In college, Brianna Keefe was always on the go. As a collegiate cheerleader and scholar, she needed healthy, delicious food options without sacrificing time or taste. Frustrated by the lack of choices for those with active lifestyles, Keefe began designing a better-for-you restaurant brand from scratch.
“Cooking at home or sitting at a restaurant didn’t work with my schedule, and I kept getting into unhealthy situations,” Keefe says. “I wanted to build a concept where I could create a job for myself and be happy going to work every day. I could feel the demand growing, especially when I moved to Washington, D.C., after college.”
Toastique CEO and founder Brianna Keefe
Keefe’s vision for Toastique was inspired by the beauty of fresh produce in its simplest form. The vibrant colors and flavors of fruits and vegetables became the foundation for a menu of gourmet toast combinations, bowls, cold-pressed juices, smoothies, wellness shots, and collagen-infused coffee beverages.
“If you can create something that looks just as beautiful as it tastes, it brings the dining experience full circle. All of our food options have nice color and flavor,” Keefe says. “Presentation is so important [to Toastique] because we eat with our eyes first. When customers watch their food being made, they’re delighted … and that instant gratification and validation makes our team feel good too.”
Toastique’s flagship location, a modest 1,000-square-foot space in the heart of D.C., lacked cooking equipment, so everything was made in-house. Keefe prioritized fresh ingredients and fast service, catering to her busy clientele of working professionals and tourists. In its first year of operation, Toastique generated over $1 million in sales.
“When we created the original menu, the idea was to try and have something for everyone, hitting all flavors and dietary preferences. Through our growth, we’ve developed new seasonal options or toasts of the month,” Keefe says. “Now, we can listen to our customers in all markets and incorporate their ideas into a concept we’re taking nationwide.”
One of Toastique’s latest innovations is a cocktail menu that brings its health and wellness focus into a new category. The cocktails are free from artificial colors, sweeteners, and excessive sugar, complementing the brand’s busiest crowd—brunchers.
“Our clientele appreciates the healthier bar options, and it elevates our brunch menu,” Keefe says. “Breakfast and lunch have the highest foot traffic, so this also introduces the opportunity of a happy hour later in the day when the crowds start to dwindle. You can’t find healthier cocktails anywhere else.”
Through franchising, Toastique has expanded to 14 states, including new locations in Atlanta and the Bay Area in California. Keefe is particularly excited about growing in West Coast markets.
“Toastique comes across as a West Coast brand, and we’re excited to expand throughout California. We have three locations there already that are strong performers,” Keefe says. “Nobody does toast like us, and our demographic will love what we have to offer. We’re doing something big and beautiful … entering new markets is one of my favorite things about the brand right now.”
During this period of growth, Keefe remains focused on connecting with each community. Each new market is an opportunity to partner with passionate entrepreneurs, attend pop-up events and farmers markets, and collaborate with local fitness businesses.
“As a young brand, being involved in the community and honing in on awareness is crucial. So is educating people about what healthy eating looks like and then making it accessible,” Keefe says. “There are a lot of better-for-you brands that aren’t authentic when you dig deep … and our transparency is something we pride ourselves on. We intentionally choose franchise partners who are comfortable going out and networking with the community.”
Keefe’s journey from athlete to restaurateur has resulted in a fast-growing national brand, earning her a spot on the Forbes 30 Under 30 list. Reflecting on her success, she credits her willingness to sacrifice everything for her passion.
“I’m so proud of the team I’ve built to surround our brand. We’ve been able to evolve Toastique into a best-in-class lifestyle brand that integrates wellness and a sense of community. We’re helping people start their day on the right foot,” Keefe says. “We want to be known as a wellness destination. People feel welcome here, regardless of their health journey. We just want to be integrated effortlessly into people’s lives … and treat them to nourishing foods that set the tone for the rest of their day.”
Purdue athletic director Mike Bobinski spent weeks creating a list of coaching candidates and perfecting his pitch to the finalists. He is also talking about increasing NIL and coaching budgets while monitoring negotiations to keep players from leaving.
The 67-year-old is embarking on a coaching search unlike any he has done previously. Bobinski said he understands this is college football in 2024, and if Purdue is going to turn things around next season and stay competitive long term, he must adapt to the swiftly changing landscape.
Speedy decisions are essential, money talks and investment plans rule the day.
“Our folks didn’t necessarily respond warmly to the way NIL evolved in the recent past, but that’s going to change,” Bobinski said Monday, one day after firing second-year coach Ryan Walters. “You need a coach who understands that and embraces that the new world is going to require a new way of thinking. And you can’t dislike the way things have evolved because they have evolved. So you’ve got to be able to find a way to thrive in that (world).”
The environment rarely rewards decision makers for finding a perfect coach. Instead, biding time can prove more costly than the roughly $9.5 million buyout Walters received.
Players can transfer on a whim, either for a coach or team they feel is a better fit or for higher name, image and likeness compensation. A lot of that money comes from boosters or sponsors who expect sustained success.
Decisons needed in a hurry
Purdue, like other schools, acted quickly following the most lopsided loss in school history, 66-0 at then No. 10 Indiana, on Saturday. Walters was fired the next day leaving the Boilermakers with a gaping hole to navigate during the early signing period that opens Wednesday and the transfer portal that opens Monday.
The compressed schedule has everyone scrambling.
Penn State coach James Franklin said Sunday he will be more involved with this week’s signings than his assistants who are installing the plan for Saturday’s Big Ten championship game between the third-ranked Nittany Lions and No. 1 Oregon. Both teams are likely to make the 12-team College Football Playoff.
For schools making coaching changes, the longer a vacancy the higher the risk of losing players, recruits and possible replacements for those who do transfer.
