
MLB Power Rankings: Where every team stands as final month approaches
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adminAs September approaches, teams are mostly split into three categories: those preparing for the playoffs, those trying to make a run at contention and those whose focus has turned to next season.
There’s still a fair amount to play for within those groups. The clubs that are pretty safely in playoff positions are still battling for postseason positioning, whether in the wild-card race (the Yankees and Red Sox) or in division races (the Dodgers and Padres).
The second group — those trying to play their way into a postseason berth — has shrunk considerably, as more and more squads have fallen out of their wild-card races. And that third group? By now, it probably includes at least half of the teams in the majors.
So where does your favorite club stand with the final month of the regular season around the corner?
Our expert panel has ranked 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 Jesse Rogers, Jorge Castillo and Alden Gonzalez to weigh in with an observation for all 30 teams.
Week 21 | Second-half preview | Preseason rankings
Record: 83-51
Previous ranking: 1
Nearly one in every eight Brewers victories this season has come in walk-off fashion, including two in their past six games. The bad news is the bullpen has given up a couple of leads lately, but Milwaukee still has players it can rely on late in games, such as William Contreras, who blasted a walk-off home run against the Giants in the ninth inning Friday and sent a sold-out home crowd into a frenzy. A few days later, rookie Isaac Collins sent a ball deep enough for a sacrifice fly to topple the Diamondbacks in the ninth, setting off a similar party in the stands. Finding the right thing to happen at the right moment continues to be Milwaukee’s way this season. — Rogers
Record: 77-57
Previous ranking: 4
The Dodgers placed Alex Vesia, one of their best and most frequently used relievers, on the injured list Tuesday, but the expectation is he’ll only miss the minimum amount of time. Soon, they hope, they’ll be about as close to whole as they’ve been all season. Tanner Scott, Kirby Yates and Enrique Hernandez returned off the IL in recent days, while Max Muncy, Tommy Edman and Michael Kopech are not far behind. It’s why the Dodgers believe their best baseball might still be ahead of them. And given that the Padres have the easiest remaining schedule in the majors, it probably needs to be. — Gonzalez
Record: 78-57
Previous ranking: 3
Riley Greene‘s first grand slam came on the longest home run a Tigers player has hit since Statcast began tracking them 15 years ago. It traveled 471 feet, clearing the center-field batter’s eye in Sacramento on Tuesday night. The Tigers lost that game to the A’s, but Greene’s blast was an indication of the power strides he has taken in his age-24 season.
“I think he’s really hitting his stride in the big leagues,” Tigers teammate Kerry Carpenter told MLB.com. “No one ever doubted the fact that he had this kind of pop, so it’s the fact that he’s getting the ball in the air and putting good swings on good pitches.” — Gonzalez
Record: 76-57
Previous ranking: 2
Baseball is secondary when it comes to Zack Wheeler‘s health scare, and the silver lining is that he is expected to return to previous form in 2026 after being diagnosed with venous thoracic outlet syndrome. But it’s a huge blow to the Phillies’ 2025 World Series chances, as Wheeler was having another Cy Young-caliber season. The Phillies still have Cristopher Sanchez and Ranger Suarez, but the rotation — the team’s strength — won’t be as dominant in October without Wheeler. — Castillo
Record: 78-56
Previous ranking: 5
It’s early, but the Blue Jays’ gamble on Shane Bieber looks promising. The 2020 Cy Young Award winner, acquired from the Guardians at the trade deadline, was dynamite in his season debut Friday. He held the Marlins to one run on two hits with nine strikeouts and no walks over six innings in his first start since undergoing Tommy John surgery in April 2024. With Bieber, Kevin Gausman, Chris Bassitt, Eric Lauer, Jose Berrios and Max Scherzer as starting options, the first-place Blue Jays are shaping up to be a threat in October. — Castillo
Record: 76-57
Previous ranking: 6
There isn’t enough time or space here to describe the run rookie starter Cade Horton is on. Let’s start with his ERA since the All-Star break: It’s a miniscule 0.49. We could stop right there, but how he’s doing it is even more impressive. The Cubs are limiting his pitches in the second half considering this is his first full year in the big leagues, which has made him focus even more on throwing strikes. And he’s done it in a big way. In two of his starts this month, Horton threw a combined 141 pitches, including a whopping 111 for strikes. And his in-the-zone stuff is lights out. He’s an ace in the making. — Rogers
Record: 75-59
Previous ranking: 7
Mason Miller headlined the Padres’ epic trade deadline haul, but among the new additions, there has been no bigger difference-maker — throughout the sport, perhaps — than Ramon Laureano, the veteran outfielder acquired from the Orioles alongside Ryan O’Hearn. Laureano hit a first-inning grand slam in a wild victory against the Mariners on Tuesday and is slashing .315/.370/.598 with six home runs since joining the Padres at the end of July. The Padres’ offense is in desperate need of slug, especially with Jackson Merrill back on the IL. Laureano is providing it. — Gonzalez
Record: 74-60
