Ohio State took down Notre Dame to win the inaugural 12-team College Football Playoff and claim the school’s first national championship since 2014, but now it’s time to get an early look ahead to the 2025 college football season and what teams are in contention right now.
NIL and the transfer portal have changed the game, but there is still a lot that works even if more reinvention is coming.
Week 1 of the 2025 college football season features a loaded slate, including LSU at Clemson, Notre Dame at Miami and Alabama at Florida State, among others. LSU-Clemson could be a top-five matchup, as could the biggest headliner: Manning and Texas visiting Ohio State in a matchup of the 2024 national champion and our early 2025 favorite.
The Georgia Bulldogs have been projected as the number-one seed for the 2025 college football playoffs. While the 2024 college football season just recently en
Here's the complete schedule for the College Football Playoff for the 2025-26 season, including game dates, how to watch and teams. This is the second year of the 12-team playoff.
NFL Draft declaration deadline is in the rearview mirror, which means the crop of prospects for April's event is set. A total of 71 college players will forgo their remaining eligibility and test the professional waters.
We ranked the top defenses for the 2024 season based on how many times an opponent's drive ended without points.
From near fights to CFP classics, the 2024 season was the longest ever, but still delivered. Bill Connelly counts down the best games of the season.
College Football National Championship hosted in Atlanta, Georgia, and the 2026 National Championship confirmed for Miami, Florida, the College Football Playoff Committee has selected their next location for 2027: Las Vegas,
Ohio State reigned supreme in the first year of the 12-team College Football Playoff, defeating Tennessee, Oregon, Texas and Notre Dame on its road to glory. Like most things in college sports right now,
Hurts’ winning percentage as a starter in the NFL is 68.9. Compare that to Dan Marino, who is considered by many to be the NFL’s greatest passer of all time and the best player never to win a Super Bowl. As a starter, Marino won 61.3 percent of his games and played in one Super Bowl.