Author: rb809rb

  • Indiana’s Curt Cignetti not interested in moving on to NFL: ‘I made that decision a long time ago’

    Curt Cignetti’s work turning Indiana from a Big Ten doormat into a national championship hopeful has not gone unnoticed by those outside of the college football world.

    As the 15-0 Hoosiers prepare for Monday’s College Football Playoff national championship game against Miami, Cignetti was asked about taking his talents to the NFL. His name has been brought up during this current coaching cycle and bandied about regarding potential future openings. But the interest would only be one sided.

    “I’m not an NFL guy,” Cignetti said during Saturday’s CFP media day. “I made that decision a long time ago. Chuck Amato, NC State, in 2000. I had a chance to go with the Packers. Tommy Rossley, Mike Sherman, [Brett] Favre was in his heyday. I declined the opportunity. I almost took it. That’s when I made the final decision. I’ve always been more of a college football guy.”

    A Pittsburgh native, Cignetti’s name was floated earlier this week after Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin stepped down.

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    Cignetti has over 90 million reasons to stay in the college game after inking a lucrative eight-year extension with Indiana in October that will see him average $11.6 million per season.

    The 64-year-old Cignetti was a head coach for IUP, Elon and James Madison before being hired for the Hoosiers' job ahead of the 2024 season. In two seasons in Bloomington he's led Indiana to a 26-2 record and two appearances in the CFP. He's also coached a Heisman Trophy winner and likely No. 1 overall NFL Draft pick in Fernando Mendoza.

    The Hoosiers lost to Notre Dame in the CFP first round last year before this past season's climb atop the rankings and wins over Alabama and Oregon to reach the title game.

  • Air Force suspends men’s basketball coach Joe Scott indefinitely as treatment of cadet-athletes investigated

    Air Force has suspended head men’s basketball coach Joe Scott indefinitely as the treatment of cadet-athletes is investigated, the school announced in a brief statement Saturday.

    “Air Force Men’s Basketball Head Coach Joe Scott has been suspended indefinitely pending an investigation into the treatment of cadet-athletes,” the statement reads. “Assistant Coach Jon Jordan (USAFA ’85) will serve as interim head coach.

    “No further information is releasable at this time.”

    Scott, 60, has led the Falcons for 10 seasons, including six straight in his second stint as head coach. He previously served in that role from 2000-04.

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    While Scott, who played at Princeton as a guard from 1983-87, guided Air Force to a Mountain West regular-season title and an NCAA tournament appearance during a 2003-04 season that saw the Falcons crack the AP Top 25, he hasn’t achieved comparable success in his second go-around at the program’s helm.

    In fact, Scott has yet to author a winning season since he took over the reins again ahead of the 2020-21 season.

    The Falcons have won single-digit games three of the past five seasons and are off to a 3-14 start this season. As of Saturday morning, they are still winless (0-6) in Mountain West competition during the 2025-26 campaign.

    After Scott’s first run as Air Force head coach, he took the same position at his alma mater, Princeton. His reunion lasted from 2004-07. Then he coached Denver for nine seasons from 2007-16. He took the Pioneers to the NIT after a WAC regular-season title in 2012-13.

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    Scott was an assistant at Holy Cross (2016-18) and then Georgia (2018-20) before returning to Air Force.

    Jon Jordan, Air Force’s interim head coach, is also in his second stint with the program. He’s been back since the 2022-23 campaign. He’s coached on the program’s staff for a total of nine seasons, dating back to 2000-05 when he first worked under Scott and then Chris Mooney.

    A 1985 graduate of Air Force, where he was a three-year letter winner on the court, Jordan also coached on Scott’s staff at Denver.

  • Buffalo Bills vs. Denver Broncos: How to watch today’s NFL game, kickoff time, TV channel and more

    The Buffalo Bills have made it all the way to the divisional playoff round this season, but as they head into their game against the Denver Broncos, they’ll be without a few key players who have suffered injuries as of late, including cornerback Maxwell Hairston, linebacker Terrel Bernard, along with safety Jordan Poyer and wide receiver Gabe Davis, who were both injured last weekend in the Bills win over the Jacksonville Jaguars. The Broncos are healthy and well-rested by comparison, coming off a bye week and ready to host the Bills at Mile High Stadium.

