With little at stake, Packers and Vikings take aim at goals

A pair of division rivals have differing agendas as they prepare for their regular-season finale.

The Green Bay Packers want to get healthy heading into the playoffs, where they already have clinched a wild-card berth. This weekend's game will do nothing to change their No. 7 NFC playoff seed.

Meanwhile, the Minnesota Vikings want to put a final stamp on this season as they look toward 2026. They see the final game of this season as an opportunity for players to make a case for prominent roles next season.

So, in the big picture, Sunday's game between Green Bay (9-6-1) and Minnesota (8-8) in Minneapolis means little in the standings but could mean a lot for both teams and their futures, be it short term or long term.

"We're still in that wildly significant time where any and all reps and experience (matter)," said Vikings coach Kevin O'Connell, whose team is on a four-game winning streak. "It's another home game at U.S. Bank Stadium. All those things are important."

Nothing is more important than health for the Packers.

Green Bay has no shot at the NFC North division title after the Chicago Bears claimed that last week. The Packers know they will open the playoffs on the road next weekend, with the opponent and starting time to be determined.

Packers quarterback Jordan Love participated in practice to start the week but remained in the league's concussion protocol. Backup Malik Willis, who has started with Love out, was limited to start the week with a shoulder injury.

The dual injuries prompted Green Bay to sign quarterback Desmond Ridder to its practice squad on Wednesday. Ridder, 26, has not played this season but has appeared in 25 games with 18 starts across parts of three seasons with the Atlanta Falcons and Las Vegas Raiders.

Packers coach Matt LaFleur was tight-lipped when asked about his starting quarterback for Sunday.

"Here's what I told the team," LaFleur said. "We have 53 spots on our roster. You can have two call-ups. You have 48 dressed on game day. So there's going to be some starters that aren't going to play. Shoot, they may not suit up, they might suit up. And then you're going to have some starters that are going to play. So, basically, you guys will find out on Sunday who's playing."

There is far less mystery in Minnesota, where J.J. McCarthy is set to make his 10th start in his first season of NFL action. McCarthy missed all of last season because of a knee injury.

The 22-year-old has shown flashes of his ability this season, but he also has struggled with consistency. He has passed for 11 touchdowns and 12 interceptions in his first nine games, and the regular-season finale could help the Vikings determine how much competition they want to bring in to challenge for the starting role in 2026.

McCarthy's top target is Justin Jefferson, who needs 53 receiving yards to reach the 1,000-yard mark for the sixth straight season. Jefferson also is looking for his first touchdown since Nov. 2.

Packers running back Josh Jacobs is 71 rushing yards shy of a 1,000-yard campaign, but he has dealt with a knee injury in recent weeks and could be a candidate to rest. He was a limited participant in practice on Wednesday. Backup running back Emanuel Wilson has 452 rushing yards and three touchdowns on the season.

--Field Level Media

With little at stake, Packers and Vikings take aim at goals

A pair of division rivals have differing agendas as they prepare for their regular-season finale. Th...
CBS cuts off Gary Danielson during his sign-off message from Sun Bowl, his final college football broadcast

A reflective, grateful and emotional Gary Danielson asked a rhetorical question after sharing hisSun Bowlsign-off message with his expansive CBS team, "How are we going to get off the air?"

The answer to the question came less than 10 seconds later.

As the analyst was searching for the final words of his final college football broadcast to punctuate a 36-year run calling ball, CBS cut him off.

CBS cut off Gary Danielson as he was still delivering his sign-off message into retirement.https://t.co/pMsRFHRQxSpic.twitter.com/7qHTCKhIz1

— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing)December 31, 2025

In the corner of the frame, a hand can be seen counting down the final seconds of the farewell to the former Purdue, Detroit Lions and Cleveland Browns quarterback.

That's when Danielson appeared to call an audible.

"Sometimes you can say, how do you get off?" Danielson said before pointing to his producer and adding, "This guy right here."

Abruptly, CBS went to commercial break, wrapping the broadcast. Hard outs are part of live TV, and Danielson of course knows that, but that ad interruption brought an untimely end to an otherwise beautiful tribute to one of the greatest voices in college football history.

Minutes earlier, Danielson — flanked by play-by-play announcer Brad Nessler and sideline reporter Jenny Dell — heard about and watched back some of the great moments during his illustrious career in the booth.

"To have done it with somebody that is unmatched in what you do has been a privilege," Nessler said. "It's been an honor. I'm going to miss you. Our team's going to miss you. Our crew's going to miss you. CBS is going to miss you.

