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MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — After the final seconds ticked off the clock in a down-to-the-wire 38-31 win over Miami on Saturday, jubilant Louisville players ran onto the field and started screaming, ‘First year! We’re going to that ‘ship!’ Near midfield, coach Jeff Brohm finished up a television interview — his daughter by his side — and then got a hug from his beaming dad, Oscar.

What Brohm did in his first year as Louisville coach will go down in school history as the literal stuff of legends.

Brohm returned to Louisville to lead his hometown team, to a hero’s welcome, and has guided the No. 10 Cardinals (10-1) to their first ACC championship game appearance. In doing so, Brohm becomes the first Power 5 coach to take different teams to back-to-back conference championship games in consecutive years — having done it with Purdue last year in the Big Ten.

When asked what that accomplishment meant to him during his postgame interview, Brohm admitted he had no idea he was the first to do that. It should be noted Jamey Chadwell has also done it, with Coastal Carolina and Liberty.

“That does mean a lot to be quite honest with you,” Brohm said. “Being at Purdue, we worked hard to win games. Getting to the Big Ten championship was as good as any accomplishment I had there, and we had some big wins. So, we come here, Year 1, to find a way to get to this championship game means a whole lot.

“It just shows that if you’re willing to put in the work, surround yourself with good people, allow others to buy in and work together, take the blame when things aren’t going well, good things can normally happen.”

Louisville had to fight to clinch its spot against Florida State, needing its fourth comeback victory of the season. Miami stymied the Cardinals’ run game, a strength headed into the matchup. That meant putting the ball in the hands of quarterback Jack Plummer, who was pressured constantly — in fact, Miami blitzed Plummer on 23 of 39 dropbacks, the highest blitz rate and second-most blitzes he has faced in a game in his career, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

Plummer thrived under the pressure, particularly in the second half, and utilized his tight ends to make huge plays when it mattered most. Plummer threw for 195 yards and all three of his touchdown passes against the blitz.

One of them went to tight end Nate Kurisky. Another went to offensive lineman Trevonte Sylvester on a tackle-eligible play. Kurisky led all Louisville receivers with five catches, and 12 different players caught a pass.

“We’re trying to find any way possible to score, and we’ve got to utilize everyone we’ve got on the team,” Plummer said. “The play with Trevonte, we’ve been practicing that one for a few weeks now, and we had a good situation to call it.”

After Miami tied the game at 31 with 5:34 left, Plummer led a quick scoring drive — throwing a 58-yard touchdown pass to Kevin Coleman after Miami defensive backs Jaden Davis and Te’Cory Couch collided with each other, leaving Coleman a wide open field to score.

Miami drove down the field and had fourth-and-goal with 1:30 remaining, but Tyler Van Dyke threw incomplete for Jacolby George. The Hurricanes had one last chance with 3 seconds left. Van Dyke heaved a ball toward the end zone, and it ended up in the hands of Xavier Restrepo just short of the goal line.

The celebration ensued for Louisville, a team picked eighth in the preseason ACC media poll.

“It was crazy,” cornerback Quincy Riley said. “Nobody expected us to be here, and first year for the new coaching staff, new players, something that’s never been done in history? You got to know what it was like. It was crazy, a crazy environment.”

For Brohm, the victory had to have been especially satisfying, knowing how badly Louisville wanted him to take over the program. He was Kentucky’s “Mr. Football” in 1998 and played at Louisville. His brother, Greg, also played at Louisville. Greg now serves as his chief of staff. Oscar Brohm is visible around the program, too.

Back in July at ACC Kickoff, Brohm said he wanted to be able to capitalize on the energy and excitement that had engulfed the entire fan base and program since he arrived last year to replace Scott Satterfield. But did he know all this would be possible in Year 1? If he did, he wasn’t saying on Saturday afternoon.

“I’m one of those guys that doesn’t look too far down the road,” Brohm said. “I understand the challenges that it is to win football games at a high level, and it takes a lot. It takes great coaching. It takes recruiting, it takes players wanting to buy in and work hard. It takes a little luck on your side. It takes some fight, and some unity that has to happen on your team.

