Big 12 spring preview: A year of change and unpredictability
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3 years agoon
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Bill Connelly
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Dave Wilson
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Dave Wilson
ESPN Staff Writer
- Dave Wilson is an editor for ESPN.com since 2010. He previously worked at The Dallas Morning News, San Diego Union-Tribune and Las Vegas Sun.
It’s a big year for the Big 12. After dropping to 10 football teams in 2011, the conference will balloon to 14 this year with the arrivals of BYU, Houston, UCF and Cincinnati, before once again matching up with its name next season when Texas and Oklahoma depart to the SEC to make it a nice, round 12-team league again.
Of course, given that realignment never stops, that could be only temporary. But that’s not why we’re here today. We’re here to try to make some sense of a league that saw its 2021 title-game participants (Baylor and Oklahoma State) combine to go 13-13 last season. It saw a 5-7 team, TCU, start 12-0 under a new coach, before Kansas State stopped it to win the league championship (a year after the Wildcats went 4-5 in the conference).
What we’re saying is this conference is wholly unpredictable, which makes it fun to predict. What we know is Texas and Oklahoma are going on a farewell tour and the teams are sure to hear about it from fans, while the newcomers are in search of new rivalries. The Longhorns and Sooners, as usual, signed stellar classes and are ready to try to battle for the top of the league. But like last year’s K-State team, there are sleepers with experience — like Texas Tech, perhaps?
As spring practices get rolling, Bill Connelly and Dave Wilson break down the top storyline and newcomer to watch for each team in the Big 12.

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Top storyline: The Bears followed an incredible 2021 league championship season by stumbling to a 6-7 finish, including a November stretch in which they went 1-3 and gave up 437 yards of offense per game — uncharacteristic struggles for a defensive-minded head coach like Dave Aranda. He responded by replacing Ron Roberts at defensive coordinator with Matt Powledge, who had been co-DC at Oregon for a season after serving as safeties and special teams coach at Baylor the previous two seasons. On offense, running back Richard Reese proved to be a great fit for offensive coordinator Jeff Grimes’ running attack, but Aranda opted for Blake Shapen over Gerry Bohanon at quarterback after last spring’s practices, leading to Bohanon’s transfer. Shapen threw for 2,709 yards and 18 touchdowns with 10 interceptions, but he finished under a 60% completion rate in four games, didn’t reach the 200-yard mark in six and threw for five TDs against four INTs in the Bears’ four straight losses to end the season. Transfer quarterback Sawyer Robertson from Mississippi State could push Shapen this spring, but Shapen will get every opportunity to improve.
Newcomer to watch: The Bears added a lot of heft up front in the Barrington brothers, offensive linemen from Spokane, Washington, who played at BYU. Campbell, a 6-foot-6, 295-pound junior, played in nine games last season and landed on several freshman All-America teams in 2021 after starting six games. But his brother Clark was a big prize for the Bears as they try to protect Shapen and reinvigorate the offense. The 6-6, 305-pound senior played in 46 games at BYU, starting 40, including all 13 at left guard last season. He was an All-American in 2021 and was on the Outland Trophy watch list last preseason. — Wilson
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Top storyline: What changes will Jay Hill bring to the table? The former Weber State head coach takes over as defensive coordinator after Ilaisa Tuiaki’s resignation. After an excellent defensive performance in 2020, the Cougars’ defense fell off course in 2021, then completely collapsed in 2022, allowing 38 points per game and 7.2 yards per play in five losses. Hill built a defensive juggernaut in the Big Sky, and he takes over a unit that got wrecked by both injury and inconsistency. Twenty-six different players started at least one game, and while a majority of them return, actual playmakers need to emerge. Nickel back Max Tooley, perhaps? Linebacker Ben Bywater? This collapse came at a terrible time, with the Cougars’ move to the Big 12, and Hill needs to find traction quickly.
