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Nothing about this Heisman Trophy race has followed the script we have come to expect. For one, there are no representatives from the SEC — the conference that has won four of the past five trophies.

Perhaps even more surprisingly, the same top four players on our midseason list remain on this one, though in a slightly different order. Colorado receiver/defensive back Travis Hunter has moved past Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty into the top spot. But only five points separate them, suggesting a tight race that could go down to the wire.

Two quarterbacks might have something to say about that. Going back to 2000, quarterbacks have won the Heisman 20 times; the only two non-QBs to win in the past 14 years were wide receiver Devonta Smith in 2020 and running back Derrick Henry in 2015. In addition, no player outside a power conference has won the award since Ty Detmer in 1990.

Here is how ESPN writers voted on their top Heisman candidates headed into the final week of the regular season. In this round of voting, 10 different players received votes.

To arrive at the final rankings, 12 voters were asked to select their top five. First-place votes earned five points with four points assigned for second-place votes, three points for third-place votes, two points for fourth-place votes and one point for fifth-place votes.

Total points: 56 (first-place votes: 9)

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0:31

Travis Hunter hits the Heisman pose after 2nd TD for Colorado

Travis Hunter hits the Heisman pose after he catches his second touchdown of the game for Colorado vs. Kansas.

Simply put, nobody has done what Hunter has done this season, and that is the biggest reason why he has vaulted to the top of our Heisman watch. We are not just talking about the snap count here, which on its face is unprecedented; Hunter has played 1,266 snaps, more than any player since 2018, when ESPN started tracking snap count data.

He has been an elite starter at both of his positions: receiver and cornerback. Hunter has 82 catches for 1,036 yards and 11 touchdowns this season. His receiving touchdowns number is tied for the second most in a season in school history. Defensively, he has three interceptions and is the first player with 1,000 receiving yards and three interceptions in a season since at least 1980.

His snap count breakdown is nearly identical: 602 on offense, 640 on defense (with an addition 24 on special teams). The only other season in which someone played at least 200 snaps on both sides of the ball since 2018? Yup, Travis Hunter last year (412 on offense, 572 on defense).

According to ESPN Research, Colorado has run 710 plays on offense this season, and Hunter has played on 85% of them. On defense, Colorado has run 772 plays, with Hunter playing 83%.

For a comparison, the only defensive player to win the Heisman, Charles Woodson in 1997, played the bulk of his snaps on defense and was merely a contributor on offense, with 238 yards receiving and three touchdowns.

Is it any wonder Hunter has begun striking the Heisman pose at a much more frequent clip?

“Travis is who he is,” said Colorado coach Deion Sanders, who also played both ways as a player. “It’s supposed to go to the best college football player. I think that’s been a wrap since, what? Week 2?”

ESPN BET Heisman odds: -800


Total points: 51 (first-place votes: 3)

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0:29

Ashton Jeanty can’t be contained on thrilling 61-yard TD

Ashton Jeanty finds an opening in the offensive line and houses a 61-yard touchdown to put Boise State ahead against Wyoming.

Jeanty has already reached his goal of 2,000 yards rushing through 11 games this season, continuing his master class of speed, toughness and big-play ability every time he touches the ball. He is now the first player to rush for 125 or more yards in 11 straight games in the same season since Troy Davis did it at Iowa State in 1996.

Jeanty needs three more rushing touchdowns to join Barry Sanders as the only players in FBS history with 30 rushing touchdowns and 2,000 yards rushing in a single season.

With 2,062 yards rushing so far this season, Jeanty leads the nation — with nearly 600 more yards than his closest competitor. He is also the first back since 2019 to rush for more than 2,000 yards.

Still, he is a ways away from the single-season rushing mark Sanders set in 1988 (2,850 yards). His production has also fallen off a tick since midseason. After averaging 9.9 yards per carry in his first six games, Jeanty has averaged 5.74 in the past five. He had three 200-yard performances in the first six games of the season, and just one in the past five.

But even when he is slowed, he is not completely stopped. Against UNLV, in which he had season lows in yards (128) and yards per carry (3.9), he scored the deciding touchdown in a 29-24 win. Last week in a closer-than-expected 17-13 win over Wyoming, Jeanty was forced out of the game and into the medical tent after taking a hard hit to the legs in the third quarter. He missed one drive but had 53 yards rushing upon his return to set up the go-ahead score.

