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Week 11 brought bigger news off the field than on it, as Texas A&M fired coach Jimbo Fisher on Sunday despite having to pay a $76 million buyout. And of course, the Michigan sign-stealing saga reached a head with the suspension of coach Jim Harbaugh before the Wolverines’ game with Penn State.

On the field, a pair of unbeaten teams — Georgia and Washington — posted impressive wins, while two more players tried to force their way into the Heisman Trophy conversation.

Our college football reporters look at the fallout from all the action in this week’s takeaways.


Jimbo Fisher, Florida State follow QBs in opposite directions

It’s not exactly breaking news to suggest a team is only as good as its quarterback, but Week 11 reinforced just how essential having a genuine star at the position actually is.

Where would LSU be this season without Jayden Daniels‘ heroics?

How many big throws has Michael Penix Jr. made in leading Washington into playoff contention?

Is there a more significant development this season than Jalen Milroe‘s transition from liability to foundation for Alabama?

But if you want to understand the true significance of elite QB play — and the often fickle nature of the position — look no further than Florida State and its former head coach.

The Seminoles are 10-0, carried back from the brink of the abyss by a quarterback no one believed in. Jordan Travis has done it all for FSU over the past three years, and his emergence has almost perfectly mirrored Florida State’s return to glory.

Meanwhile, Jimbo Fisher was fired by Texas A&M on the heels of a 6-4 start after his last, best hope at the QB position, Conner Weigman, went down with a season-ending injury in Week 3.

In Week 11, Travis fueled Florida State’s 27-20 win over rival Miami for his third straight victory over the Hurricanes.

In Week 11, Fisher was forced to start Jaylen Henderson against Mississippi State. It was Fisher’s fifth different starting QB in the past three seasons.

There was a time, not all that long ago, when Fisher was considered the preeminent quarterback whisperer in college football. He turned JaMarcus Russell, Christian Ponder, EJ Manuel and Jameis Winston into first-round NFL draft picks. Then, suddenly, the magic was gone. Fisher saw one QB recruit after another run into off-field issues, transfer, flame out or never emerge. He left FSU with a black hole at the position — one worsened by Willie Taggart’s inability to even sign a high school quarterback for two years — and headed to Texas A&M expecting to find greener pastures.

Instead, Fisher’s best years at A&M came with the QB he inherited, Kellen Mond, and none of his recruits — Zach Calzada, Haynes King, James Foster, Eli Stowers — amounted to much of anything.

Fisher’s fate was effectively sealed because he could never find a quarterback.

Meanwhile, Florida State’s salvation came from a castoff from Louisville, a guy Taggart didn’t think could play the position. Travis nearly quit football altogether in 2021, only to be salvaged by Mike Norvell, Kenny Dillingham and McKenzie Milton, who all saw something he didn’t even see in himself.

Fisher’s run of bad luck, bad evaluation and bad development ended with his termination.

Florida State’s good luck, bold vision and long-term investment might end with a playoff berth.

It’s amazing what the right QB can do to change the fates of powerful coaches and blue-blood programs. — David Hale


Georgia is never the hunted, always the hunter

Kirby Smart has done an incredible job of building Georgia’s program through recruiting, development of players and creating the kind of competition on the practice field that leads to quality depth few teams can match.

But after two straight national championships — really, after one, for that matter — most teams and players get complacent. It’s human nature to enjoy success by basking in it rather than using it to drive you harder.

But the more the Bulldogs win, the hungrier they become.

With their winning streak at 27 straight games, they can tie the SEC record on Saturday with a triumph at Tennessee. When Alabama won 28 in a row under the legendary Bear Bryant from 1978 to 1980, and certainly as the years have gone by, a lot of people thought that record that might never be broken. After all, it has stood for more than 40 years. Alabama also won 28 in a row on the field from 1991 to 1993, but it later had to forfeit eight wins and a tie in 1993 because of NCAA sanctions.

Making the Bulldogs’ run even more impressive is that they’ve lost a ton of talent to the NFL over the past two years yet just keep steamrollering along. They’ve had a staggering 24 players selected in the draft during the past two years, but the loss of such elite personnel hasn’t translated on the field.

Seeing tight end Brock Bowers return in a 52-17 rout of Ole Miss was especially revealing. Smart said a lot of people had advised Bowers to sit out the rest of the season, get even healthier and enter the NFL draft. Bowers is one of the top pro prospects in college football, and he returned to action just 26 days after having surgery on his ankle.

Smart said Bowers was even more hell-bent on returning the more people told him he should sit out the rest of the campaign, to “prove them wrong.”

