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Week 10 Power Rankings: Oregon jumps into the top 5; three teams join the list

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Week 10 Power Rankings: Oregon jumps into the top 5; three teams join the list


Arch Manning kept the ball on a run-pass option, knowing a big hit was coming his way. The Texas quarterback waited until the last possible second before firing the ball to a leaping Emmett Mosley V in the end zone.

Manning’s third touchdown pass gave Texas a 24-point lead over Vanderbilt, and the Longhorns held on for a 34-31 win. The much-scrutinized Manning, who entered his first season as a starter with outsize expectations and struggled to meet them for seven games, had settled into a nice rhythm. Manning has 674 passing yards and six touchdowns in his past two starts, and he enters the stretch run brimming with confidence.

Quarterbacks improve and so do offenses overall, as Texas has shown in recent weeks. Offenses and quarterbacks also regress, as Carson Beck and Miami have with losses in two of the past three games.

But November provides the stage for offenses to make strides and ideally peak in the most important games. Weather and injuries will factor in for some teams, as will schedule strength. Our latest power rankings examine the top 25 and what each team can do to improve on offense during a pivotal month. — Adam Rittenberg

Previous ranking: 1

The Buckeyes had a strong performance on the ground in the 38-14 win over Penn State. But the running game has been middling for much of the season, even with quarterback Julian Sayin and wideouts Carnell Tate and Jeremiah Smith buoying arguably the most lethal passing attack in the country. The Buckeyes rank 10th in the Big Ten with 153 rushing yards per game and ninth with 4.64 yards per carry. Ohio State is eighth in the league in yards before contact per rush (1.73) and 11th in yards after contact per rush (2.84), suggesting the issues lie both with the offensive line and the running backs. Still, the more carries freshman Bo Jackson has gotten, the better the running game has been. And last season, Ohio State’s revamped offensive line found its groove in the College Football Playoff after struggling during the regular season. Against Penn State, Jackson rushed for 105 yards on 13 carries for his first 100-yard game since Sept. 13. That could prove to be a springboard for Ohio State’s running game down the stretch. — Jake Trotter


Previous ranking: 2

Like many aspects of coach Curt Cignetti’s team, the offense is difficult to nitpick. The Hoosiers entered Saturday’s game at Maryland ranked third nationally in scoring and fifth in yards per contest. Indiana continued its machinelike efficiency against the Terrapins, leaning on its running game with Kaelon Black and Maryland transfer Roman Hemby. Despite not having starting offensive lineman Drew Evans and losing standout wide receiver Elijah Sarratt to a hamstring injury in the first half, Indiana still finished with 55 points and 588 yards in its latest win. IU has displayed tremendous offensive balance throughout the season, and the run game has really come on strong across the past two weeks after a brief dip. The Hoosiers need to maintain that approach the rest of the way. — Rittenberg


Previous ranking: 3

The duo of Mario Craver and KC Concepcion changed everything for the Aggies’ offense this season by creating space with big-play threats, which was seriously lacking last season. The transfers have combined for 76 catches, 1,261 yards and 11 touchdowns as compared with last season’s leading receivers Noah Thomas and Jabre Barber, who racked up 77 catches for 955 yards and 10 TDs over the entire campaign. Despite losing last season’s leading rusher, Le’Veon Moss, to an ankle injury, the Aggies have used the legs of quarterback Marcel Reed (349 yards, six TDs) to supplement running back Rueben Owens II. And as of late, ball carrier Jamarion Morrow, who scored twice against LSU, has given Texas A&M another wrinkle. The Aggies are humming along. But one area for improvement? They rank 123rd in penalties per game (7.9), and coach Mike Elko has challenged his team to be more disciplined. After a bye week, the Aggies will be headed to Missouri with ESPN Research’s best strength of record, which suggests the average playoff contender would have only a 5% chance to go 8-0 against A&M’s schedule to date. — Dave Wilson


Previous ranking: 4

The Crimson Tide have surged since losing to Florida State in the season opener thanks in large part to the development and poise of quarterback Ty Simpson. The biggest area that needs improvement is the run game, which has not been nearly as consistent or explosive as that of past Tide teams. Alabama is averaging just 118.9 yards per game and 3.6 yards per carry, ranking among the bottom third in the country. Alabama has one 100-yard rusher in Power 4 games, and multiple times its leading rusher was not a running back. Some of that is because ball carrier Jam Miller has been banged up, but the offensive line has not been nearly as good at run blocking as projected. If Alabama is going to make it through the rest of its schedule and a possible CFP run, there is no question it will have to figure out a way to run the ball better and more consistently. — Andrea Adelson


