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  • AP source: ACC, FSU, Clemson reach proposed deal to end legal fight, alter funds

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    The Atlantic Coast Conference, Clemson and Florida State have reached a proposed settlement that would end their legal fight and change the league’s revenue-distribution model, a person familiar with the situation said Monday.


    What You Need To Know

    • FSU, Clemson and the ACC reach proposed deal to end their legal battle, AP source says
    • If approved, the settlement would boost revenue payouts for teams with the best TV ratings
    • Trustees at FSU and Clemson and the ACC’s Board of Directors have each scheduled meetings for Tuesday
    • Top-earning schools could see an upside of $15 million or more

    The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because neither the league nor the schools have publicly addressed the settlement, which requires all three to formally approve. ESPN first reported details of the settlement.

    Trustees at Clemson and Florida State have each scheduled meetings for Tuesday. The FSU meeting specifically lists lawsuits involving the ACC on the agenda, while the Clemson meeting agenda refers to settling “athletic litigations.”

    The ACC’s Board of Directors — made up of university presidents and chancellors — will also hold a call to sign off on the settlement Tuesday during a previously scheduled meeting, the person who spoke to AP said.

    If approved, the settlement would incorporate viewership ratings into revenue distribution among member schools, which would increase payouts to schools generating the most TV interest. The upside could be $15 million or more for top-earning schools, while it could also result in a decline of about $7 million for others, the person told the AP.

    Still, it would offer another sign of stability in the immediate term for the ACC and Commissioner Jim Phillips, who has spent much of his four-year tenure working to find ways to enhance revenue as the league faces an increasing gap behind the Big Ten and Southeastern conferences.

    The settlement comes roughly a month after ESPN exercised its option to extend its media base-rights agreement with the league through 2036, aligning that deal with a separate one that covers their partnership for the ACC Network through that same period.

    It also comes in the first year of a Phillips-championed “success initiative” that allows schools to keep more of the money generated by their own postseason success, which could amount to about $25 million in a year — tied mostly to performance in the College Football Playoff.

    League schools signed a grant-of-rights agreement that gives the ACC control of media rights for any school that attempts to exit for the duration of the ESPN deal. Schools had signed that agreement in the lead-up to the ACC Network’s 2019 launch, which meant the league could charge hundreds of millions of dollars for leaving the conference early.

    Still, FSU filed a lawsuit in December 2023 seeking to explore potential membership in other leagues and challenging the league’s ability to impose those penalties. Clemson followed in March 2024. The ACC had countersued both.

    ACC leaders had been discussing ways to rethink revenue distribution to help potentially resolve the legal fights with FSU and Clemson back to last fall.

    The ACC has 18 member schools — 17 in football — after realignment led to the addition of Cal, Stanford and SMU.

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    Associated Press

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  • Viral football-training mom and son from Polk County live out Super Bowl dream

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    HAINES CITY, Fla. — Czar Glanton is old school. The 9-year-old boy doesn’t need any fancy equipment to train. 


    What You Need To Know

    •  Czar Glanton and his mom, Terrica Williams, were gifted tickets from the NFL to attend Super Bowl 59
    •  Glanton and Williams went viral for doing football drills in their front yard
    •  Two have been featured on ESPN, Access Hollywood and the Jennifer Hudson Show
    • Czar’s cousin is NFL Super Bowl Champion and Apopka High School alumni Jalen Carter


    Just a of couple cones, a trash can and grass, which are found in his front yard. 

    Glanton’s personal trainer, his mom Terrica Williams, is with him every step of the way. 

    “I’m putting that work in and I’m trying to be the best and she’s trying to make me be the best,” said Glanton. 

    Czar Glanton is practicing his defensive stance in his front yard. (Spectrum Sports 360/Brandon Green)

    The two started uploading their progress to Instagram.

    After a couple of videos, their followers ballooned to more than 50,000 and they had millions of views. 

    “We always uploaded videos together,” Williams said. “And see the way it blossomed in such a positive way, it was so encouraging, so reinsuring and I know that if we keep working hard the sky’s the limit.”

    The Polk County natives have been featured on ESPN, Access Hollywood, and the Jennifer Hudson show. 

    During an interview with the actress and singer, the two were gifted with tickets from the NFL to this year’s Super Bowl between the Eagles and Chiefs. 

