
Blaney, Byron, Logano, Reddick: Who will be 2024 NASCAR champion?
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10 months agoon
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Ryan McGee, ESPN Senior WriterNov 8, 2024, 11:15 AM ET
Close- Senior writer for ESPN The Magazine and ESPN.com
- 2-time Sports Emmy winner
- 2010, 2014 NMPA Writer of the Year
If it feels like the Daytona 500 was a while ago, well, that’s because it was. Eight and a half months, to be exact. Now the winner of that race, William Byron, is one of the final stock car steerers standing, joined by surefire NASCAR Hall of Famer Joey Logano, wunderkind Jumpman pilot Tyler Reddick and, thanks to some last-minute race-winning heroics at Martinsville last weekend, defending Cup Series champ Ryan Blaney.
This Championship 4 have endured a particularly peculiar season that has produced 18 winners over 35 races, the anointing of first-time winner in Harrison Burton, a farewell tour for legend Martin Truex, Jr., an Indy/Charlotte Double Duty attempt by Kyle Larson and yet another controversial win by Austin Dillon, not to mention some fights, an antitrust suit filed against NASCAR (by Reddick’s team, 23XI Racing) and a big ol’ spaghetti pile of postseason controversy as Blaney celebrated at Martinsville Speedway, the deciding factor in Byron making the cut.
Who are this year’s fearless foursome fighting for the Cup in Sunday’s highest-finisher-wins-it-all 312-lap throwdown? How did they get here? How have they fared at Phoenix Raceway in the past? Where are their heads as they, well, head into the desert? And if the guy driving for Michael Jordan wins the title, will he be expected to hug the trophy and cry all over it like MJ did in ’91 and ’96?
Read ahead as we give you the stats, the path and also a short Q&A with each member of NASCAR’s Championship 4.
Ryan Blaney | No. 12 | Ford Mustang | Team Penske
2024: 3 wins, 3 wins, 1 pole, 11 top-5s, 17 top-10s, 5 DNFs
2024 playoffs: 1 win, 0 poles, 4 top-5s, 6 top-10s, 2 DNFs
Playoff history: 8th appearance, 5 wins, 1 this year
Best championship finish: Defending NASCAR Cup Series champion
Phoenix career stats: 17 starts, 0 wins, 8 top-5s, 12 top-10s, 2 DNFs, 10.9 average finish
McGee: So, how exactly would you describe last Sunday at Martinsville? Not all the controversy happening behind you, but the relief of that amazing late drive, the win and transferring into the title fight?
Blaney: It felt like redemption. I gave the race away the week before at Homestead [passed by Reddick in the final turn of the race], like it was 100% on me. So, Martinsville was, personally, just like a self-confidence type of thing. That reaction arc, from being just crushed at one race and then winning the next, that was just electric.
McGee: When we talked this very day one year ago, on the eve of your first Championship 4, it was all about your mindset and mentality. Now you have that championship ring on your hand. You’ve literally been there, done that. Does it feel different this time around?
Blaney: A little bit. Just knowing how the weekend flows. The schedule is very different, the energy is leading up to the race, for sure. But once it starts…
McGee: OK, this is the part where all athletes and coaches say, “It’s just another race” or “just another game,” but it’s not. So, once it starts, be honest, it’s not, right?
Blaney: You definitely pay attention where the other three guys are. I mean, you know who you’re racing, and you know what’s at stake, so you’re constantly paying attention to that, but also, you’re trying your best to just pay attention to what you’re doing. So, I think it’s a little bit of both. You understand the highs that are on it, and the pressure that’s on and it’s like, how do you rise up to that pressure? How do you not let it get to you? But you want that pressure. You’re pretty fortunate if you get to feel that pressure, because it means you’re trying to do something really important.
McGee: Speaking of pressure, you’ve been in it the entire postseason. I look at the past 10 races and it reads: crash, crash, running, crash, running, running, crash. You have four finishes of 30th or worse in the NASCAR playoffs. Where was the defending champ’s head four weeks ago? Because it didn’t look like the champ would have a chance to defend.
Blaney: Some people are like, “Oh, the 12 team shouldn’t be here, they haven’t been performing at all.” It’s like, have you even looked at why we have four finishes of 30th or worse? It’s because I’ve just gotten caught up in other people’s mess. We were super fast in all those races. Like, we didn’t run one lap at Watkins Glen [the second postseason race] and we had already been wrecked. We know we should be here. Fighting back has been the way we’ve done it all season. Sunday won’t be any different.
McGee: I know you love the history of the sport because of your DNA; you come from generations of racers. There are only 17 drivers with two championships and only eight drivers who have managed at least one repeat and it’s happened only ten times. What would it mean to you to be in those clubs?
Blaney: I never would have dreamt about winning one and, let alone, you know, having a chance to win two and go back to back. I’m hungrier to win the second than I was the first, because you know that feeling. You understand that excitement and the joy that it brings you and your people, and you want that feeling again, so we’re even foaming at the mouth more to win the second one.