It explains why Florida Atlantic hired Zach Kittley from Texas Tech on Monday or Temple plucked K.C. Keeler from Sam Houston State on Tuesday. It also explains why Bobinski and North Carolina athletic director Bubba Cunningham hope to hire new coaches next week, though Cunningham recently noted his top candidates are all with teams still playing.
“It’s a great time for me to get out. This isn’t the game that I signed up for. It has changed so much,” said Mack Brown, who was fired last week despite being the winningest coach in Tar Heels history. “We were recruiting really, really well until the NIL came in. And we’ve really dropped off with our recruiting. The transfer portal is not something most of the academic schools are excited about because it’s hard to get in. So right now I think it’s a wonderful time for somebody else to come in and take over.”
Immediate gratification
Donors, of course, want to put a face with a program before shelling out the big bucks.
Indiana has gone from a three-win team in 2023 to a playoff contender under first-year coach Curt Cignetti, a potential model for how to thrive in the transfer portal era. The Hoosiers invested more money in the program to convince Cignetti to take the job.
With athlete revenue-sharing looming for schools, athletic directors are talking publicly and somewhat urgently to alumni and boosters about their need for enough money to keep football teams competitive. This is not familiar turf for some schools, as Brown alluded to.
“The last 2 1/2 to three years really, with the NIL world, the way it evolved were very different,” Bobinski said. “And, honestly, that world did not advantage Purdue. That was a challenge for us for a variety of reasons.”
College football teams are increasingly using other coaches or administrators to help head coaches manage rosters and monitor potential transfers — something more akin to serving as an NFL personnel director. Over the weekend, Stanford said former star Andrew Luck will be the school’s first football general manager.
Could that become the norm? Perhaps.
For now, the focus for Cunningham and Bobinski is finding a new coach. Only four Power Four jobs are currently open — North Carolina, UCF, West Virginia and Purdue. And as Bobinski begins this next search, his message to the candidates is simple.
“This is a good job. That doesn’t mean it’s an easy job. Those are two different things, but it is a very good job,” Bobinski said. “It will be very well resourced. We will participate fully in revenue sharing. That’s a commitment Purdue has made. We’re talking about being very much on a level playing field (financially) with the people they’re competing against.”
___
AP Sports Writer Aaron Beard contributed to this report.
Surprisingly,the top two contenders for this year’s Heisman Trophy race are not quarterbacks. Only two non-quarterbacks have won the award in the last 14 years – wide receiver DeVonta Smith in 2020 and running back Derrick Henry in 2016.
In the top three contenders for the Heisman Trophy, there is one quarterbacks, one running back, and one player who doubles as a wide receiver and cornerback. If you’ve not been paying attention, allow me to introduce you.
2024 Heisman Trophy candidates
WR/CB Travis Hunter, Colorado
No other player in the NCAA has played two positions as consistently and successfully as Colorado’s Travis Hunter, who lines up on both sides of the ball. As such, he’s played 1,266 snaps (602 on offense, 640 on defense, and 24 on special teams), more than any other player since 2018, according to ESPN. And he’s been successful on those snaps as well.
On offense, Hunter is a receiving weapon, with 92 catches for 1,152 yards and 14 touchdowns this season, the second-most in one season in school history.
As a cornerback, Hunter has logged 31 tackles, 11 pass deflections, a forced fumble, and four interceptions. He is the first player since 1980 to record 1,000 receiving yards and three interceptions in one season.
The only defensive player to ever win the Heisman Trophy was Charles Woodson in 1997, taking the majority of his snaps as a defensive back, but also serving as a kick returner and the occasional wide receiver, logging 238 yards and three touchdowns. When you think about that, it makes what Hunter’s done even more impressive.
Charles Woodson says Travis hunter has his vote for #HE12MAN ‼️
“It’s not just the amount of snaps , it’s the production “
Colorado’s season is over after they beat Oklahoma State 52-0 on Friday. Hunter is a finalist for the Chuck Bednarik Award, given to the best defensive player of the year, and in competition with Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty for the Maxwell Award, an award given to the College Football Player of the Year and which usually mirrors the Heisman (the last eight of ten winners of the Maxwell also won the Heisman).
RB Ashton Jeanty, Boise State
Boise State still has one game left to play this Saturday, the Mountain West Championship against the Rebels, but their standout running back Ashton Jeanty has already racked up record rushing yards. He’s got 312 carries for 2,288 yards and 28 touchdowns, plus 18 catches for 102 yards and a receiving touchdown.
Jeanty is the first player to rush for 125+ yards in 11 straight games in the same season since Troy Davis did so in 1996 at Iowa State. He needs just two more rushing touchdowns to join Barry Sanders as the only players in FBS history with 30 rushing touchdowns and 2,000 yards in a single-season (Sanders holds the record with 2,850 rushing yards in a season).
His 2,062 rushing yards leads the nation, with his closest competitor still 600 yards behind him.
Ashton Jeanty will go down as the most deserving player to not win the Heisman.
He’s done things we’ve never seen from a running back & did it all without striking a Heisman pose after every score. pic.twitter.com/60uaSbCobT
Dillon Gabriel played for UCF from 2019 until 2021 when he transferred to Oklahoma for the 2022 season. He spent two seasons there, racking up 6,828 yards, 55 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. In his final year, he transferred to Oregon, ahead of the 2024 season.
He’s now led them to a 12-0 season and a Big Ten title game. He leads the conference in passing yards (3,275) and touchdowns (24). He has a shot to pass Case Keenum (19,217)as the NCAA’s all-time passing leader, currently at 18,140. This is the fifth time in his career that he’s over 3,000 yards passing. He set an NCAA FBS record for total touchdowns last month.
His success lifted Oregon to No. 1 in the rankings and made them the only undefeated team in the nation.
Heisman Trophy odds
These are the odds of each of the top candidates to win the Heisman Trophy in 2024, according to Fox Sports. Colorado’s Travis Hunter has the lead.
