Week 13 INSTANT fantasy takeaways: Panthers stun Rams + Colts collapse + Holiday games reactions

Matt Harmon and Chris Allen provide their instant fantasy reactions to all the action in Week 13, including the four games that took place on Thanksgiving and Black Friday. Harmon and Allen reveal the boom and bust players of Week 13 and do deep dives on the games with the biggest fantasy and playoff implications for the rest of the season.

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(1:00) - Matt's solo SNF recap: Broncos 27, Commanders 26

(17:15) - Games we care about the most: LAR@CAR, HOU@IND, AZ@TB

(54:30) - Holiday games recaps: GB@DET, KC@DAL, CIN@BAL, CHI@PHI

(1:20:20) - Games we sort of care about: BUF@PIT, LV@LAC, MIN@SEA, CLE@SF, JAX@TEN, NO@MIA

Matt Harmon and Chris Allen provide their instant fantasy reactions to all the action in Week 13, including the four games that took place on Thanksgiving and Black Friday. Harmon and Allen reveal the boom and bust players of Week 13 and do deep dives on the games with the biggest fantasy and playoff implications for the rest of the season.

🖥️Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family athttps://apple.co/3zEuTQjor atyahoosports.tv

Week 13 INSTANT fantasy takeaways: Panthers stun Rams + Colts collapse + Holiday games reactions

Matt Harmon and Chris Allen provide their instant fantasy reactions to all the action in Week 13, including the four gam...
NFL Week 13 INSTANT reactions: Panthers' HUGE upset, division race predictions, are the Ravens even good?

Nate Tice & Charles McDonald give their instant reactions and takeaways from Week 13 of NFL action. The two hosts start with their takeaways from the Denver Broncos' narrow victory over the Washington Commanders on Sunday night.

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Next, Nate & Charles give their 3 Highs, 3 Lows from Week 13. The highs include the Buffalo Bills bouncing back to beat the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Carolina Panthers pulling off a huge upset vs. the Los Angeles Rams and the Chicago Bears keeping it rolling vs. a struggling Philadelphia Eagles offense. On the low side of Week 13 were the Indianapolis Colts blowing their AFC South lead (in what is now a very tight division race with the Houston Texans & Jacksonville Jaguars), the Detroit Lions losing to the Green Bay Packers on Thanksgiving and the Baltimore Ravens looking like this just isn't their year against the Cincinnati Bengals.

Finally, the two hosts wrap things up with some Extra Credit on what's shaping up to be a photo finish in the NFC West division race between the Rams, Seattle Seahawks and San Francisco 49ers.

(1:00) - Broncos beat Commanders on SNF

(17:40) - Bills beat Steelers

(25:15) - Panthers upset Rams

(33:40) - Bears beat Eagles on Black Friday

(46:40) - Colts blow AFC South lead

(58:35) - Lions lose to Packers on Thanksgiving

(1:08:30) - Are the Ravens even good?

(1:15:45) - Extra Credit: NFC West race

Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young leaves the field after their win in an NFL football game against the Los Angeles Rams, Sunday, Nov. 30, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. (AP Photo/Rusty Jones)

🖥️Watch thisfull episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family athttps://apple.co/3zEuTQjor atYahoo Sports Podcasts

NFL Week 13 INSTANT reactions: Panthers' HUGE upset, division race predictions, are the Ravens even good?

Nate Tice & Charles McDonald give their instant reactions and takeaways from Week 13 of NFL action. The two hosts st...
QB Justin Herbert breaks bone in left hand, but he's optimistic about playing for Chargers next week

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert will have surgery Monday to repair a broken bone in his non-throwing hand.

Herbert is optimistic about his chances to play next week for the Chargers (8-4), whobeat the Raiders 31-14on Sunday for their fourth victory in five games. Herbert played the final three quarters against Las Vegas with a hard cast on his left hand while exclusively taking shotgun snaps.

"I think it's one of those things where you just stabilize it (and play)," Herbert said. "I'm not the doctor, unfortunately, but they were hopeful, so I think that's a good thing."

Herbert wasn't sure when his hand was broken, but it appeared to happen late in the Chargers' opening drive when he was thrown to the ground by Raiders safety Jeremy Chinn after a short scramble. Herbert threw a touchdown pass to Quentin Johnston on the next snap, but trainers took him off the field a few minutes later.

Trey Lance took Herbert's place to begin the Chargers' second drive against Las Vegas. After Lance moved the Chargers past midfield and completed his only throw, Herbert returned to the sideline and took some practice snaps before joining the drive with a protective glove over his cast.

"What I know is that he's as tough as they come," Chargers coach Jim Harbaugh said. "He taped it up, (put on a) glove and played a great game."

Herbert quickly completed passes to Keenan Allen and Oronde Gadsden before throwing an interception to Kyu Blu Kelly, who stepped in front of Ladd McConkey at the goal line. That difficult pick was Herbert's only turnover despite his limited ability to hold onto the ball.

"Ball security is at a paramount, and I think I did a good enough job of that today in the pocket," Herbert said. "Just get the ball to the running backs."

The Chargers and Raiders were tied at halftime, but Herbert led two long scoring drives in the second half. His offense converted 12 of its 17 third downs while outgaining Las Vegas 341-156.

Herbert has 2,842 yards passing with 21 touchdowns and 10 interceptions this season, his sixth for the Chargers.

Herbert had to play with a splint on a broken finger on his left hand after it got caught in a Raiders defender's helmet in 2023, but he also missed the final four games of that season afterbreaking a finger on his right handwhile playing against Denver. Those four games were the only injury absence of Herbert's career.

"In terms of experience, I've gone through so many things," Herbert said. "I think it will be helpful, but at the end of the day, just got to go out there and make sure everything is good, you're comfortable, and as long as the trainers and doctors are feeling it's safe to return to play, I trust those guys completely."

The Chargers got nowhere near the playoffs in 2023, but Herbert's current team is in playoff position with five games to play, and he doesn't want to miss a chance to chase his first postseason victory.

Los Angeles' remaining games are a gauntlet against five opponents currently over .500 — starting with a visit from defending Super Bowl champion Philadelphia next Monday night.

"I'm treating it as if I'm playing Monday," Herbert said. "I think they were very hopeful for that, so I think that's just something we'll see tomorrow and get a feel for."

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/NFL

QB Justin Herbert breaks bone in left hand, but he's optimistic about playing for Chargers next week

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert will have surgery Monday to repair a broken bon...
Vikings QB mess: Justin Jefferson skips media, explanation of latest offensive no-show after Sam Darnold gets his revenge on Minnesota

Like any NFL quarterback gamble, there was always risk of a steep downside. But certainly the Minnesota Vikings couldn't have imagined it goingsobadly forsolong.

One year ago at this time, the Vikings were coming off a white-knuckled 30-27 victory over the Chicago Bears in overtime. They celebrated the resiliency of Sam Darnold, who had thrown for 330 yards and two touchdowns and led Minnesota to an impressive game-winning drive in the extra frame. Suddenly, Minnesota was heading into December 9-2 and with four of their final six games at home. Destiny was seemingly unfurling before the franchise, with both the playoffs and NFC North crown within reach. And inside it all, Darnold was presenting himself as a viable long-term starting quarterback option resting in the hands of head coach Kevin O'Connell and general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah.

For all intents and purposes, it seemed like a hard situation to screw up. But the NFL can be cruel that way. Sometimes when everything and everyone is looking up, the floor is just waiting to fall out beneath it all. And that may be the best way to describe the Vikings one year later.

No floor — just the falling.

