Miami makes CFP title case after Cotton Bowl upset of Ohio State: 'This is our moment'

ARLINGTON, TX — Everyone in AT&T Stadium knew what Miami was going to do.

Leading No. 2 seed Ohio State 17-14 in the Cotton Bowl and taking over at their 30-yard line with 5:56 to play, the No. 10 seed Hurricanes had one mission: to run the ball down theBuckeyes' throat to milk the clock, deliver the knockout blow and send the defending national champions packing from theCollege Football Playoff.

"We all looked each other in the eyes," said senior center James Brockermeyer. "We said, 'This is our moment. Let's take over this game.'"

What unfolded over the ensuing five minutes of game clock tells the story of a team blossoming at the right time and a program that has reclaimed its place on the national stage after spending more than two decades lost in the wilderness.

Ten plays. Eight runs for 52 yards. A 19-yard gain to get things started by junior running back Mark Fletcher, who had a game-high 90 yards. Twenty-six yards from backup CharMar Brown, including the 5-yard score that provided the final exclamation pointon a 24-14 upset.

Miami linebacker Mohamed Toure celebrates a defensive play against Ohio State during their 2025 College Football Playoff quarterfinal at the Cotton Bowl.

The whole thing can be boiled down like this: Ohio State knew what Miami wanted to do and couldn't do a single thing about it.

"It just shows that we're a team that will do what it takes to win a game and grind things out against a really, really good defense like that," Brockermeyer said. "They're a great team. But we've got a great team, too."

That's how Miami was built, in the trenches, by a coach in Mario Cristobal who knows no other way. From the depths of his five-win debut in 2022 and miserable moments such as a shocking debacle loss toGeorgia Techa year later, Cristobal has pieced together a team constructed to win hard-fought, physical games against the nation's best in postseason play.

"We keep getting better and better up front," Cristobal said. "When you play a team like that that's been the number one defense in the country the entire year, you have to. And you have to not only hit, but you've got to be willing to take the hits and keep coming, because that's what it's going to be."

