ESPN’s new streaming service is divided into two tiers: the ESPN Unlimited package and the ESPN Select package.
For $29.99, the ESPN Unlimited package includes access to all of ESPN’s linear networks: ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, SECN, ACCN, ESPNews, and ESPN Deportes, as well as access to programming on ABC, ESPN+, ESPN3, SECN+, and ACCNX. That means fans will get coverage of more than 47,000 live events each year, plus on-demand replays, original programming and more.
ESPN Select (also referred to as ESPN+) is also still an option if you don’t want to commit to the full package. For $12.99/month, you can tune in and get exclusive access to events like select NCAA football games, F1 driver cams, simulcasts of certain sports that air on other channels and more.
The Miami Dolphins have agreed to terms to hire Jon-Eric Sullivan as the franchise’s new general manager, they announced Friday.
Sullivan has served as the vice president of player personnel of the Green Bay Packers since 2022. He will replace Chris Grier, who parted ways with the Dolphins in October after serving in the organization since 2000.
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The 50-year-old Sullivan grew up in football as his father, Jerry, coached in college and the NFL for nearly 40 years, including spending the 2004 season as the Dolphins’ wide receivers coach.
The younger Sullivan, who was part of the GM interview circuit last offseason and spoke with the Las Vegas Raiders, New York Jets and Tennessee Titans, has only worked for the Packers. He began as an intern in 2003 and worked his way up through the scouting department before being promoted to VP of player personnel.
Sullivan’s first big task will be to find a replacement for head coach Mike McDaniel, who was fired on Thursday after four seasons in charge. He’ll then have to figure out what to do with quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, who will be entering the second year of an extension next season and will account for a $56.4 million salary cap hit.
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Free agency will be important this offseason after the Dolphins finished 7-10 and in third place in the AFC East, missing out on the postseason for the seventh time in nine seasons. They are currently scheduled to select No. 11 overall in April’s NFL Draft.
Alabama is bringing back both Austin Mack and Keelon Russell in 2026.
The school’s NILcollective announced Friday that the two had signed deals to stay at the school. Mack was Ty Simpson’s backup in 2025, while Russell was a five-star recruit in the class of 2025.
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Their return to Alabama in 2026 likely takes the Tide out of the running for a transfer portal quarterback as the two competed with Simpson for the starting job ahead of the 2025 season before Simpson was announced as Alabama’s Week 1 starter. He held the job for the entire season and declared for the 2026 NFL Draft earlier in the week. Simpson was 305-of-473 passing for 3,567 yards and 28 TDs with 5 interceptions across 15 games in 2025.
Simpson was forced to leave Alabama’s 38-3 Rose Bowl loss in the second half with an undisclosed injury. Mack replaced him and was 11-of-16 passing for 103 yards.
Mack followed Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer from Washington after the 2023 season. He backed up Michael Penix Jr. as the Huskies made the national title game and then was on the Alabama roster behind Jalen Milroe and Simpson in 2024. He’ll be a redshirt junior in 2026.
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Russell will be a redshirt freshman after appearing in two games across the 2025 season. The Texas native was the No. 2 quarterback recruit in the country behind Michigan’s Bryce Underwood out of high school and was also the No. 2 overall player in his class. Mack was a four-star recruit in the class of 2023 and the No. 16 quarterback in the country.
David Blough has quickly risen through the coaching ranks in Washington. The Commanders have decided to hire Blough as their new offensive coordinator after his first season with the team, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.
Hired as an assistant quarterbacks coach before the 2024 season, Blough finished the year as QB coach after Tavita Pritchard was hired as the head football coach for Stanford University. Washington felt strongly enough about his potential to block him from interviewing with the New York Jets, Detroit Lions and Chicago Bears.
Blough, 30, will replace former Commanders offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury, who was fired after his second season on Dan Quinn’s staff. A quarterback with the Lions from 2019-21, Blough also received interest from his former team for their offensive coordinator vacancy. Rather than risk losing him, the Commanders gave Blough a promotion before he could interview in Detroit.
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This season, Washington ranked No. 22 among NFL teams in total offense, a significant decline after ranking No. 7 the previous year. Jayden Daniels being limited to only seven games due to elbow, hamstring and knee injuries was a major factor in that slide. In 2024, Daniels won Offensive Rookie of the Year honors.
With Daniels’ absence, the Commanders compiled the third-fewest passing yards (3,129) in the NFC, averaging 184 per game. The offense also averaged just under 21 points in its 17 games.