[Get more Vikings news: Minnesota team feed]

To a low on Sunday that hasn't been seen inside the franchise since 2007. That's the last time the Vikings had been shut out in a game, losing to the Green Bay Packers 34-0. On Sunday, the zero on the Minnesota side of the ledger felt much worse — via a26-0 loss to the Super Bowl-contending Seattle Seahawks, stewarded by a quarterback who has helped spark a renaissance in the franchise: Sam Darnold.

This one didn't just hurt in Minnesota. It radiated agony. So much so, superstar wideout Justin Jefferson left afterward without speaking to reporters for the first time in his six-year NFL career. This after embracing Darnold in a hug at midfield after the loss and sharing a few words.

Former teammates Sam Darnold and Justin Jefferson share a moment postgame 🫶pic.twitter.com/ynLmywDX1X

— NFL (@NFL)December 1, 2025

Jefferson's 2024 running mate in Minnesota hadn't exactly had a banner day, with Darnold throwing for only 148 yards on 14-of-26 passing and no touchdowns. But Darnold's former favorite Vikings wideout had done almost nothing, with Jefferson catching two passes for 4 yards, both career single-game lows.

For the Vikings, it felt like a concrete stamp of three realities that aren't going away.

First, letting Darnold depart Minnesota in free agency in favor of sliding every bet onto J.J. McCarthy appears to have been a massive mistake, one that is potentially franchise-changing — although it's hard to see the entire horizon at this stage. What we do know is that Darnold is capable of being a winning quarterback when he's surrounded with a running game and a defense. And while he's still capable of an occasional single-game implosion, he's grown past the fears of a full-scale rollback into the single-read-and-then-panic quarterback of yesteryear. At worst, he is finding his place as a high-end game manager along the lines of the Detroit Lions' Jared Goff. At best? Time will tell what that looks like. But at the very least, he's proven to be worth the risk.

The second reality: The Vikings have no choice but to plug McCarthy back into the starting lineup once he clears concussion protocol. Rookie backup Max Brosmer was absolutely not ready to play in an NFL game. From the four sacks to the four interceptions, including an atrocious no-look hook shot into the air while being sacked, which resulted in an 85-yard touchdown return by Seattle linebacker Ernest Jones IV, Brosmer looked consistently overwhelmed. At the very least, McCarthy was a roller coaster withsomehighs between a lot of lows. Brosmer imploding merely underscores that the Vikings are going to have to go through the wood-chipper the rest of the season and see if McCarthy can show any semblance of progress.

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - NOVEMBER 30: Justin Jefferson #18 of the Minnesota Vikings looks on against the Seattle Seahawks during the third quarter at Lumen Field on November 30, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

And the final reality: Minnesota is going to have to take the route of the Indianapolis Colts in 2025 and either sign or trade for a veteran backup who can compete for the starting job heading into training camp in 2026. Candidates with some youth and track records as a starter could be the Arizona Cardinals' Kyler Murray, San Francisco 49ers' Mac Jones, Las Vegas Raiders' Kenny Pickett or Philadelphia Eagles' Sam Howell. The "flier" category of young players with tools but no real sustained résumé of previous opportunities could include the Los Angeles Chargers' Trey Lance, or Green Bay Packers' Malik Willis. And the recently highly-drafted-but-out-of-favor crowd that includes the Colts' Anthony Richardson and Tennessee Titans' Will Levis.

Yes, that's a hefty batch of bruised fruit in the clearance aisle. But that's where the Vikings once found Darnold, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers netted Baker Mayfield and the Colts plucked Daniel Jones. You can even throw in serviceable seasons of Geno Smith with the Seattle Seahawks from 2022 to 2024. As O'Connell has spoken of himself, you can find quarterbacks who were placed on the scrap heap too early. And surely, he's got to think long and hard about his own words on the subject before he turns away from McCarthy. But in terms of opening up a real competition in 2026, there aren't going to be a wealth of great options.

That is, barring some kind of unbelievable turn of fortune — like hitting the lottery and finding some kind of miraculously answered prayer of peeling Matthew Stafford off the Los Angeles Rams. If O'Connell has ever had a fever dream, that's the one. Of course, it would entail the Rams absolutely falling head over heels in love with a quarterback in the 2026 draft and then convincing Stafford to swap Los Angeles and Sean McVay for Minneapolis and O'Connell for the last chapter of his career. It's hard to believe that scenario ever happening, but who could have seen Tom Brady wrapping his NFL symphony as a member of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers?

That this is the conversation one season after going 14-3 says a lot about the quarterback mistake in Minneapolis. It's an error that has devolved into Justin Jefferson leaving in silence as one year of a very real Super Bowl window is being slammed shut. Now the Vikings head into December at 4-8, with five games left and one monstrous quarterback problem dragging them down.

The floor is gone. All that's left is the falling.

Vikings QB mess: Justin Jefferson skips media, explanation of latest offensive no-show after Sam Darnold gets his revenge on Minnesota

Like any NFL quarterback gamble, there was always risk of a steep downside. But certainly the Minnesota Vikings couldn...
Lane Kiffin talks regret, who told him to 'take the shot' before boarding private jet to LSU

Marty Smith may have residency in Oxford, Mississippi after coveringthe Lane Kiffin saga.

The ESPN reporter, who spent nearly all of Saturday and Sunday at theOle Missfootball facility,got a 3-minute interviewwith Kiffin before the former Rebels coach boarded a private jet set for Baton Rouge totake his next chapter as LSU football coach.

Kiffin reiterated his desire to coach Ole Miss in the upcomingCollege Football Playoff, but Mississippi athletic director Keith Carter decided against it andpromoted defensive coordinator Pete Goldingto head coach in Kiffin's place.

"It was really difficult. This has been a really special place. Six years here," Kiffin told Smith. "I know there are a lot of feelings and emotions around right now. I hope when they settle down that there's an appreciation about what we were able to do here and having the best run that's ever been done in the history of the school.  Brought some exciting times. I'm so appreciative of the people of Oxford and the relationships that I developed here… Just prayed a lot. Made a family decision and hopefully get a chance to go impact a whole new set of people."

Lane Kiffin says CFP decision came down to Ole Miss AD Keith Carter 'has to live here'

Kiffin told Smith he wasn't part of Sunday's meeting between Carter and the school's chancellor, at Carter's request.

"I totally respect Keith's decision… He asked me not to come to the meeting, which I totally understand," Kiffin said. "I don't know that I necessarily agree, we're trying to find a way to make this work and coach the team and give the team the best chance to win... He's got a job to do, and like he said, he has to live here. So maybe all the national people understand why he should let me be able to coach, but he has to live here, and it's a little different when you're the AD, so totally respect that. And Keith has been amazing to us over the six years."

Lane Kiffin said mentors helped push him to LSU

"My heart was here (Oxford), but I talked to some mentors, coach (Pete) Carroll, coach (Nick) Saban, you know, and especially when coach Carroll said, 'Your dad would tell you to go. Take the  shot. Take the shot. You've accomplished a lot here.' I always felt I always hated how we gave one year to Tennessee and then left. I really hated that feeling of that. Even though it was exciting, but I think we gave a lot to this program and to this city, and some of the most historic wins in this stadium they've ever had and best regular season in the history of the school, so I feel proud of that part. But it just became time, you know, talked to God and he told me it's time to take a new step. It's a new chapter."

