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We’re now in the stretch run, as the 2024 MLB season enters September and teams make their final pushes for the postseason. In fact, some of the league’s top clubs are already on their way to clinching a playoff berth as soon as next week.

The Astros and Cubs are examples of how far a team can go if it kicks into high gear to finish out the season. Houston has been hot since the All-Star break, helping it to a comfortable lead over Seattle and all but guaranteeing another division title despite the team’s less-than-stellar start to 2024. Meanwhile, thanks to a stretch of nine wins in 10 games to end August, Chicago has at least gotten itself back into the conversation for a wild-card spot. The Cubs would have to keep up this momentum to make that a reality, but they’re in a much better spot than they were a few weeks ago.

Division titles and wild-card berths are still up for grabs, so don’t expect teams to slow down any time soon — not in a year without a clear No. 1 club, which is highlighted by the continued changes to our top five this week.

Our expert panel has combined to rank every team based on a combination of what we’ve seen so far and what we already knew going into the 162-game marathon that is a full baseball season. We also asked ESPN MLB experts David Schoenfield, Bradford Doolittle, Jesse Rogers, Alden Gonzalez and Jorge Castillo to weigh in with observations for all 30 teams.

Week 22 | Second-half preview | Preseason rankings

Record: 84-56
Previous ranking: 1

The Dodgers came out of Labor Day weekend with some breathing room in the National League West, having taken three of four on the road against the division-rival Diamondbacks. It was quite the encouraging series for the Dodgers, who scored 17 runs in 20 innings against Arizona’s four starters. But it didn’t end without another injury to a starting pitcher. This time it was Clayton Kershaw, who went back on the injured list with a bone spur in his left big toe. The Dodgers don’t expect him to be out long, but they have layered in another uncertainty to a rotation chock full of them. On the bright side: Their offense is flat-out scary once again, with Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman rolling together at the top and so many others contributing thereafter. — Gonzalez


Record: 83-56
Previous ranking: 3

The Phillies and the Braves split the first two games in this past weekend’s four-game series before Zack Wheeler delivered a gem on Saturday with seven scoreless innings to beat Max Fried. On Sunday, Nick Castellanos‘ 11th-inning single with two outs delivered the walk-off run, with Carlos Estevez pitching two scoreless innings while twice escaping the ghost runner. On Tuesday, the Phillies then rallied from a 6-1 first-inning deficit to beat the Blue Jays 10-9 as Kyle Schwarber blasted the go-ahead three-run homer in the ninth, part of a Herculean three-homer, 5-for-6 day with six RBIs.

Schwarber became the first player in Phillies history with two three-homer games in one season and just the 27th in MLB history with a game featuring at least 3 home runs, 5 hits and 6 RBIs (Mike Schmidt, during his four-homer game in 1976, is the only other Phillies player to reach those numbers). — Schoenfield


Record: 80-60
Previous ranking: 2

Rosters expanded on Sunday, and to the chagrin of Yankees fans, top prospect Jasson Domínguez remained in Triple-A. Domínguez has shined in the minors this season when healthy, batting .307 with nine home runs and an .857 OPS across three levels. The switch-hitting outfielder batted fifth in his only major league game this season as the 27th man for the Little League Classic last month, illustrating where Yankees brass believe he fits on the roster.

But manager Aaron Boone gave two primary reasons for not calling him up: He wouldn’t play every day for the Yankees and his season has been disjointed by injuries. Ultimately, it comes down to the Yankees preferring to give the struggling Alex Verdugo more chances to rebound before moving on. Remember, Sept. 1 was only the first day to expand rosters, not the deadline. Domínguez could still very well be in pinstripes before the end of the regular season — and wear them into October. — Castillo


Record: 81-59
Previous ranking: 6

Jackson Chourio continues to mash baseballs in the absence of Christian Yelich, giving Milwaukee lethal pop at the top of the lineup. He hit a grand slam on Monday in a 9-3 win over St. Louis while also walking three times. Exploits like that might give some Rookie of the Year voters extra pause before clicking on Paul Skenes or Jackson Merrill when voting begins. Chourio won’t win the award, but his production — which took off just as Yelich went down with his back injury — could be a godsend for the Brewers in the postseason. In fact, since the latter player was placed on the IL, Chourio has an OPS just under 1.000. — Rogers


Record: 81-60
Previous ranking: 4

The Orioles’ starting rotation was already a cause for concern before Corbin Burnes had the worst stretch of his career last month. The right-hander gave up 28 runs (21 earned) over 25⅔ innings in five starts. With a month remaining until the postseason — and two before hitting free agency — alarms sounded. In his last start, Burnes gave up two runs (one earned) across five innings, but he had just four strikeouts — further lowering the lowest strikeout rate of his career — and it was against the abysmal White Sox. He’ll have to bounce back to ace status to give Baltimore any chance of winning a World Series. — Castillo


