Connect with us

Published

on

Last we saw the SEC on the gridiron, it was underachieving dramatically.

Well, sort of. SEC teams went 8-7 in bowl/playoff season, falling short against the spread by only 1.6 points per game (which is to say that the spreads were pretty accurate on average). But they underachieved by more than that against Big Ten teams, and for the second straight season — gasp! — an SEC team failed to win the national title. The league still comfortably had the best average SP+ rating in the nation thanks primarily to the small number of genuinely bad teams, but it certainly didn’t finish the 2024 season in a great mood.

With the Big Ten’s Penn State and Ohio State, Notre Dame, and the ACC’s Clemson all looking at potential top-5 hype, there’s a decent chance that the SEC’s title-free run reaches three years. But try to hold back your sympathy tears — the league still has at least three of the most talented teams in the nation and the largest selection of upper-middle-class teams with dreams of 10-2 records and playoff at-large bids. In Arch Manning, LaNorris Sellers, DJ Lagway, Marcel Reed and maybe Austin Simmons, it has the most fascinating set of young quarterbacks in the sport. It has the most under-pressure Alabama head coach in a generation. It has Diego Damn Pavia. And if last year is any indication, it might have a few more shocking, playoff-turning upsets too.

This league never lacks for talent, grievance or storylines. I don’t see why that would change in 2025. Let’s preview the SEC!

Every week through the summer, Bill Connelly has been previewing another FBS conference, ultimately including all 136 FBS teams. The previews include 2024 breakdowns, 2025 previews and team-by-team capsules. Here are the MAC, Conference USA, Mountain West, Sun Belt, AAC, Indie/Pac-12, ACC, Big 12 and Big Ten previews.

2024 recap

The 2024 SEC race was a perfect battle of ceiling versus floor. Texas and Georgia had the high floors, losing only to SP+ top-10 teams and grinding out wins, often by margins smaller than expected. (Texas underachieved against SP+ projections in seven of its last 10 games, Georgia in four of its last six.) Alabama and Ole Miss, meanwhile, put together some of the most impressive single-game performances of the season — Kalen DeBoer’s Crimson Tide beat Missouri 34-0 and LSU 42-13 in back-to-back weeks, while Ole Miss pummeled South Carolina 27-3 and became the first team since 2019 LSU to beat Georgia by more than 17 points (28-10).

That ridiculously high ceiling is why Bama and Ole Miss finished higher than Texas and Georgia in the final SP+ rankings. But both missed the College Football Playoff because they were also capable of losing to 4-8 Kentucky, 6-7 Oklahoma and 7-6 Vanderbilt. Granted, the latter two were statistically unlikely defeats — Ole Miss had a 76% postgame win expectancy* for its 20-17 loss to Kentucky, while Bama was at 99% for its (glorious) 40-35 loss to Vandy — but they happened.

(* Postgame win expectancy looks at all the predictive stats that a given game produces — the things that get fed into the SP+ ratings themselves — tosses them into the air and says, “With these stats, you could have expected to win this game X% of the time.)

Elsewhere, Tennessee rode brilliant defense to a CFP bid, and other hopefuls South Carolina (lost three of four early in the season), LSU (lost three in a row), Texas A&M (lost four of five to end it) and Missouri (a 3-3 midseason stretch) looked the part at times but fell short because of funks.


Continuity table

The continuity table looks at each team’s returning production levels (offense, defense and overall), the number of 2024 FBS starts from both returning and incoming players and the approximate number of redshirt freshmen on the roster heading into 2025. (Why “approximate”? Because schools sometimes make it very difficult to ascertain who redshirted and who didn’t.) Continuity is an increasingly difficult art in roster management, but some teams pull it off better than others.

Only the Big 12 has a better returning production average than the SEC, which, in a universe with (legally) well-paid players, is something you would probably expect. The Big 12 ended up with the advantage because of its huge number of strong returning QBs — who carry significant weight in the returning production formula — but the SEC has the highest average of both returning starts and incoming FBS starts. This is going to be an awfully seasoned league in 2025.


2025 projections

Of the five teams that finished in the SP+ top 10 last season, four rank 81st or worse in returning production, but the fifth, Bama, ranks in the top 30. That is by far the cleanest, easiest way to explain why the Crimson Tide start out on top here. Of course, it’s looking as if Texas is likely to start out No. 1 in the preseason polls, but because there’s no “Arch Manning is about to take The Leap” factor in these projections, the Horns are merely top-5.

Nationally, there are eight teams projected within a touchdown of the No. 1 ranking in SP+, and the SEC has only three of them. (The Big Ten also has three, while Clemson and Notre Dame are also involved.) That indeed means the SEC doesn’t exactly have overwhelming odds of producing a national champion. But as I told SEC fans when the league was winning titles nearly every season, that’s not the greatest measure of league strength. Alabama winning six titles with the best coach of all time didn’t exactly say much about how good Mississippi State or South Carolina was, right? But while the SEC has let its title grip slip, the simple fact that it has 10 of the projected top 17 teams (and 12 of the top 25) drops some pretty clear hints regarding which conference has the best overall depth. (I talked more about the effects of that depth in this piece.)

I always gush about how wide open and unpredictable the Big 12 is, and justifiably so, but “No one has a better than 1-in-6 chance of winning the conference title, and 10 teams have at least a 1-in-20 chance” is pretty dang wide open and unpredictable! If Texas’ Manning is as good as people expect, then the Longhorns’ odds obviously get a big bump, but on paper this race could go about 100 ways.


10 best games of 2025

Here are the 10 games — eight in conference play, plus two of the biggest nonconference games of 2025 — that feature (A) the highest combined SP+ ratings for both teams and (B) a projected scoring margin under 10 points.

Texas at Ohio State (Aug. 30) and LSU at Clemson (Aug. 30). I have so many questions about each of these four teams, and I’m so happy that they’ve basically paired off with each other to help answer them. Toss in Alabama at Florida State in between the noon ET kickoff in Columbus and the evening kickoff in Clemson and you’ve got yourself a solid SEC headliner for each time slot on the first Saturday of the season.

Georgia at Tennessee (Sept. 13). The Bulldogs and Volunteers meet in September for the first time since 2018. Good. I like my UGA-Tennessee games early, when they can spark the largest possible existential crises.

Alabama at Georgia (Sept. 27). A rematch of the second-best game of 2024*. Aside from Ohio State-Michigan, no game did a better job of reminding us that huge college football games will still be huge and delightful even if the national title stakes are dampened by a bigger playoff.

(* Bama gets a rematch of the best game of 2024 the next week when Vandy comes to town.)

LSU at Ole Miss (Sept. 27). Is it too late to redraw the schedules? Between the Bama-Georgia and Oregon-Penn State main events and an undercard of LSU-Ole Miss, Indiana-Iowa, TCU-Arizona State and USC-Illinois (and, on top of everything else, South Dakota at North Dakota State), Week 5 might actually be too big! Goodness.

Texas at Florida (Oct. 4). Texas benefited from a relatively easy slate (relatively speaking) in 2024, with just three regular-season opponents finishing in the SP+ top 20. But if Florida and Oklahoma improve as projected this fall, the Horns are looking at five such games, only one of which is in Austin. That’s the opposite of easy.

Ole Miss at Georgia (Oct. 18). Ole Miss might have enjoyed the single best performance of the regular season in last year’s 28-10 walloping of the Dawgs. That the Rebels turned right around and lost to Florida, eventually eliminating them from CFP contention, has to be one of the biggest on-field regrets of the last 50 years in Oxford.

Alabama at South Carolina (Oct. 25). South Carolina began turning its season around with a near-comeback win over Bama in 2024. This will be the Gamecocks’ third straight game against a projected top-20 team, so the season might have already gone in a couple different directions by the time Bama gets to town.

LSU at Alabama (Nov. 8). Bama crushed LSU in Baton Rouge last season, then pulled an Ole Miss and fell victim to a devastating upset two weeks later. Considering the expectations and pressure both of these teams are dealing with, this game could have playoff stakes and/or hot seat stakes. Or both?

Texas at Georgia (Nov. 15). Georgia was the only SEC hurdle Texas couldn’t clear last season. There’s obviously a chance this will be the first of two UGA-UT matchups in a four-week span.


Conference title (and, therefore, CFP) contenders

Head coach: Kalen DeBoer (second year, 9-4 overall)

2025 projection: Second in SP+, 9.8 average wins (6.0 in the SEC)

Heading into Week 13 last year, Alabama was chugging right along. Kalen DeBoer’s first Crimson Tide team was 8-2, second in SP+ and, despite losses to Vanderbilt and Tennessee, seventh in the CFP rankings. And then, almost overnight, the offense vanished.

Alabama offense, first 10 games: 39.5 points per game, 6.8 yards per play, 1.7% turnover rate, 8.3 yards per dropback

Alabama offense, last 3 games: 14.7 points per game, 4.8 yards per play, 5.1% turnover rate, 6.0 yards per dropback

The pairing of DeBoer with quarterback Jalen Milroe seemed awkward from the start, simply because Milroe was the polar opposite of Washington’s Michael Penix Jr. — with whom DeBoer’s Huskies reached the national title game in 2023 — in all ways good (far more mobile and explosive) and bad (far more sack- and mistake-prone). It worked for much of 2024, then it suddenly didn’t work at all.

Milroe is off to the NFL, and Ryan Grubb, Washington’s 2023 offensive coordinator, is back in tow after a year in the pros. Likely starting quarterback Ty Simpson was the nation’s No. 2 dual-threat quarterback prospect in 2022, and he showed solid wheels in ripping off a 78-yard should’ve-been-a-touchdown run in garbage time against Chattanooga in 2023. (He also showed the wrong kind of Milroe similarities in somehow taking five sacks in just 15 dropbacks against South Florida that same year.) Splitting the difference between Penix and Milroe, and shedding some of the negative plays that doomed Milroe late in 2024, could take Bama quite a long way.

Simpson — or, if Simpson falters, sophomore Dylan Mack or five-star freshman Keelon Russell — will certainly have solid weapons around him. After an incredible start to his freshman year (544 receiving yards at 28.6 per catch in his first five games), Ryan Williams managed just 321 yards at 11.1 per catch the rest of the way, but he was still outstanding for a first-year player. Williams, senior Germie Bernard and Miami transfer Isaiah Horton will lead the way at receiver, while high-upside youngsters like Jalen Hale, Rico Scott and, perhaps, converted corner Jaylen Mbakwe attempt to carve out niches. At running back, solid seniors Jam Miller and Louisville transfer Dre Washington will vie for carries with sophomores Richard Young and Daniel Hill. And a potentially spectacular offensive line, led by left tackle Kadyn Proctor and center Parker Brailsford, could help to turn a good skill corps into a great one.

The defense should already be great. Last season the Tide ranked fifth in points allowed per drive, combining top-20 efficiency (success rate) and big-play prevention (yards allowed per successful play) with elite red zone play and turnover capabilities. Best of all, of the 19 players who saw 200-plus snaps, 13 return. The spine of the defense — senior tackles LT Overton and Tim Keenan III, linebacker Deontae Lawson and safeties Keon Sabb and Bray Hubbard — has massive experience and known quality, and on the outside, corner Domani Jackson and sophomores such as edge rusher Qua Russaw and corners Zabien Brown and Cam Calhoun (a Utah transfer) have flashed elite upside. If coordinator Kane Wommack can figure out how to better rush the passer, quarterback might be the only question mark this team has.