YOU CAN WATCH FULL INTERVIEW HERE:

My interview with@Lane_Kiffinprior to his departure from Oxford to Baton Rouge.•Why he chose LSU over Ole Miss•Why he wasn't in Sunday's Ole Miss team meeting•His response to not coaching Ole Miss in the playoff•Why this took so long•Peter Carroll's important msgpic.twitter.com/GfBkE7fnHU

— Marty Smith (@MartySmithESPN)December 1, 2025

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:What Lane Kiffin told Marty Smith before boarding private jet for LSU

Lane Kiffin talks regret, who told him to 'take the shot' before boarding private jet to LSU

Marty Smith may have residency in Oxford, Mississippi after coveringthe Lane Kiffin saga. The ESPN reporter, w...
McLaughlin-Levrone, Duplantis win World Athlete of the Year titles

MONACO (AP) —Sydney McLaughlin-Levroneand Armand "Mondo" Duplantis have won the World Athlete of the Year titles for 2025.

The international governing body for track and field announced the winners Sunday at ceremony in Monaco, with McLaughlin-Levrone also winning the women's track award and pole vault world-record holder Duplantis winning the men's field events award.

McLaughlin-Levrone has been undefeated for two years in both the400 meters and the 400-meter hurdles, an event where she's on a 24-race winning streak.

She won the 400 at the world champions in Tokyo, breaking a 42-year-old championship record and setting the second-fastest time ever. That made her the first athlete to win world titles at both the 400 and 400-meter hurdles.

"The culmination of the season in Tokyo was a really special moment," McLaughlin-Levrone said. "I'm so thankful for everyone who supported, watched, voted and who was there throughout this whole process.

"For me, 2025 was a year of stepping outside of the comfort zone and pushing the bounds of what was mentally and physically possible. I want to continue pushing boundaries in 2026."

Duplantis set four world pole vault records, each by 1-centimeter increments, and was unbeaten in 16 competitions in 2025, including world titles.

"I hope to keep pushing it. I hope to keep irritating everyone who has to vote for me for years to come!" Duplantis said. "It's really important for me to win this for the field eventers. It's very special, I'm going to really cherish this one."

AP sports:https://apnews.com/sports

McLaughlin-Levrone, Duplantis win World Athlete of the Year titles

MONACO (AP) —Sydney McLaughlin-Levroneand Armand "Mondo" Duplantis have won the World Athlete of the Year titl...
Bedard's 4 points lead Blackhawks to a 5-3 comeback win over Ducks

CHICAGO (AP) — Connor Bedard scored the tie-breaking goal at 9:55 of the third period, added an empty-net score and had two assists as the Chicago Blackhawks rallied from an early three-goal deficit to top the Anaheim Ducks 5-3 on Sunday and snap a five-game slide.

Tyler Bertuzzi, Ryan Greene and Colton Dach also scored as Chicago tied it 3 by 12:34 of the second. Chicago converted two of four power-play chances and killed all three Anaheim advantages.

Bedard beat Ville Husso with a nifty move from the front of the crease to put Chicago ahead 4-3 following a turnover by Alex Killorn. Husso had entered the game 44 seconds earlier after starter Petr Mrazek exited with an undisclosed injury.

Bedard fired into an empty net with 1:55 remaining to seal it.

Spencer Knight rebounded from a shaky start to finish with 23 saves.

Cutter Gauthier had a goal and an assist as the Ducks jumped out a 3-0 lead midway through the first period.

Chris Kreider scored for the second straight game to give him 600 career points. Olen Zellweger also scored and Troy Terry set up two goals to extend his point streak to seven games.

Mrazek made stopped 13 of 16 of shots before exiting in his first start against the Blackhawks since they traded him to Detroit in March. Anaheim No. 1 goalie Lukas Dostal missed his third game withan upper-body injury.

Gauthier and Zellweger beat Knight on two of Anaheim's first three shots, giving the Ducks a 2-0 lead 47 seconds in. Kreider's off-the-skate deflection upped it to 3-0 at 10:25

Bertuzzi cut it to 3-1 with 2:03 left in the first, deflecting in a power-play score. Greene made it 3-2 at 6:43 of the second, finishing a 2-on-1-break with Bedard.

Dach tied it 3-all during a power-play at 12:34 of the second.

Ducks: Visit St. Louis on Monday

Blackhawks: Start a four-game trip at Vegas on Tuesday.

AP NHL:https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Bedard's 4 points lead Blackhawks to a 5-3 comeback win over Ducks

CHICAGO (AP) — Connor Bedard scored the tie-breaking goal at 9:55 of the third period, added an empty-net score and had ...
NFL Winners and Losers: After Rams loss, it's hard to find any reliable Super Bowl contenders

Through this wild, up-and-down NFL season, the one reliable team that seemed to emerge was the Los Angeles Rams. After last week's blowout win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, they wereeveryone's pick as the best team in football.

What we're learning in Week 13 is that there are no reliable teams this season.

On Thursday and Friday, all four favorites lost and all the losers were exposed in various ways. TheDetroit Lions,Kansas City Chiefs,Baltimore RavensandPhiladelphia Eagles lostand none looked close to being Super Bowl contenders. It didn't matter because the Rams were rock solid.

And then Sunday happened.

The Rams, who were getting a historic run of mistake-free football from Matthew Stafford, lost 31-28 to a Carolina Panthers team that looked absolutely terrible six days earlier in a Monday night loss to the San Francisco 49ers.

Stafford threw two interceptions,including a pick 6, and lost a crucial fumble late in the third quarter with his team trailing. Stafford hadn't thrown an interception since Week 3. Stafford had thrown 28 straight touchdowns without an interception, an NFL record, before even he looked vulnerable.

Stafford's turnovers weren't the only issue. The defense let down too. Bryce Young hit a huge go-ahead 43-yard touchdown pass to Tetairoa McMillan on fourth down late in the fourth quarter, and that was a key turning point. Young had 206 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions. Everything that worked for the Rams last week against the Buccaneers vanished Sunday.

The Rams are still a good team. We're just seeing that every team this season is prone to a bad loss. There is no historically great team this season. One has to win a Super Bowl, however, even if the eventual champions won't exactly be the 1972 Miami Dolphins. Maybe it's the Rams. Perhaps it's someone like the Eagles, who figure out their issues, or the Denver Broncos, who keep flying under the radar. The key to the postseason might be who avoids playing their worst game for a month, because every team this season has shown they're capable of bad performances. Even the Rams.

Here are the rest of the NFL's winners and losers from Sunday's action of Week 13:

WINNERS

Bills' defense:Buffalo hasn't had a great season on defense. The Bills were 17th in points allowed and 13th in yards allowed heading into Sunday's game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. That's decent but not at a championship level.

The Bills might not be back to a championship level yet, but their defense came up big against the Steelers.

Pittsburgh was stuck on 90 yards through three quarters of a26-7 loss to the Bills.The Buffalo defense scored as many touchdowns as Pittsburgh's offense, as a huge sack by Joey Bosa on Aaron Rodgers led to a fumble recovery for a touchdown. Thatchanged the entire game, and 249 rushing yards by the Bills helped get the win.

Buffalo is 8-4 and has shown glimpses of being a dangerous postseason team. But until the defense makes a big improvement, it will be tough to go on a long playoff run. Maybe Sunday was a sign of a turnaround.

Robert Saleh:The San Francisco 49ers' defense has few stars on the field this season. They do have a star calling the defense.

Saleh, San Francisco's defensive coordinator, is getting the most out of a unit that lost stars Nick Bosa and Fred Warner due to injuries. A young defense is getting better as the season goes along, and that's a testament to Saleh's coaching. The49ers held Shedeur Sanders and the Cleveland Browns downin a 26-8 win with some terrible weather. It was a good follow-up to a strong performance in Week 12, when the 49ers shut down the Panthers (who looked pretty good against the Rams on Sunday).