Previous ranking: 8

A bye for the Ducks this past week allows them to get some extra time to prepare for what might be one of their trickiest matchups left, against Iowa on the road this Saturday. Oregon’s offense ranks 10th in SP+, but its passing game has lagged behind its running attack, which is one of the 10 best in the country. The final stretch will put more pressure on quarterback Dante Moore, who is coming off what appeared to be a nose injury that sidelined him during the Oct. 25 home victory against Wisconsin. (It does not appear he will miss significant time.) After a really strong start to the season, Moore struggled in Oregon’s loss against Indiana but bounced back with his best statistical game at Rutgers. Something to watch: If the Ducks are able to get wide receiver Evan Stewart back after being out for most of the season with a serious knee injury he suffered in June, it could be a huge development for their unit heading into a potential playoff run. — Paolo Uggetti


Previous ranking: 6

It’s difficult to nitpick an Ole Miss offense that ranks third in the SEC in passing (289.2 yards) and total offense (476.8 yards) and is fourth in scoring (36.2 points) and rushing (187.6 yards). The Rebels weren’t at their best in Saturday’s 30-14 home win against South Carolina. Quarterback Trinidad Chambliss, the Division II transfer from Ferris State, has been one of the best stories in college football this season. He completed 12 of 21 passes for 159 yards with one touchdown and one interception. It wasn’t his best effort.

“I felt like our fans and defense showed up today,” Rebels coach Lane Kiffin said. “Our offense in the passing game didn’t. Inconsistency in the passing game started in the third quarter. They started to play a lot of man and stopping the run. Gotta beat them in the passing game when they do that, didn’t for a little bit there.” — Mark Schlabach


Previous ranking: 10

BYU has found itself in a familiar position: 8-0 and the front-runner to win the Big 12. The Cougars were here a year ago (9-0, actually), only to drop a pair of late games and lose out on the tiebreaker to play for the conference title. BYU had a well-timed bye over the weekend ahead of this week’s trip to Texas Tech in what is the biggest game of the week in college football. The Cougars have appeared vulnerable at times, but this is a team that has won 19 of its past 21 contests. — Kyle Bonagura


Previous ranking: 5

The Bulldogs didn’t have their finest effort on offense in a 24-20 victory against rival Florida in Jacksonville on Saturday. But once again, Georgia’s offense made big plays when it needed it most in the fourth quarter. After running for 221 yards in a 43-35 win over Ole Miss on Oct. 18, the Bulldogs didn’t have as much success on the ground against the Gators. Georgia ran 39 times for 138 yards, averaging just 3.5 yards per carry. Florida’s defense did a good job of containing quarterback Gunner Stockton, who has hurt many opponents with designed keepers this season. Running the ball was a point of emphasis for coach Kirby Smart this past offseason, after his Bulldogs ranked next to last in the SEC with 124.4 yards per game, the lowest average in his tenure. Georgia has been better this season; it ranks sixth in the league with 184 yards per game. But Smart wants even more out of his ground game in the final month of the season. — Schlabach


Previous ranking: 12

If Texas Tech wants to reach the playoff, this week’s game against BYU feels like a must-win. The Red Raiders could lose and still reach the Big 12 title game for a chance to play its way back into the 12-team field, but with as many teams still in the mix in the conference, the tiebreaker game could get tricky. The Red Raiders are undefeated when quarterback Behren Morton is available, which is something the committee would take into account come selection time. When he’s healthy, Texas Tech usually looks like the best team in the Big 12. — Bonagura


Previous ranking: 13

A ho-hum 25-10 win over Boston College is nothing to get excited about, but for Notre Dame, it was probably a good example of what a middling effort looks like. That the Fighting Irish perhaps overlooked BC is not a shock; the Eagles have been awful. But even amid a less-than-stellar outing, Notre Dame’s offense still flexed its two most impressive muscles. Jeremiyah Love ran for 136 yards and a pair of scores, while CJ Carr threw for 299 yards and two touchdowns. Dig a little deeper, however, and there was at least one reminder of Notre Dame’s early-season issues. Of Love’s 136 yards, 94 came on one play. Jadarian Price had just 12 yards on nine carries. The ground game, aside from Love’s long run, averaged just 2.4 yards per carry. Balance will be essential against better foes, and with Love and Price, Notre Dame should never have to worry about an ability to move the ball on the ground. — David Hale


Previous ranking: 19

The most productive scorer in the Sooners’ first road win over a ranked opponent since 2019? Kicker Tate Sandell. The big-legged redshirt junior knocked in four field goals, including three over 50 yards, in Oklahoma’s 33-27 win at Tennessee. As important, Oklahoma got its running game going at Neyland Stadium. Xavier Robinson‘s 115 yards marked the most by a Sooners running back in 2025. And with another 80 yards on the ground from quarterback John Mateer, Oklahoma turned in its best rushing performance against a power conference defense this fall. The Sooners were still outgained 456-351 in Week 10. But even base-level production on the ground at Tennessee made a game-changing impact for an offense that struggled mightily across much of October. It was enough to help keep Oklahoma’s playoff hopes alive. The Sooners will need to keep that same rushing attack cranking when they visit Alabama on Nov. 15. — Eli Lederman