Quarterback is awfully important, though, and Georgia shows up on the schedule by the end of September. Simpson has to not only be ready but ready quickly. That’s not how things always work out.


Head coach: Kirby Smart (10th year, 105-19 overall)

2025 projection: Fourth in SP+, 9.8 average wins (5.9 in the SEC)

I talked about ceilings and floors above and how Georgia and Texas reached the SEC championship game primarily because they avoided the low lows that befell other contenders. In Georgia’s case, we got a perfect example of how a high floor can work for you.

The Bulldogs finished sixth in SP+ (their worst ranking since 2020), 10th on offense (worst since 2020) and ninth on defense (worst since 2018). The Dawgs were clearly a couple of steps off where they were while going 42-2, with three straight top-2 SP+ finishes, from 2021 to 2023. And yet, they dominated in the red zone, avoided third-and-longs, dominated on fourth downs when necessary and played great special teams. They had the depth to account for most of the injuries that came their way, and they beat Texas twice — once via a comeback engineered by backup quarterback Gunner Stockton after Carson Beck’s season-ending injury — and won the SEC in this supposed down year. Stockton couldn’t lead the Dawgs past Notre Dame in the CFP quarterfinals, but it’s pretty clear Georgia’s down years remain better than most teams’ great years.

There’s reason to wonder if Georgia is in for another one of these “down” years. Kirby Smart still recruits an absurd number of blue-chippers and, therefore, has one of the best roster bases in the country. And while he certainly hasn’t used the transfer portal to great effect like rival coaches, he did bring in rather proven entities in running back Josh McCray (Illinois), edge rusher Elo Modozie (Army) and maybe nickel Adrian Maddox, along with physically impressive — if relatively unproven — players such as receivers Zachariah Branch (USC) and Noah Thomas (Texas A&M), defensive tackle Josh Horton (Miami) and safeties Jaden Harris (Miami) and Zion Branch (USC). I’m guessing Georgia’s floor will still be as high as anyone’s.

I struggle to see many units that might improve over last year, however. Sophomore running back Nate Frazier could be ready for a star turn, with the bull-like McCray providing a scary change of pace, and if the new safeties are solid, the secondary could improve a bit, even if it isn’t as elite as past Georgia secondaries. Special teams should remain awesome too, with the return of kicker Peyton Woodring and punter Brett Thorson and the addition of Zachariah Branch as a scary return man.

The incoming receivers’ per-route numbers, however, basically match those of the starters who just left; Beck didn’t get enough from his receiving corps last year, and there’s no guarantee Stockton will. Despite this, Beck still finished eighth in Total QBR with 3,485 passing yards and 28 TDs, and Stockton will have to play awfully well to match that. Meanwhile, last year’s top four offensive linemen are gone, as are seven of the 10 defensive linemen and linebackers who saw 300-plus snaps. The front seven’s production dipped in 2024, and now it’s double-dipping in the turnover department.

No matter how many holes Georgia has, there are countless blue-chippers vying to fill them. That could work out beautifully. But it’s easier to see a repeat of 2024 than a return to 2021-23 in Athens this year. With the right breaks, that could be enough to prompt another SEC title run or more. But it also leaves the door open for other contenders.


Head coach: Steve Sarkisian (fifth year, 37-17 overall)

2025 projection: Fifth in SP+, 9.6 average wins (6.3 in the SEC)

Reading the tea leaves and sussing out the conventional wisdom, it sure seems like Texas is going to be the No. 1 team in the preseason polls. And I get it. There really is a chance that Arch Manning is as good as we’ve been assuming he’d become for years, and if he is, then nothing else matters all that much.

The Longhorns have only a couple of last year’s key receivers returning — DeAndre Moore Jr. and sophomore Ryan Wingo — and while both battled ups and downs in 2024, their upside is obvious. So is that of big-time freshmen like Kaliq Lockett and Jaime Ffrench. Manning will have a strong set of running backs at his disposal, with leading rusher Quintrevion Wisner returning and sophomore C.J. Baxter, a key 2023 piece, back from injury. And while the line is replacing four starters, including incredible left tackle Kelvin Banks Jr., Manning’s athleticism and Manning-esque smarts would make their jobs easier up front. The defense has holes to fill up front, but it’s going to be good no matter what, and if Manning is dominating, the Horns will have more margin for error on that side.

As I asked in my Ifs List, however, what if Manning is merely very good? What if he flashes epic upside — like he did against UTSA, completing passes of 75, 51 and 36 yards and ripping off a 67-yard touchdown run in less than 30 snaps — but also gets fooled at times, like he did against Louisiana-Monroe (and in cameos against Georgia and Florida)? What if he needs an unproven receiving corps to bail him out and an unproven offensive line to protect him more?

What if, against a tougher schedule than last season, the offense gets held in the 17-point range a couple of times and the defense has to make more stops than usual? The back eight will certainly do its job, thanks to the best linebacking corps in the country — Anthony Hill Jr. (15.5 TFLs last year) is otherworldly, as are edge rushers Trey Moore and Colin Simmons — and a secondary featuring corner Malik Muhammad, safety Michael Taaffe and nickel Jaylon Guilbeau. But what about a defensive line that lost five of last year’s top six and is double-dipping turnover like Georgia’s front seven? Can senior Ethan Burke and a load of incoming transfer tackles, including the mammoth Travis Shaw (North Carolina) and Cole Brevard (Purdue), get the push required? And if the injury bug bites more than it did last year, when the Horns ranked fourth in lineup stability, will that wreck what already appears to be tenuous depth in some areas?

I have a lot more questions about Texas than I do the typical (expected) No. 1 team, but it could turn out that the answers match the hype. Steve Sarkisian has slowly built quite the juggernaut, and Manning is a Manning. Regardless, we barely have to wait another month to start getting answers. Having Texas at Ohio State in Week 1 absolutely rules.


Head coach: Brian Kelly (fourth year, 29-11 overall)

2025 projection: Ninth in SP+, 8.5 average wins (5.2 in the SEC)

In three years at LSU, Brian Kelly has had three top-15 offenses, the best offensive player in the country (Jayden Daniels in 2023) and the best defensive player in the country (Harold Perkins Jr. late in 2022). His Tigers have beaten three top-10 teams, and they’ve spent parts of all three seasons in the AP top 10.

They’re also 0-3 in season openers, they’ve lost to three unranked teams and they’ve lost four games by at least 20 points. Their offenses have been consistently good, but they’ve averaged just a 36.3 ranking in defensive SP+ and 73.3 in special teams. When Kelly arrived in Baton Rouge, he immediately restored LSU’s top-15ish credentials after down seasons at the end of the Ed Orgeron era. But the Tigers were 10th in SP+ in 2022, 11th in 2023 and 15th in 2024. That’s good, but it’s not moving in the right direction.

This year could further the stagnation, but the Tigers remain really close to a breakthrough. Garrett Nussmeier threw for 4,052 yards and 29 touchdowns last season, taking few sacks and distributing the ball beautifully — seven players caught at least 20 passes, with three between 55 and 61. Of the seven primary receivers, slot man Aaron Anderson, wideout Zavion Thomas and running back Caden Durham return. They’re joined by some potentially fun transfers in Nic Anderson (Oklahoma) and Barion Brown (Kentucky). Plus, tight end Trey’Dez Green hinted at great things as a freshman, and if bowl standout Chris Hilton Jr. ever achieves consistency, he’s going to be scary: He has averaged 21.2 yards per catch in his career, but he has caught only 31 balls in parts of four seasons.

Nussmeier was awesome on third-and-longs, but he had to be because the run game wasn’t giving him much help. Durham averaged a fantastic 3.8 yards per carry after contact, but he faced contact quickly, and now his line is replacing four starters. Including two transfers, six linemen have starting experience, but it’s going to be an extremely young group.

After stumbling to 52nd in defensive SP+ in 2023, LSU rebounded to 34th in Blake Baker‘s first season as coordinator. That’s pretty good considering Perkins made it just four games before getting injured for the season, but it’s not good enough for title contention. If Perkins and Whit Weeks, another disruptive linebacker who suffered a serious injury last season, are 100% healthy at the same time, that’s one of the best linebacking duos in the country. Kelly tried to sign every defensive end in the portal and came away with Florida State’s Patrick Payton, among others, plus a 10-TFL tackle in Bernard Gooden (USF). The secondary returns corner Ashton Stamps (13 pass breakups) and an active trio of transfers in corner Mansoor Delane (Virginia Tech), safety A.J. Haulcy (Houston) and nickel Tamarcus Cooley (NC State). Baker loves to attack. How many times LSU gets burned in the process will determine the course of the season.

The schedule is loaded with trips to Clemson, Ole Miss, Alabama and Oklahoma, but when LSU is cooking, the Tigers can romp through any schedule. It’s just been a little while since they cooked.


Head coach: Lane Kiffin (sixth year, 44-18 overall)

2025 projection: 11th in SP+, 8.9 average wins (5.1 in the SEC)

On one hand, I was pretty satisfied with Ole Miss missing the playoff. I am happy with the idea that losses matter — even really close ones (they lost three by 13 combined points) and statistically unlikely ones.

On the other hand, damn, Ole Miss was really, really good last year. Per SP+, this was the best Rebel team since 1963, with its best offense since 1971 and its best defense since 1966. Lane Kiffin channeled John Vaught last season, but the Rebels came up just short of a playoff shot. Blow a chance to make a big title run with a squad like that, and you may end up regretting it for quite a while.

Ole Miss offensive players made 143 starts last season; those responsible for just 31 return: slot receiver Cayden Lee (12 starts), tackle Diego Pounds (nine), tight end Dae’Quan Wright (six) and tackle Jayden Williams (four). Among 17 incoming transfers, running back Damien Taylor (Troy) and receivers De’Zhaun Stribling (Oklahoma State) and Harrison Wallace III (Penn State) should be solid immediately, and young former blue-chippers in running back Kewan Lacy (Missouri) and receiver Caleb Odom (Alabama) have obvious upside. With 2024 LSU transfer Logan Diggs healthy and ready to roll, the skill corps should be solid. I don’t see any guaranteed stars among the incoming linemen, though.

The most important player on the offense isn’t actually a transfer, though. Granted, Kiffin signed three new QBs, including one of my favorites, Division II star Trinidad Chambliss (2,925 passing yards and 1,019 rushing yards at Ferris State last year). But the job is sophomore Austin Simmons‘ to lose.

play

2:11

Ole Miss’ Austin Simmons on new role: ‘I feel older than my age’

As Simmons now holds the title as starting quarterback for the Rebels, the 19-year-old college graduate explains how his experience prepares him to be the leader in the locker room.

Simmons is a redshirt sophomore who finished high school two years early and already earned his undergrad degree (and pitched for the baseball team as a freshman). He was pretty good in a tiny sample last season — he went 5-for-6 for 64 yards filling in for Jaxson Dart in the big win over Georgia — and if he’s awesome, the Rebels will be too.

Pete Golding’s defense enjoyed an incredible breakthrough last season, jumping from 23rd to third in defensive SP+, but of the 18 players with 200-plus snaps, only four return. The front six is exciting — outside linebacker Suntarine Perkins (10.5 sacks, 10 run stops) is dynamite, sophomore tackle Jamarious Brown is super active for his size (6-foot-1, 315 pounds) and linebacker transfers Jaden Yates (Marshall) and Andrew Jones (Grambling) were major playmakers at their last school. But the secondary will be entirely transfer-dependent. Corners Ricky Fletcher (South Alabama) and Jaylon Braxton (Arkansas) and safeties Kapena Gushiken (Washington State), Wydett Williams Jr. (ULM) and Sage Ryan (LSU) could all be good, but the hit rate needs to be about 100% among them.

