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College Football Awards, Week 1 (2025) September 2, 2025

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COACHES
Wish I were himRyan Day, Ohio State

Glad I’m not him: Steve Sarkesian, Texas

Lucky guy: Brent Key, Georgia Tech

Poor guy: Deion Sanders, Colorado

Desperately seeking a wake-up call: Chris Klieman, Kansas State

Desperately seeking a P.R. man: Mike Norvell, Florida State

Desperately seeking sunglasses and a fake beard: Jeff Monken, Army

Desperately seeking … anything:  Kalen DeBoer, Alabama

TEAMS
Thought you’d kick butt, you did: Illinois (defeated Western Illinois 52-3)

Thought you’d kick butt, you didn’t: Kansas State (defeated North Dakota 38-35)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you did: Marshall (lost to No. 5 Georgia 45-7)

Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you didn’t:  Toledo (lost to Kentucky 24-16)

Thought you wouldn’t kick butt, you did:  Temple (defeated UMass 42-10)  

Dang, they’re good: Ohio State
Dang, they’re bad:  UMass

Can’t Stand Prosperity:  N/A

Did the season start?  Kansas State
Can the season end?  Army

Can the season never end? Florida State

GAMES
Play this again:  No. 3 Ohio State 14, No. 1 Texas 7

Play this again, too: No. 9 LSU 17, No. 4 Clemson 10

Never play this again: BYU 69, Portland State 0

What?  No. 3 Ohio State 14, No. 1 Texas 7

HuhNo. 9 LSU 17, No. 4 Clemson 10

Are you kidding me??  Florida State 31, No. 8 Alabama 17

Oh – my – GodTarleton State 30, Army 27 (2OT)

NEXT WEEK

rankings are current AP (week 2)
Ticket to die for:  Michigan @ Oklahoma

Best non-Power Four vs. Power Four  matchup: James Madison @ Louisville

Best non-Power Four matchup: North Texas @ Western Michigan

Upset alert: UConn @ Syracuse

Must win: UCLA @ UNLV

Offensive explosion: Kansas @ Missouri

Defensive struggle: Miami (OH) @ Rutgers

Great game no one is talking about: Iowa @ No. 22 Iowa State

Intriguing coaching matchup:  Frank Reich of Stanford vs Kalane Sitake of BYU

Who’s bringing the body bags?  San Jose State @ Texas

Why are they playing? Florida International @ Penn State

Plenty of good seats remaining: Bryant @ UMass

They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?  Eastern Washington @ Boise State

Week 1 Thoughts:

The 2025-’26 college football season has launched for real, and a few good games have helped the season launch more than respectfully.  Indeed, in one of the greatest opening games in living memory, No. 1 Texas came to Columbus to play No. 3 (and defending national champ) Ohio State.  Adding even more drama and poignancy to this already-historic matchup was the fact that this was legendary ESPN football commentator Lee Corso’s last appearance on the network’s College Gameday show.  In a very classy farewell gesture, Corso, 90, wore a tuxedo for his farewell appearance.  The Ohio State band formed the letters “CORSO” on the field right before kickoff, and he was joined by the Gameday crew a the 50 yard line of Ohio Stadium to deliver his final “headgear” stunt.  Appropriately, he donned the Brutus Buckeye head.  How could he not?  Twenty-nine years ago, his first ever big-game outcome prognostication vis-à-vis donning the team’s mascot head was born at Ohio State, where he likewise put on Brutus’ head.  It was more than fitting that he bookended his legendary body of work at ESPN by doing the same thing, in fitting tribute to the place where the cherished tradition began.

The game itself was incredible, with huge defensive plays abounding throughout the game.  Ryan Day’s overall strategy of bringing in Matt Patricia from the NFL paid off handsomely.  Patricia used his vast NFL experience to call up defensive schemes to make inexperienced Texas QB Arch Manning uncomfortable, and it showed in the Longhorns’ lack of offensive output throughout all but the last drive of the game.  Still, Manning managed to exploit the occasional crack in the Buckeyes’ defense, and Texas was thus one pass completion away from taking the game into overtime.

In a larger sense, this loss on the part of the Longhorns shall not tank their season.  Should Texas effectively regroup and make the playoffs come season’s end, surely their path shall cross that of Ohio State yet again.  Should they do so, it is almost always impossible to beat the same formidable opponent again in the same season, as the Buckeyes demonstrated with devasting effectiveness against Oregon in the most recent Rose Bowl.