Previous ranking: 14

For the Cavaliers to make it to the ACC championship game, they will have to make sure their run game is the best it can be down the stretch. They were able to run the ball more effectively in a 31-21 win over Cal, gaining 194 yards on 44 attempts. That was a huge priority after struggling to run it last week in an overtime win over North Carolina. Virginia is at its best when it runs to set up the pass, and that is what the Cavs did so effectively at the start of the season while rushing for more than 200 yards in their first three Power 4 games. Running back J’Mari Taylor is having an All-ACC caliber season, and Harrison Waylee has proved to be a nice change of pace back. Quarterback Chandler Morris can help in the run game, as well. — Adelson


Previous ranking: 22

After Arch Manning‘s second straight 300-yard passing game, coach Steve Sarkisian said the improvement of Texas’ offensive line, along with the experience and maturity of Manning at quarterback, means he can get his offense more in attack mode. The one-two punch of Quintrevion Wisner and CJ Baxter returning allows the Longhorns to open up the play-action game, like they did against Vanderbilt as Manning went 12-of-15 for 166 yards and three TDs on play fakes. Texas gets a bye week to heal up before a Nov. 15 showdown in Athens against No. 5 Georgia followed by home games against Arkansas and Texas A&M. Key stats for Texas’ playoff hopes: Sarkisian has 12 wins over ranked teams over the past three campaigns, second only to Kalen DeBoer (13); and Texas is 17-1 at home during that same span, tied for fewest home losses in the FBS. — Wilson


Previous ranking: 16

Late in the 28-16 win over Virginia Tech, Cardinals running back Isaac Brown came up limping near the sideline. Brown has been on fire as of late, and he had another 130 yards on the ground Saturday. But he also has been Louisville’s only consistent big-play threat, and if he is to miss any time, it’s easy to wonder what this Cardinals offense would look like without him. Quarterback Miller Moss has been mediocre for much of the season, and Saturday’s outing was a microcosm of larger concerns. Moss threw a pick and averaged just 4.9 yards per pass. Moss’ 66.1 Total QBR ranks 54th nationally, and he has had at least one turnover in six of eight games this season. Moss was never likely to be as prolific as Tyler Shough had been a year ago for the Cardinals, but Moss probably needs to be a tick or two better than he has been if Louisville wants to make a serious push for the playoff. — Hale


Previous ranking: 7

The Yellow Jackets’ struggles against the run finally caught up with them in Week 10 against NC State, which ran for 243 yards in a 48-36 win. Quarterback Haynes King was still exceptional, accounting for 511 of Georgia Tech’s 559 yards, but some of the cracks in the offensive facade showed through, as well. The rushing attack came up short multiple times in the red zone, forcing Georgia Tech to settle for too many field goals, and the receivers had several key drops. In all, Tech’s offense remains one of the better groups in the country. But the dependence on King to be the superhero was on display in the loss to NC State, and the struggles in stopping the Wolfpack on defense was a reminder that no matter how dynamic King is, someone still needs to stop the other team too. — Hale


Previous ranking: 11

The Commodores clawed back against Texas but were in too big of a hole, starting the fourth quarter down 34-10 before scoring 21 unanswered. The biggest reason was the lack of protection for Diego Pavia, who had been sacked just seven times all season before Texas got to him six times. Vanderbilt also entered the game averaging 203 yards rushing, but it was held to just 58, the lowest output in two campaigns since offensive coordinator Tim Beck arrived (along with Pavia). Pavia was 7-for-12 for 86 yards when he was pressured against Texas but 20-of-26 for 279 when he wasn’t, so solidifying things up front is key for the stretch run. Vandy has home games against Auburn and Kentucky then an end-of-year trip to Knoxville to take on Tennessee. ESPN Research currently gives the Commodores a 25% chance to make the playoff — but a 94% chance if they win out. — Wilson


Previous ranking: 24

The Utes’ offensive turnaround this season has been remarkable. When they’re clicking, they have one of the most fun offenses to watch in college football. The playcalling is creative, and there are huge gaps to run through. It’s pleasing to the eye. In the two games the Utes were stifled — by Texas Tech and BYU — the offensive line just wasn’t able to get the same push, and it threw off the timing of everything. At its finest, Utah might be the best team in the Big 12. But with two conference losses — to teams it trails in the standings — Utah will need a lot of help to reach the title game. — Bonagura


Previous ranking: 18

With Beau Pribula out with a dislocated left ankle, Missouri got a bye week to prepare freshman Matt Zollers for his first career start against No. 3 Texas A&M this Saturday. Zollers was a smooth-passing top-100 recruit, and he went a decent 14-for-23 for 138 yards and a touchdown while nearly leading a comeback against Vanderbilt. But Mizzou needs to do him some favors by reestablishing a solid run game. It’s a lot easier to run than throw against A&M anyway, but after earning early-season All-American hype, Tigers back Ahmad Hardy has averaged only 3.7 yards per carry over his past three games. If Hardy can’t get going again (and the offensive line can’t help a bit more than it has of late), beating a top-five team is going to be awfully difficult. — Bill Connelly