Record: 80-61
Previous ranking: 7

It’s hard to overstate how impressive it was that the Padres won 28 of their first 40 games after the All-Star break without arguably their best player. That player, Fernando Tatis Jr., finally rejoined the team on Monday after a 10½-week absence prompted by a stress reaction in his right femur. Yu Darvish returned on Wednesday from a 14-week absence that was prompted by a family issue and an elbow injury. The Padres’ offense was rolling along nicely without Tatis, but it could really use his dynamic speed-and-power combination. The rotation was getting a boost from Joe Musgrove‘s recent resurgence, but it could use another frontline arm like Darvish. The Padres are basically whole for the stretch run. And they seem dangerous. — Gonzalez


Record: 75-64
Previous ranking: 10

How hot is the Houston rotation? Hot enough that it’s uncertain that the return of future Hall of Famer Justin Verlander makes the group better — though, Wednesday’s first-inning meltdown might have proven otherwise. The Astros’ rotation ERA since the trade deadline — when they acquired red-hot lefty Yusei Kikuchi — is 3.10. All five starters have done the job, before Spencer Arrighetti gave up nine runs in ⅔ innings in his start on Wednesday. Among qualified starters since Aug. 1, Hunter Brown ranks first in ERA (1.45), just ahead of third-place Framber Valdez (1.59). Kikuchi (2.57, 12th) and Ronel Blanco (3.38) are also all rolling, as was Arrighetti, who ranked 12th with a 1.95 ERA before his most recent start and is now 56th. Reports are that with Verlander off the IL, Blanco will be the odd man out — for now. — Doolittle


Record: 80-60
Previous ranking: 8

After the Royals tied the Guardians for first place in the American League Central last Tuesday, Cleveland quickly pulled back ahead to a safe lead in the division, taking the final game of that series from the Royals and then winning back-to-back series against Pittsburgh and Kansas City this week.

The rotation reeled off three great starts in a row. Alex Cobb tossed six scoreless innings against Pittsburgh on Sunday, taking a perfect game into the seventh. Gavin Williams allowed one hit and one run in seven frames to beat the Royals the next day, and then Tanner Bibee allowed two hits and one run over six innings in Tuesday’s win. Actually, make it four great starts in a row — Matthew Boyd allowed four hits and one run in six innings although got the loss Saturday. That’s three runs and nine hits over 25 innings. — Schoenfield


Record: 79-61
Previous ranking: 5

A deflating Labor Day weekend that saw them lose three of four to the Dodgers at home, virtually putting the division out of reach, was met with some welcomed news on Tuesday: Christian Walker, who should’ve probably been an All-Star first baseman this year, returned to the lineup after missing the past five weeks with an oblique strain. This is a good time to appreciate Josh Bell, a scramble pickup when Walker went down near the end of July. In 28 games as Walker’s replacement, Bell slashed .283/.356/.453, helping a shorthanded D-backs offense — also without Ketel Marte, Gabriel Moreno and, now, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. — lead the majors in OPS since the All-Star break. Even with Walker back, Bell will continue to draw starts against lefties. His bat has been too good to sit. — Gonzalez


Record: 76-63
Previous ranking: 12

After losing three of four to the Phillies, it’s all about holding on to the wild-card spot now as that series dropped the Braves seven games back in the division. Chris Sale — who didn’t pitch in the Philadelphia series — delivered another great effort on Tuesday, tossing seven scoreless innings to beat the Rockies and maintain his lead in the NL for the pitching Triple Crown (wins, ERA, strikeouts). Sale has 15 straight starts allowing two earned runs or fewer, the longest such streak in Braves history. He also passed 200 strikeouts, his eighth such season, joining Randy Johnson (13) and Steve Carlton (eight) as the only lefties with that many 200-K seasons. — Schoenfield


Record: 75-64
Previous ranking: 11

Talent has never been the concern for Royce Lewis. The former No. 1 overall pick has proven in a short time that he has the ability to become one of baseball’s elite hitters. The question has always been his health. This week, however, another emerged: Where is Lewis going to play in the field? Drafted as a shortstop, Lewis became a full-time third baseman at the major-league level only last season after Minnesota signed Carlos Correa. This week, he made his first start at second base after having throwing issues at third. Lewis didn’t seem keen to the change — he offered a “no comment” when asked after making his debut at second — but the Twins are moving forward with it for now. — Castillo


Record: 76-65
Previous ranking: 9

Let’s say the trajectory of the Royals’ season was like that of a typical coyote versus roadrunner pursuit. Imagine the persistent coyote gaining ground on the roadrunner, little by little, until at last he has it cornered against the rocky hillside of a mountain terrace. Then, the moment the coyote realizes that he’s won his chase, the terrace gives way and the coyote tumbles into a free fall, spiraling into what appears to be a bottomless void.