“He’s very bright, there’s no doubt. He’s been around some great offensive minds,” Kingsbury said to ESPN about Blough, who played for him with the Arizona Cardinals in 2022. “So his biggest strengths are he sees it from the lens of the player and yet he can kind of separate and still be the coach.”
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Blough’s rapport with Daniels may also have been a factor in promoting him to offensive coordinator. The coach and player reportedly competed in a game of “P.I.G.” before practice each Friday.
“Just a guy that’s recently just got out of football, has been around and knows Matthew Stafford, [Jared] Goff, [Kirk] Cousins,” Daniels said to The Athletic last season. “Bringing different knowledge of how he’s seen the game, how he’s seen those guys prepare day in and day out, so he is very knowledgeable. You can go ahead and talk to him about anything.”
Trae Young spoke about running the pick-and-roll with Alex Sarr and throwing a lob to the second-year standout center. He discussed delivering passes to a cutting Bilal Coulibaly.
During the four-time All-Star point guard’s introductory Washington Wizards news conference ahead of Friday’s home game against the New Orleans Pelicans, the 27-year-old Young was visualizing what it will be like playing for his new team when he returns to the court.
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Young is currently sidelined with a right quad contusion, and he missed 23 games earlier this season with an MCL sprain in his right knee that’s reportedly caused residual pain.
“Coming over here doing these physicals, they want to make sure I’m right and things like that,” Young said, alongside Wizards general manager Will Dawkins.
“I don’t want to come back and not be myself for this team and for this city. So I’ll just leave it up to them to make sure they let you know when I’m coming back — hopefully soon.”
The Dallas Mavericks selected Young No. 5 overall in the 2018 draft before immediately trading him and a first-round pick to the Hawks for the draft rights to Luka Dončić.
Young spent seven-plus seasons in Atlanta. He was eligible for a four-year extension, but the Hawks didn’t make him a long-term offer this past offseason. After leading the NBA in assists per game in 2024-25, Young is now in the fourth year of a five-year, $215 million deal.
He talked Friday about wanting to see through Capital One Arena renovations and how he’s taken notice of an organizational transformation under Dawkins and team president Michael Winger.
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“Just being able to watch from afar and just some of the pieces that they’ve gotten since [Dawkins and Winger have] been here and the headaches I’ve had these last couple of times playing against them, you kind of see the difference and feel the difference from the way they play.”
Young added, regarding the Wizards’ franchise: “It’s on its way up, and I hope I’m a piece of this puzzle on the way up with it.”
Why the Wizards traded for Young
Dawkins and Young go way back.
Before Dawkins became the Wizards’ GM in 2023, he spent 15 seasons with the Oklahoma City Thunder, ultimately serving as the team’s vice president of basketball operations from 2020-23.
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Young, who played at Norman North High School before starring at nearby University of Oklahoma, went to his fair share of OKC games when he was growing up.
“Probably saw him come to one of our games when he was like 12, 13 years old, and people are like, ‘Hey, he’s a young talent.’” Dawkins said.
“There’s a lot of ties there being in Oklahoma City. It’s a small town. He’s from Norman. My wife’s from Norman. Her whole family lives there. He went to OU. My wife’s family all works at OU, went to OU. So I’ve known him for a very long time. When you’re in a city like that, and you have the player of the year-type candidates in high school and college, it’s very easy to see him.”
Dawkins continued: “So you see him in the different gyms, and then you learn his family and you know what he’s about and you know the fiber that he comes from. Always kept in touch with the family, kept in touch with him once he became a professional player and watched him through the ranks.”
Dawkins described trading for Young this season as an “easy decision.”
The Wizards haven’t had an All-Star since Bradley Beal in 2021. Young hasn’t gone two straight seasons without earning that recognition in his career.
He’s criticized for his defense, and the value of his offense has been questioned in a league where points no longer come at a premium.
Young pointed out Friday that even though he no longer has a baby face, he’s not a finished product. It’s clear the Wizards see his upside, too.
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“When Michael [Winger] and I got here two-and-a-half seasons ago,” Dawkins said, “we wanted to emphasize a few things: the importance on remaining flexible throughout the rebuild, the importance of thinking and thinking in layers and stacking things up, and then I would say being opportunistic and doing that while finding players that fit toward our long-term vision, which is sustained success.
“And I think looking back on the trade, that reflects well on all those principles.”
Trae Young #3 of the Washington Wizards reacts on the bench with Bilal Coulibaly #0 and Khris Middleton #22 during the first half against the New Orleans Pelicans at Capital One Arena on January 9, 2026 in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images)
(Scott Taetsch via Getty Images)
The franchise has won 50-plus games only five times, and not since 1978-79 when it was still going by the name “Washington Bullets.”
