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A lot has happened in the world of college football since Jim Harbaugh and the Michigan Wolverines celebrated their national championship win three months ago — not the least of which was Harbaugh departing for the NFL.

Nick Saban, recognized as the greatest college football coach of all time, retired from his post at Alabama, setting off a late coaching carousel chain reaction that left Kalen DeBoer in Tuscaloosa, Jedd Fisch at Washington and San José State’s Brent Brennan at Arizona.

Georgia scored the top-ranked recruiting class in February, and while there are more changes ahead as the spring transfer portal swings open next week, there is action on the field this weekend in the form of spring games at many power conference schools.

To catch you up, our college football reporters offer some intriguing newcomers, breakout candidates and position battles to keep an eye on.

Jump to a conference:
SEC | Big Ten
ACC | Big 12

Position battle to watch: Cornerback — The Crimson Tide will be starting over at cornerback in Kalen DeBoer’s first season as coach. Both starters from a year ago, Terrion Arnold and Kool-Aid McKinstry, are headed to the NFL, likely as first-round picks, and four other corners transferred. The odds-on favorite to be Alabama’s top cornerback next season is USC transfer Domani Jackson. Nick Saban heavily recruited Jackson out of high school, but he chose USC. The former five-star prospect played only one season at USC on a defense that ranked 121st nationally in scoring.

After Jackson, who knows? Jahlil Hurley returns after redshirting last season and has yet to play a snap in college. Alabama brought in three highly rated freshmen — Zabien Brown, Jaylen Mbakwe and Zay Mincey — and all three have elite skills and are pushing to get on the field right away. Mbakwe has run a 10.47 100-meter dash. — Chris Low


Most intriguing newcomer: Bobby Petrino — Petrino isn’t technically a newcomer, but he’s back in a familiar place as Arkansas’ offensive coordinator. There aren’t many more fascinating storylines in college football than Petrino’s return to Fayetteville, where he was 21-5 in 2010 and 2011 as the Hogs’ head coach before he got into a motorcycle accident with an athletic department subordinate with whom he was having an affair, then misled his superiors to cover it up. He was Jimbo Fisher’s offensive coordinator at Texas A&M last season, though it’s up for debate how much of his offense he was running. Meanwhile, Sam Pittman’s future with Arkansas (4-8 last season) started to come into doubt, particularly after the dismissal of offensive coordinator Dan Enos in October following a six-game losing streak.

By now, Petrino’s high-flying offenses and his two straight seasons of 10 or more wins at Arkansas were sorely missed, and the two paths converged. It’s an interesting gambit: If the Hogs don’t win fast enough, a wildly popular interim candidate exists. But if Petrino’s offense is a difference-maker, Pittman (23-25 at Arkansas) will have a shot at getting the train back on the tracks. — Dave Wilson


Most intriguing newcomer: QB D.J. Lagway — After accounting for 74 touchdowns (58 passing, 16 rushing) as a senior in high school, Lagway was the big prize of the Gators’ recruiting class. While Graham Mertz is still in Gainesville after a season in which he completed 73% of his passes for 2,903 yards along with 20 touchdowns and just three interceptions, Lagway is the future.

After Florida’s first spring scrimmage, coach Billy Napier complimented Lagway’s ability to learn and retain information, along with his ability to take lessons from meetings into practice. “He’s picked it up quickly, and now it’s just the game management piece is next,” Napier said. Perhaps we’ll get a good sample of that in the spring game. — Harry Lyles Jr.


Position battle to watch: Free safety — While running back Trevor Etienne, who transferred from Florida, is the fancy new addition in Athens, a position battle folks should be watching is at free safety. Malaki Starks returns at strong safety, but his former running mate, Javon Bullard, is off to the NFL. Experienced players, such as Dan Jackson, David Daniel-Sisavanh and JaCorey Thomas, could fill the void, but there are also younger options, such as Justyn Rhett or five-star KJ Bolden. The Dawgs also brought in Jake Pope from Alabama.