It took months for the Royals to catch the Guardians in the division, but the very moment they did, Kansas City’s season took an abrupt about-face. Nothing went right for the Royals during a faceplant that reached seven games on Tuesday before a win Wednesday stopped it. The one saving grace of the skid: A similar slump by the Red Sox behind them in the standings means the Royals still have a buffer in the wild-card race. At some point, maintaining that buffer will entail winning a few games. — Doolittle


Record: 76-64
Previous ranking: 13

The Mets did what they had to do — sweeping the White Sox over the weekend and then extending their win streak to six games with two wins over the Red Sox — and they’re now neck-and-neck with the Braves for the third wild card. Francisco Lindor continues to make his MVP case and blasted his 30th home run on Tuesday, joining Alex Rodriguez (seven) and Ernie Banks (five) as the only shortstops with five 30-homer seasons. David Peterson also fanned 11 in that win on his birthday — the most strikeouts ever for a Mets pitcher on his birthday. Peterson is 4-0 with a 1.81 ERA over his past seven starts. — Schoenfield


Record: 72-68
Previous ranking: 17

The development of center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong and catcher Miguel Amaya have lengthened the Cubs’ lineup, helping them score runs in bunches on a recent 8-1 road trip. It leads to a philosophical question for next season: Can they keep attempting to win with a good 26-man roster or do they need to move a few players for a star — if one becomes available? The latter is the easiest way back to the postseason as too many things have to go right for an average nine-man lineup to be clicking, as opposed to having a couple of dangerous thumpers in the middle of it. But until Chicago acquires one, it will simply have to be pleased with the progress. — Rogers


Record: 70-70
Previous ranking: 14

Boston’s struggles over the past month have corresponded with a surprising downturn for Rafael Devers. The All-Star third baseman was slashing .185/.252/.324 with three home runs since Aug. 3. His OPS for the season has sunk from .992 to .898. His batting average is also down to .277 from .304. Shoulder pain has been a factor; he missed three games with a shoulder injury before returning to go 1-for-21 over five games. The Red Sox, as a result, have lost five straight games. Their playoff hopes are sinking fast. — Castillo


Record: 70-70
Previous ranking: 18

Perhaps the biggest disappointment for the Tigers this year is that the top of the order they dreamed about didn’t necessarily pan out. The organization had high hopes for a foursome of Parker Meadows, Riley Greene, Spencer Torkelson and Kerry Carpenter — but Torkelson and Meadows were sent to the minors at midseason, Carpenter missed close to three months with a stress fracture in his back, and Greene, an All-Star thanks to a strong first half, just went through a brutal month of August. On Sunday, though, the four of them provided all the Tigers’ production in a win over the Red Sox. It was a sign that perhaps next year the Tigers will get the kind of production they hoped for. — Gonzalez


Record: 70-70
Previous ranking: 15

Another losing week saw the Mariners dip below .500 for the first time since April 20 as their playoff chances decreased well into the single digits. Ironically, the punchless offense has been modestly more productive of late only for that improvement to overlap with a decline by a Seattle pitching staff that has carried the load since Opening Day. Bryan Woo and Bryce Miller have continued to shine, while Luis Castillo has more or less treaded water. But Logan Gilbert and George Kirby, both positioned for Cy Young runs not that long ago, have fallen off. Kirby in particular has been getting blitzed. Over six starts since the beginning of August, Kirby has a 6.10 ERA and a 5.74 FIP. — Doolittle


Record: 71-69
Previous ranking: 19

Jordan Walker‘s return from the minors has been mostly quiet so far, as the 22-year-old is still figuring things out in the big leagues. The ultra-talented outfielder was 7-for-28 with a home run and 10 punchouts over his first eight games after spending several months at Triple-A this season. But he lit up the box score over the weekend in New York when he went 5-for-5 with a home run while scoring four times. Walker is the future in St. Louis, so the Cardinals are giving him valuable at-bats as they begin to play out the string. A once promising run to wild-card contention has faded into focusing on building blocks for next season. — Rogers


Record: 68-72
Previous ranking: 16

The Giants won their fourth consecutive game on Aug. 10, putting them three games above .500 and 1.5 games back of a playoff spot. It seemed as if they might make a legitimate late-season push. Since then they’ve gone 7-14 while losing their last four series to the Mariners, Brewers, Marlins — yes, Marlins — and D-backs. Any postseason hopes have long been dashed — largely because of their offense. The Giants have OPS’d .644 over their past 21 games, which qualified as the most important stretch of their season. They’ve scored four runs or less in 15 of those games. — Gonzalez


Record: 69-70
Previous ranking: 20

Junior Caminero is young enough to consider Manny Machado a hero growing up in the Dominican Republic. The Rays’ top prospect — and one of the top in all of baseball — met Machado as a boy when Machado starred for the Orioles. Caminero wears No. 13 because of Machado. Over the weekend, Caminero suited up opposite his favorite player, starting at third base against Machado’s Padres. The 21-year-old choked up when asked about the moment in an interview, calling it a dream come true. With the Rays’ sights set on 2025, Caminero is producing in his second major league stint, slashing .263/.349/.447 with three home runs in 21 games. — Castillo