    Terrica Williams and her son Czar Glanton were gifted tickets to the Super Bowl after their football training videos went viral on Instagram. (Courtesy: Terrica Williams)

    Terrica Williams and her son Czar Glanton were gifted tickets to the Super Bowl after their football training videos went viral on Instagram. (Courtesy: Terrica Williams)

    Glanton said when they were in New Orleans, emotions overcame his mother. 

    “She was really happy. She was crying,” said Glanton. “I’m just telling you that right now.”

    The duo got to see their favorite player and his cousin Apopka High School alumni Jalen Carter win it all.

    “For me, it just opens the gate for opportunity for Czar,” said Williams. “Though you are young and although we are from a more rural area. It is possible, those dreams, those huge stages, those high-level performing athletes they come from the same place you’re from.”

    Glanton’s dream is to one day play in the Super Bowl. 

    The path to making it a reality starts in his front yard. 

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    Brandon Green

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  • Georgia recovers from No. 3 Florida’s comeback for upset win

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    ATHENS, Ga. — Georgia guard Blue Cain sank a go-ahead 3-pointer with 47 seconds remaining after No. 3 Florida took its first lead by scoring 13 unanswered points, and the Bulldogs defeated the Gators 88-83 on Tuesday night.

    Florida, which trailed by 26 points in the first half, rallied from a 78-67 deficit with the 13-0 run to lead 80-78. Cain’s 3-pointer ended the run.

    Georgia (17-11, 5-10 Southeastern Conference) boosted its hopes for its first NCAA Tournament berth since 2015. The Bulldogs ended Florida’s 12-game winning streak in the series and gave coach Mike White his first win against his former Florida team. White had been 0-6 against the Gators.

    Will Richard scored a career-high 30 points, but Florida (24-4, 11-4) fell short of pulling off its second comeback in four days. The Gators rallied from an eight-point second-half deficit to beat LSU 79-65 Saturday night.

    Silas Demary Jr. led Georgia with 21 points. Asa Newell had 15.

    Georgia fans obliged repeated requests from the public address announcer to give Florida’s team and officials 90 seconds to leave before charging the court. Fans then flooded the court.

    Takeaways

    Florida: Sophomore forward Alex Condon, who missed four games with a low ankle sprain, scored nine points.

    Georgia: The Bulldogs’ last win over Florida was a 61-55 victory on March 2, 2019. Tyrin Lawrence had 14 points after missing three games with a hamstring injury.

    Key moment

    Thomas Haugh’s layup with 1:28 remaining gave the Gators their first lead at 79-78.

    Key stat

    The Gators’ 15 steals led to a 29-12 advantage in points off turnovers.

    Up next

    Both teams return to action on Saturday night, when Florida plays host to No. 12 Texas A&M and Georgia visits Texas.

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    Associated Press

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  • No. 2 Florida steamrolls Oklahoma 85-63

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    GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Walter Clayton Jr. scored 18 points, Will Richard added 14 and No. 2 Florida steamrolled Oklahoma 85-63 on Tuesday night for its fifth consecutive victory.

    Alijah Martin chipped in 14 points off the bench for the Gators (23-3, 10-3 Southeastern Conference), who tied a season-low with six turnovers and improved to 13-1 at home.

    Clayton, Richard and Martin — Florida’s top three scorers — combined to make 15 of 31 shots, including nine 3-pointers. They scored 25 of the team’s first 37 points as the Gators opened a double-digit lead and never looked back.

    Florida played its second game without starting forward Alex Condon and backup Sam Alexis. Both wore protective boots, although Condon participated in the shootaround without one.

    Micah Handlogten, in his second game back since breaking his left leg last March, finished with two points, five rebounds, two assists and a block.

    Jeremiah Fears led the Sooners (16-10, 3-10) with 22 points and five rebounds.

    Takeaways

    Oklahoma: The Sooners’ fifth consecutive loss came amid a daunting stretch that included games against four ranked teams. Each of those losses came by at least 18 points.

    Florida: The Gators have handled their most adversity of the season without a hiccup. They played at times without Clayton, Martin, Condon and Alexis during their current streak.

    Key moment

    The Gators hit five 3-pointers — including three on consecutive possessions over a span of 1:18— to highlight a 17-3 run that turned a six-point game into a lopsided affair in the first half.

    Key stat

    Florida hit 12 of 32 shots from behind the arc, giving coach Todd Golden’s team double-digit 3s in five straight games.

    Up next

    Oklahoma hosts No. 21 Mississippi State on Saturday; Florida plays at LSU later that day.