Take it from Starks, who said earlier this week, “That room is very competitive.” And don’t forget about new defensive backs coach Donte Williams, who comes in from USC after Fran Brown’s departure to Syracuse. The Bulldogs will figure it out because they always do, but it should be a fun battle with plenty of talent. — Lyles


Most intriguing newcomer: QB Brock Vandagriff — Vandagriff came to Kentucky as a graduate transfer from Georgia, where he was part of back-to-back national championship teams in 2021 and 2022. Vandagriff spent this spring taking most of the first-team reps and is expected to be the Wildcats’ starter. He has two years of eligibility remaining and has drawn some comparisons within the program to former quarterback Will Levis.

Vandagriff is unproven as QB1, though, as he has played in only 13 total games, completing 12 of 21 passes for 165 yards and two touchdowns. There is experience behind Vandagriff, as Beau Allen returns to Kentucky as a graduate transfer following one season at Georgia Southern and another at Tarleton State. — Heather Dinich


Breakout candidate: WR Kyren Lacy — Lacy is LSU’s top returning receiver and is poised to fill the holes left by the departures of Malik Nabers and Brian Thomas. Lacy, who has started 12 games for LSU, was the Tigers’ No. 3 receiver last year, and has caught 54 passes for 826 yards and seven touchdowns in two seasons at Baton Rouge.

Coach Brian Kelly said Lacy used to be “easily distracted at times” but has played with a newfound consistency this spring. “What has happened here, more than anything else, is he has found the right zone to be in as it relates to practicing and preparation,” Kelly said. “He learned a lot last year watching Malik and BT and the way they came to practice every day and performed, and said, ‘I can do this, too.’ I’m really proud of him and happy for him because he’s going to have a breakout season because of it.” — Dinich


Most intriguing newcomer: DE Princely Umanmielen — Lane Kiffin has brought in an assortment of intriguing newcomers on both sides of the ball and has worked the transfer portal as well as anyone. The 2024 Rebels will have new faces from several SEC teams, and they’re counting on Umanmielen to make a major impact at defensive end. Edge rushers are always at a premium, and the 6-foot-5, 255-pound Umanmielen has experience and production going for him. He played four seasons at Florida (25 starts) and recorded 11.5 tackles for loss, including seven sacks, last season.

Kiffin made it a priority to get bigger, stronger and faster this offseason, and Umanmielen fits that mold. Kiffin said this spring that Umanmielen has “ideal size, length and speed to be a really good player, one that you don’t have to say, ‘OK, here’s how we’d use somebody to kind of hide some of the deficiencies,’ which we’ve done a lot here.” — Low


Most intriguing newcomer: TE Holden Staes — The Vols needed help at tight end with Jacob Warren and McCallan Castles gone, so they brought in Staes after he spent two seasons at Notre Dame. Look for the 6-4, 242-pounder to become a frequent target for first-year starting quarterback Nico Iamaleava.

One reason Staes picked Tennessee was the way the Vols have used their tight ends under coach Josh Heupel. Staes caught 15 passes for 176 yards and four touchdowns last season for Notre Dame. He has really good hands and can make plays in space, but his blocking ability jumped out to the Tennessee coaches as much as anything. Staes is still adjusting to the pace of Tennessee’s up-tempo offense, but his versatility should be a factor in both the passing and running games. — Low


Most intriguing newcomer: QB Will Howard — Ohio State fans will get their first glimpse of the Kansas State transfer, who entered the spring as the front-runner to take over at quarterback for Kyle McCord (now at Syracuse). Howard brings the dual-threat element back to the Buckeyes’ backfield, rushing for 351 yards and nine touchdowns for the Wildcats last season.

The pressure is on Ohio State after a third consecutive loss to Michigan, the reigning national champions. But following an aggressive offseason in the transfer portal — coupled with the hiring of offensive coordinator Chip Kelly — the Buckeyes boast the players to pursue their own national title. Still, their hopes figure to hinge heavily on Howard — or his primary competition for the job, Devin Brown — providing improved quarterback play. — Jake Trotter


Position battles to watch: Offensive tackle and wide receiver — Penn State lost starting tackles Olu Fashanu, a projected first-round NFL draft pick, and Caedan Wallace from a line that showed some improvement but lacked the performance needed against top competition. The team added Wisconsin transfer Nolan Rucci, an ESPN top-40 recruit in 2021 from the state, who joins returnees such as Drew Shelton, Anthony Donkoh and J’ven Williams. Shelton is out this spring while recovering from surgery, which has created strong competition between Rucci, Donkoh and Williams, which coach James Franklin said would continue into fall camp.