“This is Game 11, Week 13 of the season, and he’s an absolute warrior playing through being banged up,” coach Spencer Danielson said after the victory over Wyoming. “We got to be smart with his body and make sure we get him what he needs.”

ESPN BET Heisman odds: +600


Total points: 34

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2:19

Cam Ward goes off against Duke with 5-TD performance

Cam Ward goes 25-for-41 with 400 yards and five touchdowns to push the Hurricanes past the Blue Devils.

Miami built its football dynasty with a succession of elite quarterbacks who earned it the nickname “Quarterback U.” But it has been more than 20 years since the Hurricanes both won a championship and had a quarterback make it to New York as a finalist for the Heisman.

Ward appears on the verge of changing all that. He has not been perfect, but Ward has been, quite simply, the most dazzling quarterback in college football this season. Some of his plays border on incomprehensible — from no-look shovel passes to big throws across his body — but others are the routine throws that he needs to make to get the job done. Ward is completing a career-high 67.2% of his passes and has the Hurricanes ranked No. 1 in the nation in total offense, averaging 541.5 yards per game.

Along the way, he has reset the single-season school record for touchdown passes (34 and counting), passing yards (3,774) and completions (268), doing it with an unflappability that has earned him widespread praise from his coaches and teammates. The latter two marks were set by Bernie Kosar in 1984. Not since Ken Dorsey made it to New York in 2001 and 2002 has there been so much excitement around the quarterback position at Miami.

Ward has brought hope that the program has turned a corner. A win on over Syracuse on Saturday puts the Hurricanes in the ACC championship game and keeps their College Football Playoff hopes alive. Ward put a 28-23 loss to Georgia Tech on Nov. 9 — in which he fumbled on the final drive — behind him, following it up with a 280-yard, two-touchdown performance in a 42-14 victory over Wake Forest on Saturday. He knows he has to be at his best for the Hurricanes to reach the goals they set when the season began.

ESPN BET Heisman odds: +1200


Total points: 26

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0:25

Dillon Gabriel becomes FBS all-time TD leader with pass to lineman

Dillon Gabriel finds Gernorris Wilson in the end zone to pass Case Keenum as the all-time touchdown leader in FBS history.

Gabriel has done exactly what he has done over the course of his six-year career: throw for lots of yards and score lots of touchdowns. Indeed, for the fifth time in his career, he is over 3,000 yards passing (the lone exception at UCF in 2021, when he went down with a season-ending injury early in the year). Gabriel also set the NCAA FBS record earlier this month for total touchdowns (179), so his productivity and longevity cannot be denied.

The difference, this year, is that his veteran presence, savvy playmaking and remarkable accuracy has lifted Oregon to the No. 1 ranking as the only undefeated team left in the country.

That is no coincidence. Gabriel is completing a career-high 73.8% of his passes as he has methodically guided the offense, ranking No. 5 in the country in QBR. At the midseason point, Gabriel was at No. 4 in this poll as well. To climb higher, he will have to do more in his last two games. Last time out against Wisconsin, he failed to throw a touchdown for the first time all season as Oregon scored a season-low 16 points. Still, Gabriel made plays to lead the Ducks to a come-from-behind 16-13 win in which they outscored the Badgers 10-0 in the fourth quarter.

Against Maryland on Nov. 9, Gabriel threw three touchdown passes but only for 183 yards. In his past two games, his QBR was well below his season average. Opportunities against Washington and in the Big Ten championship game could potentially be difference makers in the Heisman race.

ESPN BET Heisman odds: +5000


Total points: 8

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0:30

Cam Skattebo celebrates 3rd TD by autographing football

Arizona State’s Cam Skattebo immediately autographs a football after scoring his third rushing touchdown of the game.

As Arizona State has begun its rise, so too has Skattebo. After receiving zero votes in our midseason poll, Skattebo sits at No. 5, thanks in large part to the impact he has had on the Sun Devils’ offense. He ranks No. 2 in the nation in all-purpose yards behind Jeanty with 1,681 (1,221 yards rushing, 460 yards receiving).

The 5-foot-11, 215-pounder plays like a battering ram, making him one of the hardest players to bring down in college football.

