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Oklahoma moved up to No. 5 in The Associated Press Top 25 college football poll Sunday, while a late-game gaffe nearly cost 25th-ranked Miami‘s spot in the rankings and six basketball blue bloods made some history.

No. 1 Georgia, coming off its best game of the season in a rout of Kentucky, regained some of the first-place votes it lost in the AP Top 25 last week, when it needed a late rally to beat Auburn and stay unbeaten.

The Bulldogs got 50 first-place votes after getting 35 last week. No. 2 Michigan received 11 first-place votes as the Wolverines roll along unbeaten and untested.

No. 3 Ohio State and No. 4 Florida State each moved up a spot and received a first-place vote.

Oklahoma jumped seven spots after beating Texas on Saturday to reenter the top 10 for the first time since mid-September of last year, when it started tumbling toward a 6-7 season.

The Sooners and Longhorns both have open dates next weekend before a six-week stretch of games to end the regular season and determine if they meet again this year, possibly with a berth in the four-team College Football Playoff on the line.

“I have no doubt we’re going to see them again in the Big 12 championship,” Sooners safety Peyton Bowen said of the Longhorns, who slipped six spots to No. 9.

Said Texas coach Steve Sarkisian: “I expect us to get back on the horse. I think that this locker room is full of champions and our goal is to go win a championship this year. So we have to handle our business.”

No. 6 Penn State held its spot, as did No. 7 Washington and No. 8 Oregon in the week before their Pac-12 showdown.

USC dropped a spot to No. 10 after escaping with a triple-overtime victory against Arizona. The Trojans have fallen in the poll for three straight weeks, despite remaining unbeaten.

Miami managed to hang on to a spot in the rankings, dropping eight places after losing for the first time this season. The Hurricanes’ 23-20 setback to Georgia Tech was Saturday’s most painful loss, not to mention a candidate for one of the worst in program history.

In position to kneel out the clock with the lead, the Hurricanes instead called a running play, fumbled the ball away with 26 seconds left and then watched as the Yellow Jackets went 74 yards in four plays for the winning score with one second left on the clock.

Hoop dreams

The traditional basketball powerhouses continue to shine on the gridiron in 2022.

The top six schools by appearances in the AP men’s college basketball poll are Kentucky, North Carolina, Duke, Kansas, UCLA and Louisville.

For the first time in the 87-year history of the AP football poll, all of those schools are ranked at the same time: North Carolina is No. 12, Louisville is 14th, Duke is No. 17, UCLA is 18th, Kansas is No. 23, and Kentucky is No. 24.

Louisville jumped 11 spots to its highest ranking since 2017 after defeating Notre Dame to stay unbeaten.

The Irish slipped 11 spots to No. 21 after a second loss in three weeks to an undefeated team.

Poll points

Georgia’s 17-week streak of No. 1 appearances is now tied for the fourth longest of all time with Florida State, which went wire-to-wire as No. 1 in 1999.

The Bulldogs are well positioned to make a run at the second-longest streak before the season is out.

Next up on the list is an 18-week streak at No. 1 by USC from 1972 to 1973, then comes Miami’s 21 in a row from 2001 to 2002.

The record is out of reach this year: USC was No. 1 in 33 straight polls from late in the 2003 season until the final poll of the 2005 season.

The Bulldogs don’t seem to be in much danger of either losing or dropping from No. 1 with a victory over the next few weeks.

Georgia goes to Vanderbilt on Saturday then has a week off before facing Florida on Oct. 28.

A scheduled run vs. Missouri at home, at No. 13 Ole Miss and at No. 19 Tennessee in November will be a bigger challenge for the Bulldogs.

Moving out

Seven teams that entered Saturday unbeaten lost, and two of them dropped out of the Top 25.

Fresno State, which lost a key Mountain West game at Wyoming, fell out of the rankings after two weeks in.

Missouri lost to LSU and also slipped out after two weeks in.

Moving in

The two teams jumping into the rankings this week have been here earlier this season: UCLA vaulted to No. 18 after beating Washington State, while Kansas returned to the rankings at No. 23 after a week out by routing UCF.