The Broader Line-up of Games

In what might become an annual tradition for the first week of college football awards each season, it is worth noting the many poor matchups among a few really great games.  Once again, most of the matchups scream “[W]hy are they playing?”  To wit (final scores indicated in parentheses): 

Louisville vs EKU (51-17); Arizona State vs Northern Arizona (38-19); SMU vs East Texas A&M (42-13); BYU vs Portland State (69-0); Tulsa vs Abilene Christian (35-7); North Texas vs Lamar (51-0); Ole Miss vs Georgia State (63-7); Texas Tech vs Arkansas Pine Bluff (67-7); USC vs Missouri State (73-13); Florida vs Long Island University (55-0); Arkansas St. vs SE Missouri State (42-24); W. Kentucky vs North Alabama (55-6); Oklahoma vs Illinois State (35-3); Iowa vs Albany (34-7); James Madison vs Weber State (45-10); Memphis vs Chattanooga (45-10); Arkansas vs Alabama A&M (52-7); Oregon vs Montana State (59-13); Penn State vs. Nevada (46-11); Georgia vs Marshall (45-7); Iowa State vs South Dakota (55-7); Air Force vs Buckness (49-13); Boston College vs Fordham (66-10); West Virgina vs Robert Morris (45-3); UConn vs Central Conn. St. (59-13); Pittsburgh vs Duquense (61-9); Navy vs VMI (52-7); Illinois vs Western Illinois (52-3); Kansas vs Wagner (46-7); Florida International vs Bethune-Cookman (42-9); SDSU vs Stony Brook (42-0); Houston vs Stephen F. Austin (27-0); Missouri vs Central Arkansas (61-6); Oklahoma State vs Tennessee-Martin (27-7); Duke vs Elon (45-17)

I would add other games as well to the above litany, except that the intended punching bags managed to make the games somewhat respectable, such as Indiana vs Old Dominion (27-14); Wisconsin vs Miami (OH) (17-0); Minnesota vs Buffalo (23-10); Wyoming vs Akron (10-0); UNLV vs Idaho State (38-31); Kentucky vs Toledo (24-16) and Michigan vs New Mexico (34-17).  The joke was truly on Army, who lost to lowly Tarleton State in the second overtime, 30-27.

As far as college football has evolved (e.g., the new playoff format), further evolution is clearly in order.  To be sure, these absolutely atrocious lineups are likely a holdover of the recent time when one loss could potentially tank a team’s entire season.  That is no longer the case, however, so going forward, it is not unreasonable for us fans to expect more marquee matchups such as the aforementioned Texas vs Ohio State, or Virginia Tech vs South Carolina, or Alabama @ Florida State, or Miami (FL) vs Notre Dame, and especially LSU @ Clemson, a memorable game in its own right.  Likewise with Notre Dame @ Miami (Fla.), which turned out to be another fantastic game.  More of these top-ten matchups, please!  Moreover, Monday night matchup of TCU @ North Carolina, which happens to also be Bill Belichick’s college coaching debut, holds much promise as well.

Just do not expect to see such needed evolution take place next week, which shall deliver too many “why are they playing?” matchups as well.

The Lee Corso Era Ends September 1, 2025

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The 2025-’26 college football season has launched with one of the greatest opening games in living memory.  No. 1 Texas came to Columbus, Ohio, to play No. 3 (and defending national champ) Ohio State.  Adding even more drama and poignancy to this already-historic matchup was the fact that this was legendary ESPN football commentator Lee Corso’s last appearance on the network’s College Gameday show.  In a very classy farewell gesture, Corso, 90, wore a tuxedo for his final appearance.  The Ohio State band formed the letters “CORSO” on the field right before kickoff, and he was joined by the Gameday crew at the 50 yard line of Ohio Stadium to deliver his final “headgear” stunt.  Appropriately, he donned the Brutus Buckeye head.  How could he not?  Twenty-nine years ago, his first ever big-game outcome prognostication vis-à-vis donning the chosen team’s mascot head was born at Ohio State, where he likewise donned Brutus’ head.  It was more than fitting that he bookended his legendary body of work at ESPN by doing the same thing, in fitting tribute to the place where the cherished tradition began.

The fact that he predicted correctly was but an ancillary benefit to the proper tribute to the spirit of the moment and to the theatre of the ritual as a whole.  But beneath the theatrics of it all, Corso was 286-for-430 over his 29 years of headgear picks, making for a 66.5 percent “winning” percentage of such colorful prognostications.  Most college coaches would kill for such a winning percentage.  Ironically, Corso himself certainly “won” more such predictions than he did winning games at the University of Louisville or Indiana University, wherein he went 73-for-164, or 44.5 percent from 1969 to 1984 (including a one-year stint at the end at Northern Illinois). 

