s the whole “Ole Miss gearing up for a playoff bid and praying to hold on to its coach” thing.)
There is so much to keep track of Saturday, in other words. Stay caffeinated and keep the remote in your hand at all times! Here’s everything you need to follow in a hectic Week 13.
All times Eastern, all games on Saturday unless otherwise noted.

A big one in the Big Ten (West)
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No. 15 USC at No. 7 Oregon (3:30 p.m., CBS)
The old-school Big Ten portion of Oregon’s Big Ten schedule is over, and now the Ducks will finish up with old friends USC and Washington. The 9-1 Ducks still have some business to handle, playoff-wise, but they’ll be favored in both games, and they should still be OK at 10-2. At 8-2 and 15th in the CFP rankings, USC obviously has to win out to have a chance.
It’s going to be elite vs. elite when the Trojans have the ball.
Key statistical rankings
Yards per play: USC offense second, Oregon defense third
Points per drive: USC offense fifth, Oregon defense ninth
Success rate*: USC offense fourth, Oregon defense 18th
Yards per successful play: Oregon defense first, USC offense 11th
(*Success rate: How frequently an offense is gaining 50% of necessary yardage on first down, 70% on second and 100% on third or fourth.)
USC’s Jayden Maiava still ranks first nationally in Total QBR, as he has for most of the season. His combination of sack avoidance and big-play passing is rare — only 9.9% of pressures on him become sacks (fifth among power-conference QBs) and he averages 14.3 yards per completion (fourth).
In Makai Lemon, Maiava has an all-around star at receiver — he has made 61% of his catches out of the slot and 35% lined up wide, and though he does a lot of damage from screens, hook routes and other short passes, he also has caught 14 of 19 passes for 517 yards and three touchdowns on balls thrown 20-plus yards downfield. He has an elite catch rate at nearly every level.
Last week, against the best defense USC has faced this season (Iowa), Lemon caught 10 passes for 153 yards. Now comes the new best defense the Trojans have faced: Oregon ranks third in defensive SP+ and second in yards allowed per dropback. The Ducks have yet to give up more than 5.3 yards per play in any game. USC has yet to average less than 5.5.
That will be a great matchup, but whether this is a great game depends on USC’s defense. At 37th in defensive SP+, it’s comfortably the best group Lincoln Riley has fielded in Los Angeles, but against the only two top-20 offenses they’ve faced, per SP+ (Illinois and Notre Dame), the Trojans gave up 34.0 points per game and 7.2 yards per play. Oregon ranks 10th in offensive SP+.
The pass defense is solid, but the Trojans rank 126th in rushing success rate allowed and 103rd in stuff rate (run stops at or behind the line). That’s pretty scary against an Oregon team that has grown hit-or-miss through the air but almost always brings it on the ground.
In the past five games, with his receiving corps struggling through injuries, Dante Moore‘s Total QBR has been under 42.0 three times and over 91.0 twice. But the Ducks are second nationally in both rushing success rate and yards per carry, and they have endless depth at running back: Four backs have rushed at least 42 times, and three (Noah Whittington, Jordon Davison and Dierre Hill Jr.) average at least 7.0 yards per carry. Teams can make stops if they force Moore to constantly make plays on passing downs, but it’s hard to guarantee USC will ever knock the Ducks off schedule.
Current line: Ducks -9.5 | SP+ projection: Ducks by 10.6 | FPI projection: Ducks by 6.0
Can Oklahoma and BYU handle their business?
Oklahoma and BYU are in solid shape playoff-wise, but SP+ gives the Sooners only a 46% chance of winning their next two games, while the Cougars are at 52%. Now is not the time for a misstep.
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No. 22 Missouri at No. 8 Oklahoma (noon, ABC)
Attack the opponent’s offensive line, punish the quarterback’s inevitable mistakes, win the turnover battle, dominate in the red zone. It’s important to have an identity and Oklahoma most certainly has one. The Sooners forced three turnovers, returned one for a touchdown, and gave up only two touchdowns in nine trips inside their 40 as they won by six at Tennessee. Then they forced three more turnovers, returned another one for a touchdown, blocked a field goal attempt and somehow beat Alabama in Tuscaloosa despite being outgained by 184 yards. In their past six games, their turnover margin is plus-8 in four wins and minus-4 in two losses.
If Missouri’s quarterback situation were a little steadier, this game would be a near toss-up. The Tigers force three-and-outs 42.6% of the time (fifth nationally), and though they can occasionally be vulnerable to big plays, OU doesn’t create many of those. They are happy to engage in field position warfare with a run game featuring Ahmad Hardy, the nation’s leading rusher, and they are the nation’s leader in net YAC.
If this were an old-school, rushing-and-punting battle, Mizzou would have a great shot, but quarterback play matters. OU’s John Mateer hasn’t been amazing since his return from a September hand injury (past five games: 63.2 Total QBR, 5.0 yards per dropback, 2-to-4 TD-to-INT ratio) but he’ll give the Sooners an advantage over either of Mizzou’s two quarterbacks: A limited Beau Pribula, who is trying to rush back after dislocating his ankle four weeks ago, or, more likely, true freshman Matt Zollers, who has produced a dismal 21.9 Total QBR in two starts.
The winner of the turnover battle probably takes this one, and with the way defensive end Taylor Wein and the Sooners’ defensive front can create havoc — they average 10.2 tackles for loss, and no one else tops 8.5 — mistakes from Mizzou’s QB of choice will probably make the difference.