Joey Logano | No. 22 | Ford Mustang | Team Penske
2024: 3 wins, 3 poles, 6 top-5s, 12 top-10s, 6 DNFs
2024 playoffs: 2 wins, 0 poles, 2 top-5s, 4 top-10s, 1 DNF
Playoff history: 11th appearance, 12 wins
Best championship finish: 2018 and 2022 Cup Series champion
Phoenix career stats: 31 starts, 3 wins (most recent: November 2022), 8 top-5s, 16 top-10s, 5 DNFs, 13.5 average finish
McGee: It’s funny looking over the guys in this foursome, and I remember when you first got here and seemed like you were the young guy for like a decade, and now you’re the cagey veteran with these young guys.
Logano: But I’m not old, either. That’s a good place to be.
McGee: Yes, 34 years old. To quote former Arizona resident Doc Holliday, you’re in your prime. With the younger guys, a lot of my talk has been about mindset, but this is your sixth Championship 4. You’re a two-time champ. What’s that worth on Sunday?
Logano: A lot. You definitely feel more confident going into the weekend because you know what’s coming your way. You know that you know what the week leading up is. A couple of weeks leading up, a couple of days leading up. Stress, everything on your plate, most importantly the amount of time that you will not have.
McGee: You have been in this with teammates and without. You have Blaney with you this year. How much different is it when you go into this with help, but also racing against them?
Logano: It does change the way the race plays out a little bit, right? You have a friend out there, and we have been just as open during meetings for this race as any other race, but maybe once it starts it’s not quite as good of a friend as normal. I was in this position before with Brad [Keselowski] racing here in Phoenix. But the bottom line is that if you’re [team owner] Roger Penske, that means you have a 50% chance, so one of us had better deliver! (laughs)
McGee: There is one Championship 4 newcomer in the field, Reddick. What do you remember about your first time being in the finale with a title shot?
Logano: I don’t know how he is feeling, but I know for me, I was s—ting my pants. Whether it’s your first time or your sixth or whatever, you don’t know if you’ll ever get there again. You don’t know. You know you don’t want to waste the opportunity that is there, and that anxiety that will get you. The pressure is real, man. It’s either going to make you better or it’s going to make you crack. And I know people focus on the drivers but it’s like that for the whole team. It’s not just the drivers who are going to win or lose this thing. If the whole team is going to be there, there’s going to be a lot of pressure on everyone, even if they tell you, “It’s no big deal.” It is. It’s the biggest deal in our sport.
McGee: So, 20-something Joey won his first Cup title six years ago. Now, you’re 30-something Joey, father of three. What’s the celebration now? Y’all head to Chuck E. Cheese?
Logano: I can’t say I’ve ever been a partier. So, 2018 wasn’t too wild. (laughs) My oldest, Hudson, was there, but he was a baby. Then, in 2022, seeing him run up to grab the checkered flag, and then climb into the car with me to ride to Victory Lane, it was definitely a tear-jerking moment. Now it would be even more so that way, because, you know, he’s 6 and my other son, Jameson, is 4. My daughter’s 2, so we can all celebrate together. I don’t know if the youngest would remember it, but my oldest will remember, and if nothing else, we’ll have a lot of pictures and really cool videos and look back. It’s all about the family video someday, right? It’s kind of all you got is memories, and this would be a really special memory to have all together.
Tyler Reddick | No. 23 | Toyota Camry | 23XI Racing
2024: 3 wins, 3 poles, 12 top-5s, 20 top-10s, 4 DNFs, 26-race “regular season” champion
2024 playoffs: 1 win, 1 pole, 1 top-5, 2 top-10s, 2 DNFs
Playoff history: 5th appearance, 1 win, this year
Best championship finish: 6th, 2023
Phoenix career stats: 9 starts, 0 wins, 2 top-5s, 3 top-10s, 1 DNF, 17.9 average finish
McGee: You drive for a team co-owned by Michael Jordan. You drive a Jumpman-sponsored car that routinely features paint schemes modeled after Air Jordans. So, how many pairs of Jordans do you own?
Reddick: I feel like I had a good count like a month ago … but I feel like I’ve had like 15 to 20 pairs show up since then … so, shoot, I’m thinking it’s around 120.
McGee: Did you say 15 or 20 this month? What a job perk!
Reddick: (laughs) Yeah. That’s not bad.
McGee: I have seen a lot of celebrities from other sports come and go from the garage, but Jordan seems all in. He was celebrating with you at Homestead after your last-lap pass. The last time he won a championship of any kind was 1998, playing for the Chicago Bulls. What will it mean if you get to hand him a championship trophy on Sunday?
Reddick: I just think about when I really fell in love with racing as a very young kid, watching NASCAR on Sundays, or hanging out at the track with my dad when he raced. I just always wanted to hopefully one day be a Cup Series driver. Then the ultimate dream come true would be to become a Cup champion. But then, you add to that what you just mentioned. Michael is the champion. He has been so bought-in with 23XI since Day 1 to help the dream of his become realized, too. I don’t know what the emotions are going to be like.
McGee: We all remember him in 1991 and ’96 holding that NBA trophy and crying all over it.
Reddick: We might get a repeat, yeah. But me.
McGee: The other co-owner of your team is Denny Hamlin. How do you explain to all these fans you’ve garnered because of Jordan from the stick-and-ball sports world, this dynamic of racing for a championship-driving a car owned by Hamlin, while also racing against Hamlin, who drives for another team in Joe Gibbs Racing?
