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LAS VEGAS — World Series-winning general manager James Click said Tuesday he is in talks with the Houston Astros on a new contract but has not yet come to an agreement with the organization, leaving the architect of baseball’s champion in limbo as the offseason begins.

Click’s contract expired Oct. 31, during the World Series in which the Astros beat the Philadelphia Phillies in six games. He refuted a USA Today report that said he had agreed to a one-year deal, telling reporters: “We are having discussions right now. I think anytime that you’re having discussions it means that it’s not complete.”

Click said he discussed a potential contract with Astros owner Jim Crane on Monday in the hours between the team’s championship parade and his flight here for the annual General Managers Meetings. The Astros called a press conference for Wednesday afternoon, which Click said he found out about “recently” after the team announced it, during which they’re expected to announce a contract extension for manager Dusty Baker. When asked if Click planned to be a part of the press conference, he said: “I am planning to be here trying to put together the team for next year.”

Click, 44, joined the Astros after they fired general manager Jeff Luhnow in 2020 following revelations that their 2017 championship team engaged in a sign-stealing scheme. In his first GM job, Click inherited a talented team that was teetering in the wake of the scandal and helped stabilize the Astros, who declined comment through a spokesperson when reached by ESPN.

Philosophical differences between him and Crane left multiple Astros front-office employees concerned about whether Click would return, sources told ESPN. Despite a World Series appearance in 2021, Click entered this season as a lame duck. Crane has leaned increasingly on advisors Jeff Bagwell and Reggie Jackson, both Hall of Fame players, according to sources. At the trade deadline this year, ESPN reported earlier this week, Crane spiked an agreed-upon trade that would have landed the Astros catcher Willson Contreras from the Chicago Cubs for right-handed starter Jose Urquidy.

“We’re different,” Click said. “Jim is — well, look, let me clarify. There’s some things that we do very differently. There’s some things that we are very lined up on and that’s gonna be true of any relationship between a boss and an employee. I think he likes to act very quickly. In certain cases, I tend toward a more deliberate approach. He is very demanding, but he also gives you the resources to accomplish what he tasks you to do.”

Click said he was not under the impression that Wednesday’s press conference would serve as a deadline for him negotiating a new contract. His old deal, he said, converted into at-will employment status, allowing him to leave the Astros’ job for another team. Click said he would prefer the situation not devolve into that.

“I’m optimistic,” he said. “My family is very happy in Houston. We’ve settled in. I really love the town. The diversity is amazing. I thought honestly during the parade, one of the most standout things to me was just the crowd, and it shows just what a global city Houston is and the culture that it has. It was on full display. The support that the town has, I’ve never been a part of anything like that. It was addictive. And my wife and I are really, really happy that our kids are happy. We feel very settled. I’m really hopeful to be back.”

Rarely do World Series-winning general managers not return in the aftermath of their victories. And even more rarely do they leave of their own volition. Former Astros assistant GM David Stearns stepped down from his role as president of baseball operations with the Milwaukee Brewers in late October, and though he remains under contract with the team, he is an exception. Perhaps the closest analog to Click, if he can’t come to an agreement, would be Alex Anthopoulos, the longtime Toronto Blue Jays GM who left the organization after it hired Mark Shapiro as team president.

“The opportunity to work with the people in the Astros organization,” Click said, “the opportunity to be part of that culture in that clubhouse to be around the players, the caliber of players that we have, is almost impossible to find. … In any job there’s going to be things that are good and there’s gonna be things that are bad. You just have to take it all on balance.”

Click declined to say what he was seeking in a contract, whether it was multiple years or more autonomy over baseball-operations decisions. Running a team with Crane’s involvement is an experience unlike his only other job in baseball, with the Tampa Bay Rays, whose owner, Stu Sternberg, is far more hands-off.

“I only have one other owner to compare it to,” Click said, “and it’s a little different than that guy.”

The uncertainty didn’t seem to faze Click, who joined his contemporaries during a media session at Resorts World Las Vegas, where the GM Meetings are being held before free agency starts in earnest Thursday. Until then, free agents are only allowed to re-sign with their current teams.

The Astros will have plenty to do this winter, with ace Justin Verlander, first baseman Yuli Gurriel and outfielder Michael Brantley among their free agents. Though the Astros would welcome Verlander back, Click said, the soon-to-be-40-year-old, who is expected to win the American League Cy Young Award, will be coveted among contending teams.