Current line: OU -7.5 (down from -9.5 Sunday) | SP+ projection: OU by 5.4 | FPI projection: OU by 3.5
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No. 11 BYU at Cincinnati (8 p.m., Fox)
Texas Tech, BYU and Utah are the three nastiest, most physical teams in the Big 12, and they are a combined 27-4 in 2025 — 3-3 against each other and 24-1 against everyone else. BYU responded to a loss at Tech with a 44-13 blowout of TCU; now the Cougars face a Cincinnati team that has run aground, losing to Utah (45-14) and Arizona (30-24), and falling to 37th in SP+.
Cincy quarterback Brendan Sorsby, so good for much of the season, went just 26-for-61 (43%) with two touchdowns and three picks in those losses, and not even great production from running back Tawee Walker could save either game. The Bearcats’ defense has been a hindrance for much of the season, and suddenly the offense isn’t carrying its weight.
BYU’s offense still battles inconsistency at times, but against defenses ranked 30th or worse in SP+ they’re averaging 38.8 points and 6.5 yards per play. Does Cincinnati still have enough gas in the tank to match that?
Current line: BYU -2.5 | SP+ projection: BYU by 4.2 | FPI projection: BYU by 4.4
Another week of clarity vs. chaos in the ACC
The current ACC title scenarios range from straightforward to spectacularly messy. If Georgia Tech beats Pitt on Saturday and Virginia beats Virginia Tech next week, the Yellow Jackets would almost certainly play the Cavaliers. But if Pitt beats Tech, the Panthers could clinch with an underdog win over Miami next week. SMU, meanwhile, would benefit from a Pitt win, but the Mustangs have two tricky games left (Louisville, at Cal).
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Pitt at No. 16 Georgia Tech (7 p.m., ESPN)
Pitt quarterback Mason Heintschel finally looked like a freshman last week against Notre Dame, going 16-for-33 with an interception and four sacks. The run game went nowhere, star Desmond Reid got hurt, and a decent defensive performance couldn’t prevent a 37-15 loss. But as Pat Narduzzi so elegantly put it last week, that game didn’t really matter. If the Panthers win their next two, they will play for the ACC title.
Georgia Tech’s defense is much, much worse than Notre Dame’s. The Yellow Jackets rank 99th in yards allowed per carry (no sacks) and 95th in yards allowed per dropback. They’re pretty good when opponents are behind schedule, but those scenarios are rare. Pitt should score a decent amount, but the Panthers still have to slow down Tech’s star quarterback Haynes King. In his past six starts, he has averaged 291 passing yards and 93 non-sack rushing yards per game — nearly a 4,000/1,200 pace.
The stakes are enormous for Tech over these next three weeks: It could win the ACC and get long-awaited revenge on rival Georgia after last season’s heartbreak, or it could suffer double heartbreak instead. No pressure.
Current line: Tech -2.5 | SP+ projection: Tech by 2.0 | FPI projection: Tech by 1.8
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Louisville at SMU (noon, ESPN2)
Two weeks ago, Louisville had 42% of its snaps gain zero or fewer yards, with three sacks and loads of pressure on Miller Moss, and suffered an upset loss to Cal. Last week, the Cardinals were more efficient but produced 10 penalties, including four on offensive linemen and blocking tight ends, and fell to Clemson. Glitches up front have ruined their ACC title and CFP hopes (running back injuries haven’t helped), and now the best they can hope to do is ruin SMU’s.
Unfortunately for Louisville, SMU is good at creating offensive line glitches. The Mustangs are 25th in stuff rate and 37th in sack rate, and though they’ll give up big plays as a trade-off — and their secondary has battled a lot of injuries — Moss needs to be upright to make that happen.
Louisville’s defense will have a lot of the same advantages, at least. SMU’s offense is improving, but the Cards rank in the top 20 in yards allowed per both carry and dropback. Edge rusher Clev Lubin and slot corner Antonio Watts are outstanding disruptors and will give Louisville a chance.
Current line: SMU -2.5 | SP+ projection: SMU by 2.6 | FPI projection: SMU by 4.6
Keeping playoff hopes alive
According to general playoff odds, there’s probably about one CFP spot available, at most, for the quintet of No. 12 Utah, No. 13 Miami, No. 14 Vanderbilt, No. 15 USC and No. 18 Michigan. Besides USC, the other four are double-digit favorites this weekend, but they face unique challenges.
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Kentucky at No. 14 Vanderbilt (3:30 p.m., ESPN)
Vanderbilt got a week off to rest a tiring defense that had given up 82 points in its past two games. If the Commodores can beat both Kentucky at home and Tennessee away, they’ll have solid CFP odds. With quarterback Diego Pavia playing as well as ever, they have a chance.
But this isn’t the best time to play Kentucky: Over the past three games, the 5-5 Wildcats have overachieved against SP+ projections by 24.6 points per game, enough to quickly leap from 66th to 43rd in SP+. Cutter Boley has posted at least a 78.0 Total QBR in five of his past six games, and backs Seth McGowan and Dante Dowdell have combined for 355 yards and seven touchdowns in the past two. Vanderbilt is used to track meets at this point, but the Commodores can’t afford a misstep against a hot opponent.
