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Ten years ago, Michigan and Michigan State produced one of the most unforgettable finishes college football has ever seen.

In an instant, two unlikely figures became forever linked — and the faces of that play: Spartans backup safety Jalen Watts-Jackson and Michigan fan Chris Baldwin, a sophomore at the school.

Under coach Mark Dantonio, Michigan State arrived in Ann Arbor undefeated and ranked in the top 10.

But in his first season, coach Jim Harbaugh had quickly turned around a Wolverines team that had gone 5-7 the year before under Brady Hoke. With a 23-21 lead, Harbaugh was 10 seconds away from his first signature win.

“Then all of a sudden,” Baldwin said, “things started moving in the wrong direction.”

In those final 10 seconds, Watts-Jackson became a Michigan State legend. As Michigan prepared to punt, the snap was fumbled, and Watts-Jackson snatched the ball out of the air and rushed into the end zone for an improbable game-winning touchdown — dislocating his hip as he did.

Just a few feet away, standing in the third row of the student section in that end zone, Baldwin put his hands on his head in disbelief. ESPN’s cameras caught the reaction, creating a viral image that cemented a new phrase in the sports lexicon: “Surrender Cobra.”

As Michigan and Michigan State prepare to meet again for the 118th time Saturday (7:30 p.m. ET, NBC), ESPN went inside that iconic moment — through the words of those who witnessed it firsthand.

Baldwin grew up in Saginaw, Michigan, a lifelong Wolverines fan. He saw his first game at the Big House when he was 5 years old. During his freshman year of college, he formed a close group of friends — Tim Worley, Blayze Damron, Ian McKenzie and childhood friends Brandon Freudenstein and Jacob Pitcher — who loved Michigan football just as much. By their sophomore year in 2015, they all lived together and had season tickets. On Oct. 17, Michigan State was coming to town for the biggest Wolverines game in years. Underscoring its magnitude, ESPN’s “College GameDay” broadcast live from Ann Arbor.

Baldwin: That was our first “College GameDay.” Being big football fans, that’s the crown jewel. We got in line to get in around 3 p.m. on Friday.

Worley: They told us tents weren’t going to be allowed. Then we ended up being the only ones without a tent. So we just camped out in lawn chairs and stayed up all night.

Damron: We were all pumped. When they opened the gates, we walked in and easily got on the front row.

Worley: Steve Spurrier was the guest picker. He had retired that week. He picked Michigan. We thought it was going to be one of the best days ever.


After back-to-back double-digit winning seasons, Michigan State was off to a 6-0 start, highlighted by a win over No. 7 Oregon in Week 2. A win at Michigan would propel the Spartans into the thick of the four-team playoff conversation. But the Spartans were battling injuries, especially to their secondary. They would start a pair of true freshmen, Grayson Miller and Khari Willis, at safety. Dantonio also bumped Watts-Jackson up to second on the safety depth chart. Then he injured his shoulder in practice two days before the game.

Watts-Jackson: I wasn’t even supposed to play. But the day before we travel, Coach D is like, “Hey, man, we might need you. Are you going to be able to play?” I’m like, “Hell yeah, I’m playing.”

Dantonio: When we pull the bus up to Michigan Stadium, everybody’s there razzing us. We had three buses. I was thinking we’ve got to get our guys hyped somehow. When we get there, I told everyone, I’m going to count to 10 and then we’ll all get off the bus. I asked them to think about what we’re going to do during those 10 seconds as a football team. It’s going to take something special to win. … I never even realized until after the game there were 10 seconds left on the clock.

Watts-Jackson’s dad, Rick Jackson: I live like 20 minutes from Michigan. When Jalen went to Michigan State, I had to throw all my Michigan gear away. … I wasn’t really expecting Jalen to play, but we went to the game to support the team.

Watts-Jackson: I roomed with [running back] Gerald Holmes in the hotel. I’m kind of down because I got hurt. He’s like, “Bro, I don’t know, I got a feeling that you’re going to do something special tomorrow.”