Previous ranking: 11
Boston’s trio of Garrett Crochet, Brayan Bello and Lucas Giolito makes for a dangerous rotation in a short playoff series, but the Red Sox must get there first and the back end of their group is tenuous. Dustin May, the fourth starter, has been inconsistent since he was acquired from the Dodgers at the trade deadline, and the fifth spot is unclaimed. Walker Buehler recently relinquished the post and moved to the bullpen. His replacement, Richard Fitts, went on the IL on Wednesday with an arm injury. The remaining options are both in Triple-A: Kyle Harrison, acquired from San Francisco in the Rafael Devers trade, and Payton Tolle, the organization’s top pitching prospect. — Castillo
Record: 73-60
Previous ranking: 8
Aaron Judge‘s elbow injury — and the mystery surrounding his return to the outfield — and Anthony Volpe‘s substantial struggles are creating angst among Yankees fans, but Cam Schlittler has been an overlooked revelation. The rookie right-hander has a 2.76 ERA in eight starts behind a triple-digit fastball and encouraging pitching to complement it. A strong finish could land the Massachusetts native in the Yankees’ postseason rotation, slotted behind Max Fried and Carlos Rodon. — Castillo
Record: 73-60
Previous ranking: 9
Carlos Correa is settling in nicely in his return engagement with the Astros, piling up the base knocks this month. He just had a 10-game hit streak and has had three multihit games over the past week as Houston scored 26 runs in three straight wins over the Orioles. Since being acquired, Correa has covered for the loss of Isaac Paredes, hitting nearly .350 in August while helping keep the Astros at the top of the AL West. The trade might just prove to be the move Houston needed for another October run. — Rogers
Record: 72-62
Previous ranking: 10
The Big Dumper made history last week, hitting home runs No. 48, 49 and 50 in a span of two days against the Braves and Padres and breaking the record for most home runs by a primary catcher — and he still has a month to keep adding to it. The AL MVP race might come down to the final handful of games as Raleigh has caught Aaron Judge in WAR. If Raleigh gets enough of a bonus because of the position he plays, he’ll win it. If voters simply believe Judge is better due to a variety of other offensive categories, it’ll be his. — Rogers
Record: 72-61
Previous ranking: 12
Jonah Tong will make his major-league debut Friday against the Marlins, following in Nolan McLean‘s footsteps from Double-A to Triple-A to Queens this season. Tong’s rise, however, was quicker than the Mets could have imagined. The Canadian right-hander wasn’t invited to big-league camp and made just two starts for Triple-A Syracuse. But his sustained dominance this season — 11⅔ scoreless innings for Syracuse and a 1.43 ERA overall this season — pushed the front office to make the move as veterans Kodai Senga and Sean Manaea continue to struggle. — Castillo
Record: 68-66
Previous ranking: 13
The Reds just can’t seem to get over the hump in the wild-card race — they’ve been on the outside looking in for quite some time, behind the Mets for the final spot. It won’t get any easier, either, as Cincinnati possesses the second-toughest remaining schedule in MLB after already losing series to the Diamondbacks and Dodgers over the past week. The month of September includes visits from the Blue Jays and Mets, followed by another West Coast trip to San Diego and Sacramento before getting the Cubs for four at home late in the month. It feels like the Reds will end up where they are now: above .500 and a good team, but not a playoff one. — Rogers
Record: 69-65
Previous ranking: 15
Aaron Judge and Cal Raleigh have been absorbing all the MVP talk in the AL, understandably so, but Bobby Witt Jr. has quietly put together another MVP-caliber season. It might not be as splashy as last year, but his numbers — a .298 batting average, .855 OPS, 19 homers, 34 steals, 21 outs above average and 6.6 FanGraphs WAR — seem good enough for a third-place finish. And if the Royals somehow surge to a playoff spot in September, maybe — just maybe — he moves up. Witt, at least, is trending upward; his .959 OPS in August is his highest of any month. — Gonzalez
Record: 68-67
Previous ranking: 16
The Rangers need to decide if they’re in the playoff hunt because time is running out on them. Reaching .500 is a start but they haven’t exactly gone on a run for the postseason in the second half. They remain on the outside of the postseason race due to massively inconsistent play, mostly at the plate, while dealing with a blow to their pitching staff as Nathan Eovaldi was lost for the season with a rotator cuff injury. With a strength of schedule in the top 10 most difficult the rest of the way, Texas needs a mini miracle in order to play in October. — Rogers
Record: 64-69
Previous ranking: 17
Junior Caminero recently hit four home runs over three games, ballooning his total to an astounding 39 in his first full major league season. Only Cal Raleigh, Kyle Schwarber, Shohei Ohtani, Eugenio Suarez and Aaron Judge have more in 2025. But Caminero’s production is historic beyond that: The Rays third baseman is already tied for fourth all time in home runs by a player in his age-21 season or younger. Eddie Matthews set the mark with 47 homers in 1953. Caminero is within striking distance with the entire month of September remaining. — Castillo
Record: 66-66
Previous ranking: 14
