Week 12 Power Rankings: Oklahoma jumps into top 10; three new teams join the list
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3 weeks agoon
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Texas A&M‘s Saturday began with reports about a contract extension for coach Mike Elko, continued with the team falling behind 30-3 to South Carolina on its home field and ended with the team capping the biggest comeback in its history.
Although the Aggies left Kyle Field at 10-0 for the first time since 1992, they have areas to improve as the most important games, including their first College Football Playoff appearance, are ahead. Texas A&M’s defense was inconsistent Saturday and has been for much of the season. Quarterback Marcel Reed showed a bit of everything. Elko certainly will seek steadier play going forward.
Texas A&M isn’t the only top-25 team that needed to brush up on a few things after Week 12. Michigan went to Chicago’s Wrigley Field and committed five turnovers but still outlasted Northwestern 24-22. Speaking of turnovers, Alabama had three in its home loss to Oklahoma, half of its season total coming into the game. The Tide also continue to seek a jolt to their running game.
Ole Miss wriggled free of Florida and won 34-24 in a game in which both fan bases want coach Lane Kiffin, but the Rebels undoubtedly will be working on their red zone offense ahead of the Egg Bowl. Georgia Tech is still alive in the ACC race but has given up a combined 82 points the past two weeks.
Every team appearing in the power rankings — yes, even Ohio State — has areas to upgrade in the final month. Here’s a look at them. — Adam Rittenberg

Previous ranking: 1![]()
The defending national champions have consistently been the most dominant team in college football this season. On Saturday, the Buckeyes easily routed UCLA 48-10, as the Bruins, minus quarterback Nico Iamaleava, managed only two first downs in the first half against Ohio State’s terrifying defense. Given how well the Buckeyes are playing on both sides of the ball, it’s difficult to discern any one area in which Ohio State needs to improve. Instead, the talented Buckeyes simply have to find a way to play up to their capability when they travel to Michigan in two weeks. Over the four straight losses to the Wolverines, Ohio State has inexplicably saved its worst for Michigan, culminating with last year’s stunning loss as a three-touchdown favorite. The unbeaten Buckeyes have already all but clinched a spot in the playoff. But if they want to eradicate the losing streak to Michigan on the way to the postseason, the Buckeyes have to keep their edge against their archrival. — Jake Trotter
Previous ranking: 3
After a tight first half against Wisconsin, Indiana needed no tiptoeing heroics as it pulled away behind Heisman Trophy contender Fernando Mendoza, who completed 22 of 24 passes for 299 yards and four touchdowns. The Hoosiers improved to 11-0 for the first time, a season after starting 10-0 for the first time. Indiana doesn’t have an obvious area for improvement as much as it needs a break, since injuries are piling up. All-Big Ten defensive end Mikail Kamara left Saturday’s game because of a lingering shoulder stinger. Indiana again played without starting guard Drew Evans and wide receiver Elijah Sarratt, both of whom should return for the Big Ten championship game at the latest. After averaging only 2.2 yards per rush against a stout Wisconsin defense, Indiana needs to get its offensive line healthy and its run game rebooted. Fortunately for IU, it has only one game before the Big Ten championship. — Rittenberg
Previous ranking: 2
The Aggies made all kinds of history Saturday in their 31-30 win over South Carolina, including becoming the first SEC team in 287 tries over the past 20 years to erase a 27-point deficit. Marcel Reed had a horrific first half, going 6-of-19 with two interceptions, then was 16-of-20 with three touchdowns in the second half, finishing with 439 yards. It’s fair to say Mike Elko would love to see a little more consistency, but at 10-0 and No. 3 in the CFP rankings, he’s more than happy with the finishes. One puzzling stat: Texas A&M is 134th in red zone scoring defense, allowing opponents to score on 96.6% of trips, yet it has the nation’s top third-down defense with a conversion just 24% of the time. The Aggies get a tune-up against 1-10 Samford this week at Kyle Field before a huge showdown with Texas in Austin on Nov. 28. — Dave Wilson
Previous ranking: 5
The Bulldogs seem to be getting better on defense every week, but there are still improvements to be made. After struggling to sack the quarterback, Georgia had six combined in its past two games against Mississippi State and Texas. The Bulldogs also weren’t very good on third down earlier in the season, but the other Bulldogs and Longhorns were a combined 10-for-28 on third down. Younger players such as Quintavius Johnson and Zayden Walker are getting more snaps up front, and cornerback Ellis Robinson IV has improved after struggling earlier in the season. Linebacker CJ Allen, the Bulldogs’ best defender, injured his left knee against Texas and didn’t return. Allen was scheduled to have an MRI, but he told Smart his knee felt good after the game. — Mark Schlabach
Previous ranking: 6
The Red Raiders blew out another Big 12 foe, rolling to a 48-9 rout of UCF in a home finale in which they led 38-2 at halftime. First-year offensive coordinator Mack Leftwich keeps adding new wrinkles to this offensive attack and found some good answers Saturday for Tech’s struggles with finishing drives in the red zone, including getting speedy receiver Reggie Virgil involved in the run game and unveiling a Wildcat package for Heisman hopeful linebacker Jacob Rodriguez. Quarterback Behren Morton continuing to stack quality starts since returning to the lineup is clearly helping this unit find its rhythm. Now it’s time to chase championships after achieving Texas Tech’s first 10-win season since 2008. — Max Olson
Previous ranking: 7
As electrifying as the Ole Miss offense has been this season, the defense has been inconsistent — particularly in SEC play. That showed itself again in a 34-24 comeback win over Florida on Saturday. Though the Gators have struggled on offense for the bulk of the season, they had success with explosive plays in the first half, as DJ Lagway hurt the Rebels with his arm and legs. Ole Miss tightened up in the second half to pull out a win. But the uneven performance has become a bit of a trend. Ole Miss ranks No. 11 in scoring defense in its SEC games, giving up an average of 25.6 points. Kentucky, Arkansas, Georgia and Florida all scored more points than their season SEC average when they played Ole Miss. Plus, the defense has forced only eight turnovers all season. — Andrea Adelson
Previous ranking: 8
The Ducks got a bit of a tough draw having to play on a Friday night after traveling to Iowa the week before, but their performance did not suffer. Oregon outgained Minnesota by over 300 yards on its way to a dominant 42-13 win over the Gophers. Given that the Ducks were missing key players in wide receiver Dakorien Moore as well as wideout Gary Bryant Jr., the fact that the Oregon offense was still able to produce 510 yards speaks to its depth and talent. The health of those wide receivers will be a crucial part of the Ducks’ stretch run and into the College Football Playoff. Perhaps the only nitpick for Dan Lanning’s team is its red zone defense, which even though it has allowed only 19 trips all season, has also given up 14 touchdowns and only once was able to stop a team from scoring any points — that’s one of the 10 worst marks in the country. That might not mean much (undefeated Texas A&M is also in the bottom 10 in the stat), but as Oregon plays better opponents, it is something to watch. — Paolo Uggetti