Wide receiver also will be in the spotlight after a tough 2023 season. KeAndre Lambert-Smith and Harrison Wallace III both return, and Penn State added Ohio State transfer Julian Fleming. Will those three or a group of younger players provide the reliable targets quarterback Drew Allar needs? — Adam Rittenberg


Most intriguing newcomer: RB Reggie Love III — Love is new to Purdue but not to several of the Boilermakers coaches who joined Ryan Walters from Illinois. He had 883 rushing yards and six touchdowns during the past two seasons for the Illini, and will provide a strong complement to Purdue’s lead back Devin Mockobee.

Offensive coordinator Graham Harrell has multiple players who can attack defenses on the ground, as Hudson Card (203 rush yards, five TDs in 2023) brings more mobility than most Air Raid quarterbacks. Although Love had only 15 receptions at Illinois, his pass-catching ability could be amplified for the Boilers. Other newcomers to watch include defensive back transfers Nyland Green (Georgia) and Kyndrich Breedlove (Colorado), and defensive line transfer CJ Madden (Georgia). — Rittenberg


Most intriguing newcomer: Head coach Bill O’Brien — What exactly will Boston College look like this year under O’Brien? It’s a fascinating question. He’s among the most accomplished playcallers in football, but his history — at Alabama, Penn State and with the New England Patriots and Houston Texans — doesn’t suggest a guy eager to throw caution to the wind and play wide-open, backyard football.

But look at BC’s 2023 season under Jeff Hafley, and that’s when the Eagles were most dangerous, with quarterback Thomas Castellanos getting outside the pocket, winging it downfield and scrambling for yards on broken plays. In all, 17.4% of BC’s offense came on scrambles or throws outside the pocket, the third-highest rate in the ACC. So will it be more of the same with Castellanos, or can O’Brien help his QB develop as a pocket passer? — David Hale


Breakout candidate: QB Haynes King — One could argue that the same could have been said last spring, but King is still a breakout candidate for the Yellow Jackets. In his first full year as a starter — also Brent Key’s first full season as head coach — King was electric. He completed 62% of his passes for 2,842 yards, 27 touchdowns and 16 interceptions, and added 737 yards on the ground with 10 touchdowns, averaging 6.1 yards per rush.

King is one of the best returning quarterbacks in the ACC, and after leading Tech to its first bowl win in seven years, it’s fair to expect even more in Year 2. If he’s able to limit turnovers, the Yellow Jackets have an opportunity to take another step in 2024. Saturday’s spring game is one of the most anticipated in Midtown Atlanta in a while, and King is a big reason. — Lyles


Most intriguing newcomer: QB Cam Ward — This is an easy one. Ward’s decision to come to Miami, after initially deciding to enter the NFL draft, is fascinating because it shifted the entire conversation around the Hurricanes. Before Ward, who played at Washington State the past two seasons, shifted gears, Miami signed Albany transfer Reese Poffenbarger to beef up the quarterback room. But now? Miami appears to have one of the strongest quarterbacks in the ACC headed into the season.

The spring game will be our first chance to see how Ward fits into this offense under coordinator Shannon Dawson, and how he jells with his receivers. Miami has two veterans returning in Xavier Restrepo and Jacolby George, and young talent that could be ready to emerge in Isaiah Horton, JoJo Trader, Ny Carr and Ray Ray Joseph. Miami has not had consistent quarterback play since Tyler Van Dyke was a freshman in 2021. If Ward is able to live up to the expectations, the Hurricanes will have a shot to be in the hunt for the ACC title. — Andrea Adelson


Position battle to watch: Quarterback — Technically, there’s no battle here. Head coach Pat Narduzzi insists Nate Yarnell is his guy, and Yarnell seems to be eager to flex some muscle in a new up-tempo offense in 2024. But Yarnell has only two games of serious work under his belt, and his role as the de facto starter was defined mostly on the back of solid performances against BC and Duke to end last season.