"And damn it, college football's going to miss you, buddy."

Danielson has been part of CBS' top college football broadcasting pair since 2006 and is a six-time Emmy nominee.

A mainstay in the afternoon slot, he became a staple in SEC coverage and lately had expanded his footprint to the Big Ten with CBS.

"Everybody says, 'What do you want to be remembered as?' That's cool, but it's what I want to remember. And this is the stuff I remember," Danielson said as a slideshow of pictures rolled, documenting his time with his coworkers at CBS.

Those weren't his final words on air. But maybe they should be the ones we remember.

CBS cuts off Gary Danielson during his sign-off message from Sun Bowl, his final college football broadcast

A reflective, grateful and emotional Gary Danielson asked a rhetorical question after sharing hisSun Bowlsign-off messag...
What's next for Michigan football? 'Nobody knows who's going to be here'

ORLANDO, FL – Barring a national championship, every end to aMichigan footballseason is bittersweet, no matter the team.

Sure, a win can blunt the pain of knowing it's the final gathering of any particularWolverinessquad, especially if it also brings a sense of momentum for the following season. Even a loss can bring that, with enough standout returners.

But for this Michigan team those don't quite apply after theWolverinesfell to Texas, 41-27, in the Citrus Bowlon Wednesday, Dec. 31. U-M gave up 17 unanswered points in the final 6:54 to end 2025 with a thud. Perhaps even more unfortunately, that's the least of the tumult this group faced in December.

A saga that beganDec. 10 with thefiring of coach Sherrone Moore, featured jail time for Moore and an arraignment watched across the state, and, eventually, thehiring of longtime Utah coach Kyle Whittinghamon Dec. 26 leave the Wolverines in a bit of no-man's land.

More:Will Sherrone Moore get a second chance like other disgraced coaches?

U-M players know Whittingham is a no-nonsense coach who builds his teams with DNA similar to that which Michigan has often espoused at its best: physicality, with a ground-and-pound philosophy on offense and a disciplined, aggressive defense.

But they don't entirely know how the program will get from here to there under Whittingham. There appears to be brightness ahead, but before then ...

"It was tough in there," linebacker Cole Sullivan said of the locker room following the loss. "We know that there's going to be a lot of changes made, it's not going to be the same group. Any year, a bowl game is always the last time ... but we know it's going to be different next year and it's unfortunate we had to end it this way.

Biff Poggi on Michigan: 'This isn't a rebuild'

The path to a shinier 2026 starts with Michigan keeping its core together.

True freshman quarterback Bryce Underwood struggled at times in Year 1 — including against the Longhorns, when three second-half interceptions turned a back-and-forth duel with Texas' Arch Manning into a referendum on arm strength vs. turnovers. And yet, Underwood's upside is obvious, as evidenced by his well-thrown touchdown to Kendrick Bell in the first quarter, his 33-yard rumble to set up a second touchdown pass in the second and his diving touchdown to give U-M the lead in the fourth.

Should U-M keep Jordan Marshall or Justice Haynes — heck, how about both — at running back with incoming five-star recruit Savion Hiter (expected to arrive from Virginia this weekend), Michigan will be looking at one of the most loaded running back rooms in the country.

Combine that with an offensive line that's young but promising — Blake Frazier, Andrew Sprague and Jake Guarnera all got invaluable experience this year and freshmen Andrew Babalola and Ty Haywood were both among the most highly regarded tackles in the class of 2025 — and interim coach Biff Poggi wasn't stretching when he pushed back Wednesday at the notion of 2026 being a growing season.

"This isn't a rebuild," he said. "I think that would be shortchanging the kids and where they are. I think coach Whittingham is going to do a fantastic job here. He's going to have a lot of really good players back. He's obviously going to bring players in.

"Been a head coach 20 years, won three conference championships. ... I think he's going to find a very full cupboard with a bunch of really willing kids that are just great kids."

So who's coming back for Michigan football?

Select players met with media after the game, including linebacker Jimmy Rolder who is mulling an NFL future.

Bell and running back Bryson Kuzdzal definitively declared they intend to return to Ann Arbor in 2026, while Sullivan said he had to think it over.

It's not that hewantsto leave, but with all of his attention on U-M's final game — despite meeting with Whittingham and liking what he heard — he waits to wait to see what the staff looks like.

"Obviously the scheme is one thing," Rolder said. "Then the mentality of the staff. That's kind of all I can really say right now. I'm really excited to meet everybody that's coming and just see what they have to say — hopefully we blend in a good way."