Current line: Vandy -9.5 | SP+ projection: Vandy by 11.3 | FPI projection: Vandy by 7.7
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No. 18 Michigan at Maryland (4 p.m., BTN)
If Michigan wins its last two games, the Wolverines could give the CFP committee a giant headache. At 18th, they need some help to move into playoff positioning, but a win over top-ranked Ohio State would be an enormous boost (and might sneak them into the Big Ten championship game).
One issue: How many times have they actually looked like a playoff team this year? Twice? They were certainly impressive in the 63-3 win over Central Michigan, and manhandling Washington 24-7 in mid-October was excellent, but they’ve underachieved against projections in five of the past six games. Maryland has been outscored by an average of 38-12 in November, but it’s probably time for Michigan to start looking the part, and potentially in rainy conditions.
Current line: Michigan -13.5 | SP+ projection: Michigan by 9.4 | FPI projection: Michigan by 10.5
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No. 13 Miami at Virginia Tech (noon, ESPN)
In theory, I understand the anger regarding Miami’s No. 13 CFP ranking. The Hurricanes did beat No. 9 Notre Dame in the season opener, and they have the same number of losses. Still, Notre Dame has lost only to the No. 3 and No. 13 teams while beating No. 15 USC. Miami has the win over the Irish but has lost twice to unranked teams — playing timidly late in both games — and has no other super-impressive wins on the résumé. No sympathy here.
That said, the Canes looked phenomenal last week against NC State despite rising injury issues. It was their best performance since about Week 3, and if they keep playing at that level, they could score some style points. Tech didn’t have much left to offer against Louisville or Florida State, but potentially sloppy weather might be a factor.
Current line: Miami -17.5 | SP+ projection: Miami by 23.3 | FPI projection: Miami by 16.8
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Kansas State at No. 12 Utah (4 p.m., ESPN2)
Kansas State had something going for a bit, winning three of four to jump to 4-4, but after a pummeling against Texas Tech, the Wildcats needed five takeaways to survive a dismal performance against one of the worst Oklahoma State teams of our lifetimes. Their momentum has halted, and now they have to face a mean and ambitious Utah team. The Utes have beaten only one SP+ top-50 opponent, but they’re eighth in SP+ because their wins have come by an average of 48-12.
K-State’s Avery Johnson is still super elusive, and the Wildcats’ run defense is decent, but it’s hard to imagine Johnson escaping star John Henry Daley all game, and it’s hard to imagine the Wildcats knocking QB Devon Dampier and the Utah ground game off course for long.
Current line: Utah -17.5 | SP+ projection: Utah by 17.0 | FPI projection: Utah by 15.3
Which G5 favorite falls this week?
We’re down to three primary contenders for the Group of 5’s guaranteed playoff spot: 9-1 James Madison, 9-1 North Texas and 8-2 Tulane. We’ve lost a front-runner for two straight weeks, so the fact that Tulane is the new highest-ranked team might spell doom for the Green Wave, but JMU also faces a tricky home test. SP+ gives the three favorites only a 48% chance of all winning.
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No. 24 Tulane at Temple (3:45 p.m., ESPNU)
What does Temple have left in the tank? K.C. Keeler’s 5-5 Owls have been a pleasant surprise and, at their best, get high-level passing from Evan Simon and solid pursuit from linebackers Damien Ordonez and Cam’Ron Stewart. But they might have peaked a month ago.
Tulane, meanwhile, remains hard to trust. The Green Wave have beaten Memphis and East Carolina but no-showed against UTSA in between. Quarterback Jake Retzlaff is as good as advertised, but the pass defense has been disastrous at times. If Temple regains its sharpness following a bye week, this could be tricky.
Current line: Tulane -7.5 | SP+ projection: Tulane by 5.6 | FPI projection: Tulane by 4.2
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Washington State at James Madison (1 p.m., ESPN+)
For the third time in six weeks, Wazzu travels east of the Mississippi River — this time to play in rainy conditions at 10 a.m. PT. But the Cougs are hot, having risen from 111th in SP+ in September to 69th, and they’ve given up only 11.5 points per game in a six-game stretch that included trips to Virginia and Ole Miss.
We’ll see if JMU is just too hot for that to matter. Led by defensive ends Sahir West and Aiden Gobaira, the Dukes are eighth nationally in points allowed per drive, and after a bumpy midseason stretch, the offense has averaged 52 points over its past four games.
Current line: JMU -13.5 | SP+ projection: JMU by 14.5 | FPI projection: JMU by 12.2
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North Texas at Rice (7:30 p.m., ESPNU)
Like Temple, Rice is a pleasantly surprising 5-5 in Scott Abell’s first season. His option offense has had its moments, but the defense is boom or bust, and one assumes North Texas’ explosive offense, led by potential 4,000-yard passer Drew Mestemaker and 1,000-yard rusher Caleb Hawkins, will have far too much firepower. An upset here would be a shocker.
Current line: UNT -18.5 | SP+ projection: UNT by 21.7 | FPI projection: UNT by 16.5
Week 13 chaos superfecta
We’re once again using this space to will chaos into existence, looking at four carefully curated games with pretty big point spreads and mashing them together into a much more upset-friendly number. We whiffed last week, which dropped us to 6-6 for the season. Going by the math, that’s exactly where we should be, but let’s win out from here.
This week we’re taking on a playoff theme: In the four games in the “Keeping playoff hopes alive” section above, SP+ says there’s only a 44% chance that Miami (93% at Virginia Tech), Utah (86% vs. Kansas State), Vanderbilt (76% vs. Kentucky) and Michigan (72% at Maryland) all win. Let’s eliminate a contender!