That Christian Veilleux, who started six games last season, and Alabama transfer Eli Holstein also are on the roster supposedly just means Pitt has depth at the position. But a strong spring game for Yarnell would help quell any rumblings about a QB battle among the fans this summer, even if Narduzzi is convinced he has his guy either way. — Hale


Breakout candidate: LB Jaden Keller — A redshirt junior, Keller has grown by leaps and bounds from his arrival as an undersized playmaker in the middle of the field, and yet, Virginia Tech still hasn’t seen the best of him. Keller has made four starts in his career and had some nice moments, but head coach Brent Pry said he remains a player the team hopes will emerge as a genuine star.

This spring has probably been the closest to that breakthrough for Keller, who figures to be the starter at middle linebacker in the fall, and Pry said Keller has been at his best during the Hokies’ scrimmages at Lane Stadium. Expect Keller to put on another show Saturday, this time with fans watching. — Hale


Most intriguing newcomer: QB Brendan Sorsby — Sorsby was thrown into the deep end as a redshirt freshman at Indiana last season, and while he didn’t exactly thrive, he did produce numbers similar to those of Cincinnati’s Emory Jones — Jones was 68th in Total QBR, Sorsby 71st — only Jones was a senior.

With a senior-heavy line and a skill corps that features not only a 1,000-yard rusher (Corey Kiner) and go-to receiver (senior Xzavier Henderson) but also a wave of intriguing transfers, such as Ohio State running back Evan Pryor and explosive UTEP slot man Tyrin Smith, Cincinnati’s offense should improve a decent amount if it has a quarterback ready to improve with it. Sorsby showed hints of being that guy last fall, and he could show a few more glimpses in the spring game. — Bill Connelly


Position battle to watch: Offensive line — New Cougars coach Willie Fritz, who replaces Dana Holgorsen, is quite the intriguing newcomer, but much of his offensive line will be as new as he is. The lone exception is right guard Tank Jenkins, who is returning for his seventh collegiate season (two at Texas A&M, four at Houston).

Houston will look to integrate three transfers (Dakota White, a 30-game starter at Lousiana Tech; Jake Wiley from UCLA; and Cedric Melton, who arrived from Ole Miss) along with five offensive linemen the Cougars signed this year. The good news is every position is up for grabs after a coaching change, but the bad news is that’s a lot of new faces at a key position after a 4-8 season in Houston’s first year in the Big 12. — Wilson


Most intriguing newcomer: WR Dorian Singer — Singer also fit this billing at USC a year ago. He was coming off a brilliant 2022 season at Arizona in which he caught 66 passes for 1,105 yards with six touchdowns and was named second-team All-Pac-12. But after transferring to USC last year to catch passes from the reigning Heisman Trophy winner, Caleb Williams, Singer’s production regressed. He never quite got in sync with Williams the way other USC receivers did and finished with just 24 catches for 289 yards and three scores.

In hopes of regaining his 2022 form, Singer jumped back in the portal and landed at Utah, which was in desperate need of some offensive playmakers after finishing No. 120 in the country in receiving yards per game (165.8). — Kyle Bonagura

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Jets stick up for Hellebuyck after latest playoff dud

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Jets stick up for Hellebuyck after latest playoff dud

The Winnipeg Jets defended star goaltender Connor Hellebuyck after another disastrous performance on the road, a 5-2 loss Friday night in which the St. Louis Blues forced Game 7 in their Stanley Cup Playoff opening-round series.

Hellebuyck was pulled after the second period in favor of backup Eric Comrie, the third straight game in St. Louis that he failed to finish. Hellebuyck surrendered five goals on 23 shots, including four goals on eight shots during a 5-minute, 23-second stretch in the second period that cost the Jets the game.

As has become tradition in this series, Blues fans mockingly chanted, “We want Connor!” after Hellebuyck left the game and the Jets’ bench.

“This isn’t about Connor,” Winnipeg coach Scott Arniel said. “Tonight was not about Connor. Tonight, we imploded in front of him. Now, it’s a one-game showdown. It’s our goalie against their goalie, our best players against their best, our grinders against theirs. I have a lot of confidence in our [entire] group — not just Helly.”

Hellebuyck won the Vezina Trophy last season as the NHL’s top goaltender, as voted on by the league’s general managers. He also won the award in 2019-20 and is the favorite to win it for a third time this season. Hellebuyck is also a finalist for the 2024-25 Hart Trophy, awarded to the NHL’s most valuable player. He was the starting goaltender for Team USA at the 4 Nations Face-Off tournament in February and was expected to do the same for the U.S. in next year’s Winter Olympics in Italy.

