
Irish Farmageddon, a new option team and … UTEP?! Your guide to CFB fun in 2025
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Bill ConnellyAug 18, 2025, 07:15 AM ET
Close- Bill Connelly is a writer for ESPN. He covers college football, soccer and tennis. He has been at ESPN since 2019.
The 1990 college football season kicked off with chaos off the field and a sense of familiarity on it. Miami and Notre Dame had gone a combined 22-1 against the rest of the nation in 1989, and the Hurricanes’ 27-10 win over the Irish on Nov. 25 had basically decided the national title. In 1990, they predictably began the season ranked No. 1 and 2, respectively; Florida State, the only team to beat either in 1989, began the year ranked fourth, and the others in the preseason top 10 had all finished the previous season 12th or better. Though each year produces its own upstarts, the sport’s balance of power seemed crystal clear heading into the 1990s.
Off the field, everything was as blurry as could be. With Penn State’s impending move to the Big Ten, the first major run of conference realignment was underway, and people were envisioning a world that might feature as few as three superconferences. Sports Illustrated’s Austin Murphy wrote about a possible Super SEC (with Florida State, Miami, South Carolina and the SWC’s Arkansas, Texas and Texas A&M) and a Pac-14 with Colorado, BYU, San Diego State and Utah. It began to seem as if anything were possible regarding the future of the sport.
Those vibes unexpectedly made their way onto the field. The season started with a wild 31-31 tie between No. 5 Colorado and No. 8 Tennessee — the Vols scored 21 points in the final eight minutes to erase a two-score deficit — and the temperature never went down. Miami lost to BYU in Week 2, Colorado suffered a second blemish the next week, and the upsets came so hot-and-heavy that Virginia found itself No. 1 for the first time by mid-October. By the end of the year, 18 teams had appeared in the AP top five, the most ever. Colorado ended up splitting the national title with Georgia Tech even though the Yellow Jackets hadn’t entered the polls until October and the Buffaloes had suffered the aforementioned multiple blemishes. Colorado had also famously benefited from the sport’s most famous clipping penalty and, of course, a fifth down.
(Charles Johnson didn’t score on fifth down either. The Missouri grad in me is obligated to endlessly remind you of this.)
The Buffaloes and Yellow Jackets didn’t play each other for the title, of course, because in 1990 we were still letting poll voters and half-informed and self-interested bowl officials decide who had a shot at a ring. Georgia Tech had to play No. 18 Nebraska in the Citrus Bowl because the Sugar Bowl had locked up Virginia in early November, right before the Cavaliers fell apart following a loss to … Georgia Tech. The Orange Bowl, having already landed Colorado, could have selected Tech for a 1-versus-2 battle but decided to go with big brand Notre Dame instead. Television ratings were more important than merit, after all.
Thirty-five years later, on the first Friday night of the season, Colorado and Georgia Tech will meet for the first time. That Sunday, Miami and Notre Dame will face off as well. The sport is facing unprecedented change off the field — so much so that I wrote a book about it — but any 1990 vibes we can channel on the field are welcome because in these parts we love chaos. College football is at its best when (again, on the field) it makes the least possible sense.
Messy seasons take on lives of their own, but really, college football’s superpower is that it’s far too big to contain. There are always messes, and there is always a close game on, a funky offense to watch and small-school madness to follow. Each year I create a road map for getting the most out of the season. Here’s how to enjoy yourself to the fullest this fall.
Watch the big games (duh)
Sometimes you have to search for the fun, and other times it’s staring you in the face. The spectacle of a big game is one of college football’s best draws. Here are three games from each week that feature (A) the highest combined projected SP+ ratings from the two teams and (B) a projected scoring margin (per SP+) of less than 10 points. (Games between teams in the preseason AP Top 25 are in bold.)
Week 1: Texas at Ohio State, LSU at Clemson, Notre Dame at Miami (Sunday)
Week 2: Michigan at Oklahoma, Baylor at SMU, Iowa at Iowa State
Week 3: Georgia at Tennessee, Texas A&M at Notre Dame, Florida at LSU
Week 4: Florida at Miami, Michigan at Nebraska, Auburn at Oklahoma
Week 5: Alabama at Georgia, Oregon at Penn State, LSU at Ole Miss
Week 6: Texas at Florida, Miami at Florida State, Kansas State at Baylor
Week 7: Alabama at Missouri, Oklahoma vs. Texas, Georgia at Auburn
Week 8: Tennessee at Alabama, Ole Miss at Georgia, Penn State at Iowa
Week 9: Alabama at South Carolina, Texas A&M at LSU, Ole Miss at Oklahoma
Week 10: Penn State at Ohio State, Florida vs. Georgia, Oklahoma at Tennessee
Week 11: LSU at Alabama, Oregon at Iowa, Texas A&M at Missouri
Week 12: Texas at Georgia, Florida at Ole Miss, South Carolina at Texas A&M
Week 13: Tennessee at Florida, Missouri at Oklahoma, Kansas State at Utah
Week 14: Ohio State at Michigan, Texas A&M at Texas, Alabama at Auburn
Granted, Week 2 is a bit of an alternative programming week — allow me to petition for “College GameDay” to pass on Michigan-Oklahoma in favor of the resumption of the Mizzou-Kansas Border War in Columbia — but big games are distributed nicely throughout the season.
Irish Farmageddon, baby!