Reddick: I know think that’s weird, probably, but in our world it isn’t. Denny is always there to give help if called upon. And yes, it is interesting because who was racing against me and Blaney at Homestead? Denny. At Vegas, same thing [Hamlin criticized Reddick for an early crash]. But he’s always been really good about lending a hand and giving me his opinion on things. So, yeah, it can be a bit tricky balance, when we race each other on the racetrack we both know that everything that we share with each other we will also probably use against each other. We wouldn’t be racers if we didn’t.
McGee: You have two Xfinity titles, won via this same four-team finale format. So, are you nervous? Is this weird? How do you feel going into Sunday because we sportswriters, we’re all shamelessly going to make a big deal out of the fact of this your first time in the Championship 4 and the pressure, the unknown, all of that.
Reddick: Go on and do that if you want, because that’s not where I’m going to be. It is my third time doing this, in different series with different owners and different manufacturers against different drivers, but I have felt really at ease, knowing what this means and where we’re going to be. I find it easy to focus. We have had to battle back all season, so nothing that comes up Sunday will rattle us.
McGee: This sounds like the kid I first saw win a late model race at Rockingham when he was 16.
Reddick: I remember that race. We had a really bad year. We’d blown up every single engine we’d bought. We’d had some bad wrecks. Halfway through the year our budget was gone. I just had the feeling going into Rockingham that this might be one of my last opportunities to be in a stock car. We won and it swung the door back open. That has happened to me again and again. I don’t think the pressure Sunday will be worse than that.
William Byron | No. 24 | Chevrolet Camaro | Hendrick Motorsports
2024: 3 wins, 1 pole, 12 top-5s, 20 top-10s, 4 DNFs
2024 playoffs: 0 wins, 0 poles, 4 top-5s, 7 top-10s, 0 DNFs
Playoff history: 6th appearance, 1 win
Best championship finish: 3rd, 2023
Phoenix career stats: 13 starts, 1 win (March 2023), 2 top-5s, 7 top-10s, 0 DNFs, 11.8 average finish
McGee: I think the last time we chatted was standing in Daytona 500 Victory Lane. You’ve had quite the 2024 since then, all the way up to that postrace controversy at Martinsville.
Byron: We’ve honestly been through a lot this year. I feel like we started off the year really well, and honestly, had some things we were working through and felt like we were close during the summer but just couldn’t get the wins. But once we got into the second round of the playoffs, we just really hit on it. Communication, trust, speed, everything just started to come together, and that’s how we did what we did these last several weeks (six top-6 finishes in the past six races).
McGee: Revisiting Martinsville, you were out of the Championship 4, but Christopher Bell was hit with a penalty and that pushed you in. Were you able to put that all behind you pretty quickly, even with us media folks asking you about it?
Byron: I was honestly really surprised how quickly my mind shifted. I stayed off social media all week. I really blocked out all the noise. Even my crew chief asked me at one point, “Hey, did you see this or that?” and I’m like, “Dude, I haven’t even paid attention.” Typically, I’m pretty easily distracted when it comes to that stuff, but I don’t know, it just felt like when Sunday night happened the way it did, I went from believing we weren’t in and preparing for the worst, but then there was this shot in the arm that we need to go get this championship. So, yeah, out of a mess, I feel optimistic.
McGee: A year ago, we talked about a lot of unknowns ahead of your first Championship 4. So, what do you know now that you didn’t expect to learn in this race in 2023, when you won the pole, finished fourth in the race and third in the championship?
Byron: First, don’t listen to the “it’s just a normal race” stuff because it’s not normal at all. What stuck with me last year, is that it’s a short opportunity, and the race is even shorter than the week, and you just want to capitalize on every moment that you have. It’s one of the shortest races we run (312 laps, 500 kilometers) so it went by really fast. I think the biggest difference last year was that we had some guys that were not in the playoffs that we found ourselves racing really hard with (non-title contender Ross Chastain won the race), so that was a little unique. And then Christopher Bell was out early in the race, so it was really three of us. It’s a little weird feeling, I would say, in that sense because you do have different types of things you’re focused on. We’re back here with a couple different competitors, but there’s a lot of similarities to last year, so it’ll be nice to lean on that stuff.
McGee: Since the Netflix reality show dropped in the preseason, right before you won Daytona, everyone who saw the show became invested in your Lego obsession. So, have people been giving you Legos or telling you about their Legos? Are you kind of Lego’d out?
Byron: (laughs) At this point, I am a bit Lego’d out. It’s the No. 1 thing I get asked. And I’m telling you this just as we’ve had the Netflix guys around this week and a lot more than usual. I honestly did not let them in a lot through the playoff round of 8, because I just wanted to focus. It’ll be interesting to see what the next thing is.
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Sports
GameDay Kickoff: Expectations for Jeremiah Smith, LSU-Clemson and more ahead of Week 1
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8 hours agoon
August 28, 2025By
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Week 1 is finally here and there’s plenty to know about ahead of this weekend. Top 25 matchups will be played, and many freshmen will have the chance to show if they can shine under the bright lights for the first time.