Defensive back Tony-Louis Nkuba #21 of the Arizona State Sun Devils celebrates by jumping into an inflatable bowl of Kellogg's Frosted Flakes after intercepting a pass against the Duke Blue Devils during the first half of the Tony The Tiger Sun Bowl game at Sun Bowl Stadium on December 31, 2025 in El Paso, Texas Tony the Tiger stands on the field after the coin toss before a football game between Duke and Arizona State in the Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl at Sun Bowl Stadium in El Paso, Texas, on Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets quarterback Haynes King (10) greats the Pop-Tarts mascots before the Pop-Tarts Bowl against the BYU Cougars at Camping World Stadium. Pop-Tarts mascots celebrate with BYU Cougars after beating Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets in the Pop-Tarts Bowl at Camping World Stadium. Pop-Tarts mascots celebrate with BYU Cougars after beating Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets in the Pop-Tarts Bowl at Camping World Stadium. The Cheez-It Citrus Bowl mascots perform on the field before a game between the Michigan Wolverines and Texas Longhorns at Camping World Stadium. Louisville Cardinals players celebrate after defeating the Toledo Rockets in the Boca Raton Bowl at Flagler CU Stadium. Washington Huskies head coach Jedd Fisch holds the LA Bowl championship belt presented by Rob Gronkowski after defeating the Boise State Broncos at SoFi Stadium. Musical artist/rapper Snoop Dogg holds the championship trophy after the Fresno State Bulldogs defeated the Miami (OH) RedHawks 18-3 to win the 2025 Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl at Casino Del Sol Stadium on December 27, 2025 in Tucson, Arizona. Actor Keegan-Michael Key receives the game coin prior to the 2025 Bush's Boca Raton Bowl of Beans game between the Louisville Cardinals and the Toledo Rockets at Flagler Credit Union Stadium on December 23, 2025 in Boca Raton, Florida. Comedians Theo Von, left, and Nate Bargatze watch from the sidelines during the first half of the ReliaQuest Bowl between Iowa Hawkeyes and Vanderbilt Commodores at Raymond James Stadium on December 31, 2025 in Tampa, Florida. Head coach Jeff Traylor of the UTSA Roadrunners is doused with water by Jamel Hardy #13 during the fourth quarter against the FIU Panthers in the 2025 SERVPRO First Responder Bowl at Gerald J. Ford Stadium on December 26, 2025 in Dallas, Texas. Army Black Knights head coach Jeff Monken gets splashed with Powerade after Army beat UConn 41-16 in the Wasabi Fenway Bowl at Fenway Park. Interim head coach Drew Svoboda of the North Texas Mean Green is doused after his team defeated the San Diego State Aztecs 49-47 in the Isleta New Mexico Bowl at University Stadium on December 27, 2025 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Northwestern Wildcats players dump Gatorade on head coach David Braun of the Northwestern Wildcats after defeating the Central Michigan Chippewas in the 2025 GameAbove Sports Bowl at Ford Field on December 26, 2025 in Detroit, Michigan. Head coach John Hauser of the Ohio Bobcats is doused with water after winning the game against the UNLV Rebels at the Scooter's Coffee Frisco Bowl at Ford Center on December 23, 2025 in Frisco, Texas. Virginia Cavaliers head coach Tony Elliott is doused with Gatorade after winning the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl at EverBank Stadium Saturday December 27, 2025 in Jacksonville, Fla. Virginia defeated Missouri 13-7. Fresno State Bulldogs head coach Matt Entz is doused with gatorade after defeating the Miami (OH) RedHawks during the Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl at Casino Del Sol Stadium. Head coach Clay Helton of the Georgia Southern Eagles receives a Powerade dunk after winning the JLab Birmingham Bowl by beating the Appalachian State Mountaineers 29-10 at Protective Stadium on December 29, 2025 in Birmingham, Alabama. Interim Head Coach Terry M. Smith of the Penn State Nittany Lions lifts the championship trophy following the game against the Clemson Tigers during the 2025 Bad Boy Mowers Pinstripe Bowl at Yankee Stadium on December 27, 2025 in New York City. BYU Cougars quarterback Bear Bachmeier (47) and head coach Kalani Sitake are presented a large pop-tart to eat after they beat the against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets at Camping World Stadium. Ken Seals #9 of the TCU Horned Frogs celebrates with teammates after defeating the USC Trojans in the game at the Alamodome on December 30, 2025 in San Antonio, Texas. Head coach Willie Fritz of the Houston Cougars celebrates with the Texas Bowl Trophy after defeating the Louisiana State Tigers during the Kinder's Texas Bowl at NRG Stadium on December 27, 2025 in Houston, Texas. Conner Weigman #1 of the Houston Cougars is named Texas Bowl MVP during the Kinder's Texas Bowl against the Louisiana State Tigers at NRG Stadium on December 27, 2025 in Houston, Texas. Maverick McIvor #7 of the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers reacts as he recieves the MVP trophy after his team defeated the Southern Mississippi Golden Eagles to win the R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl at Caesars Superdome on December 23, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. Old Dominion Monarchs hoist the Cure Bowl trophy after beating the South Florida Bulls at Camping World Stadium. Jacksonville State Gamecocks running back Khristian Lando (22) hoists the trophy as Troy Trojans take on Jacksonville State Gamecocks during the IS4S Salute to Veterans Bowl at Cramton Bowl in Montgomery, Ala. on Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025. Jacksonville State Gamecocks defeated Troy Trojans 17-13. Interim head coach Drew Svoboda of the North Texas Mean Green raises the championship trophy after his team defeated the San Diego State Aztecs 49-47 in the Isleta New Mexico Bowl at University Stadium on December 27, 2025 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Micah Alejado #12 of the Hawai'i Rainbow Warriors holds up the Hawai'i Bowl Championship trophy after winning the Sheraton Hawai'i Bowl over the California Golden Bears at the Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex on December 24, 2025 in Honolulu, Hawai'i. NC State Wolfpack head coach Dave Doeren receives the trophy after beating Memphis Tigers in the Gasparilla Bowl at Raymond James Stadium.