Week 13 playlist
Here are some more games you should pay attention to if you want to get the absolute most out of the weekend, from both information and entertainment perspectives.
Friday
Florida State at NC State (8 p.m., ESPN). After NC State’s brilliant upset of Georgia Tech in Week 10, the Wolfpack went on bye and barely returned, suffering a 41-7 no-show loss to Miami last week. And hey, speaking of immaculately frustrating teams, FSU is overachieving against SP+ projections by 12.5 points per game at home and underachieving by 18.0 PPG on the road. Which of these teams shows up?
Current line: FSU -4.5 | SP+ projection: FSU by 8.5 | FPI projection: FSU by 5.0
Hawai’i at UNLV (10:30 p.m., FS1). With Boise State imploding without quarterback Maddux Madsen, the Mountain West race has become messy — five teams are tied for second at 4-2 (behind 5-1 San Diego State). Two of them play late Friday night, and I’ll be shocked if it isn’t one of the more fun games of the weekend. UNLV has hit 30 or more points in nine of 10 games, and Hawai’i has done so in five straight.
Current line: UNLV -2.5 | SP+ projection: UNLV by 4.8 | FPI projection: UNLV by 6.1
Early Saturday
Baylor at Arizona (1 p.m., TNT). Arizona lost three of four in midseason, but the Wildcats have won three in a row to jump to 7-3. Compared to 2024, they’ve improved dramatically on both sides of the ball — from 90th to 30th in offensive SP+ and from 84th to 39th on defense — and that should give them an advantage against a Baylor team that typically only plays offense. Fun offense, for sure, but only offense.
Current line: Arizona -6.5 | SP+ projection: Arizona by 9.1 | FPI projection: Arizona by 4.8
Kansas at Iowa State (noon, FS1). This one’s projected to go down to the wire, which is awful news for Kansas — the Jayhawks have lost nine of their past 11 one-score games. ISU can provide hope in that regard: The Cyclones endured a 1-12 one-score run of their own a while back but have won 11 of 16 since. At 5-5 and hosting Utah next week, KU probably needs this one to assure bowl eligibility.
Current line: ISU -4.5 | SP+ projection: ISU by 4.7 | FPI projection: ISU by 3.4
Minnesota at Northwestern (noon, BTN). Just call Minnesota the Florida State of the Big Ten — the Gophers are overachieving against projections by 5.4 PPG at home and underachieving by 16.6 PPG on the road. Northwestern nearly stole one last week against Michigan and returns to Wrigley Field to give it another go. If Minnesota shows up, this could be dead even, but that’s evidently a lot to ask for.
Current line: NU -3.5 (down from -5.5) | SP+ projection: NU by 1.7 | FPI projection: NU by 3.7
Rutgers at No. 1 Ohio State (noon, Fox). We’re into November and still playing the “Ohio State will win easily, but what might we learn about the Buckeyes?” game. The OSU passing game is coming off of a semi-disappointing performance — and the status of banged-up receivers Jeremiah Smith and Carnell Tate appears uncertain — so maybe we’ll learn something about Julian Sayin‘s resourcefulness?
Current line: OSU -31.5 (down from -33.5) | SP+ projection: OSU by 31.5 | FPI projection: OSU by 28.4
Saturday afternoon
Arkansas at No. 17 Texas (3:30 p.m., ABC). The return of Horns-Hogs was one of the best things about Texas joining the SEC, and after last season’s relative dud, I say we’re owed something strange. Arkansas is good enough offensively to scare (and eventually lose to) just about anyone, and Horns LB Anthony Hill Jr. is listed as questionable. Let’s see how Texas responds to last week’s damaging loss to Georgia.
Current line: UT -8.5 (down from -10.5) | SP+ projection: UT by 9.8 | FPI projection: UT by 11.2
East Carolina at UTSA (3:30 p.m., ESPN+). ECU has won 10 of 14 since replacing coach Mike Houston with Blake Harrell midway through 2024, and at 5-1 in American Conference play, the Pirates are still in the conference title race. UTSA, meanwhile, is maddening: The Roadrunners have overachieved against SP+ projections by at least 12 points three times and have underachieved by at least 10 points five times.
Current line: ECU -2.5 | SP+ projection: ECU by 5.5 | FPI projection: ECU by 3.2
Duke at North Carolina (3:30 p.m., ACCN). Since beating Clemson to announce itself as an ACC contender, Duke has face-planted, particularly on defense, losing two straight. The 5-5 Blue Devils need to beat either UNC or Wake Forest to bowl, and this feels like the more likely win. UNC just lost to Wake and might not have the offensive competence to punish even a flatlining defense such as Duke’s.
Current line: Duke -6.5 | SP+ projection: Duke by 6.6 | FPI projection: Duke by 7.2
TCU at No. 23 Houston (4 p.m., Fox). Houston’s 8-2 record has been propped up by good fortune in close games (4-0 in one-score finishes), but the Cougars have a shot at a 10-win season and could take full advantage of the fact that TCU’s offense vanished three games ago. Having underachieved against projections for five straight games, the 6-4 Horned Frogs are stumbling toward the finish line.
Current line: Houston -1.5 | SP+ projection: Houston by 2.8 | FPI projection: TCU by 0.7
Jacksonville State at Florida International (3:30 p.m., CBSSN). FIU has won two straight to get to 5-5, and a once-moribund offense is blossoming via efficiency from RB Kejon Owens and big plays from WR Alex Perry. Jax State has won 14 of 15 in CUSA play dating to last season, and RB Cam Cook is second nationally in rushing yards. This one could have some fireworks.