Previous ranking: 12
Who expected Oklahoma’s biggest win in years to come in a game in which it had its lowest yardage total (212) in years? The Sooners shined on special teams and defense against Alabama and avoided the big mistakes on offense that normally doom teams on the road. The key now is to get John Mateer and the offense on a similar trajectory for home games against Missouri and LSU that could propel OU into the CFP. Mateer has only two touchdown passes in his past five starts and has eclipsed 200 passing yards only once in the past four games. Although Mateer had a magical 20-yard touchdown run at Alabama, Oklahoma averaged just 2.6 yards per carry. A stronger offensive performance is needed to finish off a 10-2 regular season. — Rittenberg
Previous ranking: 4
Coach Kalen DeBoer’s imperfect team had gotten through the SEC gauntlet largely because of how it started games and how it took care of the ball. Alabama had only six turnovers, tied for third fewest nationally, and had outscored opponents 179-71 in the first half of games. But the Tide committed three turnovers in Saturday’s loss to Oklahoma, including an 87-yard Ty Simpson interception returned for a touchdown that put the Sooners up 10-0. Despite outgaining Oklahoma 406-212, Alabama’s inability to hang onto the ball or sustain drives in the second half led to its first home loss under DeBoer. The Tide also must brush up their special teams play after a fumble on a punt return and a bad operation on a field goal attempt at the end of the first half. The run game remains an area of concern, as Alabama averaged only 2.4 yards per rush. — Rittenberg
Previous ranking: 9
For all intents and purposes, Notre Dame’s evaluation period is over. It closed out the meat of its season with an emphatic 37-15 win at Pitt in which CJ Carr threw a pair of touchdowns, Jeremiyah Love cemented himself as a Heisman contender, the special teams was big, and the defense held the Panthers to only 219 yards of offense, an 0-for-13 mark on third down and racked up four sacks. It was a near perfect performance by the Irish. Now, they wrap up with games against Boston College and Stanford in which they should be heavily favored and … they wait. Assuming Notre Dame finishes the season 10-2, it should be in prime position for a playoff bid, but with so much still up in the air — how many SEC teams get in?; is the Big Ten getting at least three teams?; will there be an upset in the Big 12?; does the committee reconsider Miami? — nothing is guaranteed. The best thing that can happen to the Irish down the stretch is a lot of chaos elsewhere. — David Hale
Previous ranking: 10
The Cougars’ 44-13 win against TCU was exactly what they needed after last week’s dismal loss to Texas Tech. BYU has won a lot of close games this season, but for a team that could be in the discussion for the final at-large spot, style points now matter. This is a team that has to make its case to the committee, and comprehensive wins — like the one against TCU — are obviously much more effective in that process. With Cincinnati and UCF left before a likely rematch with Texas Tech in the Big 12 title game, BYU needs two more wins like this one to help make its case. — Kyle Bonagura
Previous ranking: 13
Utah’s playoff hopes took a hit Saturday when Oklahoma upset Alabama, ensuring the Utes won’t jump the Sooners in the updated playoff rankings. For the Utes to qualify for the playoff, they are going to need some help, and now an Oklahoma loss to either Missouri or LSU is essential. All Utah can do now is continue its trajectory. It has been dominant most of the season and now has Kansas State and Kansas left to further bolster its résumé. — Bonagura
Previous ranking: 15
The Hurricanes got their offense back on track in a 41-7 win over NC State gaining 581 yards as Carson Beck threw for 291 yards and their running backs combined for 214 yards. But one of the biggest issues that has plagued Miami — particularly in losses — has been penalties. Miami remains one of the most penalized teams in the country — ranking No. 94 in all of FBS for penalty yards this season and tied for No. 119 in average penalties per game (7.7). Against NC State, Miami essentially hit that average, with eight penalties for 75 yards — including one that nullified a touchdown in the third quarter. It didn’t cost Miami because it was so dominant against the Wolfpack, but there is no doubt the Hurricanes have to work on this area as they try to make a push for an at-large berth in the CFP. — Adelson
Previous ranking: 17
The Trojans needed a win to keep their CFP hopes alive and though they trailed Iowa 21-10 at halftime, their defense woke up and was able to shut out the Hawkeyes in the second half and give USC a 26-21 victory that Lincoln Riley described as a “culture win” for the program. Even if he was as ebullient as he ever has been as USC’s head coach, Riley did not mince words about the first-half performance, saying his team didn’t play “worth a damn in the first half.” The Trojans’ defense, in particular, has not gotten off to great starts in several games, giving up explosive plays and putting USC in a hole early. With Oregon looming next week in what might be the biggest game yet in Riley’s tenure, the Trojans cannot afford to keep starting off slowly if they want a chance to upset the Ducks and pave their way to their first CFP appearance. — Uggetti
Previous ranking: 16
The good news for the Yellow Jackets is that in the chaotic ACC, they control their destiny. If they win this week against Pitt, they punched their card for the ACC championship game. Win there, and they’re in the playoff. But those are two big “ifs” given the way the Jackets’ defense has played of late. In the past two games combined, Georgia Tech has given up more than 1,100 yards and 82 points. NC State and Boston College combined to average 7.24 yards per rush on designed runs in those games, with nearly as many runs of at least 10 yards (seven) as runs stopped for a loss or no gain (eight). The past two opponents for Pitt and Georgia Tech have not shown elite run games, so perhaps there’s some hope. But NC State and BC were hardly world-beaters either, and they had their way with the Jackets’ defense. Brent Key & Co. need to get things figured out on that side of the ball ASAP — or risk blowing a wide-open shot at the playoff. — Hale
Previous ranking: 14
If the Commodores are going to win their next two games against Kentucky (home) and Tennessee (road) to stay in the hunt for a CFP bid, they’re going to have to play better on defense than they did in their previous two games. In a 34-31 loss at Texas and 45-38 victory in overtime against Auburn, the Commodores surrendered 72 points and nearly 1,000 yards of offense. That isn’t good enough. The Longhorns went 7-for-11 on third down, and Arch Manning threw for 328 yards with three touchdowns. Auburn quarterback Ashton Daniels, starting for only the second time, threw for 353 yards and two touchdowns and ran for 89 yards and two scores. Obviously, this past week’s open date couldn’t have come at a better time for Vandy’s defense. — Schlabach