Player
Position
School
Odds
Travis Hunter
WR/CB
Colorado
-10000
Ashton Jeanty
RB
Boise State
+2500
Dillon Gabriel
QB
Oregon
+30000
When is the Heisman Trophy ceremony?
Voting opens on December 2 and closes on December 9. The Heisman winner will be announced and presented in New York on Saturday, December 14, one week after the conference championship games. The finalists invited to New York will be revealed on December 9.
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The fifth College Football Playoff rankings of 2024 will be announced tonight, Tuesday, Nov. 30, and things are bound to change after seven ranked teams lost last weekend. Before the CFP committee unveils the next rankings, I predict where the top 25 teams will land, along with the bracket.
Note that these are my predictions and mine alone. I look at head-to-head results, schedule strength, games against ranked teams and more to help rank the teams how I think the CFP committee will do so. You can read the CFP committee’s official protocols here.
2024 College Football Playoff rankings predictions: Fifth Top 25 projections
These predictions are as of Sunday, Dec. 1.
Oregon (12-0) LW: 1 — Oregon will be ranked No. 1 as long as it’s undefeated.
Texas (11-1) LW: 3 — Texas won its long-awaited rivalry game with Texas A&M, adding a quality win to its resume as it moves up to No. 2
Penn State (11-1) LW: 4 — Penn State moves up in this week’s rankings after Ohio State’s loss.
Notre Dame (11-1) LW: 5 — Notre Dame escaped USC and will likely host a game in the first round of the playoff, potentially rising to the No. 5 seed when it’s all said and done.
Georgia (10-2) LW: 7 — A win is a win in the committee’s eyes this week. Georgia moves up thanks to winning its close game in a week where Miami and Ohio State lost.
Tennessee (10-2) LW: 8 — Tennessee assured its spot in the playoff with a win over Vanderbilt. The Volunteers will be in a great position to host a playoff game.
Ohio State (10-2) LW: 2 — Ohio State will still be in the playoffs even with its second loss because of wins over Penn State and Indiana. Those wins keep the Buckeyes over a pair of one-loss teams.
SMU (11-1) LW: 9 — SMU defeated Cal to enter the ACC championship with just one loss.
Indiana (11-1) LW: 10 — Indiana stays behind SMU after a win over a one-win Purdue team.
Boise State (11-1) LW: 11 — Boise State handled business against Oregon State and will rise into the top 10.
South Carolina (9-3) LW: 15 — Theorder of the rankings from No. 12-14 will be the cause for plenty of debate. South Carolina beat a Clemson team ranked No. 12 last week, while other three-loss SEC teams beat unranked opponents. However, teams like Alabama and Ole Miss defeated the Gamecocks head-to-head. True as that may be, the committee already showed that head-to-head isn’t the end-all factor when the Tide, Rebels, Bulldogs and Vols were all in the top 10 a few weeks ago. The Clemson win pushes the Gamecocks into the playoffs.
Alabama (9-3) LW: 13 — Alabama will be the first team out this week at No. 12 since it’s ranked higher than any Big 12 team. The Tide will need one team to falter to help it make the playoff.
Ole Miss (9-3) LW: 14 — Ole Miss will be ranked 14th by the committee and require conference championship game blowouts to make the playoff.
Miami (FL) (10-2) LW: 6 — Miami lost its second game of the season to Syracuse. The Hurricanes have fewer losses than teams ranked above it, but Miami hasn’t defeated a currently ranked team. The loss to Syracuse knocked Miami from the ACC championship game and the playoff picture.
Arizona State (10-2) LW: 16 — Arizona State dominated Arizona with a spot in the Big 12 championship game on the line. The Sun Devils are just one more win away from a playoff spot.
Iowa State (10-2) LW: 18 — Iowa State won Farmeggedon, holding off Kansas State. The Cyclones can clinch a playoff spot with a win next week.
BYU (10-2) LW: 19 — BYU finishes the regular season with 10 wins but is out of the playoff picture since it won’t play in the Big 12 title game.
Clemson (9-3) LW: 12 — Clemson’s hopes of making the playoff as an at-large team died with a loss to South Carolina, but its hopes of making the playoff revived when Miami’s loss sent it to the ACC Championship Game. Nonetheless, expect Clemson to land outside the top 15 this week.
Missouri (9-3) LW: 21 — Missouri rallied past Arkansas and will move inside the top 20 this week.
UNLV (10-2) LW: 22 — UNLV took down Nevada and will enter the top 20 ahead of a CFP elimination game in the Mountain West title game.
Syracuse (9-3) LW: NR — At 9-3 with a win over a then-top-10 team, Syracuse will enter the rankings this week.
Illinois (9-3) LW: 23 — Illinois defeated Northwestern and will remain ranked this week.
Colorado (9-3) LW: 25 — Colorado moves up after a 52-0 win on Black Friday. Unfortunately, the Buffaloes saw their playoff hopes disappear last week in a loss.
Texas A&M (8-4) LW: 20 — Texas A&M lost to Texas, but the committee will keep the Aggies ranked since Texas is a top-two team.
Army (10-1) LW: NR — I have no idea who the committee will rank in the final spot, but I’ll go with Army since the Black Knights are 10-1 and bounced back from their first loss with a win.
First Teams Out: No. 12 Alabama, No. 13 Ole Miss, No. 14 Miami
Notable College Football Playoff rankings questions
How far does Ohio State fall?
Ohio State lost to an unranked Michigan, but it still has wins over two top-10 teams. The playoff committee already had a pair of two-loss teams ranked above one-loss teams last week. Could a third two-loss team in Ohio State continue the trend?
Where are the three-loss SEC teams in comparison to Miami?