Saleh didn't succeed as a head coach of the New York Jets, but poor ownership makes that a difficult situation. Teams might not hold his record in New York against him, especially as they see him maximizing a 49ers defense for a team that is in good shape to make the playoffs despite numerous injuries on both sides of the ball.

Baker Mayfield and Bucky Irving:The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have been surviving in spite of injuries. It's starting to look better for them on that front.

Mayfield left last week's game with a left shoulder injury and there was a lot of doubt if he would play this weekend. He played and had another strong outing in a20-17 win over the Arizona Cardinals. He had 194 yards and a touchdown. He found an old reliable target in Chris Godwin Jr., who led the Bucs with 78 receiving yards and is another Tampa Bay star rounding into form after dealing with injuries.

Even more promising was the return of Irving. The second-year back played for the first time since Week 4, having missed almost three months with foot and shoulder injuries, and he looked sharp. Irving scored a touchdown and generally looked like his old self. Irving had 81 yards from scrimmage, which was reasonable considering he was returning after a long layoff. He gives the Buccaneers another playmaker down the stretch.

Tampa Bay has a very easy schedule the rest of the season and should win the NFC South. If the Bucs keep getting healthy, they could be dangerous in the postseason too.

Dolphins defense:After seven weeks, the Dolphins' defense looked like perhaps the worst in the NFL. Miami was allowing 29.3 points per game and hadn't allowed fewer than 21 in a game. The Dolphins were 1-6.

Then, suddenly, it changed. The Dolphins' defense faced a bad New Orleans Saints team and it started pouring rain in the second half, but it was still another strong defensive performance in a21-17 win. New Orleans rallied to score a late touchdown, but when the Saints went for the 2-point conversion and the tie, the Dolphins came up with a huge play as Minkah Fitzpatrick picked off Tyler Shough and returned it for 2 points.

Then after the Saints got a rare onside kick and Miami's defense was forced to get back on the field, the Dolphins got a quick stop that culminated with a fourth-down stuff on a Tyler Shough quarterback sneak.

The Dolphins have won four of five, perhaps saving head coach Mike McDaniel's job in the process. They probably have saved defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver's job, too.

Since that awful start on defense, the Dolphins allowed 10, 28, 13 and 13 points in their four games heading into Week 13. The 28-point game was the only loss in that stretch, to Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens. The Dolphins have turned it around despite dealing pass rusher Jaelan Phillips to the Eagles before the trade deadline. It's an impressive transformation, and it came out of nowhere.

LOSERS

Pete Carroll:As the season goes on, it gets harder to make a case for Carroll to get a second season with the Las Vegas Raiders.

Last week there was a big shakeup, as Carroll fired offensive coordinator Chip Kelly. Nothing got better. Ashton Jeanty was quiet again, Geno Smith had another mediocre day and even though Brock Bowers was great with two touchdown catches (including a fantastic one for his second score), the Los AngelesChargers beat the Raiders soundly, 31-14. The Raiders had 156 yards of offense.

Once a coach starts firing coordinators, it's a sign he's in trouble. You have only so many coordinators to blame your problems on. The Raiders have fired their offensive coordinator and special teams coordinator over the past few weeks. With the Raiders at 2-10, and having lost 10 of their last 11, Carroll's future will be a big topic of discussion over the next few weeks.

Max Brosmer's moment of infamy:We knew the most likely outcome for Brosmer, an undrafted rookie making his first NFL start, was he would struggle against a tough Seattle Seahawks defense.

He just had to avoid a blooper that would be replayed a million times. Nope.

Brosmer had one of the most embarrassing plays of the season in theMinnesota Vikings' loss on Sunday. On a fourth down, Brosmer was stumbling down when he tossed away the ball, without looking, praying for a positive result. Instead, his pass went right to Seahawks linebacker Ernest Jones IV, who went 85 yards for a pick 6.

That might have been OK if Brosmer had otherwise played well in place of J.J. McCarthy. He didn't. He looked very much like an undrafted rookie making his first start against one of the NFL's best defenses. Brosmer had 126 yards and threw four interceptions. His passer rating was 32.8. The Vikings were shut out for the first time since 2007. The Seahawks didn't play particularly well against the Vikings' defense, but Jones' pick 6 was really all they needed.

Nothing is saving the Vikings this season. And now they're embarrassing themselves.

Indianapolis Colts' hold on AFC South:A few weeks ago, there was chatter that the Colts were the best team in football. They might not even end up winning their division.

The Colts took a damaging loss Sunday. The Houston Texans continued their hot streak, with their defense making several big plays and their offense doing enough tobeat the Colts 20-16. The Texans failed to convert a tush push on third and fourth downs late in the game, giving the Colts a chance. Daniel Jones got the Colts into Texans territory but the drive stalled and Jones' fourth-down pass was knocked down to give Houston a huge stop.

Jones' fractured fibula was reported this past week, and that has to be a reason the Colts' offense has taken a step back. Indianapolis has lost three of four and the only win was an overtime victory over a bad Atlanta Falcons team in Berlin.

The Colts are now 8-4. TheJaguars are also 8-4 after they beat the Titans on Sundayand the Texans are back in the race at 7-5. A dream start to the season is evaporating quickly.

Tennessee Titans and their coaching search:The bad part about the Titans firing head coach Brian Callahan so early in the season is it allowed the top candidates in the 2026 head-coaching cycle ample opportunity to watch Tennessee play.

The job is beyond a fixer-upper. The Titans are a horrible team, and aside from having Cam Ward (which might not be the draw we think it is) and an inside track at the top overall pick in next year's NFL Draft, there's not a lot to sell any candidate with multiple options. The Titans were uncompetitive at home in a25-3 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars. The Titans are 1-11. An incredibly lucky win over the Arizona Cardinals has saved them from weeks of talk of the 0-17 possibility and being one of the worst teams ever.

Ward is a conundrum. The top overall pick of this year's draft has some impressive highlights but the body of work is not great. The Titans have scored 14 or fewer points seven times this season. You can blame the infrastructure around Ward for his struggles, but it's hard to deny he has struggled. He had just 141 yards on 38 attempts Sunday. The new head coach would have to buy into turning Ward into a franchise quarterback, which is possible but he doesn't have the post-rookie promise of someone like Caleb Williams a year ago.

The Titans will hire a decent candidate. It's one of 32 jobs and the franchise does have Ward and likely the top pick. But it needs to be built from the ground up, and that's a scary proposition for a candidate with other offers.

Raheem Morris:It's the time of year in which coaches have to worry about what will happen after the season. Another bad loss for the Atlanta Falcons won't look good on Morris.

The Falcons were facing a New York Jets team that was 2-9 coming in and using Tyrod Taylor at quarterback after benching the ineffective Justin Fields. The Falcons blew a late 24-17 lead, allowing the Jets to tie it and then drive for a game-winning field goal as time expired.

TheFalcons lost 27-24 and are now 4-8 this season. They've been a big disappointment. Even worse, their first-round draft pick in 2026 was traded to the Los Angeles Rams during this year's draft.

Morris might pay the price for the poor record. Atlanta went 8-9 last season, Morris' first full season leading the team, and this season has been even worse. A young Falcons team hasn't made progress. Over the rest of the season the Falcons will have to ask themselves if they're seeing enough to justify running it back with Morris for another season.

NFL Winners and Losers: After Rams loss, it's hard to find any reliable Super Bowl contenders

Through this wild, up-and-down NFL season, the one reliable team that seemed to emerge was the Los Angeles Rams. After l...
Browns players call out 49ers' Jauan Jennings: 'I see why he got punched'

Nearly one week after he was at the center of a heated confrontation with an opponent,San Francisco 49erswide receiver Jauan Jennings once again has drawn the ire of multiple members of another team.