Conference call

Pac-12: 7 (Nos. 7, 8, 10, 15, 16, 18, 19)
SEC: 6 (Nos. 1, 11, 13, 19, 22, 24)
ACC: 5 (Nos. 4, 12, 14, 17, 25)
Big Ten: 3 (Nos. 2, 3, 6)
Big 12: 3 (Nos. 5, 9, 23)
Independent: 1 (No. 21)

Ranked vs. ranked

No. 8 Oregon at No. 7 Washington: The 103rd meeting between the Ducks and Huskies will be the first top-10 matchup.

No. 10 USC at No. 21 Notre Dame: For the first time since 2005 and 2006, the Trojans and Fighting Irish are playing with both teams ranked in consecutive seasons.

No. 25 Miami at No. 12 North Carolina: Only the second meeting in which both teams are ranked.

No. 18 UCLA at No. 15 Oregon State: For the first time since 2001, both teams are ranked, and it’s the second straight home game for the Beavers versus a ranked opponent.

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Sources: Chesney set to be named UCLA coach

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Sources: Chesney set to be named UCLA coach

James Madison coach Bob Chesney has emerged as the target of UCLA’s coaching search, sources told ESPN.

He’s set to sign a five-year deal with UCLA, according to ESPN sources, that will be finalized after James Madison’s Sun Belt championship game.

Chesney’s James Madison team is 11-1 this season and plays Troy this week in the Sun Belt championship. UCLA has agreed with James Madison that Chesney will coach the Dukes if JMU wins the Sun Belt and ends up in the College Football Playoff field as one of five highest-ranked conference champions.

Chesney informed his team of his intention to leave Monday, sources told ESPN. Chesney jumped to the top of the list of candidates in this frenetic college coaching cycle, drawing interest for a number of the top openings, as JMU is ranked No. 19 in both the Associated Press and AFCA Coaches polls.

Once Chesney’s hiring is finalized, UCLA gets a coach with a consistent track record of winning, as athletic director Martin Jarmond and the UCLA search committee quickly coalesced around his candidacy early in the process.

Chesney, a Pennsylvania native, brings a background as an assistant coach on both defense and special teams. He has also developed a reputation as a turnaround artist, as he has resuscitated struggling programs at Division III Salve Regina, Division II Assumption University and turned FCS Holy Cross into a high-level winner. Along with being 20-5 at JMU, he’s 131-51 overall as a college head coach over 16 seasons. At Holy Cross, he led the school to four of the six FCS playoff appearances in school history, reaching four in a row from 2019 to 2022. He also led the Crusaders to five Patriot League titles.

UCLA’s courtship has been a long one, as it fired coach DeShaun Foster in mid-September after an 0-3 start. He finished his two-season tenure at 5-10.

The UCLA search committed included notable graduates such as longtime NBA executive Bob Myers and Commanders GM Adam Peters.

Jarmond and UCLA top football administrator Erin Adkins flew out and saw Chesney in Virginia nearly three weeks ago, according to sources. UCLA met with four candidates in person and quickly identified Chesney as the best fit. The committee viewed Chesney’s background through small college football and his knack of turning around programs as positives. Since arriving in the Big Ten, UCLA is 8-16 overall, bringing about a wake-up call that more investment is needed.

UCLA pitched to candidates a job with increased financial support, as well as the financial ambition to be competitive in the Big Ten and embrace the academic standards of UCLA. Chesney has worked at strong academic schools, including as an assistant at Johns Hopkins prior to becoming a head coach.

“He had an appreciation for UCLA, the academics and the Big Ten,” said a source familiar with the process. “He also had a detailed plan on how to turn the program around.”

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Mississippi St. flips ex-Auburn commit Womack

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Mississippi St. flips ex-Auburn commit Womack

Four-star prospect Bralan Womack, ESPN’s No. 3 safety in the 2026 class, flipped his commitment from Auburn to Mississippi State on Monday, sealing a historic late-cycle pledge for coach Jeff Lebby and the Bulldogs.

Womack, a 6-foot, 200-pound defender from Flowood, Mississippi, is the No. 39 overall prospect in the 2026 ESPN 300. If he signs later this week, Womack will join the in-state Bulldogs as the school’s highest-ranked signee in the ESPN recruiting era, dating to 2006.

Prior to Monday, Womack had spent the fall as the top-ranked commit in Auburn’s 2026 class after picking the Tigers over Florida, Ohio State and Texas A&M in August. However, Auburn’s decision to fire coach Hugh Freeze on Nov. 2 unsettled Womack’s recruitment, opening the door to late fall flip interest from LSU, Mississippi State and Texas A&M.