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Despite a bundle of young talent — including Sarr and Coulibaly as well as second-year forward Kyshawn George, second-year guard Bub Carrington and rookie guard Tre Johnson — the Wizards are second-to-last in the Eastern Conference standings.
And yet Young was interested in taking his talents to D.C.
“There’s a lot of different directions I could have went as far as my goals and what I want my legacy to be at the end of the day,” he said.
“Just being able to have an impact on my teammates and people around me … being able to be a vet and doing it with these young guys here, I feel like I have more experience and more things that I can give these young guys.”
Young later said: “D.C. is overlooked as far as a big market. In the NBA, I feel like this is a big market. And I just feel like I’m being able to come into an opportunity to be myself. I’m around people that obviously have known me for a long time and know the type of person I am and the type of winner I want to be.”
Young makes jersey change, reminisces on John Wall days
Young is going from wearing No. 11, which he donned at Oklahoma and then with the Hawks, to wearing No. 3 with the Wizards.
It’s not a totally new number for him, though.
He told reporters Friday that he wore it during his freshman year of high school.
Young is turning back the clock, and he hopes to help return the Wizards to the success they enjoyed with Beal and, of course, five-time All-Star guard John Wall in the 2010s.
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“I walked into the arena yesterday, and I was telling Will [Dawkins] how I want to see this place sold out,” Young said. “I remember seeing this place, and we’re about to retire John Wall’s jersey, and just seeing it as a kid packed out.
“I want to get it back to that. And it’s not just me. It’s going to be this team and everybody [as] a part of it. So I just am super excited to have this feeling. I’m glad that the fan base is excited, and we going to give them something to be excited about going forward.”
Those Beal-Wall teams maxed out at the Eastern Conference semis. Young went to the Eastern Conference finals during the 2020-21 season, his third in the league.
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Now a veteran, Young wants to help the Wizards’ young core reach that stage, and then make a run at the Larry O’Brien Trophy.
“I understand where we’re at right now and where we want to go. This is a day-by-day process,” he said.
“I don’t want to look too far ahead or set expectations on when this will happen because you never know. It happened faster than I expected in my last place. So you never know when it can happen. But if you focus on the daily stuff, I mean, things are going to work out.”
United States women have not won an Olympic medal in figure skating’s singles event since Sasha Cohen’s silver in 2006. Based on the performances of Amber Glenn, Alysa Liu and Isabeau Levito in this week’s nationals, however, that could change at the Milan Games in just a few weeks. .
The Big Three lived up to their name, claiming gold, silver and bronze, respectively, at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships on Friday night. And now they await their selection to the United States Olympic team on Sunday, and a date with the rest of the world in February.
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Skating her long program to “I Will Find You” by Audiomachine, Glenn opened with a triple axel — 3 1/2 revolutions — and never looked back. A soulful, evocative program marred only by the slightest of wobbles and tightness was nonetheless strong enough to earn Glenn, 26, a score of 233.55, good for her third straight national title.
Liu, 20, has recaptured the nation’s attention — and soon the world’s — thanks both to her talent as an Olympian and two-time U.S. champion, and to her decision to walk away from the sport entirely for two years. But now she’s back, skating with joy and exuberance, and on Friday night she posted a Lady Gaga-soundtracked routine of graceful brilliance that judges awarded a silver medal-winning total score of 228.91.
Levito, the 18-year-old 2023 national champion, skated an exquisite routine to the music of “Cinema Paradiso.” Her near-flawless performance earned her a total final score of 224.45. In any other Olympics of the last 20 years, she’d be the leading light, in this one she’ll have to fight for the spotlight. It’s a good problem for the United States to have.
Alysa Liu competes during the women’s short program at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough)
Efimov and Mitrofanov executed a brilliant, though not quite flawless, long routine to maintain their hold atop the pairs standings, finishing with 207.71 points. Ellie Kam and Danny O’Shea, the 2024 U.S. champions, won silver with 197.12 points, and Katie McBeath and Daniil Parkman finished in the bronze position with 187.45. Emily Chan and Spencer Akira Howe claimed the pewter medal, while Audrey Shin and Balazs Nagy struggled through their long routine and plummeted from second place after the short program to fifth overall.
Alisa Efimova and Misha Mitrofanov celebrate their 2025 national championship win. (Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)
(Matthew Stockman via Getty Images)
There’s still significant uncertainty at the top of the rankings from an Olympic perspective. Efimov and Mitrofanov’s Olympic fates remain at the mercy of the federal government. Efimov is not a U.S. citizen, but possesses a green card and has applied for naturalization. While many international competitions do not require skaters to be citizens of the nation they represent, the International Olympic Committee mandates that all its competitors be citizens of their nations. The problem for Efimov is that the standard waiting period for her request is measured in years … and she only has hours.