Previous ranking: 11
Where to begin? The Longhorns’ deflating loss at Georgia was another disappointing performance in a season full of them. Quarterback Arch Manning played better in recent weeks, but his mechanics still aren’t great. He completed 27 of 43 passes for 251 yards with one touchdown. He made a poor decision on a pass that was intercepted in the red zone and was sacked three times. The Longhorns dropped more than a few passes and were penalized nine times for 58 yards. Georgia limited Texas to only 23 rushing yards on 17 attempts (including sacks), the third straight game in which the Bulldogs held the Longhorns to 35 rushing yards or fewer. With three losses, Texas probably won’t make the CFP, but it can spoil rival Texas A&M’s SEC title hopes by knocking off the Aggies in Austin on Nov. 28. — Schlabach
Previous ranking: 18![]()
The Wolverines remain alive in the playoff picture, but they have to clean up the turnovers. Michigan escaped Wrigley Field with a 24-22 victory over Northwestern, despite coughing the ball up five times, including on three consecutive drives in the fourth quarter. Freshman Bryce Underwood threw two bad interceptions, then tried to hand the ball off too high on fourth-and-1, leading to a Northwestern fumble recovery. Underwood did bounce back to guide the Wolverines on a winning drive, capped with Dominic Zvada‘s 31-yard field goal as time expired. The Wolverines were able to overcome the turnovers against Northwestern. But they won’t be able to survive that again in two weeks when top-ranked Ohio State visits Ann Arbor. — Trotter
Previous ranking: 21
The Cavaliers played their most complete game of the season in a 34-17 win over Duke, and reestablished their run game, gaining 224 yards. But coach Tony Elliott has emphasized learning how to finish games, and that is certainly an area to work on during the open date — as they face rival Virginia Tech on the final weekend of the regular season. A win clinches a spot in the ACC title game. Virginia took a 31-3 lead into the fourth quarter, but Duke scored two touchdowns in less than a minute — one off a pick-six — that gave the Blue Devils new life. Elliott noticed his team relaxed for just a bit with the big lead. But he also noticed after Duke made it a two-score game, his team regrouped to finish out the victory. Virginia cannot afford any letups against the Hokies — Virginia Tech is in the midst of a tough season, but the Hokies have won 19 of the past 20 games in the rivalry. — Adelson
Previous ranking: 22
Tennessee rolled to a 42-9 win over New Mexico State on Saturday; the Volunteers averaged 6.3 yards per carry with a nicely balanced 219 passing yards and 194 rushing yards. But the Vols did give up 313 passing yards, which didn’t alleviate doubts about the defense. It picked off two passes, made seven tackles for loss and forced four turnovers on downs, but defense has been a major issue all season, and this game only alleviated that concern so much. Beating Florida and especially Vanderbilt to finish the season will require more stops than the Vols tend to make. — Bill Connelly
Previous ranking: NR
The Dukes put together their most complete performance to date in a 58-10 victory over App State on Saturday. Their Alonza Barnett III-led offense got on a run of nine consecutive scoring drives and put up 627 total yards, and the defense gave up a mere 29 yards through three quarters and held Sun Belt leading rusher Rashod Dubinion to a season-low 25 yards. After their biggest blowout win in Sun Belt play since moving up to FBS in 2022, Bob Chesney’s squad has won eight in a row. If this team can stay healthy and maintain this momentum against Washington State and Coastal Carolina, it will continue playing its way into serious CFP consideration. — Olson
Previous ranking: 24
What a season it has been for the Mean Green, with their high-flying offense led by Drew Mestemaker, the overnight sensation who didn’t even start in high school. Behind coach Eric Morris, North Texas is 9-1 with the country’s top scoring offense (45.3 points per game) and Mestemaker has thrown for 3,000 yards, with 23 touchdowns (four more rushing) and four interceptions. But the run defense has been a bit of an Achilles’ heel, including giving up more than 300 yards to three different teams this season: Army (387), Navy (311) and South Florida (306, in its only loss of the season). As long as the Mean Green can keep slinging it against Rice and Temple, they’ll stay in CFP contention. Rice, in particular, poses a threat, averaging 211 rushing yards. — Wilson
Previous ranking: NR
Two pick-sixes and an incredible day from Ahmad Hardy — 25 carries, 300 yards, 3 touchdowns — gave Missouri a comfortable 49-27 win over Mississippi State on Saturday. The Tigers averaged 8.0 yards per play to the Bulldogs’ 3.8, and they led by double digits for the final 20:56 of the game. But with a trip to Oklahoma on deck, the areas for improvement are pretty obvious. Oklahoma has one of the best run defenses in the country, and assuming Mizzou quarterback Beau Pribula isn’t yet ready to return from a dislocated ankle, freshman Matt Zollers will face both the most hostile crowd and defense he has seen. He did what he needed to do against MSU, completing 8 of 15 passes for 112 yards, 2 touchdowns and 1 overthrown interception, but the degree of difficulty will rise considerably in Norman. — Connelly
Previous ranking: 23
The Hawkeyes had won 46 out of their past 47 games when leading by double digits at halftime. But Iowa failed to score after halftime, and USC rallied for a 26-21 victory. Second-half scoring has doomed Iowa all season. In its four losses, the Hawkeyes have combined to score only 17 points in the second half. They lost those four games — to Iowa State, Indiana, Oregon and USC — by a total margin of 15 points. With a slightly more effective second-half offense, Iowa could have easily been in the thick of the Big Ten title picture, as well as the playoff. Those hopes are now gone. And the Hawkeyes will have to find a way to score more after halftime to finish with at least eight wins for a fifth straight season. — Trotter
Previous ranking: NR
The Illini haven’t had the breakthrough season they envisioned with three losses, but they still can finish with consecutive seasons of eight or more wins for the first time since 1989 and 1990. Illinois will be favored against both Wisconsin this week and Northwestern next week, and it will look to build on its best defensive effort in Big Ten play, holding Maryland to six points and 293 total yards in Saturday’s win. The Illini defense has had some difficult moments, especially on the road, giving up more than 250 passing yards six times and twice surrendering five passing touchdowns (Indiana and Washington). Wisconsin and Northwestern aren’t prolific passing offenses, so Illinois has a chance to finish strong. The Illini also must push for more takeaways after recording only one in the past four games and 10 all season. — Rittenberg
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The hope and heroism of Army safety Larry Pickett Jr.