Womack’s exit from the Tigers’ incoming class comes one day after the program announced the hiring of South Florida coach Alex Golesh on Sunday. Womack, who visited Auburn for the Iron Bowl in Week 14, told ESPN on Nov. 25 that his decision would be tied closely to the outcome of the Tigers’ coaching search and interim coach D.J. Durkin’s role with the program in the future.

Whether or not Durkin will remain on Golesh’s staff remains unclear as of Monday.

Womack, ESPN’s No. 3 recruit in the state of Mississippi, won back-to-back state titles in his sophomore and junior seasons at Mississippi’s Hartfield Academy. He entered his senior campaign this fall as the state’s reigning Gatorade Football Player of the Year.

Womack has visited each of LSU, Mississippi State and Texas A&M since late October. He told ESPN that the Bulldogs turned up the heat on his recruitment early last month, eventually hosting him twice in November, most recently during last weekend’s Egg Bowl defeat to Ole Miss.

Womack said the Bulldogs’ pitched him on becoming the defensive version of star freshman quarterback Kamario Taylor — an in-state signee in the 2025 class who made his first career start in Week 14 — and highlighted the program’s progress across two seasons under Lebby.

“You can see his ability to go out and get players and build confidence in a locker room that didn’t have much when he walked in,” Womack said. That takes a lot. You can see what he’s doing.”‘

Womack now stands as the lone ESPN 300 pledge in Mississippi State’s 2026 signing class with the three-day early signing period set to open Wednesday morning. Prior to his flip, the Bulldogs’ incoming class sat at No. 49 in ESPN’s class rankings for the 2026 cycle.

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Stoops fired after 13 years at UK, owed $37.7M

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Stoops fired after 13 years at UK, owed .7M

Kentucky has fired football coach Mark Stoops.

The school’s athletic director announced the dismissal Monday, thanking Stoops for his dedication and leadership:

“His tenure transformed the program and reset expectations,” said athletic director Mitch Barnhart in a statement released on social media. “His tenure transformed the program and reset expectations. His time here was filled with memorable victories, a historic run of consecutive bowl appearances, and a commitment to developing young men both on and off the field.”

Stoops just completed his 13th season at Kentucky with a 5-7 record after going 4-8 in 2024. Kentucky lost its final game of the year to rival Louisville 41-0 on Saturday.

Stoops, 58, went 72-80 during his time in Lexington (82-80 if including the 10-win 2021 season that was later vacated) and leaves as the winningest coach in school history. Bear Bryant is No. 2.

Stoops brought consistency to Kentucky, making bowl games every season from 2016 to 2023 and twice finishing in the AP top 20.

But Kentucky has had very few bright spots the past two seasons, and the university decided to move on despite Stoops being signed through June 2031 and earning $9 million this year.

Stoops is owed 75% of his remaining salary, which is approximately $37.7 million. That falls within the top five buyouts in college football history, four of which have come this year (the first three were Brian Kelly, $54 million; James Franklin, $49 million, though that was reduced when he took the job at Virginia Tech; and Jonathan Smith, $33 million).

Stoops’ last two years at Kentucky came in the wake of changes to NIL and revenue sharing in college football. Before that era, Stoops delivered some of the best seasons in school history. That included 10-win seasons in 2018, Kentucky’s first since 1977, and the aforementioned 2021 season since vacated.

He developed Kentucky into a program with toughness and player development as its hallmarks. The Wildcats had multiple players drafted every year from 2019 through 2025, including four first-round picks during his tenure.

Kentucky appeared to have found its quarterback for the future this season, as Stoops inserted freshman Cutter Boley as the starter in late September. The move paid dividends, as Kentucky took Texas to overtime and then won three straight games — at Auburn, Florida and Tennessee Tech. Boley threw 15 touchdown passes and completed 65.8% of his throws.

After the loss to Louisville on Saturday, Stoops — who chose to remain at Kentucky when other opportunities surfaced over the years — said he wasn’t going anywhere.

Asked after the game about the possibility of stepping down, Stoops told reporters, “Like, I’m going to walk away? Are you kidding me? … Zero percent chance I walk.”

Barnhart has pledged to “make the necessary investments to recruit an elite head coach” to “build a championship program for the people of Kentucky.”

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