Whether Click will be around to even pursue Verlander remains in question. But coming off Saturday’s championship and the ensuing celebrations, Click came to Las Vegas with a plan regardless of his employment status. “I’m on a hot streak,” he said. “Figure I’ll go hit the tables.”

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‘Just getting started’: Gators knock off Rebels

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'Just getting started': Gators knock off Rebels

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Coach Billy Napier and his team did something no one at Florida had done in nearly two decades. It could be the turning point for a once-proud program that clearly slipped in recent years.

DJ Lagway threw two touchdown passes, Montrell Johnson ran for 127 yards and a score, and the Gators upset No. 9 Mississippi 24-17 on Saturday to knock the Rebels out of College Football Playoff contention.

Florida (6-5, 4-4 SEC), which topped LSU last Saturday in the Swamp, beat ranked teams in consecutive weeks for the first time since 2008.

“We’re just getting started,” said Napier, who is expected back for a fourth season in 2025. “This is part of the big-picture journey. Belief is the most powerful thing in the world.”

It marked Florida’s second-largest upset win in the past 45 seasons, behind a victory at No. 16 LSU in 2016 (14-point underdogs). It also was the Gators’ first win as a double-digit home underdog in the past 45 seasons.

Ole Miss (8-3, 4-3), which closed as a 13.5-point favorite at ESPN BET, lost for the first time in four games and surely will drop out of the 12-team playoff picture. The Rebels ranked ninth in the latest CFP rankings and needed only to avoid stumbling down the stretch against Florida and lowly Mississippi State to clinch a spot in the playoff field.

“Obviously a lot was at stake, and we didn’t come through,” coach Lane Kiffin said. “A lot of missed opportunities.”

Kiffin’s team had a miscue-filled day: 0-for-3 on trips inside the red zone; a season-high three turnovers; 3-for-14 on third downs; and a season-high five dropped passes despite perfect weather.

“Very unusual,” Kiffin said.

Still, Ole Miss had chances late. But Jaxson Dart threw interceptions to end the team’s last two drives. Bryce Thornton, beaten for a touchdown in the first half, picked off both. The second one came with 17 seconds remaining and set up a raucous celebration by defenders in the end zone.

Dart completed 24 of 41 passes for 323 yards, with two TDs and the two picks. He was sacked four times and also scrambled 14 times for a team-high 71 yards.

“You look at the way we played, we had a chip on our shoulder for sure,” Florida defensive tackle Cam Jackson said.

Dart, meanwhile, apologized for the performance.

“I’m sorry. I’m sorry to my teammates. I’m sorry to my coaches. Sorry for the fans,” he said. “Can’t lose these games. This one’s going to hurt for a really long time. That’s all I can really say. I’m sorry.”

The Rebels probably would have had a comfortable lead had it not been for repeated failures inside the 20-yard line. Defensive tackle J.J. Pegues, a 325-pound wrecking ball out of the backfield, was stopped on two fourth-down runs inside the 20-yard line, and Caden Davis missed a 34-yard field goal in the second quarter.

Ole Miss’ drops were egregious, including at least three that probably would have been touchdowns.

Florida was much more efficient. Lagway completed 10 of 17 passes for 180 yards, with an interception. He made three throws with defenders draped all over him.

“Those were the plays of the game,” Napier said.

Johnson had a few of those, too. His 9-yard scoring run from the Wildcat formation was huge and came after he missed most of the past four games.

“I focused on grinding and trying to work my way back,” Johnson said. “Last week I got a couple carries, and this week I shot to the moon.”

Information from ESPN Research and The Associated Press was used in this report.

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Cignetti: ‘So obvious’ Indiana still playoff worthy

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Cignetti: 'So obvious' Indiana still playoff worthy

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Indiana coach Curt Cignetti didn’t think he needed to say it. Following Saturday’s 38-15 loss at Ohio State, do his upstart Hoosiers still belong in the 12-team playoff?

“Is that a serious question?” Cignetti responded defiantly. “I’m not even going to answer that one. The answer’s so obvious.”

Cignetti then smiled and nodded yes with a wink before exiting the postgame podium.

Tuesday will reveal whether the playoff selection committee agrees.

Indiana’s potential inclusion — or exclusion — figures to be the most controversial playoff storyline ahead of the final week of the regular season.

Before traveling to Columbus, the fifth-ranked Hoosiers (10-1) had been one of the most dominant teams in the country, reaching double-digit wins for the first time in program history.