We get a fun and important game even before Week 1 arrives: This Saturday, No. 17 Kansas State and No. 22 Iowa State will meet for the 109th iteration of Farmageddon — and in the farm-iest of locales: Ireland. ISU has won four of the past five to take a 54-50-4 lead in the series, and the winner of this one will enter Week 1 as a favorite to reach the Big 12 championship game. I really should have pushed to cover this game in person.
Week 5 is incredible
I’m not sure we’ve ever seen a September weekend as big as Week 5 might shape up to be. Preseason No. 2 Penn State hosts No. 7 Oregon, while No. 5 Georgia attempts revenge at home against No. 8 Alabama. Meanwhile, the undercard is endless. No. 9 LSU visits No. 21 Ole Miss in one of the SEC’s more spirited old rivalries, No. 7 Notre Dame visits Arkansas for the first time in a Lou Holtz Bowl of sorts, No. 3 Ohio State visits an ambitious Washington, and Auburn visits No. 19 Texas A&M in a rivalry that frequently produces silliness.
Plus, two Big Ten games that might not catch the eye in some years — USC at No. 12 Illinois, No. 20 Indiana at Iowa — take on a lot of playoff relevance, and I haven’t even mentioned TCU at No. 11 Arizona State on Friday night, a great Group of 5 showdown between Appalachian State and Boise State or an FCS top-five matchup between South Dakota and North Dakota State! There’s almost too much to keep track of in Week 5. Clear your schedule.
Bask in wild conference title races
In last week’s SP+ projections, the top eight teams in the Big 12 were separated by only 6.0 points, and 10 teams were within a touchdown of the projected top two. In the SEC, the top six were separated by 6.1 points. In the American, the top five were separated by 6.1. In the Sun Belt, Nos. 2 through 9 were separated by 6.7.
In the ACC, Big Ten, Conference USA, MAC and Mountain West, there are pretty clear hierarchies at the top. Surprises are always possible, but we know who should be (and is) favored. In these four other conferences, however, we could be in for spectacular plot twists. Irish Farmageddon should give us an early taste of this, followed by Georgia at Tennessee in Week 3, but things will kick into overdrive in Week 5 and include a good number of midweek games. Some particularly big weeks:
Week 8: Ole Miss at Georgia, Tennessee at Alabama, Texas Tech at Arizona State, Utah at BYU, Baylor at TCU, Army at Tulane, Coastal Carolina at App State, Texas State at Marshall
Week 9: James Madison at Texas State (Tues.), Marshall at Coastal Carolina (Thurs.), Texas A&M at LSU, Ole Miss at Oklahoma, BYU at Iowa State, Colorado at Utah, Kansas State at Kansas, South Florida at Memphis, Louisiana at South Alabama
Week 11: UTSA at South Florida (Thurs.), Georgia Southern at App State (Thurs.), LSU at Alabama, BYU at Texas Tech, Iowa State at TCU, Tulane at Memphis, James Madison at Marshall, Texas State at Louisiana
Week 14: Navy at Memphis (Fri.), Texas A&M at Texas, LSU at Oklahoma, Colorado at Kansas State, Utah at Kansas, Army at UTSA, James Madison at Coastal Carolina, South Alabama at Texas State, Georgia Southern at Marshall
Which new/young SEC quarterback takes control?
It was easily one of the most interesting storylines I pieced together as I was writing my conference previews: The SEC is overflowing with new or young starting quarterbacks with massive upside and incomplete résumés, so much so that they got their own section in my most important players of 2025 list. For that matter, six of the top eight teams in the preseason AP poll have new starting QBs.
Most of these guys are athletic and exciting, which is to say that they’re capable of making tons of big plays and/or taking lots of hits. A couple of them will underachieve or battle injuries that impact their teams significantly. A couple could break through and lead top-five charges. Figuring out who’s who will be both entertaining and integral to the playoff race.
Year 2 on Lake Michigan
Five Home Games at Northwestern Medicine Field at Martin Stadium. See you next Fall 🌊 pic.twitter.com/Mh2pHonQvJ
— Northwestern Football (@NUFBFamily) December 13, 2024
Northwestern is spending almost a billion dollars on its Ryan Field rebuild, and this is the last season the Wildcats will play in their temporary home at Martin Stadium on Lake Michigan. It’s an incredible, aesthetically pleasing venue, and it will host at least one pretty big-time game: the Wildcats’ Week 3 matchup against Oregon. (Their late-season home games against Michigan and Minnesota will be at Wrigley Field, unfortunately.)
The Pepto-Bismol All-Stars
Certain teams will be playing in an inordinate number of close games. According to my final preseason SP+ projections, there are a whopping 25 teams with at least eight games projected to finish within one score (approximately 7.5 points), including eight schools with nine such games. (Perhaps not surprisingly, four of these teams are from the Big 12.) You will be watching the fourth quarter of many of their games.
10 tight games: UTEP
9 tight games: Baylor, Colorado State, Iowa State, Middle Tennessee, San Diego State, TCU, West Virginia
8 tight games: Akron, Appalachian State, Delaware, Florida, Hawai’i, Houston, Iowa, Jacksonville State, Kansas, Louisiana Tech, New Mexico State, North Texas, Oklahoma, Pittsburgh, Sam Houston, Texas A&M, Utah
UTEP is a heavy underdog against Texas in Week 3 and a two-touchdown dog against Liberty in mid-October. But from the Utah State game in Week 1 to the trip to Delaware in Week 14, the other 10 games are projected within five points. Guhhhh. Stock up on antacid, Miners fans.