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    Associated Press

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  • Gators climb to No. 2 in men’s hoops rankings; Auburn remains No. 1

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    Auburn’s win at Alabama assured the Tigers would keep the No. 1 ranking in The Associated Press Top 25 men’s college basketball poll for a sixth consecutive week.

    Meanwhile, Alabama lost its hold on the No. 2 spot, which is now occupied by Florida.

    The Tigers (23-2) received 59 of 60 first-place votes in Monday’s poll, reclaiming nearly all the support lost when they fell at home to Florida on Feb. 8. Auburn had been the unanimous No. 1 for three consecutive weeks before that loss, but remained at the top last week despite seeing nearly half of those first-place votes go primarily to Alabama, with a few to Florida and Tennessee.

    The Tigers won Saturday in a 1-vs.-2 road matchup against the rival Crimson Tide, hours after the committee that will choose the 68-team field for the NCAA Tournament put Auburn as its No. 1 overall seed in its preliminary rankings.

    The top tier

    The two teams to beat the Tigers sit right behind them. Florida and Duke were tied for third last week, and the Gators inched past the Blue Devils to break that tie and take the No. 2 spot while claiming the remaining first-place vote.

    Alabama fell to No. 4, followed by Houston, Tennessee, Texas A&M — with its highest ranking since December 2017 — Iowa State, Texas Tech and St. John’s to round out the top 10.

    Of that group, the Red Raiders represented the only change from last week’s set of teams, climbing three spots to replace Purdue for their first top-10 appearance in three years. Grant McCasland’s squad, which has lost just twice since the start of 2025, was unranked until cracking the poll at No. 22 on Jan. 27.

    Rising

    Michigan had the week’s biggest jump among ranked teams, climbing eight spots to No. 12 after beating Purdue last week and pushing its win streak to six games.

    No. 15 Missouri jumped six spots, while No. 11 Wisconsin, No. 18 Clemson and No. 20 Maryland each rose five spots.

    In all, 12 teams moved up from their position last week.

    Sliding

    Memphis took the biggest tumble of the week, falling eight spots to No. 22 after its overtime loss at Wichita State ended an eight-game winning streak.

    No. 13 Purdue, No. 19 Arizona and No. 23 Kansas — the preseason No. 1-ranked team — all fell six spots, while No. 24 Mississippi tumbled five.

    Ten teams fell from last week’s poll.

    Welcome back

    No. 25 Louisville was the week’s lone new addition, returning to the poll for the second time after a two-week stint in January. First-year coach Pat Kelsey has guided the program to its first 20-win season since 2019-20, with the Cardinals having lost just once since mid-December.

    Farewell (for now)

    Creighton (No. 24) fell out of the rankings for the second time this season. The Bluejays were ranked for the first four weeks, then returned last week for what turned out to be a one-week stay.

    Conference watch

    The Southeastern Conference had a national-best nine teams, including three of the top four and five of the top 10. The Big 12 and Big Ten each had five teams, though the Big 12 had three in the top 10 while the highest-ranked Big Ten team checked in at 11th.

    The Atlantic Coast Conference had three, followed by the Big East with two and the American Athletic Conference with one.

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    Associated Press

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  • USF makes sure love wins for Coach Abdur-Rahim

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    TAMPA, Fla. — This one was for Coach.

    This was the kind of game former University of South Florida head coach Amir Abdur-Rahim would have loved.


    What You Need To Know

    • The University of South Florida (USF) and the American Athletic Conference (AAC) honored their late basketball coach, Amir Abdur-Rahim, during the Bulls’ double overtime victory against Temple.
    • The AAC named Abdur-Rahim the honorary Coach of the Year and also presented a $15,000 check to the Future Foundation
    • The AAC will also annually present the Amir Abdur-Rahim Sportsmanship Award to a men’s basketball player.
    •  Abdur-Rahim passed away unexpectedly last October


    It was gritty. It went into double overtime. It was emotional. No way would USF lose this game.

    “Every guy was locked in before the game and we did a good job of preparation throughout the week,” USF guard Kobe Knox said. “So we knew what coming into this game and winning the game meant for everybody.”

    This was for Coach Abdur-Rahim. On the same night USF defeated Temple, the Bulls’ former coach was honored by the American Athletic Conference. First, with the AAC’s honorary Coach of the Year award, presented to his family. Then, with a check for $15,000, his contracted bonus for Coach of the Year recognition, made out to the Future Foundation.

    Family members of USF basketball head coach Amir Abdur-Rahim accept the Coach of the Year award on his behalf. (Spectrum Sports 360)

    “I think it’s the least we can do,” AAC Commissioner Tim Pernetti said. “He’s had a short-term permanent impact on the American and he deserves to be honored in this way forever.”