By SEC standards, the Rebels’ schedule is again manageable, but it wasn’t the big games that hurt Ole Miss last year. If Simmons clicks, and the new defense doesn’t fall off too much, maybe they’ll get a chance to right 2024’s wrongs.


Head coach: Josh Heupel (fifth year, 37-15 overall)

2025 projection: 13th in SP+, 8.8 average wins (5.0 in the SEC)

Tennessee had suffered three losing seasons in four years (and, somehow, eight in 13) before Josh Heupel took over. He has already enjoyed two top-10 finishes with no losing seasons. Better yet, his two top-10 teams were completely different from one another: Per SP+, the 2022 team was driven by the Vols’ best offense since 1940, and last year’s was driven by their best defense since 1999.

The 2025 Vols will likely also be defense-first. Defensive coordinator Tim Banks deploys a huge rotation, and at least 12 of the 25 guys with 150-plus snaps return, including one of the SEC’s best run-stopping defensive ends (Joshua Josephs), one of its most active 300-pounders (Bryson Eason), the team’s leading tackler (Arion Carter) and up to three starting defensive backs.

Why “up to four” DBs? Because the status of star cornerback Jermod McCoy remains unknown after a January ACL tear. The Vols won’t be at their best until/unless he’s 100%. They ranked sixth in lineup stability last year, but 2025 immediately got off to a poor start with McCoy’s injury.

The offense was still solid in 2024, slipping only to 23rd in offensive SP+, but the big plays have definitely vanished through the years.

Opponents have slowly adjusted to Heupel’s quick offense and seem basically to be giving the Vols the Patrick Mahomes treatment at this point (let them have whatever they want close to the line of scrimmage and form a cloud in the back to prevent the huge gashes).

Of last year’s starters, only receiver Chris Brazzell II, tight end Miles Kitselman (who was injured in the spring) and left tackle Lance Heard return. The Vols basically traded quarterback Nico Iamaleava to UCLA for Joey Aguilar in the spring. Iamaleava was the far more highly touted recruit, but Aguilar, who transferred from Appalachian State to UCLA last winter, is a far better scrambler and takes far fewer sacks. (He also throws more picks.)

Learning a third offense in less than a year isn’t optimal, and if Aguilar isn’t up to speed, redshirt freshman Jake Merklinger could take over. The Vols are probably fine at running back, where sophomores DeSean Bishop and Peyton Lewis could replicate new Cleveland Brown Dylan Sampson’s production, but sophomore Mike Matthews and redshirt freshman Braylon Staley both might start after combining for 10 catches last year, while the second string is littered with freshmen and, potentially, Carter, who played on both sides of the ball in the spring. It’s a similar story up front, where the two-deep will consist of Heard, transfers Wendell Moe Jr. (Arizona) and Sam Pendleton (Notre Dame) and an assembly line of redshirt freshmen and sophomores. It feels like the Vols could end up with their best defense and worst offense yet in the Heupel era.


A couple of breaks away from a run

Head coach: Mike Elko (second year, 8-5 overall)

2025 projection: 15th in SP+, 7.7 average wins (4.5 in the SEC)

It wasn’t LaNorris Sellers, it wasn’t DJ Lagway, and it wasn’t Michael Van Buren Jr. or Michael Hawkins Jr. either. Who was the best freshman quarterback in the SEC last year, per Total QBR? Texas A&M’s Marcel Reed.

A four-star true freshman from Nashville, Tennessee, Reed first filled in for an injured Conner Weigman, then took Weigman’s job outright after leading a nearly perfect second-half performance against LSU. He wasn’t the most explosive passer, he scrambled a bit too much and opponents baited him into more mistakes late in the season. But among the 17 SEC QBs with at least 150 dropbacks, he ranked fourth in success rate with the third-lowest sack rate. He kept the Aggies moving forward with his arm and his legs (633 non-sack rushing yards).

The run game will be absolutely dynamite with Reed and seniors Amari Daniels and Le’Veon Moss (combined: 1,426 yards and 18 TDs last year) and sophomore Rueben Owens running behind an enormous line that returns last year’s top six, five of whom are seniors (average size: 6-6, 333 pounds). A&M will absolutely maul opponents that don’t have a good enough defensive front.

When Reed has to pass, he’ll lean on a new receiving corps that lost last year’s top five targets. He should have an excellent possession option in NC State slot transfer KC Concepcion, but he’ll need a few youngsters to come through, like sophomore (and former top-20 prospect) Terry Bussey, all-or-nothing Mississippi State transfer Mario Craver and less-tested options like redshirt freshmen Ashton Bethel-Roman and Izaiah Williams and freshman Jerome Myles.

The Aggies defense was spectacularly all-or-nothing last season: In their past five games, they allowed 44, 3, 43, 17 and 35 points. That’s how things go when you stop 39% of snaps at or behind the line of scrimmage (eighth nationally) but rank 119th in yards allowed per successful play. The secondary is where most of the booms and busts originated — the Ags were fourth in completion rate allowed but 121st in yards allowed per successful dropback — and experience should help to tamp down the glitches. Starting safeties Dalton Brooks and Marcus Ratcliffe and corner Dezz Ricks were all freshmen or sophomores, and they should improve alongside senior corner Will Lee III. I love the addition of nickel Jordan Shaw (Washington), another sophomore with playmaker instincts.

The Aggies ranked just 85th in sack rate despite solid work from second-round NFL draft pick Nic Scourton, but the addition of transfer ends Dayon Hayes (Colorado), T.J. Searcy (Florida) and Samuel M’Pemba (Georgia) could help in that regard. Big tackle Albert Regis and linebackers Taurean York and Scooby Williams made double-digit run stuffs last season; if the pass rush improves a hair, the defense will too.


Head coach: Shane Beamer (fifth year, 29-22 overall)

2025 projection: 17th in SP+, 7.2 average wins (4.1 in the SEC)

Shane Beamer makes memories. He has struggled to build momentum at South Carolina, bouncing from 48th to 19th to 51st to 14th in SP+. His Gamecocks have lost nine games by at least 21 points. But he finished his first season by christening the mayo bath tradition, and his Gamecocks beat No. 5 Tennessee and No. 7 Clemson back-to-back late in 2022. Last season, after a 3-3 start, they won six in a row and got two highlight-reel touchdowns from LaNorris Sellers to beat Clemson again.

play

1:06

Highlight: Sellers seals scintillating South Carolina win at Clemson

QB LaNorris Sellers scores on a 20-yard touchdown run with 1:08 remaining to clinch the No. 15 Gamecocks’ 17-14 road win over the Tigers in the Palmetto Bowl.

South Carolina has been so all over the map under Beamer that either a charge into the top 10 or a .500 season wouldn’t be a surprise.

From a pure entertainment standpoint, you might want to root for the top-10 charge because that would mean Sellers took a spectacular leap. He took too many sacks last year and finished 42nd in Total QBR, but his great plays were unreal. The Clemson game was indicative: He took three sacks, committed two turnovers and led just one scoring drive in South Carolina’s first eight possessions but ripped off the two brilliant runs to win the game. With any consistency whatsoever, he’d be scary.

The rest of the team is retooling. The offense lost its leading rusher (Raheim Sanders) and receiver (tight end Joshua Simon) and entire interior offensive line, while the defense lost nearly its entire front six outside of end Dylan Stewart.

Stewart is fantastic — he had 11 TFLs and 6.5 sacks as a true freshman — but he’s the only known quantity, and the only semi-proven pass rusher arriving via the portal is Campbell’s George Wilson. The secondary was young, aggressive and sometimes error-prone in 2024, but it returns five of last year’s top seven, including outstanding nickel Jalon Kilgore, and added solid corners in Brandon Cisse (NC State) and Myles Norwood (Ball State).

The 6-3, 240-pound Sellers will form an imposing backfield with transfer running backs Rahsul Faison (Utah State) and Isaiah Augustave (Colorado), and the offensive line will be big, albeit patched together with transfers. The receiving corps is semi-proven at best. Former star recruit Nyck Harbor is ridiculously imposing (6-5, 235) and grew slightly more consistent late in 2024, but he has been more athlete than receiver to date.

After a somewhat manageable start, South Carolina will play seven projected top-21 teams in its final nine games. That brutal stretch will probably preclude the Gamecocks from making a serious run at the CFP, but when Beamer and Sellers are involved, anything is possible.


Head coach: Eliah Drinkwitz (sixth year, 38-24 overall)

2025 projection: 21st in SP+, 7.7 average wins (4.0 in the SEC)

If you have sturdy quarterback play, you can properly execute a good two- or four-minute drill, and with a strong kicker who can bomb in clutch field goals, you’re probably going to win more close games than you lose. Missouri had all those things in 2023 (while ranking 10th in SP+) and 2024 (19th), but winning 21 combined games required a 10-1 record in one-score finishes. With solid QB play, the Tigers could be a top-25 team again on paper, and the schedule is friendly by SEC standards. But no one wins 90% of their close games forever.

Drinkwitz did a nice job of basically adding a transfer for every starter lost. Either Penn State transfer Beau Pribula or former blue-chipper Sam Horn will fill Brady Cook’s shoes at quarterback. As Drew Allar‘s backup at Penn State, Pribula threw mostly short, smart passes and kept PSU on schedule with his feet, but he never really had to show off his arm or make big plays in crunch time. We’ll see how that goes.

Drinkwitz also added Louisiana-Monroe running back Ahmad Hardy. Among 32 backs with 200-plus carries, Hardy ranked sixth in yards per carry after contact (3.7) and first in forced missed tackles per touch (0.33), and he was a freshman playing on an outmanned team.

With last year’s top two receivers gone, Drinkwitz added 900-yard transfers in Kevin Coleman (Mississippi State) and Xavier Loyd (Illinois State), and with five of the top seven linemen gone, in come five transfers, including key left tackle Johnny Williams IV (West Virginia). The offense will have lots of starting experience, but most of it came elsewhere.

On defense, things look awfully sound for coordinator Corey Batoon. Mizzou has ranked 24th or better in defensive SP+ for three straight seasons and returns seven starters. The pass rush was key to having the No. 5 third-down defense in FBS, and losing end Johnny Walker Jr. hurts in that regard, but returnee Zion Young and a host of defensive end transfers, led by Damon Wilson II (Georgia), should offer solid options. And if the rush is good, the secondary could be fantastic; it returns five of last year’s top six, including disruptive nickel Daylan Carnell, and adds four starters from elsewhere, including well-traveled safety Jalen Catalon (UNLV). The offense’s main job could be to control the ball, avoid mistakes and try to hand the game to an excellent defense. Come to think of it, that also sounds like a pretty good close-game recipe.


Head coach: Billy Napier (fourth year, 19-19 overall)

2025 projection: 14th in SP+, 7.0 average wins (3.9 in the SEC)

I talked about plenty of fortunate teams above, but you know who wasn’t very fortunate in 2024? The Florida Gators. They were 134th out of 136 teams in lineup stability.

They started three different quarterbacks, three running backs, 10 receivers and tight ends, seven offensive linemen, 11 defensive linemen, three linebackers and 12 defensive backs. Among all these starters were tons of freshmen and sophomores. But somehow, despite the constant shuffling and a schedule that featured seven of the nation’s top 15 teams per SP+, the Gators proved incredibly resilient. They lost their first five games against top opponents during a 4-5 start, but they beat LSU and Ole Miss in November, then smoked Florida State and Tulane to round out an encouraging eight-win campaign.