Best of bowl season: Mascots, trophies, celebrations, Gatorade baths

This improvement was evident in an oftenugly 10-3 win against No. 7 seed Texas A&Min the opening round, when the Hurricanes overcame three missed field goals and made a late defensive stand to advance to Wednesday night's quarterfinals. But the Cotton Bowl casts Miami in a new light — as a team capable of winning the whole thing — and shows how adeptly Cristobal installed his formula.

"We live in a geographic area with a lot of high school talent, a lot of skill players. But he built it inside-out and supplanted that with great outside players, skill players," said Miami athletics director Dan Radakovich.

"That's the recipe that he thought about and actually put into action. He was able to pull that together. It wasn't like a zoom kind of thing. It was very progressive, with a great foundation."

Miami ran for 153 yards, the most Ohio State had allowed since the season opener against Texas, and averaged 4.1 yards per carry. The line gave up just two sacks and four tackles for loss. The Hurricanes set the tone by maintaining possession for more than 11 minutes in the first quarter and closed the Buckeyes out by holding the ball for almost nine minutes in the fourth.

Despite being roughly a touchdown underdog by kickoff, Miami looked better prepared for a line-of-scrimmage battle, especially when pushing piles forward after contact on the game-clinching drive and bullying an Ohio State team most expected to repeat.

"He definitely relayed that message that he wanted us to be the most physical team, the most violent team," Fletcher said of Cristobal. "And that's with anybody who we play, who we line up against, especially on the offensive side. But he was screaming that to the defense, too.  And, shoot, defense played violent. We got to play violent, too. That's how we match it."

Not to be outdone, Miami's defense sacked Ohio State quarterback Julian Sayin five times; that matched Indiana's sack total from theBig Tenchampionship game after the Buckeyes had allowed just six sacks during their 12-0 start.

On both sides of the ball, the Hurricanes were able to carry the normally unflappable Buckeyes out of their comfort zone and into choppy waters on the line of scrimmage. Counting sacks, Ohio State managed just 45 rushing yards on 1.9 yards per carry. Going back to 2016, the Buckeyes' previous low for rushing yards in a game was 58 yards against Indiana earlier this month.

"Our players kept responding. Our players kept coming with their counterpunch," said Cristobal. "And those last couple of counterpunches, that big stop after they converted a third-and-18, and then the touchdown drive at the end, and then to finish it off with an interception, those are great counterpunches. Those are just really left hooks to the body and to the head."

Most importantly, the Hurricanes' defense was able to pressure Sayin with five and often four pass rushers. Clearly fazed, Sayin completed 62.8% of his attempts, his worst performance since the opener, and tossed multiple interceptions for just the second time.

In the game's biggest single moment, Sayin delivered a misguided pass to the flat in the direction of receiver Brandon Inniss in the second quarter that Miami defensive back Keionte Scott jumped the route and returned 72 yards for a touchdown.

"We got him early, we hit him early, and I think it forced him to throw that interception," said Mesidor.

"Not only that, but throughout the game he was a little uncomfortable. He really wasn't dropping back to throw deep bombs. He was throwing drag routes, finding little holes in the zone."

The turnaround is remarkable, and shouldn't be ignored. Four years ago, Miami finished short of bowl eligibility for the first time since 2007. Two months ago, the Hurricanes lost 26-20 to SMU and was essentially tossed out of the playoff mix, only to controversially leap ahead of Notre Dame in the playoff rankings on the heels of a four-game winning streak.

Everything is coming together, at long last, and Miami is reestablished as a true national player. If they can do this against Ohio State, the Hurricanes can do the same to every team still alive in this tournament — and maybe deliver the program's first national championship since 2001 and sixth overall.

"It's a great time to shine, at the end of the game," said Brockermeyer. "We're just a team that never folds and we never will."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Miami dominates Ohio State in Cotton Bowl to validate CFP title hopes

Miami makes CFP title case after Cotton Bowl upset of Ohio State: 'This is our moment'

ARLINGTON, TX — Everyone in AT&T Stadium knew what Miami was going to do. Leading No. 2 seed Ohio State 17...
Make the NBA better: 7 New Year's resolutions for the league in 2026

Big picture, the NBA is in a really good place. We're seeing record-setting attendance. Viewership is up significantly year-over-year. The league just struck a $76 billion media deal. Franchise values are higher than ever.