“But to come back home and do it for my university, my hometown, in front of these fans is really special. I feel the pressure. I want to win, and I want to win for everybody. But it takes work, and it takes sacrifice and it takes a lot of people doing their part. So it’s just exciting to be able to go play in a great championship game.”

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Sources: Hokies fire Pry after 0-3 start, ODU loss

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Sources: Hokies fire Pry after 0-3 start, ODU loss

Virginia Tech has fired coach Brent Pry, sources told ESPN’s Pete Thamel on Sunday. Pry is set to be owed more than $6 million in his buyout.

The move comes a day after a 45-26 home loss to Old Dominion in which the Hokies were booed loudly while heading to the locker room for halftime.

Saturday’s loss dropped Virginia Tech to 0-3 on the season and 16-24 through four seasons under Pry.

The hot-seat talk bubbled up around Pry in November last season, and if the Hokies had lost to Virginia to end the season, a change may have been made at that point. But Virginia Tech defeated Virginia, and Pry’s second consecutive 6-6 regular season landed him in a bowl game.

But as the offseason included personnel changes, the talk around Pry’s status didn’t fade. He entered Year 4 with a new defensive coordinator — Sam Siefkes, a former linebackers coach with the Arizona Cardinals — and a staff that included former longtime Hokies defensive coordinator Bud Foster as an adviser/analyst.

It did not work in the early going. Though the Hokies played hard in a season-opening loss to South Carolina, they were pushed around by another SEC team, Vanderbilt, in Virginia Tech’s home opener a week later. The Commodores scored 34 consecutive points to close out a 44-20 win in which they trailed by 10 points at halftime.

That loss, however, proved to be just an opening act to Saturday’s stunning loss to in-state foe Old Dominion.

“Clearly, it starts with me,” Pry said after the loss to the Monarchs. “Coaches, players, everybody is accountable here. We’ve got to get back to the basics and find a way to be closer to the team we can be.”

Virginia Tech will host Wofford on Saturday before beginning ACC play the following week at NC State.

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UCLA fires coach Foster after Bruins start 0-3

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UCLA fires coach Foster after Bruins start 0-3

UCLA fired football coach DeShaun Foster after he started his second season at the helm 0-3, the school announced Sunday.

An impressive class in the transfer portal, including the addition of former Tennessee quarterback Nico Iamaleava, seemed like a solid foundation for Year 2 under Foster, who rallied the Bruins to win four of their last six games to end the 2024 season.

But this season couldn’t have started off any worse. In the Rose Bowl on opening night, the Bruins fell to Utah 43-10. A week later at UNLV, they stumbled again, dropping a 30-23 decision. But those losses were just lead-ins to a puzzling 35-10 defeat at the hands of New Mexico in Week 3 at the Rose Bowl.

The Bruins, through three weeks, did not top 23 points in any game, and had allowed at least 30 in all three losses.

Foster had a 5-10 record in the 15 games he coached for the Bruins.

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Surging Rangers get Garcia back from stint on IL

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Surging Rangers get Garcia back from stint on IL

NEW YORK — The Texas Rangers got a key player back for their playoff push Sunday, when outfielder Adolis García was activated from the 10-day injured list.

García, who missed 10 games with a strained right quad, was set to bat fourth and play right field in the series finale against the New York Mets.

The IL stint was the second in a month for García, who was sidelined by a sprained left ankle from Aug. 13-22. The former All-Star and Gold Glove winner is batting .235 with 18 homers and 73 RBIs this season, but he hit .368 with two homers, nine RBIs and three steals in as many attempts in nine games following his return from the ankle injury before getting hurt while beating out a potential double-play grounder against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Sept. 1.

“It’s always good to get one of your core guys back,” Rangers manager Bruce Bochy said. “He was really swinging the bat well when he got hurt.”

Despite dealing with a litany of injuries, the Rangers entered Sunday on a six-game winning streak and with the best record in the majors (16-4) since Aug. 23. Texas was two games behind the Houston Astros and Seattle Mariners in the AL West race.

Second baseman Marcus Semien (left foot) and pitcher Nathan Eovaldi (right rotator cuff) are likely out for the regular season while shortstop Corey Seager is recovering from an appendectomy.

To make room for García, the Rangers optioned outfielder Dustin Harris to Triple-A Round Rock.

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