According to TruMedia, Skattebo ranks No. 2 in the country behind Jeanty in forced missed tackles on rushes, with a whopping 86 through Week 12. (Also consider: He has 49 fewer runs than Jeanty.) One other particularly impressive stat: Skattebo has been the most effective in the fourth quarter. In that quarter, Skattebo has 337 yards rushing, more than any other quarter. Especially eye-opening considering he missed one game and sat out the fourth quarter in two blowout wins.

Skattebo also averages his highest yards per carry in the fourth quarter (6.1) and has more 10-plus-yard runs in the fourth than any other quarter.

There has been something endearing about his rise to national prominence. He has an NIL deal for his signature “Skatteburger” at a local restaurant chain, with a portion of the proceeds going to the Phoenix Children’s Hospital.

ESPN BET Heisman odds: N/A


Also receiving votes: Omarion Hampton, North Carolina, RB (1 point); Kyle Kennard, South Carolina, DE (1); Bryson Daily, Army, QB (1); Harold Fannin Jr., Bowling Green, TE (1); Tyler Warren, Penn State, TE (1)

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Baffert wins first race back at Churchill after ban

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Baffert wins first race back at Churchill after ban

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Bob Baffert returned to Churchill Downs for the first time in 3½ years on Wednesday, saddling the winner in the seventh race at the home of the Kentucky Derby.

Churchill Downs Inc. CEO Bill Carstanjen shook hands with the Hall of Fame trainer he once battled in court. In 2021, Baffert began serving what was ultimately a three-year ban by CDI. It ended in July, with Baffert taking responsibility for a failed drug test by one of his horses.

Baffert watched as Barnes won his career debut by a head over a horse trained by fellow Hall of Famer D. Wayne Lukas. The $3.2 million colt is named for Baffert’s longtime assistant, Jimmy Barnes.

Baffert has won the Kentucky Derby a record-tying six times. His horse, Medina Spirit, crossed the finish line first in 2021 but was later disqualified for failing a post-race drug test, which prevented Baffert from earning a seventh victory.

The DQ led to multiple lawsuits filed by Baffert. Medina Spirit’s failed test as well as other drug violations led the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission to fine Baffert and suspend him for 90 days, a ban that was honored at other tracks nationwide.

But all that was put aside Wednesday.

Barnes could be a contender for Baffert in next year’s Kentucky Derby.

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Crawford, 2-time WS champ with Giants, retires

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Crawford, 2-time WS champ with Giants, retires

Brandon Crawford announced he is retiring from baseball Wednesday following a 14-year career in which he made three All-Star teams and won two World Series championships with the San Francisco Giants.

“Baseball has been a part of my life for as long as I can remember, and for the rest of my life I will be thankful for the opportunities and experiences it has given me,” Crawford wrote on his Instagram account. “Time is precious. I’m incredibly grateful for all the years I spent playing the game I love, but now it is time for me to spend it with the people who I’m most thankful for.

“Thank you to all of you who have [been] there for me throughout the years. It’s been an unbelievable ride.”

A native of Mountain View, California, in the San Francisco Bay Area, Crawford, 37, played for the St. Louis Cardinals last season after spending the first 13 years of his career with the Giants, who selected the UCLA product in the fourth round of the 2008 draft.

Crawford helped the Giants win titles in 2012 — his second season in the majors — and in 2014. His first of three All-Star selections came in 2015, when he hit .256 with 21 home runs and 84 RBIs.

Crawford’s best season may have come in 2021, when he had career-bests in batting average (.298), home runs (24), RBIs (90) and stolen bases (11). He won the last of his four Gold Gloves that season and also finished fourth in the NL MVP voting.

“I always dreamed of playing for the San Francisco Giants,” Crawford wrote in his post. “Being drafted by my hometown team and spending most of my career with them far surpassed any dream I had as a kid.”

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College football preview: Rivalry matchups with CFP implications, plus a look at the Big 12

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College football preview: Rivalry matchups with CFP implications, plus a look at the Big 12

What’s on the line in Week 14? Well, it’s Rivalry Week and the final week of the regular season, so tensions are sure to be high with conference championships just right around the corner.

No. 3 Texas takes on No. 20 Texas A&M in a conference matchup that has quite a bit at stake. As the Longhorns look for a spot in the SEC title game, can they execute in the red zone at Kyle Field on Saturday?