Clinging to a 23-21 lead, the Wolverines came through with a big stop late in the fourth quarter. Dymonte Thomas batted down Connor Cook’s desperation heave on fourth-and-19, giving Michigan the ball near midfield with 1:47 remaining. The Spartans had only one timeout left. After three straight runs, Harbaugh called timeout to set up a punt with 10 seconds to go.

Dantonio: They could’ve taken a delay of game penalty. But they called timeout. I don’t know why. But that timeout gave us the opportunity to talk about what we were going to do. The call was “10 block left.” We took out the returner and added an extra guy up front, [freshman] Brandon Sowers.

Sowards: I didn’t know really where to line up. So I just lined up next to Grayson.

Miller: It’s something you work on, but once you finally line it up in a real game that nobody has ever had to do before, it’s a little bit of jumbled chaos.

Watts-Jackson: My position in that punt block was almost like a decoy. I was supposed to run straight towards the end guy and then run out to make him reach towards me, and then we shoot somebody through the gap.

Dantonio: I told them we have to block it and return it. Don’t be offsides. But it doesn’t matter if you rough the punter. Go get him. We might get a flag. But that guy was going to get hit.

Miller: I blocked a lot of punts in high school. You pick a spot, get in a track stance, find the angle and go all out. That’s all I ever did in high school. And that moment felt very similar.

Dantonio: Why Michigan didn’t come out in a tight punt formation just to get the ball off is beyond me.

Michigan All-American tight end Jake Butt: Those gunners outside should have been checked down. But I also understand where Coach [Harbaugh] was coming from. We didn’t need to block the edges because, mathematically, they couldn’t get there. Usain Bolt could’ve gotten there. They couldn’t.

Watts-Jackson: I’m not going to lie. Of course it’s not over until the end. But in my head it’s like, damn man, we really outplayed these guys, but we lost this game. At the same time, you had film that next day and you do not want to be that guy on film lollygagging that last play and be made an example of. So I’m going to do my job. Whatever happens, happens.


For Michigan, the unthinkable happened next. Punter Blake O’Neill dropped the ball, prompting ESPN announcer Sean McDonough to shout, “Whoa! He has trouble with the snap.” O’Neill picked it up, but before he could do anything with it, multiple Spartans, led by Miller and Sowards, crashed into him, popping the ball up into the air.

Butt: I wasn’t even nervous in the shield. We’ve done this a hundred times. But you can always hear the thump of the punt. You can hear a thump. I didn’t hear a thump. I heard the crowd noise shift, and you could sense the nervousness. I’m like, something’s not right.

Dantonio: If the punter just falls on the ball or we fall on the ball, the game is probably over.

Miller: After I saw him drop the ball, I threw my body in there. I don’t know how the physics of it led the ball to land in Jalen’s hands.

Sowards: I remember the look of shock in Jalen’s face.

Watts-Jackson: As I come off the edge, I don’t know what’s going on. Then I see the ball floating in the air. I don’t know what made me just reach out with one hand. I just take off running.

Baldwin: The play was coming right at us. For better or worse, we had a great view of it.

Watts-Jackson: By the time I look up at the clock, there’s six seconds left. I’m thinking I’m going to get out of bounds for the field goal. I don’t want to be caught running out the clock and not score. But as I’m running, I see only one guy in maize and blue [Wayne Lyons] in front of me. So then I’m thinking, we pick up this block, we can go all the way. Jermaine Edmondson is looking at me, and we’re thinking the same thing. He turns around and picks up [Lyons]. At the 7-yard line, I dip my head and cut back inside both of them. Once I cut back, I was going for it.

Worley: I remember having a glimmer of hope maybe that we can tackle him at the 1-yard line when the clock hits zero.

Butt: I’m chasing him, but I knew where we were on the field. I knew if I tackled him, he was going to be in the end zone. So I tried to punch the ball out. I was hoping to just get a fumble out of the back of the end zone. I felt the ball move. I just didn’t get enough of it.

Watts-Jackson: I’m thinking of my celebration, what dance I’m going to break out. But as I’m diving, I lift my left leg up and [Butt] wrapped me up by the leg. So I couldn’t bring my leg down. We both fell on my knee and my leg just popped out of my hip.