It was only recently that the Guardians looked as if they were in the midst of a surprising run at the playoffs. On Aug. 15, they sat six games above .500 and a half-game out of a wild-card spot. Then they got swept by the Braves, dropped two of three to the Diamondbacks and, in what might end up being the death knell to their season, were swept over the weekend in Texas. On Monday, in the midst of a fourth straight loss, Guardians starter Tanner Bibee was captured pacing the dugout and delivering an impassioned message to teammates before being pulled aside by Guardians manager Stephen Vogt, who told reporters afterward, “Everybody’s frustrated.” — Gonzalez
Record: 65-69
Previous ranking: 20
The D-backs’ slide has brought with it reports — most notably from The Arizona Republic — that at least some segments of the organization have grown dissatisfied with the effort and availability of star second baseman Ketel Marte, triggering speculation that he might be traded over the offseason. Marte is arguably the best player at his position and should once again garner MVP votes. He’ll turn 32 in October, but his contract — signed just four months ago — is team-friendly, paying him $91 million over the next five years with an $11.5 million player option for 2031. It’ll be fascinating to see what happens there. — Gonzalez
Record: 65-69
Previous ranking: 19
Though Willson Contreras got suspended this week — his temper tends to flare up every so often — he’s put together a solid season as he begins the second portion of his career as a non-catcher. In fact, he’d held his own at first base while compiling a decent offensive year, which includes 19 home runs and a .341 on-base percentage. He’s on pace to be about a 3.0-WAR, player which is about what he’s been since arriving in St. Louis in 2023. The Cardinals wanted to use this season to better understand their roster. Contreras gives them some certainty. — Rogers
Record: 65-68
Previous ranking: 18
The Giants no longer have much to play for, but their fans got to watch Justin Verlander reach a cool milestone Tuesday, recording his 3,516th strikeout to move past Walter Johnson for ninth on the all-time list. Verlander is 42 years old, and these past few weeks have exemplified the inconsistency that comes with pitching at this age. He navigated a 15-inning stretch in which he allowed just one run, then served up 11 hits to the Nationals, bounced back with seven scoreless against the Rays, gave up seven runs in 4⅓ innings against the Padres and then responded, most recently, with six innings of two-run ball against the Cubs. — Gonzalez
Record: 62-71
Previous ranking: 23
The Marlins’ playoff chances are all but dashed, but they’re better than they were projected to be and have the opportunity to play spoiler over the final month with Sandy Alcantara, Edward Cabrera and Eury Perez atop their rotation. Miami has seven games against the Mets and six against the Phillies down the stretch, so while the Marlins won’t play in October, they have a real chance to impact the postseason. — Castillo
Record: 61-72
Previous ranking: 24
Drake Baldwin‘s emergence has been a bright spot in an ugly season in Atlanta. The rookie catcher, who is batting .279 with 14 home runs and an .803 OPS, has a 124 OPS+ and 2.2 fWAR, both of which rank sixth among all rookies. While the Cubs’ Cade Horton and the Brewers’ Isaac Collins have shorter odds to win NL Rookie of the year, Baldwin is in contention heading into the final month. Regardless, his performance this season could push the Braves to move veteran catcher Sean Murphy during the offseason, with Murphy owed $15 million each of the next three years. — Castillo
Record: 62-71
Previous ranking: 21
Taylor Ward‘s power continues to increase every season as he reached 30 home runs over the weekend for the first time in his career. He’s established himself as a prototypical 2025 slugger — lots of strikeouts mixed in with some walks and then the long ball. His career .248 batting average is reflective of his ability, though this season it’s down to .232. Moving forward, he’s a player you can count on but not necessarily one to build an offense around. If he decreases his strikeout-to walk-ratio, he becomes more dangerous. — Rogers
Record: 60-73
Previous ranking: 22
Samuel Basallo is the marquee name who received the life-changing contract extension, but he wasn’t the only premier Orioles prospect called up recently. Dylan Beavers debuted the day before Basallo and looks the part. In nine games, the 24-year-old outfielder, a first-round pick out of Cal in 2022, is 11-for-32 with four doubles, a home run and eight walks. Baltimore continues producing position players. Pitching, however, is another matter. — Castillo
Record: 63-72
Previous ranking: 26
Lawrence Butler had a tough week at the plate (he’s had one too many of those this season), surpassing 150 strikeouts on the year after whiffing just 108 times last season. He’s played in more games this year but hasn’t shown the same dominance at the plate, compiling an OPS+ under league average after finishing at 130 in 2024. His strikeout-to-walk ratio, which is in line with last season, might need to improve before he can take the next step for the Athletics. — Rogers
Record: 60-73
Previous ranking: 25
A Twins season heading nowhere — and a fan base still angry at the Pohlads for maintaining ownership — received a much-needed bright spot Tuesday, when Mickey Gasper, a 29-year-old former 27th-round pick, ignited a four-run rally with a ninth-inning home run. Heading into that game, his major league career consisted of seven hits in 79 at-bats. And yet he was stoic after his first home run.