The Big 12 enters the week with a four-way tie at the top of the conference standings. Nine teams still have a chance at reaching the Big 12 title game — what are the scenarios for each?

Our college football experts preview big games and storylines ahead of the Week 14 slate.

Jump to a section:
Rivalry Week | Texas-Texas A&M | Big 12 updates
Quotes of the Week

Which rivalry matchup has biggest CFP implications?

Texas at Texas A&M (Saturday, 7:30 p.m. ET on ABC)

Considering Texas A&M can play its way into the SEC title game with a win against Texas and would surely be eliminated from playoff consideration with a loss, it has got to be the Longhorns vs. Aggies. A&M can still earn the No. 2 seed. There isn’t another team playing in a rivalry game with such a broad range of possibilities. Then there’s the stakes for Texas.

It is two wins away from the No. 2 seed, but if it doesn’t reach the SEC title game, that would no longer be in play. Assuming Texas falls lower than No. 5 if it loses to A&M — which is a safe assumption — the Longhorns would be in line for a difficult first-round matchup. No matter how this game finishes, it will impact the playoff field. — Kyle Bonagura

Arizona State at Arizona (Saturday, 3:30 p.m. ET)

The matchup between Arizona State and Arizona has CFP implications for only one team, but that does not make this game any less important. The Sun Devils have to win to put themselves in position to make the Big 12 championship game and move up the rankings to try to secure an automatic spot as a conference champion. As it stands right now, the race to the Big 12 title is muddy, with four teams 6-2 in league play headed into this weekend. No. 16 Arizona State (9-2) is the highest ranked among them after reeling off six wins in its past six games.

The Sun Devils would be heavy favorites to win the majority of tiebreakers, if needed, to secure a spot in the conference championship game. But the only way to even be in that mix is to beat rival Arizona, which has won their past two meetings. Though the Wildcats (4-7) are out of bowl and playoff contention, there would be no greater win than spoiling their rival’s season to take home the Territorial Cup. — Andrea Adelson

South Carolina at Clemson (Saturday, noon on ESPN)

Surprisingly, it might be South Carolina visiting Clemson. The Gamecocks rose to No. 15 in Tuesday’s CFP rankings and might have the best chance among the SEC’s three-loss teams to make the field of 12. Unlike Ole Miss and Alabama, South Carolina doesn’t have a truly bad loss on its profile. The Gamecocks likely would have beaten LSU if starting quarterback LaNorris Sellers wasn’t injured in the first half (or, if a few calls had gone their way). They have won five straight since a 2-point road loss to Alabama, recording definitive wins against No. 20 Texas A&M (home), Vanderbilt (road) and Oklahoma (road), and a narrow home win against No. 21 Missouri.

A road win against another CFP-ranked opponent could be enough to get South Carolina in ahead of two teams it lost to (Ole Miss, Alabama). Clemson, meanwhile, will have its eyes on the MiamiSyracuse game, as a Hurricanes loss would put the Tigers in the ACC title game against SMU, with a CFP berth on the line. — Adam Rittenberg


What does each team need to do to win?

Texas: The Longhorns have won 10 consecutive true road games under Steve Sarkisian, the longest active streak in the FBS. But the environment inside Kyle Field on Saturday night will be unlike anything these Texas players have ever experienced. Quinn Ewers and his squad must find a way to play calm and in control if they’re going to get the job done in College Station.

Auburn quarterback Payton Thorne‘s effectiveness on downfield shots certainly stood out during the Aggies’ 43-41 loss last week. Thorne threw for 301 yards on the night but got 230 of them on six completions. Sarkisian won’t hesitate to go after Texas A&M’s cornerbacks with his playcalling, but his QB needs to be on point with his deep passing. Ewers is 9-of-31 (29%) on throws of 20 or more air yards this season, according to TruMedia, and his 271 passing yards on those throws ranks 121st in the FBS.

One challenge that Sarkisian’s Texas offenses have run into at times in big games: red zone execution. Over the past two seasons, the Longhorns have scored touchdowns on 53% of their red zone opportunities against ranked opponents. This is one of those weeks when settling for too many field goal tries could end up proving costly. — Max Olson

Texas A&M: Follow the Georgia game plan, which is easier said than done if you aren’t Georgia. But to Max’s point, if the Aggies can rediscover their pass rush and pressure Ewers, particularly if they can force Texas to try to beat them throwing the ball, they’ll have opportunities. Against Georgia, Texas was pressured on 39% of dropbacks, and Ewers was 5-of-13 for 46 yards on those plays. On the day, he completed just 44.4% of his throws 5 or more yards downfield.