But his recent performances in the Stanley Cup playoffs have been the antithesis of that success.

Over the past three postseasons, two of which the Jets lost in the first round in just five games, Hellebuyck is 5-11 with an .860 save percentage.

Hellebuyck failed to finish any of the three games played in St. Louis during the series. He was pulled with 9:28 left in regulation in Game 3, having given up six goals on 25 shots. In Game 4, Hellebuyck was pulled 2:01 into the third period after surrendering five goals on 18 shots. Hellebuyck has allowed four or more goals in seven straight road playoff games, tying the second-longest streak in Stanley Cup playoff history

At home against the Blues in this series, it has been a different story, if not necessarily a great one: Hellebuyck is 3-0 in Winnipeg, with an .879 save percentage and a 2.33 goals-against average.

His home numbers in the regular season: 27-3-3 with a .938 save percentage and a 1.63 goals-against average in 33 games. His road numbers: 20-9-0 with a .911 save percentage and a 2.43 goals-against average. Hellebuyck was not pulled in his 63 appearances in the regular season.

Even with Hellebuyck’s multiple seasons of playoff struggles, his team exonerated him from blame for the Game 6 loss.

“I don’t need to talk about Bucky,” said forward Nikolaj Ehlers, who returned to the lineup for the first time since April 12 after a foot injury. “He’s been unbelievable for us all year. He’s continued to do that. We’ve got to be better.”

Said forward Cole Perfetti, who had a goal in Game 6: “Things got carried away. We lost our game for four or five minutes. They got a couple pucks through, and they found the back of the net. It’s frustrating. Happened a couple of times now this series where we fell asleep and they jumped on us.”

Perfetti said the Jets have rebounded from losses like this — one reason their confidence isn’t shaken ahead of Sunday’s Game 7.

“We had a loss like that in Game 4 [in St. Louis],” he said. “We went home and got the job done in Game 5. We’ve got the home ice. We’ve got the fans behind us and our barn rocking.”

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College football Luck Index 2025: Who needs luck on their side next season?

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College football Luck Index 2025: Who needs luck on their side next season?

Almost no word in the English language makes a college football fan more defensive than the L-word: luck.

We weren’t lucky to have a great turnover margin — our coaches are just really good at emphasizing ball security! We’re tougher than everyone else — that’s why we recovered all those fumbles!

We weren’t lucky to win all those close games — we’re clutch! Our coaches know how to press all the right buttons! Our quarterback is a cool customer!

We weren’t lucky to have fewer injuries than everyone else — our strength-and-conditioning coach is the best in America! And again: We’re just tougher!

As loath as we may be to admit it, a large percentage of a given college football season — with its small overall sample of games — is determined by the bounce of a pointy ball, the bend of a ligament and the whims of fate. Certain teams will end up with an unsustainably good turnover margin that turns on them the next year. Certain teams (often the same ones) will enjoy a great run of close-game fortune based on some combination of great coaching, sturdy quarterback play, timely special teams contributions … and massive amounts of unsustainable randomness. Certain teams will keep their starting lineups mostly intact for 12 or more games while another is watching its depth chart change dramatically on a week-to-week basis.

As we prepare for the 2025 college football season, it’s worth stepping back and looking at who did, and didn’t, get the bounces in 2024. Just because Lady Luck was (or wasn’t) on your side one year, doesn’t automatically mean your fortunes will flip the next, but that’s often how these things go. Be it turnovers, close-game fortune or injuries, let’s talk about the teams that were dealt the best and worst hands last fall.

Jump to a section:
Turnover luck | Close games luck
Injuries and general shuffling | Turnaround candidates

Turnover luck

In last year’s ACC championship game, Clemson bolted to a 24-7 halftime lead, then white-knuckled it to the finish. SMU came back to tie the score at 31 with only 16 seconds left, but Nolan Hauser‘s 56-yard field goal at the buzzer gave the Tigers a 34-31 victory and a spot in 2024’s College Football Playoff at Alabama’s expense.