    The Bills vs. Broncos game will air on CBS and stream on Paramount+. Here’s everything you need to know about how to watch this and every other divisional round playoff game this weekend.

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    How to watch the Buffalo Bills vs. Denver Broncos:

    Image for the mini product module
    Image for the mini product module

    Date: Saturday, Jan. 17

    Time: 4:30 p.m. ET

    TV channel: CBS

    Streaming: Paramount+, DirecTV, NFL+ and more

    Buffalo Bills vs. Denver Broncos game time:

    The Bills vs. Broncos game kicks off at 4:30 p.m. ET/1:30 p.m. PT on Saturday, Jan 17, 2026.

    Buffalo Bills vs. Denver Broncos game channel:

    The playoff game between the Bills and Broncos will air on CBS, which means if it’s on in your area, it’ll also stream live on Paramount+. You can also tune in on mobile devices with NFL+.

    How to watch the Buffalo Bills vs. Denver Broncos game without cable:

    Image for the small product module
  • John Harbaugh and Jaxson Dart each landed the best partner possible

    Just over a year ago, on Jan. 6, 2025, New England Patriots team owner Robert Kraft addressed reporters.

    Less than a year after promoting Jerod Mayo to head coach, Kraft was facing another coaching search. The Patriots had a promising first-round rookie quarterback in Drake Maye and a slew of talented players. But that combination had produced only four wins, and Kraft believed there was more to unlock.

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    “I don’t like losing,” he said. “I don’t like losing the way we lost. Things were not developing the way we would have liked.

    “I have to go out and find a coach who can get us back to the playoffs and hopefully championships.”

    So the Patriots kept the general manager who found their quarterback and they capitalized on the marketability of a storied franchise with its biggest roster question seemingly answered.

    In came former Tennessee Titans head coach Mike Vrabel, who had previously played for the Patriots. A year later, the Patriots are readying for their second home playoff game to cap off Vrabel’s first season.

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    The turnaround speed has been remarkable. So has the rapid shift in Patriots culture. The NFL took note — and now, one of the nine teams who moved on from their head coach is following a similar blueprint with hopes of similar results.

    Promising first-round quarterback on rookie contract wins four games. General manager who found the quarterback stays in place. Coach out. Club pursues established coach with track record of success.

    Hello, New York Giants head coach John Harbaugh.

    Aug 16, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA;  Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh reacts during the first half against the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images

    John Harbaugh has a chance to turn thing around quickly with the Giants, who already have a promising young QB, Jaxson Dart, in place.

    (IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / REUTERS)

    When the Baltimore Ravens fired their 18-year coach who won a Super Bowl, Harbaugh immediately became the most attractive candidate on the market. Baltimore, similarly, rose to the top of the most attractive openings — but the Giants moved down only one spot, to second place and thus first of teams Harbaugh could consider.

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    The marquee franchise in the league’s biggest market drafted Jaxson Dart 25th overall last spring. In his 14 games (12 starts) this season, Dart completed 63.7% of his passes for 2,272 yards, 15 touchdowns and five interceptions while rushing for another 489 yards and nine scores.

    Dart allured a coach accustomed to game-planning with a dual-threat quarterback in Lamar Jackson. The Ole Miss product even reportedly met with Harbaugh on his Wednesday visit.

    The negotiation tenor that followed seemed to indicate what league sources believed: Harbaugh and Dart were each the best partner the other could land this cycle. The high-energy marriage that looms intrigues opponents.

    “There’s something to be said for guys who have proven themselves,” one person with franchise familiarity said of Harbaugh. “Throughout the league, a lot of people hire [coaches] just because they call good plays. Being a head coach is so much more than calling plays.

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    “I think the direction the Giants are going in is the right direction.”

    What the Giants offer Harbaugh

    At Giants general manager Joe Schoen’s end-of-season news conference, he touted “leadership” as the top quality he’d search for in the Giants’ next head coach. Football acumen, player development and a plan at quarterback followed.

    Harbaugh rose to the top, checking these boxes.

    Ravens colleagues and league sources who have competed against the Ravens view Harbaugh’s enthusiasm as a great fit for a team with young players to engage. Harbaugh’s culture building, others said, could instill the discipline some members of the roster have lacked in recent years. His message, some believe, could resonate even more in a new building than in the hallways through which he has spoken to them through 293 regular-season games (180 wins) and 12 playoff berths.