It’s the same with this Georgia team. It’s never enough, and real or perceived, the Dawgs are always trying to prove people wrong. — Chris Low


Washington coach Kalen DeBoer hits 100-win milestone

Kalen DeBoer has only entered the national consciousness in, really, the past year and a half. In his brief time in Seattle, the Huskies have gone 21-2, and they currently own the nation’s second-longest winning streak at 17 games. This comes on the heels of an impressive two-year stint as the coach at Fresno State (12-6), the first season of which was soured by the pandemic.

Not a bad start to a coaching career, right?

Well, actually, DeBoer has been winning games — a lot of games — as a head coach dating back to when Reggie Bush and Vince Young were still in school. His five-year run as the coach at NAIA Sioux Falls from 2005 to 2009 was one of the most dominant stretches in the sport’s history. The Cougars went 67-3 in the span with four national titles.

Saturday’s win against Utah, the two-time defending Pac-12 champion, was DeBoer’s 100th as a head coach. The 10 years he spent climbing the coaching ladder seem absurdly long in hindsight, but there is no question now that he is one of the best coaches in the sport and, at 49, is positioned to become one of the faces of college coaching.

“He’s just a guy that everybody attracts to and everybody trusts because of the person he is,” Huskies quarterback Michael Penix Jr. said. “He’s the same guy every day, and he leads us very well. He continues to make sure that he puts the person over the player. He always makes sure that as a person, we’re good — we’re good in our daily lives and everybody has lives outside of football.”

That kind of perspective can feel rare in college football. When asked how winning game No. 100 compares with No. 1, DeBoer said he appreciates it more and more.

“I think realizing that the moment that these guys are in right now is what’s special to me, and that getting these wins and the experiences that they’re going to have, the memories that they’re going to have that last forever — the stories they’re going to be able to tell,” DeBoer said. “Hopefully, we’re far from being where this all ends, but I think I have appreciation for that and try to give them a dose of that every once in a while. But we’re trying to keep the pedal down to where we can realize the real goals that we have for this season.”

It doesn’t get easier. Washington will travel to No. 10 Oregon State on Saturday before ending the season with the Apple Cup against Washington State in Seattle. Then a likely rematch with Oregon awaits in the Pac-12 title game, where a College Football Playoff spot could be on the line. — Kyle Bonagura


Michigan remains undeterred by drama, distractions

The opinions about Michigan and the severity of the alleged sign-stealing operation led by former staff member Connor Stalions are both strong and wide-ranging. Did the Big Ten overstep its authority and set a problematic precedent? Did commissioner Tony Petitti go far enough with his discipline for coach Jim Harbaugh? How much should the sign stealing take away from Michigan’s remarkable turnaround since the end of the 2020 season? These questions and others have sparked vastly different and entrenched positions.

But some things aren’t really up for debate, including the ability of Michigan’s players to set aside the drama and distractions that have overwhelmed the program, even long before anyone outside of Schembechler Hall knew the name Connor Stalions. I wrote about this in August, after visiting on campus with Michigan players as well as university president Santa Ono and athletic director Warde Manuel. We discussed Harbaugh’s NFL flirtations, co-offensive coordinator Matt Weiss’ mysterious firing, the brief return and departure of Shemy Schembechler and other things that could have sidetracked Michigan but didn’t.

None of those incidents had more potential to impact Michigan on the field than what began Friday afternoon, when the Big Ten suspended Harbaugh while the team was en route to play at Penn State. When the Wolverines arrived at Beaver Stadium without Harbaugh, they didn’t know whether he would be allowed to be on the sideline. Sources with the team described the players as “locked in” and “pissed,” but how would they perform? The Wolverines responded with a clinical takedown of Penn State, leaning on their defense and run game without completing a pass for the final 36-plus minutes (and only attempting one, a play nullified by a PSU penalty).

They didn’t dominate the line of scrimmage the way they did last year against Penn State, but after back-to-back Wolverines touchdown drives in the season quarter, it never felt like the Nittany Lions would come back and win. Michigan did not commit a turnover and was penalized just twice through the first three quarters. The game’s notable coaching errors came from the Penn State sideline, not the one acting head coach Sherrone Moore patrolled.

“We’ve been going through a lot lately,” Michigan running back Blake Corum said, “but it’s only brought us closer together. I love my brothers. It was a good job today.”

Michigan should learn Friday whether Harbaugh will miss its final two regular-season games (versus Maryland and Ohio State) or return to the sideline on Saturday. But whatever happens off the field, the Wolverines likely won’t be fazed by it. Could they lose a game? Sure. But don’t expect it to be because they aren’t focused. — Adam Rittenberg


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Marvin Harrison Jr. strikes again with his 2nd TD

Marvin Harrison Jr. scores another touchdown for Ohio State, giving the Buckeyes a 14-0 lead over Michigan State.