Current line: JSU -1.5 (flipped from FIU -1.5) | SP+ projection: JSU by 3.9 | FPI projection: JSU by 1.1
Missouri State at Kennesaw State (2 p.m., ESPN+). Missouri State has won five straight to move to 7-3 in its FBS debut. The Bears aren’t eligible for the CUSA championship game, but Kennesaw State is, and any title hopes will require an immediate bounce-back after last week’s loss to Jax State. MSU quarterback Jacob Clark trying to beat Owls corners Caleb Offord and JeRico Washington Jr. should be prime viewing.
Current line: KSU -6.5 | SP+ projection: KSU by 6.9 | FPI projection: KSU by 4.2
Syracuse at No. 9 Notre Dame (3:30 p.m., NBC). Notre Dame is a projected favorite of at least 31 points in each of its last two games, so the Fighting Irish are nearly assured of a 10-2 finish and another CFP berth. Statistically, their biggest issues at the moment are suffering some negative run plays and occasionally giving up big pass plays. I don’t think Syracuse can do anything with that.
Current line: Irish -35.5 | SP+ projection: Irish by 33.3 | FPI projection: Irish by 30.1
Saturday evening
No. 20 Tennessee at Florida (7:30 p.m., ABC). Two years ago, Tennessee lost as a 5.5-point favorite in Gainesville. The Volunteers, in fact, have won only twice in Gainesville in the past 50 years. There aren’t a lot of stakes here, with UT mostly eliminated from CFP contention and Florida having clinched a losing record. But a win in The Swamp is still a win in The Swamp. It doesn’t happen often for the Vols.
Current line: UT -4.5 | SP+ projection: UT by 9.4 | FPI projection: UT by 3.7
Nebraska at Penn State (7 p.m., NBC). Since the two-game collapse that cost James Franklin his job (and, in turn, earned Nebraska head coach Matt Rhule a hefty contract extension), Penn State has been good, nearly beating Iowa and Indiana, hanging with Ohio State for a half and thumping Michigan State. Can the 4-6 Nittany Lions keep bowl hopes alive with a win over new QB TJ Lateef and Rhule’s Huskers?
Current line: PSU -8.5 | SP+ projection: PSU by 7.0 | FPI projection: PSU by 5.3
No. 21 Illinois at Wisconsin (7:30 p.m., BTN). Wisconsin’s defense has been good over the past few weeks, and Illinois’ defense finally showed up a couple of weeks ago after a poor stretch. This one should conjure some strong Big Ten West spirits, especially if we get some precipitation to go with the current 44-degrees-and-cloudy forecast for Saturday evening.
Current line: Illini -7.5 (down from -9.5) | SP+ projection: Illini by 16.6 | FPI projection: Illini by 6.0
Cal at Stanford (7:30 p.m., ACCN). Since 2001, the favorite in this matchup has gone 21-3. Unacceptable. I say we’re due a weird one, and Stanford does seem to be improving a bit. In his past two games, Cal freshman quarterback Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele has produced a Total QBR of 20.6 (against Virginia) and 86.0 (against Louisville). How will he handle his first big rivalry game?
Current line: Cal -2.5 | SP+ projection: Cal by 7.1 | FPI projection: Stanford by 0.3
Late Saturday
Washington at UCLA (10:30 p.m., NBC). Saturday’s blowout of Purdue continued a Washington theme: Against defenses worse than 50th in SP+, the Huskies average 50.8 points and 8.3 yards per play. UCLA’s defense is ranked 82nd, having given away the gains it made following Deshaun Foster’s firing. UCLA QB Nico Iamaleava is day-to-day because of injury, but nothing matters if the Bruins don’t make any stops.
Current line: UW -10.5 | SP+ projection: UW by 17.9 | FPI projection: UW by 9.0
San José State at San Diego State (10:30 p.m., FS1). SJSU’s once-prolific offense has vanished of late, scoring 26 total points in two games. Now the Spartans have to play against a defense that has given up more than 10 points only twice in eight games. SDSU can’t score either, but the Aztecs are MWC front-runners because of OLB Trey White and a ridiculous attacking front.
Current line: SDSU -12.5 | SP+ projection: SDSU by 17.2 | FPI projection: SDSU by 12.4
Smaller-school showcase
Let’s once again save a shoutout for the glorious lower levels of the sport. Here’s what you need to track as the FCS regular season wraps up and the Division II, Division III and NAIA postseasons get underway. As I say every year around this time, the more small-school football you watch, the healthier you become.
Fusion Bowl: Curry College vs. Merchant Marine (Friday, 5 p.m., NSN). The 40-team D-III playoffs get underway Saturday, but you should spend part of Friday evening watching quarterback Bubba Mustain and a prolific Merchant Marine option game dueling with 2,400-yard rusher (!) Montie Quinn and the Curry attack.
SP+ projection: Curry by 3.0
FCS: No. 10 Harvard at No. 25 Yale (noon, ESPNU). It’s FCS Rivalry Week, and with the playoffs a week away, The Game — the winner of which will claim the Ivy League title and a first automatic FCS playoff berth — is particularly big. I’ve been talking up Harvard (third in SP+) all season, but Yale is a healthy 13th in SP+, with one of the subdivision’s best defenses. A big game, even by The Game’s standards.
