ACC football transfer portal tracker live updates: Who's on the move?

College football's version of free agency has changed the sport, and there have been changes to the transfer portal itself this winter.

The portal period now runs from Jan. 2-16, with an extra five-day window (Jan. 20-24) for teams playing in the national championship. Thespring portal window in April is no longera part of the schedule, so January is the only open window for teams to add via the portal in 2026.

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Here's a look at who is expected to be on the move in the ACC this winter (players have either announced intention to transfer or it's been reported they will enter portal):

Note: Players who enter portal can return to their respective schools.

Boston College

  • TE Stevie Amar

  • LB Jason Hewlett

  • TE Ty Lockwood

  • QB Dylan Lonegran

  • CB Ashton McShane

  • RB Turbo Richard

  • DL Sterling Sanders

  • S Omar Thornton

  • QB Devin Brown

  • EDGE TJ Bush

  • QB EJ Caminong

  • LB Luke Ferrelli

  • LB Buom Jock

  • LB Curlee Thomas

'I believe in Cal.'Freshman star QB Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele won't enter portal

Clemson

  • RB Keith Adams Jr.

  • LB Jamal Anderson

  • DB Khalil Barnes

  • LB Dee Crayton

  • ATH Marquise Henderson

  • CB Shelton Lewis

Duke

  • TE Vance Bolyard

  • CB Vontae Floyd

  • RB Peyton Jones

  • S Kenzy Paul

  • DT Terry Simmons

  • OL Jack Small

  • S Maliki Wright

Florida State

  • S Ashlynd Barker

  • DB Cai Bates

  • WR Jayvan Boggs

  • DL Tyeland Coleman

  • RB Kam Davis

  • TE Luke Douglas

  • DL Jamorie Flagg

  • WR Camdon Frier

  • QB Brock Glenn

  • LB Omar Graham

  • DT L A Jessie Harrold

  • OL Tye Hylton

  • OL Manasse Itete

  • DL Jayson Jenkins

  • DE Jaden Jones

  • DB Edwin Joseph

  • RB Jaylin Lucas

  • OT Mario Nash Jr.

  • LB Jayden Parrish

  • TE Randy Pittman Jr.

  • DB Ja'Bril Rawls

  • RB Gavin Sawchuk

  • OL Lucas Simmons

  • WR Willy Suarez

  • DB Smoke White

Georgia Tech

  • QB Aaron Philo

Louisville

  • QB Deuce Adams

  • QB Brady Allen

  • RB Shaun Boykins Jr.

  • RB Isaac Brown

  • EDGE AJ Green

  • TE Nate Kurisky

  • DB Daeh McCullough

  • RB Duke Watson

Miami

  • WR Ny Carr

  • WR Ray Ray Joseph

  • WR Chance Robinson

  • DL Daylen Russell

  • TE Brock Schott

  • DL Donta Simpson

  • S Markeith Williams

NC State

  • WR Terrell Anderson

  • LB Elijah Groves

  • WR Noah Rogers

  • RB Hollywood Smothers

  • EDGE Justin Terrell

  • WR Christian Zachary

North Carolina

  • QB Bryce Baker

  • WR Paul Billups

  • OT William Boone

  • CB Khalil Conley

  • WR Chris Culliver

  • WR Javarius Green

  • OL Trevyon Green

  • LB Khmori House

  • WR Aziah Johnson

  • TE Jake Johnson

  • QB Max Johnson

  • OT Miles McVay

  • OL Jani Norwood

  • WR Jason Robinson

  • TE Yasir Smith

  • LB Tyler Thompson

  • WR Kenedy Uzoma

  • CB Ty White

  • DB Malcolm Ziglar

Pittsburgh

  • S Jesse Anderson

  • LB Rasheem Biles

  • WR Zion Fowler

  • RB Juelz Goff

  • QB Eli Holstein

  • DL Omari Abor

  • LB Kyle Ferm

  • OL King Large

  • EDGE DJ Warner

Stanford

  • OT Jack Leyrer

  • WR Myles Libman

  • WR Jason Thompson

Syracuse

  • WR Johntay Cook

  • WR Darrell Gill

  • LB James Heard

  • EDGE Derek McDonald

  • S Kaylib Singleton

  • QB Jakhari Williams

  • RB Yasin Willis

Virginia

  • EDGE Mekhi Buchanan

  • WR Suderian Harrison

  • CB Ja'son Prevard

  • CB Dre Walker

  • OL Tyshawn Wyatt

Virginia Tech

  • EDGE Keyshawn Burgos

  • LB James Djonkam

  • DB Christian Ellis

  • WR Tucker Holloway

  • CB Dante Lovett Jr. (Memphis)