After the49ers' 26-8 win over the Cleveland Brownson Sunday,Brownsdefensive tackle Shelby Harris alleged that Jennings crossed a line with his remarks while defensive tackle Maliek Collins was injured. Collins left the game in the third quarter with a knee injury and did not return.

"He says some things that you should not say to a man, ever," Harris, who did not elaborate on the nature of Jennngs' comments, told reporters after the game. "But I don't respect it because you say that (and) then run behind your O-line. That's some real soft (expletive), and I want that known.

"I see why they punched your (groin). I'm surprised nobody punched him in the jaw yet."

Collins' remark referenced Carolina Panthers safety Tre'von Moehrig punching Jennings in the groin area toward the end of the49ers' win on Nov. 24. Moehrig, who was suspended for one game for the incident, said the receiver was "talking crazy" during the game.

"He had a lot to say that was demeaning and disparaging toward some of our players," Browns defensive end Myles Garrett said of Jennings. "I was just trying to separate everybody. I tried to go up and ask what the problem was, and he started coming at me. Some guys just roll like that. I don't feel like that belongs in the game, but if that works for them, then hey, more power to them."

Jennings hauled in a fourth-quarter touchdown to extend the 49ers' lead and help put the game out of reach.

Week 6: Washington Commanders wide receiver Chris Moore (19) celebrates with teammates after scoring a touchdown during the Week 6: Atlanta Falcons running back Tyler Allgeier (25) carries the ball for a touchdown against the Buffalo Bills at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The Falcons played the game while sporting throwback uniforms that harken back to the team's inaugural season of 1966. Week 6: Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen operates at the line of scrimmage before a play against the Atlanta Falcons during a Week 6: Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young looks for a receiver against the Dallas Cowboys at Bank of America Stadium. The Panthers wore this uniform combination for the first time in the 30-27 win. <p style=Week 5: Buffalo Bills wide receiver Curtis Samuel makes a catch against the New England Patriots at Highmark Stadium. The Bills wore their new "Rivalries" uniform for the "Sunday Night Football" game, which the Patriots won, 23-20.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Week 5: Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray makes a throw during the third quarter against the Tennessee Titans at State Farm Stadium. The Cardinals wore their all-black uniforms, but were defeated 22-21. <p style=Week 5: Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Baker Mayfield awaits the snap against the Seattle Seahawks at Lumen Field. Both teams wore throwback uniforms in the Buccaneers' 38-35 win. The Buccaneers and Seahawks entered the NFL together as expansion teams in 1976.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Week 5: Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Tory Horton (15) is congratulated by teammate AJ Barner (88) after catching a touchdown pass against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers during the second half at Lumen Field. The Seahawks wore throwback uniforms harkening back to the team's original look from 1976-2001. Week 5: Los Angeles Chargers running back Omarion Hampton (8) runs against the Washington Commanders during the first quarter at SoFi Stadium. The Chargers wore monochrome powder blue uniform pants and jerseys for the first time. Week 5: New York Jets wide receiver Garrett Wilson (5) is tackled by the Dallas Cowboys' Trevon Diggs (7) and Juanyeh Thomas (2) during the first half at MetLife Stadium. The Cowboys wore their Week 5: New York Jets quarterback Justin Fields stands in the pocket against the Dallas Cowboys during the first half at MetLife Stadium. The Jets wore their all-black uniforms in the 37-22 loss. <p style=Week 4: Denver Broncos quarterback Bo Nix (10) hands the ball off to running back J.K. Dobbins during the "Monday Night Football" game against the Cincinnati Bengals at Empower Field at Mile High. The Broncos wore their "Midnight Navy" uniforms for the 28-3 win.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Week 4: Miami Dolphins running back De'von Achane rushes the ball against the New York Jets during a 27-21 win on "Monday Night Football" at Hard Rock Stadium. The Dolphins wore their new their Nike "Rivalries" uniforms – the team version dubbed "Dark Waters."

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Week 4: The Arizona Cardinals defense tackles Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Tory Horton (15) during the first quarter of a "Thursday Night Football" game at State Farm Stadium. The Cardinals became the first NFL team to wear the new Nike "Rivalries" uniform in a game. The Seahawks won the game, 23-20.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Week 3: Baltimore Ravens tight end Charlie Kolar (88) makes a catch during his team's <p style=Week 3: New Orleans Saints running back Kendre Miller (5) stiff arms Seattle Seahawks linebacker Tyrice Knight (48) during the second quarter at Lumen Field. The Saints wore their all-white uniform and helmet combo for the first time in the 44-13 loss.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Week 3: San Francisco 49ers running back Christian McCaffrey carries the ball against the Arizona Cardinals during the first half at Levi's Stadium. The 49ers wore throwback jerseys - an homage to the team's 1950s look, as well as its 1994 Super Bowl-winning season - in the 16-15 win against the Cardinals.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Week 3: New England Patriots tight end Hunter Henry (85) celebrates after scoring a touchdown against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Gillette Stadium. New England brought out its iconic Week 3: Tampa Bay Buccaneers running back Rachaad White (1) runs with the ball as New York Jets cornerback Sauce Gardner attempts to make the tackle during the second quarter at Raymond James Stadium. The Buccaneers wore their famous Week 3: Cleveland Browns running back Quinshon Judkins celebrates after scoring a touchdown against the Green Bay Packers during the fourth quarter at Huntington Bank Field. The Browns debuted their Week 3: Jacksonville Jaguars cornerback Jourdan Lewis (2) celebrates after making an interception in the fourth quarter against the Houston Texans at EverBank Stadium. The Jaguars wore their Week 3: Carolina Panthers tight end JaTavion Saunders runs with the ball against the Atlanta Falcons at Bank of America Stadium. The Panthers wore their special black helmets in the 30-0 win. <p style=Week 2: Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) runs the ball against the Atlanta Falcons at U.S. Bank Stadium. Sporting "The Vikings Classic" throwback uniform inspired by the team's look during the 1960s and '70s, Minnesota was defeated, 22-6.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Week 2: The Green Bay Packers' Micah Parsons (1) reacts during a Week 1: New Orleans Saints running back Alvin Kamara scores a touchdown against the Arizona Cardinals at Caesars Superdome. The Saints wore their reimagined

Can't-miss alternate and throwback uniforms of the 2025 NFL season

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Browns call out 49ers' Jauan Jennings after Maliek Collins injury

Browns players call out 49ers' Jauan Jennings: 'I see why he got punched'

Nearly one week after he was at the center of a heated confrontation with an opponent,San Francisco 49erswide receiver J...
NFL playoff picture Week 13: Bears take NFC's top spot, AFC South changes hands

Every week for the duration of the2025 regular season,USA TODAY Sportswill provide timely updates to theNFL's ever-evolving playoff picture − typically starting Sunday afternoon and then moving forward for the remainder of the week (through Monday's and Thursday's games or Saturday's, if applicable. And, when the holidays roll around, we'll be watching then, too).

What just happened? What does it mean? What are the pertinent factors (and, perhaps, tiebreakers) prominently in play as each conference's seven-team bracket begins to crystallize? All will be explained and analyzed up to the point when the postseason field is finalized on Sunday, Jan. 4.