Last week against Kentucky, Ewers was 20-of-21 for 191 yards and two TDs to receivers in space, according to ESPN Research. But on throws against tight coverage, he was 0-of-10. Arkansas played a three-safety look against Texas, and Ewers threw for just 176 yards, including going 1-for-2 for minus-8 yards and three sacks when under duress in the first half.

If the defense can keep it tight, the Aggies’ offense just has to be opportunistic against a really stingy Texas defense, making plays with Marcel Reed‘s legs and keeping Texas off balance. — Dave Wilson


What’s going on in the Big 12?

There are nine — yes, nine — teams that still have a chance to reach the Big 12 title game, according to the conference. That manages to be true while the team that has arguably been the best in the conference in November — Kansas, with wins against Iowa State, BYU and Colorado — is not among the group.

With Arizona State, Iowa State, BYU and Colorado all tied at 6-2, let’s take a look at the scenarios most likely to come into play.

  • If all four win, the title game will be ASU vs. Iowa State.

  • In a three-team tie between ASU, ISU and BYU, BYU is out.

  • In a three-team tie between ISU, BYU and Colorado, Colorado is out.

  • In a three-team tie between ASU, BYU and Colorado, Colorado is out.

In the case of a three-team tie with ASU, ISU and Colorado, it gets messy, so here is the exact language provided by the Big 12:

Got all that? Good. And at the risk of unnecessarily complicating things further, we’ll hit pause before running through all the other possibilities. — Bonagura


Quotes of the week

“Ryan Williams, I mean, yeah, he’s electric. He’s all this and that, but in my eyes, he ain’t really nobody to me. Ryan Williams is himself. He ain’t no big-time player to me. … Like I said, Bama is a big rival team. Every rival team I’ve played, I never lost to, and I will not lose to Bama while I’m here.” — Auburn freshman linebacker Demarcus Riddick

“I’ve said this from day one: I think when you have two programs as large as these two programs are, as close to each other as they are, it doesn’t make a ton of sense for them not to play. So it always felt weird not playing. So now to be playing and to be playing for what we’re playing for? Yeah, I’d imagine it’ll be pretty electric Saturday.” — Texas A&M coach Mike Elko, on facing Texas this weekend

“I don’t think you get really emotional about things like that. I think you’re a lot better coach when you stay composed, and you coach your players, and you teach your players what it’s going to take to win the game. It will be an emotional game, but I don’t get emotional about it. It’s an interstate rivalry. It’s a chance at a state championship. It’s a lot of pride. It’s a lot of history in the game. But the game’s played between the lines, between the players.” — Georgia coach Kirby Smart, on facing Georgia Tech during Rivalry Week

“There’s nothing that needs to be said. If you’re watching Godfather 2 and Hyman Roth is talking to Michael Corleone, you know what’s on in the background — it’s Notre Dame and USC. That’s all we got to say.” — Notre Dame defensive coordinator Al Golden

“We’ve got to have that edge. And we will because we know what’s at stake. We felt what it’s like to not win this game. It is bad. It’s one of the worst things that’s happened to me in my life, quite honestly. Other than losing my father and a few other things, like it’s quite honestly, for my family, the worst thing that’s happened. So we can never have that happen again. Ever. And that’s been the approach all season.” — Ohio State coach Ryan Day, on facing Michigan after three straight losses in the series

“I said what I had to say about the College Football Playoff after the [Ohio State] game. The only thing I’m going to say is we’re sitting in a good spot. But we’ve got to take care of business. That’s that.” — Indiana Hoosiers coach Curt Cignetti

“We’re playing for a trophy. We’re playing Missouri. They’re a rivalry game for us. … They beat [the] hell out of us last year. That should motivate us. The problem is a lot of the kids who are on the team and playing weren’t here the last year or two.” — Arkansas coach Sam Pittman, on motivating his team this week against Missouri this week after two consecutive losses in the series, including a 48-14 defeat last fall

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