“My dad always told me to act like you’ve done it before,” Gasper said in an on-field interview. “Mickey Mantle puts his head down and runs around the bases. Mickey Gaspar should, too.” — Gonzalez
Record: 59-75
Previous ranking: 27
It’s rare to see the Pirates at the top of the league in any hitting categories but that’s where they find themselves over the past week as they demolished Colorado in a sweep and kept it up at the plate in a tougher environment in St. Louis. Pittsburgh was just behind the Mets in OPS during that time frame, as seven different players hit home runs over the course of a 5-1 stretch. Shortstop Jared Triolo led the group, compiling 10 hits in a five-game span while going deep twice. First baseman Spencer Horwitz also homered twice. Let’s see if this surge continues against any team not named Colorado. — Rogers
Record: 53-80
Previous ranking: 29
James Wood was one of the best players in the majors over the first half of the season, rightfully earning an All-Star nod with 24 home runs and a .915 OPS in his first 95 games. But his production fell off a cliff after the break. In his next 17 games, the 22-year-old outfielder slashed .123/.219/.154. He registered just two extra-base hits, both doubles, and struck out 29 times in 73 plate appearances. But he seems to have turned the corner in recent weeks, posting an .848 OPS in 19 games since Aug. 7. — Castillo
Record: 48-85
Previous ranking: 28
For the second time this season, the White Sox placed star center fielder Luis Robert Jr. on the IL on Wednesday with a left hamstring strain. The injury came at a time when Robert was finally starting to turn his season around. Since the All-Star break, Robert was slashing .298/.352/.456 with five home runs and 11 stolen bases in 31 games, looking very much like the type of player a team can build around. His return to the IL, though, was a reminder of why teams remain hesitant to part with premium prospects in order to acquire him via trade. — Gonzalez
Record: 38-95
Previous ranking: 30
The Rockies are no longer on pace for the single-season loss record and have actually managed to win eight of their past 15 games (with a four-game losing streak thrown in there for good measure). Something else you might not have noticed: Brenton Doyle, their center fielder, has been one of the NL’s best hitters in the second half, slashing .373/.393/.627 with seven home runs. His 1.020 OPS ranks third in the NL among those with at least 100 plate appearances since the All-Star break. — Gonzalez
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Sports
College football hot seats: Brace yourselves for potential blue-blood turnover
Published
2 hours agoon
August 29, 2025By
admin
The college football job market took an expected turn last year.
The headwinds of financial uncertainty, combined with a record number of jobs turning over in 2023, led to a quieter year on the coaching carousel, especially at high-end schools.
Last offseason, there was a dip in head coaching changes at FBS football, with 30 total. The year before, a record 32 jobs turned over, per NCAA statistics.
Notably last offseason, no jobs turned over in the SEC and there was just one in the Big Ten (Purdue). Only West Virginia and UCF turned over in the Big 12, and the ACC had three changes (North Carolina, Wake Forest and Stanford).
None of those jobs would remotely qualify as blue bloods, which has the industry bracing for what could end up being a big year for high-end coaching turnover. The carousel rests for only so long.
That has led to a fascinating tension that will serve as the backdrop for this year’s edition: In an era when a vast majority of schools are scrambling for resources and revenue, are schools ready to pay big buyout money to part with their coaches? For big movement this year, there will have to be one or two big buyouts.
“The signs are that it’s going to be a pretty big year,” said an industry source. “There’s 15 to 20 schools in flux, and it was really light last year. That combination lends itself to a big year.
“But the question is whether 6-6 is worth making a change when you need to find 20-plus million? I think the trend is going to schools looking not to make the decision.”
There’s a counter to that perspective, and it’s a peek at the college basketball market from last year. Places like Indiana, Villanova, Iowa, Minnesota, NC State, Texas and Utah all paid sizable buyouts to kick-start new eras.
“I think people are past the rev share issues,” another industry source said. “They were stalled out last year in the football carousel, but they didn’t have any trouble getting going in the basketball carousel.”