Among the women, Glenn had leaped out to an early lead in Wednesday’s short program when she posted an 83.05, the highest score in U.S. Championships history. Liu placed less than two points behind her at 81.11, which was the championships record for the few minutes until Glenn skated. Levito followed with a 75.72. All three skaters set personal best short-program marks.
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“I feel ecstatic. The score was huge,” a joyful Glenn said after her skate. “I was not expecting that.”
Liu, equally gleeful, gushed, “I feel over the moon right now. I’m so happy with that short program. I would say that’s my favorite program I’ve done that I’ve performed for an audience.”
“This competition feels like a really big show, with the announcing and the lights and the suspenseful music,” Levito added. “It felt a little different, and I felt really happy with myself that I did my job.”
U.S. Figure Skating will select its teams on Sunday at 2 p.m. ET, and then the preparation for Milan begins.
Here are the five plays that defined Indiana’s blowout win to set up a matchup with Miami in the national championship game on Jan. 19.
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D’Angelo Ponds’ pick-6
It’s very, very difficult to score on the first play from scrimmage when you do not have the ball. Yet Indiana was up 7-0 without its offense even thinking about taking the field.
D’Angelo Ponds picked off Oregon’s Dante Moore on the first offensive play of the game and returned the ball for 25 yards and an early lead. Ponds clearly knew where Moore wanted to go with the ball at the snap and read the QB’s eyes perfectly for the score.
Oregon bounced back on its next drive with a 14-play, 75-yard possession that resulted in a 19-yard TD from Moore to Jamari Johnson. But it’s hard to deal with the game being 7-7 without the opposing offense taking the field.
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Dierre Hill Jr. knocks the ball out of Dante Moore’s hands
The Hoosiers scored on their first offensive possession of the game to take the lead back. After punting on their second offensive possession, Oregon had the ball at its own 13-yard line. And a self-inflicted disaster happened.
Moore elected to pass the ball on a run-pass option. After faking the handoff to Dierre Hill Jr. — the Ducks’ No. 3 RB forced into duty because of injuries to Noah Whittington and Jordon Davison — Hill was very close to Moore as Moore went to throw.
Too close, in fact. As Moore’s arm went backward, the ball hit Hill in the shoulder and popped into the air. Mario Landino recovered at the Oregon 3-yard line.
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Three plays later, Indiana RB Kaelon Black was in the end zone for a two-score lead. Oregon would never get any closer.
Fernando Mendoza’s 36-yard TD pass to Charlie Becker
After Indiana went up 21-7, Oregon gained six yards in five plays before punting back to the Hoosiers thanks to back-to-back sacks of Moore.
It didn’t take long for Indiana to score again after Oregon punted the ball. Just four plays after getting the ball back, Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza threw his second TD of the night with a perfectly placed 36-yard bomb to Charlie Becker and a 28-7 lead.
Dante Moore’s second fumble
By now, you know where this is headed. Two plays after Becker’s touchdown, Moore was strip-sacked by Daniel Ndukwe. Landino was in the right spot at the right time again and recovered the football.
Guess what? Indiana capitalized on the turnover, too. Moore fumbled with 2:36 to go in the first half. Ninety-seven seconds later, Mendoza threw his third touchdown of the game. This time, it was a 2-yard score to Elijah Sarratt.
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Daniel Ndukwe’s blocked punt
Indiana scored on its first possession of the second half to extend its lead to 42-7. The game was over at that point. There was no way Oregon was coming back.
But if you needed any more proof that Oregon was toast, Ndukwe provided it in the fourth quarter with his blocked punt of James Ferguson-Reynolds. Just look how Ndukwe fought through the block to get to the kick.
The ball was caught by Kaiden Turner and returned to the Oregon 7-yard line before Mendoza threw his fifth and final touchdown of the night for a 49-15 lead.
Ndukwe finished the game with three tackles, two sacks and the blocked punt. Those were the first two sacks he had all season after he entered the game with just one tackle for loss and eight tackles in 13 games.
In the final 3 1/2 minutes of Friday night’s game in Memphis, the Oklahoma City Thunder outscored the Grizzlies 14-2, completing a 21-point second-half comeback without reigning league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and standout center Chet Holmgren.
Granted the Grizzlies were missing star point guard Ja Morant — who is currently sidelined due to a right calf contusion and is reportedly on the trading block — but they still were in the driver’s seat at home against a Thunder team that’s looked more vulnerable over the past month.