Watts-Jackson’s touchdown lifted the Spartans to a miraculous 27-23 victory as time expired. Jackson, his friend Reginald Haynes, Watts-Jackson’s uncle, Julian Watts, and his pregnant fiancée, Kia, were on the other side of the stadium. With the game presumably over prior to the punt, Julian and Kia started walking up the stairs to beat the crowd. Rick walked with them to make sure they made it out.

Jackson: Then [Julian] says, “Did you just see that? I think Jalen just scored.” I’m like, how in the hell did that happen? Because it was in Michigan Stadium, they weren’t replaying it. … I didn’t even know he was injured until I went to the locker room.

Watts-Jackson: I know my hip is broken. It’s dislocated. Something’s not right. When I’m going down, I throw the ball. I don’t throw it out of excitement. And as soon as I throw the ball, I just see white jerseys piling on me.

Dantonio: He was on his back screaming.

Watts-Jackson: The first person I remember was [defensive lineman] Lawrence Thomas. He was like, “You did it, you did it.” Then I blacked out for a second. [Running back] LJ Scott was trying to pick me up, and I’m telling him like, “No, no, my hip.” They carted me off the field and put me straight in the ambulance.

Miller: Nobody knew what happened to Jalen. We didn’t hear about that until we were in the locker room. I wasn’t even sure it was Jalen who had returned the ball at that point. That’s how chaotic it was.

Jackson: I go to the locker room. I still haven’t seen the play. I see one of Jalen’s friends that played little league football with him, Tyson Smith. I ask him, “Where’s Jalen?” He says, “I don’t know, but he the man right now.”


While pandemonium filled the Michigan State locker room, the Wolverines and the home crowd were in shock. Unbeknownst to his teammates, an ambulance shuttled Watts-Jackson to Michigan’s University Hospital. Baldwin and his buddies, meanwhile, began walking home — unaware he was already going viral.

Pitcher: I couldn’t process how we just lost. It felt fake.

Baldwin: You were trying to comprehend it.

Butt: I’m truly telling you, it was a psychedelic experience. It’s like my vision was changed. The colors looked different. Even walking to the locker room, it was like, am I in a dream? Did that really happen?

Watts-Jackson: I remember the ambulance ride being super long. It felt like we were in traffic forever. I’m fully dressed, wearing everything except my helmet. They were doing whatever they could to calm me down … then we hit this bump, and I instantly got relief. I heard a pop. The bump popped my hip back into place.

Jackson: We talked to him before the surgery, and he wasn’t saying much. He was in a state of shock, like he didn’t even know what happened. He didn’t talk about the play.

Watts-Jackson: I was kind of down in the dumps going into the surgery. I’m just thinking like, damn, I’m not going to be playing for a while. Am I ever going to walk the same? Am I going to be able to run again? They compared my injury to Bo Jackson’s, and he didn’t come back from his injury to play football again.

Sowards: I texted Jalen that night to go to a friend’s house. No text back. I’m like what the heck? Maybe he’s too busy? On Sunday, when we came in to watch film and get a lift in, that’s when we found out he was still [in Ann Arbor] and was hurt pretty bad.

Pitcher: We didn’t get real cell service until we were like 10 minutes out of the stadium. I remember Chris saying, “Oh, people back home are saying they saw me on TV.”

Baldwin: As soon as I get reception, texts come flying in from all sorts of people in my life. That evening we had “SportsCenter” on, and the anchors were standing on each side of a big screen with my picture. I started to realize that this was going to be a little more than just a few family members recognizing me on TV.

Pitcher: Then we got on Twitter and we started thinking, this might definitely be a thing.

Watts-Jackson: I was in the hospital for 3½ days. All of my stuff, including my phone, went back to East Lansing. So I’m just blind to social media, blind to my friends and family reaching out. I’m a millennial. We’re attached to our phones. So it was a strange few days for sure. It felt like I was there for a month. … So I finally get back to Michigan State, I get my phone back. When I turned it on, I couldn’t use it the rest of the day because I was getting so many notifications, nonstop, to the point my phone froze. My phone was so crammed with text messages, phone calls, notifications from Instagram, Facebook, Twitter. I couldn’t even operate the phone. It wouldn’t work. I couldn’t turn it off. I couldn’t close things out. So I just left it on the charger and waited until it cooled down.