All eyes will be on No. 1 Texas-No. 3 Ohio State as the Longhorns travel to the Horseshoe Saturday. What can we expect to see from Texas quarterback Arch Manning and Ohio State wide receiver Jeremiah Smith in Week 1? No. 9 LSU travels to No. 4 Clemson in a tough road matchup to start off the season. While Brian Kelly and LSU have yet to win a Week 1 matchup the past three seasons, will this be the game that changes that? As we look forward to a jam-packed weekend, we take a look back at some of the best quotes of the offseason.
Our reporters break down what to know entering Week 1.
Jump to:
Expectations for Arch and Jeremiah
LSU-Clemson | Freshmen to watch
Offseason quotes
Texas-Ohio State preview
What do we need to see from Arch Manning Week 1?
We can expect Manning to take some deep shots, especially to receiver Ryan Wingo, who Manning has raved about all offseason. The Longhorns weren’t great at stretching the field last season with Quinn Ewers, but whenever Manning got in, he looked to make big plays. Texas’ offensive staffers said this spring they keep reminding Manning that he just needs to keep the offense moving forward and to take the easy throws when he can, especially while breaking in four new starters on the offensive line. Similarly, Manning, who has open-field speed, has been reminded by everyone — including his grandfather, Archie, who liked to run around a little bit — to get down or get out of bounds, and not to drop his shoulder and try to run anyone over. Manning doesn’t have to be “superhuman” or “do anything that is extraordinary,” Steve Sarkisian said on Monday. But a solid performance on the road at No. 3 Ohio State to open the season would set the Longhorns on a national championship trajectory. — Dave Wilson
What can we expect from Jeremiah Smith in his sophomore debut?
Smith noted during Big Ten media days last month that with a year of experience behind him, he expects to play even faster this season. That’s a scary proposition for the rest of college football, considering Smith put together one of the greatest true freshman seasons in college football history, capped with his game-clinching reception that lifted Ohio State to a national championship. The Longhorns were one of the only teams to keep Smith in check last year, holding him to just one catch for three yards. Of course, the attention on Smith allowed Carnell Tate and Emeka Egbuka to thrive, combining for 12 receptions in the 28-14 Buckeyes win. Still, Smith said he has been waiting for this opportunity to face Texas again. How new quarterback Julian Sayin performs could dictate the quality of Smith’s opportunities. Either way, Smith is primed to put on a show on the big Week 1 stage. — Jake Trotter
What each team needs to capitalize on to win
LSU: Four starters from last year’s starting offensive line were selected in the 2025 NFL draft, but that doesn’t mean LSU was elite up front. The Tigers ranked last in the SEC in rushing offense and mustered just 1.5 yards before contact on dropbacks, ahead of only Vanderbilt. This year’s unit will need to improve dramatically on that clip if LSU wants to contend for a playoff berth and that starts with the opener against Clemson. Clemson’s defensive front, manned by Peter Woods and T.J. Parker, is stout, and new coordinator Tom Allen will have his sights set on making LSU one-dimensional. The key to getting the ground game going will be a youth movement in the backfield led by Caden Durham and five-star freshman Harlem Berry. — David Hale
Clemson: As Hale mentioned, Clemson needs to dominate up front — as much as that sounds like a cliché. LSU coach Brian Kelly said he planned to rotate as many as eight offensive linemen in the opener, which is a nod to team depth, but may not be conducive in the type of environment they will be playing in. Clemson is eager to show that it has vastly improved in its front seven under new defensive coordinator Tom Allen, who brings a far more aggressive approach with his scheme. That aggressiveness was missing a year ago, as Clemson struggled to stop the run and consistently get after the quarterback with its best pass rushers. Clemson ranked No. 85 against the run a season ago while Penn State, where Allen coached, ranked No. 9. The same can be said on offense, where a veteran offensive line must help Clemson get the ground game going. Cade Klubnik was more effective as a passer last season because the Tigers had balance in their ground game. Converted receiver Adam Randall gets the nod at running back, and true freshman Gideon Davidson is expected to play. — Andrea Adelson
Five freshmen to watch in Week 1
Bryce Underwood, QB, Michigan, No. 1 in 2025 ESPN 300
Underwood shook the recruiting world with his late-cycle flip from LSU to the in-state Wolverines last November. Ten months later, ESPN’s top 2025 recruit is set to be the program’s Week 1 starter when No. 14 Michigan hosts New Mexico on Saturday.
Underwood’s elite arm talent, pocket awareness and mobility has impressed the Wolverines’ coaching staff since he arrived on campus in January, as has his accelerated knowledge of the game. The young quarterback will get his first chance to flash that talent alongside fellow Michigan newcomers in running back Justice Haynes (Alabama transfer) and wide receiver Donaven McCulley (Indiana) in Week 1 before Underwood and the Wolverines stare down a much stiffer challenge against an experienced, Brent Venables-led Oklahoma defense on Sept. 6.
Elijah Griffin, DT, Georgia, No. 3 in 2025 ESPN 300
For the first time since 2021, the Bulldogs landed the state of Georgia’s top-ranked prospect in the 2025 cycle, and Griffin already appears poised to be a Day 1 contributor for the No. 5 Bulldogs.