Newcomer to watch: BYU’s immediate fortune in the Big 12 will be determined by not only Hill, but also quarterback Kedon Slovis. The senior has thrown for 9,973 career yards and 68 touchdowns in starting stints at both USC and Pitt, and now he’ll wrap up his career in Provo, throwing to intriguing weapons such as Keanu Hill and slot man Kody Epps. — Connelly
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Top storyline: Luke Fickell took Cincinnati to great heights in part by creating a wonderfully stable and steady environment, but now, with Fickell off to Wisconsin, change is everywhere you look. Former Louisville head coach Scott Satterfield takes over and brings defensive coordinator Bryan Brown with him, while Brad Glenn, most recently of Georgia State and Virginia Tech, takes over as offensive coordinator. Satterfield hit the transfer portal pretty hard, bringing in 15 new players and counting, and basically everything you thought you knew about the UC program is now going to change, for better or worse.
Newcomer to watch: Emory Jones is making a two-man quarterback battle a three-way race. The former Florida and Arizona State starter will battle incumbent Ben Bryant and former blue-chipper Evan Prater; Glenn made the most of mobile QBs at Georgia State, which could make either Jones or Prater an intriguing option, but Bryant threw for 2,732 yards and 21 TDs last season. This is a difficult battle to handicap. — Connelly
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Top storyline: After being left behind in the wreckage of the Southwest Conference, Houston has finally completed its journey to the Power 5, landing in the Big 12 and facing off against five old SWC foes (including the annual nonconference rivalry game against Rice). But coach Dana Holgorsen, who knows the league from his time at West Virginia, is facing a challenge, replacing quarterback Clayton Tune and All-American wideout Nathaniel Dell, while also sorting out offensive and playcalling duties with the departure of trusted assistant Shannon Dawson (who went to Miami). Eman Naghavi joins Houston’s staff from Tulane to serve as run game coordinator/offensive line coach, and Holgorsen said that “we’re going to experiment with everything” when it comes to who calls plays.
Newcomer to watch: Donovan Smith, a 6-5, 230-pound junior quarterback, beat Houston as Texas Tech’s quarterback early last season — throwing for 350 yards and two touchdowns in a 33-30 double-overtime win in September. He transferred to the Cougars after playing in 23 games with eight starts in the past two seasons for the Red Raiders. He threw for 2,686 yards and 19 TDs to 10 INTs in that span, completing 64.2% of his passes. With Clayton Tune graduating, Smith will push sophomore Lucas Coley for the starting job along with true freshman Caleb McMickle. — Wilson
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Top storyline: After earning a reputation as an overachiever and a coach on the rise, Matt Campbell and the Cyclones suffered through a disappointing 2022, going 4-8 and 1-8 in conference, followed by a sizable shakeup of Campbell’s staff. Iowa State finished 114th in scoring offense last season (20.2 points per game), 83rd in total offense and 116th in rushing offense, averaging just 3.3 yards per carry. Campbell made changes almost across the board on offense, moving Nate Scheelhaase, who has been with Campbell since 2018, from RB/WR coach to offensive coordinator. He’ll replace Tom Manning at the position, while the Cyclones also brought in a new strength staff and new coaches for the offensive line, running backs, wide receivers and special teams. But Campbell still expects ISU to play a pro-style attack. What that looks like with a bunch of new faces will be of interest given that the Cyclones had a top-20 national defense last year.
Newcomer to watch: J.J. Kohl, a 6-7, 230-pound quarterback from Ankeny, Iowa, committed to the Cyclones in April and held firm through their struggles and coaching changes (it helps that his father, Jamie, was an ISU kicker). But Kohl had plenty of suitors, including Michigan, which made a late push. Kohl’s commitment was a big boost for one of Campbell’s best recruiting classes, and the home-state star (Kohl was No. 118 in the ESPN 300 and the No. 8 pocket passer in the class) arrives as the backup to Hunter Dekkers. With changes afoot on offense, Kohl could stand to benefit. — Wilson
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Top storyline: After averaging 1.9 wins per year from 2010 to ’21, Kansas parlayed a 5-0 start into its first bowl appearance in 14 seasons. Coach Lance Leipold further burnished his culture-building bona fides, but he did it primarily on offense, where quarterbacks Jalon Daniels and Jason Bean combined to throw for 3,294 yards and rush for 641 more. The return of Daniels and running back Devin Neal should assure that KU’s offense remains thrilling and dangerous, but further growth will require far more from a defense that allowed 35.5 points per game and 6.2 yards per play last season. The linebacking corps and secondary will boast massive experience, but the biggest storyline of the spring will be whether this unit can actually support such a strong offense.