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    Harbaugh led the Ravens to a Super Bowl title following the 2012 season. He has since won four of 11 postseason contests.

    The Giants have a young core to build around in Dart, 2025 rookie running back Cam Skattebo and 2024 first-round draft pick Malik Nabers on offense. Abdul Carter, the edge rusher New York selected third overall in 2025, rounded into an effective edge rusher by year’s end. Dart and Carter also each took on increasing leadership roles as the season elapsed.

    “We can’t accept what happened this year to happen ever again,” Dart said the final week of the season. “I’m excited for the offseason to grow the culture and help put my hand in it. But it’s going to have me and everybody else sick that we’re going to have to watch other teams play [in the playoffs].”

    Jan 4, 2026; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA;  New York Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart (6) scrambles out of bounds as Dallas Cowboys linebacker Shemar James (50) defends during the second quarter at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

    Jaxson Dart’s dual-threat abilities caught the eye of many head coaching candidates. (Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images)

    (IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect / REUTERS)

    Dart said he would lead moving forward with “the highest expectation” for teammates; he said Carter shared a similar message in a team huddle for the final game.

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    “We just have that energy and the outlook,” Dart said, “that it’s just the only way it can go.”

    The mentality is not dissimilar from that of Harbaugh. The longtime Ravens coach and previous special teams coordinator leads with an emphasis on positivity and growth, moments threading across his Baltimore leadership through his final game as Ravens coach. Ravens kicker Tyler Loop had missed the game-winning field goal that decided the AFC North; Harbaugh who comforted Loop and reassured him as the two walked through the Pittsburgh Steelers’ stadium tunnel minutes after what would later become Harbaugh’s final game as Ravens coach.

    The Giants’ talent pool generates mixed responses from opponents. Some league sources whose clubs faced the Giants this season viewed New York’s 2025 roster as a list of individuals including some talented standouts rather than a team adept at channeling those talents collectively to achieve more. Nabers’ season-ending ACL tear in Dart’s debut start hurt the offense’s potential, as did Skattebo’s October tibia fracture, ruptured deltoid ligament and right ankle dislocation.

    But their return could help improve the offense’s explosion in Dart’s second year. And defensively, the Giants’ front boasts Carter, Dexter Lawrence II, Brian Burns and Kayvon Thibodeaux.

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    An opponent who faced the Giants credited the defensive line as an area they “have gotten right.” Criticism of Lawrence slowing down, the opponent said, may speak more to the increased speed of the linemen around him.

    Dart’s continued development will be key to Harbaugh achieving success with the Giants. That opportunity also helped New York land the big fish.

    “There are a lot of potential head-coaching candidates,” Schoen said Jan. 6, “that are excited about the opportunity here because of Jaxson Dart.”

    What coach, scheme will Harbaugh choose for Dart?

    It’s arguably too soon to settle on coordinator expectations with eight head-coaching roles in flux even after Harbaugh’s negotiations moved seemingly from a matter of if to when.

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    But there is an expectation that Harbaugh will bring to New York his most recent Baltimore offensive coordinator, Todd Monken, if Monken does not get a head-coaching job.

    The Cleveland Browns interviewed Monken, who coordinated their offense in 2019, for the Browns’ top role last Saturday.

    How would Monken’s offense look in New York?

    “It will be different,” one AFC assistant who faced the Ravens in Monken’s tenure told Yahoo Sports. “He walked into a situation with Lamar Jackson and [Derrick] Henry. Those are two Hall of Fame players … so it will be different.”

    And yet, the AFC assistant believed Monken’s philosophies could cater to Dart’s skill set.

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    “I think he does a great job with marrying up the run with the play action,” the assistant said. “A balanced offense.”

    Another AFC executive described Monken as “naturally a pass-oriented play caller” but one who has “adapted to different guys and been explosive.”

    Developing Dart into an explosive but less reckless quarterback will be key after a rookie year that included five concussion checks, per ESPN, and two games missed to concussion.

    Nail that risk-reward analysis, and the Giants have an opportunity to follow in the footsteps of the Patriots — who beat the Los Angeles Chargers in last weekend’s wild-card round and host the Houston Texans in this week’s divisional round.