There’s little doubt Marvin Harrison Jr. will be in New York on Dec. 9, the night the 2023 Heisman Trophy will be handed out. But the Ohio State wide receiver is making a compelling case that he should be the first Buckeye to win the award since Troy Smith in 2006 and break the program’s tie with Notre Dame for the most Heisman winners (seven).

For the second straight year, Harrison went off against Michigan State. A season after catching seven passes for 131 yards and three touchdowns at Spartan Stadium, Harrison was even better Saturday night at Ohio Stadium, registering seven catches for 149 yards and two touchdowns plus a 19-yard scoring run for good measure as the Buckeyes rolled 38-3. In the process, Harrison tied David Boston’s program record for the most 100-yard receiving games at 13.

Harrison enters the final two weeks of the regular season, when Ohio State plays Minnesota and at Michigan, with 59 receptions for 1,063 yards and 12 touchdowns. He is the first wideout in program history to have multiple 1,000-yard seasons after catching 77 passes for 1,263 yards and 14 touchdowns as a sophomore.

Harrison is getting revved up at precisely the right time and will give Michael Penix Jr., Jayden Daniels, Bo Nix and any other contender a good run at the trophy as he looks to become the second wide receiver in four years — following Alabama’s DeVonta Smith in 2020 — to lay claim to the world’s most famous bronze stiff-arm. — Blake Baumgartner


Give the former walk-on some love

The Heisman Trophy favorites — Marvin Harrison Jr., Michael Penix, Bo Nix and Jayden Daniels — are certainly worthy of attention, but how about some love for Missouri running back Cody Schrader?

The former walk-on from Division II Truman State leads the SEC and ranks ninth in the FBS with 112.4 rushing yards per game. He has accumulated 1,124 rushing yards with 11 touchdowns and is averaging 5.7 yards per carry.

In Saturday’s 36-7 rout of No. 13 Tennessee, Schrader ran for 205 yards with one touchdown and caught five passes for 116 yards. According to ESPN Stats & Information research, he is the first SEC player in the past 25 years with at least 150 rushing yards and 100 receiving yards in the same game. He also is the first Missouri player to total more than 100 yards in both rushing and receiving in the same contest.

“Absolutely,” Missouri coach Eli Drinkwitz said when asked by reporters if Schrader should be among the contenders for the Heisman. “If you’re talking about the best player in college football who’s done more for his football team than anybody else. He’s the leading rusher in the SEC. When’s the last time the leading rusher in the SEC on a top-10 team wasn’t considered for the Heisman?

“The guy shows up in the biggest games on the biggest stages.”

Schrader, a 5-foot-9 senior from St. Louis, is already a semifinalist for the Burlsworth Trophy, which goes to the best player in the FBS who started his career as a walk-on. At Truman State, a public university in Kirksville, Missouri, with an enrollment of about 4,000 students, Schrader led Division II with 2,074 rushing yards and 24 touchdowns in 2021. He ran for 745 yards with nine scores at Missouri last season.

Tennessee’s defense wasn’t the only one Schrader has victimized this season. He had 112 yards with a touchdown in a 30-21 loss at Georgia on Nov. 4 and 159 yards with two scores in a 34-12 victory over South Carolina on Oct. 21.

But none of his previous performances was more impressive than the one against Tennessee.

“What an incredible day that little Superman had for us,” Drinkwitz said. “I had to. I can’t call him the Smurf anymore. He’s risen to a new level.” — Mark Schlabach

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Bill Belichick’s legacy takes a detour at North Carolina

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Bill Belichick's legacy takes a detour at North Carolina

IT’S IMPOSSIBLE TO look down to the sideline, at the man standing alone, squinting out at the field with his default look of irritation and disgust, and not wonder what he’s doing there. He looks at the papers he’s holding, squinting harder, and jots down something with the pencil stub in his right hand before peering back onto the field as if he’s trying to figure out what, exactly, is taking place in front of him.

He’s 73 years old, the hair under and inside his visor showing signs of early comb-over. There is a berth around him, a wide one, and it’s rare that he approaches anyone or anyone approaches him. An assistant runs over every so often and hands him a tablet that he jabs with his finger a few times before handing it back. He occasionally barks at an official. He walks to one end of the sideline to watch a few plays from behind the line of scrimmage, and the negative space moves with him, like he’s emanating an invisible force field.

He is the most famous and successful coach in NFL history, long past the age of needing to prove anything to anybody, even further past the age of needing the money or the work, and yet there he is, coaching a University of North Carolina football team that, at 4-7, has proved stubbornly unable to bend to his will. It’s like watching a monarch preside over a small-town school board. He coached the most envied and despised team in the NFL, and now he coaches a below-average ACC team that elicits almost no emotional response. He continues to preach the tenets of his faith: Fix your mistakes, get better every day, do your job. There is not and never has been room for frivolity, or peripheral concerns of any flavor, or even outward signs of joy. The rare smile, the northern white rhino of the sports world, is more a baring of teeth. We are left to presume he enjoys what he’s doing simply because he keeps doing it.