Previous ranking: 9

The Hurricanes have found themselves in quite a pickle headed into the stretch run: All but eliminated from ACC title game contention, they still have an outside shot at an at-large CFP berth. With that in mind, how will Miami fix its offensive issues over the final four weeks of the season? Penalties — in particular pre-snap flags — have killed drives and sapped momentum in losses to Louisville and SMU. But more than that, when the run game stalls, Miami has not done a good enough job stretching the field with explosive plays in the passing game. Some of that is because the Hurricanes do not have a reliable receiver outside of Malachi Toney. CJ Daniels showed he could be that earlier in the year, but he missed the SMU game with an injury. Against a Mustangs defense that had given up its fair share of big passing plays, Miami could not get the ball down the field consistently enough and lost. — Adelson


Previous ranking: 25

The Trojans had a bit of a role reversal in their 21-17 win against Nebraska as the defense was able to will them to a hard-fought road victory while the offense appeared to regress. Until this week, USC’s offense under quarterback Jayden Maiava had been one of the most potent units in the nation (and it still ranks third in SP+). But Maiava struggled, completing only nine passes for 135 yards and throwing one interception. USC has playoff hopes that are very much within its grasp, but it likely needs to trust its own run game even more than it is currently (202 rushing yards against Nebraska) down the stretch. Despite injuries to its top two backs in Eli Sanders and Waymond Jordan, walk-on King Miller has been a revelation, rushing for 357 yards over the past three contests. If the Trojans are set to make a true run at the CFP, both Maiava and Miller will need to be at their best. — Uggetti


Previous ranking: 21

The pregame image of Justice Haynes, the Big Ten’s leading rusher, with a boot on his foot and needing a scooter to get around would be daunting for some teams, but not Michigan. The Wolverines are set up to run the ball productively regardless of who is logging carries. Jordan Marshall stepped in for the injured Haynes and had a career performance against Purdue, finishing with 185 rushing yards and three touchdowns on 25 attempts. Michigan’s growth on offense remains with its passing game and freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood, who contributed to the rushing attack but registered only 145 passing yards along with one interception. Michigan will look for more from Underwood and his pass catchers this month. — Rittenberg


Previous ranking: NR

The Tigers smoothly navigated a potential Friday night trap game at Rice, riding a 31-point first half to a straightforward 38-14 win in Week 10. The first half of Memphis’ season was all about the run game: The Tigers averaged 237.8 yards rushing per game across their 6-0 start. Over the past month, however, things have flipped. Quarterback Brendon Lewis and Memphis’ passing game came to life in October, most prominently in Lewis’ 307-yard performance in the program’s Week 9 win over South Florida. The Tigers have shown they can win in multiple ways on offense. The question now is whether Memphis can get things clicking on the ground and in the air at the same time. If so, coach Ryan Silverfield & Co. will hit the business end of the campaign with a complete offense capable of lifting an American Conference title and, in turn, potentially clinching a spot in the playoff field. — Lederman


Previous ranking: 15

Not including sacks, Tennessee averaged 5.6 yards per carry and 37.4 rushing attempts over its first seven outings. Over the past two: 31.5 carries and 3.4 yards. The run game has abandoned the Volunteers as of late, and in Saturday’s 33-27 loss to Oklahoma, their backs rushed 24 times for just 69 yards. After scoring 10 points on its first three possessions, Tennessee suffered a drought of seven points across seven drives thanks to a one-dimensional attack and a couple of poor decisions from quarterback Joey Aguilar. With a bye week to prepare for the last three games of the season — New Mexico State, at Florida, Vanderbilt — the Vols will need to rediscover the run and give Aguilar more support for any hope of winning out and maybe, with help, salvaging a playoff berth. — Connelly


Previous ranking: NR

That the Huskies have managed to lose only to Michigan and Ohio State is indicative of the quality of the team and the talent they do have, especially on offense and specifically with quarterback Demond Williams Jr. The sophomore has thrown for over 2,000 yards and completed 73% of his passes, and he boasts a 14-to-4 touchdown-to-interception ratio as well as 429 rushing yards. (In fact, he has twice been the Huskies’ leading rusher.) Williams and his offense have had their way against equal and lesser defenses, but their worst two performances have come in those two losses facing elite defenses. (Williams threw three of his four interceptions to date against the Wolverines.) If Jedd Fisch’s team is hoping to keep surprising and rising up the rankings, the rest of its season presents a road map that is within reach, as Washington likely will be favored in three of its final four contests, with the exception being its Nov. 29 home game against Oregon. But it will require the best version of the Huskies’ offense and ask players such as running back Jonah Coleman to step up and help Williams too. That final regular-season matchup against the Ducks will feature one of the best defenses in the country trying to stop it. — Uggetti