Here's where things stand withWeek 13underway:

<p style=Week 1: Detroit Lions wide receiver Isaac TeSlaa (18) makes a catch for a touchdown against the Green Bay Packers during the fourth quarter at Lambeau Field. The play was originally ruled an incomplete pass, but the call was overturned. Despite TeSlaa's effort, the Packers won the game 27-13.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Week 1: The New England Patriots' Robert Spillane (14) and Christian Elliss (53) tackle Las Vegas Raiders tight end Michael Mayer (87) during the second half at Gillette Stadium. The Raiders won the game, 20-13. Week 1: New York Giants quarterback Russell Wilson (3) fumbles the ball on a tackle by Washington Commanders safety Will Harris (3) during the first quarter at Northwest Stadium. It was a rough Giants debut for Wilson (17 of 37 passing for 168 yards) as the Commanders won the game, 21-6. Week 1: Fireworks go off before the NFL Kickoff Game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Dallas Cowboys at Lincoln Financial Field. The defending Super Bowl champion Eagles opened the season with a 24-20 victory over their longtime NFC East rivals.

Best images of the 2025 NFL season

Week 1: Detroit Lions wide receiver Isaac TeSlaa (18)makes a catch for a touchdownagainst the Green Bay Packers during the fourth quarter at Lambeau Field. The play was originally ruled an incomplete pass, but the call was overturned. Despite TeSlaa's effort, the Packers won the game 27-13.

NFC playoff picture

1.Chicago Bears(9-3), NFC North leaders:With back-to-back victories over winning adversaries − in conjunction with the Rams' stunning loss Sunday − theBearshave now rocketed to the top of the conference. Chicago's 6-2 record in NFC games sends LA (4-3) down a spot.Remaining schedule: atPackers, vs.Browns, vs. Packers, at 49ers, vs.Lions

2.Los Angeles Rams(9-3), NFC West leaders:Carolina snapped their NFC-high six-game winning streak in rainy Charlotte, a loss that dropped LA out of the conference's top spot.Remaining schedule: at Cardinals, vs. Lions, atSeahawks, at Falcons, vs. Cardinals

3.Philadelphia Eagles(8-4), NFC East leaders:Two losses in a row not only mean a lot more scrutiny but − beware − a team that could fall into the Cowboys' clutches in the division if it's not careful.Remaining schedule: at Chargers, vs. Raiders, atCommanders, atBills, vs. Commanders

4.Tampa Bay Buccaneers(7-5), NFC South leaders:They narrowly beat Arizona to narrowly maintain their half-game lead over Carolina in the division.Remaining schedule: vs.Saints, vs. Falcons, atPanthers, atDolphins, vs. Panthers

5.Seattle Seahawks(9-3), wild card No. 1:All three of the 'Hawks' losses are against NFC opponents, including two in the division − defeats that won't serve them well in the tiebreaker department. Seattle's Week 11 loss to the Rams meant they couldn't move up Sunday ... but they are otherwise tied for first place in the NFC West.Remaining schedule: at Falcons, vs. Colts, vs. Rams, at Panthers, at 49ers

6.Green Bay Packers(8-3-1), wild card No. 2:They merely maintained their standing (for now) with their Thanksgiving win at Detroit, but a loss would have dropped them from the field entirely. A thin margin for the Pack to be sure ... yet they remain just a half-game off the NFC North lead, too.Remaining schedule: vs. Bears, atBroncos, at Bears, vs.Ravens, atVikings

7.San Francisco 49ers(9-4), wild card No. 3:They now have a 1½-game lead on their wild-card pursuers after Sunday's win, but are only a half-game behind the Rams for the NFC West lead.Remaining schedule: BYE, vs. Titans, at Colts, vs. Bears, vs. Seahawks

8.Detroit Lions(7-5), in the hunt:Getting swept by the Packers further entrenches Detroit, which could have moved into a wild-card slot with a Turkey Day win, on the outside of the field. Huge game this Thursday night with Dallas.Remaining schedule: vs. Cowboys, at Rams, vs. Steelers, at Vikings, at Bears

9.Dallas Cowboys(6-5-1), in the hunt:Three wins in a row further fuels playoff aspirations in Big D. Week 14's game in Detroit looms as massive − and potentially must-win − for the Cowboys and Lions.Remaining schedule: at Lions, vs. Vikings, vs. Chargers, at Commanders, atGiants

10.Carolina Panthers(7-6), in the hunt:A shocking upset of the Rams on Sunday reaffirms the Panthers as an outfit to be reckoned with, though they didn't gain any ground in the wild-card or divisional races (on a day when they could have gone into first place had Tampa Bay lost).Remaining schedule: BYE, at Saints, vs.Buccaneers, vs. Seahawks, at Buccaneers

AFC playoff picture

1.New England Patriots(10-2), AFC East leaders:Week 12's narrow defeat of theBengalsgave the Pats the league's best record, moving them past Denver and into the conference's top spot. Good chance they hold onto it when they hit their off week.Remaining schedule: vs. Giants, BYE, vs. Bills, at Ravens, at Jets, vs. Dolphins

2.Denver Broncos(9-2), AFC West leaders:Being idle during Week 12 cost them first place in the conference, but you can bet the break was welcome − especially for a team that will need to be close to fully charged for a brutal four-game stretch at the end of its regular season.Remaining schedule: at Commanders, at Raiders, vs. Packers, vs.Jaguars, at Chiefs, vs. Chargers

3.Jacksonville Jaguars(8-4),AFC South leaders:Their win in Nashville coupled with Indy's loss moves the Jags into first place by virtue of the common-games played tiebreaker, which they own by a one-win advantage. Slide back later, and victories over the Chiefs and Chargers could serve them well when it's time to sort out tiebreakers.Remaining schedule: vs. Colts, vs. Jets, at Broncos, vs. Colts, at Titans

4.Pittsburgh Steelers(6-5),AFC North leaders:Baltimore's Thanksgiving loss restores them to first place. A win over Buffalo on Sunday would help a lot more.Remaining schedule: vs. Bills, at Ravens, vs. Dolphins, at Lions, at Browns, vs. Ravens

5.Indianapolis Colts(8-4),wild card No. 1:They've dropped three of their past four to fall off the conference pace ... and have now ceded first place in the AFC South to Jacksonville after Sunday's loss to Houston. And the schedule doesn't let up the rest of the way out.Remaining schedule: at Seahawks, vs. 49ers, vs. Jaguars, atTexans

6.Los Angeles Chargers(7-4), wild card No. 2:They needed last week off ... and Buffalo's Week 12 loss granted the battered Bolts improved positioning.Remaining schedule: vs. Raiders, vs. Eagles, at Chiefs, at Cowboys, vs. Texans, at Broncos

7.Buffalo Bills(7-4), wild card No. 3:QB Josh Allen took a beating− as did the Bills' hopes of catching the Patriots in the AFC East race in their most recent loss to Houston. A 4-3 record in conference games leaves Buffalo behind the Chargers in the wild-card seeding.Remaining schedule: at Steelers, vs. Bengals, at Patriots, at Browns, vs. Eagles, vs. Jets

8.Houston Texans(7-5), in the hunt:They've won five of six, including four in a row. If they want to win the AFC South for a third straight year, the Texans likely need to sweep the Colts − and they took their first step toward that with Sunday's win at Indy − while continuing their surge.Remaining schedule: at Chiefs, vs. Cardinals, vs. Raiders, at Chargers, vs. Colts

9.Kansas City Chiefs(6-6), in the hunt:Not only will they almost certainly not win the AFC West for the first time since 2015, they could well miss the postseason for the first time since 2014 − Andy Reid's second year in K.C. And don't forget they've lost to the Broncos, Chargers, Bills and Jags, who are all ahead of them.Remaining schedule: vs. Texans, vs. Chargers, at Titans, vs. Broncos, at Raiders

10.Baltimore Ravens(6-6),in the hunt:A sloppy performance against the Bengalscost them first place in the AFC North and a slot in the projected playoff field. Unlike several other squads, the Ravens are also on the wrong side of a head-to-head tiebreaker with Kansas City.Remaining schedule: vs. Steelers, at Bengals, vs. Patriots, at Packers, at Steelers

NFL teams eliminated from playoff contention in 2025

▶New York Giants

▶Arizona Cardinals

▶New Orleans Saints

▶Tennessee Titans

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NFL playoff picture Week 13: Bears now No. 1 seed in NFC

NFL playoff picture Week 13: Bears take NFC's top spot, AFC South changes hands

Every week for the duration of the2025 regular season,USA TODAY Sportswill provide timely updates to theNFL's ever-e...
Georgia is new No. 3 behind Ohio State, Indiana in AP Top 25

The Big Ten Conference championship game will be a battle of the top two teams in the Associated Press Top 25 poll as No. 1 Ohio State faces No. 2 Indiana at Indianapolis on Saturday.