If you survive injuries and shuffling, you come out on the other side with a wonderfully experienced team. Of the 49 players who started at least once on offense or defense, 29 return. The offense boasts a pair of potential all-conference linemen (tackle Austin Barber and center Jake Slaughter), along with ESPN BET’s current No. 6 Heisman favorite, quarterback DJ Lagway. Lagway was inconsistent in typical freshman ways, running himself into pressure occasionally, throwing a pick every 21.3 passes and producing a substandard completion rate. But he also averaged a whopping 16.7 yards per completion. He was a major big-play outlier.

Lagway has plenty of familiar faces around him, including fellow sophomores in leading rusher Jadan Baugh and receivers Eugene Wilson III and Aidan Mizell. Wilson was a star in the making but missed most of last season. This isn’t the league’s deepest skill corps, but it is pretty dangerous. And in addition to Slaughter and Barber up front are four others who started at least one game.

The defense had a huge role to play in 2024’s success. The Gators pulled a solid bend-don’t-break routine, forcing enough turnovers and red zone stops to make it work. Considering injuries and general inexperience, that’s impressive. There aren’t many surefire stars here — end Tyreak Sapp and nickel Sharif Denson are the closest things, and with more snaps blue-chip sophomore Myles Graham might become one — but the depth is outstanding.

I’m pretty high on this team, but the schedule still has seven projected top-15 teams. The Gators drew the short straw in the current SEC scheduling rotation, and it could cost them status as a CFP contender.


Head coach: Hugh Freeze (third year, 11-14 overall)

2025 projection: 25th in SP+, 6.9 average wins (3.6 in the SEC)

On paper, Hugh Freeze’s 2024 Auburn Tigers were just about the least fortunate team you’ll ever see. They were 125th in turnovers luck, and according to the postgame win expectancy measure I discussed near the top of this piece, they managed to lose games with postgame win expectancies of 94%, 76% and 61%. SP+ saw an 8-4 team that accidentally went 5-7, and that tends to almost guarantee improvement the next season. But if you actually watched Auburn, the breakdowns were so reliable — here comes another red zone breakdown, here comes another missed field goal, here comes another turnover — that it was difficult to see the losses as mere poor fortune.

Maybe no team in the country, therefore, combines raw upside with extreme burden of proof like Auburn.

There’s potential everywhere you look. Blue-chip sophomore receivers Cam Coleman and Malcolm Simmons return after combining for 1,049 yards and 11 TDs, and they’re joined by portal standout Eric Singleton Jr. (Georgia Tech). Longtime running back Jarquez Hunter is gone, but returnee Damari Alston and transfer Durell Robinson (UConn) are explosive. And the offensive line returns four starters and adds two more in tackles Mason Murphy (USC) and Xavier Chaplin (Virginia Tech).

On defense, end Keldric Faulk became a star in 2024, and corners Kayin Lee and Jay Crawford combined for 18 passes defended. Freeze also added two of my Group-of-5 portal favorites in edge rusher Chris Murray (Sam Houston) and corner Raion Strader (Miami-Ohio).

Notice I haven’t said the word “quarterback” in this capsule yet. Freeze hasn’t gotten what he needs from the position, and he basically flipped the entire QB room: All four players who took snaps last year are gone, and three transfers — Jackson Arnold (Oklahoma), Ashton Daniels (Stanford) and Tanner Bailey (South Carolina) — and blue-chip freshman Deuce Knight are in. Arnold, the No. 3 prospect in the 2023 recruiting class, is the presumptive favorite; he does everything with maximum urgency and intensity, and he ran all over Alabama in OU’s upset win. But he also seems to lack patience when looking to pass, and that created some awfully bad habits when he was dealing with breakdowns from a poor Oklahoma line. By the end of the season, his pocket awareness and internal clock were completely broken. That’s hard to fix, but he’ll at least get some favorable reads in Freeze’s RPO-heavy system.

Freeze has been recruiting well and could leave last year’s crippling mistakes in the past if — IF — he has a quarterback.


Head coach: Brent Venables (fourth year, 22-17 overall)

2025 projection: 16th in SP+, 6.9 average wins (3.5 in the SEC)

The last time Oklahoma had a three-year record this bad, the Sooners won the national title the following season. They jolted from their late-1990s slide to go 13-0 in 2000 with a trendy offense and a speedy, aggressive defense. Brent Venables was the defensive co-coordinator for that run; now he’s the head coach trying desperately to arrest a slide. OU has gone 6-7 in two of his three seasons. It took until last season to get the defense up and running — per SP+, the Sooners had their best defense since 2009. But the offense completely fell apart, dragged down by its worst line in ages, a lack of healthy skill corps standouts and inexperienced quarterbacks who fell into bad habits.

The defense should be fantastic again. The line is loaded with seniors like end R Mason Thomas and tackle Gracen Halton, and Venables made a couple of fun additions in end Marvin Jones Jr. (Florida State) and tackle Siolaa Lolohea (Utah State). It’s a similar story at linebacker, where Kendal Daniels (Oklahoma State) joins standouts Kip Lewis and Kobie McKinzie. The biggest issue last year was occasional big-play breakdowns in the back, but after surviving a number of injuries, the secondary returns six players with starting experience and potential stars in safeties Robert Spears-Jennings and Peyton Bowen and nickel Kendel Dolby.

Even against a schedule featuring nine projected top-25 teams (!), the defense will give the Sooners a chance in most games. The offense’s improvement will determine whether they can actually win a few. Venables brought both offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle and quarterback John Mateer over from Washington State. It’s not hard to see why.

Mateer threw for 3,139 yards and rushed for 1,032 not including sacks. He can scramble into trouble sometimes, which might be an issue if the line hasn’t improved — Venables did sign three OL transfers — but the skill corps has been completely restocked with running back Jaydn Ott (Cal) and eight new pass catchers. None of the four new FBS transfers blow me away on paper, but JaVonnie Gibson (Arkansas-Pine Bluff) is one of four immensely explosive smaller-school transfers. The Arbuckle offense leans heavily on slot receivers, and if returnee Deion Burks can stay healthy, he could post huge numbers. Even just a top-30ish offense, this is a top-15ish team. The ridiculous schedule will put a ceiling on the win total, but the bar for improvement isn’t particularly high.


Just looking for a path to 6-6

Head coach: Sam Pittman (sixth year, 30-31 overall)

2025 projection: 38th in SP+, 5.1 average wins (2.5 in the SEC)

Sam Pittman’s Arkansas team doesn’t stand still. In 2021, the Razorbacks surged from 3-7 to 9-4. In 2023, they collapsed to 4-8. Last fall saw a promising rebound to 7-6 and 24th in SP+, but a 1-3 record in one-score finishes kept the excitement tamped down a bit. In 2025, both the offense and defense start over to a degree.

The Razorbacks improved from 56th to 40th in offensive SP+ in Bobby Petrino’s first season back in Fayetteville as offensive coordinator. Volatile quarterback Taylen Green returns after throwing for 3,154 yards and rushing for 838 (not including sacks); he takes too many sacks and is a constant turnover threat, but he makes countless big plays as well. His line returns three starters and adds three power-conference transfers, but the skill corps is almost completely new. Sophomore running back Braylen Russell is the only noteworthy returnee, and Pittman added nine transfer pass catchers and two running backs. New receiver O’Mega Blake (Charlotte) was maybe the most all-or-nothing receiver in FBS last season, averaging 24.8 yards per catch with a barely 50% catch rate. If other newcomers like Raylen Sharpe (Fresno State) and Ismael Cisse (Stanford) can provide solid possession options, Green should have what he needs.

Travis Williams’ defense improved to 35th in defensive SP+ last year, with a sturdy run defense and problems at the back with an injury-laden secondary. Linebacker Xavian Sorey Jr. is outstanding (100 tackles, 15 run stops), and big tackle Cameron Ball is a keeper, but of the 18 players with 200-plus snaps, they’re two of only six returnees. And beyond corner Julian Neal (Fresno State) and maybe edge rusher Phillip Lee (Troy), Pittman didn’t sign many surefire portal standouts. It might take Williams a while to figure out his best lineup.

With eight projected top-25 opponents, Arkansas is the third of the “short straw” teams with Florida and Oklahoma. Green is a must-watch QB, for reasons good and bad, and Blake could make the Hogs’ offense even more explosive. But I’m not sure they have the defense to overcome the schedule.


Head coach: Mark Stoops (13th year, 77-73 overall)

2025 projection: 43rd in SP+, 4.7 average wins (1.9 in the SEC)

The last time Kentucky slipped below .500 (5-6 in 2020), Mark Stoops made an inspired offensive coordinator hire (new Jacksonville Jaguars head coach Liam Coen), fielded the best offense of his tenure, won 10 games and, per SP+, fielded Kentucky’s best overall team since 1977. Four years later, the Wildcats need another shot in the arm. The defense has slipped a bit, the offense collapsed to 89th in offensive SP+ in Coen’s absence and UK went just 4-8 in 2024. Stoops kept offensive coordinator Bush Hamdan, instead attempting a portal-based rebound. Two former FCS stars might dictate the fate of the program.

If the offense is good again, it will mean redemption for Hamdan and quarterback Zach Calzada. The former Texas A&M and Auburn quarterback returns to the SEC after throwing for 6,342 yards in two seasons at Incarnate Word. He’ll get help from strong backs — burly transfers Dante Dowdell (Nebraska) and Seth McGowan (New Mexico State) join speedy sophomore Jamarion Wilcox — and a remodeled line, but the receiving corps is a question mark. Incoming receivers Kendrick Law (Alabama) and Troy Stellato (Clemson) will try to supply efficiency and free up all-or-nothing deep threats Ja’Mori Maclin and J.J. Hester (Oklahoma).

The defense has been merely good and not elite for a couple of years, and of the nine guys with 200-plus snaps in the front six, seven are gone. The return of senior tackle Josaih Hayes from an Achilles injury should help, but I’m most intrigued by the addition of the best defender in FCS, South Dakota’s Mi’Quise Humphrey-Grace. He had 18.5 TFLs last season, and he’s got fantastic size (6-4, 265 pounds). The secondary lost a great nickel in Zion Childress but returns veteran safeties Jordan Lovett and Ty Bryant and corner JQ Hardaway.

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before, but the schedule isn’t going to help UK’s rebound attempt. The Wildcats are semi-comfortable favorites in only three games and play eight against projected top-25 teams. If Calzada is solid and Humphrey-Grace shines, bowl eligibility is possible, but another 10-win rebound is almost certainly not in the cards.


Head coach: Clark Lea (fifth year, 16-33 overall)

2025 projection: 55th in SP+, 4.7 average wins (1.6 in the SEC)

The New Mexico State gambit worked!

play

0:59

Diego Pavia gives electric postgame interview after Vandy’s stunning upset of Alabama

Diego Pavia credits his teammates for Vanderbilt’s historic upset of Alabama before getting mobbed by his family on the field.

Needing a boost in both toughness and playmaking, Clark Lea imported the former head coach (Jerry Kill), offensive coordinator (Tim Beck), quarterback (Diego Pavia) and tight end (Eli Stowers), among others, from the best NMSU team in decades. They delivered. Pavia became one of the SEC’s biggest personalities, the defense leaped from 124th to 59th in defensive SP+ (with minimal NMSU assistance) and the Commodores upset Bama for the first time in 40 years and enjoyed their first winning season in 11. Pavia evidently enjoyed the experience so much that he sued to come back for another year. And won.