Dantonio: He came back on Wednesday. Another surreal moment, him being with his teammates for the first time since making that play.

Sowards: He was in a wheelchair. He came down and we all went crazy because that was the first time we had seen him since the game. We were chanting, “Ja-len, Ja-len …” as he was rolling down.

Watts-Jackson: The day after, I got on social media and everywhere I would see the play, I would see this picture: Chris with his hands on his head, doing the Surrender Cobra. That was the first time I had ever even heard that phrase.


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Replays of final play for MSU – UM

Replays of final play for MSU – UM

The Spartans went on to win the Big Ten championship and advance to the College Football Playoff, which remains the program’s only playoff appearance. Watts-Jackson eventually recovered from his hip injury and rejoined the Spartans the following season. The Wolverines ultimately bounced back from the stunning loss to win 10 games. Baldwin, meanwhile, became a campus sensation. He still lives in Ann Arbor and has season tickets. Once a year, his old college buddies come to town to go to a Michigan game together and stay at his house. Sometimes, they even meet up for a road game. While taping a podcast about the game a few years ago, Baldwin and Watts-Jackson finally met.

Miller: We were definitely a team of destiny. Beating Michigan on the way to making the playoffs was certainly sweet.

Butt: If any one thing had gone even partly wrong, we would’ve been OK. Truly, it was a nightmare scenario. Everything that had to go right for Michigan State went right. And we were on the other side of it. Even to this day, it stings.

Dantonio: It’s never over.

Jackson: I missed the whole play. It still kills me to this day that I didn’t see the play at all. People still don’t believe when I tell them, I was there and never saw the play. I had to watch it on TV.

McKenzie: Chris was a minor celebrity all of a sudden. We couldn’t do anything without watching him take pictures for 10 minutes.

Baldwin: I definitely was getting recognized, walking to class, going to get lunch, going to parties. … People were ready to take pictures.

Damron: There was a T-shirt company in Ohio selling O-H-I-O shirts with a cartoon picture of Chris. We had to go find a lawyer to send a cease and desist to them.

Baldwin: They ended up sending me a couple grand and a freezer box of some [Montgomery Inn] ribs. There were some Skyline chili cans in there. I’m still friends with the guy on Facebook.

Worley: The following year, we were at a dive bar in Key West on spring break. We were trying to watch a Michigan basketball game. It was a sports bar and on the wall they had pictures of famous sports moments. And they had a picture of Chris.

Baldwin: I had never heard of the term Surrender Cobra before.

McKenzie: I had never heard it before, either. And now Chris is the face of it.

Butt: When I saw [the memes] after the game, I deleted my social media. I was like, I’m done. That picture is ingrained in our DNA. And when I see it, I still feel a little bit of what I felt in that moment.

Miller: Anytime you see that picture, you know what it means. I find that very satisfying.

Watts-Jackson: I’ve joked with Chris, you’re more famous than me from that play.

Baldwin: It’s bittersweet. I would’ve preferred that Michigan had just gotten the punt off. But … there are worse ways to be remembered.

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Va. Tech hires Franklin; PSU buyout renegotiated

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Va. Tech hires Franklin; PSU buyout renegotiated

Virginia Tech hired James Franklin to be its next head football coach, the school announced Monday.

He will be formally introduced at a news conference Wednesday morning.

“I’m honored and humbled to join the Hokie family,” Franklin said in a statement. “My vision is simple: to restore unmatched excellence, to build something that lasts, and to serve this University, the Commonwealth of Virginia and our amazing fan base with honor, integrity, and passion. I look forward to getting to work with our players, our staff, and the entire Virginia Tech community.”

Franklin was originally owed a $49 million buyout after being fired by Penn State on Oct. 12, but part of his deal with the Hokies, sources confirmed to ESPN, includes a $9 million settlement from the Nittany Lions.