But it's not perfect. To steal the HoopIdea motto from my pals Royce Webb and Henry Abbott:Basketball is the best game ever. Now let's make it better.

The biggest slack in the system is thatstar players aren't playing enough games. The biggest names used to miss only one out of every 10 games. Nowadays, we're seeing one out of every three games. Nikola Jokić, arguably the best player in the game, isthe latest superstar to be sidelinedfor a big chunk of the season. At the moment, the Jokić injury has brought a lot of hot-button topics to the forefront.

So, let's get to it. Here are seven New Year's resolutions for commissioner Adam Silver and the NBA to consider.

1. Make it a 58-game regular season

It's time. Play each team twice. Once at home, once on the road. Raise the stakes for every game. Kill the dreaded back-to-back. Football-ify the weekly schedule (say, Tuesdays and Sundays). Lower the risk of injury. Let everyone breathe. Let everyone prosper.

In 2019, Kevin Arnovitzreportedthat the league and its teams formally explored the 58-game idea as part of a comprehensive plan to add a not-yet-established in-season tournament and play-in tournament. Those two tournaments have been a success. Now it's time for the other part of that to come to fruition: the 58-game season.

Any momentum of a 58-game season came to a screeching halt during the pandemic-shortened seasons, which did not see a dramatic improvement on the injury front. Silver has arguedthe league studied the COVID-affected seasonsand found no evidence that reducing games would lead to a corresponding improvement in player health. You don't need to be a rocket scientist to see why using thepandemicseasons as a control group would be a foolish idea.

The NBA knows the best product is when games are spaced out without back-to-backs and plenty of days allowing for the body to recover. Proof of that understanding has been staring at us all along: look at the playoffs! The NBA doesn't allow back-to-backs in the playoffs. I wonder why! Games lost due to injury go way down in the playoffs, partly because players are willing to play through bumps and bruises when the stakes are highest. But star participation skyrockets in the playoffs, I would posit, because the NBA has built in proper recovery time and bodies aren't still raw from the night before.

Beyond the upside of injury prevention, I'm a firm believer that a 58-game season would do wonders for the NBA product. It would solve much of the tanking problem. Fewer games means more teams in the hunt for playoff and play-in spots for a larger chunk of the season. Furthermore, and this is a huge one, it would standardize the schedule so every fan and every team would know what day of the week they're playing. College football has Saturdays. NFL has Sundays. Fans build their entire week around football. It's appointment viewing. NBA has … well … it depends. A 58-game schedule would make appointment viewing a reality.

I also don't think a 30% reduction in games would lead to a 30% reduction in revenues. At least not in the long run. If players aren't run into the ground trying to play 100 games a year (with playoffs), they're more likely to have longer (and more reliable from a fan/TV partner perspective) careers.

2. Abolish the draft. Establish rookie free agency

Charlie Munger once said, "Show me the incentive and I'll show you the outcome." By giving the bottom-three teams the best odds at the No. 1 pick, the NBA is indirectly asking teams to lose on purpose to maximize the chance that the next superstar falls into their laps.

Instead of a draft, the league should televise a Rookie Signing Week and — gasp! — allow the most-qualified individuals to choose their workplace. Rather than guaranteeing ping-pong balls, the league should replace draft odds with a cap exception proportional to their previous record. The worst teams would have marginally more money to offer the Cooper Flaggs of the world, but the advantage would only go so far. Organizational competence would matter much more when teams have to pitch the best prospects about whytheyshould be the team they sign with. Right now, organizationalincompetenceis what matters most.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 25: Cooper Flagg of the Dallas Mavericks speaks to the media after being drafted first overall during the 2025 NBA Draft at Barclays Center on June 25, 2025 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Mike Lawrie/Getty Images)

Anyone clutching their pearls about the Los Angeles Lakers or New York Knicks loading up on talent should take a deep breath. Elite players want to be the star. That means playing time, the ball in their hands and, yes, money. If you don't believe me, look at how top recruits choose their college program.