    Coach Abdur-Rahim had spent only a year in the AAC, but he left an indelible mark. And when he passed away unexpectedly in October, just before the start of the season, the league wanted to find ways to honor him.

    His legacy will continue with the annual AAC Amir Abdur-Rahim Sportsmanship Award, given to the men’s basketball player who best exemplifies fair play and leadership.

    “To see the impact that he had, to see that being recognized beyond even his basketball acumen, but to the impact he made on so many,” USF athletic director Michael Kelly said.

    You still see Coach Abdur-Rahim everywhere. He’s in the student section that bears his name. He was on t-shirts with his Love Wins mantra. And he was on the court. These Bulls are playing for the man who taught them to dream big. The man who brought pride back into the USF program.

    “He did something here in one year that this school hadn’t done in over 50 years, in terms of winning a regular season title, and that shows his basketball acumen,” Kelly said. “But he did it by connecting people.”

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    Katherine Smith

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  • Big 12 announces UCF’s 2025 football schedule

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    ORLANDO, Fla. — UCF’s 2025 football schedule features seven home games, including four Big 12 games and a home matchup with Bill Belichick’s North Carolina Tar Heels, the league announced Tuesday.

    The Knights open their season with two non-conference home games at FBC Mortgage Stadium — the first on Thursday, Aug. 28 against Jacksonville State and then North Carolina A&T on Saturday, Sept. 6, to kick off Family Weekend. Kickoff times have not been announced yet.

    UCF’s other non-conference game will be against Atlantic Coast Conference opponent North Carolina on Sept. 20.

    When UCF begins conference play, coach Scott Frost’s first in the Big 12 with the Knights will be on the road at Kansas State on Sept. 27. Their home conference games will be against Kansas on Oct. 4, West Virginia on Oct. 18 for Homecoming, Houston on Nov. 8 for the Space Game, and Oklahoma State on Nov. 22. No Black Friday game will be played this season.

    The schedule includes two home games each in September, October and November, and the Knights don’t play any back-to-back road games.

    • Aug. 28 vs. Jacksonville State
    • Sept. 6 vs. NC A&T (Family Weekend)
    • Sept. 13 — Off
    • Sept. 20  vs. North Carolina
    • Sept. 27 at Kansas State
    • Oct. 4 vs. Kansas
    • Oct. 11 at Cincinnati
    • Oct. 18 vs. West Virginia (Homecoming)
    • Oct. 25 — Off
    • Nov. 1 at Baylor
    • Nov. 8 vs. Houston (Space Game)
    • Nov. 15 at Texas Tech
    • Nov. 22 vs. Oklahoma State (Senior Knight)
    • Nov. 29 at BYU

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    Spectrum Sports Staff

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  • Gators coach Golden cleared in Title IX investigation over stalking allegations

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    GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The University of Florida has cleared men’s basketball coach Todd Golden following a four-month Title IX investigation into allegations of sexual exploitation, sexual harassment and stalking.


    What You Need To Know

    • University of Florida says basketball coach Todd Golden has been cleared in a Title IX investigations
    • The university said there was no evidence to support allegations of sexual exploitation, sexual harassment and stalking
    • Golden had said previously that he was frustrated thart confidentiality and privacy continue to be abused in Title IX investigations
    • The Gators are ranked No, 5 and have won 18 of their first 18 games this season

    The school released a statement Monday, saying no evidence was found and ended its investigation. It comes amid No. 5 Florida’s best season in a decade, with the Gators having won 18 of their first 20 games.

    “The University of Florida takes these matters seriously and works deliberately to ensure that due process is upheld for everyone,” university spokesman Steve Orlando said in a statement. “After a thorough investigation that included dozens of interviews over the past months, the University of Florida has found no evidence that Todd Golden violated Title IX. The Title IX office has closed its investigation.”

    Golden previously sidestepped chances to deny the allegations “out of the respect to the process” and threatened legal action, presumably against his publicly unnamed accusers. He also recently ripped proceedings that are supposed to be confidential.

    “I am just frustrated and disappointed that a Title IX mechanism that is created to protect both sides during a situation like this — that confidentiality and privacy continues to be abused,” Golden said earlier this month after assistant coach Taurean Green was accused of sexual assault in another Title IX case.

    The school’s University Athletic Association supported Golden throughout the investigation and backed his confidentiality comment following the case’s dismissal.