Previous ranking: NR

The Hawkeyes are 68th in offensive EPA (expected points added), a considerable jump from last season, when they ranked 88th. If only Iowa could generate a few more big plays in the passing game. The Hawkeyes rank last among Power 4 offenses with just 5.64 yards per passing attempt. Iowa has completed only 14 passes for more than 20 yards and none for over 50 yards. The Hawkeyes did get two big completions (29 and 28 yards) in their resounding 41-3 victory over Minnesota last weekend. They’ll need to find a way to get a lot more of those over these next two weeks if they’re going to knock off Oregon and USC to hang on in the Big Ten title game picture. — Trotter



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For Jake Paul, Anthony Joshua represents a new kind of opportunity

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After a series of bouts against MMA fighters or retired boxers well past their prime, the former YouTuber steps up in class against a 36-year-old former heavyweight champ.



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Premier League Future Power Rankings: Long-term projections for all 20 teams

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Premier League Future Power Rankings: Long-term projections for all 20 teams


You know it’s probably going to be Arsenal or Manchester City for the Premier League title; Burnley and someone else for relegation; and one of, like, eight or nine different teams for the final two or three UEFA Champions League places.

These are the races that matter. These are the races we talk about. They frame everything that happens with a given club: Is the manager keeping the team safe from relegation? Are the new signings boosting the midtable club into the European places? Can that new striker put that already-excellent team over the top in the title race?

But in reality, clubs don’t function in this way. Or at least, they shouldn’t function in this way. They’re signing players, developing talent, and acquiring coaches with a multi-year view into the future. If everyone only cared about this season, every player in the league would be 27 years-old.

So, today, we’re going to rank all 20 Premier League clubs based on how the future looks. This isn’t a prediction for who is going to win the league in a couple of years — that wouldn’t be fun since we’d be stuck picking someone from the so-called Big Six. Instead, it’s a ranking of how likely a team is to have self-defined successful seasons in the future.

To create the rankings, we’ll use a combination of four inputs:

• Squad age: The team’s average age, weighted by minutes played this season, via FBref.

• Young talent: The combined Transfermarkt value of the team’s players aged 23 and under.

• Managerial stability: A combination of how likely the current manager is to be at the club in a few years and how confident we should be that the club would be able to replace their current manager with the right guy.

• Club health: A combination of how highly I think of the ownership and the team’s decision-makers, the state of the team’s financial health, and how likely they are to be relegated at some point.

We’ve ranked each club in each of the four categories, added them up, and came up with the following list. Let’s get to the Premier League Future Power Rankings!


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Overall score: 14

• Squad age: 5
• Young talent: 4
• Managerial stability: 3
• Club health: 2

Reason for hope: It doesn’t feel like any of their recent moves have been major successes. There’s no clear young star on the roster like Moisés Caicedo or Alexis Mac Allister. And teams aren’t knocking Brighton’s doors down to hire Fabian Hurzeler, either.

But despite all of that, the club is currently in 10th, and they have the seventh-best expected-goal differential in the league. Midtable might be the floor for a team that, according to FBref, has the fourth-lowest wage bill in the Premier League. Still, they still have a ton of young potential on the roster. If two of them become stars at the same time, this could be a Champions League club.

Reason for concern: Take all of that and spin it around. They haven’t whiffed on any signings, but the club has some more money now, thanks to its continued presence in the league and the growing financial gap between the Premier League and everyone else. And as Brighton have started to spend more on transfers for individual players, there haven’t been any real hits.

There’s a chance — a small one — that their player-identification model doesn’t work higher up the market.


Overall score: 19

• Squad age: 2
• Young talent: 11
• Managerial stability: 5
• Club health: 1

Reason for hope: Last season, Brentford’s per-game expected goal differential was plus-0.09. This season, Brentford’s per-game expected goal differential is plus-0.09. Did I mention that they lost their manager to Tottenham and their best player to Manchester United over the summer?

Reason for concern: They’ve outscored their opponents by one goal since they were promoted back in 2021. Given their wage bill — estimated by FBref to be the smallest in the league — that’s an incredible level of relative performance. But Brentford still haven’t shown the upside that we’ve seen from Brighton. One season of bad luck could still plunge them down into a relegation battle.


Overall score: 20

• Squad age: 9
• Young talent: 7
• Managerial stability: 1
• Club health: 3

Reason for hope: So much has gone wrong this season. Every key player has spent time on the sidelines. It’s increasingly looking like summer signing Viktor Gyökeres just isn’t good enough to play consistent minutes for a team at this level. And Manchester City have already passed them on goal differential.

… But despite all of that, they’ve clearly been the best team in the Premier League so far: a plus-1.09 xG differential, while no one else is even at plus-0.8.

Reason for concern: They’re all-in. After multiple seasons with one of the youngest rosters in England, this team’s average age is just, well, average. Gyokeres has attempted two shots in the Premier League in his last five appearances, and with sizable fees already invested into Kai Havertz and Gabriel Jesus, they might be stuck with what they currently have at center forward.