Miami is the other top-10 team to suffer its second loss this week. However, the Hurricanes don’t have nearly the quality wins of a team like Ohio State. Miami likely will fall below a one-loss Boise State team putting it out of the top 10. The next teams outside of the top 10 are all three-loss teams based on last week’s rankings. When comparing resumes, how much the committee will weigh a third loss will determine where Miami lands compared to South Carolina, Alabama and Ole Miss.
Resume comparison
Team
Rec.
LW Rank
LW Result
Current Ranked Wins
Losses
Miami (FL)
10-2
No. 6
L Syracuse
None Best win: Louisville or Duke
Georgia Tech (28-23) Syracuse (42-38)
Alabama
9-3
No. 13
W Auburn
Georgia (41-34) South Carolina (27-25) Missouri (34-0)
Is a win over Clemson enough to move South Carolina past teams it lost to?
South Carolina lost to LSU in a controversial 36-33 finish, lost to Ole Miss in a 27-3 rout and lost to Alabama 27-25 in a close one. That’s two losses to two teams ranked right in front of the Gamecocks. However, South Carolina was the only team to beat a ranked team this week. Will that be enough to make the Gamecocks the last team in?
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Tennessee sent emails to season-ticket holders and students on Sunday to prepare them to buy tickets to the Vols’ College Football Playoff game.
Tennessee will make the College Football Playoff, but the only question is whether it will play at home or on the road in the first round. The updated College Football Playoff rankings will be released Tuesday (7 p.m. ET, ESPN), and the final bracket will be announced on Sunday.
There will be one first-round playoff game on Dec. 20 and three games on Dec. 21 at campus sites. Matchups will announced on Sunday.
Ticket prices, which are determined by the College Football Playoff, will be announced at a later date. But UT already has general guidelines for its season-ticket holders and students to purchase playoff tickets.
Here’s the breakdown to request tickets.
Tickets if Tennessee hosts first-round playoff game
UT season-ticket holders will get the first opportunity to purchase their seat for a first-round home playoff game.
“If Tennessee is selected to host a first round (playoff game), 2024 football season ticket holders will receive an invoice for tickets in their current seat location after the selection show on Dec. 8. Any remaining tickets will be offered in donor rank order, with additional details provided after the game is announced,” the UT email to season-ticket holders said.
Credit cards will not be charged until Tennessee’s game is announced. All sales will be final and refunds will not be issued.
Students were sent an email for instructions to purchase tickets for a potential home playoff game.
UT will hold a request window for student tickets from 9 a.m. Monday to noon Tuesday in a similar format to buying regular-season tickets.
Students with the highest T-credit average will be selected for student tickets available, so being first or last to request will have no weight on a student’s chance to be selected to purchase a ticket. T-credit measures the number of athletic events that students attend during the year.
For the rest of the fan base, expect single-game tickets to sell quickly after the 12-team bracket is announced on Sunday.
Tickets if Tennessee plays first-round playoff game on road
If UT plays on the road in the first round, season-ticket holders and donors will have an opportunity to submit ticket requests. That window will open after the game is announced on Dec. 8.
However, tickets to a UT playoff road game would be very limited. Visiting teams in the playoff receive only 3,500 tickets compared to 5,000 tickets for SEC road games.
UT will accommodate Tennessee Fund donors according to donor rank with an opportunity to purchase road playoff tickets. However, UT anticipates only 1,000 tickets being available to donors after institutional needs are met.
A very limited number of student tickets will be available if UT plays a road game in the first round.
So most UT fans planning to attend a first-round road game likely would rely on the secondary ticket market.
Tickets for Tennessee games if Vols advance in playoff
UT is also hosting an exclusive window for season-ticket holders to submit ticket requests for quarterfinal, semifinal and national championship games if the Vols advance past the first-round game.
Details about that window were included in UT’s email to season-ticket holders. The window will remain open through Dec. 11. Season-ticket holders can request as many as six tickets to those games.
Students will receive an email after the bracket is announced on Dec. 8 with instructions on purchasing tickets to quarterfinal, semifinal and championship games.
Quarterfinals will be played at bowl sites: Fiesta Bowl (Dec. 31), Peach Bowl (Jan. 1), Rose Bowl (Jan. 1), Sugar Bowl (Jan. 1). Semifinals will be played at the Orange Bowl (Jan. 9) and Cotton Bowl (Jan. 10).
The national championship game will be on Jan. 20 in Atlanta.
Credit cards will not be charged until Tennessee is announced in the game that was requested. All sales will be final and refunds will not be issued.
After a chaotic end to the regular season in college football, the matchups are set for championship week. Here’s a look at the showdowns coming up in the Power Four and Group of Five. All championship games are Dec. 7 except in the American Athletic, Conference USA and Mountain West, which will be played Dec. 6.
ACC Championship
No. 9 SMU (11-1, 8-0 ACC, No. 9 CFP) vs. No. 12 Clemson (9-3, 7-1, No. 12 CFP) at Charlotte, North Carolina
What to know: The Mustangs completed a sweep of their first ACC schedule with a 38-6 win over California, making them the only team in their new league that didn’t lose a conference game; SMU has a 17-game conference winning streak dating to its days in the American Athletic. Clemson, which advanced to the title game after Miami lost at Syracuse, will be seeking its eighth ACC crown in the past 10 years.
Big Ten Championship
No. 1 Oregon (12-0, 9-0 Big Ten, No. 1 CFP) vs. No. 4 Penn State (11-1, 8-1, No. 4 CFP) at Indianapolis
What to know: The Nittany Lions have been one of the quietest one-loss teams all season but get a chance for a big win and a higher CFP seed with a victory in this one. They will face the last unbeaten team in college football in the Ducks, who finished the regular season without loss for the first time since 2010.