  • QB Garret Rangel

  • LB Michael Short

  • QB Pop Watson

Wake Forest

  • WR Chris Barnes

  • RB Tate Carney

  • EDGE Cole Funderburk

  • WR Ben Grice

  • DL Mateen Ibirogba

  • TE Harry Lodge

  • WR Micah Mays

  • QB Elijiah Oehlke

  • OT Nathan Pahanich

  • WR Elijah Reid

  • WR Reginald Vick

When does college football transfer portal open?

The portal period now runs from Jan. 2-16, with an extra five-day window (Jan. 20-24) for teams playing in the national championship. Thespring portal window in April is no longera part of the schedule, so January is the only open window for teams to add via the portal in 2026.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:ACC football transfer portal tracker: Updates for players on move

ACC football transfer portal tracker live updates: Who's on the move?

College football's version of free agency has changed the sport, and there have been changes to the transfer por...
Patriots ignite scrutiny with handling of Stefon Diggs, Christian Barmore | Opinion

Just when it seemed theNew England Patriotswere riding the perfect, storybook wave of momentum toward their return to theNFL playoffs, stuff hits the fan.

Look at Stefon Diggs. Accused of smacking his former chef and trying to choke her during an alleged Dec. 2 incident as a beef over apparent back pay escalated. Really? The go-to receiver is facing a felony charge for strangulation or suffocation.

Consider Christian Barmore. Accused of throwing the mother of his 2-year-old child to the floor and issuing threats during an alleged Aug. 8 argument that stemmed from disagreements about the room temperature and that she was making food. Seriously? The 315-pound defensive tackle is facing a misdemeanor charge of domestic assault and battery.

Two key players, two rounds of allegations that they committed heinous crimes surfaced on back-to-back days this week. Bad timing. Bad optics. The NFL had enough regular season-finale plotlines to set up Week 18, but as 2025 transitioned to 2026, thePatriotshave another version of in-with-the-new drama.

At this point, as Patriots coach Mike Vrabel insisted, they are allegations. Attorneys representing both players have flatly denied the accusations.

"We've made a statement, we've taken the allegations very seriously, and what comes of that, I think then we'll have another discussion," Vrabel said during a midweek news conference. "But I don't think we have to jump to any sort of conclusions right now and let the process take its toll."

Of course, Vrabel has a vested interest in keeping the players on the field. This isn't to question the coach's integrity. Trumped-up allegations happen. Yet it sure sounds like the Patriots might have jumped to some conclusions.

In their Tuesday statement, the team said, "We support Stefon."

In the Wednesday statement, the team indicated that it was aware of the incident involving Barmore shortly after it occurred. Yet apparently, the team reached the conclusion that whatever happened wasn't serious enough to remove a key player from the lineup.

Which reminds me: In 1996, the Patriots renounced their rights to fifth-round defensive tackle Christian Peter a week after drafting him because Myra Kraft, wife of the team owner, learned of Peter's history of violence against women and insisted as much while backlash from women's groups mounted. Early in Robert Kraft's ownership, it set a tone for the Patriots standards.

That was a long time ago. Myra, bless her, passed in 2011.

Then again, as Vrabel maintains, these are allegations. It's just that the nature of the allegations are disturbing enough to raise red flags. Yet unlikethe assault on a fan by Pittsburgh Steelers receiver DK Metcalfthat was captured on video andresulted in a two-game suspension, it's difficult to assess when there's no apparent evidence (at least in Diggs' case).

You might think Roger Goodell – no stranger to managing sticky fallout from domestic violence cases – would step right in and take the players off the field and put them on the Commissioner's exempt list while the legal process plays out.