Published
4 mins agoon
December 10, 2025By
admin

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Ryan HockensmithDec 10, 2025, 08:30 AM ET
Close- Ryan Hockensmith is a Penn State graduate who joined ESPN in 2001. He is a survivor of bacterial meningitis, which caused him to have multiple amputation surgeries on his feet. He is a proud advocate for those with disabilities and addiction issues. He covers everything from the NFL and UFC to pizza-chucking and analysis of Tom Cruise’s running ability.
HE IS HALF ASLEEP when he feels his dad slam the brakes of his van. Larry Pickett Jr.’s head darts up from the back seat, and he squints his eyes to try to understand the mayhem on the road in front of him.
Smoke rising. Cars stopped. Wires down. People standing around. A man stuck in a car — is he alive? Sparks buzz underneath his vehicle.
It’s midnight on Aug. 31, a few miles south of West Point, New York, where Pickett is a sophomore safety on the Army football team. About 20 different things are happening at once, with just enough headlights aimed in opposite directions to make it more blurred than illuminated in the cool late summer air. Fifty yards away, a closed Dunkin’ store provides a slight orange and pink tint in the background.
All six people in the van — Pickett, his mom, dad, two sisters and his girlfriend — are racing to synthesize what happened before they arrived. This is one of those rare moments in life that people stumble into, where they have to decide whether to run toward danger or stay safe on the perimeter.
Why isn’t anybody helping the driver? Why are they just standing there?
Pickett’s brain is different. He wanted to be in the Army when he was a preschooler, wearing camo for Halloween and watching “Saving Private Ryan” with his mom. He wasn’t drawn to the idea of war; he loved the military’s structure and insistence on thinking of others before oneself. So, when he had offers from schools such as Duke, NC State and South Carolina near his hometown of Raleigh, North Carolina, he chose Army to try to do something of maximum service with his life, as his parents and his Christian faith preach.
The whole scene is coming into focus now. A man clearly hit a utility pole, causing the power lines to fall and begin sparking about 10,000 volts of electricity into the air near the driver’s side door.
Pickett sits up in his seat but doesn’t say anything. Then a familiar voice cuts through the air: “Larry, you have to get that man out of the car,” his mom says. Pickett, 20, streaks out of the van, toward the car, the power line flopping and spraying electricity near the car.
He didn’t know it at the time, but in about 60 seconds, all four tires will pop, and the car will explode in flames.
WHEN PICKETT GETS to the car, the man isn’t moving. He’s staring off into space, blinking but frozen. Pickett notices a power line directly under the driver’s side, and he pauses for a moment. He feels heat pouring from inside of the car and he can’t help but wonder if the man is being electrocuted.
He hesitates for a moment, then says a prayer before he reaches his hands under the man’s armpits.
Phew. No jolt.
The car has become what electricity expert John Averrett calls a “Faraday cage,” which is a structure meant to conduct electricity — even from a lightning strike — without harming the person inside. The rubber tires can dump the voltage from the metal car into the ground without shocking the person inside.
Averrett, an electrical engineer who is licensed in 20 states and has done energy work for several NASA shuttles, has actually seen cases where people in cars think they are OK, then get out of the car and are killed by the voltage in the ground.
When Averrett analyzed the circumstances around what the Picketts encountered, he says that the scene was so hazardous that even if police or fire had gotten there first, they would have likely had to just watch the car go up in flames. “It’s in their training to not go within about 30 feet of potential live wires before the electricity is turned off for the entire area,” he says.
He pauses for a moment and then says, “If people knew more about electricity, they probably wouldn’t want it in their homes.”
Pickett feels nothing, though, as he grabs the driver’s body from behind the steering wheel. The man, David Denton, is lodged and motionless, and Pickett quickly realizes as he yanks on his body that he isn’t going to be able to maneuver the man out of the car and not hit the wire.
He pulls again, managing to get Denton angled out the side of the car, but he isn’t sure if he will be able to lug him any farther. The entire car seems to be getting hotter by the second. He feels like the clock is ticking down fast and he needs help.
That’s when he realizes someone is beside him at the exact moment he needs him. It’s one of his heroes — his dad, Larry Pickett, Sr.
THE HELP KICK-STARTS Pickett Jr. He muscles up and pulls the man’s torso out of the car. Larry Sr. gets under the man’s legs, but he immediately loses his footing and falls to his hip on the ground, dangerously close to the downed power line.
But he manages to scramble back to his feet and help carry the man across the street as another tire pops. “The best way to describe it is that it was like there were fireworks going off,” Pickett Jr. says.
His mom, Shawnonne, gets his 15-year-old sisters, Lauren and Olivia, into the van, as Lauren films most of the rescue. The scene is terrifying, even from a distance, but Shawnonne is heard on video urging them on.
Three decades earlier, she met Larry Sr. in what would be a great rom-com setup. Larry, 17, was riding in a friend’s car on Dec. 23, 1996, when a beautiful 15-year-old girl named Shawnonne (pronounced Shuh-known) Taylor made her way through a crosswalk in front of them. He felt like he was meant to talk to her, but his friend drove off before he could. An hour later, when he ran into her on another street in Raleigh, he felt like fate had swiped right on them.