Here’s where I have to be a Debbie Downer and point out that Vandy ranked seventh in turnovers luck and 11th in close-game fortune last season and might deal with comeuppance in both regards. Pavia’s willingness to both take and inflict hits is incredibly endearing, but it also meant that he spent a good portion of 2024 banged up and only somewhat effective. He gets Stowers, wideout Junior Sherrill and RB Sedrick Alexander back, and Lea added a big-play receiver transfer in Tre Richardson (Washburn). But the line lost four starters and got thinned out enough that Lea had to bring in seven transfers.

The defense should improve further. Of the 16 players with 200-plus snaps, 12 return, and I like new additions in tackle Mason Nelson (Western Michigan) and edge rusher Keanu Koht (Alabama). Honestly, the biggest loss for the defense might be punter Jesse Mirco. The Commodores benefited from major field position advantages that allowed their general bend-don’t-break act to prosper — 118th in success rate allowed, 42nd in yards allowed per successful play — and Mirco averaged 48.0 yards per punt.

If turnovers and close-game bounces (and field position) turn against Vandy, the downsides will be pretty obvious. But the Commodores return enough of last year’s key players to potentially create some more memories regardless.


Head coach: Jeff Lebby (second year, 2-10 overall)

2025 projection: 71st in SP+, 3.8 average wins (1.0 in the SEC)

Near the bottom of each of these previews, I usually encounter a team that (A) stunk last year and (B) returns nobody. Their preview just becomes a list of transfers. With Mississippi State bottoming out last season under first-year coach Jeff Lebby, you’d have figured the Bulldogs were candidates for a total roster culling. But while Lebby brought in more transfers than anyone in the SEC and added double-digit jucos as well, he also held on to 20 players who started at least once last season. Granted, none of the returnees could prevent the Bulldogs from suffering their worst record since 2003, but some continuity is probably better than none, right?

The offense was terribly inefficient last season, but it was less so before Blake Shapen suffered a season-ending shoulder injury. He scrambles into trouble like many others in this conference, but he’s solid, and he’ll benefit from a strong pair of backs in Davon Booth and dynamic transfer Fluff Bothwell (South Alabama), one of 2024’s best freshman backs. The offensive line returns two starters and welcomes four from other FBS schools, and while the receiving corps has little known quality, it has quantity with two primary returnees (tight end Seydou Traore and wideout Jordan Mosley) joined by eight transfers.

The MSU defense bent far too much and forced far too few turnovers to pull a decent bend-don’t-break routine (133rd in success rate allowed). Lebby focused most of his portal work on the front six and landed potential upgrades in tackle Will Whitson (Coastal Carolina) and linebacker Jalen Smith (Tennessee), among others, and the addition of four new 300-pounders can’t hurt. If the push up front improves, the secondary could be solid with active safety Isaac Smith and three of last year’s top four corners returning.

The bar’s pretty low here, both because MSU was comfortably the league’s worst team last year and because there weren’t too many surefire upgrades. But the mix of newcomers and returning talent should create better depth, at least, and hey, it’s not hard to improve on 2-10.

Continue Reading

Sports

Marching bands! Big entrances! Sing-alongs! 36 of our favorite game-day traditions

Published

on

By

Marching bands! Big entrances! Sing-alongs! 36 of our favorite game-day traditions

There’s nothing quite like the energy, emotion, pageantry and good ol’ fashioned fun that takes place every fall weekend at college football games.

There are time-honored traditions that date back many decades. There are century-old marching bands and pulsating techno hits. There are rampaging animals, covered wagons, antique cars and even storied rocks. There are quaint customs and there are controversies — it wouldn’t be college football without controversy, right?

With another season upon us, we’ve gathered a collection of our college football reporters’ favorite game-day traditions. We were looking for moments fans could count on and look forward to experiencing every time they go to the stadium, so we didn’t include celebrations of a win or rivalry moments that may happen only once every other year or so.

And by no means are we ranking these traditions or labeling these “better” than some that we surely left out. Every school has its own quirks and unique features that are near and dear to that team and its fans. But here’s a sampling of the wild, wacky, wonderful ways that college football strikes a special chord in the sports landscape.

Dramatic entrances

Osceola and Renegade planting the spear, Florida State: Since September 1978, Osceola has led his horse, Renegade, onto the field before kickoff of every Florida State home game and planted a spear at midfield in what has become one of the best-known college football entrances. Bill Durham, an FSU graduate, came up with the idea and got approval from the Seminole Tribe of Florida for the practice to begin. The Durham family continues to provide the Appaloosa horse that is used, and Osceola wears regalia that is authentic to the Seminole Tribe of Florida. Watching Osceola rear Renegade up on his hind legs to plant the flaming spear with 80,000 fans chanting is truly a sight to see. — Andrea Adelson

“Enter Sandman,” Virginia Tech: After installing the first videoboard at Lane Stadium in 2000, Virginia Tech decided it needed a new walkout song too. “Enter Sandman” by Metallica won out over “Welcome to the Jungle” and “Sirius.” A few years later, the tradition truly took off after a marching band member started jumping up and down during the song as a way to warm up. Now, the entire stadium jumps as the opening bars begin to play, bursting into raucous approval when the team runs out of the tunnel and onto the field. Multiple times over the years, a seismograph detected notable activity during “Enter Sandman.” And in a full circle moment, Metallica was in concert at Lane Stadium in the spring of 2025 and played its iconic song. To no one’s surprise, seismic activity again was detected. — Adelson

The Smoke, Miami: Believe it or not, the Hurricanes have come out of their tunnel onto the field for all their home games through “the smoke” since the 1950s, when the program was struggling to both win games and draw fan support. According to the university, school transportation director Bob Nalette proposed using fire extinguishers to produce smoke for players to run through as a way to drum up fan interest. In his spare time, Nalette welded a pipe together to billow said fire extinguisher smoke. The entrance took on iconic status in the 1980s as the program rose to prominence. — Adelson

Touch the Banner, Michigan: The Wolverines pride themselves on being the winningest program in college football history, but their famous pregame tradition began with the team off to a 1-5 start in 1962. The M Club, run by former letterwinners from all of Michigan’s athletic teams, asked coach Bump Elliott if letterwinners could welcome the football team before home games. They soon displayed a giant banner that reads “GO BLUE M CLUB SUPPORTS YOU,” which Michigan players and coaches leap to touch as they run out of the tunnel while “The Victors” plays. — Adam Rittenberg

Rubbing Howard’s Rock and running down The Hill; Gathering at the Paw, Clemson: Clemson has two of the most well-known pregame and postgame traditions in college football: Rubbing Howard’s Rock before running down The Hill to enter the stadium, and allowing fans onto the field postgame, win or lose, to meet at the midfield paw. Howard’s Rock, originally from Death Valley, California, was placed at the top of The Hill on the east side of the stadium in 1966. But after former coach Frank Howard told the team before a game against Wake Forest in 1967 they could rub the rock if they gave “110-percent effort,” the tradition of rubbing the rock, then running down the hill, before every game began. Gathering at the Paw also began under Howard in 1942 when Memorial Stadium opened, as a way for fans and players to gather together. — Adelson


Touching tributes

Hawkeye Wave, Iowa: Not every cherished college football tradition goes back decades and decades. In 2017, those inside Kinnick Stadium — fans, players, coaches and officials — began “The Wave,” acknowledging the child patients inside University of Iowa Stead Family Children’s Hospital, which is just across the street. After the first quarter, everyone turns toward the hospital, where the patients and their families wave from the 12th floor windows. The tradition began after Krista Young suggested the idea on a Hawkeye fan Facebook page. A social media surge followed and The Wave began for the start of the 2017 season — Rittenberg

Spirit of Chucky Mullins, Ole Miss: Nearly 36 years after his death, Chucky Mullins remains an endearing figure at Ole Miss. He was paralyzed in a 1989 game against Vanderbilt while making a hit near the goal line on Commodores fullback Brad Gaines and died less than two years later after suffering a pulmonary embolism. As the Ole Miss team takes the field at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium before games, each player touches a bust of Mullins that sits midway between the tunnel and the field. On the platform where the bust sits is Mullins’ mantra: “Never quit.” — Chris Low

Mr. Two Bits; “Won’t Back Down,” Florida: The Gators have two traditions that are immediately recognizable. Since 1949, every home game has started with the “Two Bits” cheer, started and popularized by George Edmondson. He would wear a yellow shirt, blue-and-orange striped tie and whistle, and exhort the crowd to chant. “Two Bits. Four Bits. Six Bits. A Dollar. All for the Gators, stand up and holler!” Beginning in 2013, with Edmondson in his 90s, a celebrity “Mr. Two Bits” began to lead the pregame cheers. Then in 2017, a new tradition started after Gainesville native Tom Petty died. At the end of the third quarter, the crowd sings Petty’s “I Won’t Back Down” in addition to the longstanding “We are the Boys.” — Adelson


Music that gets you moving

“Jump Around,” Wisconsin: No team has developed a wilder midgame tradition than Wisconsin’s “Jump Around,” the House of Pain song of the same name, played between the third and fourth quarters at Camp Randall Stadium. The song made its Badgers debut at the 1998 homecoming game against Purdue. Ryan Sondrup, an injured tight end for the Badgers who entered the athletics marketing department, was tasked with finding songs that could spark the crowd during games. He came back with “Jump Around,” which has sent Camp Randall shaking ever since. — Rittenberg

The Bounce House, UCF. After UCF scored its first touchdown at its new on-campus stadium on Sept. 17, 2007 — against Texas, no less — rollicking club hit “Kernkraft 400” by Zombie Nation blared from the speakers. Spontaneously, the crowd started jumping wildly, causing the stadium to vibrate and “bounce.” Thus, the birth of not only a tradition but a stadium nickname. Now the song is played multiple times during games and serves as a way to get everyone fired up, with the crowd chanting along and cheering “U-C-F!” — Adelson

“Sweet Caroline,” Pitt. Back in 2008, former Pitt football player Justin Acierno was working at the school and tasked with improving the student fan experience during games. What would keep them interested? With the help of student organizations and athletic department employees, they came up with a plan: Play Neil Diamond’s 1969 classic “Sweet Caroline” at the end of the third quarter of football games. The plan worked. Acierno made sure some of the lyrics were more Pitt friendly — subbing in “Let’s Go Pitt” during the chorus. The sing-along first happened against Buffalo in Week 2 of the 2008 season, and the rest is history. — Adelson

“Sandstorm,” South Carolina: It’s certainly not unusual to hear the techno instrumental song “Sandstorm” by Finnish DJ Darude at a sporting event, but South Carolina has staked a special claim to it in the world of college football. The connection can be traced to Sept. 24, 2009, when the Gamecocks were hosting No. 4 Ole Miss. With time winding down and South Carolina leading 16-10, and the Rebels facing a key third down, the pulsating beat blasted throughout Williams-Brice Stadium, whipping the crowd into a frenzy. “A rave breaks out in Columbia,” ESPN announcer Chris Fowler said as fans and players jumped and gyrated. The Gamecocks got that stop, “Sandstorm” roared again, Ole Miss failed on fourth down, and the upset — and new tradition — were sealed. Now anywhere South Carolina folks gather, you can expect to hear the anthem, and Darude himself appeared at Willy B to perform it for a game against Kentucky in 2023. — Steve Richards