Jimbo Fisher’s football buyout from Texas A&M in 2023 was $76.8 million, which included $19.2 million within 60 days and $7.2 million annually with no offset or mitigation. That’s the Secretariat-at-the-Belmont runaway winner for the biggest in the history of the sport.
The second-biggest public buyout belongs to Auburn, which fired Gus Malzahn in 2020 and owed him $21.7 million.
If this is indeed going to be an active coaching carousel among high-end jobs, the Malzahn number will need to be toppled. And the Fisher buyout has a chance to be as well.
Ultimately, the case for an active coaching carousel starts with big-name jobs that are in flux, the so-called market moves that ripple through the industry. A majority of those potential openings — although not all — would involve heavy lifting from a buyout perspective.
One source pointed out that schools in the SEC and Big Ten will have new line items that could make a big buyout more tenable, as there’s an influx of CFP money coming.
One school told ESPN that it has budgeted an additional $8 million additional for bowl revenue for the new CFP starting in 2026. (The specific amount is tricky, as there’s a flurry of variables that make a finite number tough to pin down.)
That makes the particulars of the buyouts important. How much money is up front? Is there offset and mitigation?
Here’s a look at the jobs with the buyout tension that could set the market, as well as other jobs worth monitoring across each conference.
Jump to a topic:
Big buyouts | Other Big Ten
Other SEC | Other ACC
Big 12 | Group of 5
Big buyouts
USC | Lincoln Riley (26-14 entering Year 4)
Buyout: More than $80 million
Nearly everything has changed since Lincoln Riley came to Los Angeles. Most notably, the results. After an 11-3 debut in 2022, he has gone 8-5 and 7-6 with losses along the way to Maryland, Minnesota and UCLA. The splash of the hire has worn off amid close losses, media clashes and modest expectations for 2025.
His winning percentage with the Trojans is 65.0%, which is lower than Clay Helton’s USC winning percentage (65.7) when he was fired. It’s also nearly 20% worse than his Oklahoma win percentage (84.6).
Many of the core people Riley brought with him from Oklahoma have been removed or seen their roles diminish, with the firing of strength coach Bennie Wylie and the hiring of new general manager Chad Bowden recent examples of significant personnel changes around him.
Athletic director Jennifer Cohen didn’t hire Riley. She also has made clear that there are championship expectations. She has invested accordingly, including a new football performance center that’s under construction and plenty of staff infrastructure and NIL financial gunpowder.
Although firing Riley would generate eye-popping financial headlines, the understanding is that there is offset and mitigation on his deal. That would diminish the number owed him over time. He’s too gifted a playcaller and offensive mind to sit out through the length of his deal, which was originally a 10-year contract that began in the 2023 season. (His buyout to leave is minimal if he chose to go elsewhere, but leaving that much guaranteed money behind would be hard.)
Without high-end results, there will continue to be uncertainty. USC will be favored in its first four games, and then it enters one of the most difficult stretches on any schedule this year — at Illinois, Michigan, at Notre Dame and at Nebraska. (There’s a bye between the trips to South Bend and Lincoln.)
That means by Nov. 1, we’ll get a sense of what Riley truly has built in his fourth season and where his tenure is headed.
The best news for Riley is there’s hope on the way, as USC has the No. 1 recruiting class for 2026, which includes 19 ESPN 300 prospects.
Florida State | Mike Norvell (33-27 entering Year 6)
Buyout: $58 million
This was unthinkable two years ago, when FSU went undefeated in the regular season and won the ACC. But since quarterback Jordan Travis’ injury and the subsequent College Football Playoff snub following 2023, everything has gone wrong for FSU.
In the wake of FSU’s 2-10 season last year, Norvell has overhauled the coaching staff, given up playcalling and brought in new coordinators. Florida State can’t really afford to fire him, but it also can’t afford to trudge through another miserable season like last year.
Norvell also agreed to a restructured new deal, which includes donating $4.5 million of his salary to the program in 2025. Effectively, Norvell took a performance pay cut. (He can earn that back, too, as included in the new deal is a $750,000 bonus for nine wins.)
The 2024 implosion came at a time when Florida State had actively — and awkwardly — been lobbying to find a new conference home. That bluster has died down, and the financials of leaving the ACC are clear. FSU’s need to get back to winning is rooted in those grander ambitions.
What’s important here if FSU does have to move on is that Norvell’s remaining money is subject to offset and mitigation. He’d likely be a strong candidate to coach again, which would blunt some of the financial pain.
Norvell went 23-4 in 2022 and 2023, which built up some grace. Here’s what no one knows: What is enough progress for 2025?
Oklahoma | Brent Venables (22-17 entering Year 4)
Buyout: $36.1 million
Oklahoma extended Venables through the 2029 season in the summer of 2024. The Sooners subsequently went 6-7 in their SEC debut, which led to some scrutiny of that deal.