DESPITE THE DEPRESSING season, despite his personal life spooling into the open, despite the most basic question — Why is he doing this? — there are times when Bill Belichick shows it’s all still in there.

It is nearly an hour past the final play of UNC’s game against Stanford when he finally appears at the lectern in the atrium of the school’s football complex. He stands, as always, and begins to speak about his team’s 20-15 win, its second ACC victory in a row and a sign — fleeting as it may be — that he just might make this college thing work after all.

He looks less weary and uninterested than usual, which means his grumbling is delivered loudly enough to hear. He graciously tells a young man who asked a lengthy question about the tendencies and strengths and weaknesses of UNC’s next opponent, Wake Forest, that he doesn’t have an answer for him yet but that it’s a great question. He makes eye contact. He’s trying. For once, the back-and-forth doesn’t feel like penance.

Fewer than 15 minutes pass before Brandon Faber, Belichick’s media relations liaison, says the coach has time for one more question.

Belichick doesn’t move.

“We’ve got time for a couple more if you want,” he says, tossing a hand in the air like it’s no big deal, like this is how he always operates. “I know I kept you hanging here, so I can go a little longer if you want.”

There is a molecular shift in the room. Belichick wants more questions? This doesn’t happen. Belichick speaks for roughly 20 minutes every Tuesday morning, and then briefly after every game. The Tuesday conversations revolve almost entirely around that week’s game, and the postgame conversations revolve almost entirely around the game that just ended. There’s almost no space for nuance or introspection or anything beyond pregame platitudes and postgame autopsies.

As anyone who has ever witnessed the Kabuki of a Belichick news conference knows, time is not the only limiting factor. He tends to treat each question as if it’s dipped in acid; he is intentionally vague (“Every game is decided between the white lines,” he said in the lead-up to Saturday’s Duke game) when he’s not being intentionally obvious (“Defensively, we send our defense out there to prevent the offense from scoring”). There are times he will answer a question at length, using the most unilluminating words possible. Hard worker, both sides of the ball, understands the system — it’s the verbal equivalent of dimming the lights, and every word is uttered in the same toneless drone. It’s easy to get drawn in, like watching a hypnotist’s pendulum, and convince yourself you’re hearing something incisive simply because of the person delivering the message. It is both gift and art.

Over the past few weeks, the discussions have focused inordinately on whether North Carolina can get to six wins, a .500 record, and squeeze its way into a bowl game for the seventh straight season. Considering that 82 schools play in bowl games, and considering that two of UNC’s wins are over Richmond and Charlotte, the bar is low enough to be subterranean. And even after Saturday’s loss to Duke, there is the possibility that a win over North Carolina State on Saturday could get the Tar Heels into a bowl game on the virtue of their Academic Progress Rate if there are not enough six-win teams to fill out the bowl schedule. Belichick, predictably, has waved away questions about the postseason, perhaps unwilling to acknowledge the truth: An invite to the Gasparilla Bowl, especially one based on a technicality, would be a far sadder end to his first college season than a week in the office poring over the names appearing in the transfer portal.

But as evening becomes night on this Saturday in Chapel Hill, a five-point win over a bad Stanford team has UNC’s athletic director and chancellor standing toward the back of the room, bouncing and smiling with happiness and, no doubt, relief. Notably absent — for the first time in Belichick’s postgame news conferences — is his girlfriend, Jordon Hudson. A New York Post article on Friday offered a potential reason for Belichick’s tardiness and Hudson’s absence: After the game, the outlet reported, Belichick’s daughter-in-law Jen, the wife of defensive coordinator Steve Belichick, spent 40 minutes berating Bill and Hudson in the coach’s office.

Belichick seems unaffected. He has opened the floor, and the questions begin to stray beyond the normal margins. He’s asked about the logo on his quarter-zip, an interlocking diagonal UNC that, a reporter suggests, might be a throwback to the 1950s, when Belichick’s father was a Tar Heels assistant. “It’s from Lawrence Taylor’s time,” Belichick says.

But it’s a question regarding the development of young players that hot-wires him into a different space. He started this thing called Sunday Night Football, a controlled scrimmage between players who didn’t suit up for the game that weekend. They play the theme song from the “Sunday Night Football” broadcast through the speakers at Kenan Stadium. Every coach in the program watches, every player is in attendance, every play is filmed from all the angles, like it’s happening in a full stadium on a Saturday afternoon. “Everybody’s out there,” receivers coach Garrick McGee says, “and everybody’s into it.”