Newcomer to watch: Leipold brought in six defensive transfers, and with last year’s top three linemen gone, a strong spring from either 325-pound senior Devin Phillips (from Colorado State) or 280-pound sophomore Gage Keys (Minnesota) would be a welcome sight. — Connelly
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Top storyline: It’s all about unearthing playmakers for K-State this spring. The Wildcats will return a healthy core from last year’s Big 12 championship squad — quarterback Will Howard, an experienced and potentially spectacular offensive line, sturdy defensive seniors such as linebackers Austin Moore and Daniel Green — but they won 10 games and a ring in part because of explosive players such as running back Deuce Vaughn, receiver Malik Knowles, defensive end Felix Anudike-Uzomah and corner Julius Brents, all of whom are gone. It was a unique and special thing to have that many plus athletes without blue-chip recruiting, and now head coach Chris Klieman has to assemble another crew of explosive players.
Newcomer to watch: Florida State transfer Treshaun Ward could be exactly the type of Vaughn replacement the Wildcats need. The junior rushed for 1,143 yards at 6.5 per carry in 2021-22 and could become an immediate star. — Connelly
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Top storyline: The excitement of coach Brent Venables’ return to Oklahoma was quickly met with shock when the Sooners lost three straight games to begin conference play, including a 55-24 rout by TCU, followed by a woeful 49-0 loss to Texas. The Sooners finished the season 6-7, gave up 30.0 points per game (99th nationally) and went just 3-6 in the Big 12. Venables did rebound with a stellar recruiting class and landed some instant-impact transfers, but the Sooners will get every team’s best shot in their last trip through the conference in 2023, including what will likely be the last Bedlam game for the foreseeable future. There is talent on hand and the players have had time to adjust to the new staff. What will Year 2 bring?
Newcomer to watch: Dasan McCullough, a transfer from Indiana, will get a shot to man the same Cheetah role in Venables’ defense that turned Isaiah Simmons into a star at Clemson. The speedy linebacker is 6-5, 230-pounds and could be all over the field, saying recently that he’s also been working with the defensive backs and defensive ends. The son of Notre Dame running backs coach Deland McCullough, his brother Daeh signed with the Sooners as a four-star safety recruit this season. Dasan will bring much-needed production to a defense that struggled mightily last season, when he became a freshman All-American for the Hoosiers with 48 tackles (6.5 for loss), four sacks and three pass breakups. — Wilson
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Top storyline: After falling from 12-2 to 7-6 following a massive round of turnover, Mike Gundy must replace a few more headliners in 2023 — among them: quarterback Spencer Sanders, leading rusher Dominic Richardson, four of last year’s top five wideouts and defensive standouts such as linebacker Mason Cobb, edge rusher Brock Martin and safety Jason Taylor II. Gundy hit the transfer portal hard, especially in the search for offensive playmakers, and he pulled the ultimate Gundy move, handing the defensive reins to a small-school dynamo in former Gannon (Division II) defensive coordinator Bryan Nardo. Spring ball will help to determine whether this giant chemistry experiment can find immediate legs, or whether it’s going to take a while.
Newcomer to watch: On defense, Nardo is a fascinating choice, but the most important newcomer might be on the other side of the ball. After an injury-plagued time at Texas Tech and two years as a backup at Michigan, quarterback Alan Bowman elected to finish his career in Stillwater. Is he the right choice for succeeding Sanders? — Connelly
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Top storyline: Sonny Dykes took over a team that finished 5-7 in 2021 and went 13-2, with the two losses coming in the Big 12 championship and the College Football Playoff National Championship. Almost every major star from that brilliant run is gone to the NFL. QB Max Duggan, RB Kendre Miller and WR Quentin Johnston were a formidable trifecta, and Steve Avila was one of the country’s best offensive linemen. On defense, Dylan Horton (four sacks in the Fiesta Bowl against Michigan), Dee Winters and Tre’Vius Hodges-Tomlinson (the Thorpe Award winner) are gone. So Dykes has his work cut out for him. Players bought in and believed last year, building a strong foundation for the future. The Horned Frogs signed their highest-rated recruiting class in the modern era and landed transfers from Alabama, LSU, Florida and Oklahoma State to help replace those big losses. No pressure for an encore, right?