Others, such as Marshall and Underwood, avoided declaring they'd be back when meeting with media earlier in the week. But there's belief both will be. They're the leaders of the program, on the field and in the locker room.

One to watch is true freshman Andrew Marsh. On Wednesday, he helped keep U-M in the game with a touchdown catch and 163 all-purpose yards, including 143 on kickoffs. Come January, he could demand top dollar in the transfer market, though Michigan is well-positioned to match any offer.

If Michigan's players proved anything in the past three weeks, it's that they're able to block out outside noise.

"Just keep going," Bell said. "Marsh says it all the time, you know he's got it on his (eye black):Keep going.So just keep pushing through. ... It was emotional in [the locker room] today. I think we all got closer, we all got tight.

"We know what's going on, what's going to happen in the building. ... Nobody knows who's going to be here."

College football transfer portal on the clock

Per NCAA rules, Michigan players can enter the portal beginning Thursday — five days after a new coach is hired, and one day before it formally opens for two weeks for players nationwide. Even before the transfer portal opened, there was back-channeling, as noted by Poggi last month — there always is, even as Whittingham decried it this week.

"You don't tamper with anybody, that's not my style," Whittingham said. "If a player we have interest in enters the portal, that's a whole different ballgame ... Now he's in the portal, he's going somewhere — so why not Michigan, if it's a good fit?"

Players will come and go. So will coaches. It's expected U-M will formally announce most of its staff this week — Whittingham said during a mid-game interview with ABC he expects to have made decisions on his coaches by the end of the weekend.

That's another step into the future. Perhaps the best thing for Michigan is to go into an offseason wiping the slate clean.

If 2025's College Football Playoff lineup is an indication, the Wolverines appear to have a a tough schedule in 2026, even without seeing how the CFP and the ensuing transfer portal winds up; there are road games at Ohio State and Oregon, and home games with SEC foe Oklahoma and Indiana. There are also visits due from perennial Big Ten powers Iowa and Penn State.

Then again, Wednesday was too soon for players to even start looking toward that time.

"I don't know," Bell said about what next year will look like. "We'll take it day by day."

Never in college football's history have teams gone from pretenders to contenders — and vice versa — as they do now. Michigan is looking at a major overhaul, and, again, that can be a good thing.

But without the warm feeling generated by a would-be bowl win, that's cold comfort as January arrives for the Wolverines.

Tony Garciais theWolverinesbeat writer for the Detroit Free Press. Email him at apgarcia@freepress.com and follow him on X at@RealTonyGarcia.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How Michigan football may look different under Kyle Whittingham

What's next for Michigan football? 'Nobody knows who's going to be here'

ORLANDO, FL – Barring a national championship, every end to aMichigan footballseason is bittersweet, no matter the team....
Bye, bye: NFC's top prize goes to 49ers-Seahawks winner

There will be plenty on the line Saturday night when the Seattle Seahawks meet the San Francisco 49ers in Santa Clara, Calif.

Namely, the NFC West title, the conference's top playoff seed and a first-round playoff bye.

Both the Seahawks (13-3) and 49ers (12-4) carry six-game winning streaks into the matchup.

The 49ers have overcome season-ending injuries to defensive stalwarts Nick Bosa and Fred Warner to move into position to earn home-field advantage through the Super Bowl, which is scheduled for Feb. 8 in Santa Clara, with a victory.

"Back when Fred got hurt, if you told anybody we'd be 12-4 and be battling Week 18 for that one seed, you're absolutely crazy," 49ers fullback Kyle Juszczyk said. "Nobody would've believed you. So it's been a special season already, and one I definitely don't take for granted. But we're not done. I have all the confidence in the world that we can get this thing done."

The 49ers would get the No. 1 seed with a victory by virtue of the head-to-head tiebreaker because they won 17-13 at Seattle in the season opener. Brock Purdy threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to backup tight end Jake Tonges with 1:34 remaining and Bosa clinched the victory with a strip-sack of Sam Darnold with 36 seconds left and the Seahawks at San Francisco's 9-yard line.

The preparation time for both teams will be shorter than usual.

The Seahawks had to make a cross-country flight home after a 27-10 road victory over the Carolina Panthers on Sunday. Zach Charbonnet rushed for a season-high 110 yards and two touchdowns in the win.

The 49ers beat the visiting Chicago Bears 42-38 in a nationally televised game Sunday night as Purdy overcame a pick-6 on the opening play from scrimmage to throw for 303 yards and three touchdowns and rush for two more scores.