The game is followed by a Tuesday or Wednesday night meeting with Belichick and the SNF participants. He spends at least an hour going over the film and relaying the notes he requires his assistants to take and provide to him. McGee has been a college coach, including a head coach, for 29 years, and he says, “I’ve been doing this a long time, and this is different than any place out there. The meeting Bill has with the players is something I’ve never seen before.”

Belichick shrugs and says, “It’s something we’ve always done, going all the way back to Cleveland. … When your players who don’t get a lot of playing time just run the other team’s plays, it’s hard for you to evaluate how they can run your plays. We created those opportunities to see how they’re progressing in running our stuff. I want to see our players running our plays, to make sure they can do what we need them to do, not just running plays off cards from something Virginia ran, or Stanford ran.”

He’s rolling now. There’s a spark, a cadence to his words that makes this feel like we’re in a classroom and not a news conference. This is his turf: running drills off to the side, working on “basics” with the non-regulars after practice every single day, seeing something nobody else sees. He’s trying to remind everyone: This is a system, and it’s proven. It’s an attempt to take back whatever he feels has been lost in the months since he signed on to this job and lived through the seeming embarrassments of the 24-year-old Hudson appearing to stage-manage an interview on “CBS Sunday Morning” (something the coach attributed to “selectively edited clips and stills from just a few minutes of the interview to suggest a false narrative”) and the routs at the hands of TCU and Clemson, and the boos and emptying stands at Kenan Stadium, and the revelation that his buddy and general manager Michael Lombardi (salary: an NCAA-best $1.5 million) took a trip to Saudi Arabia seeking funding for the program, and the indignity of having to issue a statement affirming his commitment to the Tar Heels after rumors spread that he would be open to a buyout after The Athletic reported, five games in, that his team was rife with dysfunction.

He rattles off the names of players who have gone from Sunday Night Football to regular and productive playing time: receiver Madrid Tucker, running backs Demon June and Benjamin Hall.

Turns out the man whose late career has centered on one unanswerable question — Did Belichick create Tom Brady or did Brady create Belichick? — was just setting up for the mic drop:

“That’s what Brady did the whole 2000 season,” he says. “He never played. He was the fourth-string quarterback, but he did all those plays — running our offense against our defense. The guys who didn’t play, that’s what a lot of them did. They weren’t great. They weren’t even good. But a lot of them became good, and some of them became great.”

This, you think, is it: This is why they believe, and why North Carolina, a basketball school desperate to find its spot in the college football firmament, is paying him $50 million for five years.

This is why they still believe.


BELICHICK’S FIRST STOP on campus after his hiring was the men’s lacrosse office. Belichick is a lacrosse fanatic: He was the captain of the team at Wesleyan, his sons played the sport, his daughter coaches at Holy Cross. It’s hard to say lacrosse is his happy place — this is Belichick, after all — but it seems to serve as a refuge. Head coach Joe Breschi returned to his office that day in mid-December to find a note:

“First stop on campus: visiting lacrosse office – BB”

Lacrosse, a spring sport, shares a practice field with the football team. Belichick watched one of the team’s early spring practices, and he was confused by the temporary tape on the field to designate the crease around each goal.

“We’ve never been allowed to line the football field,” Breschi told him.

Under Breschi, the Heels are consistently one of the top teams in the country. They won the 2016 national championship, but they’ve never been deemed significant enough to mark their own territory.

“I’ll take care of it,” Belichick said.

Breschi, 11 months later, remains unable to contain his amazement.

“The next day,” he says. “The very next day, there were lines on the field. We got the field lined! I’ve been here 18 years and never got the field lined.”

Belichick has become something of a Professor of Championships on the Chapel Hill campus. He gave a speech to Breschi’s lacrosse team last spring, and just last week he addressed the NCAA top-seeded field hockey team before it lost to No. 2 Northwestern in the Final Four on Friday. Head coach Erin Matson introduced Belichick: “For any field hockey program, it’s always going to be rare for the head football coach, especially during game week, to come over and take time out of their week and talk to you guys. But it’s extremely rare that we get coach Bill Belichick.”

Belichick stood before them and said, “You plan for what’s going to happen, but once the game starts, you play the game.”

It’s a similar message heard by the men’s lacrosse team. Belichick spoke to the team after he ordered the field to be lined, and shortly afterward, Breschi got a message from Belichick. “He wanted to know if we had any extra sticks and sweatshirts lying around,” Breschi says. He rounded up six of each.

“So you know what we’re wondering, right?” Breschi asks. “We’re wondering if he’s playing lacrosse in his free time.”


LOOKING OUT OVER Kenan Stadium on a gorgeous November Saturday, homecoming no less, the stands less than half filled 20 minutes before kickoff as three military paratroopers glide gently to midfield, it takes some work to imagine why the season began with such high expectations.

Despite having 70 new players, the excitement was fueled by a belief that Belichick could magically transform an entire program through the sheer force of his personal history. The university issued statements from Brady and UNC great Taylor, who said, “Carolina got a chance to win it all.”