Venables is popular in Norman, dating back to his time as an assistant. Like many defensive head coaches early in his career, he made a misstep at offensive coordinator that quelled the momentum from OU’s 10-2 season in its Big 12 finale in 2023.
There’s an athletic director shift coming at Oklahoma, with Joe Castiglione retiring. There also has been new blood in the football program, with general manager Jim Nagy coming in this offseason from the Senior Bowl.
This season is a fascinating litmus test for OU’s viability in the SEC. The Sooners have fortified the roster with a significant upgrade at quarterback (John Mateer), expect better health at wide receiver and have made holistic upgrades.
But the reality is that most teams are going to lose half their games in the SEC, and it’d be a poor time for Venables to have a bad year. The Sooners also play seven teams ranked in the preseason Top 25, and that doesn’t include Missouri or Auburn.
Wisconsin | Luke Fickell (13-13 entering Year 3)
Buyout: More than $25 million
Wisconsin ended last year with five straight losses and missed a bowl for the first time since 2001.
Wisconsin extended Fickell after last year, but that didn’t impact his buyout. There’s optimism for a change of trajectory, as Wisconsin is undergoing a schematic shift back to the school’s identity roots as a running offense. It will be a welcomed change after the failed Air Raid experiment.
The factor that has this job coming up in industry circles is Wisconsin’s schedule, which might make it difficult for the Badgers to take a significant step forward. They play at Alabama, at Michigan, Iowa, Ohio State, at Oregon, Washington, at Indiana, Illinois and at Minnesota.
Wisconsin could be a better team but have a similar record. The institutional history, Fickell’s general track record and buyout expense suggest patience is likely.
Other jobs worth monitoring
Big Ten
Maryland: Mike Locksley’s strong run at Maryland took a hairpin turn last year, as the Terps went 4-8, 1-8 in Big Ten play and Locksley admitted he lost the locker room. There’s a lot of goodwill from Locksley’s three consecutive bowl games, which hadn’t happened since Ralph Friedgen’s tenure in 2008. But there’s also a new athletic director, Jim Smith, and an expectation to return to winning. Maryland is heavily favored in its three games to open the year (FAU, Northern Illinois and Towson), which could quiet things. Locksley would be owed $13.4 million if fired, a considerable amount for Maryland. He’d also have 50% of that due in 60 days, a sizable check for a university not flush with cash.
SEC
Auburn: Hugh Freeze faces a classic win-or-else season at Auburn. The Tigers have strong talent upgrades from both the portal and recruiting. But Auburn is not a traditionally patient place, so Freeze’s 11-14 record there needs to improve quickly. He’d be owed just under $15.4 million, which is expensive but not something Auburn would flinch at if there are modest results again. Don’t expect him to be around if Auburn has another losing season.
Arkansas: The goofiest buyout in college sports looms over any potential decision on Sam Pittman. If he’s .500 or above since 2021 — he enters the year 27-24 in that time frame — Arkansas would have to pay him nearly $9.8 million. To keep the buyout at this higher level, he’d need to win five games. If Pittman goes 4-8, the number would be nearly $6.9 million. Credit Pittman, who revived Arkansas from the depths of Chad Morris’ era and keeps on surviving. If he’s above four wins, Arkansas would face scrutiny for issuing such a bizarre contract and the extra money it’d cost the program to fire him.
Florida: The temperature on Billy Napier has cooled considerably, and the Gators have a top-flight quarterback and great expectations again. He’s 19-19 through three seasons, and his buyout remains eye-popping at $20.4 million. (There’s no offset or mitigation on the deal.) Athletic director Scott Stricklin gave Napier a midseason vote of confidence last year by announcing he’d return, and Florida responded with a strong finishing kick by winning four straight to close the year. Stricklin clearly has his back. And per an ESPN source, Stricklin has three additional years added to his contract, which now runs through 2030. That bodes well for Napier, as they are clearly aligned.
ACC
Stanford: General manager Andrew Luck’s first significant hire looms. With interim coach Frank Reich clear that he’s on The Farm short term, Luck needs to decide whether he wants someone from the college ranks or the NFL. What’s unique about this job is that the hire will be made through the shared prism of how Luck sees the identity of the program, not necessarily just a coach coming in and bringing the identity.
Virginia Tech: It’s a classic prove-it year for Brent Pry, who has two years remaining on his original contract. He’d be owed $6.2 million if fired on Dec. 1. He’s 16-21 over three years and 1-12 in one-score games, and Tech’s ambitions are clearly greater than that. Considerable improvement is needed, or Tech will hit reset as the administration appears motivated by the fear of getting left behind in the next iteration of the collegiate landscape. Athletic director Whit Babcock has hired Pry and Justin Fuente, which would mean his future could be in flux if a change comes here. ADs don’t often get to hire three coaches.