SP+ projection: Harvard by 7.3
FCS: No. 4 Lehigh at No. 24 Lafayette (12:30 p.m., ESPN+). With both Lehigh and Lafayette unbeaten in the Patriot League, the 161st edition of The Rivalry is one of the biggest. This is the best Lehigh team since at least the 1970s. It would be consistent with rivalry nonsense if Lafayette were to pull an upset, but that will require points, and defensive end Matt Spatny and the Lehigh defense don’t give up many of those.
SP+ projection: Lehigh by 16.0
FCS: No. 2 Montana State at No. 3 Montana (2 p.m., ESPN+). My goodness, FCS is bringing it this week. Montana is unbeaten, and MSU hasn’t lost since an 0-2 start. The Bobcats grade out better on paper, but this game should have something for everyone, from stellar quarterback play with Keali’i Ah Yat (Montana) and Justin Lamson (MSU) to deep rushing attacks to ball-hawking secondaries. And also there’s always a stunning view in Missoula.
SP+ projection: Montana by 0.6
Division II playoffs: No. 10 Texas-Permian Basin at No. 4 Colorado State-Pueblo (3 p.m., local streaming). The D-II playoffs have expanded to 32 teams, and while the top teams are heavy first-round favorites, the CSU-Pueblo Thunderwolves are close-game addicts. Their past three games featured two three-point wins and three overtime periods. UTPB, meanwhile, has won its past four by an average of 52-14. I’ll be disappointed if this one isn’t wild and close.
SP+ projection: CSU-Pueblo by 1.3
Sports
Haaland, Rice, Semenyo: Who is your Premier League Player of the Year?
We’re fast approaching the business end of the 2025-26 Premier League season, and heading into March, everything is still very much to play for. The title race has coalesced into a two-team battle between leaders Arsenal and chasers Manchester City, while the push for Champions League soccer next season is neatly poised between several clubs — defending champions Liverpool are on the outside looking in, needing to close the gap to Aston Villa, Manchester United and Chelsea.
At the bottom end of the table, Wolves‘ fate appears certain (they are 17 points adrift from safety with just 10 games left) and, to a lesser extent, Burnley‘s too (eight points back with 11 to play), but the third and final relegation spot could go to any one of Nottingham Forest, Tottenham or Leeds United from here.
Equally hard to call is the race for the Premier League’s Player of the Year, with no clear-cut, stand-out candidate yet and plenty of stars making a clear case for the prize. So, with 10 matchdays left, we asked our regular Premier League reporters to make their picks for the top award, and why they are worthy.
Tom Hamilton: Sometimes it makes sense to go for the obvious option. If Manchester City win the league, then you could argue their standout player was one of Bernardo Silva (for his guile), Nico O’Reilly (for his adaptability and temperament) or new arrivals Gianluigi Donnarumma and Antoine Semenyo. But if you want the clear and obvious choice, then it’s Haaland, the man at the top of the scoring charts.
The Norway forward is in the middle of a relatively quiet spell for his club, but his 22 league goals have helped City to where they are. The big change for Haaland this year? He’s becoming more of an all-around contributor and his work rate is through the roof, to the extent that he has also notched seven assists, second only to Bruno Fernandes and one behind his best total of eight back in the 2022-23 campaign. That’s 29 goal contributions. Not bad.
Take City’s recent 2-1 win over Newcastle: Haaland had more touches of the ball than ever before (43), he made the third-most clearances for the team (after Rodri and Marc Guéhi) and won 12 duels, the most he has managed in a top-flight game. “He’s an incredible, generous player, so today is a performance, and I’ll never forget what Erling has done for us,” manager Pep Guardiola said afterward.
So be afraid, Premier League: Haaland is evolving into a more all-around player, and his goals and assists should see him deservedly crowned player of the season.
James Olley: With everything in the league still to play for, from title to top four to relegation, it’s too early to be conclusive about this, but Arsenal are top of the table at present, and Declan Rice has been the heartbeat of a team competing impressively on four fronts.
Only Martín Zubimendi (2,360) has played more outfield Premier League minutes for the Gunners than Rice’s 2,329, and Rice ranks second in the division for chances created (defined by Opta as key passes and assists) behind Bruno Fernandes. But he is about much more than stats. Rice drives the Arsenal team forward as he has developed into a complete midfielder, affecting the game in his box-to-box role while also proving an extremely efficient set piece taker.
If Arsenal are to keep the pace, it will largely be a result of Rice maintaining the level of form and influence he has shown so far.
Sam Tighe: When there’s no “obvious” pick like during this season, it can trick you into thinking there haven’t been any outstanding candidates. But as the group outlines, we’re hardly short of incredible individual campaigns, are we?
I’ll throw my support in for James’ pick of Rice. In a Premier League landscape where physicality, mobility and tenacity reign supreme, the 27-year-old is the division’s leading light. To put it into context, among Arsenal players, only Zubimendi (293.57 km) has covered more ground than Rice (285.48 km) this term, while among all Premier League central midfielders, only Sandro Tonali (33.37 km/h) has clocked a higher max speed than Rice (33.17 km/h).
Rice is fast and relentless; if the Gunners win the title, his frenzied, all-action style will symbolize their approach to doing so. Yet he also backs up those athletic traits with finesse where required. There are very few better corner takers in the sport right now, and there’s no doubt he’s steadily getting better at picking a pass through the lines.