“There was unprecedented hype,” says Adolfo Alvarez, UNC’s student body president. “Our opener was prime time on a holiday [Labor Day]. It was a new era for the university, and the entire day was a celebration. Michael Jordan was there, Mia Hamm was there. When the pregame video showed Belichick, everybody went crazy. It was like, ‘This is really happening.’

“Then the game kicked off.”

It’s all overly documented, every loss seemingly engineered to inflict maximum pain: TCU 48-14 in that opener; Clemson 28-3 after the first quarter; a final-play fumble at the goal line that would have beaten Cal; a failed 2-point conversion that would have beaten Virginia; a backsliding and dispiriting loss to Wake Forest to drop to 4-6; Saturday’s loss to Duke made possible by a late fourth-quarter fake field goal the Heels were comically unprepared to defend.

“They paid $14 million for a football team that’s really not very good, and that doesn’t count the money they paid for the coaches,” says a source who works closely with the UNC athletic department and requested anonymity to speak freely. “At the very least, that feels like a very bad business decision.”

The busiest guy in the program is the one who makes sure the punt team is ready. The Heels are scoring 18.7 points per game, 121 out of 134 FBS teams. The roster formation, handled mostly by people with no experience with the NCAA’s ever-changing landscape, looks in retrospect to have been haphazard. Quarterback Gio Lopez is being paid a reported $4 million over two years despite being rated ESPN’s No. 100 player in last season’s portal. He has improved throughout the season, but he is a left-handed passer who struggles to throw moving to his right, a fact that serves to shorten the playbook. Belichick’s devotion to him — “We’re just trying to win the game” — has been a recurring question after every game. The one salvation has been the defense, coordinated by Belichick’s son Steve.

“There was a certain investment in the team,” Alvarez says, “and people wanted results.”

Bill Belichick declined an interview request for this article but did respond to a few emailed questions. Asked what he learned from his first run through the new and mostly untamed NCAA landscape, where every player is an annual free agent, he responded, “I try to be as honest as I can about our program. We want student-athletes to come here who want to work hard every single day and strive to be their best to help the team be successful, so I would not do anything differently than we have in the past.”


EVERY STORE ALONG Franklin Street in Chapel Hill selling UNC gear carries a gray hoodie, sleeves cut off, with “Chapel Bill” written across the front in Carolina blue. Back in the heady days, before the team played a game, the slogan was trademarked by a company owned by Belichick and managed by Hudson.

“We couldn’t keep them on the shelves when he first got here,” an employee in one of the non-licensed shops told me in early November. “Lately the only ones we sold were for Halloween costumes.” Couples went out as Bill and Jordon, she says. The guys wore the hoodies with a visor, and their girlfriends wore cheerleading outfits.

The seepage of his personal life into the public realm is the most unbelievable twist of the entire Belichick saga. This is a man whose entire coaching image was predicated upon avoiding controversy and encouraging his players to do the same, and now, his relationship with a woman nearly five decades younger has thrown him straight into the national fixation with glorious nothingness.

From the moment Belichick was hired, Hudson took an active role in communicating with the university’s athletic department. They had been appearing together publicly since 2024, and she was, at Belichick’s behest, included in all emails directed to the coach. According to emails acquired first by The Assembly through a Freedom of Information Act request, she demanded to know whether the university was actively monitoring the school’s Facebook page “for slanderous commentary and subsequently deleting it/blocking users that are harassing BB in the comments.” Told that they were following university guidelines regarding threats and hate speech, Hudson responded, “I understand what the policy is — are we doing anything to enforce or monitor it?” She began another email regarding the perception that Steve Belichick might owe his job as defensive coordinator to nepotism by writing: “I would like to preventatively raise awareness regarding a sometimes subtle, sometimes obvious, frequently occurring detail within media releases and social media posts.” She asked that the university not use photos of Steve and Bill together lest they be viewed as “visual prompts” to charge Belichick of nepotism. (There is no mention of Belichick’s son Brian, a Tar Heels defensive backs coach, or Matt Lombardi, Michael’s son and the team’s quarterbacks coach.)

There were angry emails from professors and alums, asking why the university was serving as a publicist for Hudson. It turned into a never-ending vortex of gossip and speculation. Pablo Torre, on his podcast “Pablo Torre Finds Out,” turned l’affaire Hudson into his own cottage industry. On April 29, a professor of public law and government, Christopher B. McLaughlin, wrote an email to athletic director Bubba Cunningham with the subject line “please end this circus.” He continued: “When you agreed to pay a king’s ransom to hire Bill Belichick, did you also know that you were hiring Jordon Hudson to serve as the primary face of UNC athletics?” Reached via email, McLaughlin declined to comment.