    “The UAA acknowledges the completion of the review,” the UAA said in a statement. “We take these matters seriously and understand the need for the process to be conducted with strict confidentiality and discretion.

    “Throughout this process, Coach Golden has demonstrated tremendous focus and professionalism, and we commend him for that. As the Gators move forward, we reaffirm our commitment to promoting a championship experience with integrity.”

    The complaint against Golden accused him of sending explicit photos and videos, making unwanted sexual advances on Instagram and requesting sexual favors. The Independent Florida Alligator first reported the allegations in early November.

    Title IX is designed to protect students from discrimination, including sexual harassment. Florida began outsourcing its Title IX investigations in 2023 to Grand River Solutions, a private firm based in California.

    The 39-year-old Golden signed a two-year contract extension last March that included a $1 million raise and brought his annually salary to $4 million. The deal runs through the 2029-30 season. He is 58-31 in three seasons.

    His contract prohibits “romantic, amorous and/or sexual relationships between any coach or other employee of the Association and any student athlete or other person subject to the supervision, control and/or authority of such coach or other employee.”

    It also says the university can take disciplinary action if the coach acts in a manner “that has an ‘adverse effect’ or causes an ‘adverse reflection,’ on the reputation, mission and/or interests” of the athletic department or the university.

    The case against Green, meanwhile, is still ongoing. Green is accused of kissing an athletic department employee and trying to put his hand down her pants in March 2024, according to a complaint reviewed by ESPN.

    The woman said she did not report the alleged incident at the time in part because of Green’s status. Green, who won NCAA championships as a player with the Gators in 2006 and 2007, joined the basketball staff in 2022 following a professional basketball career.

    The woman told ESPN she came forward after Title IX investigators working on Golden’s case asked to interview her last fall about Golden’s interactions with female athletes. She said that inquiry made her realize there could be concerns about a pattern of behavior within the program.

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    Associated Press

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  • No. 5 Florida survives South Carolina 70-69

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    COLUMBIA, S.C.  — Will Richard scored on a driving layup with 4.8 seconds remaining to lift No. 5 Florida — down 14 points in the the second half — past South Carolina, 70-69 on Wednesday night.

    Richard finished with 22 points for the Gators (17-2, 4-2 Southeastern Conference). He drove left from the top of the key and banked in the go-ahead layup.

    Jacobi Wright’s desperation 3-pointer was off the mark as South Carolina (10-9, 0-6) continued its worst start in SEC play since the 2013-14 season.

    Walter Clayton Jr. had 16 points for the Gators — who trailed 52-38 with 12 minutes, 46 seconds to play — and set the program record with a 3-pointer in his 42nd straight game.

    Takeaways

    Florida: The Gators have had uneven start to the SEC with a victory over then-top ranked Tennessee and a loss to Missouri at home two games ago.

    South Carolina: The Gamecocks have never started 0-7 in SEC play, but that’s what looms with No. 14 Mississippi State headed to Columbia on Saturday.

    Key moment

    Trailing by 13 points with less than 9 minutes left, Florida forced three consecutive turnovers in the backcourt that led to baskets that cut it to 58-51. The Gamecocks could not settle themselves after that.

    Key stat

    Florida outscored South Carolina 22-0 on fast-break points.

    Up next

    Both teams are back in action Saturday. Florida returns home to face Georgia, and South Carolina faces No. 14 Mississippi State.

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    Associated Press

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  • West Pasco Flag Football is all about family

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    TAMPA, Fla. Flag Football is catching on in West Pasco.

    Kids are introduced to the sport as early as the age of three. For most of the kids who participate it will be a relationship they will take with them for the rest of their lives.

    Kyle Carlson is one of the coaches who has introduced these kids to the sport an an early age.

    “We saw an opportunity to bring NFL flag football to the West Pasco area which is such an awesome thing for kids, says Kyle, not only kids experienced in playing tackle football but kids who have never played a sport in their life”.

    This is the second season for the NFL Flag Football program in New Port Richey and from the coaches to the players, it’s a big success.

     The league has boys and girls ages three to seventeen, three hundred and fifty players are participating in this years winter league.

    “One of our missions when we found this league was to never turns kids away, right? says Carlson,We always want to give kids the opportunity to play, regardless of their ability level, their financial ability, never turn kids away is our motto”.

    League nights also have an even deeper purpose, it’s all about family, from the volunteers who coach the kids to the parents and family that offer their support from the sidelines.

    “were giving kids a platform to change their lives”.

    and these coaches and volunteers are doing that, one play and one practice at a time.