“Dixieland Delight,” Alabama: The Crimson Tide mark the beginning of the fourth quarter by playing “Dixieland Delight,” by the band Alabama, even though it’s written about a Saturday night in Tennessee. But that’s neither here nor there. It’s a beloved sing-along, the height of the form, but enterprising Tide fans also managed to insert a few of their own lyrics, including a four-letter greeting to their friends over in Auburn. (And LSU, and Tennessee too.) It became such a source of frustration that the university banned the playing of the song in 2014, then agreed to revisit it in 2018 with the #DixielandDelightDoneRight campaign, encouraging fans to say “BEAT” Auburn instead of the other word, with the stadium speakers attempting to drown out the ne’er-do-wells. Good luck with all that. — Dave Wilson


That’s dedication

Midnight Yell, Texas A&M: The Aggies love their traditions, and the SEC move and social media have exposed them to many new audiences, many of whom seem bewildered. But college football is about local customs, and watching a game at Kyle Field is one of the best environments in the sport because of the devotion of A&M fans. To wit, the Aggies routinely draw more fans the night before a game than many schools do on game day to “practice” the yells they’ll perform on game day, a tradition since 1931. — Wilson

Midnight Drummers’ Circle, Notre Dame: At midnight the night before Notre Dame football home games, fans will flock to the school’s Main Building (better known as the Golden Dome) to witness a performance by the drumline of the Band of the Fighting Irish that kicks off the game-day experience. The drummers’ circle is one of multiple Golden Dome concerts by the band during the lead-up to home games — the trumpet section also holds performances outside the Main Building at 4:10 on Fridays, and the whole band performs two hours before kickoff on game day on the Dome’s steps. — J.J. Post

Early mornings at the Tip Top Lounge, Iowa State: Cyclones fans have always showed up, even in the lean years before Matt Campbell built them into a consistent winner. The parking lots are filled with old school buses and rowdy fans, many of them powered from a pre-sunrise visit to a local watering hole known as the Tip Top Lounge. Originally started as a sandwich shop in 1950, it turned into a bar in 1962, and opens at 6 a.m. on game days, fueling fans with chili and Fireball shots, a breakfast of champions in Ames. — Wilson

Card stunts, Cal. Here is a bit of college football trivia. Cal students invented card stunts, the practice of handing out cards to a crowd to create a massive design, for The Big Game against Stanford in 1914. The practice continues today, directed by a rally committee that sets up the stunts and sorts cards to give to students for every home game. The cards drew national attention, and the ire of coach Justin Wilcox, last season during the game against San Diego State, when students kept throwing them onto the field. Officials whistled Cal for two 15-yard penalties as a result. Wilcox then took the mic of the referee and scolded fans, telling them to knock it off. — Adelson


Getting revved up

Ramblin’ Wreck, Georgia Tech. Described on the school’s website as a “one-of-a-kind mechanical mascot,” the 1930 Ford Model A Sport Coupe painted gold and white has led the Georgia Tech football team onto the field before every home game since Sept. 30, 1961. But why? In the 1940s and 1950s at Georgia Tech, it became a sort of “rite of passage” to own a shoddy, beat-up car — or “ramblin’ wreck” — kept alive thanks to the engineering ingenuity of its students. As a tribute to that spirit, the school looked for a pre-World War II Ford to serve as its mechanical mascot and found it in 1960. It took a year for the school to convince the owners to sell it, and the Wreck debuted that season against Rice. — Adelson

Sooner Schooner, Oklahoma: Every Oklahoma score at Owen Field is followed by a victory ride from the Sooner Schooner, a scaled-down version of the covered wagons used by pioneers to settle the land known as Oklahoma in 1889. The Schooner debuted in 1964 and became OU’s official mascot in 1980. Spirit squad members from the RUF/NEKS and RUF/NEK Lil’ Sis drive the Schooner, which is led by ponies appropriately named “Boomer” and “Sooner.” While there have been some notable crashes, its voyage around the field remains an integral part of game days in Norman. — Rittenberg

Vol Navy, Tennessee: It’s the most famous navy in college football. Each fall Saturday when Tennessee plays a home football game, boats of all sizes set sail for Neyland Stadium, which is located on the banks of the Tennessee River. As you wind your way down Neyland Drive en route to the games, the orange Tennessee flags waving from the procession of boats flap in the wind, on both the warmest and coldest of days. The boats, many decked out in orange, dock at marinas on the river’s banks, making for an easy walk to the stadium. Sometimes the parties on the boats are as entertaining as the games themselves, certainly the postgame parties when the Vols win. — Chris Low


Strike up the band

Script Ohio, dotting the i, Ohio State: Ohio State fans are very into their state. Chants of O-H! must be followed by I-O! The “I” in Ohio carries extra meaning, as some Buckeyes fans have shown even after death. Ohio State’s band has its own memorable spin on the state name, spelling out Ohio in script form at home games, and then inviting a senior sousaphone player to high-step and dot the i, before bowing to all four sides of Ohio Stadium. The Ohio State Marching Band, or The Best Damn Band in the Land, began doing script Ohio and dotting the i during the 1938 season, and it remains one of the most electric moments during Buckeyes home games. — Rittenberg

Stanford Band halftime show, Stanford: Very few things are off limits for the Stanford Band, known for its irreverent and sometimes controversial halftime performances. The shift away from a traditional band began in 1963, after its longtime director was dismissed. The band went on strike for the first two games of the football season. The new director leaned into the culture of the era, allowing students to play rock ‘n’ roll songs, “scatter” to get into place as opposed to traditional marching, and script humorous formations that often served as punchlines, social commentary or poked fun at opponents. The Stanford Band has drawn ire and/or been disciplined for, among other things, ridiculing UCLA, Catholicism (Notre Dame), Mormonism (BYU) and the spotted owl (Oregon). — Adelson

The MOB, Rice: The Stanford Band has a kindred spirit in Rice’s MOB (the Marching Owl Band), which is a small but mighty and scrappy group that, like Stanford, uses brainpower to take aim at opponents. In 1973, the MOB mocked two Texas A&M institutions: the Aggie Band’s military style (the MOB goose-stepped in imitation) and beloved mascot Reveille (forming a fire hydrant while playing “Oh Where, Oh Where, Has My Little Dog Gone?”). Band members were cornered in a supply closet by angry Aggies and had to be rescued by a box truck backed up to its doors. In 2007, they were reprimanded by Conference USA for a halftime skit called “Todd Graham’s Inferno,” whereupon band members searched through the circles of hell for the coach who had just left Rice for Tulsa after one successful season. Wherever sacred cows are found, the MOB will look to make ground beef. — Wilson

Marching 100, Florida A&M: When you take a trip to the “highest of seven hills” for a football game, you can expect a spectacular performance by the world-renowned Marching 100. Halftime performances start with their signature “Slow One,” as each band member holds one leg up at a 90-degree angle and slowly switches legs. The 100 then quickens the pace, followed by the band filling the field as the show begins. The band was founded in 1892 by Dr. William P. Foster and has grown to be one of the world’s most recognizable marching bands. From Paris Fashion Week to multiple Super Bowls to two presidential inauguration parades, the 100 has been seen far and wide, but the ultimate experience happens at Bragg Stadium in Tallahassee. — Erika Leflouria

Sonic Boom of the South, Jackson State: As soon as you step foot inside Mississippi Veterans Stadium in Jackson, Mississippi, you can’t help but notice the rumbling from the bass drums, followed by the funky rhythm of The Temptations’ “Get Ready” from the Jackson State marching band to get fans’ pom-poms going. Fans arrive at the stadium ahead of time to witness the Sonic Boom take part in a Zero Quarter battle of the bands against the visiting unit, an HBCU pregame staple. Following the presentation of the colors, the band rocks the stadium with its trademark tune “We Came To Play” by Tower of Power. The Sonic Boom’s halftime performances are the main attraction, however, wowing fans with their signature “Tiger Run-On” and “JSU Rocks the House” fanfare. — Kalan Hooks


Animal planet

Ralphie’s Run, Colorado: Live animal mascots aren’t as common as they used to be in college football, but Colorado’s Ralphie remains an iconic presence before games at Folsom Field. Colorado selected Ralphie as its official mascot in 1966 and the next year, she began running around the field to lead the Buffaloes out of their tunnel. A group of Ralphie handlers make the U-shaped run with the bison, who ends up in a trailer near the visitors locker room. There have been six Ralphies, always female bison, which live on a ranch in an undisclosed location. — Rittenberg

Here Comes Bullet, Oklahoma State: Since 1988, Bullet, a black horse, has galloped onto the field following every Cowboys touchdown, carrying a spirit rider waving an Oklahoma State flag. The first of four horses who’ve since served as Bullet got plenty of work. In 1988, Barry Sanders won the Heisman Trophy while scoring an NCAA-record 44 touchdowns. — Jake Trotter

Flight of the Eagle, Auburn: In a tradition that goes back to the start of the 2000 season, an eagle with a 6½-foot wingspan majestically circles Jordan-Hare Stadium as the fans chant “Warrrrrrrrr” until it lands at midfield, then they finish with “Eagle!” There have been several eagles over the years performing the flight, and right now, there are two sharing the duties. And no, War Eagle is not the Auburn mascot. It’s the school’s battle cry that dates back to a Civil War veteran. — Low

Blaster the Burro, Colorado School of Mines: Since the 1990s, the Orediggers have brought out a live donkey to celebrate after every touchdown by the home team at Marv Kay Stadium. A member of the university’s Blue Key Honor Society will run alongside Blaster the Burro to the 50-yard line to celebrate the team’s score. Spoiler: There are two donkeys that carry the duty of Blaster; Winkie is the runner burro that you’ll see on game days, while Pepsi is the burro used for special university events. — Leflouria


Big fun at smaller schools

The Cannon, Toledo. Before each home game, at the end of each half and after every Toledo score, a Civil War-era model cannon is fired off. The tradition began in 1966, when a member of the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity saw a cannon fired at a Texas game and decided to take the idea to Toledo. According to the school, another member of the fraternity “bartered his cannon for fraternity dues.” That cannon was in use until it was replaced in 2010. To this day, members of Pi Kappa Phi are responsible for operating the cannon during games. — Adelson

Purple Haze, East Carolina: It doesn’t get the pub of some of the other grand entrances in college football, but being there live to see East Carolina’s players racing onto the field at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium through a giant pirate skull amid clouds of purple smoke with Jimi Hendrix’s “Purple Haze” blaring on the jumbotron and a video of pirate ships waving ECU skull and crossbones flags and shooting off cannons on the high seas is about as cool as it gets. Jimi Hendrix and college football mixed together? That’s pure nirvana. — Low


Gone (sort of) but not forgotten

Red balloons, Nebraska: Since the 1960s, Husker fans would release red balloons after Nebraska’s first touchdown, turning the Lincoln sky into a sea of red. Due to a helium shortage, the school discontinued the tradition in 2022. But last season, Nebraska brought the balloon release back for its game against Colorado. Going forward, amid criticism for the impact the balloons have on the environment, Nebraska plans to hold the balloon release for select games only. — Trotter