Record: 67-74
Previous ranking: 21

Bowden Francis‘ performance in August was one of the few positives in a dismal season up north. The 28-year-old right-hander recorded a 1.06 ERA in 34 innings across five starts, highlighted by taking a no-hitter into the ninth inning against the Angels. The results were good enough for Francis to win AL pitcher of the month. He had primarily been used as a reliever before returning to the rotation last month, starting just four games while making 14 relief appearances. It’s a little too late for 2024, but Francis might be a building block for 2025. — Castillo


Record: 67-73
Previous ranking: 22

Cincinnati had two of its prospects make their MLB debuts this past week. Last year’s first-round pick, Rhett Lowder, threw four innings of one-run ball against the Brewers over the weekend while 2019 pick Brandon Williamson made it through 3⅓ innings and gave up two runs two days later. Not unlike this year, the Reds should go into the 2025 season with plenty of talent but perhaps an unclear path in how it all should come together. That’s what their offseason should be about — while potentially adding a true veteran star/leader instead of adding around the margins like they did this past winter. — Rogers


Record: 67-73
Previous ranking: 23

It’s too late for Wyatt Langford to make a run at the AL Rookie of the Year award, an honor that many saw him as the favorite to land before the season. A slow start that lingered into June sunk his chances in that tepid race. Since then, Langford has been up and down, mixing flashes of his immense potential with prolonged downturns. There’s little reason to be concerned long-term, but a strong finish would certainly help generate some excitement headed into the winter. Langford’s start in September indicates he’s intent on a robust finishing kick. The uptick was highlighted when he mashed a hanging slider from Clay Holmes for a winning grand slam against the Yankees on Tuesday. The ball left Langford’s bat at over 109 mph, highlighting something he’s exhibited all along: He hits the ball hard. — Doolittle


Record: 65-74
Previous ranking: 24

Pittsburgh is keeping close tabs on pitchers Jared Jones and Paul Skenes as it plays out the string, but shutting the pair down isn’t on the table just yet. Jones just returned from injury, so manager Derek Shelton wants him to finish the season and at least have his body feel what the six-month grind is all about — even if he wasn’t making every start. Shelton won’t go into detail about Skenes, but the Pirates won’t mess with their prized possession. His pitch count and stuff is being monitored closely from start to start. — Rogers


Record: 61-79
Previous ranking: 26

The longer Lawrence Butler stays hot, the less he looks like a hitter on a heater and the more he looks like someone who’s figured some things out. The delineation in Butler’s season is the beginning of July. Before that point, he was hitting .179 with two homers, eight RBIs and four steals in 52 games. Since then, Butler has hit .323 with 19 homers, 46 RBIs and nine steals, a spree which has included a pair of three-homer contests. During that span, Butler and teammate Brent Rooker, who has been outstanding all season, have combined for 100 weighted runs created, per Fangraphs. The only teammates with more: Aaron Judge and Juan Soto of the Yankees (118). — Doolittle


Record: 62-77
Previous ranking: 25

Dylan Crews — the No. 12 prospect in Kiley McDaniel’s updated top 50 list in mid-August (though he ranks higher on MLB.com at No. 2 and Baseball America at No. 4) — homered last week in his third and fourth games with the Nationals, and has shown excellent speed and defense in right field (he could play center, although Jacob Young‘s stellar defense keeps him there for now). Crews looks like he’ll be a solid contact hitter, so his ultimate upside is going to rest on two things: how much power he’ll develop and whether he’ll draw many walks to boost his OBP. While he had a more patient approach at LSU — or maybe he was simply pitched around — that hasn’t been the case in the minors or so far in his short stint in the majors. — Schoenfield


Record: 58-81
Previous ranking: 27

Reliever Ben Joyce has earned a lot of Web links thanks to his startling velocity readings, particularly when he set a Statcast record on a strikeout pitch with a 105.5 mph reading against the Dodgers’ Tommy Edman on Sept. 4. Since baseball isn’t a carnival game where Joyce wins a stuffed animal for lighting up the radar, of more interest is his baseball performance since taking over as the Angels’ highest-leverage reliever in the wake of the deal that sent Carlos Estevez to the Phillies. And that’s been pretty good. Since deadline day, Joyce has a 2.03 ERA with 14 whiffs and four walks over 13⅓ innings in 13 outings. He’s earned three holds and his first four big league saves. — Doolittle


Record: 52-87
Previous ranking: 29

Some new faces are getting a chance to play down the stretch. Connor Norby, acquired from the Orioles in the Trevor Rogers trade, has hit well in his first 13 games, with an OPS over 1.000 and three home runs. He’s primarily played third base, with a couple starts at second, and projects as a starting infielder for 2025. Outfielder Kyle Stowers, also part of that trade, has struggled to make contact. He’s not so young at 26 years old, so he probably projects as more of a fourth outfielder despite his power potential.