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In fact, with Oklahoma City’s 117-116 triumph over Memphis, head coach Mark Daigneault’s squad improved to just 8-6 in its past 14 games after starting the season 24-1.
The Thunder (32-7) still have the Grizzlies (16-22) figured out. Oklahoma City has won 16 straight games against Memphis, including a sweep in the first round of last year’s playoffs and all three of the teams’ matchups this season. First, the Thunder rallied from 19 points down on Nov. 9, and now they’ve pulled off an even more improbable come-from-behind victory over the Grizzlies.
Whereas Jalen Williams was still recovering from his wrist surgeries when that November meeting took place, the Thunder wing was in the lineup against Memphis this time around.
Williams led Oklahoma City with a season-high 26 points and his first double-double of the 2025-26 campaign. He collected 10 assists to go with his five rebounds and was one of three Thunder players to turn in 20-point games.
The others were second-year guard Ajay Mitchell and veteran wing Kenrich Williams. Mitchell poured in 23 points and Williams chipped in 21 off the bench, in part thanks to his 3-of-7 shooting from beyond the arc.
Kenrich Williams hit a go-ahead 3 from the left wing to pull Oklahoma City ahead 115-114 with 1:07 remaining. The Thunder, who came into the night leading the NBA in defensive rating, put a bow on their head-turning win with two key stops.
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Lu Dort stole a pass from Grizzlies two-time All-Star forward Jaren Jackson Jr., who then immediately fouled Dort, resulting in a pair of Thunder free throws.
Memphis center Jock Landale turned an offensive rebound into a second-chance hook shot that made it a one-point game again.
On the Grizzlies’ final possession, Thunder guard Alex Caruso put the clamps on rookie guard Cedric Coward.
With no timeouts left, seemingly nowhere to go with the ball and the clock ticking after he had already picked up his dribble, last year’s No. 11 overall pick pivoted repeatedly before putting up a shot Caruso got a piece of.
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Jaren Jackson Jr. paced the Grizzlies with 23 points. Cam Spencer delivered 11 assists. And GG Jackson added 18 points on 7-of-12 shooting off the bench.
Memphis committed 17 turnovers and went nearly three minutes of game time without a point late in the fourth quarter.
The Peach Bowl did not start well at all for Oregon.
After the Ducks received the opening kickoff of the College Football Playoff semifinal, Indiana defensive back D’Angelo Ponds picked off Oregon QB Dante Moore on the first play from scrimmage and returned the ball for a 25-yard pick-6 to open the game.
It was one of three turnovers for Moore on the day as he also lost two fumbles later in the game. That all helped Indiana run away with a 56-22 victory to advance to the national title game.
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Indiana entered the game as a 3-point favorite thanks to its undefeated season and Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza. And also because of a defense that forces a lot of turnovers. Ponds’ pick was the 18th of the season over 15 games for the Hoosiers. Indiana has now forced 29 turnovers all season — that’s just under two per game.
Indiana is an overwhelming early favorite against Miami in the national championship game.
The No. 1 Hoosiers have opened as 7.5-point favorites at BetMGM against the No. 10 Hurricanes on Jan. 19 in Miami. Though Miami would appear to have a home-field advantage, Indiana fans took over Mercedes-Benz Stadium for the school’s Peach Bowl win over Oregon in Atlanta and should be well-represented in South Florida. After all, Indiana is looking to win its first national title in school history.
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Indiana is -300 to win the game straight up, while Miami is at +240. A $10 bet on Indiana would net $3.33, while a $10 bet on Miami to win the game would profit $24.
A victory for the Hoosiers would be a third straight national championship for the Big Ten. Michigan won the final four-team playoff at the end of the 2023 season and Ohio State won four playoff games to take the national title a season ago. Miami is looking to win its first national title since the 2001 season and become the first ACC team since Clemson after the 2018 season to win the national title.
Indiana was a 3.5-point favorite ahead of its 56-22 blowout win over Oregon on Friday night. The Hoosiers had a 35-7 lead at halftime and a 42-7 lead just after the third quarter started to make the rest of the game a formality.
Mendoza had four incompletions and five touchdown passes against Oregon. It was the fifth time over 15 games this season that he had thrown more touchdowns than incompletions.
Indiana is also trying to make modern college football history as the only undefeated team remaining at the top level. If Indiana can beat Miami, the Hoosiers will be the first team since Yale in 1894 to go 16-0. A season ago, Ohio State and Notre Dame became the first modern teams to play 16 games thanks to the advent of the 12-team playoff. Both finished 14-2 after the Buckeyes lost to Oregon and Michigan during the regular season.