“Obviously, anybody can date anybody they want,” says Alvarez, the student body president. “But the coach does report to the university, and you have to show people you’re focused on coaching. Your personal life shouldn’t have too much overlap into your job. I think it was the CBS interview that caused people to say, ‘OK, what’s going on?'”

The focus has shifted as Hudson has receded into the background and the Tar Heels’ season has dragged on. (Although her attempt to trademark the term “gold digger” in late August, in the middle of the storm, was objectively hilarious, and a sign that she is willing to merrily lean in.) But there was Belichick, the day after the Wake Forest game, the man who would have been the unanimous winner of Least Likely to Attend Cheer Extreme Code Black’s performance in a coed competition at Dorton Arena in Raleigh, North Carolina, attending Cheer Extreme Code Black’s performance in a coed competition at Dorton Arena in Raleigh, North Carolina.

In the photo that made its way across the internet, Belichick stood against a wall watching Hudson’s Code Black team perform. (Hudson, the second runner-up in the Miss Maine USA pageant this year, won a collegiate cheerleading championship at Bridgewater State in 2021.) The look on his face as he watched the backflips and human pyramids was familiar. He looked like he was facing a group of reporters.


MAYBE THE SADDEST part, for now, is the football.

Belichick has been routinely outcoached, by Wake Forest’s Jake Dickert and Duke’s Manny Diaz and Clemson’s beleaguered Dabo Swinney. His team does not display the typical Belichick hallmarks of discipline and preparedness. Against Duke, the Tar Heels had more penalty yardage (103) than rushing yards (101) and had two offensive personal fouls.

The Heels have displayed a seasonlong aversion to open-field tackling. Diaz caught Belichick’s team off guard with a trick play — an offensive tackle split wide as an eligible receiver and the tight end in the tackle spot — that Belichick devised with the Patriots. This, the sloppiness and the inattention to detail, is not what anyone in Chapel Hill expected.

Case in point: a week ago Saturday at Wake Forest, 27 seconds left, Wake leading 21-12. The Demon Deacons had the ball on the UNC 2-yard line, fourth down. The Wake Forest players were celebrating, the game was over, all that was left was a kneel-down to close it out.

But then Belichick, for reasons that remain elusive, called timeout.

And Wake Forest, perhaps deciding what the hell, ran a play and scored a touchdown to win 28-12.

What was he doing? What was the motivation? Was it a test to see whether Dickert would take the bait or take a knee? Did he misread the score?

Regardless, Belichick clearly didn’t approve of the path Dickert chose. As the coaches headed for midfield for the traditional handshake, Dickert removed his cap in a clearly deferential manner, and Belichick brushed past him with a drive-by handshake that didn’t appear to include any eye contact.

After engaging in the lengthy back-and-forth after the Stanford game, Belichick was back to normal: weary, short, impatient. He said he was “just trying to keep the game alive” by calling the timeout. “I didn’t know what they were going to do. Block a field goal, make a stop. I mean, we keep competing.”

He was asked what he said to Dickert during the brusque handshake. Belichick shrugged and stared. He seemed to be looking for a way to avoid answering the question. He shrugged again.

“Congratulations?” he said, unconvincingly. “I don’t know.”

The hope generated by two straight ACC wins vanished. He answered questions for roughly five minutes.

Lombardi, whose reputation as a self-promoter is renowned in NFL circles, touted the Heels by using the much-mocked term “33rd NFL team,” owing to the vast NFL experience of its coaching staff. Shortly after his hiring, he boasted, “We’re not here to finish fourth in the ACC. We’re here to compete for championships.”

After the Wake Forest debacle, Lombardi was asked on his weekly radio show if he had a message for the fans leading up to the final home game Saturday against Duke.

It turns out Lombardi did.

“I just hope everybody uses their tickets.”

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Skenes receives record $3.4M in pre-arbitration

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Skenes receives record .4M in pre-arbitration

Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Paul Skenes received a record $3,436,343 from this year’s pre-arbitration bonus pool, raising his two-year total to $5,588,400 under the initiative to direct more money to top younger players.

A 23-year-old right-hander who debuted in May 2024, Skenes had an $875,000 salary in the major leagues after earning $564,946 in pay last year. He won’t be eligible for salary arbitration until after the 2026 season.

Kansas City Royals shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. had the previous high of $3,077,595 for the 2024 season. MLB and the union agreed to the $50 million annual pool in their March 2022 labor settlement.

Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cristopher Sanchez was second this year at $2,678,437 after earning a $576,282 bonus for 2024.

He was followed by Houston Astros pitcher Hunter Brown at $2,206,538, Seattle Mariners pitcher Bryan Woo at $1,540,676 and Arizona Diamondbacks outfielder Corbin Carroll at $1,341,674, according to figures compiled by Major League Baseball and the players’ association.