Griffin Conine, son of two-time Marlins All-Star Jeff Conine, has been playing right field and hit his first major league home run on Saturday. He’s 27 years old and was hitting .268/.350/.475 in Triple-A with a high strikeout rate, so he looks like a fringe major leaguer. — Schoenfield


Record: 51-89
Previous ranking: 28

It seemed as if they have been heading there since Opening Day, but the Rockies were officially eliminated from postseason contention on Tuesday, with a shutout loss at the hands of the Braves. It dropped them to a NL-worst 51-88. They need nine wins in September to avoid tying the franchise record for losses with 103, which they set last year. Seems pretty achievable, right? Well, they won less than that in April and June. Oh, and all eight of their remaining series will come against teams that entered play on Wednesday with winning records, including a combined 12 games against the Dodgers, D-backs and Brewers. — Gonzalez


Record: 32-109
Previous ranking: 30

The White Sox went “full White Sox” in a 9-0 loss to the Orioles on Tuesday. That’s the phrase O’s announcer Kevin Brown used in describing a bad collision between third baseman Miguel Vargas and left fielder Andrew Benintendi on a popup during the game. It was emblematic of how the White Sox have played all season. It’s one thing to be less talented than your opponents, but the reason they will break the all-time record for losses in a 162-game season is they stopped caring a long time ago. And they’re playing like it. — Rogers

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College football’s most unbreakable records, from Barry Sanders to Bobby Bowden

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College football's most unbreakable records, from Barry Sanders to Bobby Bowden

In every sport, there are hallowed records, dubious records and records that are seemingly unbreakable.

College football has evolved greatly over the years — everything from rules changes and style of play to the number of games in a season — but there are some records and accomplishments that have stood the test of time.

Some good, some not so good.

We’ve examined the past 75 years in college football, tracing back to the 1950 season, and have ranked the 10 most “unbreakable” records in the sport, listing them in order of least likely to be topped. We also dug up some of the more obscure accomplishments (and failures) during that period.

Again, we’re only considering play since 1950, so iconic records such as Tennessee going the entire 1939 regular season unbeaten, untied and unscored upon under then-Major Robert Neyland, or Georgia Tech’s 222-point margin of victory over Cumberland in 1916 are not on our list.

Undoubtedly, you’ll let us know if we missed anything.


1. Oklahoma’s 47-game winning streak

When surveying the most dominant college football machines in history, the conversation begins and ends with the Bud Wilkinson-led Oklahoma teams of the 1950s. The Sooners bulldozed their way to 47 consecutive wins, a streak that began in 1953 and lasted most of five seasons, producing back-to-back national championships in 1955 and 1956. Oklahoma held its opponents to single digits in 35 of the 47 wins and recorded 22 shutouts.

Unranked Notre Dame, a 19-point underdog, ended the streak on Nov. 16, 1957, with a 7-0 victory in Norman. The Irish scored the winning touchdown inside the final four minutes on a fourth-and-goal play from the 3-yard line, then intercepted a pass in their own end zone in the final seconds to seal the upset, leaving the home crowd stunned. Many of the fans sat in the stands for nearly 30 minutes trying to process the unthinkable — an OU loss.

Nearly 70 years later, nobody has come close to that streak. Toledo won 35 straight from 1969 to 1971. Miami (2000-02) and USC (2003-05) each won 34 in a row. Even those star-studded Georgia teams under Kirby Smart failed to seriously challenge the mark. The Bulldogs won 29 in a row during their run to back-to-back national championships in 2021 and 2022.

With the College Football Playoff era upon us and teams having to play as many as four postseason games to win the national title, not to mention conference championship games, it’s difficult to imagine a team going what would amount to three straight seasons unscathed. This is a record teams will be chasing for a long time, maybe forever.


2. Barry Sanders’ magical season

One of the most electrifying players in the history of the sport, Barry Sanders put up dizzying numbers in 1988, his junior season at Oklahoma State.

Yes, his single-season NCAA record of 2,628 rushing yards was challenged last season by Boise State’s Ashton Jeanty (2,601 yards), but there’s a catch. Sanders’ total came in just 11 games, while Jeanty played in 14. What’s more, bowl statistics didn’t count when Sanders was playing, and he had an additional 222 yards against Wyoming in the Holiday Bowl. So if those yards are added, Sanders’ total jumps to 2,850.

What seems untouchable is Sanders’ NCAA record of 238.9 rushing yards per game. For perspective, Jeanty averaged 185.8 yards last season. In fact, only two other running backs in major college football history have averaged 200 rushing yards per game in a season, USC’s Marcus Allen in 1981 (212.9) and Cornell’s Ed Marinaro (209) in 1971. Sanders had four 300-yard games in 1988, and counting the bowl game, rushed for 43 touchdowns.


3. Florida State’s top-5 finishes

For all the late Bobby Bowden accomplished during his Hall of Fame career, his remarkable consistency could be the most impressive thing. His Florida State teams finished in the top 5 of every final AP poll from 1987 to 2000, an amazing run no matter the era.

Bowden finished his legendary 34-year career at FSU with two national championships (and could have won a few more had it not been for those dreaded missed field goals against Miami), and more importantly, he put Florida State football on the map.