Indeed, that's a possibility – just not this week, with the worst-to-first Patriots (13-3) hosting theMiami Dolphinson Sunday.

According to the fine print of the NFL's personal conduct policy, a player can be placed on the exempt list, which amounts to a paid leave of absence, when formal charges for a felony or violent crime are forwarded with a grand jury indictment, charges by a prosecutor or an arraignment in a criminal court.

Diggs is scheduled to be arraigned Jan. 23 – two days before the AFC title game.

Barmore has an arraignment date of Feb. 3 – five days before Super Bowl 60.

Of course, there's no guarantee the Patriots will advance to the AFC Championship Game or the franchise's first Super Bowl since the Tom Brady era. But the way things have gone this season, you can't call it a pipe dream.

Vrabel returned to jolt New England to prominence ASAP, illustrating just how impactful the right coach in the right situation can be. New England was 4-13 inJerod Mayo's only campaignas Bill Belichick's successor in 2024. Now the Patriots have a chance to seize the No. 1 seed in the AFC playoffs. And while Drake Maye has blossomed into an MVP candidate in his second season – with Diggs assisting that effort with big plays and big leadership – the Patriots snapped Buffalo's streak of five consecutive AFC East titles.

None of that, however, should matter when weighing the status of Diggs and Barmore.

And no, Goodell doesn't have to wait on the arraignment dates to make a call. There's also fine print in that same personal conduct policy that stipulates a player can be placed on the exempt list on a limited, temporary basis to allow time for the league to conduct a preliminary investigation of an alleged crime of violence.

So, what's happening with that feature of the policy in these cases?

In the allegations against Barmore, first reported by Boston-area television station WCVB, the police report includes photographs the woman provided of her bruises. And the Patriots were aware of the incident back in August? Hmmm.

The team apparently had no qualms about putting him on the field. It makes you wonder what type of evidence is needed – an elevator video, maybe – to have some domestic violence cases hit home.

"Again, allegations," Vrabel said, "and we want to make sure that the court – that those ongoing court proceedings – and once those are satisfied, then we'll come to whatever decision that we have to make."

It's a decision that goes far beyond the Patriots. Sure, there are nuances.

In the allegations against Diggs, there are no photographs of bruises. No third-party witnesses. It seems to be a classic case of he-said, she-said. Does it matter that the apparent victim didn't alert police until Dec. 16 – two weeks after the incident – and didn't decide to press charges until Dec. 23?

Sometimes, it takes a while for victims to come forward. And in this case, there are discussions about a potential monetary settlement.

In the meantime, Vrabel insists the fresh revelations are not a distraction for his team.

Yeah, right. No, it shouldn't interfere with game-planning and practices. Yet the timing of this is less than ideal for the Patriots, with the playoffs looming. And there's still some level of energy expended on this by the participants and others inside the organization. So, distraction or not, it's not exactly business as usual – at least not for everyone.

Said Vrabel, "It's things we have to handle, and every day there's distractions, some are smaller than others."

It's just that this developing issue has the potential of growing into a much bigger distraction for the Patriots – complete with bad optics.

Contact Jarrett Bell atjbell@usatoday.comor follow on X:@JarrettBell

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Patriots' handling of Stefon Diggs, Christian Barmore raises concerns

Patriots ignite scrutiny with handling of Stefon Diggs, Christian Barmore | Opinion

Just when it seemed theNew England Patriotswere riding the perfect, storybook wave of momentum toward their return to th...
Bowl game schedule today: Previewing the four college football matchups on Jan. 2

With 2026 now officially underway, thecollege football seasonis nearly at its end. But before we wrap things up in the Bowl Subdivision with next week'sCollege Football Playoff semifinalsand the subsequent title game, we have one more full day of bowl games to enjoy.

If it's big-name programs you want, Friday's lineup might not appeal to you. But the slate does feature a couple of squads inthe US LBM Coaches Poll, as well as some of the nation's premier academic institutions. One of the prime-time contests will hopefully live up to our placement in the bowl rankings – several of which, we freely admit, were wildly off the mark. Here are the Friday bowl offerings.

Armed Forces Bowl: Texas State vs. Rice

Time/TV:1 p.m. ET, ESPN in Fort Worth, Texas.