Also topping $1 million were Athletics first baseman Nick Kurtz at $1,297,017, Chicago Cubs outfielder Pete Crow-Armstrong at $1,206,207, Athletics catcher Drake Baldwin at $1,175,583, Milwaukee Brewers second baseman Brice Turang at $1,155,884 and Tampa Bay Rays third baseman Junior Caminero at $1,068,739.

Milwaukee became the first team with as many as 10 players earning the bonuses in one year. The Detroit Tigers and Miami Marlins tied for the second most this year with six each. Brewers players totaled the most money at $4,742,392, followed by Pittsburgh at $4,362,309 and the Athletics at $3,103,411.

Several of the players receiving bonus money have long-term contracts, a group that includes Carroll, Sánchez, Boston Red Sox outfielders Roman Anthony and Ceddanne Rafaela and pitcher Brayan Bello, Milwaukee outfielder Jackson Chourio and pitcher Aaron Ashby, Cleveland Guardians pitcher Tanner Bibee, Detroit infielder Colt Keith and San Diego Padres outfielder Jackson Merrill.

A total of 101 players will receive the payments under a plan aimed to get more money to players without sufficient service time for salary arbitration eligibility going into the season, which was two years, 132 days. Players signed as foreign professionals are not eligible.

Eighteen players earned bonuses based on awards. An eligible player receives $2.5 million for winning an MVP or Cy Young Award, $1.75 million for second in the voting, $1.5 million for third, $1 million for fourth, fifth or selection to the All-MLB first team, $750,000 for Rookie of the Year, $500,000 for second in Rookie of the Year voting or All-MLB second team.

All-MLB teams are voted by fans, media members, broadcasters, former players and officials.

A player is eligible to receive the bonus for one achievement per year, earning only the highest amount. The remaining money is allocated by a WAR formula.

Washington Nationals outfielder Daylen Lile received the smallest bonus of $150,000 — while he was not among the top 100 by WAR, he finished fifth in NL Rookie of the Year voting.

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Red Sox acquire durable Gray in trade with Cards

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Red Sox acquire durable Gray in trade with Cards

The Boston Red Sox have acquired veteran right-hander Sonny Gray in a trade with the St. Louis Cardinals, it was announced Tuesday.

In return, St. Louis receives left-handed prospect Brandon Clarke and right-hander Richard Fitts. Boston also will receive $20 million to help cover Gray’s salary, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan.

Gray, 36, waived his no-trade clause to leave the Cardinals. The three-time All-Star went 14-8 with a 4.28 ERA last season while not missing a start for St. Louis.

He had been guaranteed $40 million for the next two seasons: $35 million for 2026 and a $5 million buyout of a $30 million team option for 2027. His contract was changed to guarantee him $41 million: a $31 million salary for next year and a $30 million mutual option for 2027 with a $10 million buyout.

By pairing Gray with ace Garrett Crochet in the starting rotation, the Red Sox now have two of the five pitchers to record at least 200 strikeouts in each of the last two seasons, per ESPN Research. Gray struck out 201 batters last season after striking out 203 in 2024.

Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow had said adding a starting pitcher behind Crochet was one of the team’s goals for the offseason, and the deal for Gray gives Boston significant starting-pitching depth heading into 2026.

Behind Crochet and Gray are right-handers Brayan Bello and Kutter Crawford, with a number of left-handed options for the backend of the rotation: veteran Patrick Sandoval, 24-year-old Kyle Harrison and a pair of rookies that threw important innings down the stretch this year, Payton Tolle and Connelly Early.

Right-hander Hunter Dobbins tore his right ACL in July but is expected back by spring training. Right-handed veteran Tanner Houck underwent Tommy John surgery in August and is slated to miss most of, if not all, the 2026 season.

While the Red Sox have expressed interest in Minnesota right-hander Joe Ryan, among other starting-pitching trade targets, they went for the shorter-term play with Gray, who has pitched in the big leagues for 13 years, making the All-Star team as recently as 2023. He has a career 125-102 record with a 3.58 ERA in 330 starts.

The 6-foot-4 Clarke, 22, features a fastball that can touch 100 mph and is coupled with a nasty slider. He threw 38 innings in Class A this season, striking out 60 but walking 27 for a 4.03 ERA.

Fitts, who turns 26 next month, was 2-4 with a 5.00 ERA in 10 starts for the Red Sox in his rookie season. He struck out 40 while giving up 11 home runs in 45 innings.

“[Fitts] has already begun his big league career, and with his power stuff and willingness to attack the strike zone, he has the ability to start games at the highest level for many years,” said Cardinals president of baseball operations Chaim Bloom, who previously held that job with the Red Sox.

“Both have the potential to be part of our growing core for a long time.”

ESPN’s Jeff Passan and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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