Think about it: Fourteen straight top-5 finishes. Pete Carroll had some dominant teams at USC, and the Trojans’ longest streak was seven straight top-5 finishes (2002-08). The same is true for Oklahoma under Wilkinson (1952-58). And while Alabama won six national titles under Nick Saban, his longest run of top-5 seasons was five in a row (2014-18).


4. Oklahoma’s wishbone onslaught

If an offense is rushing for more than 250 yards per game today (there were four in 2024), that’s considered a punishing running attack. In 1971, with Barry Switzer as offensive coordinator, Oklahoma averaged a staggering 472.4 rushing yards per game.

The Sooners had installed the wishbone the year before, and nobody could slow them down. They averaged 45 points per game and lost only once, to eventual national champion Nebraska 35-31 in what was billed as the “Game of the Century.” Even in that loss, Oklahoma rushed for 279 yards.

The last team to come within 50 yards of the Sooners’ record was the 1987 Oklahoma team, which averaged 428.8 yards per game. No team in the past 30 years has reached even 400 yards. Even triple-option teams haven’t come close. Army was first nationally in rushing last season, averaging 300.5 yards per game.


5. Throwing it to the wrong team

Not all records are enshrined in trophy cases. Florida quarterback John Reaves threw an NCAA-record nine interceptions (on 66 passing attempts) in a 38-12 loss to Auburn in 1969. Reaves was a prolific passer and put up better career numbers than Gators Heisman Trophy winner Steve Spurrier, but Florida’s only loss of the 1969 season was “one of those days.”

When Reaves left Florida in 1971, he was college football’s all-time leading passer with 7,549 yards, and he was selected in the first round of the NFL draft. Reaves died in 2017 at the age of 67. He joked years after that forgettable game that the “safeties were the only guys who were open that day.” In this age of college football, any coach that kept a quarterback in a game long enough to throw nine interceptions probably would be looking for a new job the next week.


6. Derrick Thomas’ sack parade

Derrick Thomas was a generational pass rusher. He once had seven sacks in an NFL game, which is still a record. As a senior linebacker at Alabama in 1988, Thomas gobbled up opposing quarterbacks at an astonishing rate, finishing with 27 sacks (39 tackles for loss) on his way to earning SEC Defensive Player of the Year honors.

Thomas was unblockable that season, but you won’t find his eye-popping numbers in the NCAA record book. At the time, sacks weren’t an official NCAA statistic, meaning Arizona State’s Terrell Suggs has the “official” NCAA sack record with 24 in 2002. While defenders play more games now (Thomas played in 11 games in 1988), no FBS player has reached the 20-sack plateau in the past 20 years. Last season, the FBS sack leader was Marshall’s Mike Green with 17.

Thomas, who finished with 52 career sacks at Alabama, played 11 seasons in the NFL, all with the Kansas City Chiefs. He died in 2000 at the age of 33 following a car accident.


7. Hat trick for Antonio Perkins

If a player returns one kick for a touchdown in a game, he’s probably not going to get a chance to return another one. And if he returns two, the only way he’s going to touch the ball again is after it goes out of bounds. But three punt returns for a touchdown?

Perkins did the unfathomable in 2003 when he became the first player in NCAA history to score on three returns in a game, going 84, 74 and 65 yards, in Oklahoma’s 59-24 rout of UCLA in Norman. So, yes, a valid question is: Why in the name of Boomer Sooner did the Bruins keep kicking to him? Perkins’ final touchdown came with 2:39 to play in the game.

Perkins also broke the NCAA record for punt return yards (277), a mark previously held by the late Golden Richards, who had 219 punt return yards in 1971 against North Texas while playing for BYU. Perkins, a cornerback for Bob Stoops’ OU teams, finished his college career with eight punt returns for touchdowns.


8. Marcus Allen’s amazing run

After coming to USC as a defensive back and playing some as a fullback early in his career, Marcus Allen did things in his 1981 senior year that not even Sanders accomplished in his record-setting 1988 season.

For starters, Allen rushed for more than 200 yards in eight of 11 games (Sanders had seven 200-yard games in ’88) and finished with 2,342 yards on his way to winning the Heisman Trophy. But what really jumps out is that Allen started the season with five straight 200-yard games, a streak that seems surreal 44 years later.

In many ways, Allen is the most accomplished football player ever. He’s the only player to win a national championship, Heisman Trophy, Super Bowl championship, Super Bowl MVP award and NFL MVP award, a distinction that may never be duplicated. He’s also both a Pro Football and College Football Hall of Famer.


9. Patrick Mahomes’ wizardry

Before he started collecting Super Bowl rings with the Kansas City Chiefs, Patrick Mahomes played a starring role in one of the wildest shootouts in college football history. Oklahoma and Baker Mayfield outlasted Texas Tech and Mahomes 66-59 in 2016, an offensive smorgasbord that produced one record after another.

Playing through a separated throwing shoulder and fractured left wrist he suffered in the first half, Mahomes set an FBS record with 819 yards of total offense. He completed 52 of 88 passes for 734 yards and five touchdowns and also rushed for 85 yards and two touchdowns.