Like many of the elite defensive line talents before him at Georgia, Griffin possesses top-end traits — speed, physicality and SEC-ready size at 6-foot-4, 310 pounds — that have had onlookers drawing comparisons to former Bulldog Jalen Carter throughout the spring and summer. Griffin’s maturity and ability to pick up the defense has also stood out as he vies for snaps along a revamped Georgia defensive line that returns multiple starters from a year ago. Whether or not he starts against Marshall on Saturday, Griffin is expected to play early and often in a significant role within coordinator Glenn Schumann’s defense this fall.
Dakorien Moore, WR, Oregon, No. 4 in 2025 ESPN 300
Moore has been one of the nation’s most productive high school playmakers in recent seasons, and his elite speed and playmaking talent are expected to earn him early opportunities this fall as he steps into an unsettled Ducks wide receiver group.
Missing top 2024 pass catchers Tez Johnson (NFL), Traeshon Holden (NFL) and Evan Stewart (injury), No. 7 Oregon is screaming for fresh downfield producers in 2025. The Ducks have plenty of experienced options between Florida State transfer Malik Benson and returners Justius Lowe, Gary Bryant Jr. and Kyler Kasper, but none offer the brand of electricity Moore presents. One of ESPN’s highest-rated wide receiver prospects since 2006, Moore should be an asset for first-year starting quarterback Dante Moore as soon as Oregon takes the field against Montana State on Saturday.
Demetres Samuel Jr., DB/WR, Syracuse, No. 223 in 2025 ESPN 300
Samuel reclassified into the 2025 class to enter college a year early. At just 17 years old, the 6-1, 195-pound freshman is set to feature prominently for the Orange this fall starting with Syracuse’s Week 1 matchup with No. 24 Tennessee on Saturday in Atlanta.
A speedy tackler from Palm Bay, Florida, Samuel has legit two-way potential, and the Orange intends to make the most of it in 2025. Syracuse coach Fran Brown announced earlier this month that Samuel will start at cornerback against Tennessee while also taking snaps at wide receiver, where the Orange are replacing their top two pass catchers from a year ago. With Travis Hunter in the NFL, Samuel stands as one of the most intriguing two-way talents across college football.
Jayvan Boggs, WR, Florida State, No. 284 in 2025 ESPN 300
Boggs joins the Seminoles after hauling in 99 receptions for 2,133 yards and 24 touchdowns in a wildly productive senior season at Florida’s Cocoa High School last fall. Listed as a starter in Florida State’s Week 1 depth chart, he has an opportunity to pick up where he left off in 2025.
Boggs combines a thick build with sudden route running and knack for yards after the catch. Alongside transfers Gavin Blackwell (North Carolina), Duce Robinson (USC) and Squirrel White (Tennessee), he’s positioned to emerge as a reliable downfield option from the jump within a new group of Seminoles pass catchers around Boston College transfer quarterback Tommy Castellanos, starting with Florida State’s Week 1 meeting with No. 8 Alabama (3:30 p.m. ET, ABC). — Eli Lederman
Notable offseason quotes
“I depend on Depends. … I’m making a joke out of it, but it is real. It is real. It is real. If you see a port-a-potty on the sideline, it is real, I’m just telling you. You’re going to see one at practice, on the sideline [in games].” — Colorado coach Deion Sanders, joking about his cancer recovery.
“But since we’re in Vegas, it seems like the right time to say it, our theme for this team is double down.” — Oregon coach Dan Lanning, on expectations coming off last year’s undefeated regular season.
“We figured we would just adopt SEC scheduling philosophy, you know? Some people don’t like it. I’m more focused on those nine conference games. Not only do we want to play nine conference games, OK, and have the [revised] playoff format [with automatic qualifiers], we want to have play-in games to decide who plays in those playoffs.” — Indiana coach Curt Cignetti on criticism of the Hoosiers’ light nonconference schedule.
“The recent NCAA ruling to not punish players that weren’t involved is correct. However, this ruling also proves that the NCAA as an enforcement arm no longer exists.” — Former Ohio State coach Urban Meyer, on the sanctions against rival Michigan.
“They don’t have Nick Saban to save them. I just don’t see them stopping me.” — Florida State QB Tommy Castellanos to On3 in June about the opener vs. Alabama.
“I’m 21 so I can do shots at a bar.” — Texas quarterback Arch Manning, joking after being asked about how he has to carry himself in public.
“They can have their opinion. We’re going to handle all that on Aug. 30.” — Clemson DE T.J. Parker on the battle over the stadium nickname “Death Valley” between Clemson and LSU.
“I still have the [Catholics versus Convicts] shirt. I do. It’s well documented that’s as intense if not the most intense rivalry that at that time it felt like the national championship went through South Bend or Coral Gables. Intensity was high, physicality, the edge that game was played with was next level.” — Miami coach Mario Cristobal on the Notre Dame rivalry. Cristobal played in the game and will now coach in it as Miami opens vs the Irish.
“Be delusional … It means no cap on the jar, no limitations, dreaming big. With the College Football Playoff where it is, as Indiana showed last year, anybody can get there. If we’re delusional enough to know we can do that, we can get there … Take the cap off the jar. Limitless.” — Minnesota coach P.J. Fleck, speaking at Big Ten media days.