Big 12 Championship
No. 14 Arizona State (10-2, 7-2 Big 12, No. 16 CFP) vs. TBD at Arlington, Texas
What to know: The Sun Devils rode Cam Skattebo (177 yards and three touchdowns) in a big win over rival Arizona to land a title game berth after perhaps the wildest of all power conference races. Their opponent was not settled until late Saturday.
SEC Championship
No. 3 Texas (11-1, 7-1 SEC, No. 3 CFP) vs. No. 6 Georgia (10-2, 6-2, No. 7 CFP) at Atlanta
No. 25 Army (10-1, 8-0 AAC) vs. No. 18 Tulane (9-3, 7-1, No. 17 CFP) at West Point, New York.
What to know: The Green Wave’s loss to Memphis over the weekend likely cost the league any hope of a playoff bid but both teams are going to the postseason regardless. Army still has its annual showdown with Navy before a bowl game, too.
Conference USA Championship
Jacksonville State (8-4, 7-1 CUSA) vs. Western Kentucky (8-4, 6-2) at Jacksonville, Florida
What to know: The C-USA title game pits two teams in a rematch six days after facing each other. WKU handed the Gamecocks their first league loss, 19-17 on Saturday night, and will have to beat them again for the title.
Mid-American Championship
Ohio (9-3, 7-1 MAC) and Miami (Ohio) (8-4, 7-1) at Detroit
What to know: The two Ohio schools met earlier this season, with the RedHawks beating the visiting Bobcats 30-20. Ohio has won seven of its last eight.
Mountain West Championship
No. 11 Boise State (11-1, 7-0 MWC, No. 11 CFP) vs. No. 21 UNLV (10-2, 6-1, No. 22 CFP) at Boise, Idaho
What to know: The Broncos bring a 10-game winning streak into the championship game, have won 11 straight at home and are on the verge of making the College Football Playoff behind Heisman Trophy candidate Ashton Jeanty. They have made the Mountain West title game three straight seasons. This one is a rematch of the title game a year ago won by Boise State and a regular-season matchup in October, a 29-24 Broncos win.
Sun Belt Championship
Louisiana-Lafayette (10-2, 7-1 Sun Belt) vs. Marshall (9-3, 7-1) at Troy, Alabama
What to know: The Ragin’ Cajuns earned a spot in the championship for the fifth time in the seven-year history of the game. Marshall beat James Madison 35-33 in double overtime to clinch a spot for the first time in program history.
Rivalry week lived up to the billing as several of the top teams in the country were dragged down by their respective arch-nemesis. No. 2 Ohio State and No. 6 Miami lost stunners, while No. 7 Georgia and No. 8 Tennessee needed late comebacks to pull away from far lesser opponents.
The chaos had a major impact on the conference title races. Penn State will now play in the Big Ten Championship Game instead of Ohio State, while Clemson made it to the ACC title game after Miami’s loss.
The night slate brings more potential for upheaval. No. 3 Texas travels to Kyle Field to play No. 20 Texas A&M in a historic matchup. With wins, No. 18 Iowa State and No. 19 BYU have openings to the Big 12 Championship Game. Here are the biggest winners and losers of college football’s Week 14.
Loser: Ohio State coach Ryan Day
Ohio State was a four-score favorite against its hated rival. Michigan was down their two best players. The Buckeyes had the more talented roster by a massive margin. Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork confirmed that the program spent more than $20 million in the NIL market to assemble this team. It didn’t matter. Michigan shocked Ohio State 13-10 after a late field goal from Dominic Zvada to pick up one of the most devastating losses in modern Ohio State history.
Day may return next season as Ohio State’s coach and the Buckeyes still technically have a chance to win the national championship as they should still make the playoff. Still, there are three expectations in Columbus: Beat Michigan, win the Big Ten and win the national championship. Day has now whiffed on the first two in four straight seasons. If he doesn’t win the national championship this year, he could very soon be out of a job.
South Carolina quarterback LaNorris Sellers has been one of the rising stars in the sport, but his performance in a 17-14 win over No. 12 Clemson will put him firmly on the national map. Sellers threw for 164 yards and rushed for 166 and two touchdowns to pull the upset victory at Death Valley. Sellers had a game-winning 20-yard run with 1:08 remaining that will go down as one of the biggest runs in South Carolina history. There’s no guarantee that the Gamecocks find their way into the College Football playoff, but Norris’s Herculean effort at least gives them a chance.
Loser: Miami
All Miami had to do was survive Syracuse. More, all the ‘Canes really had to do was maintain 21-0 lead they took early in the second quarter and they would be essentially a lock to play for the national championship. Instead, another poor game management decision from Mario Cristobal proved costly in a 42-38 loss against the Orange.
Cristobal opted to kick a field goal from the 10-yard line with 3:42 remaining in the game despite trailing by seven points. The Hurricanes did not get the ball back again as the defense failed to get Syracuse off the field. Now, Miami has no control of its CFP fate and will be in a battle with teams like Alabama and South Carolina to make the field. It’s a total failure and could prove to be the end of the season for the best Miami passing offense in school history.
Loser: SEC title contenders
The good news for the top of the SEC is most of its top contenders ultimately pulled off victories in tight rivalry week games. However, none of them looked anywhere near national championship caliber during a miserable 24-hour stretch on Friday and Saturday.
No. 7 Georgia looked miserable in a 44-42 win over Georgia Tech that went to eight overtimes, the second-most in college football history. The Bulldogs needed 21 points in the fourth quarter just to give themselves a chance. No. 8 Tennessee similarly got off to a slow start against Vanderbilt, going down 17-7 in the first quarter before finally turning things on. No. 14 Ole Miss needed a late fourth quarter touchdown to pull away for a 26-14 win over a horrendous Mississippi State team.
Ultimately, the performances probably won’t hurt the SEC’s place in the College Football Playoff, but it certainly didn’t help.