Mayfield, who had transferred from Texas Tech to Oklahoma, had the “lesser” of the stats between the two future NFL quarterbacks that day. He threw for only 545 yards and seven touchdowns — but got the win. The teams combined for an FBS-record 1,708 yards of offense. “To have both those guys play the way they did … We’ll never see it again, I don’t think,” said Kliff Kingsbury, who was Texas Tech’s head coach that season.


10. No upsetting Nick Saban

Nick Saban won a slew of games against nationally ranked teams during his career, 104 to be exact, but his streak of beating the teams he was supposed to beat during his 17 seasons at Alabama was unmatched. The Crimson Tide won 100 consecutive games against unranked foes under Saban and went 14 years without losing a game to an unranked opponent, a streak that was snapped by a 41-38 loss to 19-point underdog Texas A&M on Oct. 9, 2021 with a walk-off 28-yard field goal by the Aggies’ Seth Small. It was the longest such streak in the AP poll era, and Saban was 123-4 overall at Alabama against unranked teams.

The A&M game also marked the first time one of Saban’s former assistants (Jimbo Fisher) had beaten him. Saban had been 24-0 against former assistants.

Saban had not lost to an unranked team since his first season at Alabama in 2007, when Louisiana-Monroe upset the Tide 21-14 in Tuscaloosa. The next closest winning streak against unranked teams in the AP poll era (since 1936) is 73 by Florida from 1990 to 2000 under Steve Spurrier. Miami won 72 in a row from 1985 to 1995.


Now that we’ve ranked the top 10, here are some honorable (and dishonorable) mentions:

Florida has scored in 461 straight games, the longest active streak and the longest in FBS history. The last time the Gators were shut out in a game was on Oct. 29, 1988, a 16-0 loss to Auburn. A distant second is TCU, which has scored in 407 straight games.

• Houston quarterback Andre Ware passed for 517 yards and six touchdowns — all in the first half before sitting out the rest of the game — in a 95-21 battering of NCAA probation-beleaguered SMU in 1989 in the Astrodome. Houston finished with an NCAA-record 1,021 yards of offense. The Mustangs were coming off a two-year NCAA “death penalty” for violating rules and more than half their starters were freshmen. SMU coach Forrest Gregg was furious afterward about Houston running up the score and called it a “sad day for college football.” Houston also was on probation that season and wasn’t allowed to play in a bowl game or appear on live television, but Ware still won the Heisman Trophy.

Michigan’s Mike Hart had 1,005 consecutive rushing attempts without a losing a fumble from 2004 to 2008. Two of his three career lost fumbles came in his last game, the Capital One Bowl against Florida, which the Wolverines won 41-35.

Nebraska has sold out every home football game at Memorial Stadium dating back to Nov. 3, 1962, a streak of 403 straight games. The Huskers have suffered through some lean times over the past decade, and while packed stadiums and sellouts aren’t necessarily the same thing, every ticket available to the public has been sold for 60-plus years. Admittedly, Nebraska has been forced to get creative to keep the streak alive, with corporations and donors buying up unused tickets at discount prices. But still… 403 straight sellouts!

Alabama won a record 27 straight games against SEC opponents from 1976 to 1980, a streak that ended with a 6-3 loss to Mississippi State in Jackson, Mississippi on Nov. 1, 1980. That setback to the Bulldogs was the only loss to an SEC opponent Alabama captains Major Ogilvie and Randy Scott had their entire college careers. The Crimson Tide’s average margin of victory in the streak was 21.6 points, and only three times in 27 games did their opponent score more than 20. Florida won 25 straight against SEC foes under Spurrier from 1994 to 1997.

East Carolina’s Dominique Davis completed 36 consecutive passes in 2011, completing his last 10 against Memphis and his first 26 the following week against Navy. That broke Aaron Rodgers’ record of 26 in a row in 2004 when Rodgers was at Cal.

Georgia had an NCAA-record 13 turnovers in a 48-6 loss to rival Georgia Tech and Bobby Dodd in 1951. Zeke Bratkowski threw eight interceptions (in 35 attempts) and the Bulldogs lost five fumbles. Bratkowski still holds the SEC record for career interceptions (68), but as a second-year starter in 1952, he led the nation in passing and earned All-America honors before going on to play for the Green Bay Packers following the 1953 season.

• With Chris Klieman in his third season as coach, North Dakota State allowed just three punt returns in 14 games for a net total of zero yards in 2016. Of North Dakota State’s 61 punts that season, 37 were fair catches.

Northwestern lost 34 straight games from 1979 to 1982. The closest any school has come to that futility is New Mexico State dropping 27 in a row from 1988 to 1990.

Vanderbilt went the entire season in 1993 without a single touchdown pass, the last FBS team to do so. The Commodores’ only SEC win that season was 12-7 over Kentucky. They ran the I-bone option offense under Gerry DiNardo and attempted 157 passes with no touchdowns and 13 interceptions. Three different quarterbacks played that season, and the Commodores attempted a total of 17 passes in their four wins.