But that coaching winning percentage aside, he became a legend at ESPN in particular and in college football commentary in general, a larger-than-life face of the game.  A painting of Corso has just been unveiled at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta, to remain on permanent display.  Even though the Ohio State-Texas game itself was broadcast on FOX and not ESPN, even FOX’s Big Noon Kickoff show (their own equivalent to ESPN’s College Gameday) made their own tribute to this legend in the sunset of his 70-year career in college football.  And yes, both Gameday and Big Noon were at Ohio Stadium that day — what an experience that alone had to be for the fans in attendance!

Two generations of football fans have enjoyed his presence around ESPN college football broadcasts, joining the likes of Chris Fowler, Kirk Herbstreit, later Rece Davis, and much later, Pat McAfee to create an enticing, tailgating atmosphere that became must-see TV for college football fans before the opening kickoff of games at noon, Eastern Time.  Corso, with his strong resemblance to filmmaker and comic genius Mel Brooks, surely lived up to the coincidental semblance by providing for the panel a juxtaposed combination of the wise old sage with animated antics.  His famous catchphrase of “[N]ot so fast, my friend!”, signaling to the audience that he was about to offer a prediction of outcome for an upcoming game that day that would be contrary to that of another member’s of the panel, was further accented with his handling of a pencil or some other writing implemenet.  In fact, that gesture was further enhanced when he began to use Ticonderoga pencils, which no doubt must have swelled that company’s bottom line and stock value upon the release of that information.

An era that has lasted more than three decades at ESPN and has influenced the college football landscape in a broad sense has now come to a close.  As lamentable as that may be, discerning fans can acknowledge that the time had come for a while.  He suffered a small stroke in 2009, but still managed to return to the Gameday panel later that year. The last two seasons or more gave fans cause for notice in terms of Corso’s decline in mental acuity and animation that made the legend he became in the first place.  Even during his last appearance on the program yesterday, his presence was inconsistent.  When he was present that day, however, it was a pleasure to see him in the tux, even with his verbal articulation in further decline. 

Now as a nonagenarian, may he enjoy his remaining years in prosperity, peace, and everything else that would equate to success in his mind.  We shall miss his presence on Gameday, but shall cherish the memories of his insights and antics – and mascot headgear-donning – as we gear up for kickoff every Fall Saturday. 

Playoff scenarios based on the latest AP Polls (Week 8, 2018) October 18, 2018

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Week 7 in college football for the 2018 provided considerable thrills – and headaches – for fans, what with upsets abounding, especially near the top of the rankings.  Unranked Tennessee taking down then-No. 17 Auburn, and unranked Virginia beating then-No. 16 Miami (Fla.) are small potatoes compared to upsets elsewhere that week.

Indeed, no fewer than four AP top ten teams went down in defeat in Week 7 of 2018.  For starters, No. 17 Oregon outlasted then-No. 7 Washington, 30-27, in overtime.  Unranked Michigan State toppled No. 8 Penn State on the road, 21-17.  Iowa State leveraged their special night-time atmosphere to help them beat then-undefeated (and then-No. 6) West Virginia 30-14.  Even more significant was No. 13 LSU pommeling then-No. 2 Georgia 36-16.

As a result of these four key upsets, Washington fell from the No. 7 ranking to No. 15.  Penn State fell from No. 8 to No. 18.  West Virginia fell from No. 6 to No. 13, while Georgia fell from No. 2 to No. 8.

Last year, the Bulldogs made it to the national championship game.  Now, the prospect to return is in jeopardy.  At least it’s October and not November, meaning there is still time to recover.

Regardless, the current AP Top Ten now suggests some very intriguing playoff possibilities.  These are important for the health of college football.  An all-southern/all-SEC college football championship game my thrill the faithful in the southeastern region of the country, but it turns off the rest of the country.  That’s bad for business.  If your sport starts to be perceived as regional in its nature, that hurts your national image, and prevents you from engaging the markets you need to be interested in order to ensure its long-term strength and viability.  Alabama vs. Clemson and Alabama vs. Georgia thus saw a TV ratings decline, whereas Texas vs. USC (2005-’06) and Ohio State vs. Oregon (2014-’15) where perfect matchups to bring in robust, national audiences.  Ohio State vs. Florida (2006-’07), Ohio State vs. LSU (2007-’08) and especially Ohio State vs. Miami (2002-’03) were decent-to-great matchups as well for this purpose.  Alabama vs. Notre Dame (2012-’13) was good on paper, but the outcome of the game proved that it was a mismatch, with the Irish clearly being overrated at the time.