Franklin went 128-60 over 12 seasons at Penn State and three at Vanderbilt. He brings a résumé that includes winning more than 68% of his games, an appearance in the 2024 College Football Playoff semifinals and a Big Ten championship in 2016.

He’ll replace his former defensive coordinator Brent Pry, who was fired in September after an 0-3 start and a 16-24 record with the Hokies through four seasons.

Franklin’s arrival in Blacksburg will give the Hokies their most accomplished coach since Hall of Famer Frank Beamer, who retired in 2015 after 29 seasons at the school. Since that time, Tech has endured the underwhelming tenures of Justin Fuente and Pry as the school struggled to assimilate to modern college football.

After firing Pry, Tech’s board of visitors passed a plan to add $229 million to the athletics budget over the next four years. The move was to help make Tech a more attractive job and attract a candidate who could revive the school’s lagging football fortunes.

“James Franklin embodies the spirit, vision, and relentless pursuit of excellence that will elevate Virginia Tech Football back on the national stage where it belongs,” athletic director Whit Babcock said in a statement. “This is a landmark moment for our program. … James is a dynamic leader, a relentless recruiter, and a coach who has proven he can build and sustain elite, championship-caliber programs. We are thrilled to welcome him and his family to Blacksburg and to entrust him with the future of VT Football.”

In Franklin, the Hokies get an established coach whose availability wasn’t considered a possibility at the start of the 2025 season. Penn State began the season ranked No. 2 in the country and started 3-0 before enduring three straight losses, including a double-overtime loss to No. 6 Oregon when the Nittany Lions were ranked No. 3 in September.

After losses to UCLA and Northwestern, Penn State fired Franklin.

Franklin came to Penn State in 2014 in the throes of NCAA sanctions from the Jerry Sandusky sexual abuse scandal. Franklin led the Nittany Lions to the Rose Bowl and Big Ten title in 2016.

Franklin’s tenure was ultimately defined by general success that never manifested at the very highest levels of winning, as he finished 4-21 at Penn State against AP top-10 opponents. Over his 12 seasons there, he led Penn State to six seasons of double-digit victories, including three straight from 2022 to 2024.

The Centre Daily Times was first to report about Penn State’s settlement with Franklin.

Virginia Tech hasn’t won double-digit games since Fuente’s first season in 2016. From 2004 to 2011, Tech won double-digit games each season under Beamer.

Franklin brings strong ties to the I-95 corridor, including the talent-rich DMV area. Along with recruiting that area heavily at Penn State, Franklin coached two stints at Maryland as an assistant and one year at James Madison.

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Man charged with murder in shooting of Beam

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Man charged with murder in shooting of Beam

OAKLAND, Calif. — A 27-year-old man was charged Monday with murder in the death of celebrated former football coach John Beam, who died Friday after being shot in the head on the junior college campus in Oakland, where he worked.

Cedric Irving Jr. could face 50 years to life if convicted, Alameda County District Attorney Ursula Jones Dickson said Monday at a news conference. Irving also faces enhancement charges alleging he personally fired a gun that caused great bodily injury and that the victim was particularly vulnerable, possibly due to age, according to the charging complaint.

Beam, 66, was a giant in the local community, a father figure who forged deep relationships with his players while fielding a team that regularly competed for championships. The Netflix docuseries “Last Chance U” focused on Beam and the Laney Eagles in its 2020 season. He most recently had been serving as the school’s athletic director after retiring from coaching last year.

“He really is the best of Oakland — was the best of Oakland,” Jones Dickson said. “His spirit is still here.”

The district attorney said Irving had no criminal record. He is being held without bail and is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday. The Alameda County Public Defender’s Office said it has not been appointed to represent Irving and declined comment.

Back-to-back shootings at two schools last week have roiled Oakland, a city of roughly 400,000 across the bay from San Francisco. On Wednesday, a student was shot at Oakland’s Skyline High School. The student is in stable condition, and two juveniles were in custody.