Embrace the option
Army and Navy enjoyed sudden surges in 2024 thanks to new interpretations of their good, old option offenses. Army surged from a combined 12-12 in 2022-23 to 12-2 last fall — with an American conference title — thanks to a combined 2,794 rushing yards and 42 TDs from quarterback Bryson Daily and fullback Kanye Udoh. Navy, meanwhile, left behind four straight losing seasons with a 10-3 campaign and defeated both Army and Oklahoma in December. And although Daily and Udoh are gone, Navy quarterback Blake Horvath returns in 2025.
Neither service academy will sneak up on anyone this year, but they’re still going to run their own versions of sexy option offenses. Air Force has maintained its own variety of the option and has been rewarded with five 10-win seasons in 11 years, though the Falcons fell off course after heavy turnover in 2024.
I’m not telling you anything you don’t know. These three schools have long annoyed the hell out of opponents with their increasingly unique attacks. But we’re welcoming someone new to the FBS option party this year: Rice, which enjoyed a few winning seasons in the 1990s with Ken Hatfield’s option offense, decided to give it another go, hiring Davidson’s Scott Abell to replace Mike Bloomgren.
At Davidson, Abell’s Wildcats drew attention with gaudy rushing totals at the FCS level, and in his very first season, they pulled off one of the most unusual accomplishments you’ll ever see, rushing for 789 yards in one game … and losing. I don’t expect many wins from Rice in 2025, but the Owls are virtually guaranteed to find a rhythm against an insufficiently prepared opponent and produce some delightful numbers. You’ll want to keep an eye out for it.
Watch the midweek games
1:08
BYU fans go wild on late game-winning TD
BYU’s Darius Lassiter sends the crowd into a frenzy after hauling in a miraculous touchdown catch in the waning moments against Oklahoma State.
Midweek games are great for giving us opportunities to catch up on interesting teams, dive into fun locales (and maybe slide down a muddy hill) and, quite frequently, enjoy some silly football. Last season alone, the midweek slate gave us BYU’s incredible last-second win over Oklahoma State, Virginia Tech’s overturned Hail Mary against Miami, Duke’s overtime win over Northwestern on Lake Michigan, wild Arizona State wins and UNLV thrillers, Kennesaw State’s first win as an FBS team (a shocking upset of Liberty) and a number of zany comebacks. November’s MACtion slate gave us a weekly classic, and Week 4 gave us maybe the wildest Friday night of all time, featuring a big Stanford upset of Syracuse and two overtime games (Illinois over Nebraska and Washington State over San Jose State). Whew.
The 2025 midweek games have a high bar to clear. Not including Black Friday after Thanksgiving, here’s one Tuesday-to-Friday game to pay particular attention to each week. (I made an exception for the start of MACtion.) We’ll inevitably gravitate toward whichever wild games go down to the wire, but these will be worth paying attention to regardless.
Week 1: Georgia Tech at Colorado (Fri.)
Week 2: James Madison at Louisville (Fri.)
Week 3: NC State at Wake Forest (Thurs.)
Week 4: Iowa at Rutgers (Fri.)
Week 5: TCU at No. 11 Arizona State (Fri.)
Week 6: West Virginia at BYU (Fri.)
Week 7: East Carolina at Tulane (Thurs.)
Week 8: Louisville at No. 10 Miami (Fri.)
Week 9: California at Virginia Tech (Thurs.)
Week 10: James Madison at Texas State (Tues.)
Week 11: Miami (Ohio) at Ohio (Tues.), Northern Illinois at Toledo (Wed.), UTSA at South Florida (Thurs.), Tulane at Memphis (Fri.)
Week 12: No. 4 Clemson at Louisville (Fri.)
Week 13: Florida State at NC State (Fri.)
Week 14: Navy at Memphis (Thanksgiving)
Watch as much smaller-school football as you can
Think about it this way: As breathless as the 1990 season already was, it was even wilder if you followed the sport at all levels. In the I-AA (now FCS) playoffs that year, newcomer UCF upset Jim Tressel’s second-ranked Youngstown State team in the first round, and Nevada erased a 15-point fourth-quarter deficit to beat Furman in three overtimes in the quarterfinals before beating rival Boise State 59-52 in another three overtimes in the semis. Eventual champ Georgia Southern had to survive a 28-27 epic against Idaho in the quarters before hitting fifth gear.
At the Division III level, Allegheny and Lycoming, each making their first (and, for Allegheny, only) title-game appearances, played a Stagg Bowl epic, with Ken O’Keefe’s Allegheny Gators winning 21-14 in overtime. In NAIA, Billy Joe’s Central State Marauders embarked on one of the greatest modern runs by an HBCU program, winning three playoff games by a combined 127-40 to claim their first national title.
Small-school football is the ultimate world builder. On a given Saturday, there’s always a bitter rivalry you hadn’t heard of and an unforgettable finish you’d never seen before. Every week provides title stakes of some sort before the breathless beast known as the smaller-school playoffs gets underway in November. The more you see, the happier you become, and you can watch just about any game in the country via either a streaming service or a school’s website.
Here are three huge smaller-school games for each week of the regular season, plus a choice selection for Week 0. Top-10 matchups are in bold.