In the first series of the game, Clemson’s T.J. Parker pulled a perfect sack-and-strip of SMU QB Kevin Jennings, forcing and falling on a loose ball at the SMU 33-yard line. Clemson scored two plays later to take a 7-0 lead. Late in the first quarter, Khalil Barnes picked off a Jennings pass near midfield, ending what could have become a scoring threat with one more first down. A few minutes later, Clemson’s Cade Klubnik fumbled at the end of a 14-yard gain, but tight end Jake Briningstool recovered it at midfield, preventing another potential scoring threat from developing. (Klubnik fumbled seven times in the 2024 season but lost only one of them.)

Early in the third quarter, after SMU cut Clemson’s lead to 24-14, David Eziomume fumbled the ensuing kickoff at the Clemson 6, but teammate Keith Adams Jr. recovered it right before two SMU players pounced.

Over 60 minutes, both teams fumbled twice, and Clemson defended (intercepted or broke up) eight passes to SMU’s seven. On average, 50% of fumbles are lost and about 21% of passes defended become INTs, so Clemson’s expected turnover margin in this game was plus-0.2 (because of the extra pass defended). The Tigers’ actual turnover margin was plus-2, a difference of 1.8 turnovers in a game they barely won.

Clemson was obviously a solid team in 2024, but the Tigers probably wouldn’t have reached the CFP without turnovers luck. For the season, they fumbled 16 times but lost only three, and comparing their expected (based on the averages above) and actual turnover margins, almost no one benefited more from the randomness of a bouncing ball.

It probably isn’t a surprise to see that, of last year’s 12 playoff teams, eight benefited from positive turnovers luck, and six were at plus-3.3 or higher. You’ve got to be lucky and good to win, right?

You aren’t often lucky for two straight years, though. It might be noteworthy to point out that, of the teams in Mark Schlabach’s Way-Too-Early 2025 rankings, five were in the top 20 in terms of turnovers luck: No. 5 Georgia, No. 7 Clemson, No. 9 BYU, No. 11 Iowa State and No. 17 Indiana (plus two others from his Teams Also Considered list: Army and Baylor).

It’s also noteworthy to point out that three teams on Schlabach’s list — No. 6 Oregon, No. 8 LSU and No. 15 SMU — ranked in the triple-digits in terms of turnovers luck. Oregon started the season 13-0 without the benefit of bounces. For that matter, Auburn, a team on the Also Considered list, ranked 125th in turnovers luck in a season that saw the Tigers go just 1-3 in one-score finishes. There might not have been a more what-could-have-been team in the country than Hugh Freeze’s Tigers.


Close games

One of my favorite tools in my statistical toolbox is what I call postgame win expectancy. The idea is to take all of a game’s key, predictive stats — all the things that end up feeding into my SP+ rankings — and basically toss them into the air and say, “With these stats, you could have expected to win this game X% of the time.”

Alabama‘s 40-35 loss to Vanderbilt on Oct. 5 was one of the most impactful results of the CFP race. It was also one of the least likely results of the season in terms of postgame win expectancy. Bama averaged 8.8 yards per play to Vandy’s 5.6, generated a 56% success rate* to Vandy’s 43% and scored touchdowns on all four of its trips into the red zone. It’s really hard to lose when you do all of that — in fact, the Crimson Tide’s postgame win expectancy was a whopping 98.5%. (You can see all postgame win expectancy data here)

(* Success rate: how frequently an offense is gaining at least 50% of necessary yardage on first down, 70% on second and 100% on third and fourth. It is one of the more reliable and predictive stats you’ll find, and it’s a big part of SP+.)

Vandy managed to overcome these stats in part because of two of the most perfect bounces you’ll ever see. In the first, Jalen Milroe had a pass batted at the line, and it deflected high into the air and, eventually, into the arms of Randon Fontenette, who caught it on the run and raced 29 yards for a touchdown and an early 13-0 lead.

In the second half, with Bama driving to potentially take the lead, Miles Capers sacked Milroe and forced a fumble; the ball sat on the ground for what felt like an eternity before Yilanan Ouattara outwrestled a Bama lineman for it. Instead of trailing, Vandy took over near midfield and scored seven plays later. It took turnovers luck and unlikely key-play execution — despite a 43% success rate, Diego Pavia and the Commodores went 12-for-18 on third down and 1-for-1 on fourth — for Vandy to turn a 1.5% postgame win expectancy into a victory. It also wasn’t Alabama’s only incredibly unlikely loss: The Tide were at 87.8% to beat Michigan in the ReliaQuest Bowl but fell 19-13.