Start with a basic premise that it’s good for business when traditional powers do well.  If Georgia does well, that engages the Atlanta market, which is pretty big, in case you forgot.  If Notre Dame does well, it engages the Chicago and New York City markets.  If USC does well, it engages the Los Angeles market.  If Ohio State and Michigan do well (either or both), that engages much of the Midwestern markets, as well as the Big Ten alums who have left the Midwest for the East Coast, the South, or the West Coast.  If Texas does well, it engages the Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston Markets.  You get the picture.

Now, back to the Week 8 Top Ten rankings from the AP poll.  At No. 1 remains Alabama.  Ok, fine.  With Georgia knocked out of the No. 2 spot (but still in the top ten), that allows for Ohio State to take over that position.  This is good for the sport.  Clemson has moved a spot to No. 3, while Notre Dame has quietly moved up to the No. 4 ranking.

Just by looking at these current top four spots, if these remain unchanged and translate directly into playoff rankings, one would have a great playoff scenario to engage a critical mass of the viewing public.  Alabama and Clemson would be there to keep the South’s fever pitch at maximum levels, while Ohio State and Notre Dame enjoy national audiences so as to include enough of the rest of the country as well.  The Fighting Irish’s ranking this time is no wishful thinking.  Thoughtful analysts concur that this 2018 ND team is much stronger and more athletic than its overrated 2012 counterpart.  Fox Sports’ Colin Cowherd has gone so far as to observe that this is the best ND team since the Lou Holtz era.  As ESPN’s Lee Corso would exclaim, “Yo!”

While there is no west coast team in sight in these current rankings, that is not a deal-breaker, either.  There are enough Big Ten grads on the west coast to keep those markets engaged should Ohio State make it to the playoffs.   The Buckeyes, in this scenario, would represent the West Coast as well as the Midwest.

Naturally, much football remains to be played, and the remainder of the top ten shall make all efforts to crack their way into the playoffs as well.  Of those currently poised for such possibilities, some of them, too, offer intriguing engagement opportunities.  LSU sits at No. 5 after their ripping upset victory over the Bulldogs, and are destined for a major showdown with the Crimson Tide come Nov. 3, in Baton Rouge, no less.  Michigan sits at No. 6 after their big win over Wisconsin last night.  If they maintain their momentum, their Nov. 24 annual grudge match with the Buckeyes in Ann Arbor could be epic.

Meanwhile, Texas has survived another test and now sits at No. 7.  If QB Sam Ehlinger stays healthy, who knows how much further the Longhorns could continue to climb?  This is key to note because Texas in the playoffs engages a different market than the Southeast.  The beauty of Texas in the championship game is that they can theoretically engage two markets simultaneously, as a B1G team can do vis-à-vis both the Midwest and other regions.  In Texas’ case, not only can a Longhorn playoff appearance pique the interest of the DFW and Houston metro areas (San Antonio and Austin don’t hurt either, as that is another combined 4 million-plus people in that mini-megalopolis), but the Southeast could vicariously join in, too.

An Oklahoma (currently No. 9)  playoff appearance, while a different region than the Southeast, has a limited upside.  Yes, it engages the central plains, but there is not much major population there).  Best case scenario is that it will interest the OU grad transplants living in the major Texas markets.  The Longhorns, thankfully, have done their part, though, in making the more market-significant team better-poised for a playoff run at this point.

This is not a swipe at the SEC, or the fans therein, for a personally love southern football and identify with the South.  As someone who is concerned about the national and long-term health of college football, however, perspective must be maintained.  Fans in SEC country will watch the playoffs no matter who is playing.  Fans elsewhere, though, will only watch if they feel they have a stake in things; that they are being represented.  We have enjoyed such perfect or near-perfect matchups in the past, such as the aforementioned Texas-USC games and the Ohio State-Oregon games, for example.

Meanwhile, more big games remain, and the way things have gone thus far, more upsets are likely to occur.  Teams currently in the bottom half of the top ten could claw theyr way up with help from such theoretical upsets.  After all, we’re halfway to regular season’s end, and the stakes and urgency only intensify from here.  Let’s enjoy the ride, and cheer on the key wins that would help make for the best playoff matches with optimal, national appeal while we’re at it!