Beth Lindop: It might seem preposterous to nominate a Liverpool player considering how abject they have been at times this season, but in terms of pure individual excellence, Szoboszlai would be my pick.
In the summer, there was a suggestion in some quarters that the Hungary international could lose his place in the team following the arrival of the £116 million playmaker, Florian Wirtz, from Bayer Leverkusen. However, Szoboszlai has this season established himself as the first name on Arne Slot’s team sheet, with his relentless running, tactical flexibility and, of course, his eye for a spectacular strike having kept the Reds’ campaign from descending into total disaster.
With 10 goals to his name already this season, Szoboszlai is well on course to surpass his career-best goal tally. He has also deputized admirably at right back amid Liverpool’s ongoing injury crisis, while his noticeable willingness to speak more frequently to the media is reflective of a player keen to assume more responsibility within the team and position himself as a future club captain.
Liverpool’s disappointing collective form means Szoboszlai will most likely miss out on individual accolades, but he should definitely be in the conversation.
Antoine Semenyo, FW, Manchester City (formerly at Bournemouth)
Mark Ogden: This is a tough one because there really hasn’t been an outstanding candidate so far this season, but my pick right now would be Semenyo. He was outstanding for Bournemouth during the first half of the season — his 10 Premier League goals kept Andoni Iraola on the tails of the top six for a while — but his performances meant it was inevitable he would move on in January, and he had a queue of heavyweight clubs wanting to sign him before he chose Manchester City.
Even though a deal was done and his release clause was triggered, Semenyo agreed to stay at Bournemouth for two extra games in January before making his move. No fuss, no drama: just a professional attitude and the perfect sign-off with a stoppage time winner against Spurs in his final game.
His form at City has been just as impressive, and he kept them in the title race during their midseason wobble with three goals in his first five games. So for performing at his top level for two clubs and showing professionalism throughout, I’m going for Semenyo.
Rob Dawson: There were genuine concerns about whether Brentford would be able to avoid relegation this season after losing manager Thomas Frank — as well as key players Bryan Mbeumo, Yoane Wissa, Christian Nørgaard and Mark Flekken — in one summer. Goals were expected to be a particular problem after both Mbeumo and Wissa — who combined for 39 in the Premier League last season — moved on.
Frank’s replacement, Keith Andrews, deserves a lot of credit for turning this season into a push for Europe instead of a battle against the drop. But so too does Igor Thiago. His 17 league goals have cushioned the blow of losing Mbeumo and Wissa. It’s a fantastic return for a 24-year-old striker in his first full campaign in England after last season was ruined by injury.
Scoring goals in the toughest league in the world is a big ask, and Thiago has done it regularly. Unfortunately for Brentford, he has done so well that the inevitable question will be: How long can they keep him before he follows Mbeumo and Wissa out of the door?
Gab Marcotti: To me, it’s pretty simple. Aston Villa might be on the slide, but they’re still third, well ahead of Liverpool, Manchester United and Chelsea. And this is after a summer when they didn’t really add anybody of note and lost their sporting director, Monchi, as well. A lot of that is down to Rogers: He has started every game and has usually been a difference-maker each time.
Rogers doesn’t have the greatest supporting cast — certainly not compared to the other suggestions who are sure to crop up — and I think it’s fair to say that, without him, Villa would be midtable at best. Only four players have more open play goal involvements (non-penalty goals and assists) than he does this season, and all of them play for bigger and better-resourced sides: Haaland, Fernandes, Semenyo and João Pedro.
Throw in the fact that he invented Cole Palmer‘s goal celebration — they were teammates at City, and Palmer “borrowed” it from him — and to me he’s the obvious choice.
Martín Zubimendi, MF, Arsenal
Julien Laurens: When Arsenal spent €60 million last summer to activate his release clause and recruit him from Real Sociedad, there were a lot of skeptics about his adaptation to the Premier League, his potential and even his talent, but there was also concern about his ability to take the Gunners to the next level. And yet, I think he has already proved all the doubters wrong.
It has not always been perfect, obviously — remember his mistake against Manchester United — but overall, he has been impressive. His ability to dictate the tempo of a game, his intelligence and his reading of the play have been outstanding. He has also scored five Premier League goals already, which is more than Szoboszlai, more than Rice and only three less than Rogers, who is a more advanced player, by the way. Some of his goals have also been key, such as the openers against Forest, Leeds and Sunderland, in keeping Arsenal on course for a potential first league title in over 20 years.
Zubimendi makes Rice and Jurriën Timber better, and there is still so much room for improvement from him as well. He has had such a great impact on the team that it’s worth celebrating.
Sports
UConn rolls by 32 in Pitino’s biggest loss at St. John’s
HARTFORD, Conn. — Tarris Reed Jr. had 20 points, 11 rebounds and six blocks, and No. 6 UConn held 15th-ranked St. John’s to 20% shooting in a 72-40 blowout Wednesday night that snapped the Red Storm’s 13-game winning streak.
Alex Karaban added 14 points and five rebounds for the Huskies, who moved back into first place in the Big East by avenging an 81-72 loss to St. John’s at Madison Square Garden on Feb. 6.
St. John’s missed 12 consecutive shots in the first half and then its final 24 field goal attempts of the game as the Huskies (26-3, 16-2) romped to their most lopsided victory in series history.