Jones Dickson said Skyline students were on a field trip at Laney College and had to suffer through two lockdowns in the same week. She said it was time to bring accountability into the debate over gun violence because too many young people were being hurt by easy access to firearms.

“That’s unacceptable that we have children in our community who now this is the norm. Two days in a row that they’re locked down for gun violence on a campus. I’m not good with that,” Jones Dickson said.

Officers arrived at Laney College before noon Thursday to find Beam shot in the head at the athletics field house. He was treated at a hospital but died the following day from his injuries.

Irving was arrested at a commuter rail station just after 3 a.m. Friday. He was carrying the firearm used to shoot Beam, and he admitted to carrying out the shooting, according to the probable cause document.

Oakland Police Assistant Chief James Beere said the suspect went on campus for a “specific reason” but did not elaborate. “This was a very targeted incident,” he said at a Friday news conference.

Beere did not say how the two men knew each other but said Irving was known to hang around the Laney campus. Irving’s brother told the San Francisco Chronicle that Irving had lost his job as a security guard after an altercation and was facing eviction at home.

Beam joined Laney College in 2004 as a running backs coach and became head coach in 2012, winning two league titles. According to his biography on the college’s website, at least 20 of his players went on to the NFL.

Beam previously worked at Skyline High School, where Irving had played football but after Beam had left for another job.

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AP Week 12 poll reaction: What’s next for each Top 25 team

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AP Week 12 poll reaction: What's next for each Top 25 team

Ohio State and Indiana both won big to keep their undefeated seasons alive, but the rest of the top 5 made things exciting. Texas A&M, after trailing South Carolina 30-3 at the half, stormed back to win by a point. Alabama lost its first conference game of the season to Oklahoma. And Georgia, after battling Texas for three quarters, scored three touchdowns in the final period to win 35-10.

What does it all mean for the AP Top 25? Let’s break down the rankings.

Stats courtesy of ESPN Research.

All times Eastern.

Previous ranking: 1

2025 record: 10-0

Week 12 result: Defeated UCLA 48-10

Stat to know: This is Ohio State’s fourth 10-0 start under Ryan Day.

What’s next: Saturday vs. Rutgers


Previous ranking: 2

2025 record: 11-0

Week 12 result: Defeated Wisconsin 31-7

Stat to know: This is Indiana’s first-ever 11-game win streak.

What’s next: Nov. 28 at Purdue, 7:30 p.m., NBC


Previous ranking: 3

2025 record: 10-0

Week 12 result: Defeated South Carolina 31-30

Stat to know: Texas A&M’s 27-point comeback against South Carolina is the largest in school history.

What’s next: Saturday vs. Samford, noon, SEC Network+


Previous ranking: 5

2025 record: 9-1

Week 12 result: Defeated Texas 35-10

Stat to know: Georgia has won 12 straight home games against AP top 10 teams.

What’s next: Saturday vs. Charlotte, 12:45 p.m., SEC Network


Previous ranking: 6

2025 record: 10-1

Week 12 result: Defeated Florida 34-24

Stat to know: Ole Miss is 2-0 when trailing entering the fourth quarter this season.

What’s next: Nov. 28 at Mississippi State, noon


Previous ranking: 8

2025 record: 10-1

Week 12 result: Defeated UCF 48-9

Stat to know: All of Texas Tech’s wins this season have been decided by 20 or more points.

What’s next: Nov. 29 at West Virginia


Previous ranking: 7

2025 record: 9-1

Week 12 result: Defeated Minnesota 42-13

Stat to know: Oregon has won 38 straight games against unranked opponents. That’s the second-longest streak in FBS behind Georgia.

What’s next: Saturday vs. USC, 3:30 p.m., CBS


Previous ranking: 11

2025 record: 8-2

Week 12 result: Defeated Alabama 23-21

Stat to know: Oklahoma had 212 yards of total offense, its fewest in a win since 2001.

What’s next: Saturday vs. Missouri, noon, ABC


Previous ranking: 9

2025 record: 8-2

Week 12 result: Defeated Pittsburgh 37-15

Stat to know: This is Notre Dame’s eighth straight win following its 0-2 start.