Next, he pulled off an approach that will forever be a part of their family lore. He introduced himself to her, but instead of asking for her number, he wrote down his and handed it to her. She thought he was very good-looking and appreciated that he didn’t ask for her number — she considered it gentlemanly to leave her feeling no pressure to ever call. And the fact that he had a Nokia cellphone certainly didn’t hurt.
So, she did call — for 55 seconds. Back then, Pickett had a cellphone plan that allowed for one free minute before the rate jumped to 99 cents per minute. So, she started calling him to say she was home, then he would hang up and find a landline to call her back. Their relationship was forged on those calls, one 55-second “Hey, I’m home” at a time.
They started dating, and they haven’t stopped. They’re that couple who won’t stop saying nice things about each other, even if their spouse isn’t around. They go to church together and insist on a date night every week, usually to a local Steelers bar and restaurant, Overtime Sports Pub. Shawnonne’s brother, Ike Taylor, won two Super Bowls as a corner in Pittsburgh, so Pickett Sr. became an honorary Steelers fan. He even has a tattoo of the date they met and the GPS coordinates of the crosswalk. Everyone should love the way they do.
On the night of the accident, it’s her voice propelling son and husband along. She yells from the van as Larry Sr. and LJ (that’s what everybody in the family calls Larry Jr.) drag Denton across the road. Both of them are shocked at the visual of Denton’s eyes — open but empty, his arm dangling and scraping across the pavement of Route 9W. Police and fire crews arrive a few minutes later and set up a perimeter as they work to get the power company to shut down electricity to that corner of the town.
In the background, the car goes up in flames, all four tires melting down until the metal touches the ground. That amount of heat, Averrett says, will cause an explosion in just a few seconds, and that’s what happens. With the power off 20 minutes later, the local fire department is able to douse the flames before they reach a nearby propane tank.
Averrett is at a complete loss for how Denton and the Picketts survived such a dangerous scene. On a Zoom call, he just looks off into the distance and says, “You always hear that God has his hand on a lot of things. This may have been one of them.”
A month after the accident, Shawnonne sits beside Lauren and Olivia across the table from Larry Sr. and me at Overtime Sports Pub. I run through all the different ways that that night could have gone horribly wrong. All of the Picketts are attentive people — when someone is speaking, they never seem to be waiting to respond. They leave space for whatever someone is saying to them.
There’s silence when I get through with my list of terrible possibilities. A few seconds go by and nobody says anything. The girls’ eyes move from mom and dad, and then over to me. At first, I couldn’t quite decipher what the looks mean.
Then Larry Sr. speaks. “I’ve had people say we should have waited for the police to arrive,” he says. “But there’s no way he would have gotten out of that car.”
He’s not dramatic when he says it. It’s very monotone, like he’s reading off road directions. I stare over at Shawnonne, and so do the girls. I’m expecting her to have some second thoughts, to contemplate the idea that maybe in retrospect, they might have been a little more cautious.
But that’s not how the Picketts walk through the world. What happened that night was what needed to be done, and so it was done. They believe the right thing can sometimes be scary, but that’s because it’s the right thing, there shall be no handwringing, regardless of the outcome.
In a slow but emphatic voice, Shawnonne finally says, “I would change nothing about it,” and the whole table nods.
NEARLY 10 MINUTES after arriving at the scene, the Picketts sit across the street with Denton. He’s wide awake now but completely woozy. He’s on his butt on the ground, his back against Pickett Jr.’s legs.
“What car was that?” Denton asks.
“Your car,” Pickett Sr. says.
“That wasn’t my car.” Denton argues.
“It’s your car,” Pickett Jr. insists.
“You got to be kidding me,” Denton says.
They go back and forth some more with Denton, who seems disoriented and in disbelief. The entire time, he rests with Pickett Jr. as his backstop alongside the road. Eventually paramedics arrive and cart off Denton, who has only minor bumps and bruises. The Picketts have an Airbnb nearby, so they turn the van around and they all go home.
For the next few hours, adrenaline still surges through the entire family. They talk about the accident and try to piece together what must have happened. Their guess is about the same as what the facts ended up being: Denton, a 66-year-old MTA worker from New York City, had been at a party near West Point. On the trip home, he missed a turn on Route 9W, which is a treacherous, twisty four-lane road that runs beside the Hudson River to Army. Denton, who hadn’t been drinking, had driven straight through a curve into a telephone pole. But now he is going to be fine.
“I’m just thankful that we were in the right place at the right time,” Pickett Jr. says. “A lot of different things had to go right that night for it to work out the way that it did. I was just a small part of what happened.”
Larry Sr. is a wizard with cameras and video editing (he owns a multimedia company in Raleigh), so he takes the footage that Lauren had shot earlier in the night and makes a Facebook post before they go to bed. He keeps telling Pickett Jr. that he is a hero, and his son just smiles and shakes his head.
He’s a stoic 6-1 young man who is 195 pounds of “yes, sir” and “thank you, ma’am” and might very well be a starting safety for Army a year or two from now. But he is also very warm, with a smile that is easily accessible. Teammates gently goof on him for being so straightlaced, like the time players went around the room announcing their celebrity crush. When it was Pickett’s turn, he said, “My girlfriend,” and everybody yelled, “Shut up!” at him.
“She is my celebrity crush,” he insists.
Pickett Jr. continues to try to stiff-arm the compliments as he turns in for the night. But Larry Sr. is just too proud to not tell his son — and the world — what an awesome kid he has watched grow up. By the time Pickett’s head hits the pillow at around 3 a.m., he’s done cringing at his family for the night.
His last thought is, Wow, that really happened tonight.
Little does he know that as he brushes his teeth, a few million people around the world have begun to go wild over the Gen Zer who saved a guy’s life.
KIDS THESE DAYS, RIGHT? Perhaps no comment summarizes today’s youth better than this popular quote: “The children now love luxury. They have bad manners and contempt for authority. They show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise. Children are now tyrants.”