Sports
East Carolina-NC State and other under-the-radar rivalries really pack a punch
Published
8 hours agoon
August 28, 2025By
admin
-
Ryan McGeeAug 28, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Senior writer for ESPN The Magazine and ESPN.com
- 2-time Sports Emmy winner
- 2010, 2014 NMPA Writer of the Year
Let’s start with a personal memory, shall we?
Saturday, Sept. 10, 1983. Night had fallen and traffic was moving slowly as our aircraft carrier Oldsmobile Delta 88 Royale was sitting in line attempting to leave Raleigh’s Carter-Finley Stadium. My mother had a white-knuckled grip on the polished wooden steering wheel. I was riding shotgun, dressed head-to-toe in North Carolina State red and white. My little brother was in the backseat, donned in East Carolina purple and gold. He loved the Pirates because our father was an alum and had pitched for the East Carolina Teachers College baseball team back in the day. But I loved the Wolfpack because we were living in Raleigh in the Jimmy Valvano era and, did I mention it was 1983?
ECU had just defeated State for the first time in six years and did so by stopping the Pack on fourth down deep in Pirates territory in the waning seconds, preserving a 22-16 victory in front of 57,700 fans, at the time the largest crowd to ever witness a college football game in the state of North Carolina.
My brother was very happy. I was not. Mom, flying solo because Dad was away officiating another game in another town, had to physically separate us as we walked through the gravel parking lot to the car. Now we all watched as no one was bothering to separate a pair of bourbon-soaked gentlemen throwing hands in that same parking lot right beside our car. They were also dressed in opposing colors. When the guy in red had enough, he got back into his car and power-locked the doors. So the guy in purple walked around behind the car, ripped the license plate off with his bare hands and threw it like a frisbee into the dark pine trees that lined the lot.
“Just so you know, that’s what you two looked like walking to the car,” Mom said to us, our preteen faces still flushed. “If you’re still doing that when you’re their age, don’t come home.”
My brother mouthed silently at me from the backseat: “Go Pirates.”
I responded in kind, perhaps even with a middle finger extended: “Go Pack.”
Looking at East Carolina-NC State this weekend and thinking of all the Down East NC houses divided. Ex. Here’s Dad pitching for ECU in the 1960s and me in my Wolfpack gear in the 1980s (holding a bass). pic.twitter.com/LRBKQEyySU
— Ryan McGee (@ESPNMcGee) August 27, 2025
Army-Navy, the Iron Bowl, The Game, the Big Game and more Cups than you would find at a Bed Bath & Beyond going out of business sale. College football, far more any other sport, is built atop a foundation of rivalries. But while we as a helmeted nation tend to focus on the biggest brand-name showdowns — the ones that determine conference titles, steer national championship pushes and have long held down prime network time slots on late November weekends — they aren’t always the most fun or even the most furiously fought football fracases on the calendar.
That’s why my personal favorite rivalries are the ones that set fire to their particular corner of the map with a crazed college football intensity but are games that people who live outside that immediate area might not fully understand or appreciate.
The contests when towns, counties, particular pages of state atlases and individual homes are divided by laundry. When autumn Saturday evenings aren’t just a football game, but rather a fistfight at a family reunion. And who doesn’t want to watch that?
It’s Akron and Kent State, stars of the Bottom 10 Cinematic Universe, located only 10 miles apart, who have a snafu in the snow every November over the possession of a Wagon Wheel. It’s North Dakota State vs. South Dakota State, Bison vs. Jackrabbits, in a contest that almost always has huge FCS national title implications and also almost always ends with postgame finger-pointing that will last for the next 364 days. It’s basically the entire Sun Belt Conference, where divisions still exist, teams still ride buses to games, bad blood has flowed through reluctantly shared veins of the likes of Georgia Southern vs. App State and where soon-to-be member Louisiana Tech is resuming the Rivalry in Dixie against Southern Miss. Football feuds that reach back through years gone by in lower divisions and long-abandoned small college conferences.
Central Michigan vs. Western Michigan for the Victory Cannon. Kansas vs. Missouri, a rivalry that next weekend will be reinstated as the Border Showdown, formerly called the Border War, a title with roots back to an actual border war between the two territories. Montana vs. Montana State in the Brawl of the Wild. Even the big brand likes of Clemson vs. Georgia, stadiums only 80 miles apart, and the game we just watched in Ireland to open the 2025 season, Iowa State vs. Kansas State, aka Farmageddon.
Why do I so relish these raucous regional rivalries? Because as you are now aware, I grew up right in the middle of one — maybe the best example there is. East Carolina versus North Carolina State, who will meet for the 34th time Thursday at 7 p.m. ET on the ACC Network.
Will the nation be riveted? No. But will my neighborhood of that nation be hotter than a bottle of Texas Pete? Oh, hell yes.
“I call them cookout games because if there is ever an argument at the family cookout, then it’s probably about a game like this one.” That’s how it was once explained to me by Ruffin McNeill, a Lumberton, North Carolina, native and former all-star ECU defender who became the coach at his alma mater in 2010 and led the Pirates to four bowls in six years before he was controversially dismissed. Now Ruff is a special assistant at … wait for it … NC State. “To me, it’s what makes college football the best sport in the world. When you look at your brother or your cousin and you say, ‘You know I love you, but for a few hours this weekend I’m not going to love you as much as I usually do.'”