Newcomer to watch: New offensive coordinator Kendal Briles arrived from Arkansas to replace Garrett Riley, who departed for Clemson after winning the Broyles Award as the top assistant coach in college football last season. Enter Briles, whose name was a tough pill to swallow for many TCU fans because of his affiliation with Baylor and his father, Art, who was fired amid a sexual assault scandal in Waco in 2016. Briles stayed on under Jim Grobe at Baylor before becoming the OC at FAU for Lane Kiffin, then moving on to Houston with Major Applewhite, Florida State with Willie Taggart and working for Sam Pittman at Arkansas — where the Hogs ranked 35th nationally in scoring, averaging 32.5 points per game. At TCU, he’ll have to find a new quarterback to replace a Heisman finalist, replenish all those key players on offense and get them up to speed quickly. — Wilson
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Top storyline: Are the Longhorns ready for prime time? The roster is loaded. There are two top-five national recruits at quarterback in returning starter Quinn Ewers and Arch Manning, a 6-5 freshman with a big arm and a bigger name. The wide receiver corps was depleted last year with the injury to Isaiah Neyor, a transfer with big hopes, and this week’s revelation that Xavier Worthy played much of the season with a broken hand. Ja’Tavion Sanders will be a star at tight end. Georgia transfer AD Mitchell is a big addition as a 6-5 target who will complement Worthy, Jordan Whittington and the returning Neyor. On top of that, the young offensive line has key players to build around. On defense, Gary Patterson has gone back home to Fort Worth, and Sarkisian is worried about the pass rush. But the return of linebacker Jaylan Ford and the addition of freshman Anthony Hill could help the LB corps become a strength. A Sept. 9 trip to Tuscaloosa to face Alabama will be a huge benchmark for where Sark’s progress stands.
Newcomer to watch: Anthony Hill is a 6-2, 230-pound freshman who was ranked as the top linebacker in the country in the 2023 recruiting class and can play from sideline to sideline. The Horns have firepower all over the field on offense. For them to make serious noise this year, they’ll need the defense to make a leap, and Hill could see the field early and often with the graduations of DeMarvion Overshown and Diamonte Tucker-Dorsey. Hill, the No. 16 overall prospect in the ESPN 300, is a huge building block for the future. — Wilson
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Top storyline: Year 1 of the Joey McGuire era was a success in Lubbock, with him energizing the fan base and signing a top-25 recruiting class, all while beating Texas and Oklahoma in the same season. McGuire has 10 starters returning on offense, including quarterback Tyler Shough, the former Oregon transfer who started five games last season. He won all of them to move to 8-1 in his career as the starter at Tech. Shough had 353 total yards and was the MVP of the Texas Bowl in the Red Raiders’ 42-25 win over Ole Miss. In Year 2, can McGuire make a push to contend?
Newcomer to watch: With the departure of Tyree Wilson, who likely will be a top-10 pick in the NFL draft, the Red Raiders were searching for pass-rushers. Steve Linton, a 6-2, 225-pound outside linebacker/edge rusher, is a senior from Dublin, Georgia, who arrived via transfer from Syracuse, where he started 11 games last season and had 22 tackles (six for a loss) and 3.5 sacks. He has two seasons of eligibility left and could be a key contributor in Tim DeRuyter’s aggressive defensive scheme that averaged seven tackles for a loss per game last year — ranking the Red Raiders in the top 20 nationally. — Wilson
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Top storyline: After back-to-back nine-win seasons, third-year head coach Gus Malzahn is leading UCF’s big power-conference leap with a couple of new coordinators: Darin Hinshaw on offense (replacing North Carolina-bound Chip Lindsey) and Addison Williams on defense (replacing Arkansas-bound Travis Williams). Both have worked for Malzahn recently, and Hinshaw led an explosive, if inconsistent, offense at UAB last season. The Knights boast quite a bit of experience on both sides of the ball, so the spring will be a good opportunity to see exactly what Malzahn, Hinshaw and Williams are looking to change in moving to the Big 12. Will Williams look to get more aggressive? Will Hinshaw work as well with quarterback John Rhys Plumlee (2,586 passing yards, 862 rushing yards) as Lindsey did?