Week 0: No. 7 UC Davis vs. No. 11 Mercer (FCS Kickoff Classic)
Week 1: No. 9 Pittsburg State at No. 1 Ferris State (D-II) (Thurs.), No. 4 Morningside at No. 3 Benedictine (NAIA), No. 14 Sacramento State at No. 3 South Dakota State (FCS)
Week 2: No. 3 South Dakota State at No. 2 Montana State (FCS), No. 3 Benedictine at No. 1 Grand View (NAIA), No. 9 Pittsburg State at No. 5 Central Oklahoma (D-II)
Week 3: No. 3 Grand Valley State at No. 9 Pittsburg State (D-II), No. 2 Mount Union at No. 23 Grove City (D-III), No. 6 Colorado State-Pueblo at No. 22 Central Missouri (D-II)
Week 4: No. 3 Johns Hopkins at No. 4 Susquehanna (D-III), No. 8 Georgetown (Ky.) at No. 6 St. Thomas (Fla.) (NAIA), No. 4 Incarnate Word at No. 18 Northern Arizona (FCS)
Week 5: No. 5 South Dakota at No. 1 North Dakota State (FCS), No. 18 Ouachita Baptist at No. 2 Harding (D-II), No. 17 Jackson State at Southern (FCS)
Week 6: No. 1 North Dakota State at No. 6 Illinois State (FCS), No. 5 St. John’s at No. 12 Bethel (D-III), No. 17 Wheaton at No. 1 North Central (D-III)
Week 7: No. 8 Mary Hardin-Baylor at No. 6 Hardin-Simmons (D-III), No. 19 Northern Arizona at No. 7 UC Davis (FCS), No. 15 UW-Platteville at No. 19 UW-River Falls (D-III)
Week 8: No. 6 St. Thomas (Fla.) at No. 2 Keiser (NAIA), No. 4 Morningside at No. 10 Northwestern (Iowa) (NAIA), No. 5 Montana Western at College of Idaho (NAIA)
Week 9: No. 1 North Dakota State at No. 3 South Dakota State (FCS), No. 3 Grand Valley State at No. 1 Ferris State (D-II), No. 6 Illinois State at No. 5 South Dakota (FCS)
Week 10: No. 6 CSU-Pueblo at No. 10 Western Colorado (D-II), No. 8 Tarleton State at No. 16 Abilene Christian (FCS), East Tennessee State at Chattanooga (FCS)
Week 11: No. 3 South Dakota State at No. 5 South Dakota (FCS), No. 6 Hardin-Simmons at No. 8 Mary Hardin-Baylor (D-III), No. 7 UC Davis at No. 12 Idaho (FCS)
Week 12: No. 7 UC Davis at No. 2 Montana State (FCS), No. 6 Illinois State at No. 3 South Dakota State (FCS), No. 12 Valdosta State at No. 8 West Florida (D-II)
Week 13: No. 2 Montana State at No. 9 Montana (FCS), No. 14 Sacramento State at No. 7 UC Davis (FCS), No. 15 Lehigh at Lafayette (FCS)
Better yet, adopt a small-school team
Want the full smaller-school experience? Follow a team (preferably a good one) from start to finish. Here are five particularly choice options.
Incarnate Word. The Cardinals have averaged 39.5 points per game in the 2020s, and their defense has improved significantly of late. Third-year coach Clint Killough, still only 32, has been aggressive in the transfer portal, and with lots of powerful FCS teams in flux because of an increase in transfers to FBS, UIW might have a shot at a return to the FCS semifinals or better. A good team that doesn’t mind a track meet every now and then? Yeah, watch UIW.
Slippery Rock. The Rock made the Division II semifinals last year, and they were the only team to stay within 34 points of a rampant Ferris State in the playoffs, falling 48-38. They’ve been elite at both offense and defense at some point recently, they could have the best line play of any D-II team outside of Ferris, and the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference is really fun to follow. And, I mean, they’re called The Rock! You want to root for The Rock!
Pittsburg State. Division II’s MIAA is a blast, with at least two teams — Central Oklahoma and Central Missouri — thirsting for track meets on a weekly basis. Pitt State actually plays defense, but the Gorillas are on this list both because they should be very good and because they’re absolutely masochistic: They’re starting the season at No. 1 Ferris State, at No. 5 Central Oklahoma and at home versus No. 3 Grand Valley State. They could be toast by the end of September, or they could be a national title contender.
A Division III Wisconsin team of your choice. The 2024 WIAC race was one of the sport’s best, featuring weekly heart-stoppers and plot twists and finishing with six of eight teams within two games of the title. All six of those teams — UW-La Crosse, UW-Platteville, UW-River Falls, UW-Whitewater, UW-Oshkosh and UW-Stout — rank between 11th and 32nd in the national preseason poll at D3football.com.
River Falls and Stout haven’t won a conference title since the turn of the century; La Crosse was a 1980s and 1990s power but hasn’t made the D-III semis since 1996; Oshkosh came within three points of the 2016 national title but hasn’t won a playoff game since 2017; Platteville has beautiful orange-and-blue jerseys and is hunting for its first playoff win in 14 years; and Whitewater, the D-III standard-bearer for so long, has fallen off a bit but still defends like heck.
Pick your fighter and buckle in.
Montana Western. Last year I suggested adopting College of Idaho, and the Yotes were track meet kings until a late-season slump. This season your points-loving, NAIA team of choice in Big Sky country should be Montana Western. The Bulldogs topped 40 points seven times before dropping a 31-24 heartbreaker to NAIA power Morningside in the playoffs. Quarterback Michael Palandri has thrown for 6,213 yards and 58 TDs in the past two years. This team should be excellent and ridiculously entertaining.