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    In his second season, Maye is among betting favorites for MVP. Vrabel, in his first year at the Patriots helm, is among Coach of the Year favorites.

    “There’s certainly an opportunity that you look at those franchises and how they put it together in a quick turnaround,” Schoen said of the Patriots and the Chicago Bears’ 2025 success. “In an ideal world, yeah, that would be it.

    “That would be the goal. That would be ideal.”

  • Miami (Ohio) moves to 19-0 on 3-pointer with 1.5 seconds left in 105-102 OT win over Buffalo

    Miami (Ohio)’s incredible unbeaten run continued on Saturday thanks to an overtime winner by Peter Suder.

    Suder hit a 3-pointer with 1.5 seconds left in OT to give the RedHawks a 105-102 home win over Buffalo. The win pushed Miami to 19-0.

    Miami is one of just three teams that entered the weekend without a loss, along with Arizona and Nebraska. The RedHawks are now 7-0 in the MAC.

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    Suder’s 37 points are the most he’s scored in a single game since he dropped 42 on Air Force in December 2024. Suder was 13-of-22 from the field and 7-of-10 from 3-point range. All five of Miami’s starters had at least 12 points, as the team got just seven points from the bench.

    The RedHawks have been one of the best offensive teams in the country this season. Their offensive rating ranks second, though advanced statistics like KenPom don’t treat Miami as kindly, thanks to the team’s strength of schedule. Miami played two lower-level teams outside of MAC play and did not play a power conference opponent.

    That lack of schedule strength could be an issue for the NCAA tournament committee if the RedHawks don’t win the MAC tournament. But that’s a problem for another day. Miami deserves to be ranked in the AP Top 25 on Monday and should stay there as long as it stays unbeaten.

  • Packers DC Jeff Hafley emerges as frontrunner for Dolphins’ head-coaching job: Report

    Jeff Hafley is attracting a handful of NFL teams who are in search of a new head coach, but one franchise in particular is reportedly keying in on the Green Bay Packers’ defensive coordinator.

    Hafley, 46, has emerged as the leading candidate for the Miami Dolphins’ head-coaching job, according to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, who reported Saturday that he was told the former Boston College head coach “blew everyone away in his initial virtual interview with the Dolphins.”

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    It’s also important to note that Miami hired former Packers executive Jon-Eric Sullivan as its new general manager earlier this month. Hafley joined Green Bay’s staff in 2024, and he worked with Sullivan over the past two seasons while Sullivan served as the Packers’ vice president of player personnel.

    Pelissero pointed out in his Saturday report, however, that the Dolphins haven’t made a final decision, and that they have more interviews scheduled, including one on Sunday with Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator Joe Brady.

    Plus, Miami has competition for Hafley. Four other teams — the Tennessee Titans, Atlanta Falcons, Las Vegas Raiders and Arizona Cardinals — have all requested second interviews with Hafley, and he’s slated to interview for the Pittsburgh Steelers’ head-coaching vacancy on Saturday, per Pelissero.

    The Packers got off to a 9-3-1 start this season. Along the way, they allowed just 19 points per game. That was even an improvement from the 19.9 points per game they gave up in 2024, Hafley’s first season on the job, when they clocked out sixth in the NFL in scoring defense.

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    But the loss of premier edge rusher Micah Parsons in Week 15 coincided with the start of a season-ending losing streak that stretched to five games in the playoffs. Parsons, a five-time Pro Bowler who piled up 12.5 sacks in 14 games in his first season with Hafley and the Packers, suffered a torn ACL, and Green Bay missed him sorely down the stretch.

    Before Matt LaFleur brought Hafley aboard in Green Bay, Hafley went 22-26 as BC’s head coach from 2020-23. He went from coordinating a suffocating Ohio State defense in 2019 to navigating the pandemic in 2020 and leading BC to a winning season in his first year as a first-time head coach.

    Hafley finished his stay at BC with another winning season, capped by a Fenway Bowl victory over a 17th-ranked SMU team.

    Hafley spent seven seasons as an NFL assistant in the 2010s, coaching defensive backs for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2012-13), Cleveland Browns (2014-15) and San Francisco 49ers (2016-18).

    Now he’s a coveted NFL head-coaching candidate.