(Ole Miss can feel the Tide’s pain: The Rebels were at 76.0% postgame win expectancy against Kentucky and 73.7% against Florida. There was only a 6% chance that they would lose both games, and even going 1-1 would have likely landed them a CFP bid. They lost both.)

Adding up each game’s postgame win expectancy is a nice way of seeing how many games a team should have won on average. I call this a team’s second-order win total. Alabama was at 10.7 second-order wins but went 9-4. That was one of the biggest differences of the season. Somehow, however, Iron Bowl rival Auburn was even more unfortunate.

Based solely on stats, Arkansas State should have won about four games, and Auburn should have won about eight. Instead, the Red Wolves went 8-5 and the Tigers went 5-7.

Comparing win totals to these second-order wins is one of the surest ways of identifying potential turnaround stories for the following season. In 2023, 15 teams had second-order win totals at least one game higher than their actual win totals — meaning they suffered from poor close-game fortune. Ten of those 15 teams saw their win totals increase by at least two games in 2024, including East Carolina (from 2-10 to 8-5), TCU (5-7 to 9-4), Pitt (3-9 to 7-6), Boise State (8-6 to 12-2) and Louisiana (6-7 to 10-4). On average, these 15 teams improved by 1.9 wins.

On the flip side, 19 teams overachieved their second-order win totals by at least 1.0 wins in 2023. This list includes both of 2023’s national title game participants, Washington and Michigan. The Huskies and Wolverines sank from a combined 29-1 in 2023 to 14-12 in 2024, and it could have been even worse. Michigan overachieved again, going 8-5 despite a second-order win total of 6.0. Other 2023 overachievers weren’t so lucky. Oklahoma State (from 10-4 to 3-9), Wyoming (from 9-4 to 3-9), Northwestern (from 8-5 to 4-8) and NC State (from 9-4 to 6-7) all won more games than the stats expected in 2023, and all of them crumpled to some degree in 2024. On average, the 19 overachieving teams regressed by 1.9 wins last fall.

It’s worth keeping in mind that several teams in Schlabach’s Way-Too-Early Top 25 — including No. 6 Oregon, No. 8 LSU, No. 11 Iowa State, No. 13 Illinois and, yes, No. 21 Michigan — all exceeded statistical expectations in wins last season, as did Also Considered teams like Army, Duke, Missouri and Texas Tech. The fact that Oregon and LSU overachieved while suffering from poor turnovers luck is (admittedly) rather unlikely and paints a conflicting picture.

Meanwhile, one should note that three Way-Too-Early teams — No. 12 Alabama, No. 23 Miami and No. 25 Ole Miss (plus Washington and, of course, Auburn from the Also Considered list) — all lost more games than expected last season. With just a little bit of good fortune, they could prove to be awfully underrated.


Injuries and general shuffling

Injuries are hard to define in college football — coaches are frequently canny in the information they do and do not provide, and with so many teams in FBS, it’s impossible to derive accurate data regarding how many games were missed due to injury.

We can glean quite a bit from starting lineups, however. Teams with lineups that barely changed throughout the season were probably pretty happy with their overall results, while teams with ever-changing lineups likely succumbed to lots of losses. Below, I’ve ranked teams using a simple ratio: I compared (a) the number of players who either started every game or started all but one for a given team to (b) the number of players who started only one or two games, likely as a stopgap. If you had far more of the former, your team likely avoided major injury issues and, with a couple of major exceptions, thrived. If you had more of the latter, the negative effects were probably pretty obvious.

Despite the presence of 1-11 Purdue and 2-10 Kennesaw State near the top of the list — Purdue fielded one of the worst power conference teams in recent memory and barely could blame injury for its issues — you can still see a decent correlation between a positive ratio and positive results. The six teams with a ratio of at least 2.8 or above went a combined 62-22 in 2024, while the teams with a 0.5 ratio or worse went 31-56.