Beyond that pair, the top five of the most recent poll Sunday was a bit scrambled with Georgia and Oregon moving up one spot to No. 3 and No. 4, respectively. No. 5 Texas Tech jumped up two spots after a 49-0 blowout victory at West Virginia.

Texas A&M tumbled four spots to No. 7 after the Aggies lost for the first time this season, 27-17 at Texas.

While Miami and Vanderbilt each earned convincing victories, Miami moved up one spot to No. 12, while Vanderbilt dropped a spot to No. 13. No. 14 Texas moved up two spots.

Michigan fell three spots to No. 18 after its 27-9 loss to Ohio State, while James Madision, the highest-ranked Group of Five team, moved up a spot to No. 19.

No. 22 Arizona, No. 23 Navy and No. 25 Missouri all entered the Top 25 this week, while Tennessee, Pittsburgh and SMU fell out of the poll. Navy is set to face Army on Dec. 13.

Associated Press Top 25

1. Ohio State (12-0)

2. Indiana (12-0)

3. Georgia (11-1)

4. Oregon (11-1)

5. Texas Tech (11-1)

6. Ole Miss (11-1)

7. Texas A&M (11-1)

8. Oklahoma (10-2)

9. Notre Dame (10-2)

10. Alabama (10-2)

11. BYU (11-1)

12. Miami (10-2)

13. Vanderbilt (10-2)

14. Texas (9-3)

15. Utah (10-2)

16. Virginia (10-2)

17. USC (9-3)

18. Michigan (9-3)

19. James Madison (11-1)

20. North Texas (11-1)

21. Tulane (10-2)

22. Arizona (9-3)

23. Navy (9-2)

24. Georgia Tech (9-3)

25. Missouri (8-4)

--Field Level Media

Georgia is new No. 3 behind Ohio State, Indiana in AP Top 25

The Big Ten Conference championship game will be a battle of the top two teams in the Associated Press Top 25 poll a...
Texans upend Colts 20-16, tightening AFC South race with controversial go-ahead drive

The AFC South isn't where you'd expect to find a definitive answer to that age-old question of irresistible force vs. immovable object. But hey, this has been an odd year in the NFL already, so why not delve into the world of theoretical philosophy?

On Sunday afternoon, at least, the immovable object won out. That would be the Houston Texans and their league-leading total defense (264.3 yards per game), who defeated the Indianapolis Colts and their league-leading scoring offenseby a final score of 20-16. Sunday marked the first game all season that Indianapolis failed to score at least 20 points.

As you'd expect for a game of this nature, the two sides were never separated by more than a single possessional all game. And thanks to Houston's highly controversial touchdown drive in the fourth quarter, this game could be a pivotal one in the race for the AFC South title.

The game saw two teams heading in opposite directions. After a surprising and hot start, Indianapolis has cooled off significantly in recent weeks, losing two of its past three and needing overtime to get a win against Atlanta in Berlin. While Jonathan Taylor remains one of the league's most effective offensive weapons, quarterback Daniel Jones has settled back to Earth in recent games.

Houston, meanwhile, is attempting to become the second team to lose its first three games and still make the playoffs … after the Houston Texans themselves, who also pulled off the feat in 2018. Since losing those first three, Houston had won six of eight coming into Sunday.

CJ Stroud and the Houston Texans looked to even up the AFC South against Indianapolis. (Dylan Buell/Getty Images)

Through the first three quarters, the teams exchanged blows and scores — a Houston field goal here, an Indianapolis touchdown there. Through three quarters, the game was tied at 13 … exactly as you'd expect.

Houston's first drive of the fourth quarter is one that will haunt Indianapolis for some time, particularly if the Colts can't secure the division. Over the course of the drive, the Texans appeared to commit an uncalled delay-of-game penalty, and then a questionable pass interference call on third-and-15 gave Houston a fresh set of downs deep in Indianapolis territory. Nico Collins scored on an end-around run

To end the drive on a perfectly enraging note for Colts fans, ahighly debatable extra pointfrom Kai'imi Fairbairn appeared to fly wide to the left, but since the ball sailed above the goalpost, the good/no good call was a judgment rather than an absolute fact.

One Colts field goal later, Indianapolis' defense dug deep and held strong against two straight Houston tush pushes, forcing a turnover on downs with less than five minutes remaining.

That set up a statement drive for both teams' key asset — the Colts' offense and the Texans' defense — and while Indianapolis marched all the way to the Houston 31, the Colts turned over the ball on downs with 1:45 remaining. (A missed extra point earlier in the game proved consequential; the Colts could have potentially kicked a field goal to draw the game level were they not down by four.)

Jones, dealing with the effects of a cracked fibula, finished the game with 201 yards passing and two touchdowns, while Taylor was held to just 85 yards. On the Houston side, C.J. Stroud returned from a three-week injury layoff due to a concussion to throw for 276 yards; Collins and Nick Chubb each rushed for touchdowns on the afternoon.

With the win, Houston (7-5) continues its assault on the standings, tightening up the AFC South and setting up a potential key tiebreaker over Indianapolis (8-4).

One key question for Indianapolis going forward: thestatus of cornerback Sauce Gardner, who suffered a calf injuryjust three plays into the game. Soon afterward, he was in street clothes and a walking boot on the Indianapolis sideline. A surprising pickup from the Jets at the trade deadline, Gardner is one of the game's finest cornerbacks, and any lengthy absence will burden the Colts' defense that much more.

When you factor in theJaguars, who annihilated the Titans on Sundayto move to 8-4, the AFC South is suddenly a highly competitive division, which exactly no one would have predicted when the Colts won seven of their first eight.

Indianapolis has two games remaining against Jacksonville, starting next week, and one more against Houston. The Texans, meanwhile, are done with their divisional play except for that regular-season finale against Indianapolis … which is looking more consequential by the week.

Texans upend Colts 20-16, tightening AFC South race with controversial go-ahead drive

The AFC South isn't where you'd expect to find a definitive answer to that age-old question of irresistible forc...
Oregon would get bye as No. 4 seed and Texas A&M would play at home on AP Top 25-based CFP bracket

Oregon would receive a coveted top-four seed and Texas A&M would play a first-round home game in the biggest changes to the College Football Playoff mock bracket based on the latestAssociated Press Top 25.

Texas A&M slipped from No. 3 to No. 7 in Sunday's AP poll, allowing Oregon to move up one spot to No. 4. That would give the Big Ten three of the top four seeds, with Ohio State No. 1 and Indiana No. 2. Georgia of the SEC would be No. 3. Top-four seeds earn byes to the quarterfinals.

Now that the Atlantic Coast Conference championship game matchup is set, Virginia would bump Miami out of the bracket as the league's highest-ranked team in the AP poll (Virginia will play unranked Duke in the title game). Miami had held that spot in last week's bracket while still alive for the conference title game.