Sitting at 2-4, Baylor coach Dave Aranda seemed dead to rights. The Bears faced a tall task just to make a bowl game. Instead, the Bears are suddenly the hottest team in the Big 12. Baylor shocked Kansas 45-17 to cap off a six-game winning streak and clinch an eight-win season for the first time since 2021. The Bears won’t get the tiebreaker luck they need to reach the Big 12 title game, but Baylor is playing as well as anyone in the conference.
Quarterback Sawyer Robertson (23 for 31 for 310 yards and four touchdowns) and running back Bryson Washington (28 carries for 192 yards and two touchdowns) have been the breakout stars of the run and present Aranda some serious building blocks. The Bears will have a serious case to be a preseason Big 12 favorite in 2024.
Loser: The AAC
No. 17 Tulane was perhaps the biggest winner of the last CFP Rankings after sitting at No. 17, ahead of multiple two-loss Big 12 teams. If Arizona State lost, there was a serious chance that Tulane could get into the CFP over the Big 12 champion as the fifth conference champion.
Instead, the Green Wave were unprepared for the moment and lost against Memphis 34-24 to pick up a third loss and likely risk their spot in the top 25. Tulane rushed for only 57 yards and gave up 242 yards on the ground, including 177 to running back Mario Anderson. Instead of being the hunter, Tulane is in rough shape as both Boise State and UNLV are likely to finish ahead of the AAC champ in the rankings.
Rivalry week lived up to the billing as several of the top teams in the country were dragged down by their respective arch-nemesis. No. 2 Ohio State and No. 6 Miami lost stunners, while No. 7 Georgia and No. 8 Tennessee needed late comebacks to pull away from far lesser opponents.
The chaos had a major impact on the conference title races. Penn State will now play in the Big Ten Championship Game instead of Ohio State, while Clemson made it to the ACC title game after Miami’s loss.
The night slate brings more potential for upheaval. No. 3 Texas travels to Kyle Field to play No. 20 Texas A&M in a historic matchup. With wins, No. 18 Iowa State and No. 19 BYU have openings to the Big 12 Championship Game. Here are the biggest winners and losers of college football’s Week 14.
Loser: Ohio State coach Ryan Day
Ohio State was a four-score favorite against its hated rival. Michigan was down their two best players. The Buckeyes had the more talented roster by a massive margin. Ohio State athletic director Ross Bjork confirmed that the program spent more than $20 million in the NIL market to assemble this team. It didn’t matter. Michigan shocked Ohio State 13-10 after a late field goal from Dominic Zvada to pick up one of the most devastating losses in modern Ohio State history.
Day may return next season as Ohio State’s coach and the Buckeyes still technically have a chance to win the national championship as they should still make the playoff. Still, there are three expectations in Columbus: Beat Michigan, win the Big Ten and win the national championship. Day has now whiffed on the first two in four straight seasons. If he doesn’t win the national championship this year, he could very soon be out of a job.
South Carolina quarterback LaNorris Sellers has been one of the rising stars in the sport, but his performance in a 17-14 win over No. 12 Clemson will put him firmly on the national map. Sellers threw for 164 yards and rushed for 166 and two touchdowns to pull the upset victory at Death Valley. Sellers had a game-winning 20-yard run with 1:08 remaining that will go down as one of the biggest runs in South Carolina history. There’s no guarantee that the Gamecocks find their way into the College Football playoff, but Norris’s Herculean effort at least gives them a chance.
Loser: Miami
All Miami had to do was survive Syracuse. More, all the ‘Canes really had to do was maintain 21-0 lead they took early in the second quarter and they would be essentially a lock to play for the national championship. Instead, another poor game management decision from Mario Cristobal proved costly in a 42-38 loss against the Orange.
Cristobal opted to kick a field goal from the 10-yard line with 3:42 remaining in the game despite trailing by seven points. The Hurricanes did not get the ball back again as the defense failed to get Syracuse off the field. Now, Miami has no control of its CFP fate and will be in a battle with teams like Alabama and South Carolina to make the field. It’s a total failure and could prove to be the end of the season for the best Miami passing offense in school history.
Loser: SEC title contenders
The good news for the top of the SEC is most of its top contenders ultimately pulled off victories in tight rivalry week games. However, none of them looked anywhere near national championship caliber during a miserable 24-hour stretch on Friday and Saturday.
No. 7 Georgia looked miserable in a 44-42 win over Georgia Tech that went to eight overtimes, the second-most in college football history. The Bulldogs needed 21 points in the fourth quarter just to give themselves a chance. No. 8 Tennessee similarly got off to a slow start against Vanderbilt, going down 17-7 in the first quarter before finally turning things on. No. 14 Ole Miss needed a late fourth quarter touchdown to pull away for a 26-14 win over a horrendous Mississippi State team.
Ultimately, the performances probably won’t hurt the SEC’s place in the College Football Playoff, but it certainly didn’t help.
Sitting at 2-4, Baylor coach Dave Aranda seemed dead to rights. The Bears faced a tall task just to make a bowl game. Instead, the Bears are suddenly the hottest team in the Big 12. Baylor shocked Kansas 45-17 to cap off a six-game winning streak and clinch an eight-win season for the first time since 2021. The Bears won’t get the tiebreaker luck they need to reach the Big 12 title game, but Baylor is playing as well as anyone in the conference.
Quarterback Sawyer Robertson (23 for 31 for 310 yards and four touchdowns) and running back Bryson Washington (28 carries for 192 yards and two touchdowns) have been the breakout stars of the run and present Aranda some serious building blocks. The Bears will have a serious case to be a preseason Big 12 favorite in 2024.
Loser: The AAC
No. 17 Tulane was perhaps the biggest winner of the last CFP Rankings after sitting at No. 17, ahead of multiple two-loss Big 12 teams. If Arizona State lost, there was a serious chance that Tulane could get into the CFP over the Big 12 champion as the fifth conference champion.