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How ‘A League of Their Own’ started a feud between Madonna and Evansville, Indiana
Published
6 hours agoon
August 19, 2025By
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EVANSVILLE, INDIANA, IS one of America’s biggest small towns, sitting on a bend in the Ohio River with a population of around 120,000. Its residents are a proud people.
They’re proud of their town’s resilience during the Ohio River flood of 1937 that covered 500 city blocks. They’re proud of the city’s role in World War II as a major manufacturing hub for aircraft and naval vessels.
They’re proud of their five-time College Division national champion University of Evansville men’s basketball team, and the program’s perseverance after a plane crash took the lives of the entire 1977 team.
Then there are the locals who became legends in their respective sports, like Bob Griese, Don Mattingly and, most recently, swimmer Lilly King. And we can’t even begin to get started on local high school basketball standouts throughout the years. This is Indiana, after all.
People from Evansville are proud of the high school they graduated from. They’re proud of whichever side of town, east or west, that they live on. The west side hosts the annual Fall Festival, one of the largest street festivals in the United States.
The east side was home to Roberts Stadium, which was host to the NCAA College Division (now Division II) men’s basketball national championship, as well as concerts by artists including Elvis Presley, Jimi Hendrix and Taylor Swift, who kicked off her first major tour in Evansville in 2009.
But on Dec. 8, 1991, Roberts Stadium was host to a different kind of event. An estimated 300 people gathered in the parking lot to create a human billboard. A helicopter with photographers aboard went into the southern Indiana sky around 1:30 p.m. to capture the message, which was intended for the Queen of Pop, Madonna.
The people who showed up for the gathering lay on their backs and held up large cards. Madonna’s name was spelled out in white. Over it was a red circle with a line through it to show the crowd’s disapproval.
The inspiration for the protest was a line from a TV Guide interview in which Madonna — who spent 11½ weeks in Evansville making what would become the highest-grossing baseball film in history, “A League of Their Own” — compared the city (derogatorily) to Prague.
Before the demonstration, Evansville was just the small town in Indiana that served as the backdrop for some of the most significant movie scenes in one of history’s most popular sports films.
Afterward, it was thrust into the national spotlight, portrayed as the town that rebelled against one of the most famous people in the world.
THE FILMING OF “A League of Their Own,” the movie centered on the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League of the 1940s and ’50s, began in the summer of 1991. The movie, directed by Penny Marshall, would star Geena Davis, Tom Hanks, Rosie O’Donnell, Lori Petty, Jon Lovitz and, of course, Madonna.
Evansville, as well as spots around the Illinois-Indiana-Kentucky tristate area, was selected as a filming site. Scenes were also shot in Chicago and Cooperstown, New York. Evansville’s Bosse Field, the third-oldest professional baseball stadium in the United States, behind only Wrigley Field and Fenway Park, drew Columbia Pictures to the area. The company believed it to be the perfect setting for baseball scenes, while the rest of the town could easily be touched up to create a 1940s look.
It’s no small deal when a major Hollywood production comes to any town, and in proud Evansville, the chance for residents to show off their home to some of film and entertainment’s biggest stars was a dream opportunity.
The crew began to arrive in the area on Aug. 7, 1991, but one of the film’s leads already seemed less than overjoyed to be in town. Chicago Sun-Times columnist Bill Zwecker said on “The Joan Rivers Show” that he asked Tom Hanks if he was excited to move the filming from Chicago to Evansville, to which he said Hanks replied, “Well, no. I’m sure Evansville is a nice town, but it’s certainly not going to have all the excitement Chicago has.”
Cynthia Cowen of Evansville wrote a letter to the editor of The Evansville Courier that was published a week after Hanks’ quote from Zwecker was made public. “I realize the quote upset some residents,” Cowen wrote. “But let’s face the fact that Evansville does not compare to Chicago and probably never will.” She suggested Evansville “should just try to be itself.”
That’s what Evansville did. Cast and crew members received a packet of things to do in town, with nightlife listings, restaurants and pubs, and, as Courier writer Eileen Dempsey noted, “a smattering of adult bookstores and a gay bar also were included.”
It wasn’t long before people in the area were interacting with some of Hollywood’s stars.
Lovitz ran into fans, signing autographs and taking pictures in New Harmony, Indiana. Hanks (who has since spoken fondly of his time in Evansville) was seen at a pawn shop purchasing a Fender 12-string guitar. He also found his way to popular local eateries such as House of Como and Wolf’s Bar-B-Q. Davis tried a chicken enchilada, beans and rice with a strawberry margarita at Hacienda on First Avenue. The restaurant paid the $11 bill for her, so she autographed the check and left a $5 tip for the server. Marshall was seen shopping at the Old Evansville Antique Mall, getting a variety of items such as quilts, spice jars and snowshoes, according to Dot Small, one of the owners.
A local, Richard Harper, snapped a photo of Madonna as she arrived in town in a maroon Lincoln. His wife, Mary Jo, sent the photo to Madonna’s address in town, and within a week, it was returned, signed “For Richard, Love Madonna.”
Some found other ways to extend themselves to Madonna. A 47-year-old California man, Floyd “Sandy” Bucklin, left a message for her in the classifieds of the Courier for the duration of the filming.
MADONNA CICCONE: Meet me for coffee. 415-***-****.
The Rev. Stephen Schwambach, pastor of Bethel Temple, invited Madonna to his church through the Courier.
Filming took about three months, with the movie’s World Series scene set at Bosse Field and one of the most iconic lines in any sports film — “There’s no crying in baseball!” — captured at the smaller League Field in nearby Huntingburg, Indiana.