They also became the first team since 1998 to start 8-0 without trailing once. All but one of the Hoosiers’ wins came by at least two touchdowns.

But the Hoosiers, who face 1-10 in-state rival Purdue next weekend, will finish without a top-25 win. Indiana’s strength of schedule ranked just 106th coming into the Ohio State game.

The Hoosiers scored a touchdown on their opening drive to take their first lead over Ohio State in five years.

But the Buckeyes rolled the rest of the way, holding Indiana to just 53 yards in the first half, its lowest total in a first half in 10 years, according to ESPN Research.

Ohio State led 31-7 before the teams traded meaningless touchdowns in the final two minutes. Hoosiers quarterback Kurtis Rourke, who was second nationally in QBR (88.1), completed just 8 of 18 passes for 68 yards while taking five sacks.

“We couldn’t protect the quarterback,” Cignetti said. “Every time we dropped back to pass, something bad happened. … It was like a nightmare.”

Special teams proved to be nightmarish for the Hoosiers, as well.

Just before halftime, Indiana punter James Evans mishandled the snap and was tackled at the Hoosiers’ 7-yard line. The Buckeyes punched the ball in the end zone three plays later to take a 14-7 lead into half.

Then, following an Indiana three-and-out to begin the third quarter, Ohio State’s Caleb Downs returned a punt 79 yards for a touchdown to ignite the onslaught. Indiana fell to 1-71 all time against AP top-five opponents, according to ESPN Research.

“We didn’t handle the noise very well,” Cignetti said of playing in Ohio Stadium. “We didn’t play our best game today. But I think a big part of that was because of them.”

The Hoosiers did get some help later Saturday afternoon.

Florida knocked off Ole Miss 24-17, effectively removing the ninth-ranked Rebels (8-3) from the playoff conversation. But both the Big 12 and ACC could have multiple teams vying for playoff consideration.

Still, Rourke said he believes Indiana’s overall body of work should show that the Hoosiers are worthy of an at-large playoff bid.

“I hope so. We trust ourselves against anybody,” said Rourke, adding that he hopes to get a rematch with Ohio State “at some point” in the playoffs.

“Next week is a big game,” Rourke said. “We’ve got to go handle Purdue, and then move on take one game at a time.”

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SMU clinches ACC title berth in debut season

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SMU clinches ACC title berth in debut season

SMU clinched a spot in the ACC championship game after a 33-7 win over Virginia on Saturday, becoming the first team in league history to make the title game in its first season.

The Mustangs do not have an opponent yet. Miami (10-1, 6-1) must beat Syracuse next weekend to clinch its spot. A loss means Clemson, which has already finished league play at 7-1, would make it to Charlotte.

SMU came into the league off great success in the American Athletic Conference, winning the league a year ago. But no team has done what the Mustangs have done in Year 1, making the transition from Group of 5 to Power 4.

The ACC championship game has been around since 2005, and now in the 20th anniversary of the game, SMU has made history.

“It’s hard to win 10 games, it’s hard to do something that’s never been done before,” coach Rhett Lashlee said. “No one’s ever moved from a small conference to a power conference and gone to the championship game in their first year. Just really proud of our guys.”

SMU joined the ACC in its quest to return to a power conference, and in doing so, agreed to take no television revenue from the ACC for nine years. They were a team on a mission from the very start, eager to prove they belonged on this level.

SMU has been a different team since turning to Kevin Jennings as its starting quarterback after three games. Jennings is 8-0 as a starter and has helped SMU to a 7-0 ACC record — the only team that is undefeated in league play. Against Virginia, Jennings went 25-of-33 for 323 yards with a touchdown and interception.

Lashlee signed a contract extension with the school Friday, reaffirming his commitment to being with the Mustangs for the long term. Despite its ACC dominance, SMU remains on the outside looking in, based on the latest College Football Playoff selection committee rankings.

If SMU wins the ACC, the Mustangs would be a lock to make it into the CFP. Another loss could mean the end of their playoff hopes. SMU closes the regular season against California next Saturday.

Lashlee grew emotional discussing how far his team has come this season.

“I’m really proud of them. I had this thought Friday, I’m going to miss a lot of these guys,” Lashlee said before pausing to gather himself. “It’s a fun group. They love playing together. They love playing for each other. They love playing for SMU. They don’t care who gets the credit. I think that’s why they win. It’s special. I’m just a lucky guy who gets to be their coach.”

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