Overall score: 23

• Squad age: 1
• Young talent: 1
• Managerial stability: 14
• Club health: 7

Reason for hope: They’ve collected more young talent than probably any other club in Premier League history. And those double No. 1 rankings don’t even include all of the great prospects over at Strasbourg, the ownership group’s other club in France.

Reason for concern: It’s still unclear whether the people in charge know how — or even want — to turn that talent into a team that could genuinely win domestic and continental trophies. Their current accounting books would violate the Premier League’s new squad-cost-ratio rules, and I don’t know if Enzo Maresca is the right guy for this job or if Chelsea know who his best replacement would be, either. We know Chelsea’s future is filled with talent — but we don’t know a whole lot beyond that.


Overall score: 25

• Squad age: 14
• Young talent: 3
• Managerial stability: 4
• Club health: 4

Reason for hope: Now, here’s the club where everything has gone wrong this season. Almost none of the new signings have played well. Most of the guys from last year’s team look worse. Mohamed Salah might leave the club — and might have already left the company of the best players in the world. Manager Arne Slot can’t find any of the right buttons to press. They’ve already lost more games than they did all of last season.

And yet: they’re two points back of fourth place in the Premier League and tied for sixth place in the big Champions League table.

Reason for concern: This was the first real transfer window for new-ish sporting director Richard Hughes. The club spent a ton of money — and they got significantly worse.

The Alexander Isak signing, in particular, was a massive departure from the way Liverpool usually do things: a record-breaking fee for an already-in-his-peak-years, injury-prone player with system-fit issues. Their transfer moves no longer deserve the benefit of the doubt.


Overall score: 29

• Squad age: 3
• Young talent: 15
• Managerial stability: 6
• Club health: 5

Reason for hope: The two more subjective rankings here are a combination of inference and what I know from people I talk to in the sport. But Bournemouth were willing to move on from a beloved manager who saved them from relegation because they (1) knew they got lucky, and (2) thought they’d identified a better option.

This kind of decision only gets made when a club really knows what it’s doing, from top to bottom. Most of the soccer world thought it was madness when they fired Gary O’Neil. Now, pretty much every club in the world would be willing to hire Andoni Iraola.

Reason for concern: The top-end talent seems to have dried out, and we’re already seeing it both from their results and performances this season. I trust Bournemouth to go through a rigorous process of identifying an eventual Iraola replacement — I trust they’ve already done it, too — but what does this team look like with a different coach and without players who will go on to start for PSG and Real Madrid?


Overall score: 31

• Squad age: 3
• Young talent: 2
• Managerial stability: 13
• Club health: 13

Reason for hope: After an era-ending season where the squad looked old and Pep Guardiola couldn’t find any solutions for a team that frequently got trampled by the Premier League’s increasing athleticism, City have turned the roster over in one offseason. They’re back to being title contenders — at home and abroad.

Reason for concern: There are those 115 Premier League charges still hanging over the club, and Pep Guardiola’s contract expires at the end of next season.

Man City have such financial power that they’ll always be competitive, but we’ve never seen a club with this much money be transformed into the vision of one man before. What happens when Pep leaves? And what punishment might the league still have in store for its most dominant club?


Overall score: 37

• Squad age: 12
• Young talent: 12
• Managerial stability: 7
• Club health: 6

Reason for hope: They’ve lost Michael Olise and Eberechi Eze in consecutive summers. And somehow, the more talent they lose, the better they get:

• 2023-24: minus-0.09 xG differential per game
• 2024-25: plus-0.30 xG differential per game
• 2025-26: plus-0.48 xG differential per game

Reason for concern: Oliver Glasner isn’t long for London — South London, at least — and Palace’s track record with coach hirings is mixed before the Austrian arrived to replace Roy Hodgson. While Palace seem to have a better handle on Championship prospects than anyone, their young-talent pipeline is starting to dry up. With Marc Guéhi expected to leave either in January or after the season, how many more star departures can they weather?


Overall score: 38

• Squad age: 6
• Young talent: 5
• Managerial stability: 16
• Club health: 11

Reason for hope: If Spurs had Brighton’s budget, we would be raving about all of the young talent they’ve built up over the past couple years. In fact, only Brighton and Chelsea have more 23-and-under players with an estimated market value of €10 million or more.

If you’re going to run off a bunch of disappointing seasons in a row, you need to be building for the future while your results are in the tank. Spurs have at least done that.

Reason for concern: They’re … getting worse? Here’s their expected goals differential, or xGD, over the past three seasons:

• 2023-24: plus-0.13 xGD/game
• 2024-25: minus-0.12 xGD/game
• 2025-26: minus-0.43 xGD/game

Former club chairman Daniel Levy is gone, but the club’s long-term performance level is lower than it’s been at any point this century.