Those three months were a success, and it seemed like Evansville was happy with its taste of Hollywood.
IN THE NOV. 23, 1991, issue of TV Guide, MTV anchor Kurt Loder interviewed Madonna in Los Angeles’ Hollywood Hills, in part to discuss “MTV 10,” a one-hour musical special celebrating MTV’s first decade.
As Loder wrote, “For the past three months — it might as well have been three years — she was stranded in Evansville, Indiana, a place she will not be revisiting in this current lifetime. (‘I may as well have been in Prague,’ she says, by way of summing up the town’s attraction.)”
Madonna told Loder that she was excited in the beginning to learn to play baseball, “but when you have to do it over and over again, you lose interest. Unless you’re getting paid 12 million dollars to play baseball — then I could grow very interested.”
Loder noted that Madonna didn’t have MTV at the home in which she was staying. “For the first time in my life, I felt very disconnected,” she told him.
But not everyone agrees. Jeff Meece, who helped with props during the Evansville shoot, told the Evansville Press that because of conversations on the set, he believed that Madonna watched the “MTV Video Music Awards.” “It was generally acknowledged on the set the next day that she had watched the awards,” he claimed. “Obviously she had cable.”
The general manager of United Artists Cable of Evansville, Michael MacNeilly, personally visited the home Madonna stayed at in McCutchanville to check the house’s service. He claimed it was properly installed at the house, MTV and all. “We’re not a Podunk cable service,” he told the Courier. In fact, the real estate agent for the home, Jeri Garrison, had made cable installation a priority when Madonna decided to move in earlier than initially planned.
Madonna’s publicist at the time, Liz Rosenberg, said shortly afterward that her client’s comments had been exaggerated by Loder. “I’m sure she didn’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings,” she said. “She’s a Midwest girl. In fact, she had a very good time in Evansville and made good friends.” But as soon as the quotes hit magazine shelves, WSTO-96 FM program director Barry Witherspoon began planning the Roberts Stadium parking lot stunt.
Before Madonna’s comments to TV Guide, Witherspoon was one of the thousands to be an extra for the film. He brought over 100 T-shirts from the station with him one day and asked the publicist there to pass them out and make sure all of the stars got one.
“You had all these big stars,” he recalled. “Being in radio, I never really had been a starstruck type person, because any big concert that came to Evansville, I would end up backstage, just hanging out with the groups and whoever it was, you know, Van Halen or Def Leppard or whatever. We all just kind of hung out and stuff.”
Witherspoon noticed that the stars of the movie would go behind the stadium in between shots. So, instead of sitting with the rest of the extras in his seat at the stadium, he sneaked back to see them. He recalled them sitting around hay bales, including one in the middle with a big fruit bowl.
“Well, my whole purpose for even doing this, for even going over there, wanting to be an extra, my goal was to get Tom Hanks to stop by the station and do an on-air stint with our morning show,” Witherspoon said.
Witherspoon told Deborah Fruin, who wrote a story titled “A Bad Day For Evansville” in the Madonna 92 magazine, “We had tried to get Madonna — in fact any of the stars — to come to the radio station for an hour, a minute, anything, but we had no luck. As far as I know the cast of ‘A League of Our (sic) Own’ only gave one group interview to a television station during their entire stay.”
He sat down on a hay bale, grabbed some fruit and asked Hanks about appearing on the radio station. Hanks’ reply? “Nah, better not do that.”
After that, Witherspoon said he got up to go sit on a park bench. As he sat there, Madonna was walking by to go to her trailer.
“I just looked up and said, ‘Hey, did you get that T-shirt I sent over to you?'” he recalled. “And she didn’t even turn her head. She just kind of looked out of the corner of her eye as she walked past me and just said, ‘Oh, is that you?’ I know it’s no big deal to give her a T-shirt, but it was just kind of, I don’t know, kind of rubbed me the wrong way.”
Witherspoon told the story on air the next day for the station’s morning show. And when the TV Guide interview came out, Witherspoon got the station involved further by organizing the parking lot stunt.
“I could have cared less what she said about Evansville myself, and I think the rest of the staff did too. But, Madonna was a big player on our station. We played everything she had done and played the snot out of it. She was a superstar, and that was the height of her superstardom really.
“So I just looked at it as — I looked at everything as a promotional opportunity for the radio station.”
Witherspoon showed up first, a few hours early, to make sure he chalked out the message in the parking lot for people to follow. “I had to get that right, because, you know, we end up doing it wrong, it looks stupid on us.” The turnout wasn’t as large as Witherspoon had hoped, so he had those in attendance lie on their backs to fill all the space. Many also wore T-shirts designed by a local graphic design artist that had a caricature of Madonna inside a map of Indiana that read, “Serving Time in Prague, Ind.”
Witherspoon got a hold of a helicopter pilot out of Henderson, Kentucky, and offered him free advertising if he would fly over the parking lot during the protest. One of Witherspoon’s jocks and a photographer from the Courier went up in the helicopter and took photos of the message along with a camera crew for the syndicated tabloid-style television show “Hard Copy.”
“I would be surprised if there was a whole lot of people that really gave a crap [about her comments], maybe thousands, but there was several hundred thousand people around. We tried to make it more than it was, just so that we could get some publicity out of it.”
That image turned the tiny, local slight into a national story.
“Entertainment Tonight” ended up doing a segment on Madonna and Evansville. Arsenio Hall, whose late-night TV show had millions of viewers, had Madonna and Rosie O’Donnell on and asked how they liked Indiana.