Instead, the Green Wave were unprepared for the moment and lost against Memphis 34-24 to pick up a third loss and likely risk their spot in the top 25. Tulane rushed for only 57 yards and gave up 242 yards on the ground, including 177 to running back Mario Anderson. Instead of being the hunter, Tulane is in rough shape as both Boise State and UNLV are likely to finish ahead of the AAC champ in the rankings.
Looking back at how each team reached the final Saturday of November, there was almost nothing out there to suggest the Wolverines would score this upset.
But there were two factors that were clearly overlooked. One was history: Michigan had won three in a row in this rivalry, so thoroughly humbling Ohio State that the No. 2 Buckeyes essentially reinvented themselves to regain a foothold in the series.
Another was Michigan’s defense. While not quite up to the standard set a year ago, this group carried the Wolverines into the postseason with no help from one of the worst offenses in modern program history.
History, defense, key plays in key moments, the ability to eventually dictate the flow of this game despite Ohio State’s best efforts, another dominant fourth quarter – that’s how the Wolverines scored what should go down as one of the great upsets in the rivalry’s history.
For Michigan, the win overwrites what had been an often miserable year under new coach Sherrone Moore. His tenure now has a marquee moment upon which to build the foundation for a future Big Ten or national champion.
In the immediate future, the Buckeyes will no longer reach the conference championship game. No. 1 Oregon will instead meet No. 4 Penn State, which closed out the regular season by beating Maryland. Not playing for the Big Ten crown will force Ohio State to sweat out the final College Football Playoff rankings and see where their postseason journey begins..
And in the bigger picture, this is a nightmare moment for coach Ryan Day. He is the first Ohio State coach to lose four in a row to Michigan since John Cooper from 1988-91 and the first coach to lose to an unranked Michigan team since Cooper in 1993.
FIRING TIME?:Latest Michigan loss has Ohio State’s Ryan Day under fire
This is the worst loss of Day’s tenure and one of the Buckeyes’ worst losses in this series. Despite his regular-season success against teams other than the Wolverines, Day may never live this one down.
The Buckeyes, Wolverines and South Carolina lead Saturday’s winners and losers:
Winners
Michigan
Michigan should play a bowl game in Charlotte, Nashville or Tampa while Ohio State might end up in the playoff, so the Buckeyes could end up having the last laugh. Yeah, right: The Wolverines are going to be laughing at the Buckeyes’ expense for another year after owning the fourth quarter, continuing one of the dominant themes of this four-game winning streak. Going back to 2021, Michigan has outscored OSU 75-31 in the second half.
South Carolina
With his team down 14-10 with just over a minute left, South Carolina quarterback LaNorris Sellers weaved his way through No. 12 Clemson’s defense for a 20-yard touchdown run to complete the Gamecocks’ 17-14 win and an incredible run through the second half of the regular season. No. 14 South Carolina closed with six wins in a row, four against ranked competition, and now are in position to earn a miraculous playoff berth with some help in the Power Four. In a do-or-die rivalry matchup for both teams, the Gamecocks were able to intercept Cade Klubnik on the game’s final possession to win in Death Valley for the second time in a row.
Clemson
But Clemson is also a winner, of a sort. Despite losing the rivalry game, the Tigers will backdoor into the ACC championship game by virtue of No. 6 Miami’s loss to Syracuse. After all this, Clemson might get back into the playoff by beating No. 9 SMU and winning the ACC for seventh time in nine years.
Tennessee and Notre Dame
These two prominent playoff contenders locked down at-large bids with rivalry wins to close out the regular season. Nico Iamaleava had four touchdowns passes to spark No. 8 Tennessee’s 36-23 win against Vanderbilt. Later on Saturday afternoon, the No. 5 Fighting Irish outscored Southern California 21-7 in the third quarter and then had two field-length interception returns for touchdowns in the fourth to win 49-35. The Irish are in position to host an opening-round playoff opponent. The Volunteers may as well, depending on what happens in next week’s conference championship games.
Losers
The ACC
Losing 42-38 to Syracuse puts No. 6 Miami’s playoff hopes in dire straits. But they aren’t dead entirely, not with the messiness that has ensued in the SEC and the dearth of contenders with fewer than three losses. We’ll know with the penultimate playoff rankings on Tuesday night where Miami really stands. The Hurricanes’ case rests on at least five wins against bowl teams, led by wins against Duke and Louisville. Overall, though, this is the story for the ACC: That Clemson and Miami lost on Saturday very likely makes this a one-bid league to the playoff.
Ryan Day
It’s hard to describe just how disastrous Saturday was for Day, who has excelled at Ohio State in every metric but the two that matter: beating the Wolverines and winning national championships. He may still have the chance to achieve the latter thanks to playoff expansion. But regardless of what happens over the next two months, this loss to Michigan is one Day will never live down. While the idea that he’d be replaced after this year remains difficult to imagine, Day will at a minimum head into the 2025 season needing to beat Michigan, play for the Big Ten crown and make a deep run into the playoff to ensure his future with the Buckeyes.
Kansas
The second-half magic ran out near the finish line for Kansas, which had three ranked wins in a row against Iowa State, Brigham Young and Colorado but lost 45-21 to Baylor to fall just shy of bowl eligibility. Down 21-10 at halftime, the Jayhawks allowed three touchdown drives of at least 62 yards in the third quarter to trail 42-17 heading into the third quarter. This was the first game all year that got out of hand: The Jayhawks’ remaining six losses came by a combined 30 points.
Auburn
The Iron Bowl came at the right time for No. 13 Alabama. After last week’s 24-3 loss to Oklahoma, the Crimson Tide took out some frustration on Auburn by running for 201 yards and four scores in a 28-14 win. That’s the Tigers’ fifth loss in a row in the series, the program’s longest losing streak since dropping nine in a row from 1973-81. The loss also keeps Auburn out of the postseason for the second time in three years while handing coach Hugh Freeze back-to-back losing seasons for the first time in his coaching career.