Newcomer to watch: Hinshaw is probably the best answer, though he’ll be leaning on some big newcomers — literally and figuratively — up front. UCF is replacing four starters on the offensive line, so Malzahn brought in four transfers, led by former Alabama blue-chipper Amari Kight and All-MAC tackle Marcellus Marshall. — Connelly
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Top storyline: What on earth happened to the defense last year (and can it be fixed)? After suffering quite a bit of offseason attrition and in-season injuries, the Mountaineers collapsed from 44th to 116th in scoring defense and gave up 42.7 points per game and 6.5 yards per play in their losses. Head coach Neal Brown kept coordinator Jordan Lesley and added a couple of key MAC DBs in corner Montre Miller (Kent State) and nickel Keyshawn Cobb (Buffalo). Was that enough change? Will young playmakers begin to emerge for Lesley this spring? Will turnover up front (three of last year’s top four linemen are gone) offset rich experience in the secondary? There are plenty of questions to ask of this suddenly dismal defense, and there’s no time like the present for finding answers.
Newcomer to watch: After losing coordinator Graham Harrell to Purdue, Brown promoted run-game coordinator Chad Scott as a replacement. Scott should like the run personnel he oversees, but quarterback JT Daniels and last year’s top four receivers are gone. The QB job will likely go to either of two internal choices (Garrett Greene or Nicco Marchiol), but Brown brought in receivers Devin Carter (NC State) and Ja’Shaun Poke (Kent State) and tight end Kole Taylor (LSU). They’ll need to produce immediately. — Connelly
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Sports
Who will hoist the Heisman in 2026? A way-too-early look
Published
1 hour agoon
December 14, 2025By
admin

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Mark SchlabachDec 13, 2025, 08:00 PM ET
Close- Senior college football writer
- Author of seven books on college football
- Graduate of the University of Georgia
Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, who led the No. 1 Hoosiers to a perfect 13-0 record and their first Big Ten title since 1967, captured the 91st Heisman Trophy on Saturday night.
Mendoza beat out quarterbacks Diego Pavia (Vanderbilt) and Julian Sayin (Ohio State) and running back Jeremiyah Love (Notre Dame) to take home the trophy during a ceremony in New York.
Mendoza, who played two seasons at California before joining the Hoosiers this season, completed 71.5% of his pass attempts for 2,980 yards with 39 total touchdowns.
He was only the second Heisman Trophy finalist from Indiana. Running back Anthony Thompson was runner-up to Houston quarterback Andre Ware in one of the closest votes in 1989.
With Mendoza, Pavia and Love expected to move on to the NFL after this season, who are the top returning Heisman Trophy candidates for 2026?
In compiling the list of potential candidates, I projected that quarterbacks John Mateer (Oklahoma), Ty Simpson (Alabama) and Dante Moore (Oregon); receivers Carnell Tate (Ohio State), Zachariah Branch (Georgia) and Makai Lemon (USC); and running back Emmett Johnson (Nebraska) will turn pro (along with the aforementioned finalists from this year).
Here is a look at some of the top potential contenders (in no particular order):

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2025 stats: 80 catches, 1,086 receiving yards, 12 total touchdowns
Smith’s highlight reel of acrobatic, one-handed catches continues to grow, and he arguably has been the best player in college football this season. He was the fastest Buckeyes player to reach career marks of 2,000 receiving yards (24 games), 100 catches (20) and 25 touchdown receptions (25).
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2025 stats: 78.4% completion pct, 3,323 passing yards, 31 touchdowns, 6 interceptions
Sayin might have captured the Heisman Trophy this season if Ohio State’s offense hadn’t flopped in its 13-10 loss to Indiana in the Big Ten championship game. In his first season as a starter, Sayin is on pace to break the NCAA single-season pass completion record of 77.4%, set by Oregon’s Bo Nix in 2023.