Overall score: 40

• Squad age: 6
• Young talent: 10
• Managerial stability: 10
• Club health: 14

Reason for hope: Sunderland aren’t your typical relegation survivor. Sam Allardyce isn’t on the sidelines, and Gareth Barry isn’t playing in the midfield. Instead, they’re managed by Regis Le Bris, who had never coached in England before and had only been the manager at one other club before joining Sunderland.

And — OK, sure, Granit Xhaka is basically their Gareth Barry. But beyond him, this isn’t a roster of late- and post-peak Premier League vets. Just two of their most-used 11 players are in their 30s and almost everyone who comes off the bench is 25 or younger.

Reason for concern: Although they’re currently in eight place, they have the 17th-best xG differential in the Premier League. And that’s after a season in the Championship when they ranked seventh by the same metric. Now, xG isn’t a perfect indicator of team performance, but clubs that overperform their aggregate chance quality tend to eventually come crashing back to Earth — at some point.


Overall score: 41

• Squad age: 10
• Young talent: 6
• Managerial stability: 15
• Club health: 10

Reason for hope: They figured out how to fix the attack in a single summer. Last season, United scored 44 goals in 38 matches. This year, they’ve scored 30, and they’ve only played 16 games. For the first time in a long time, United identified a problem, threw a bunch of money at it, and actually got the result for which they were hoping.

Reason for concern: Five Manchester United players have created a combined 3.0 expected goals and assists so far this season. Four of them are 26 or older, two of them are 30-plus (Bruno Fernandes and Casemiro), and Ahmad Diallo is the only one (23) who still hasn’t hit his prime.

They’re going to have to replace Bruno and Casemiro over the next couple seasons, and by the time they figure it out, their two major attacking signings from this summer, Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo, could already be aging out of their primes.


Overall score: 43

• Squad age: 18
• Young talent: 14
• Managerial stability: 2
• Club health: 9

Reason for hope: Here’s how many points every Premier League team has won since Oct. 24, 2022:

In other words, Aston Villa have been one of the four best teams in the Premier League since Unai Emery replaced Steven Gerrard.

Reason for concern: They’re really old — and they’re on a gonzo heater right now. I have no doubt that Villa’s weird style of play — high line with little pressure, slow possession but also lots of through balls — is fooling the models that measure these things, but Villa are three points off the table despite, uh …

Can they retool as the roster gets older and the results inevitably start to go against them?


Overall score: 44

• Squad age: 16
• Young talent: 9
• Managerial stability: 11
• Club health: 8

Reason for hope: If Lewis Hall can stay healthy, Newcastle might have the best pair of young fullbacks in the Premier League — if not the world.

Both Hall and Tino Livramento are already fantastic passers, and I think the single-best predictor of whether or not a young player will have a successful career might be how much progressive passing they do. Livramento is 23, Hall 21, and they both rank in the 84th percentile or better among all players at their position across Europe’s Big Five top leagues for progressive passes completed.

Reason for concern: That’s really it? Nick Woltemade has been OK to start his career, Anthony Gordon is a solid Premier League player, but every other key contributor to this team is at the end or already past his peak years.

The first era of Saudi ownership at the club was an on-field success; they were in a relegation battle when the new owners came in; they’ve been a top five team in the league since. But that version of Newcastle looks like it’s reaching its conclusion. What comes next?


Overall score: 51

• Squad age: 8
• Young talent: 8
• Managerial stability: 18
• Club health: 17

Reason for hope: They’re even younger than they look. Among the 14 players who have featured in at least 400 minutes this season, just two are older than 30: 33-year-old keeper Mats Selz, who has played every minute of all but one match this season, and 34-year-old striker Chris Wood, who has only started seven games but pushes the average age up since he’s so old.

Nikola Milenkovic and Ibrahim Sangaré are both 28, but the other 10 players are all 25 or younger. A lot of their big signings from this summer haven’t featured much yet, and many of them are 23-and-under, so there’s potential for Forest to get even younger

Reason for concern: This is the worst-run team in the league because of the guy who owns it. Now, there are a bunch of smart people working at Forest, and you can see it shine through in every fourth or fifth signing they make — hello, Elliott Anderson! — but they’re already on their third manager of the season.

Sean Dyche has stabilized the club after the philosophical whiplash from Nuno Espirito-Santo to Ange Postecoglu, but owner Evangelos Marinakis is a complete wild card who is liable to do something ridiculous at any moment. The only reason they aren’t lower is that they’re five points clear of the relegation battle.


Overall score: 52

• Squad age: 18
• Young talent: 13
• Managerial stability: 9
• Club health: 12

Reason for hope: David Moyes has been willing to play Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall, Ilman Ndiaye, and Jack Grealishand a center forward all at the same time. While they’re still waiting for one of those strikers to start producing, KDH, Ndiaye, and Grealish all rank in the top 15 in the league for expected assists created. That’s something to build on!