“They’ve been playing so well, the streak that they were on. … So it was just our night,” UConn coach Dan Hurley said. “It just starts snowballing on you when you have a night like this. Obviously, we played really good defense on them, and I thought we demoralized them a little bit when the score gets where the score got. And I just think it was one of those nights where everything went great for us and everything went wrong for them. But we did a lot to make that happen.”
It was by far the largest defeat for the Red Storm in three seasons under Hall of Fame coach Rick Pitino, and their fewest points in a game since scoring 40 against Notre Dame in March 2013. St. John’s had its largest loss as an AP-ranked team since March 15, 1960, when it fell to St. Bonaventure by 35.
For Pitino, it was his second-largest loss as the head coach of an AP-ranked team in his career, behind only a 33-point loss with then-No. 5 Louisville in February 2009.
“It’s probably only happened to me two times in my career. Once was in my first year at Kentucky when we went into Phog Allen [Fieldhouse] at Kansas, but I was playing with very much an inferior team with walk-ons, not with this type of team,” Pitino said, referring to a 55-point loss with an unranked Wildcats team in December 1989. “It’s all on me. I’m very disappointed in our performance, offensively especially, sharing the ball, moving the ball. It’s all on me.”
Solo Ball had 11 points and four assists for UConn, and Silas Demary Jr. provided seven points, eight rebounds and five assists.
Joson Sanon scored all 10 of his points in the first half for St. John’s (22-6, 15-2), which finished 11-of-56 from the field and fell a half-game behind UConn in the conference standings. The team’s 13-game winning streak was its longest in 41 years.
Zuby Ejiofor had two quick baskets for the Red Storm early in the second half, but the Huskies scored the next 16 points. A driving layup by Karaban put them up by 23 with 13:42 left, and St. John’s went the last 17:27 without a field goal.
“I don’t know what it is. All I know is we didn’t play good offense,” Pitino said. “We did things that we’ve never done. And again, it’s something that I’ve got to question about myself, and I will question it because the team did not do the things we’ve done in the last 13 games.”
Braylon Mullins had six points and Karaban scored five during UConn’s 18-0 run in the first half. A driving layup by Ball gave the Huskies a 33-12 lead.
Sanon had 10 of the next 12 points for St. John’s as the Red Storm began to cut into the deficit. Reed grabbed his own miss and kicked the ball out to Ball for a 3-pointer, and the Huskies went into halftime leading 41-26.
UConn’s starters outscored the Red Storm’s starting five 61-28, and the Huskies had a 42-12 advantage in the paint.
The Associated Press and ESPN Research contributed to this report.
Sports
LPGA legend shares her feelings about US women’s Olympic wins: ‘Gets me really emotional’
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The United States came away with 33 total medals at the 2026 Milan Cortina Games, and many came from the female athletes who showed out in Italy this month.
There were 17 medals won by the U.S. female athletes, including eight of the 12 gold medals.
As many Americans enjoyed watching the events at home, LPGA Tour legend Michelle Wie West was in Milan watching the U.S. reach the podium in several events.
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Michelle Wie attends Netflix’s “Happy Gilmore 2” New York Premiere at Jazz at Lincoln Center on July 21, 2025, in New York City. (Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)
“I had the honor to be in Milan with Nike and got to see some Winter Olympic Games for the first time in person. It’s amazing to see all these competitors,” she told Fox News Digital in a recent interview. “Got to see [silver medalist] Chloe [Kim] do her halfpipe, and that was incredible.
“Women’s hockey, I mean, incredible. I got to go to the first game, and it was just lights out.”
From Mia Manganello in speed skating, to Alysa Liu’s captivating gold medal in figure skating, Wie West admitted the Olympics made her a bit emotional seeing the athletes achieve their dreams.
“This whole Winter Olympics season has been so — I think every Olympic season is so uplifting,” she said. “But this one in particular was so inspiring, and it feels like the female athletes really knocked it out of the park.
“I feel like every Olympics gets me really emotional. I can see athletes achieve their dreams, and it’s so cool. It was really cool to see it in person.”

Gold medalist Alysa Liu of Team United States poses for a photo during the medal ceremony for the Women’s Single Skating on day thirteen of the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on Feb. 19, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
Wie West also added that Lindsey Vonn’s “heartbreaking” crash, after competing through a torn ACL, was hard to see. However, “seeing her journey up until that moment and even afterwards has been so inspiring to me.”
Breanna Stewart, a three-time gold medalist with Team USA women’s basketball, shared Wie West’s sentiments about seeing American success overseas.
“I think there were so many events I really learned a lot about, whether it was bobsledding, or curling, or watching hockey,” she said. “Just wanting to cheer on the USA in whatever event they were doing, and see the pride and passion the athletes were having whenever they stepped up to compete with their sport.”

LPGA player Michelle Wie West plays her shot from the 14th tee during the Golden Bear Pro-Am prior to the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday 2025 at Muirfield Village Golf Club on May 28, 2025, in Dublin, Ohio. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
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Stewart even mentioned getting “goosebumps” thinking about what it feels like getting a medal around your neck, and better yet, seeing the flag raise with the national anthem playing.
“It’s really just satisfaction and justification of why you’re doing it and why you’ve gone through those hard moments and times,” she explained. “To me, the Olympics is the highest of the high. You’re playing your sport at the highest level against everyone else in the world, and you see that. It’s just a goosebump feeling no matter how many times you do it. Just the pride and knowing you’re representing something bigger than yourself always comes through full circle.”
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