Massachusetts native AJ Dybantsa chose BYU. Dylan Harper and Ace Bailey went to Rutgers. Cade Cunningham handpicked Oklahoma State. Anthony Edwards opted for Georgia. Allen Iverson attended Georgetown. Shaq landed at LSU. Notice none of these programs reside in Miami, Los Angeles or New York.

Yes, blue-chip programs like Duke, Kansas and Kentucky have cleaned up top-shelf talent in the one-and-done era, but that can only happen in a system that clears rosters every year, and colleges can promise a prospect that he'd be The Guy. That doesn't fly in the NBA. Also, small-market teams should rejoice because last time I checked Durham, North Carolina; Lawrence, Kansas; and Lexington, Kentucky, are not coastal metropolises.

Let's be real: the NBA Draft and Draft Lottery are an awkward charade. Remember how Cooper Flagg looked ill when Dallas won the lottery? If we're being honest, the optics and general idea of the draft aren't super awesome to begin with. It's littered with wrong hats, delayed trade calls and sad 19-year-olds with nerve-wracked families lingering in the green room. Let the players pick their proverbial hat and watch bedlam ensue as each team has to reassess once top players go off the board. It'd be amazing television.

3. Eliminate the 65-game rule — or any game requirement — for awards

It was a bad idea to begin with, and I have zero idea why the NBPA signed off on it in the first place. The policy indirectly paints star players in a horrible light by suggesting that they were taking games off for load management/rest, and not actually, you know, injured. It clearly hasn't been a motivator. Since it was established in 2023, star players are missing the cut more, not less.

In reality, the media was already holding players accountable and rewarding players that played more games. In fact, there has been only one player in an 82-game season that won MVP while playing fewer than 65 games: Bill Walton in 1977-78. It's a classic case of a cure being worse than the disease.

By implementing the rule, every MVP and All-NBA conversation (hello, Nikola Jokić and Giannis Antetokounmpo!) is now stained by constant injury talk rather than using that oxygen for praising a player's greatness. Instead, many people will accuse SGA of skating to another MVP award that will artificially and potentially eliminate Jokić, Antetokounmpo, Luka Dončić and Victor Wembanyama. If the goal is to promote player health and champion those who play the most games, it is doing the opposite. Get rid of it.

4. Let top seeds choose playoff opponents

Think of the drama! Think of the spice! Think of the … fairness? Yes, fairness!

The integrity of the playoff system is being threatened by, yes, injuries. In the past, when the league was healthier and stars suited up almost every game, the playoff seeds were a fair representation of the best teams. But because player health has become such a scourge and disrupts the standings, we could have a situation in which a top seed faces a loaded team that fell in the league hierarchy due to a star player (or players) getting sidelined for long stretches.

[Jones: New Year's resolutions for all 30 NBA teams]

Congrats to the OKC Thunder for earning the top seed, now you have to face … Nikola Jokić and the Nuggets!Hey, Detroit, kudos to you for winning the East, good luck against the No. 8 seed featuring … checks notes … Giannis Antetokounmpo!

To avoid this scenario and inject more excitement in the playoff structure, the NBA should allow the top seeds (Nos. 1-3 in the first round; top seeds again in the semifinals) to choose their opponents. It's a more efficient system that rewards regular-season performances, builds storylines and makes the playoffs a lot juicier. It'll also clear up the weird loophole that the No. 1 seed has the least amount of time to prepare for its first-round opponent thanks to the play-in tournament.

5. Bring back traditional home/away jerseys for national TV games

The NBA added prestige to the NBA Cup by changing the floors to highlighter colors and signaling to the audience that This Is Different. But what if we added prestige by … going back to normal.

Let's restore some recipes and go back to the good old days when — and stay with me now — home teams wore white. I know! Crazy! Let's dial it back and make sure that, for big games, teams wear the standard jerseys rather than seemingly flip through different jerseys every game. Please, we need Celtics green and New York white at Madison Square Garden. This is elemental to the NBA experience.