Here’s the thing, though — that quote is from 1907, and it’s not even about the young people of 1907. That quote is pulled from a college dissertation written by a 24-year-old college student named Kenneth John Freeman, and he was actually summarizing how Plato, Aristotle, Socrates and the ancient Greeks panicked about the lazy, entitled, luxury-loving next generation of young people. Turns out, middle-aged humans have been using the same critiques for at least the last 2,500 or so years.
This age-old generational divide is, of course, a two-way street. Aristotle’s daughter was probably rolling her eyes as he told her to go touch some grass, then responding with her own version of “OK, boomer.”
But the Greeks never had smartphones, you’re probably saying. And that’s a fair point. Recent studies are showing that the digital world — specifically social media — might indeed have unprecedented ugly effects on brains, especially young brains. “There are reasons to be concerned,” says Maria Rosario de Guzman, a professor of child, youth and family studies at the University of Nebraska. “But it’s important to remember that we don’t know yet. Worrying about technology’s effects on kids is certainly not new.”
Rosario de Guzman cites remarkably similar moral panics over the past few centuries from middle-aged people about the next generation’s relationship with new inventions. The English freaked out in the late 1700s over the incredible brain rot that novels were creating for kids. Americans then had now-hilarious meltdowns in the 1930s over the dangers of the radio, followed by the same freak-outs in the 1950s about TV, the 1980s about Nintendos, the 1990s about the internet and now social media for the foreseeable future.
British psychology researcher Amy Orben recently coined a term for this consistent societal dread: The Sisyphean Cycle of Technology Panics, named for the Greek mythological character doomed to an eternity of pushing a rock up a mountain only to have it roll back down over and over again.
Rosario de Guzman is one of many experts who share those worries but also say to take a deep breath and try to zoom out to see the whole picture. Kids will always be one big sauce, a blend of ingredients that has, for centuries now, mostly ended up coming out just fine. “As we discuss all the problems facing this generation, just try to realize there are things to celebrate, too,” she says.
Touching grass is a foundational principle at Little People Preschool in Raleigh, where a young boy named Larry Pickett Jr. enrolled 17 years ago. This is the Pickett family business now — Shawnonne has gone from a teacher when Pickett Jr. was a toddler to co-owning the school with her husband. Larry Sr. joined her after a very successful 20-year career in auto sales. They loved the school so much that they had to buy it.
They had big ideas for the preschool. They wanted the kids to be around nature every single day, so they got two goats and a bunch of chickens and ducks that the students had to go feed and take care of daily. They also started growing flowers and vegetables in the backyard of the school with hopes of the kids tending to the garden themselves. Their goal was to be able to grow, harvest and cook some of their own vegetables for school lunches. Larry Sr. says that when former North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper visited the school in 2023, Cooper toured the outdoor section and said, “I wish this place was around when my kids were in school.”
The biggest idea of all, though, was a different way to work with parents. On tours of the preschool, Shawnonne makes sure to let parents know that they have high standards at Little People for them, too. She tells them that any time there is a behavioral issue, the Picketts will want to discuss with them their attitude, not just the kids’ behavior. They truly believe that when they see a kid struggling, acting out or attached to devices, the parents should be held accountable, first and foremost.
“Kids are innocent and hopeful,” Shawnonne says. “Why are they trying to fill space in their lives with screens? That’s on us as adults. They have only been clouded with whatever you provided for them.”
If the Pickett kids are the end result of Little People Preschool’s “start with the parents” brand of raising kids, then it might be time to franchise the business nationwide. Larry Jr., Lauren and Olivia Pickett are all ridiculously nice and respectful straight-A students. Pickett Jr. calls home from West Point every evening to say goodnight to his 15-year-old sisters. Lauren loves drawing and the theater and thinks she wants to be involved in show business someday. Olivia is a little more reserved than her sister, but her parents believe she will be a fierce attorney someday. They’re all proud Little People Preschool graduates.
“My parents have always had a great passion to just help the kids of our generation — help nurture us, love us, help the kids love each other,” Larry Jr. says, “so that hopefully we can grow up in this world and go and do great things as we share that same love and compassion toward other people.”
The 2025-26 class of tiny humans at Little People Preschool are 100%, not from concentrate organic joy. Knox, Kylie, Nairobi and Ryley follow Miss Shameeka into the animal pen, and the goats, Ava and Goatie, come trucking out to greet them with a blast of bleats. The kids all scream, but it’s not a scared scream — more like exuberant kids if Mickey Mouse or Moana walked into the room. They feed the animals every day, even on this sloppy Wednesday in October. Miss Shameeka does most of the actual feeding as the kids goof around in the pen and pet the animals. They are close to nature and loving it, and Mr. Larry still belly laughs as he watches from the side of the pen as the kids jump around near the goats, ducks and chickens. The grass is wet and muddy on this day. But they’re touching it.
The 4-year-olds all go inside a few minutes later for a math lesson that Miss Shawnonne is going to teach. She comes in with one onion and a basket of tomatoes that she had gotten at a local farmer’s market a few days before. She puts the basket down and asks the kids to each pick out a tomato as she sets down a scale on the table.
The kids take turns grabbing a tomato. Then Miss Shawnonne wants them to compare the sizes of their tomato with the onion.
“I love tomatoes,” a little girl says. “They make ketchup!”
Miss Shameeka and Shawnonne both nod their heads as they set up a scale.
“But onions are nasty,” one boy says. Other kids all agree.
“They do have a strong flavor,” Miss Shawnonne says with a smile. “But they also are a part of lots of meals where you probably don’t even notice that they’re in there.”
For the next 15 minutes, the kids all make their predictions about weights for the onion and tomatoes, and there’s more joy and open-mindedness in this small classroom than in any screeching think piece about the participation trophy generation on the horizon.
After the lesson, Miss Shawnonne takes the vegetables into a small kitchen area outside the classroom. She washes them, then chops up and starts to fry everything — one “nasty” onion and about 10 tomatoes.
While the vegetables cook, Miss Shawnonne talks about how optimistic she is about the future. She believes these precious little humans will be awesome big people someday. “They’re going to be OK,” she says. “But we have to do our jobs as adults, too.”
Another 15 minutes later, the pasta and sauce are ready. The kids sit in their tiny chairs, with their tiny silverware and bowls, and they eat the lunch they had helped to make. They love their sauce, and maybe we should, too.