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2025 stats: 70.7% completion pct, 2,691 passing yards, 442 rushing yards, 31 total touchdowns
In his first full season as Georgia’s starting quarterback, Stockton helped guide the Bulldogs to a 12-1 record and SEC title. His legs and right arm were a big reason the Bulldogs averaged 31.9 points, despite enduring myriad injuries on the offensive line. Stockton was at his best when the game was on the line — he completed 86% of his passes with 11 touchdowns and one interception in the fourth quarter against ranked opponents.
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2025 stats: 84 receptions, 970 receiving yards, 7 receiving touchdowns
Toney’s teammates call him “Baby Jesus,” and the true freshman delivered in a big way in his first season with the No. 10 Hurricanes. He ranks sixth in the FBS with 84 catches and had 1,328 all-purpose yards. Toney even threw for two scores. Not bad for an 18-year-old who would be a senior in high school if he hadn’t reclassified to the class of 2025.
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2025 stats: 61.4% completion pct, 2,942 passing yards, 32 total touchdowns
Even after all the hand-wringing about Manning being overrated at the start of the season, the former five-star recruit ended up putting together a good campaign, throwing for 2,942 yards with 24 touchdowns. The No. 13 Longhorns need to find some offensive linemen (he was sacked 23 times) and receivers to help him in 2026.
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2025 stats: 65.5% completion pct, 3,016 passing yards, 24 total touchdowns
Ole Miss officials have submitted a waiver to the NCAA on Chambliss’ behalf for another season of eligibility. He played his first three seasons at Division II Ferris State before transferring to Ole Miss this year. He was named SEC Newcomer of the Year after taking over the starting job in the third game of the season.
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2025 stats: 1,560 rushing yards, 16 touchdowns
A transfer from Louisiana-Monroe, Hardy led the FBS with 130 rushing yards per game and was No. 2 with 1,560 total rushing yards. He had eight 100-yard games for the Tigers, including a whopping 300-yard effort with three touchdowns in a 49-27 victory against Mississippi State on Nov. 15.
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2025 stats: 61.8% completion pct, 2,932 passing yards, 466 rushing yards, 31 total touchdowns
Reed announced this week that he plans to stay at Texas A&M next season, which is great news for the No. 7 Aggies. He was a threat with the ball in his hands, throwing for 2,932 yards with 25 touchdowns and running for 466 yards with six scores. His decision-making needs to continue to improve, so he can cut down on his 10 interceptions.
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2025 stats: 63.6% completion pct, 3,117 passing yards, 20 total touchdowns
There’s a reason new Bears coach Tosh Lupoi took a late-night flight to Hawai’i to make sure Sagapolutele was staying at Cal. He was only the second true freshman in FBS history to pass for 200 yards or more in each of his first 11 starts. In the Bears’ late-season upsets of then-No. 21 SMU and No. 15 Louisville, Sagapolutele passed for a combined 653 yards with six touchdowns and no picks.
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2025 stats: 1,279 rushing yards, 20 touchdowns
After transferring from Missouri, Lacy helped the No. 6 Rebels win 11 games in the regular season for the first time. He ranks No. 2 in the FBS with 20 rushing touchdowns and piled up 1,279 yards on the ground. Will he follow former coach Lane Kiffin to LSU or remain with the Rebels in 2026?
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2025 stats: 66.2% completion pct, 3,431 passing yards, 29 total touchdowns
If Maiava returns to the No. 16 Trojans for another season, he’ll probably flourish in Lincoln Riley’s offense. This year, he threw for 3,431 yards with 23 touchdowns and 8 interceptions. He ranks No. 1 with a 91.2 total QBR. According to Pro Football Focus, he was second in the FBS with 26 big-time throws. (A big-time throw is defined as a high-difficulty, high-value pass.)
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2025 stats: 1,035 rushing yards, 6 total touchdowns
Jackson became the fifth true freshman in OSU history to produce a 1,000-yard season, joining Robert Smith (1990), Maurice Clarett (2002), JK Dobbins (2017) and TreVeyon Henderson (2021). That’s good company. And, of course, he’d be the second Bo Jackson to collect a stiff-armed trophy.