Hand signs for Texas schools: At Texas, they Hook ‘Em with the index and pinky fingers. At Texas A&M, they Gig ‘Em with the thumb. SMU has two fingers up, the V for victory, which later became pony ears. Houston adds a middle finger to Texas’ sign to make a cougar paw — “unofficially, it indicates the students’ attitude toward UT,” Texas Monthly once wrote. At Texas Tech, they extend the thumb and index finger for Guns Up. TCU raises the first two fingers then bends the tips down, allegedly to look like the horns of the Horned Frog. Baylor fans make a bear claw to Sic ‘Em. Of the nine former Southwest Conference schools only Rice and Arkansas didn’t have hand signs. But the one they all had in common was turning Texas’ horns upside down. R.I.P. to the SWC. — Wilson


Playing with food

The State Fair of Texas and a Fletcher’s Corny Dog, Texas-Oklahoma: Texas and Oklahoma fans don’t share much affinity for each other, but they both agree that their annual rivalry game boasts the best setting in college football — the center of the State Fair of Texas. There’s a mutual respect for each other on the Midway that isn’t shared inside the stadium — fans in Baker Mayfield jerseys riding the 212-foot-tall Texas Star Ferris wheel with those in Colt McCoy’s threads. And it’s not game day without a Fletcher’s Corny Dog, who originated the battered and fried hot dog on a stick in 1942 and now sell more than half a million of them each year during the fair’s 24-day run. — Wilson

Tortilla toss, Texas Tech: Nobody seems to know for sure how and when it started, but since at least the late 1980s, Texas Tech students have been throwing tortillas onto the field after the opening kickoff. The university doesn’t endorse this tradition. But that hasn’t stopped the Red Raider faithful from slinging tortillas all around Jones Stadium. — Trotter


‘Greatest show in college sports’

White Out, Penn State: One of the best scenes in college football, for the biggest home night game of the season, is a White Out at Happy Valley. For the past two decades, Penn State fans dress in all white, creating a sea of white — and bedlam — throughout 106,572-seat Beaver Stadium. It’s an intimidating environment for the opposition and one of those experiences in college football that nobody can duplicate. Penn State has dubbed its White Out as the “greatest show in college sports.” This season’s is Sept. 27 against Oregon. — Low


The total package

Saturday night at Tiger Stadium, LSU: Where do you start when it comes to taking in an LSU football game? The tailgating, in particular the scrumptious food (jambalaya, gumbo and shrimp po’boys, all out of this world). And, yes, there are always beverage options available. The wardrobes and Mardi Gras beads are unlike anything else you’ll find in college football, and no trip to LSU is complete without visiting Mike the Tiger in his sprawling digs. And then there’s the Golden Band From Tigerland and those first four notes before breaking full bore into “Hold That Tiger.” It all adds up to college football pageantry at its finest. — Low

Continue Reading

Sports

Overreactions or not? Breaking down the latest from AL’s top contenders

Published

on

By

Overreactions or not? Breaking down the latest from AL's top contenders

A few days ago, we checked in on what to believe and what not to in the National League. Well, the American League is perhaps even more chaotic.

The New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox are in the midst of a crucial four-game series at Yankee Stadium — with the final game on “Sunday Night Baseball” at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN. Both teams will try to make a statement and inch closer to the Toronto Blue Jays at the top of the division while staying ahead in the wild-card race.

The Blue Jays had been hot — except they just lost a series to the lowly Pittsburgh Pirates. The Houston Astros were recently shut out three games in a row (and four out of five) but kept their slim hold on first place in the AL West because the Seattle Mariners went 2-7 on a recent road trip, including a brutal three-game wipeout in Philadelphia. Meanwhile, the Detroit Tigers might be back on track, and the Kansas City Royals are suddenly surging.

Let’s check on the current states of overreaction in the AL and make some verdicts.


Overreaction: Judge! Bellinger! Stanton! The Yankees are back, baby!

Calm down there, tiger. The Yankees took two of three from Minnesota. They scored 24 runs in sweeping St. Louis, and then they bashed nine home runs in a win over Tampa Bay.

The middle of the order is leading the way. Aaron Judge is back off the injured list. Cody Bellinger has proven to be one of the most unheralded pickups of last offseason, on his way to his most home runs since his MVP season of 2019. The big shocker has been Giancarlo Stanton, though. He missed the first two-plus months of the season because of what was described as a double tennis elbow, as if he had spent the offseason working on his backhand slice, preparing for the French Open. In 46 games since returning in mid-June, he’s hitting .311/.389/..642, producing what is easily his highest OPS since his MVP season of 2017, and has been so hot that the Yankees played him a few games in right field to keep his bat in the lineup (allowing Judge to DH while working on returning to the field) even though Stanton is less mobile than the monuments in center field.

So, it has been a nice stretch after losing records in June and July. But there are still issues. Max Fried, who starts Friday night, is scuffling, with a 6.80 ERA over his past eight starts. He hasn’t had a quality start since June. The back of the bullpen is still sorting out things, as David Bednar has replaced Devin Williams as the closer (and blew the save Wednesday, although the Yankees won in extra innings), but Camilo Doval and Jake Bird, two other trade deadline acquisitions, haven’t made an impact. There could still be a terrific bullpen here, especially if Williams gets straightened out, but let’s hold off on declaring that.

And Judge still hasn’t played the outfield. Though manager Aaron Boone played Stanton in right field at Yankee Stadium, where there is less ground to cover, he hasn’t played Stanton in the field on the road, leaving him as a part-time player for now. Ryan McMahon, the team’s other big deadline move, has been getting on base but has one home run in 22 games with the Yankees.

VERDICT: OVERREACTION. You can make the argument that if everything was clicking for the Yankees, they have the most upside and deepest roster in the AL: a potential ace in Fried, a potential No. 2 in Carlos Rodon, a potential wipeout bullpen, the best hitter in the sport in Judge and power up and down the lineup. They haven’t played that well against the top teams in the AL, however, including a combined 4-13 record against the Red Sox and Blue Jays, and Fried’s current struggles are a big concern. Let’s not put the Yankees in the playoffs yet.


Overreaction: The Red Sox have to win this series against the Yankees

The likeliest scenario in a four-game series between two evenly matched teams is, of course, a split. That would leave the Red Sox where they started the series, one game behind the Yankees and in third place in the AL East, but potentially in a much tighter wild-card picture. Still, after winning their first five games in August, the Red Sox went 3-7 in their past 10 games entering the Yankees series, so that makes this series a little more pressure-packed even for a late-August Red Sox-Yankees showdown.

Most frustrating, the Red Sox lost two games in extra innings in that 3-7 stretch and also lost both games that Garrett Crochet started. He had one bad start against the Houston Astros, lasting four innings in his worst start of the season, and then the bullpen blew a 3-1 lead to the Miami Marlins as Greg Weissert and Steven Matz allowed ninth-inning home runs when Aroldis Chapman was unavailable to close. Chapman had pitched the previous games and had thrown only 14 pitches over the two outings, so it was a dubious decision by manager Alex Cora (Chapman had appeared in three consecutive games earlier in the season).

One key for the Red Sox down the stretch: How much will Cora push his top pitchers? Crochet is already past his innings total of 2024 and hasn’t pitched on four days’ rest since June 18, with rest periods of seven and nine days during that span. Chapman has had a dominant season but has pitched just 48 innings in 53 appearances and has rarely made even back-to-back outings. The Yankees series begins a stretch for Boston of 13 games in 13 days and 19 in 20, so Cora will have to make some decisions with his rotation.

VERDICT: OVERREACTION. Is there urgency to turn things around? Of course. Is this a do-or-die series? No, it’s still too early to make that claim, especially with the Red Sox still in a solid wild-card position (granted, chasing down the Blue Jays remains the ultimate goal). On the other hand, this eight-game road trip to New York and Baltimore looms large, given the Red Sox are just 28-34 on the road– and the Orioles have been playing better of late. A bad road trip could be disastrous. Check back next week.


Overreaction: The Blue Jays — not the Tigers — are now the best team in the AL

The Blue Jays have gone 48-26 since May 28 — the second-best record in the majors behind Milwaukee since that date. They have the highest OPS in the majors since then and only the Brewers are close to them in runs scored (Boston has scored the third-most runs and is 50 runs behind the Blue Jays since May 28). It hasn’t been just Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Bo Bichette either. George Springer and Addison Barger have mashed, Daulton Varsho has had a big August and role players such as Davis Schneider, Joey Loperfido, Ernie Clement and Tyler Heineman have been excellent. Toronto has a sneaky deep lineup.

Oh, and Max Scherzer has suddenly reeled off five straight quality starts.

On the other hand, the Tigers seem back on track after that stretch in July when they lost 11 of 12. They’ve won four series in a row, granted, three of those were against the Los Angeles Angels, Chicago White Sox and diminished Minnesota Twins, but they also just swept the Astros, knocking around Framber Valdez in the series finale Wednesday and tossing shutouts in the other two wins. Charlie Morton has helped stabilize the rotation with three excellent starts in his four turns with the Tigers, and the bullpen — with added reinforcements from the trade deadline — has been much better in August after struggling in July. Kerry Carpenter has also been mashing since his return in late July.

VERDICT: OVERREACTION. If you’re buying Scherzer and Eric Lauer as frontline starters and all the surprising offensive performances, then it’s not unreasonable to suggest the Blue Jays are the team to beat. Some of those offensive numbers are skewed by that crazy series at Coors Field when they scored 45 runs in three games, however, and when considering the entire season, the Tigers still have the better run differential (as do the Yankees and Red Sox). The Jays’ bandwagon is gaining momentum, but the AL still feels like one big group of teams that will all finish 92-70.


Overreaction: The Astros can’t hit, and the Mariners can’t pitch

Does anyone want to win the AL West? It doesn’t seem like it (you can even throw in the Texas Rangers, who were tied with the Mariners on July 30 but have gone 6-13 since then in playing a difficult August schedule). The Astros are hitting just .226 in August with a .649 OPS. Carlos Correa has been their best hitter, so it’s hard to criticize that trade, but Jesus Sanchez has hit .150 with one RBI for Houston while rookie Cam Smith has fallen into a slump. Getting back Yordan Alvarez, who just began a rehab assignment, will be a big lift if he’s healthy.

As for the Mariners, they have their top five starters healthy for the first time, but this road trip exposed their secret: Their rotation is vastly overrated. The Mariners are 26th in rotation ERA on the road. Bryan Woo is the only starter of those five with an ERA under 5.00 on the road. Logan Gilbert has a 2.22 ERA at home and 6.00 on the road. Luis Castillo‘s road OPS is nearly 300 points higher than it is at home. They pitch well at home because T-Mobile Park is such a pitcher-friendly park. The Mariners still have two road trips remaining: a nine-game trip to Cleveland, Tampa and Atlanta, and then a six-game trip to Kansas City and Houston.

VERDICT: NOT AN OVERREACTION. Both concerns are legitimate. The Astros’ offense hasn’t been terrible this season, but it rates as middle of the pack, and Correa is replacing the injured Isaac Paredes, so he’s not an upgrade. Seattle’s rotation struggles on the road — and lack of bullpen depth — are perhaps an even bigger concern. The season series is tied 5-5. FanGraphs projects a dead heat for the division title. The teams will meet once more in Houston during the second-to-last weekend of the regular season — and that series might decide the AL West.


Overreaction: The Royals will make the playoffs

As the Red Sox, Astros and Mariners have stumbled over the past 10 games, it opened the door for the Royals, who won five in a row and seven of eight to inch closer in the wild-card race (with Cleveland right there, as well). Bobby Witt Jr. is raking in August, Vinnie Pasquantino has been crushing home runs and, further proof of the unpredictability of the trade deadline, Mike Yastrzemski and Adam Frazier, two seemingly minor pickups, have been outstanding.