AT BREAKFAST THE morning after the accident, Pickett Jr.’s phone lights up with text messages in a group chat of Army defensive backs. A few of the guys had seen the video as it circulated overnight, and word quickly spread to the coaching staff.
By the time Army has a team meeting that Sunday afternoon, everybody knows — though Pickett is caught off guard when head coach Jeff Monken starts the meeting by saying, “It looks like we’ve got a hometown hero on this team!” Everybody whoops and hollers, and Pickett stands up to tell the story of what happened.
The coaches notice that when he tells the story, he recites the same basic facts that the video shows and that his dad described in the Facebook post. But they spot that his version emphasizes his dad’s role, and that Pickett’s dad had emphasized Pickett Jr.’s role. “That tells you why Larry is the person that he is,” Monken says. “They went together, then his dad took no credit. Then Larry tells the story and credits his dad.”
The next few months are a wild ride for the Picketts. News outlets across the U.S. write about them. And the whole family flies to Long Island, New York, for the Fox Nation Patriot Awards in November, where LJ is honored as a hero. He accepts the award and speaks for about a minute, thanking his family and Army.
At the end, the three Fox hosts announce there is a surprise guest: “David Denton, come on out.”
The crowd roars as Denton comes on stage and says to Pickett Jr., “You saved my life. God sent you as an angel that night.”
Denton then walks to the microphone. “If it wasn’t for him, I would not be here today,” Denton says. “And that lesson taught me a lot. … I’m always going to be in my life out there helping other people.
“I appreciate you. I thank you. Such a selfless act.”
ON NOV. 10, a week after visiting Pickett Jr. at West Point, I drive my daughter and her boyfriend to New York City for a Broadway show. They’re both awesome kids, high school seniors with big hearts and bright futures. They make me feel the same optimism as the Pickett family about the next generation.
But they’re also teenagers who speak a foreign language to a 48-year-old like me. For the first 30 minutes of the two-hour trip, I try to listen and participate in the conversation. There is talk of group texts, other group texts about those group texts, people liking Instagram posts but not liking others, people being “sus” or “crashing out” and a situation that required my daughter to say several times, with authority, “Facts.” (I believe that means something is, like, extremely true.) At one point, I suggest a pizza place in NYC where we could eat, and her boyfriend says, “Good shout,” which apparently means a teenager likes what you just said.
A few minutes later, my daughter starts playing videos from a kid on Instagram who has 420,000 followers who watch him go to stores and restaurants that are about to close for the night. He then says, “Let’s watch the lights turn off.”
Then the lights turn off.
That’s it. That’s the bit.
If there were a breathalyzer for having too much teenager nonsense in your bloodstream, I just flew past the legal limit.
I think, I’m out. I can’t listen to this.
So I put in my AirPods to listen to my very smart, important podcasts about, uh, MMA and the TV show “Survivor.”
But my mind gradually drifts from listening to a preview of UFC 322 back to the Larry Pickett Jr. story. I keep trying to get my head around what I want this story to mean. I want to talk about the incident itself with care, because, let’s be honest, not everybody should just read about him and decide to run into burning buildings. But we could all probably do a little more in our daily lives to make this world a better place for the kids we dump on all the time.
Or maybe I’m overcomplicating things? Maybe this is just a story about an impressive young person who did a beautiful thing, and that’s it. Perhaps this is a simple story that puts some optimism into the world about selfless young people.
As I drive, I keep coming back to something Shawnonne Pickett said at the Steelers bar about how when adults rail against kids these days, they’re often pointing fingers with no real good-faith purpose. “If everybody who said those things did something that day to enrich a young person’s life, can you imagine that world?” she says.
I actually can’t, I think. It feels like pessimism about kids, and the future is being implanted into my middle-aged brain every week, which allows me to blamelessly ascend to the same perch that Socrates once occupied, putting down the next generation because it might make me feel better about the life I have lived.
That abruptly brings me back to this moment in the car. My daughter and her boyfriend have drifted back to their devices, silently scrolling while I am disengaged listening to my podcasts. In the Picketts’ minds, that is not giving the kids something productive to fill the space. How could I whine later that my kids’ faces are glued to screens if I tune them out?
Right about then, I pull onto the Saw Mill River Parkway, a twisty four-lane road that cuts down toward the Bronx and Manhattan. It’s one of those roads that has straight stretches where everybody’s going 70, then a mile with three turns and a red light where traffic slows to 25.
Sort of like 9W, near West Point.
My daughter’s boyfriend makes a comment about how short the on-ramps are for the road, and my daughter chimes in that she doesn’t love this road and never wants to drive on it. I take out my AirPods and jump into the conversation, trying to be present with them. We talk together for a few minutes, laughing and enjoying ourselves.
Then it happens.
Cars swerving. Horns. Smoke. A big truck with its four-ways on. Frantic brake lights. Shattered glass. A car on its roof, still rocking. A woman running.
The accident must have begun 10 seconds before I get there.
I’m ashamed to admit it, but my first thought is, Damn, we are making really good time.
But my brain has been Pickett-pilled just enough that my second thought is a little less selfish. I veer off the road and park 20 feet from the crash. A black pickup truck stops in front of me as I turn toward my daughter and boyfriend to say, “No matter what, stay in the car.” I don’t tell her to do this, but my daughter dials 911.
The guy in the truck gets to the car first. The woman who ran from the driver’s side is sitting in the grass. She’s bleeding from her lip and wrist.
“Is there anybody else in the car?” he yells over the whir of cars still buzzing by. She doesn’t answer. She seems so shaken sitting on the ground beside the wreck.
We go over to the passenger side to try to open the door. It’s wedged into the pavement, the car’s weight pressing down on the door. There’s smoky air all over, so it’s impossible to see inside. I grab a hold of the door handle and yank as hard as I can. It makes a hideous cloying noise as the metal grinds against the road. But it starts to open, crushing pieces of broken glass as it slowly opens.
Oh no…
There’s an older woman, about 70, hanging upside down, her seat belt suspending her face down. The other guy runs to get a knife from his truck so we can cut her out of there. The air is tangy and gross — it’s from the airbags, not a fire.