O’Donnell joked that Madonna was planning on buying a house in Evansville. Hall followed up and asked about the protest, to which Madonna replied, “They thought I threw shade on them.” She shrugged and said, “What are you gonna do? They only had one drag bar there!”
Despite some manufactured outrage that turned into national press, some locals were upset enough to keep their complaints in the local papers for weeks.
“I will probably see the movie when it opens only because I want to see our beautiful countryside and the local people that appear throughout. As far as I’m concerned, Madonna is not welcome to return to Evansville for the premiere of this movie or for any other reason.” – Melody Burbage, Henderson, Ky.
“Golly, gee, aw shucks, I’m just sick you weren’t happier here in Evanspatch these past few months.” – Gretchen Schroeder, Evansville
“Will The Evansville Courier pour a bit more ink through the machinery regarding Madonna’s criticism of Evansville? Who really cares what she says? … Her lack of class is evident in the simple fact that, after all the hospitality extended her by area businesses, she possesses not even the grace to say, ‘Thanks for the stay, Evansville.'” – Christine Fuchs, Evansville
There was one feud-related event held before things simmered down, though this one at least benefited a good cause.
Organizers, including Rick O’Daniel, created a fundraising picnic to benefit the Special Olympics, calling it the “Evansville-Prague Summer Olympics.” Announced in June 1992, invitations were extended to the Czech embassy in Washington to attend the event, which was set for July 4 from noon to 5 p.m. at Burdette Park.
Madonna was invited as well, specifically to “carry the Olympic torch through town and to light the Olympic barbecue grill,” O’Daniel told the Courier.
Although Madonna didn’t officially decline an invitation, the Czechoslovakian director of foreign policy sent the organizers of the event a letter. It informed them that President Vaclav Havel could not attend as “he must be in Czechoslovakia for the presidential elections in the first weeks of July.”
As the Courier’s Eileen Dempsey pointed out, “All things considered, Havel may have had more fun in Evansville. He lost his re-election bid Friday.”
WHILE SOME EVANSVILLE residents didn’t have glowing reviews of Madonna, she got along just fine with other people in town.
Such as University of Southern Indiana baseball coach Gary Redman, who taught baseball fundamentals to the actors. “Her first day there she was in left field just shagging fly balls,” Redman recalled. His young sons, Josh and Jace, were out there as well. “I found out pretty quickly that she absolutely loves kids. … She took right to them, and was just as nice as could be to them, played ball with them. When there was downtime she’d want to do things with them.”
Redman recalled overhearing a story Madonna told about jogging one morning in McCutchanville. “She had to go to the bathroom, really bad. So I think [she and her bodyguards] went to somebody’s house and knocked on the door and said, ‘This is Madonna. I gotta go to the bathroom.’ And she said how embarrassing that was.”
For Madonna’s birthday, Redman’s wife, Geralyn, and their sons bought balloons and baseball cards for her. “She couldn’t have been any sweeter to us, myself, my two boys,” he said.
Off the diamond, a trip to Sho-Bar, a former strip joint turned gay nightclub on Franklin Street, was one of the most widely reported highlights of Madonna’s stay in Evansville.
Patrick Higgs, a local who had taken time off from his DJ job at another bar to work every day on the movie set, went to Sho-Bar the night of Sept. 7 excited. He had spent the day filming a scene with Madonna and Rosie O’Donnell and wanted to tell his friends all about it. When he walked in, one of the owners wanted to speak with him. The bar’s DJ got into an argument with one of the other owners and quit. So they hired Higgs.
Madonna, in a black spaghetti-strap dress and a black tam, showed up that same night and paid the $3 cover charge for herself and a group of 10 others. She stood at the bar for about an hour but didn’t drink. She was very health-conscious, locals came to learn.
Eventually, someone from the group went over to owner Shawn Nix and asked if she could have a table. Of course Nix made room for her despite a packed house. Before making her exit that night, the bar had Madonna sign her name on the wall in fluorescent paint.
At a news conference for the film the next day, the cast and crew took questions from local media. Madonna was complimentary of the corn and root beer floats she’d had. As the session was closing, a reporter quipped to Madonna, “See you at Sho-Bar.” She replied with a smile, “See you at Sho-Bar.”
“Sho-Bar suddenly became the Madonna watch place,” Higgs said. “So she never came back.” That wasn’t a huge issue. Business there boomed anyway.
Alan Lee, a sportscaster at WEHT-Ch. 25, had a “Blond Ambition Scoreboard” named after Madonna’s tour as a regular feature of his nightly sportscasts since she arrived in town. Part of the bit was that Lee also wouldn’t shave until Madonna called him.
Eventually, after helping the crew get the extras needed for the World Series shoot, Lee’s phone rang at 5:22 one morning. It was Madonna. The two had a brief conversation about the filming and her time in Evansville.
“Looking back on that, there was never really any real controversy that was going on,” Lee said. “We had fun when they were here. She had fun that we know of. I think the overall impression to me would have been, this was a very positive experience for Evansville.”
HAVING “A LEAGUE of Their Own” filmed in Evansville was a significant moment in time for the city and its residents. An estimated 33,000 tristaters were extras in the film, it pumped $10 million into the local economy and it helped bring attention to Bosse Field, which had been tenantless after the Evansville Triplets of Triple-A left for Nashville following the 1984 season.