That’s how a lot of North Carolina families will be rolling Thursday night, especially those who reside between the state capital and the Outer Banks, what we call Down East. From Nags Head to New Bern and Scotland Neck to Smithfield, one giant barrel of red and white and purple and gold, all swirled together in the same living room. And man, do those colors clash.
“So, I’m from Texas, right? We have a lot of really intense rivalries that mean a lot inside the state of Texas but that people outside of Texas don’t really understand,” USC coach Lincoln Riley said earlier this year. He was East Carolina’s offensive coordinator for five years, 2010 to 2014, coaching under McNeill. “When NC State came to our place in 2010, I remember in pregame, it was already so tense. I said, ‘Oh man, this is how this is?’ Ruff said, ‘Yes, it is. Now imagine what it’s going to be like when we go there. Buckle up.'”
BACK TO THE memory banks.
Jan. 1, 1992. The final Peach Bowl was played in Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium. It was a drizzly day, but that didn’t prevent nearly 60,000 people from attending the last college football game played at the home of the Braves, soon to be replaced by the Georgia Dome. Both ECU and NC State were in the Top 25. After nearly two decades of annual contests, they hadn’t played since 1987. Why? Because after another win in Raleigh, Pirates fans stormed NC State’s home field and pillaged the goalposts. By this time Valvano was NCSU’s athletic director and, angered by the damage done to his football stadium, he immediately discontinued the series. So, when it came time for the Peach Bowl to send out its invites, the powers-that-be wisely made phone calls to two schools located only 80 miles apart and only a day’s drive down I-85 to their stadium.
There, in the stands, sitting with my family and surrounded by ECU fans, I began openly gloating about State’s imminent victory. After all, the Pack led by 17 points with less than nine minutes remaining. It was over, right? Wrong. Pirates quarterback Jeff Blake, amid chants of “We … believe!” and a sea of foam yellow buccaneer swords, orchestrated a comeback that made him not merely an East Carolina football legend, but the forever Pirates football deity.
I was so bitter about that day for so long that it pained me the first time I finally interviewed Blake, and he was such a genuinely nice guy.
“Everywhere I go, it’s about the ’92 Peach Bowl,” he said to me for a 2014 story about bowl games. Blake threw for more than 21,000 yards over 14 NFL seasons and is now director of the IMG QB Academy in Florida. “If I had won a Super Bowl ring, it would still be second in [Greenville, NC] to people wanting to see my Peach Bowl watch. At a big school, those moments might not mean so much. For the rest of us, those are the moments.”
ECU vs. NCSU has provided so many of those moments.
That game that Lincoln Riley spoke of in 2010 began with a 21-0 ECU lead in the first quarter, but Wolfpack QB Russell Wilson led a comeback of his own, sending the game into OT. But in that extra frame, Wilson was intercepted to secure the victory for the Pirates. It was a revenge game for their last meeting two years earlier, when it was NC State who celebrated at the end of the series’ first-ever overtime contest.
In 2022, ECU had a chance to tie and win the game late but missed a PAT and field goal as time expired, preserving NCSU’s 1-point win. And, oh yeah, there’s their last meeting, only eight months ago in the Military Bowl, where a sellout crowd in Annapolis got a red-hot game and a bloody ref as the result of a fight at the end of the game, à la those drunk dudes in the parking lot in ’83.
Speaking of, I failed to mention this when I shared that story, but those guys totally knew each other. They looked similar. Had the same nose. One even called the other by name. So, it should come as no surprise that the prize awarded for winning this game is directly based on that kind of kinship. The Victory Barrel, which wasn’t introduced until 2007 but has been retroactively marked to represent every result since the series began in 1970, was rolled out with a backstory about two ultracompetitive brothers who grew up on an Eastern North Carolina farm but attended the two different schools. Eventually, they donated the pork barrel that they had once kept in a barn, whittled with the results of their own hometown competitions, for the schools to keep track of their football games.
“Those games are the ones where you look at the other guy and you know that guy, or you at least recognize that guy, because that guy either lives in your neighborhood, or hell, he might be your brother,” explained Jerry Kill when asked about the intensity of overlooked rivalries. Now he’s a special consultant at Vanderbilt. Prior to that, he was the coach at New Mexico State, one half of the Rio Grande Rivalry versus New Mexico, aka the Game When The Diego Pavia Logo Urination Video (ahem) Leaked, which holds its115th edition later this season. “If you like western movies, you know how it works. This town ain’t big enough for the both of us.”
North Carolina has never been big enough for all its college football teams. Tobacco Road has long belonged to what used to be called the Big Four. Beginning at the western edge of the middle region of the state, aka the Piedmont, with Wake Forest, then moving east into the Triangle, with Duke and UNC in the middle and NC State on the eastern flank. But as Appalachian State began to gather steam, it challenged from the mountains after East Carolina did the same from the coast. Both have always coveted the power conference ACC membership of the Big Four, but both have also proudly owned the little brother chip on their shoulder pads. All while Wake and State have done the same, as they’ve had to watch the nation become obsessed with the Blue Devils and Tar Heels during hoops season.