I have to reach under her body to try to unlock the seat belt, and my face goes past hers. She’s looking out into nowhere, unblinking, and her forehead has blood all over it. That visual haunts me then and now, this poor person prone in the air, bleeding. Her arms are dangling, and I don’t see her blink.
She might already be gone.
I reach through and fumble at the seat belt. But her weight is so heavy that the belt is stretched taut. I lay down on the ground, the glass pieces poking into the knees of my jeans, and I get a shoulder under her body, just enough to take some pressure off the seat belt. After a second or two, I feel the click of the belt and I’m under her body enough that when she falls, I’m able to help her body flutter to the ground. I roll her onto her side, then to her butt.
She just blinked. Thank God. She’s moving. She’s alive.
The other guy gets back and grabs her legs. I take her shoulders, and we lug her over beside her daughter at the side of the road.
About two minutes later, a police officer and an EMT show up. They barely speak. They just go to work. Everybody seems fine. The car isn’t on fire, so this isn’t even remotely close to what the Picketts ran into. We’ve all convened in the grass near the older woman, who is now wrapped into several bright silver foil-ish warming sheets that the EMT provided. The daughter, who is maybe 40 years old, seems so relieved. She is dabbing blood off her lip, but she keeps saying thank you to everyone sitting nearby.
“Everything is OK now,” I say.
“I know,” she says back.
It’s been less than five minutes but feels like a lifetime. I’m able to stand back and watch as others show up to help. The adrenaline is wearing off a bit, so I can feel a bunch of small abrasions in my hands and legs from laying in the broken glass. Nothing serious.
The police officer is walking around surveying the scene as cars whiz by. Occasionally, a passing car hits some debris and causes a really jarring clank or crunch noise.
A woman is crouching behind the passenger, propping her up on the ground as the driver comes over and says that the older woman is her mom. Another woman appears out of nowhere with blue rubber gloves on — she says she’s a nurse and she starts wrapping the daughter’s hand in gauze.
The real hero might have been the guy with the truck, and the blinking lights a football field away. He had been right behind the car when it rolled, and he slowed to a stop and put his four-ways on — he essentially shut down traffic and prevented untold havoc behind the single-car accident.
The police officer eventually comes over and tells us all we can go. He makes a comment about how it’s probably safer if people clear out from the scene.
I look back at my car, and my daughter and her boyfriend are staring out the back window. I have a brief moment of panic.
Was it a bad idea to stop? I mean, I have two teenagers in the car, one of whom isn’t my kid.
As I watch this ragtag collection of strangers all pick themselves up off the ground, I’m struck by the humor of all of us crouched down, touching grass together. To this day, I don’t know their names. I don’t know what they do for a living. I don’t know what they all risked by trying to do the right thing.
And yet, I feel comfortable saying they all would probably agree with the words of Shawnonne Pickett: We would change nothing about it.
Sports
Sources: Vols eyeing Penn State’s Knowles as DC
Published
10 mins agoon
December 10, 2025By
admin

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Adam RittenbergDec 10, 2025, 03:52 PM ET
Close- College football reporter; joined ESPN in 2008. Graduate of Northwestern University.
Tennessee is targeting Penn State‘s Jim Knowles to be its defensive coordinator, and is expected to finalize a deal soon, sources told ESPN’s Pete Thamel.
Knowles, in his first season at Penn State, is not being retained by new Nittany Lions coach Matt Campbell. He came to Penn State from national champion Ohio State, as the linchpin of coach James Franklin’s 2025 staff, and received a three-year contract that made him one of the nation’s highest-paid assistants at $3.1 million annually. But Penn State fired Franklin just six games into the season.
Tennessee fired defensive coordinator Tim Banks on Monday, after five seasons with the school. Banks was a finalist for the Broyles Award, which goes to the nation’s top assistant, just last season and received a contract through the 2027 season. But the Vols regressed on defense this fall, slipping to 113th nationally in pass defense and allowing 33 or more points seven times, including 45 to Vanderbilt during a loss in the regular-season finale.
CBS first reported Knowles as a potential target for the Tennessee job.
Knowles was a finalist for the Broyles Award back in 2021, when he served as Oklahoma State‘s defensive coordinator. He then moved to Ohio State, where his 2024 defense led the nation in both fewest points allowed and fewest yards allowed. This season under Knowles, Penn State ranks 34th nationally in yards allowed and 37th in points allowed.
The 60-year-old Knowles also has held coordinator roles at Duke and Western Michigan, and served as Cornell’s coach from 2004 to 2009.
Sports
Hoosiers likely without DE Daley for playoffs
Published
10 mins agoon
December 10, 2025By
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Jake TrotterDec 10, 2025, 02:13 PM ET
Close- Jake Trotter is a senior writer at ESPN. Trotter covers college football. He also writes about other college sports, including men’s and women’s basketball. Trotter resides in the Cleveland area with his wife and three kids and is a fan of his hometown Oklahoma City Thunder. He covered the Cleveland Browns and NFL for ESPN for five years, moving back to college football in 2024. Previously, Trotter worked for the Middletown (Ohio) Journal, Austin American-Statesman and Oklahoman newspapers before joining ESPN in 2011. He’s a 2004 graduate of Washington and Lee University. You can reach out to Trotter at jake.trotter@espn.com and follow him on X at @Jake_Trotter.
Indiana is likely to be without Stephen Daley for the playoffs after the defensive end suffered an injury during the Big Ten championship postgame celebration, coach Curt Cignetti told reporters Wednesday.
Cignetti called the injury “serious” and said Daley is “probably” done for the season.
Daley, a senior who transferred in from Kent State this past offseason, ranks third nationally with 19 tackles for loss. He also has 5.5 sacks and 35 tackles, including three tackles and a sack in Indiana’s 13-10 win over Ohio State in the Big Ten title game.
Cignetti didn’t specify the injury, but confirmed it happened after the game, calling it “sort of unbelievable.” It’s unclear when the injury happened, but Daley was seen limping while high-fiving fans in the stands behind the end zone.
The undefeated Hoosiers, coming off their first Big Ten title since 1967, have a first-round bye in the playoff, then will face the winner of Oklahoma–Alabama in the Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day.
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