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2025 stats: 70.2% completion pct, 4,129 passing yards, 36 total touchdowns
Mestemaker is one of the best stories in college football. He didn’t start a single game in high school, then joined North Texas as a walk-on. This season, he led the FBS with 4,129 passing yards, helping him capture the Burlsworth Trophy as the top walk-on in the country. Will he join former Mean Green coach Eric Morris at Oklahoma State in 2026?
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CJ Carr, QB, Notre Dame
2025 starts: 66.6% completion pct, 2,741 passing yards, 24 touchdowns
Fighting Irish coach Marcus Freeman entrusted Carr to lead his offense after a heated battle in preseason camp. The decision paid off, as Carr put together one of the best performances by a first-time starter in Notre Dame history. He threw for at least one touchdown in each of his first 12 starts, becoming the first Irish player to do that since Everett Golson in 2012-14. Carr’s 24 passing touchdowns are tied for the most in the first 12 starts by a Notre Dame player since 1966.
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2025 stats: 70% completion pct, 2,850 passing yards, 595 rushing yards, 27 total touchdowns
Williams is one of the best dual-threat quarterbacks in the FBS, and his ability to run and throw was on display in the Huskies’ 38-19 victory against Rutgers on Oct. 10. He became the first player in school history to pass for at least 400 yards (400) and run for at least 100 (136) in the same game. Williams was second on the team with 595 rushing yards.
Others to watch: Sam Leavitt, QB, TBA; Cam Coleman, WR, Auburn; Brendan Sorsby, QB, Cincinnati; Josh Hoover, QB, TCU; Darian Mensah, QB, Duke; Nate Frazier, RB, Georgia; LJ Martin, RB, BYU; Bear Bachmeier, QB, BYU; LaNorris Sellers, QB, South Carolina; Bryce Underwood, QB, Michigan
Sports
Washington staying with Terrapins for ’26 season
Published
14 hours agoon
December 14, 2025By
admin

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Adam RittenbergDec 13, 2025, 09:32 PM ET
Close- College football reporter; joined ESPN in 2008. Graduate of Northwestern University.
Maryland quarterback Malik Washington, who set the team’s freshman passing record this fall, will return to the Terrapins for the 2026 season.
Washington set Maryland freshman records for passing yards (2,963) and completions (273) this season, while connecting on 17 touchdown passes. He reached 200 passing yards in all but one game and finished as just the second Big Ten freshman since 1996 to record at least 2,500 passing yards and at least 300 rushing yards.
“Representing this team, this area, means so much to me and my family,” Washington said in a statement Saturday. “This is home and we’re going to continue keeping the best athletes from this area here with the Terps. I believe in everyone in our facility and I know we’re building something that our fans will be excited about for years to come.”
Washington, the nation’s No. 134 recruit in the 2025 class, grew up in Severn, Maryland, about 30 miles from Maryland’s campus. Despite a 4-8 record that included only one Big Ten win, Maryland announced that coach Mike Locksley, who recruited Washington, would return in 2026. Locksley will enter his eighth season as Maryland’s coach.
“Malik is a Terp through and through and I’m thrilled he’s coming back to lead this football team,” Locksley said in a statement. “He means so much to this area and this area means so much to him. What we saw from Malik this past season is only the tip of the iceberg. He has such a bright future and he’s already started putting the work in towards the 2026 season.”
Sports
QB Mendoza first Hoosier to win Heisman Trophy
Published
14 hours agoon
December 14, 2025By
admin
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Associated Press
Dec 13, 2025, 08:00 PM ET
NEW YORK — Fernando Mendoza, the enthusiastic quarterback of No. 1 Indiana, won the Heisman Trophy on Saturday night, becoming the first Hoosier to win college football’s most prestigious award since its inception in 1935.
Mendoza claimed 2,362 points, including 643 first-place votes. He beat Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia (1,435 points), Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love (719 points) and Ohio State quarterback Julian Sayin (432 points).
Mendoza guided the Hoosiers to their first No. 1 ranking and the top seed in the 12-team College Football bracket, throwing for 2,980 yards and a national-best 33 touchdown passes while also running for six scores. Indiana, the last unbeaten team in major college football, will play a College Football Playoff quarterfinal game in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1.