The Royals are doing this without Cole Ragans and Kris Bubic, but Noah Cameron continues to pitch well and fellow rookie Ryan Bergert, who came over in the Freddy Fermin trade, has delivered three good starts. Just like last year’s team, the Royals have that spark of optimism rising at the right time.

VERDICT: NOT AN OVERREACTION. We’ll learn more about the Royals with this weekend’s series in Detroit and then the rematch next weekend in Kansas City. Otherwise, however, their schedule is pretty soft the rest of the way, including a season-ending road trip to Anaheim and Sacramento against two teams that will be playing out the string. The vibes are good. The Royals will sneak in as a wild-card team.

Continue Reading

Sports

Overreactions to the dog days of August: Brewers’ dominance, Mets’ struggles and more from the NL

Published

on

By

Overreactions to the dog days of August: Brewers' dominance, Mets' struggles and more from the NL

Whew. That was some weekend. The Milwaukee Brewers kept winning — until they finally lost. The New York Mets kept losing — until they finally won. The Los Angeles Dodgers made a big statement, the Philadelphia Phillies suffered a crushing injury, and the Chicago Cubs managed to win a series even though their bats remain cold.

What’s going on with these National League contenders? With fan bases in euphoria or despair, let’s make some verdicts on those current states of overreaction.


Overreaction: The Brewers are unquestionably MLB’s best team

“Unquestionably” is a loaded word, especially since we’re writing this right after the Brewers reeled off 14 consecutive victories and won a remarkable 29 of 33 games. They became just the 11th team this century to win at least 14 in a row, and you don’t fluke your way to a 14-game winning streak: Each of the previous 10 teams to win that many in a row made the playoffs, and four won 100 games. Baseball being baseball, however, none won the World Series.

The Brewers were just the sixth team this century to win 29 of 33. Cleveland won 30 of 33 in 2017, riding a 22-game winning streak that began in late August. That team, which finished with 102 wins but lost the wild-card series to the New York Yankees, resembled these Brewers as a small-market, scrappy underdog. The Dodgers in 2017 and 2022 and the A’s in 2001 and 2002 also won 29 of 33. None of these teams won the World Series, either.

For the season, the Brewers have five more wins than the Detroit Tigers while easily leading the majors in run differential at plus-168, with the Cubs a distant second at plus-110. Those figures seem to suggest the Brewers are clearly the best team, with a nice balance of starting pitching (No. 1 in ERA), relief pitching (No. 10 in ERA and No. 8 in win probability added), offense (No. 1 in runs scored), defense (No. 7 in defensive runs saved) and baserunning (No. 2 in stolen bases). None of their position players were All-Stars, but other than shortstop Joey Ortiz the Brewers roll out a lineup that usually features eight average-or-better hitters, with Christian Yelich heating up and Andrew Vaughn on a tear since he joined the club.

On the other hand, via Clay Davenport’s third-order wins and losses, which project a team’s winning percentage based on underlying statistics adjusted for quality of opponents, the Brewers are neck-and-neck with the Cubs, with both teams a few projected wins behind the Yankees. Essentially, the Brewers have scored more runs and allowed fewer than might otherwise be expected based on statistics. Indeed, the Brewers lead the majors with a .288 average with runners in scoring position while holding their opponents to the third-lowest average with runners in scoring position.

Those underlying stats, though, include the first four games of the season, when the Brewers went 0-4 and allowed 47 runs. Several of those relievers who got pounded early on are no longer in the bullpen, and ever since the Brewers sorted out their relief arms, the pen has been outstanding: It’s sixth in ERA and third in lowest OPS allowed since May 1.

Then factor in that the Brewers now have Brandon Woodruff and Jacob Misiorowski in the rotation (although Misiorowski struggled in his last start following a two-week stint on the injured list). The Brewers are also the best baserunning team in the majors, which leads to a few extra runs above expectation.

VERDICT: NOT AN OVERREACTION. The Brewers look like the most well-rounded team in the majors, particularly if Yelich and Vaughn keep providing power in the middle of the order. They have played well against good teams: 6-0 against the Dodgers, 3-0 against the Phillies and Boston Red Sox, 4-2 against the New York Mets and 7-3 against the Cincinnati Reds. They’re 5-4 against the Cubs with four games left in the five-game series. None of this guarantees a World Series, but they’re on pace to win 100 games because they are the best team going right now.


Overreaction: Pete Crow-Armstrong‘s struggles are a big concern

On July 30, PCA went 3-for-4 with two doubles and two runs in a 10-3 victory for the Cubs over the Brewers. He was hitting .272/.309/.559, playing electrifying defense in center field, and was the leader in the NL MVP race with 5.7 fWAR, more than a win higher than Fernando Tatis Jr. and Shohei Ohtani. The Brewers had started to get hot, but the Cubs, after leading the NL Central most of the season, were just a game behind in the standings.

July 31 was an off day. Then the calendar flipped to August and Crow-Armstrong entered a slump that has featured no dying quails, no gorks, no ground balls with eyes. He’s 8-for-52 in August with no home runs, one RBI and two runs scored. The Cubs, averaging 5.3 runs per game through the end of July, are at just 2.75 runs per game in August and have seen the Brewers build a big lead in the division.

Crow-Armstrong’s slump isn’t necessarily a surprise. Analysts have been predicting regression for some time due to one obvious flaw in PCA’s game: He swings at everything. He has the fifth-highest chase rate among qualified batters, swinging at over 42% of pitches out of the strike zone. It seemed likely that it was only a matter of time before pitchers figured out how to exploit Crow-Armstrong’s aggressiveness.

Doubling down on the regression predictions, PCA has produced strong power numbers despite a below-average hard-hit rate (44th percentile) and average exit velocity (47th percentile). Although raw power isn’t always necessary to produce extra-base power — see Jose Altuve — those metrics were a red flag that PCA might have been overachieving.

VERDICT: NOT AN OVERREACTION. OK, here’s the odd thing: PCA’s chase rate has improved in August to just 28%, but that hasn’t translated to success. His hard-hit rate isn’t much lower than it was the rest of the season (although his average fly ball distance has dropped about 20 feet). His struggles against left-handers are real: After slugging .600 against them in April, he has hit .186 and slugged .390 against them since May 1. He’ll start hitting again at some point, but it’s reasonable to assume he’s not going to hit like he did from April through July.

It’s not all on PCA, however. Kyle Tucker has been just as bad in August (.148, no home runs, one RBI). Michael Busch is hitting .151. Seiya Suzuki has only one home run. Those four had carried the offense, and all are scuffling at once. For the Cubs to rebound, they need this entire group to get back on track. Put it this way: The Cubs have won just three of their past eight series — and those were against the Pittsburgh Pirates, Baltimore Orioles and Chicago White Sox.


Overreaction: The Mets are doomed and will miss the playoffs

On July 27, the Mets completed a three-game sweep of the San Francisco Giants to improve to 62-44, holding a 1½-game lead over the Phillies in the NL East. According to FanGraphs, New York’s odds of winning the division stood at 55% and its chances of making the playoffs were nearly 97%. A few days later, the Mets reinforced the bullpen — the club’s biggest weakness — with Ryan Helsley and Tyler Rogers at the trade deadline (after already acquiring Gregory Soto).

It’s never that easy with the Mets though, is it? The San Diego Padres swept them. The Cleveland Guardians swept them. The Brewers swept them. Helsley lost three games and blew a lead in another outing. The rotation has a 6.22 ERA in August. The Mets lost 14 of 16 before finally taking the final two games against the Seattle Mariners this past weekend to temporarily ease the panic level from DEFCON 1 to DEFCON 2. The Phillies have a comfortable lead in the division and the Mets have dropped to the third wild-card position, just one game ahead of the Reds. The team with the highest payroll in the sport is in very real danger of missing the playoffs.

VERDICT: OVERREACTION. The bullpen issues are still a concern given Helsley’s struggles, and Rogers has fanned just one of the 42 batters he has faced since joining the Mets. Still, this team is loaded with talent, as reflected in FanGraphs’ playoffs odds, which gave the Mets an 86% chance of making the postseason entering Monday (with the Reds at 14%). One note, however: The Reds lead the season series 2 games to 1, which gives them the tiebreaker edge if the teams finish with the same record. A three-game set in Cincinnati in early September looms as one of the biggest series the rest of the season. Mets fans have certainly earned the right to brood over the team’s current state of play, but the team remains favored to at least squeak out a wild card.


Overreaction: Zack Wheeler’s absence is a big problem for the Phillies

The Phillies’ ace just went on the IL because of a blood clot near his right shoulder, with no timetable on a potential return. The injury is serious enough that his availability for the rest of the season is in jeopardy. Manager Rob Thomson said the team has enough rotation depth to battle on without Wheeler, but there are some other issues there as well:

Ranger Suarez has a 5.86 ERA in six starts since the All-Star break.

Aaron Nola was activated from the IL on Sunday to replace Wheeler for his first MLB start in three months and gave up six runs in 2⅓ innings, raising his season ERA to 6.92.

Taijuan Walker has a 3.34 ERA but also a 4.73 FIP and probably isn’t someone you would feel comfortable starting in a playoff series.

• Even Jesus Luzardo has been inconsistent all season, with a 4.21 ERA.

Minus Wheeler, that arguably leaves Cristopher Sanchez as the team’s only sure-thing reliable starter at the moment. Though a trip to the playoffs certainly looks secure, all this opens the door for the Mets to make it a race for the division title.

VERDICT: NOT AN OVERREACTION. Making the playoffs is one thing, but it’s also about peaking at the right time, and given the scary nature of Wheeler’s injury, the Phillies might not end up peaking when they need to. Nola certainly can’t be counted on right now and Suarez has suddenly struggled a bit to miss bats. There’s time here for Nola and Suarez to fix things, and the bullpen has been strengthened with the additions of Jhoan Duran and David Robertson, but even with Wheeler, the Phillies are just 22-18 since the beginning of July. Indeed, their ultimate hopes might rest on an offense that has let them down the past two postseasons and hasn’t been great this season aside from Kyle Schwarber. If they don’t score runs, it won’t matter who is on the mound.


Overreaction: The Dodgers just buried the Padres with their three-game sweep

It was a statement series: The Dodgers, battled, bruised and slumping, had fallen a game behind the Padres in the NL West. But they swept the Padres at Dodger Stadium behind stellar outings from Clayton Kershaw and Blake Snell, and a clutch Mookie Betts home run to cap a rally from a 4-0 deficit. Still the kings of the NL West, right?

After all, the Dodgers are finally rolling out that dream rotation: Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Shohei Ohtani, Tyler Glasnow, Snell and Kershaw are all healthy and at full strength for the first time this season. Only Roki Sasaki is missing. Yamamoto has been solid all season, Ohtani ramped up to 80 pitches in his last start, Glasnow has a 2.50 ERA since returning from the IL in July, Snell has reeled off back-to-back scoreless starts, and even Kershaw, while not racking up many strikeouts, has lowered his season ERA to 3.01. That group should carry the Dodgers to their 12th division title in the past 13 seasons.

VERDICT: OVERREACTION. Calm down. One great series does not mean the Dodgers are suddenly fixed or that the Padres will fade away. The Dodgers’ bullpen is still battling injuries, Betts still has a sub-.700 OPS and injuries have forced them to play Alex Freeland, Miguel Rojas and Buddy Kennedy in the infield. Check back after next weekend, when the Padres host the Dodgers for their final regular-season series of 2025.

Continue Reading

Trending