What’s next: Saturday vs. Syracuse, 3:30 p.m., NBC


Previous ranking: 4

2025 record: 8-2

Week 12 result: Lost to Oklahoma 23-21

Stat to know: The loss to Oklahoma snapped Alabama’s eight-game win streak.

What’s next: Saturday vs. Eastern Illinois, 2 p.m., SEC Network+


Previous ranking: 12

2025 record: 8-1

Week 12 result: Defeated TCU 44-13

Stat to know: BYU scored on each of its first seven drives against TCU.

What’s next: Saturday at Cincinnati, 8:00 p.m., Fox


Previous ranking: 13

2025 record: 8-2

Week 12 result: Idle

What’s next: Saturday vs. Kentucky, 3:30 p.m., ESPN


Previous ranking: 15

2025 record: 8-2

Week 12 result: Defeated Baylor 55-28

Stat to know: Utah has scored 45 points or more in its past three games.

What’s next: Saturday vs. Kansas State, 4:00 p.m., ESPN2


Previous ranking: 16

2025 record: 8-2

Week 12 result: Defeated NC State 41-7

Stat to know: Miami’s 581 yards against NC State were its most in a conference game since 2020.

What’s next: Saturday at Virginia Tech, noon, ESPN


Previous ranking: 14

2025 record: 9-1

Week 12 result: Defeated Boston College 36-34

Stat to know: Georgia Tech would secure a spot in the ACC title game with a win next week against Pitt.

What’s next: Saturday vs. Pittsburgh, 7:00 p.m., ESPN


Previous ranking: 17

2025 record: 8-2

Week 12 result: Defeated Iowa 26-21

Stat to know: USC has lost six straight games against top 10 opponents, a streak going back to 2019.

What’s next: Saturday at Oregon, 3:30 p.m., CBS


Previous ranking: 10

2025 record: 7-3

Week 12 result: Lost to Georgia 35-10

Stat to know: The loss to Georgia was the fifth consecutive loss against an AP top-five team for Texas.

What’s next: Saturday vs. Arkansas, 3:30 p.m., ABC


Previous ranking: 18

2025 record: 8-2

Week 12 result: Defeated Northwestern 24-22

Stat to know: Michigan has won nine consecutive games against Northwestern.

What’s next: Saturday at Maryland, 4:00 p.m., Big Ten Network


Previous ranking: 20

2025 record: 9-2

Week 12 result: Defeated Duke 34-17

Stat to know: Virginia is 9-1 in its past 10 games against Duke.

What’s next: Nov. 29 vs. Virginia Tech


Previous ranking: 21

2025 record: 7-3

Week 12 result: Defeated New Mexico State 42-9

Stat to know: Tennessee has 434 points this season, its second-most through ten games in school history.

What’s next: Saturday at Florida, 7:30 p.m., ABC


Previous ranking: 24

2025 record: 9-1

Week 12 result: Defeated App State 58-10

Stat to know: JMU has won eight straight since losing to Louisville in Week 2.

What’s next: Saturday vs. Washington State, 1:00 p.m., ESPN+


Previous ranking: NR

2025 record: 9-1

Week 12 result: Defeated UAB 53-24

Stat to know: This is the first time North Texas has been ranked in the AP poll.

What’s next: Saturday at Rice, 7:30 p.m., ESPNU


Previous ranking: NR

2025 record: 7-3

Week 12 result: Defeated Mississippi State 49-27

Stat to know: Missouri’s 49 points against Mississippi State was its sixth-best mark against an SEC opponent since joining the conference in 2012.

What’s next: Saturday at Oklahoma, noon, ABC


Previous ranking: NR

2025 record: 8-2

Week 12 result: Defeated Florida Atlantic 35-24

Stat to know: Tulane is now 2-1 all time against FAU.

What’s next: Saturday at Temple, 3:45 p.m., ESPNU


Previous ranking: NR

2025 record: 8-2

Week 12 result: Idle

What’s next: Saturday vs. TCU, 4:00 p.m., Fox

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