  • As college football evolves, QB transfer moves are becoming the most vital part of the sport

    MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — Whether you like it or not, here’s the new economic reality of college football: If you’re an in-demand transfer quarterback, that job will be roughly as lucrative over the next year as being the No. 12 pick in the NFL Draft, the No. 15 pick in the NBA Draft, the 30th-ranked golfer on the PGA Tour and the No. 10 men’s tennis player in the world.

    As we’ve watched the transfer portal over the past two weeks and heard the reported numbers attached to those transactions, it doesn’t always feel real. Four million here, five million there. It seems like Monopoly money.

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    For a college quarterback? Someone who may never throw a touchdown in the best football league in the world?

    Yes.

    And Monday night’s national championship game will show us why.

    We can talk all we want about what it takes to build a roster in the NIL era, the escalation of coaching salaries and which programs are doing the best job developing talent. But at the end of the day, nearly all of it hinges on the shotgun courtship between a program and the quarterback it pulls out of the transfer portal.

    Miami's Carson Beck and Indiana's Fernando Mendoza will meet in the title game on Monday night. (Getty)

    Miami’s Carson Beck and Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza will meet in the title game on Monday night. (Getty)

    Get it right and you’ve got a chance to be playing in the last game of the season like Indiana and Miami. Get it wrong and you’re talking about millions of dollars down the drain, boosters who feel like they got ripped off and coaches getting put on the hot seat.

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    “It’s definitely a tricky situation,” Indiana offensive coordinator Mike Shanahan said. “It happens quick.”

    And it defines so much of what’s happening on the field, off the field and in courtrooms around the country.

    It’s why a very specific and unorthodox legal strategy in Mississippi is being deployed to give Trinidad Chambliss the chance at one more year.

    It’s why Oregon’s Dante Moore is turning down the opportunity to be a likely top-two draft pick to stay at Oregon, and why the school is willing to pay more big money for Dylan Raiola to be his understudy.

    It’s why schools were desperate to get Alabama’s Ty Simpson to put his name in the portal over the last few weeks, offering millions of dollars even after he announced his intent to enter the draft where there’s a chance he won’t make as much money.

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    And it’s why Miami is at the center of a different storm this weekend amid Duke’s Darian Mensah putting his name in the transfer portal and breaking a contract worth $4 million next year. Despite creating all kinds of legal entanglements that will need to be resolved, it seems likely to happen one way or another because the Hurricanes need a starting quarterback next year and they’re willing to pay a lot to get one who’s proven he can play.

    “Anything related to the future, we choose respectfully not to comment on because, for us, all that matters right now is this team and this opportunity,” Miami coach Mario Cristobal said Saturday. “So we’ll leave it at that.”

    CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - DECEMBER 6: Darian Mensah #10 of the Duke Blue Devils throws a pass against the Virginia Cavaliers during the second half of the ACC Championship game at Bank of America Stadium on December 6, 2025 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Cory Knowlton/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images)

    Duke’s Darian Mensah has entered the transfer portal and Miami is reportedly considered the landing spot for the talented quarterback.

    (Cory Knowlton/ISI Photos via Getty Images)

    Not so long ago in college football, bringing in transfer quarterbacks on a year-by-year basis was the mark of an unhealthy program. Outside of Russell Wilson becoming a sensation at Wisconsin after spending four years at NC State, rent-a-quarterback situations largely did not work out very well.

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    “Inherently, I’m an old-school soul,” Miami offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Shannon Dawson said. “I like to develop kids and [believe] reps within a system matter.”

    But everyone here knows if Miami is going to make another run next year, it likely won’t be with a quarterback currently on the roster.

    After all, this is the second year in a row both teams in the national title game have ridden one-year rentals. It could be a while before we see another national championship that recruited and developed its quarterback as a multi-year project out of high school.

    In some ways, a program’s fate is as simple as this: Did you make the right bet in the transfer portal?

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    It’s why the eye-popping financial numbers are what they are. Though we can certainly debate whether Carson Beck’s up-and-down production was worth all those millions of dollars or whether he was as good for Miami as Cam Ward (another one-year transfer) last year, that’s not the right evaluation.

    Miami is the national championship game. In a sport where the demand for good quarterbacks is greater than the supply, they have more than justified Beck’s price tag. And now they’ll do it all over again. If Mensah is the right choice, the financial and legal pain of extracting him from Duke will be worth it.

