It’s just Week 1, but it’s never too early to start predicting who we’ll see in the College Football Playoff.
No team made a bigger statement in Week 1 than the Florida State Seminoles, who turned a halftime deficit against No. 5 LSU into a laugher. Quarterback Jordan Travis became the first FSU player to throw for four touchdowns and run for another since Jameis Winston in 2013. Travis’ three scoring connections with transfer wide receiver Keon Coleman have the eighth-ranked Seminoles looking like a serious playoff contender in the eyes of the ESPN voters.
Georgia started its run at the first college football three-peat since the 1930s by cruising past UT Martin 48-7. It was the Bulldogs’ 13th win by at least 30 points since the start of the 2021 season, the most in the FBS.
Michigan’s run-heavy offense has earned it two consecutive wins over Ohio State, two straight Big Ten titles and two straight trips to the CFP. The Wolverines opened the season throwing against East Carolina, however. Quarterback J.J. McCarthy passed for 280 yards and finished with an 86.7% completion rate, the highest in Michigan history (minimum 25 pass attempts).
Alabama is looking to return to the playoff after a rare absence last year, and the Crimson Tide got off to the right start. Jalen Milroe became the first quarterback in school history to throw for three touchdowns and rush for two more in a single game.
Ohio State’s offense got off to a bumpy start in the post-C.J. Stroud era. The Buckeyes, favored by 30 points at Indiana, managed just 23 total points, and quarterbacks Kyle McCord and Devin Brown did not throw a touchdown pass. The defense did not have any such problems, allowing only a second quarter field goal.
Here’s who ESPN’s college football writers would vote in if the four-team playoff were held today.
Andrea Adelson: Georgia, Florida State, Michigan, Alabama Blake Baumgartner: Georgia, Florida State, Michigan, Alabama Kyle Bonagura: Georgia, Florida State, Michigan, Alabama Bill Connelly: Florida State, Georgia, Alabama, Oklahoma Heather Dinich: Georgia, Florida State, Michigan, Alabama David Hale: Georgia, Florida State, Ohio State, Michigan Chris Low: Georgia, Florida State, Michigan, Alabama Harry Lyles Jr.: Georgia, Florida State, Michigan, Alabama Ryan McGee: Georgia, Ohio State, Alabama, Washington Adam Rittenberg: Georgia, Michigan, Florida State, Alabama Alex Scarborough: Georgia, Michigan, Florida State, Alabama Mark Schlabach: Georgia, Michigan, Florida State, USC Paolo Uggetti: Georgia, Michigan, Ohio State, USC Tom VanHaaren: Georgia, Michigan, Florida State, Alabama Dave Wilson: Georgia, Michigan, USC, Florida State
After an epic Game 3 that went a record-tying 18 innings, Game 4 of the 2025 World Series will be a true test for both the Los Angeles Dodgers and Toronto Blue Jays. Can the Dodgers ride the high of Freddie Freeman‘s walk-off home run to a third straight victory, or will the Blue Jays’ bats bounce back to tie the Fall Classic at two games apiece? What will Shohei Ohtani — who will be on the mound for L.A. — do for an encore after a history-making night at the plate?
LOS ANGELES — U.S. viewers for the first two games of World Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and Toronto Blue Jays dropped 14% from last year’s matchup between the Dodgers and the New York Yankees, but Canadian and Japanese audiences set records.
Last year’s first two games averaged 14.55 million and this year’s first two averaged 12..5 million on Fox, Fox Deportes, Fox One streaming, the Fox Sports app and Univision, Major League Baseball said Tuesday.
MLB said the combined 32.6 million viewers for the opener in the U.S., Canada and Japan were its highest since the Chicago Cubs‘ ended their 108-year title draught by beating Cleveland in Game 7 of the 2016 Series.
Toronto’s 11-4 win in Game 1 averaged 13,305,000 and Los Angeles’ 5-1 victory in Game 2, which did not include Univision coverage, averaged 11.63 million, Fox said.
Los Angeles’ 6-3, 10-inning win in last year’s opener that ended with Freddie Freeman‘s grand slam was seen by 15.2 million, the most-watched Series game since 2019. The Dodgers’ 4-2 victory in Game 2 last year was viewed by 13.44 million.
Game 1 this year drew 7 million viewers in Canada and Game 2 was watched by 6.6 million, the two most-watched Blue Jays games on Sportsnet. The network is owned by Rogers Communications Inc., the parent company of the Blue Jays.
The opener also was broadcast with French-language commentary on TVA Sports and drew 502,000, that network’s most-watched game.
This year’s opener averaged 11.8 million on NHK-G, the most-viewed World Series game in Japan televised by a single network, and Game 2 averaged 9.5 million on NHK-BS for a two-game Japanese average of 10.7 million.
The two-game average in the U.S., Canada and Japan was 30.5 million.
Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
LOS ANGELES — Toronto Blue Jays star George Springer was not in the starting lineup for Tuesday’s Game 4 of the World Series after leaving Monday night’s game against the Los Angeles Dodgers with right side discomfort.
Springer, 36, suffered the injury on a swing in the seventh inning of Game 3, exiting not long after calling for the athletic trainer.
Springer underwent an MRI, but the team wasn’t forthcoming about the results, with manager John Schneider indicating only that Springer was “hour-to-hour.”
“I think swinging will be the key to kind of determine if he’s in there or not,” Schneider said earlier Tuesday, not long before the lineup was announced. “But he was the first one here, a lot of treatment, a lot of work, and George is going to do everything he can to be ready.”
Springer has been a key offensive cog and leader during the Blue Jays’ postseason run. He has four home runs this month to go along with an .884 OPS, including a three-run homer in Game 7 of the American League Championship Series against the Seattle Mariners.
He injured his right knee on a hit by pitch in that series but was able to start the next day.