Looking back at how each team reached the final Saturday of November, there was almost nothing out there to suggest the Wolverines would score this upset.
But there were two factors that were clearly overlooked. One was history: Michigan had won three in a row in this rivalry, so thoroughly humbling Ohio State that the No. 2 Buckeyes essentially reinvented themselves to regain a foothold in the series.
Another was Michigan’s defense. While not quite up to the standard set a year ago, this group carried the Wolverines into the postseason with no help from one of the worst offenses in modern program history.
History, defense, key plays in key moments, the ability to eventually dictate the flow of this game despite Ohio State’s best efforts, another dominant fourth quarter – that’s how the Wolverines scored what should go down as one of the great upsets in the rivalry’s history.
For Michigan, the win overwrites what had been an often miserable year under new coach Sherrone Moore. His tenure now has a marquee moment upon which to build the foundation for a future Big Ten or national champion.
In the immediate future, the Buckeyes will no longer reach the conference championship game. No. 1 Oregon will instead meet No. 4 Penn State, which closed out the regular season by beating Maryland. Not playing for the Big Ten crown will force Ohio State to sweat out the final College Football Playoff rankings and see where their postseason journey begins..
And in the bigger picture, this is a nightmare moment for coach Ryan Day. He is the first Ohio State coach to lose four in a row to Michigan since John Cooper from 1988-91 and the first coach to lose to an unranked Michigan team since Cooper in 1993.
FIRING TIME?:Latest Michigan loss has Ohio State’s Ryan Day under fire
This is the worst loss of Day’s tenure and one of the Buckeyes’ worst losses in this series. Despite his regular-season success against teams other than the Wolverines, Day may never live this one down.
The Buckeyes, Wolverines and South Carolina lead Saturday’s winners and losers:
Winners
Michigan
Michigan should play a bowl game in Charlotte, Nashville or Tampa while Ohio State might end up in the playoff, so the Buckeyes could end up having the last laugh. Yeah, right: The Wolverines are going to be laughing at the Buckeyes’ expense for another year after owning the fourth quarter, continuing one of the dominant themes of this four-game winning streak. Going back to 2021, Michigan has outscored OSU 75-31 in the second half.
South Carolina
With his team down 14-10 with just over a minute left, South Carolina quarterback LaNorris Sellers weaved his way through No. 12 Clemson’s defense for a 20-yard touchdown run to complete the Gamecocks’ 17-14 win and an incredible run through the second half of the regular season. No. 14 South Carolina closed with six wins in a row, four against ranked competition, and now are in position to earn a miraculous playoff berth with some help in the Power Four. In a do-or-die rivalry matchup for both teams, the Gamecocks were able to intercept Cade Klubnik on the game’s final possession to win in Death Valley for the second time in a row.
Clemson
But Clemson is also a winner, of a sort. Despite losing the rivalry game, the Tigers will backdoor into the ACC championship game by virtue of No. 6 Miami’s loss to Syracuse. After all this, Clemson might get back into the playoff by beating No. 9 SMU and winning the ACC for seventh time in nine years.
Tennessee and Notre Dame
These two prominent playoff contenders locked down at-large bids with rivalry wins to close out the regular season. Nico Iamaleava had four touchdowns passes to spark No. 8 Tennessee’s 36-23 win against Vanderbilt. Later on Saturday afternoon, the No. 5 Fighting Irish outscored Southern California 21-7 in the third quarter and then had two field-length interception returns for touchdowns in the fourth to win 49-35. The Irish are in position to host an opening-round playoff opponent. The Volunteers may as well, depending on what happens in next week’s conference championship games.
Losers
The ACC
Losing 42-38 to Syracuse puts No. 6 Miami’s playoff hopes in dire straits. But they aren’t dead entirely, not with the messiness that has ensued in the SEC and the dearth of contenders with fewer than three losses. We’ll know with the penultimate playoff rankings on Tuesday night where Miami really stands. The Hurricanes’ case rests on at least five wins against bowl teams, led by wins against Duke and Louisville. Overall, though, this is the story for the ACC: That Clemson and Miami lost on Saturday very likely makes this a one-bid league to the playoff.
Ryan Day
It’s hard to describe just how disastrous Saturday was for Day, who has excelled at Ohio State in every metric but the two that matter: beating the Wolverines and winning national championships. He may still have the chance to achieve the latter thanks to playoff expansion. But regardless of what happens over the next two months, this loss to Michigan is one Day will never live down. While the idea that he’d be replaced after this year remains difficult to imagine, Day will at a minimum head into the 2025 season needing to beat Michigan, play for the Big Ten crown and make a deep run into the playoff to ensure his future with the Buckeyes.
Kansas
The second-half magic ran out near the finish line for Kansas, which had three ranked wins in a row against Iowa State, Brigham Young and Colorado but lost 45-21 to Baylor to fall just shy of bowl eligibility. Down 21-10 at halftime, the Jayhawks allowed three touchdown drives of at least 62 yards in the third quarter to trail 42-17 heading into the third quarter. This was the first game all year that got out of hand: The Jayhawks’ remaining six losses came by a combined 30 points.
Auburn
The Iron Bowl came at the right time for No. 13 Alabama. After last week’s 24-3 loss to Oklahoma, the Crimson Tide took out some frustration on Auburn by running for 201 yards and four scores in a 28-14 win. That’s the Tigers’ fifth loss in a row in the series, the program’s longest losing streak since dropping nine in a row from 1973-81. The loss also keeps Auburn out of the postseason for the second time in three years while handing coach Hugh Freeze back-to-back losing seasons for the first time in his coaching career.