The Southeastern Conference has five of the 12 teams on the bracket. The Big Ten has three teams and the Big 12, ACC and Sun Belt one each. Notre Dame would be in as an independent. The CFP committee will release its fourthrankingsof the season Tuesday night.

Based on the AP Top 25, the CFP would open like this:

— No. 9 seed Notre Dame at No. 8 seed Oklahoma. Winner vs. No. 1 Ohio State.

— No. 12 seed James Madison at No. 5 Texas Tech. Winner vs. No. 4 Oregon.

— No. 10 seed Alabama at No. 7 Texas A&M. Winner vs. No. 2 Indiana.

— No. 11 seed Virginia at No. 6 Mississippi. Winner vs. No. 3 Georgia.

The first three teams outside the bracket: BYU, Miami and Vanderbilt.

BYU is ranked No. 11 by the AP but would get bumped by Virginia of the ACC. Miami is No. 12 in the AP poll but would be bumped to make room for Group of Five representative James Madison of the Sun Belt.

The five highest-ranked conference champions automatically qualify for the CFP, but no longer do the four highest-ranked champions receive a first-round bye.The 12-team bracket is now seeded directly based on the CFP's final rankingson Dec. 7.

The top four seeds will be assigned to quarterfinals in ranking order and in consideration of current bowl relationships. This year, quarterfinal winners advance to the semifinals at the Fiesta Bowl and the Peach Bowl. The No. 1 seed would receive preferential placement based on geography.

Teams ranked Nos. 5-12 by the CFP will play in the first round, with the higher seeds hosting the lower seeds either on campus or at other sites designated by the higher-seeded school. First-round games are Dec. 19 and 20, quarterfinals Dec. 31 and Jan. 1, semifinals Jan. 8 and 9 and the championship game is Jan. 19 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphereandhere(AP News mobile app). AP college football:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-football

Oregon would get bye as No. 4 seed and Texas A&M would play at home on AP Top 25-based CFP bracket

Oregon would receive a coveted top-four seed and Texas A&M would play a first-round home game in the biggest changes...
Matthew Stafford sets record for most TDs without an interception, then immediately throws 2 interceptions

Matthew Stafford finally threw an interception. But he secured his place in NFL history before the giveaway.

In the first quarter of Sunday's game against the Carolina Panthers, Stafford found Davante Adams in the end zone for a 4-yard touchdown pass. The score gave the Los Angeles Rams a 7-0 lead. And it put Stafford in the NFL history book.

STAFFORD ➡️ ADAMSName a better goal line duo this season 👀(via@NFL)pic.twitter.com/GRgVSHyIEM

— Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports)November 30, 2025

The touchdown was Stafford's 28th straight this season in a span in which he did not throw an interception. That's the most touchdowns without an interception in NFL history. He was previously tied with Tom Brady at 27.

Stafford entered Sunday having thrown 30 touchdowns and just two interceptions while leading the Rams to an NFC-best 9-2 record. He hadn't thrown an interception since a Week 3 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles.

[Get more Rams news: Los Angeles team feed]

But Stafford didn't extend the record Sunday. On the very next Rams possession, Stafford threw a red-zone pass that got tipped at the line of scrimmage. The ball bounced high into the air, and Panthers safety Nick Scott picked it off in the end zone.

Then on the next Rams possession, Stafford threw another one. And this one didn't get tipped.

Stafford targeted Puka Nacua in the flat near midfield. But Panthers cornerback Mike Jackson jumped the route and intercepted the ball at the Los Angeles 48. He ran untouched from there to the end zone for a pick 6 and a 14-7 Panthers lead.

The pair of interceptions doubled Stafford's total this season in which he'd joined Drake Make for the lead in the MVP race.

It's been a remarkable season and one that has the Rams in Super Bowl contention. But Stafford would certainly like to have those two passes back.

Matthew Stafford sets record for most TDs without an interception, then immediately throws 2 interceptions

Matthew Stafford finally threw an interception. But he secured his place in NFL history before the giveaway. I...
Pat Fitzgerald in, Jonathan Smith out for Michigan State football

Less than two hours after it was reportedMichigan State was firing football coach Jonathan Smithafter just two seasons, it appears theSpartanshave already found their man.

Former Northwestern coachPat Fitzgeraldwill get his chance to return to coaching, back in the Big Ten in East Lansing.

People with knowledge of the situation who couldn't speak publicly confirmed to the USA TODAY, Detroit Free Press and Lansing State Journal, Fitzgerald is the pick. A contract had not yet been signed as of midday Sunday, Nov. 30.

College football coaches on the move:Carousel in overdrive, keep up with hirings, firings

College football coaching carousel:Grades for each hire, how they fit

Virginia Tech hired James Franklin as its next head coach. Franklin was fired earlier this season at Penn State. He replaces Brent Pry, who was fired midseason by the Hokies. Oklahoma State hired Eric Morris from North Texas to be the Cowboys next head coach. Morris replaces longtime OSU coach Mike Gundy, who was fired earlier this season. Colorado State hired Jim Mora Jr. as its new head coach. Mora led UConn to back-to-back nine-win seasons and replaces Jay Norvell, who was fired midseason. Oregon State hired Alabama co-offensive coordinator JaMarcus Shephard as its head coach, replacing Trent Bray who was fired after an 0-7 start this season.

These college football coaches are on the move. See who found new home

Fitzgerald, who turns 51 on Tuesday, went 110-101 over 17 seasons with his alma mater from 2006-22, the entirety of his head coaching career and the Wildcats' longest-tenured coach in school history. The Midlothian, Illinois, native was an All-Big linebacker for Northwestern from 1993-96 and was a consensus All-American, won the Big Ten defensive player of the year and was the national winner of both the Bronko Nagurski Trophy and Chuck Bednarik Award in both the 1995 and 1996. He received the Big Ten Medal of Honor in 1997.

As a coach, Fitzgerald won the Big Ten West title in 2018 and was named Big Ten coach of the year, and he won a second West division title in 2020 and earned the national Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award.

The hire doesn't come without concerns.

Northwestern firedFitzgerald in July 2023 due to a hazing scandal the schoolsaid "included forced participation, nudity and sexualized acts of a degrading nature." Fitzgerald, who reportedly was owed $68 million from the private school on his contract that ran through 2031, filed a wrongful termination lawsuit in October 2023 for $130 million.

Fitzgerald reached a settlement in his wrongful-termination lawsuit against Northwestern and was back on the market as an established winner with extensive Big Ten experience. On paper, this looks like a perfect fit. Fitzgerald would need to show a plan on offense and for how he's going to adapt to the NIL-driven landscape that has exploded during his three years off the sidelines. But a search that ends with him returning to the Big Ten would be a coup for the Spartans.

The Spartans program isn't without its own issues.MSU was hit with NCAA sanctions earlier this fall that occurred in 2022-23 under Mel Tucker,who received a three-year show-cause penalty for failing to monitor the program and two staff members who also received show-cause penalties. The NCAA said Tucker was not involved with providing improper benefits of around $11,000 to three players and six recruits, however, in its negotiated settlement with MSU.

Fitzgerald, who has been out of college coaching for three seasons, was 5-9 against the Spartans during his tenure at Northwestern. The Wildcats were 4-20 in his final two seasons, which included MSU's season-opening win under Tucker in 2021 in Evanston, Illinois.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Michigan State football hire Pat Fitzgerald as new head coach

Pat Fitzgerald in, Jonathan Smith out for Michigan State football

Less than two hours after it was reportedMichigan State was firing football coach Jonathan Smithafter just two seasons, ...

 

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