    “I think it comes down a lot to that,” Miami athletic director Dan Radakovich said. “That’s a football and collective type of decision. We help kind of set the parameters in terms of what the pie is, and they divide the pie the way they need to divide it.”

    Indiana is playing a similar game from Kurtis Rourke last year to Fernando Mendoza this season to, most likely, TCU transfer Josh Hoover in 2026.

    Compared to Beck’s high-profile departure from Georgia, Mendoza’s announcement that he was leaving Cal a year ago generated a fraction of the fanfare. Considered a good quarterback, whose deal with Indiana landed in the reported $2 million range, Hoosiers coach Curt Cignetti may have been the only person who realized he had recruited a future Heisman Trophy winner.

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    “If you trust your evaluation and your history of evaluation has been successful and you have a lot of confidence in yourself and your process, you feel strong about a guy,” Cignetti said. “I felt extremely strong about Fernando. Extremely. I knew we had something.”

    But on Tuesday morning, when Mendoza starts preparing to be the likely No. 1 pick in the NFL Draft, the most important question at Indiana — and maybe the only question — is going to be whether they’ve done it again with Hoover.

    “It would be nice to have a guy for a few years, but when you’ve got a chance to get a guy that can play winning football, that’s been through the wars, to me it’s an easy decision,” Cignetti said. “You’ve got to win every year. Now there’s no, ‘Oh, in five years we’ll be good.’ That was a long time ago. It’s not a perfect world, college football.”

    The process isn’t perfect, either. The transfer portal is only open for 15 days. Coaches and general managers have to make career-defining decisions with imperfect information. The amount of money it takes to get one of these quarterbacks raises the stakes for everyone.

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    At some point, if this speed dating cycle continues, Miami or Indiana is probably going to make a season-ruining mistake. It’s just how the sport works now.

    “Getting to the truth a lot of times is hard,” Dawson said. “You’ve got cut through the weeds a little bit. You a blackjack player? Nothing’s 100 percent, right?

    “We looked at [Beck’s] career as one of, man, this kid’s got a lot of experience. We felt like we were a really good football team and we felt like we needed somebody that’s played in some big games because we were hoping to play in some big games, and he’s been in a lot of them.”

    He’s got one more Monday night. But in many ways, the biggest game of all — the one that determines who’s playing in the championship game 12 months from now — has already been played.

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    When you think about everything riding on the shoulders of these transfer quarterbacks and what it means to a school when they hit the way Indiana and Miami have, the $4 million salaries may not be that crazy after all.

  • Cincinnati takes down No. 2 Iowa State, records first win over top-2 team at home since 1967

    Cincinnati endured eight 3-pointers from Iowa State sharpshooter Milan Momcilovic and held on to beat the No. 2 Cyclones in Saturday afternoon in Fifth Third Arena, where fans stormed the court after a 79-70 win. It was Cincinnati’s first victory over a top-two team at home since 1967.

    That feat last occurred nearly 59 years to the day when Cincinnati defeated Louisville. Both teams were part of the Missouri Valley Conference at the time.

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    Before Saturday, the Bearcats (10-8, 2-3 Big 12) hadn’t won a game against a top-two team, period, since March 2012, when they upset Syracuse in the Big East tournament.

    The Cyclones (16-2, 3-2) began the season 16-0, including 3-0 in conference competition, most notably with wins over then-No. 14 St. John’s and a top-ranked Purdue squad. But they’ve now lost back-to-back games to unranked foes, both this week. Iowa State dropped from the ranks of the unbeaten on the road Tuesday. Kansas steamrolled T.J. Otzelberger’s group 84-63.

    Four days later, the Cyclones fell to a Bearcats team that has been competitive in Wes Miller’s fifth season at the helm but had struggled to finish games.

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    Cincinnati practically led wire-to-wire against Iowa State, even fending off a furious 14-2 run that featured a trio of Momcilovic’s 3-pointers late in the second half. Momcilovic, who entered with a nation-leading 53.9 3-point percentage, clocked out 8 of 14 from deep and with a career-high 34 points.

    The Bearcats were buoyed by their own run, a 17-3 surge, which they staged earlier in the period.

    A skip pass from forward Baba Miller to Baylor graduate transfer guard Jalen Celestine set up a 3 and really put Cincinnati’s wheels in motion. Miller finished with four assists to go along with his 12 rebounds and eight points. Celestine chipped in 12 points off the bench, thanks to four triples.