If the game isn't on national television, then teams can choose whichever jersey they want. But for the big games, bring back some normalcy in an increasingly confusing world.

6. Tighten up the gather-step rules

It's too easy to score in the NBA. The Chicago Bulls and Atlanta freakin' Hawks just scored 302 points in regulation and no one batted an eye. The worst offense in the league, the Indiana Pacers, score 108.1 points per 100 possessions, per NBA.com/stats. You know where that would rank in the 2000-01 season? Not 15th. Not 10th. Not fifth. It would be first! Better than the Kobe-Shaq Lakers that won 56 games with an offensive efficiency of 107.0 points per 100 possessions that led the league. In fact, the injury-marred Pacers are scoring more on a per-possession basis thananyof the Kobe-Shaq Laker teams.

Scoring inflation has happenedfast. You know the 12-20 Utah Jazz led by Lauri Markkanen and Keyonte George? They're currently scoring at a higher rate than the KD/Steph Warriors'bestoffensive season. I know. It's disorienting.

We need to bring defense back. We can start with bringing back the travel to the spirit of the rule. Players have studied travel rules and stretched legal basketball innovations to the extreme and, I would argue, way past the limit. Gather step plus one step.

Call it The Grayson Allen Rule. Look at this play. I don't know what this is, but this is not basketball.

pic.twitter.com/32OBq4wmrx

— Rob Perez (@WorldWideWob)December 9, 2025

Whatever rule that makes that an illegal play, I'm all for.

Yeah, that can't be legal. Except it is. When @mdwbasketball (go follow that account btw) says it's legal, it's legal. I just don't think itshouldbe legal.

It's too easy to score in the NBA. Let's pull it back a bit and call travels like we used to.

7. Allow referee press conferences

Frankly, it's overdue. With gambling allegations and investigations ensnaring Chauncey Billups, Terry Rozier, Damon Jones, Malik Beasley and Jontay Porter (who has pled guilty, unlike the other names on this list), trust in the integrity of the game may be at its lowest since the Tim Donaghy scandals. And I'm not just talking about angry fans on social media. Recently, the NBA had to step in and announce four five-figure fines in just one week, penalizing teams and players for publicly criticizing officials.

It's time to further ensure transparency and integrity of the game by having referees available to speak freely with credentialed reporters after the game and have that media session broadcast on public channels.

On most nights, ref press conferences may not be needed. But allowing at least one beat reporter from each team to be present for a postgame news conference would be a big win for the trust in the system. Such a forum would cultivate an educational and informative context for rules to be explained, decisions clarified and calls defended. Currently for every game, the NBA assigns a pool reporter who has to submit questions ahead of time and the resulting Q&A is posted in text form on its website. For instance,is this at all helpful or productive?

In my opinion, current measures don't go far enough. The NBA has already opened the door by allowing the crew chief to announce a coach's challenge ruling to the fans over the PA system. Having the crew chief sit and answer questions in a professional setting among reporters would be a step in the right direction. By and large, referees are good at their jobs. Let them show us.

Make the NBA better: 7 New Year's resolutions for the league in 2026

Big picture, the NBA is in a really good place. We're seeing record-setting attendance. Viewership is up significant...
Bowl game schedule today: Breaking down the College Football Playoff matchups on Jan. 1

TheCollege Football Playoffresumes Thursday with a New Year's Day tripleheader, a lineup that features some of the sport's most iconic bowl venues.

The lineup features three teams that have been fairly regular playoff participants since the four-team format was introduced a little over a decade ago. Each member of that trio on this day faces a relative newcomer to the CFP, in part a product of increased access to the field afforded by the expansion to 12.

PATH TO PLAYOFF:Sign up for our college football newsletter

Here's what you need to know as you watch to see who will join Wednesday night's Cotton Bowl winner in next week's semifinals.

Orange Bowl: No. 4 Texas Tech vs. No. 5 Oregon

Time/TV:noon ET, ESPN in Miami Gardens, Fla.