“I don’t think you can exaggerate the impact this movie still has on the community,” said Bill Bussing, the owner of the Frontier League’s Evansville Otters. “Gosh, I might be at the ballpark in November or December on a Saturday afternoon working, and people will come with tourists because they want to see the ballpark.
“Even in the offseason, who would expect that anybody would be there on Saturday? But they come anyway, and I let them in, and they walk around. Some kids say, ‘This is the best day of my life,’ because they’ve seen the movie so many times they can recite the lines from certain scenes.”
Major League Baseball has explored the idea of playing a game at Bosse Field in recent years, though there are no concrete plans to do so. If a game were to be played in Evansville, there’s no question that if there were “A League of Their Own” ties, the entire cast, including Madonna, would be welcomed back.
“I thought it was overdone,” said Gordon Engelhardt, who worked nearly four decades at the now Courier & Press. “I think the media was, you know, as we are members of the media, we were looking for a story, and I think it was overblown.”
“We don’t bear grudges here,” Bussing said. “I think she would be welcomed here if she’d be willing to come back.”
Opportunity is what pushed everyone. A local radio station saw an opportunity to take advantage of its proximity to the biggest star on the planet. National media did the same after the parking lot stunt.
But most importantly, Evansville got the opportunity to mix with Hollywood, and that’s how many residents remember the experience. It’s one more thing the town can be proud of.
Sports
D-backs star Marte apologizes, explains absence
Published
8 hours agoon
August 19, 2025By
admin
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ESPN News Services
Aug 18, 2025, 09:00 PM ET
PHOENIX — Ketel Marte is having one of the best seasons of his career on the field.
That hasn’t stopped a fair amount of criticism for the Arizona Diamondbacks slugger off of it.
The All-Star second baseman apologized through an interpreter Monday for missing three games following the All-Star break after flying back to his home in the Dominican Republic — a situation that has apparently been festering in the clubhouse over the past month.
The 31-year-old said he initially expected to return to Phoenix immediately following the break but was “frustrated” and “in a bad spot” after he learned his residence in Scottsdale, Arizona, had been burglarized during the break, according to the interpreter.
The D-backs were playing a crucial stretch of games — fighting for playoff position ahead of the July 31 trade deadline. Arizona placed Marte on the restricted list for the first two games of his absence and then he didn’t play a third game after returning to the club.
In response to criticisms that he takes too many games off, Marte said he has dealt with injury issues and is following a plan designed by the training staff. Marte has missed 33 games this year, the majority of which were because of a hamstring injury.
“I know there’s an elephant in the room and I’ll just say what I want to say about it,” D-backs manager Torey Lovullo said. “I know that Ketel talked to you guys and I’m proud of him for doing that. That’s not easy for him to do. I know he showed some vulnerability and I’m really proud of him for digging in the way that he did.
“What I’ll say about Ketel are the things that I know — he’s a great teammate, he’s a great young man, he plays hard every single day for the Arizona Diamondbacks. He just wants to win baseball games. That’s it.”
Marte has dealt with a torrent of criticism after a report in the Arizona Republic last week said that some teammates were frustrated with the second baseman’s behavior over the past month and that his absence after the All-Star break might have partially caused the team’s collapse before the trade deadline.
The D-backs came into the season with high expectations but are 60-65.
Arizona won the three games Marte missed after the All-Star break — sweeping the St. Louis Cardinals — but then lost nine of 10 when he returned to the lineup.
That affected the organization’s approach at the trade deadline. The Diamondbacks sent third baseman Eugenio Suárez and first baseman Josh Naylor to the Seattle Mariners in separate deals, outfielder Randal Grichuk to the Kansas City Royals and right-hander Merrill Kelly to the Texas Rangers.
Marte is having a terrific all-around offensive season, batting .297 with 23 homers and 56 RBIs. The three-time All-Star has been with the organization since 2017 and was key to the team’s unexpected run to the World Series in 2023.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sports
Robles ejected for hurling bat at Triple-A pitcher
Published
11 hours agoon
August 18, 2025By
admin
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ESPN News Services
Aug 18, 2025, 12:46 AM ET
Seattle Mariners outfielder Victor Robles was ejected from a minor league game during a rehab assignment with Triple-A Tacoma on Sunday after he was nearly hit by an inside pitch and tossed his bat at the pitcher.
Las Vegas starter Joey Estes’ first pitch to Robles in the third inning was inside and Robles whacked at it to avoid getting hit.
After taking a few steps behind the plate and dropping his bat, Robles picked up the bat and threw it in Estes’ direction and was immediately ejected from the game by plate umpire Joe McCarthy.
Robles, who was hit by a pitch three times in his previous four games with Tacoma, took some steps toward the mound while yelling at the pitcher but was held back by McCarthy and Las Vegas teammates.
After going into the dugout, Robles threw a box of snacks toward the field before heading to the clubhouse.
He took to social media later to apologize for letting his frustration get the best of him.
“Coming off a long rehab and being away from the game for most of the season has been physically and mentally challenging,” Robles said in his Instagram story. “Adding to that, the recent passing of my mother has been incredibly hard, and I’ve been doing my best to hold it together. That’s not an excuse, but some context I feel you deserve to understand where I’m coming from.”
He added, “Getting hit 5 times in 15 at-bats added to that pressure, and I reacted in a way I’m not proud of. This game means the world to me, and so do the people who play it. I respect every one of you, not just as a player, but as a teammate and competitor.”
Robles is rehabbing a dislocated left shoulder he suffered in April.
Information from The Associated Press contributed to this story.
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