Virginia: There was a discernable uptick in investment and aggression by Virginia in the portal this offseason. That’s a sign the pressure is ratcheted up on Tony Elliott, who is 11-23 through three seasons. He entered a job with arguably the worst facilities in power conference football. He also dealt with unspeakable tragedy: the murder of three players in a campus shooting. UVA showed signs of progress last year with five wins, and that needs to continue. Elliott is owed more than $11.1 million if fired on Dec. 1, and UVA is more likely to need to direct that to the roster than a payout.
Cal: Can Cal do better than Justin Wilcox? It’s unlikely, as he has led the team to four bowls since taking over in 2017. Cal has no athletic director, landed in an awkward geographic league and is working to financially catch up to the rest of the sport. Wilcox would be owed $10.9 million if he’s fired, which would seemingly be too rich for Cal to handle. But with so much change afoot, there’s an industry expectation that something could happen here, as Wilcox could also have other suitors.
Big 12
Oklahoma State: The school forced Mike Gundy into a reduced salary and buyout. Those are fluorescent signs of a school preparing to move on, although the buyout remains significant at $15 million. It would be a seminal moment for a school to fire a coach who has more than 100 more wins than the next most successful coach in school history. Gundy is 169-88, but the program fell off a cliff last year at 3-9. The roster doesn’t offer much optimism for drastic improvement, and essentially the entire coaching staff is new. Gundy has done some of his best work with low expectations, and that’s what OSU has in 2025.
Arizona: Arizona’s dip from 10-3 in Jedd Fisch’s first year to 4-8 in Brent Brennan’s first season has led to scrutiny. Also, there has been a new athletic director brought in since Brennan was hired. The buyout price is steep at $10.6 million, but it’s something Arizona is expected to consider if there’s no improvement. It doesn’t help matters for Brennan that rival Arizona State burst into the CFP in Kenny Dillingham’s second year.
Cincinnati: There have been growing pains entering the Big 12 for the Bearcats, who are 4-14 in league play in the first two years. There’s an expectation for continued improvement in Scott Satterfield’s third year, as he went 3-9 in Year 1 and jumped to 5-7 last year. The Bearcats lost their final five games last year. The buyout tab is nearly $12 million, which is a lot for a school that moved its opener against Nebraska to Kansas City for financial reasons.
Baylor: The temperature on Dave Aranda’s seat has cooled exponentially compared with the past two seasons. He snapped a skid of two losing seasons by going 8-5 last year and 6-3 in the Big 12. A change would require a precipitous downturn, as Aranda is beloved in Waco. There’s an unforgiving schedule, however, that opens with Auburn and a trip to SMU. His buyout is in the $12 million range, and it’s unlikely to be tested.
Group of 5
American: The American might have been the biggest surprise in the 2024 coaching carousel, with FAU, Tulsa and Charlotte all firing coaches after just two seasons. Temple, Rice and East Carolina also fired their coaches. Oddly, the worries over revenue share spending didn’t intimidate these schools from making moves.
There’s really only one job squarely in the crosshairs, and that’s Trent Dilfer at UAB, who is 7-17 in two seasons. He’d be owed nearly $2.5 million if dismissed. UAB has struggled to translate its strong run in Conference USA to the American since joining in 2023.
Conference USA: This also projects to be a quieter year in Conference USA, with only Louisiana Tech having a coach potentially in flux. Sonny Cumbie went 5-8 last year after opening with back-to-back 3-9 seasons. He’ll need continued improvement to stick around for that school’s eventual transition to the Sun Belt. He’d be owed nearly $875,000 if let go, as 2026 is the last year of his deal.
MAC: There’s already one MAC job open, after Kenni Burns’ firing this spring at Kent State. There are significant financial challenges both there and at Akron, which also could be in flux with Joe Moorhead entering Year 4 at 8-28. (He’d be owed about $650,000 if fired, which is significant.) There’s still a market for Moorhead as a college offensive coordinator, which could be the pivot if the Zips don’t get moving. (Perhaps the NFL, too.) Overall, this looks like a quieter year in the MAC.
Mountain West: The lack of a contract extension for Jay Norvell at Colorado State is a smoke signal that a decision is coming. He has just one year left on his deal and would be owed $1.5 million if fired before Dec. 1. He also wouldn’t have to pay any money to go elsewhere. Norvell has an administration that didn’t hire him and, despite solid improvement, there will be speculation over his future until something changes contractually. Colorado State went 8-5 last year and 6-1 in the Mountain West. Norvell is 16-21 in his three years.