Why watch:The last full day of the bowl season kicks off with a pair of Lone Star State squads without much shared history. These same two teams did, however, square off in the First Responder Bowl two years ago, with theBobcatstaking a 45-21 decision. The 2025 campaign wasn't a huge success for either program, but both should enjoy this opportunity. Unfortunately, Owls starting QB Chase Jenkins and backup Drew Devillier have announced plans to transfer, meaning either Lucas Scheerhorn or Patrick Crayton Jr., both little-used freshmen, will be pressed into service. The Bobcats should have most of their primary contributors, including QB Brad Jackson and WRs Beau Sparks and Chris Dawn.

Why it could disappoint:Texas State generates a ton of long scoring plays, and the Owls tend to give them up. That certainly looks ominous from a competitive standpoint.

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

Liberty Bowl: No. 25 Navy vs. Cincinnati

Time/TV:4:30 p.m. ET, ESPN in Memphis, Tenn.

Why watch:With a double-digit win season and the Commander in Chief's Trophy secured, the Midshipmen have one more goal to attain, a Top 25 ranking to finish the campaign. The Bearcats briefly cracked the poll themselves this fall before closing the year on a four-game skid. Cincinnati QB Brendan Sorsby is in the portal, so the start will go to Brady Lichtenberg, who has attempted just six passes but completed four of them. Navy QB Blake Horvath will look to close out his outstanding career on a high note, with help as usual from RB Alex Tecza and SB Eli Heidenreich.

Why it could disappoint:It shouldn't. Even with most of its regular lineup, Navy doesn't usually win with wide margins but by executing better in the details. Expect a close one here.

Duke's Mayo Bowl: Wake Forest vs. Mississippi State

Time/TV:8 p.m. ET, ESPN in Charlotte, N.C.

Why watch:Year one in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, under Jake Dickert unquestionably exceeded expectations. TheDemon Deaconsnow look to close out the year by giving their new head coach a mayo bath. TheBulldogsmanaged just one victory in SEC play but were within a score on a couple other occasions. Wake QB Robby Ashford wasn't always an accurate passer but usually got the ball where it needed to go. He will be without draft-bound RB Demond Claiborne and breakout WR Chris Barnes who is in the portal. The Mississippi State offense will be in the hands of freshman Kamario Taylor, who didn't have much luck in his Egg Bowl start against Ole Miss but does have some speedy weapons at his disposal.

Why it could disappoint:Wake's most significant strides this fall were on the defensive side, which was demonstrably not the case for the Bulldogs. Miss State could win a shootout, so it might behoove the Deacons to moderate the tempo.

Holiday Bowl: No. 20 Arizona vs. SMU

Time/TV:8 p.m. ET, Fox in San Diego.

Why watch:The non-playoff bowl calendar closes in – usually – sunny San Diego, where the Wildcats and Mustangs could put on an offensive show. Both teams should have most of their top producers participating. Arizona QB Noah Fifita threw for 2,963 yards and 26 TDs, with WR Kris Hutson serving as primary target and RB Ismail Mahdi leading the ground game. SMU counters with QB Kevin Jennings, who also has 26 scoring tosses but twice as many picks with 10 on the season. He spreads the ball well, but TE Matthew Hibner is a valuable weapon in the red zone.

Why it could disappoint:We hope this one delivers the goods, but both teams have opportunistic defenses that thrive on takeaways. It might get away if those occur early, as happened to SMU in last year's playoff appearance.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:College football bowl games today schedule features four matchups

Bowl game schedule today: Previewing the four college football matchups on Jan. 2

With 2026 now officially underway, thecollege football seasonis nearly at its end. But before we wrap things up in the B...
Kawhi Leonard's 45 points with bloodied nose lead Clippers to 6th straight win, 118-101 over Jazz

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Kawhi Leonard scored 45 points, James Harden added 20 and the Los Angeles Clippers recovered from blowing a 21-point lead to beat the Utah Jazz 118-101 on Thursday night, extending their winning streak to a season-best six games.

Leonard was the only Clippers starter on the floor for much of the fourth quarter. He singlehandedly matched Utah's points in the period (20), with blood on his nose from what appeared to be a scratch.