"I wish it wasn't (a short week). We just had a short week," said 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan, referring to his team having played on Monday, Dec. 22, at Indianapolis. "So I really wish it would have been Sunday, but it is what it is. Hopefully the guys can heal up and be ready to go."

Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald didn't seem concerned.

"Whatever," he said on Seattle Sports 710 AM. "When's the game? All right, let's go put together a plan. Let's go."

The short week could affect injured players and whether they can make it back.

Seahawks left tackle Charles Cross didn't play the past two games because of a hamstring injury and missed practice time this week, as did his backup Josh Jones (ankle/knee). Seattle signed rookie Amari Kight off the practice squad just in case.

Seattle safety Coby Bryant (knee) didn't practice on Wednesday. On the plus side, the Seahawks will get linebacker Derick Hall back after a one-game suspension.

San Francisco left tackle Trent Williams (hamstring) and defensive end Keion White (groin) missed practice on Wednesday. Juszczyk (hip), running back Christian McCaffrey (back), tight end George Kittle (ankle), wide receiver Ricky Pearsall (knee/ankle), defensive end Yetur Gross-Matos (knee) and cornerback Upton Stout (concussion) were limited.

Kittle, asked if he would be ready to play Saturday, replied, "Absolutely."

The Seahawks can't afford another sluggish start, especially against a 49ers team that has scored 37 or more points in each of its past three games.

Seattle has scored an average of seven points before halftime over its past five games.

"We've had some games where we've started really great (and) we've had some games where we haven't and been able to rebound," Macdonald said. "I think it's hard to attribute it to just one thing. If not, I think we would have probably found a solution by now."

-Field Level Media

Bye, bye: NFC's top prize goes to 49ers-Seahawks winner

There will be plenty on the line Saturday night when the Seattle Seahawks meet the San Francisco 49ers in Santa Clar...
Joe Burrow argues for 'change' with Bengals in three-year playoff drought: 'What we've been doing hasn't worked'

NFL fans know Joe Burrow is a true franchise quarterback, one of the few elite players who can lift up an entire team and immediately make it a contender. Despite the presence of Burrow, however, the Cincinnati Bengals haven't made the playoffs in three seasons.

That's quite the feat, one that hasn't gone unnoticed by Burrow, whoadvocated for "change" within the organizationWednesday, per ESPN.

"We don't want to be in the spot we are in now, so something's got to change," Burrow said Wednesday. "Whether it's players we have continuing to improve and get better and play championship-caliber football or bringing in guys that will or whatever it may be. Obviously, something has to [change]."

It marks yet another eyebrow-raising comment by the 29-year-old Burrow over the past few weeks. With the Bengals in the midst of their worst season since 2020, Burrow has been vocal abouthis enjoyment of the gameandadmitted he's considered a futurewhere he's no longer a Bengal.

Burrow kept his "change" comments centered around players, saying either those currently on the team need to take a step forward or the organization needs to bring in championship-caliber talent to lift the team back into the playoffs.

While Burrow didn't mention coaching or front-office upheaval, there may be some Bengals fans who believe that could be the necessary "change" to push the Bengals back into contention. Under Zac Taylor, the Bengals have been criticized for their slow starts. While he was able to lead the team to a Super Bowl in his third season, the fact that Taylor has failed to take a Burrow-lead team to the playoffs in three straight years is a concern.

Burrow, however, isn't completely blameless in his team's failure to make the postseason the past three seasons. When healthy, Burrow is undoubtedly an elite quarterback. But various injuries have prevented him leading the Bengals to glory. Burrow missed seven games in 2023 due to a wrist issue and nine games this season with a toe injury. Both injuries essentially sunk the team's chances in those seasons.

Keeping Burrow healthy and upright would go a long way toward the Bengals returning to the Super Bowl in the next couple seasons. The team's front office was criticized for not doing enough last offseason to strengthen its offensive line. Those critiques were immediately validated after Burrow went down in Week 2 with his injury.

Because of that, it shouldn't come as a surprise that Burrow is advocating for change. If he can avoid taking big hits, Burrow has it in him to lead the Bengals to a championship. But if the Bengals continue to embrace the status quo — like they did last offseason — the remainder of Burrow's time in Cincinnati could end in bitter disappointment.

Joe Burrow argues for 'change' with Bengals in three-year playoff drought: 'What we've been doing hasn't worked'

NFL fans know Joe Burrow is a true franchise quarterback, one of the few elite players who can lift up an entire team an...

 

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