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    The Bearcats were paced by graduate guard Day Day Thomas, who scored a team-high 19 points. He made three 3s, plus a mid-range jumper that followed one of Iowa State’s consecutive giveaways.

    Cincinnati scored 20 points off the Cyclones’ 10 turnovers.

    Sencire Harris polished off the game-changing run with six straight points. Later, he missed a two-handed dunk on the break that could have helped the Bearcats shoo away Iowa State’s comeback bid.

    But even with that Cyclones push, which drew them within five points with less than five minutes to go, Cincinnati persevered.

    The Bearcats pulled away again late, triggering a euphoric postgame celebration.

  • Bills-Broncos: Mecole Hardman’s first catch since 2024 is same play that won Chiefs Super Bowl

    DENVER — Even Buffalo Bills fans might not have realized who was catching their team’s first touchdown pass of the divisional round. But they recognized the name once they heard it.

    Mecole Hardman is used to big stages. He caught a walk-off touchdown in the Super Bowl, but that was with the Kansas City Chiefs two seasons ago. If you didn’t know where he was playing currently that’s OK; Hardman hadn’t caught a pass for the Bills all season, appearing in only two games and spending most of the past few months either out of the NFL or on the Bills’ practice squad or injured reserve.

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    He reemerged at the right time. At the end of Buffalo’s first drive, Hardman was wide open for a 4-yard touchdown from Josh Allen.

    Hardman was playing due to extreme injury issues in Buffalo’s receiving corps. Tyrell Shavers and Gabe Davis suffered torn ACLs in the wild-card round. The Bills were perilously thin at receiver but had Hardman on the practice squad. Hardman was released by the Packers twice earlier this season, once at the end of preseason and then again off their practice squad in September. He was signed to the Bills’ practice squad in early November, and that paid off Saturday. Hardman had been on injured reserve for a while with Buffalo and had just one target from Allen before his number was called in a big spot against the Broncos.

    [Get more Bills news: Buffalo team feed]

    If the play looked familiar, it was. It was almost exactly the same “Corn Dog” play the Chiefs ran to Hardman to win Super Bowl LVIII in overtime two years ago, as called out by CBS color commentator Tony Romo. The Bills sold the route to the left before coming back to Hardman on the right, and Josh Allen took the snap from under center, but otherwise it was remarkably similar to Hardman’s historic play against the 49ers, motioning in and then reversing direction and flaring out to the flat.

    Hardman is a recognizable name to many football fans after that championship-winning touchdown. And so was the play that produced his first touchdown with the Bills.

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  • Rockies deny they blocked Kris Bryant from attending 2016 Cubs reunion

    The Chicago Cubs’ reunion of their curse-breaking 2016 World Series title team had a notable absence: Kris Bryant.

    The 2016 National League MVP wasn’t on stage when Anthony Rizzo, Kyle Schwarber, Javier Baez, Jon Lester, Kyle Hendricks and several other former Cubs players appeared at Cubs Convention on Friday. Fans in search for a reason soon found one from a report on radio station 670 The Score, which claimed that Bryant “was not allowed to be there by his team.”

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    That team would be Bryant’s current club, the Colorado Rockies.

    The report triggered a wave of outrage on social media, with the Rockies making for an easy villain. No reason was provided for why they would do so. A day later, the Rockies denied they had any part in Bryant missing the reunion, via MLB.com’s Thomas Harding and the Denver Post’s Patrick Saunders.

    So why wasn’t Bryant there while other active players on other teams, such as Schwarber and Baez, were? That remains unclear.

    Bryant remains one of the most important players in Cubs history as a central figure on the team that broke through 108 years of disappointment, but his future in baseball has never been more cloudy due to a series of back injuries that have ravaged his Rockies career.

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    The four-time All-Star signed a seven-year, $182 million contract with Colorado after the 2021 season. That deal is now considered one of the worst in MLB history, as he’s managed to play only 170 games in four seasons. While on the field, he’s slashed only .244/.324/.370 with the Rockies despite the advantage of Coors Field.

    Bryant was diagnosed with a degenerative disc disease last May and has been rumored to be considering retirement, though he insisted a couple months ago he intends to keep playing. He has three years and $81 million left on his contract.