Wake Forest’s Nick Sciba holds the NCAA record with 34 consecutive made field goals in the 2018 and 2019 seasons. He made his first 23 attempts in 2019 before missing from 48 yards in the regular-season finale against Syracuse.

With 6,405 yards in 54 games, San Diego State’s Donnel Pumphrey broke Ron Dayne’s NCAA career rushing record in 2016. Dayne had 6,397 in 43 games at Wisconsin. It’s hard to imagine a player putting up those numbers — and taking the beating a running back does — and staying four years in the current climate of college football to make a run at Pumphrey’s record.

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Bielema: SEC needs 9 league games for CFP sake

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Bielema: SEC needs 9 league games for CFP sake

CHICAGO — Illinois coach Bret Bielema wants to see the College Football Playoff expand to 16 teams in 2026, but only if all the major conferences, including the SEC, play nine league games per season.

Speaking Tuesday before Illini Night at Wrigley Field, Bielema said the 16-team model doesn’t necessarily need to include four automatic spots for Big Ten teams, as Ohio State coach Ryan Day advocated for earlier this month. But Bielema, who coached in the SEC at Arkansas and has spent most of his career in the Big Ten, said both leagues need to be aligned in the number of conference games. The Big Ten currently plays nine, while the SEC has remained at eight.

“I don’t think there’s any way we can do a 16-team playoff if they’re not at nine,” Bielema said.

He also referred to conversations coming out of the SEC spring meetings in Florida, where LSU coach Brian Kelly suggested in SEC-Big Ten nonleague challenge.

“We voted unanimously as Big Ten coaches to stay at nine league games and actually maybe have an SEC challenge,” Bielema said. “I was told that they voted unanimously to stay at eight and not play the Big Ten. But then some people pop off and say what they want to say because they want to look a certain way.

“I get it, but like, I think until you get to nine for everybody, I don’t think it could work.”

The 10 FBS commissioners and Notre Dame athletic director Pete Bevacqua are meeting this week in Asheville, North Carolina, to discuss the future format and other issues.

Bielema, who has stood up for the Big Ten and taken some playful shots at the SEC on social media, said his wife has told him to “slow my roll.” But as one of the more experienced coaches in the Big Ten, he also remembers what Ohio State’s Jim Tressel and Michigan’s Lloyd Carr told him as a young coach in the league.

“They just said, ‘Hey, you really got to look out for not just your team, but the better of college football,'” Bielema said. “And so I think as I come back, especially this last three or four years at Illinois, I’m in meetings, and there’s a lot of good coaches, but some of these guys are on the younger version of their themselves, and they just don’t understand what’s coming at them. So I’ve really tried to stand up for the game a lot.”

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Eyeing NFL, 3-star QB Thomalla chooses Alabama

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Eyeing NFL, 3-star QB Thomalla chooses Alabama

Alabama completed a flip of three-star Iowa State quarterback pledge Jett Thomalla on Tuesday, finishing the Crimson Tide’s efforts to land a passer in the 2026 class this spring.

A record-setting quarterback from Omaha, Nebraska, Thomalla is ESPN’s No. 18 quarterback prospect in the latest cycle. He initially committed to Iowa State in April before receiving a scholarship offer from Alabama on May 15. Thomalla visited the Crimson Tide two weeks later, during which he connected with the quarterback development backgrounds of Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer, offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb and quarterbacks coach Nick Sheridan.

“My dream is to go to the NFL,” Thomalla told ESPN earlier this month. “The resources around the place and all the eyes that are on you, I know I can develop there. Those coaches can be really good for my process of becoming the best quarterback I can be.”

Thomalla’s flip closes a monthslong pursuit of a 2026 quarterback pledge for the Crimson Tide.

After signing five-star, dual-threat Keelon Russell in the 2025 cycle, Alabama had largely stayed away from the top end of the passer market in the 2026 class before stepping up its efforts this spring. Alongside Thomalla, the Crimson Tide offered three-star prospects Matt Ponatoski and Tayden-Evan Kaawa over the past month. Alabama also expressed interest in three-star passer Bryson Beaver, who visited for a throwing session with the program this past weekend.

The 6-foot-4, 200-pound Thomalla is set to enter his senior season at Nebraska Millard South High School this fall. He led Millard South to a 12-1 record and Class A state title as a junior in 2024, setting state classification records for passing yards (3,663) and touchdowns (47).

Thomalla lands as the eight member of DeBoer’s second recruiting class at Alabama. The Crimson Tide’s latest class includes four ESPN 300 pledges, led by top 100 cornerbacks Jorden Edmonds and Zyan Gibson and four-star offensive tackle Sam Utu (No. 77 overall).

Alabama is set to host a cast of high-profile prospects this weekend for a final round of official visits before the recruiting dead period begins Monday. In-state targets Anthony Jones (No. 25), Ezavier Crowell (No. 30) and Cederian Morgan (No. 47) are among the key prospects expected on campus as the program prepares to bolster its 2026 class in the coming months.

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