Seven of nine conference champions had a ratio of at least 1.3, and 11 of the 12 CFP teams were at 1.44 or higher (five were at 2.6 or higher). Indiana, the most shocking of CFP teams, was second on the list above; epic disappointments like Oklahoma and, especially, Florida State were near the bottom. (The fact that Georgia won the SEC and reached the CFP despite a pretty terrible injury ratio speaks volumes about the depth Kirby Smart has built in Athens. Of course, the Dawgs also enjoyed solid turnovers luck.)


Major turnaround candidates

It’s fair to use this information as a reason for skepticism about teams like Indiana (turnovers luck and injuries luck), Clemson (turnovers luck), Iowa State (close-games luck), Penn State (injuries luck) or Sam Houston (all of the above, plus a coaching change), but let’s end on an optimistic note instead. Here are five teams that could pretty easily enjoy a big turnaround if Lady Luck is a little kinder.

Auburn Tigers: Auburn enjoyed a better success rate than its opponents (44.7% to 38.5%) and made more big plays as well (8.9% of plays gained 20-plus yards versus 5.7% for opponents). That makes it awfully hard to lose! But the Tigers made exactly the mistake they couldn’t make and managed to lose games with 94%, 76% and 61% postgame win expectancy. There’s nothing saying this was all bad luck, but even with a modest turnaround in fortune, the Tigers will have a very high ceiling in 2025.

Florida Gators: The Gators improved from 41st to 20th in SP+ and from 5-7 to 8-5 overall despite starting three quarterbacks and 12 different DBs and ranking 132nd on the list above. That says pretty spectacular things about their overall upside, especially considering their improved experience levels on the O-line, in the secondary and the general optimism about sophomore quarterback DJ Lagway.

Florida Atlantic Owls: Only one team ranked 111th or worse in all three of the tables above — turnovers luck (111th), second-order win difference (121st) and injury ratio (131st). You could use this information to make the case that the Owls shouldn’t have fired head coach Tom Herman, or you could simply say that new head coach Zach Kittley is pretty well-positioned to get some bounces and hit the ground running.

Florida State Seminoles: There was evidently plenty of poor fortune to go around in the Sunshine State last season, and while Mike Norvell’s Seminoles suffered an epic hangover on the field, they also didn’t get a single bounce: They were 129th in turnovers luck, 99th in second-order win difference and 110th in injury ratio. Norvell has brought in new coordinators and plenty of new players, and the Noles are almost guaranteed to jump up from 2-10. With a little luck, that jump could be a pretty big one.

Utah Utes: Along with UCF, Utah was one of only two teams to start four different quarterbacks in 2024. The Utes were also among only four teams to start at least 11 different receivers or tight ends and among five teams to start at least nine defensive linemen. If you’re looking for an easy explanation for how they fell from 65th to 96th in offensive SP+ and from 8-5 to 5-7 overall, that’s pretty succinct and telling.

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Good Cheer rallies in slop to win Kentucky Oaks

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Good Cheer rallies in slop to win Kentucky Oaks

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Unbeaten filly Good Cheer rallied on the outside through the slop to overtake Tenma by the final furlong and win the 151st Kentucky Oaks on Friday at Churchill Downs.

Louisville-born trainer Brad Cox watched the heavy 6-5 favorite cover 1 1/8 miles in 1:50.15 with Luis Saez aboard. Good Cheer paid $4.78, $3.62 and $3.02 for her seventh dominant victory.

The bay daughter of Megdalia d’Oro and Wedding Toast by Street entered the Oaks with a combined victory margin of more than 42 lengths, and on Friday, she added more distance to her resume with a stunning surge over a mushy track.

Cox, who grew up blocks from Churchill Downs, earned his third Oaks win and Saez his second.

Drexel Hill paid $21.02 and $11.76 for second while Bless the Broken was third and returned $4.78.

A thunderstorm that roared through about two hours before the scheduled post left the track soggy and sent many of the 100,910 fans seeking shelter at the track’s urging. The $1.5 million showcase for 3-year-old fillies was delayed by 10 minutes, and the conditions proved to be a minor nuisance for Good Cheer.

She was off the pace after starting from the No. 11 post but well within range of the leaders before charging forward through the final turns. Good Cheer was fourth entering the stretch and closed inside and into the lead, pulling away for her fourth win at Churchill Downs and second in the mud.

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