Sun Belt: Two coaches will be watched closely here. Tim Beck is 14-12 at Coastal Carolina over two seasons, having reached bowls in each of them. He had the misfortune of replacing Jamey Chadwell, who averaged more than 10 wins over his final three seasons. Beck would be owed $1.5 million if Coastal fired him, and Coastal has both a new athletic director and president. Ricky Rahne at Old Dominion is 20-30 overall and still in search of his first winning season there. He has just one year remaining on his deal after this one, a sign that a decision on his future one way or the other is imminent. He’d be owed $600,000 if fired.
Pac-12: None.
Sports
Miami LB Hayes charged with vehicular homicide
Published
2 hours agoon
August 29, 2025By
admin
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ESPN News Services
Aug 29, 2025, 01:35 PM ET
Miami linebacker Adarius Hayes has been charged with three counts of vehicular homicide and one count of reckless driving with serious bodily injury following an investigation into a May crash that killed three people.
Hayes surrendered to police Friday morning in his hometown of Largo, Florida, officials said, and records show he was booked into the Pinellas County Jail. It was not immediately clear if he retained an attorney.
Miami said Hayes “has been indefinitely suspended from all athletic related activities per athletic department policy” in response to the charges. The Hurricanes declined further comment.
The three people who died as a result of the May 10 afternoon crash — a 78-year-old woman, plus two children ages 10 and 4 — were all in a Kia Soul that collided with a Dodge Durango being driven by Hayes, police said at the time.
The children were ejected from the vehicle, police said, and investigators later found that Hayes was “maneuvering aggressively through traffic shortly before the crash.” He was driving at 78.9 mph in a 40 mph zone at the time of the crash, police said.
Another passenger of the Kia had been hospitalized with serious injuries.
“The investigation concluded that Adarius Hayes’ egregious speed, aggressive and reckless lane changes, and complete disregard for surrounding traffic conditions demonstrated a willful and deliberate disregard for the safety of others, constituting reckless driving. These actions directly led to the tragic deaths of the three victims,” Largo police said in a statement Friday.
The Kia, police said, was “lawfully executing a left-hand turn” when Hayes’ vehicle “made a rapid and dangerous maneuver” and crashed into the car.
Hayes played in 12 games as a freshman for Miami last season, mostly on special teams. He was a four-star recruit coming out of Largo High School.
Largo is about 20 miles east of Tampa and about 15 miles north of St. Petersburg on Florida’s Gulf Coast.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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David PurdumAug 29, 2025, 08:54 AM ET
Close- Joined ESPN in 2014
- Journalist covering gambling industry since 2008
The point spread on Saturday’s Texas-Ohio State showdown has been on the move all week, with the Longhorns becoming a favorite at some sportsbooks, including ESPN BET, as of Friday morning.
The Buckeyes opened as a 3-point favorite months ago, but sportsbooks have been reporting a steady stream of money on the Longhorns throughout the summer, causing the line to move toward Texas.
The consensus line was a pick ’em as of noon ET Friday, with ESPN BET and DraftKings listing Texas as a 1.5-point favorite.
Circa, a sportsbook known to cater to professional bettors, had seen enough interest on the Longhorns to move them to a 1-point favorite on Thursday. Derek Stevens, the owner of Circa, said on VSIN that a $550,000 bet on Texas preceded the move to Longhorns -1. The line had ticked back to pick ’em by early Friday at Circa.
“It seems like the public is moving the line,” Chris Bennett, sportsbook director at Circa, told ESPN. “We’ve seen a lot of interest in Texas, but not from the usual suspects, and by that I mean a subset of sharp customers we have a lot of history with.”
The Buckeyes have not been a home underdog since 2018 against Michigan and have been favored by less than three points at Ohio Stadium only once since 2012. If the line closes with Ohio State as the favorite, Texas would become the first team ranked No. 1 in the preseason Associated Press Top 25 to be an underdog in its first game.
“The perception is that Texas is just more experienced than Ohio State,” said Ed Salmons, veteran football oddsmaker for the Westgate SuperBook in Las Vegas. “Arch Manning is considered a much better quarterback than the Ohio State quarterback [Julian Sayin]. Both are such unknowns, no one really knows.”
Salmons said it became obvious over the summer that the betting public was supporting Texas and that, once the line dropped from the opening number of Ohio State -3, it had the potential to move all the way to the Longhorns being the favorite.
“The public right now likes Texas, but we’ll see the day of the game,” Salmons said. “Sometimes you think that, and then all of a sudden you’ll see these big Ohio State bets. It’s a game we’re expecting a ton of handle on.”
The bulk of the betting action, both on the moneyline and spread, was on Texas at Caesars Sportsbook as well, but some of the bigger bettors had not weighed in on the marquee matchup of Week 1.
“There has not been a lot of wise guy action thus far,” said Joey Feazel, lead football trader for Caesars Sportsbook. “I believe that says more to the true variation of this game and not knowing exactly what you are going to get from either side of the ball. I expect we will see some action closer to game time.”
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