Los Angeles hit seven straight 3-pointers, with Leonard making four, to pull away. Nicolas Batum finished with 14 points and went 4 of 6 from 3-point range.

The Jazz rallied despite being without three starters. They were led by reserve Kyle Anderson with 22 points — his first 20-point game in nearly three years — and Brice Sensabaugh with 20. Anderson's eight rebounds were a season high. Cody Williams had 18 points, while Isaiah Collier added 16 points and 10 assists.

The game was tied six times in the third period, when Utah took its first lead.

The Clippers outscored Utah 28-7 to start the game. The Jazz missed their first six shots and had one rebound in the first six minutes.

Utah outscored the Clippers 33-22 in the second — when Leonard scored LA's first nine points — to trail 53-50 at halftime.

Utah played without Keyonte George (illness), Lauri Markkanen (knee) and Jusuf Nurkic (toe). The Jazz have dropped six of eight.

The Jazz had 58 points in the paint and their bench outscored the Clippers' reserves 51-40.

Jazz: Visit the Golden State Warriors on Saturday.

Clippers: Host the Boston Celtics on Saturday.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/NBA

Kawhi Leonard's 45 points with bloodied nose lead Clippers to 6th straight win, 118-101 over Jazz

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Kawhi Leonard scored 45 points, James Harden added 20 and the Los Angeles Clippers recovered fr...
Ole Miss-Georgia Sugar Bowl thriller ends with delayed celebrations as officials demand last second be played

Ole Misshad to delay the celebration for their 39-34 Sugar Bowl victory over Georgia multiple times on Thursday night.

After kicking a go-ahead field goal with six seconds left, Ole Miss was awarded a safety on its final kickoff when Georgia's return team tried a cross-field lateral that hit the pylon. Players and coaches began to rush the field in celebration, before having to return to the sideline as officialsdemanded Georgiakick off with one second remaining.

Georgia then recovered an onside kick, falling on the ball to preserve the final second. Ole Miss players and coaches again began to celebrate, believing the game had ended there.

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Kewan Lacy

Ole Miss Head coach Pete Golding was even doused in a Gatorade bath. However, officials again demanded the final second be played, and stadium staff even began to push the winner's stage onto the field, before having to push it back to clear space for the final play.

Georgia ran one more play in which they executed numerous laterals before the play fizzled after dozens of seconds, before Ole Miss could finally celebrate their CFP victory.

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The win sent Ole Miss (13-1, CFP No. 6 seed) on to asemifinal against Miamiin the Fiesta Bowl next Thursday.

Kicking off on the heels of two lopsided CFP quarterfinals at the Orange and Rose bowls, the Sugar Bowl provided drama until the end.

Former Espn Star Blasts Ole Miss After Pete Golding Revealed As Lane Kiffin's Chosen Successor

After seeing a 21-12 halftime lead turn into a 34-24 deficit with 9:02 to play,Georgia (12-2, CFP No. 3 seed)rallied to tie it, first driving for Gunner Stockton's 18-yard TD pass to Zachariah Branch before Peyton Woodring's short field goal tied it with 55 seconds left in regulation.

Ole Miss quarterback Trinidad Chambliss responded by setting up the winning kick with a 40-yard pass to De'Zhaun Stribling on third down from Mississippi's own 30-yard line. A few plays later, kicker Lucas Carneiro, who'd already broken Sugar Bowl records with field goals of 55 and 56 yards, hit from 47 and sprinted triumphantly toward the Ole Miss sideline as the Rebels jubilantly swarmed around him.

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Trinidad Chambliss

Harrison Wallace III caught nine passed for 156 yards and one TD, Stribling finished with seven catches for 122 yards, Kewan Lacy rushed for 98 yards and two TDs, and the Rebels outgained the Bulldogs 473 yards to 343.

Stockton passed for 203 yards and one touchdown, and also ran for two scores.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Original article source:Ole Miss-Georgia Sugar Bowl thriller ends with delayed celebrations as officials demand last second be played

Ole Miss-Georgia Sugar Bowl thriller ends with delayed celebrations as officials demand last second be played

Ole Misshad to delay the celebration for their 39-34 Sugar Bowl victory over Georgia multiple times on Thursday night. ...

 

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