Reason for concern: Grealish is only on loan, and this is tied with Villa and Fulham for the oldest team in the league. Everton signed a bunch of young prospects this summer, but Thierno Barry, Tyler Dibling, and Adam Aznou have combined to start 10 matches this season. Dibling has only played 80 minutes; Anzou hasn’t played at all. There is some young talent on this roster — internal solutions to the aging issue — but can we trust Moyes to integrate the next generation?


Overall score: 60

• Squad age: 13
• Young talent: 20
• Managerial stability: 12
• Club health: 15

Reason for hope: Leeds were one of the all-time great Championship sides last season, and they were one of the most popular picks I can remember for a promoted side to stay up. They’re currently just one spot clear of the relegation places, but they’ve been significantly better than that.

Through 16 matches, their total xG differential is just minus-1.0 — a fantastic mark for a team that was in the second-division last season, and the 11th-best differential in the league so far.

Reason for concern: Wilfried Gnonto is the only player under the age of 25 who has even played a single minute for Leeds this season. And he’s only started four matches. Part of the reason Leeds were so good last season and why their underlying performance has been so impressive is that they’re built to win right now. But beyond the next couple of years, the cupboard is almost completely bare.


Overall score: 61

• Squad age: 18
• Young talent: 19
• Managerial stability: 8
• Club health: 16

Reason for hope: After Pep Guardiola and Mikel Arteta — or, the managers for the two best teams in the league — Marco Silva is the Premier League’s longest-serving manager. They’re only ranked eighth in my managerial-stability rating because Fulham’s previous managerial hiring history is total chaos, but while he’s there, Silva secures the club’s floor.

This might not sound like a compliment, but it is: We can be confident that Marco Silva is not going to make Fulham worse than the aggregate talent on their roster.

Reason for concern: Outside of midfielder Joshua King, there’s no young talent making any kind of impact. And, well, there’s not much peak-age talent, either. Seven of Fulham’s 11 most-used players are 29 or older. Unless they start signing some younger players and integrating them into the club soon, the bottom could fall out — especially if someone else decides they want to hire Silva.


Overall score: 65

• Squad age: 14
• Young talent: 16
• Managerial stability: 17
• Club health: 18

Reason for hope: They spent a combined €66 million on a pair of 21-and-under prospects, Mateus Fernandes and El Hadji Malick Diouf, this summer, and both of them pretty much immediately became two of the most important players on the team. For a club that’s too long obsessed over acquiring famous older players like Niclas Füllkrug, the identification and subsequent integration of Fernandes and Diouf is a notable, positive change.

Reason for concern: They’re terrible? Simon Tinsley’s projections give the Hammers a 50% chance of being relegated. Per FBref, West Ham are paying higher wages than half of the teams in the league, and they’re currently a coin-flip away from lugging an expensive, aging roster down to the Championship.


Overall score: 69

• Squad age: 11
• Young talent: 18
• Managerial stability: 20
• Club health: 20

Reason for hope: I, uh, their roster isn’t that old? I’m struggling here …

Reason for concern: They have two points through 16 matches, they’ve scored the fewest goals, and they’ve conceded the most goals. Both of the sites I’ve mentioned put their probability of being relegated north of 96%.


Overall score: 72

• Squad age: 17
• Young talent: 17
• Managerial stability: 19
• Club health: 19

Reason for hope: They’re only six points from safety, and stranger things have happened … right?

Reason for concern: According to FBref’s Stathead database, which goes back to the 2017-18 season, only three Premier League teams have posted a per-game xG differential below minus-1.0: Norwich City in 2021-22, Southampton last season, and Burnley this year. Those other two teams? They both finished in 20th.



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Registration opens for foreign players for ‘historic’ PSL 11

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Registration opens for foreign players for ‘historic’ PSL 11


Quetta Gladiators’ players celebrate a dismissal during their PSL 10 match against Multan Sultans at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore on April 29, 2025. — PCB

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has opened registration for foreign players interested in participating in the 11th edition of the Pakistan Super League (PSL).

“The foreign player registration window for the 11th edition of the PSL is now officially open,” the cricket body said in a statement issued on Friday.

The announcement comes as the league enters a “historic expansion” phase, with the addition of two new franchises, opening the door for greater international participation in what is set to be the league’s largest season to date.

The PCB said the expansion to eight teams will create significantly more roster spots and earning opportunities for overseas players.

“Agents and independent players are encouraged to complete their registration before January 20, 2026, to be included in the Player Pool,” the PCB said, adding that the registration link is available on its official website.

Launched in 2016, the PSL will feature eight teams for the first time in its 11th edition. The auction for the two new franchises is scheduled to be held in Islamabad on January 8 and will be broadcast live, the board said.

Earlier, the PCB had extended the deadline for bids for the two new franchises by a week, citing strong interest from investors in Europe, the United States and the Middle East.

The extension was announced by PCB Chairman Mohsin Naqvi on his official X account, who said the deadline had been moved from December 15 to December 22.

With the upcoming expansion, the PSL will undergo its first major structural change in seven years, officially increasing the number of franchises from six to eight.





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