Why watch:As the 4-5 pairing, this is arguably the most intriguing contest of the round. TheDucks, as expected, handled their assignment against James Madison with little difficulty. TheRed Raiderscould prove to be a different matter, though they, too, are something of a mystery with little on their resume outside the Big 12. Texas Tech's calling card all season has been its ferocious defense, exemplified by LBs David Bailey and Jacob Rodriguez making numerous plays in opponents' backfields. Ducks' QB Dante Moore usually gets superb protection with help from RB Noah Whittington, but he might have to pick and choose when to take deep shots. Red Raiders' QB Behren Morton is a capable passer in his own right, and RBs Cameron Dickey and J'Koby Williams lend plenty of ground support. The Oregon defense features LB Bryce Boettcher at its center and Teitum Tuioti and Matayo Uiagalelei bringing heat from the edges.

WHO WINS?:Our experts make picks for the Orange Bowl

Why it could disappoint:The only close contest the Red Raiders played all season resulted in their lone loss toArizona State. They aren't likely to make this one the kind of rout to which they've become accustomed, so we'll probably learn if they can deliver when under true game pressure. Oregon hasn't had many tight finishes either, though the Ducks did need a last-minute drive to escape Iowa.

Rose Bowl: No. 1 Indiana vs. No. 9 Alabama

Time/TV:4 p.m. ET, ESPN in Pasadena, Calif.

Why watch:The Hoosiers passed their biggest test to date, conquering Ohio State in the Big Ten final to earn the top seed. Their reward, however, is now a date with the most successful program of the playoff era, though the Crimson Tide are seeking their first title post-Nick Saban. Though Indiana coach Curt Cignetti has said he's not a fan of his team's long layoff, the extra time has allowed WRs Omar Cooper and Elijah Sarratt to get back to full speed. That is excellent news for Heisman winning QB Fernando Mendoza as he looks to solve the active Crimson Tide secondary, featuring DBs Bray Hubbard and Zabien Brown.AlabamaQB Ty Simpson was able to overcome a slow start last time out in his rematch with Oklahoma, but he'll have to be sharper early against the Hoosiers' equally formidable pass defense, led by DBs Louis Moore and D'Angelo Ponds.

WHO WINS?:Our experts make picks for the Rose Bowl

Why it could disappoint:The common thread in the Crimson Tide's three losses was that they were soundly beaten at the line of scrimmage, which might bode ill for them here as that is an important area of strength for the Hoosiers. While there are big-play threats on both teams, it will likely be the less glamorous ground game that will determine the outcome.

Sugar Bowl: No. 3 Georgia vs. No. 6 Mississippi

Time/TV:8 p.m. ET, ESPN in New Orleans.

Why watch:For the second time in the playoffs, the Rebels face a team they saw before in the regular season. This time, though, Ole Miss is looking to avenge a loss. The Bulldogs, perhaps playing the best football of any of the eight remaining teams when they dispatched Alabama in the SEC finale, must hope the lengthy down time hasn't sapped their momentum. The Bulldogs' offense is not a quick-strike unit, but QB Gunner Stockton is completing 70.7% of his throws, and his group converts on 45.2% of its third-down chances. Ole Miss LB Princewill Umanmielen and DL Will Echoles must keepGeorgiaoff schedule. Rebels QB Trinidad Chambliss and RB Kewan Lacy are just as good at keeping the chains moving, but LB C.J. Allen and the Bulldogs were all but immovable over the last month of the season.

WHO WINS?:Our experts make picks for the Sugar Bowl

Why it could disappoint:It shouldn't, although Georgia's dominant performance in its most recent outing in the SEC finale might have opposing fans nervous. Having been in action more recently could work to the Rebels' advantage given their unusual coaching circumstances.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:College football bowl games today schedule has three CFP matchups

Bowl game schedule today: Breaking down the College Football Playoff matchups on Jan. 1

TheCollege Football Playoffresumes Thursday with a New Year's Day tripleheader, a lineup that features some of the s...
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...

 

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