NC State head coach Dave Doeren, who made headlines this summer at ACC media days when asked about ECU and replied, “I want to beat the s— out of that team,” has never shied away from the perceived “haves vs. have-nots” syndrome when it comes to UNC. See: When he also made headlines in 2022 saying, as paraphrased by a TV crew, that NC State is blue collar and UNC is elitist. On the flipside, ECU coach Blake Harrell recently suggested that his entire roster was making less NIL money than Pack QB CJ Bailey.
“Whatever you need to motivate yourself, you do it,” Torry Holt said, laughing, prior to his induction into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame in 2022. The former NC State All-America wide receiver grew up in Gibsonville, North Carolina, just off Tobacco Road. He even picked tobacco as a kid. He also went 1-1 versus East Carolina during his four years with the Pack, highlighted by a backbreaking 68-yard TD catch to open the second half in Raleigh in 1997 that paved the way to a 37-24 win. “The important thing for me is that the last time I played them, we won. We lost the first one. But you don’t want to lose the last one. That was the last time I played them and the last time I will ever play them.”
He laughed again. “So … scoreboard.”
ONE MORE FROM the memory bank. It’s all you need to know about ECU vs. NCSU, and it easily applies to all those other underappreciated pigskin passion plays throughout this great college football nation.
It was spring 1997 and I was a young feature producer for ESPN. My primary beat was NASCAR, and I was covering a race at my hometown Rockingham Speedway. That’s when the governor of North Governor, Jim Hunt, who was an NC State graduate and former NCSU student body president, wandered into the media center during a rain delay, making small talk. He said to us, “You guys are with ESPN? Well, I have a story for you. Our state legislature is introducing a bill to try and mandate that East Carolina plays State every year. Y’all ever been to one of those games?”
I told him that, yes, I had, growing up in Raleigh in the 1980s. My camera operator said he had been a Wolfpack athlete, a swimmer. What we know now is that the bill never passed, but it did lead to more frequent Tobacco Road bookings for the Pirates.
That ’97 day in rainy Rockingham, Hunt sighed. “If that bill passes, then y’all know what I’m going to have to do?”
We looked at the governor, quizzically. He winked. Then he joked. At least I think it was a joke.
“We’re going to need to hire a lot more state troopers for Down East. Or wrestling referees.”
Sports
Deion’s pitch: Pay players NFL-style playoff bonus
Published
8 hours agoon
August 28, 2025By
admin
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Associated Press
Aug 28, 2025, 08:56 AM ET
Leave it to Deion Sanders to come up with an idea for the College Football Playoff that nobody has really mentioned yet: Pay the players for making the tournament, and pay them more when their teams win.
If they do that, then “now it’s equality, now it’s even and every player is making the same amount of money,” the Colorado coach said.
Sanders and former Alabama coach Nick Saban talked to The Associated Press as part of their unveiling of a new Aflac commercial that rolls out this week with a storyboard ripped from today’s headlines: It opens with Sanders complaining: “This game has gotten out of control. All the money. All the unpredictability.”
He is talking about health insurance, of course, and the commissioner he wants to see run it isn’t Saban, but that kooky duck who wears the same powder-blue sportscoat as the two football legends.
It’s an endorsement that Sanders says hits home some two years after his diagnosis with bladder cancer, from which he says he is fully recovered.
“I’ve been walking with my coaches over a mile” after practice, he said ahead of Friday night’s season opener against Georgia Tech. “Exercising, lifting.”
Saban will be back on the set with ESPN in his second year of “retirement” after leaving the Crimson Tide, where he won six national titles. He insists he wants to help college sports find its footing, but not via a commissioner job that was floated last year with his name coming up as the ideal fit.
“I don’t want to be in that briar patch of being a commissioner, but I do want to do everything I can to make it right,” he said.
He and Sanders agreed that there needs to be more structure around the deals players sign. Since July 1, schools have been able to start paying up to $20.5 million each to their athletes over the next year under the House settlement alongside third-party NIL deals that have turned some players into millionaires.
Saban said he believes that forgotten amid all the hype about name, image and likeness deals — deals Sanders says are a joke because “there are only three or four guys who you might know their NIL, and the rest you’re just giving money to” — is what happens to the vast majority of these players after they leave school.
“For years and years and years as coaches, and when we were players, we learned this, we’re trying to create value for our future,” Saban said. “That’s why we’re going to college. It’s not just to see how much money we can make while we’re in college. It’s, how does that impact your future as far as our ability to create value for ourselves?”
Currently, conferences whose schools advance to the 12-team playoff receive $4 million for making the bracket, with payments increasing for every round they win.
Saban said Sanders’ idea about spreading the wealth with an NFL-style playoff bonus structure for players (winners of the Super Bowl got $171,000 last year) sounded like a good idea to him. He also had no love for proposals coming out of the Big Ten that would give that league and the Southeastern Conference multiple automatic bids.
“The NFC East has the Cowboys, Eagles and Giants, they have the biggest fan bases of anyone and they have to play their way in,” Saban said. “Everyone should play their way in. One year, a conference might get five teams in, another it might get three. But there’s no [scenario] in any competitive venue where you get a guaranteed playoff spot.”
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