Mendoza, the Hoosiers’ first-year starter after transferring from California, is the triggerman for an offense that surpassed program records for touchdowns and points set during last season’s surprise run to the CFP.
The final voting totals for the Heisman Trophy 🏆 pic.twitter.com/DA5Qkg76xw
— ESPN College Football (@ESPNCFB) December 14, 2025
A redshirt junior, the once lightly recruited Miami native is the second Heisman finalist in school history, joining 1989 runner-up Anthony Thompson. Mendoza is the seventh Indiana player to earn a top-10 finish in Heisman balloting and it marks another first in program history — having back-to-back players in the top 10. Hoosiers quarterback Kurtis Rourke was ninth last year.
Quarterbacks have won the Heisman four of the last five years, with two-way player Travis Hunter of Colorado ending the run last season.
The Heisman Trophy presentation came after a number of accolades were already awarded. Mendoza was named The Associated Press player of the year earlier this week and picked up the Maxwell and Davey O’Brien awards Friday night while Love won the Doak Walker Award.
THE CONFIDENT COMMODORE
Pavia threw for a school-record 3,192 yards and 27 touchdowns for the Commodores, who were pushing for a CFP berth all the way to the bracket announcement. He is the first Heisman finalist in Vanderbilt history.
Generously listed as 6 feet tall, Pavia led Vanderbilt to its first 10-win season along with six wins against Southeastern Conference foes. That includes four wins over ranked programs as Vandy reached No. 9, its highest ranking in The Associated Press Top 25 since 1937.
Pavia went from being unrecruited out of high school to junior college, New Mexico State and finally Vanderbilt in 2024 through the transfer portal.
Brash and confident, the graduate student from Albuquerque, New Mexico, calls himself “a chip on the shoulder guy” and he was feisty off the field, too: He played his fourth Division I season under a preliminary injunction as he challenges NCAA eligibility rules; he contends his junior college years should not count against his eligibility, citing the potential losses in earnings from name, image and likeness deals as an illegal restraint on free trade.
Vandy next plays in the ReliaQuest Bowl against Iowa on Dec. 31.
THE LEADER OF THE BUCKEYES
Sayin led the Buckeyes to a No. 1 ranking for most of the season, throwing for 3,329 yards while tying for second in the country with 31 TD passes ahead of their CFP quarterfinal at the Cotton Bowl on Dec. 31.
The sophomore from Carlsbad, California, arrived at Ohio State after initially committing to Alabama and entering the transfer portal following a coaching change. He played four games last season before winning the starting job. He led the Buckeyes to a 14-7 win in the opener against preseason No. 1 Texas and kept the team atop the AP Top 25 for 13 straight weeks, tying its second-longest run.
Sayin was only the second Bowl Subdivision quarterback in the last 40 years to have three games in a season with at least 300 yards passing, three touchdowns, no interceptions, and a completion rate of at least 80%. West Virginia’s Geno Smith was the other in 2012.
Sayin follows a strong lineage of Ohio State quarterbacks since coach Ryan Day arrived in 2017. Dwayne Haskins (2018), Justin Fields (2019), C.J. Stroud (2021), and Kyle McCord (2023) averaged 3,927 passing yards, 40 TDs, and six interceptions, along with a 68.9% completion rate during their first seasons.
THE LOVE OF THE IRISH
The last running back to win the Heisman was Alabama’s Derrick Henry in 2015. Love put himself in the mix with an outstanding season for Notre Dame.
The junior from St. Louis was fourth in the Bowl Subdivision in yards rushing (1,372), fifth in per-game average (114.3) and third with 18 rushing touchdowns for the Fighting Irish, who missed out on a CFP bid and opted not to play in a bowl game.
He was the first player in Notre Dame’s storied history to produce multiple TD runs of 90 or more yards, a 98-yarder against Indiana in the first round of last year’s playoffs and a 94-yarder against Boston College earlier this season.
He padded his Heisman resume with a series of highlights displaying an uncanny ability to maintain his balance while hurdling defenders, spinning out of tackles or rolling off opponents. He teamed with Jadarian Price to create one of the season’s top running back duos, a combination that helped first-time starter CJ Carr emerge as one of the nation’s best young quarterbacks.
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