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    Mike Cairns

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  • Ohio State wins College Football Playoff championship

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    ATLANTA — Instead of crying over another collapse, Ohio State can celebrate another national title after holding off a Notre Dame comeback bid Monday night to walk away with a nailbiter of a 34-23 victory over the Fighting Irish.

    Will Howard hit big-play receiver Jeremiah Smith for 56 yards on a late third-and-11 to lock down a game that had been a laugher, then turned into something else.

    Trailing 31-7, Notre Dame scored two touchdowns and two 2-point conversions to make it a one-score game late in the fourth quarter.

    The Irish stopped Ohio State on the first two plays of the next drive and used their timeouts. But on third down, Howard found Smith in single coverage on the right sideline and dropped his best pass of the season into the hands of the second-team All-American.

    “They were running man coverage and I said, ‘Hey, I’m gonna let this loose and let him make a play on it,’” Howard said.

    It set up a field goal that started the celebration in earnest (and helped Ohio State cover the 8 1/2-point spread at BetMGM Sportsbook). And it closed out a seven-week climb from the depths of a program-shaking loss to 20-point underdog Michigan to the top of college football after this, the debut of the sport’s 12-team playoff.

    Ohio State will bring its sixth “natty” and first since the 2014 season back to the Horseshoe in Columbus.

    “It’s a great story about a bunch of guys who have just overcome some really tough situations, and with the point where there’s a lot of people that counted us out (they) just kept swinging and kept fighting,” Buckeyes coach Ryan Day said.

    Howard, a transfer-portal success story from Kansas State, threw for 231 yards and two scores, but nothing will beat the pass to Smith with everything on the line.

    The receiver, who had been bottled up by Texas in the semifinals then fairly quiet for most of this game, finally got loose for the kind of play he’s been making all year. He finished with five catches for 88 yards.

    Ohio State scored touchdowns on its first four possessions, then added a field goal on its fifth.

    When Quinshon Judkins (100 yards, 11 carries, three TDs), a transfer from Mississippi who highlighted Ohio State’s judicious use of the ever-growing portal, busted a 70-yard run to set up the score that made it 28-7, this game looked over.

    It wasn’t, and now Irish coach Marcus Freeman will have to answer a few tough questions — one about the failed fake punt in the third quarter that turned into a field goal for a 31-7 lead; the other about sending Mitch Jeter in for a short field goal attempt while down 16 and facing fourth-and-goal from the 9. It might have looked like a better call had Jeter’s kick not clanged off the left upright.

    Really, though, Ohio State was the better team. The Buckeyes outgained Notre Dame 445 yards to 308. Howard completed his first 13 passes and never really got stopped. Ohio State punted a grand total of once.

    The Buckeyes rolled through four games in the new, expanded playoff — what great timing for Ohio State, which didn’t even play for the Big Ten title — by an average score of 36-21.

    Ohio State was seeded eighth in the tournament, but the seedings were pretty much meaningless. The worse seed won every game in the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds, and the Buckeyes dominated in this title-game showdown of No. 7 vs. No. 8.

    It puts to rest, for now, any angst about that 13-10 Michigan loss in November — Ohio State’s fourth straight in the series — that ended with a brawl after Wolverine players tried to plant a flag at midfield. The whole scene left a lot of folks, both in and out of Buckeye circles, thinking Day, in his sixth season, had outlived his usefulness on a campus that hadn’t tasted a title in a decade.

    Instead, he’s on a list of title-winning coaches with Urban Meyer, Jim Tressel, Woody Hayes and Paul Brown. Also, Day’s .873 winning percentage is third among coaches with 50-plus games — one spot behind none other than the Notre Dame legend Knute Rockne, himself.

    College football still has never had a Black coach win the national title. Freeman was trying to become the first.

    Instead, another kind of history. This marked the first time the Big Ten has taken back-to-back titles since 1942. Last year’s champion was Michigan, which was sitting home watching this one, but still played a special role in a Buckeyes redemption story hardly anyone saw coming.

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    Associated Press

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  • Polk County standout returns to pro basketball, joins the Big3

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    HAINES CITY, Fla. — One Polk County pro basketball player is returning to professional basketball after an injury ended his career.


    What You Need To Know

    • Dazeran Jones is returning to professional basketball after a foot injury ended his playing career 
    • Over the years, Jones found unique ways to stay in the sport, including becoming a motion-capture actor for NBA 2K series
    • Now, he’s preparing for the Big3, a 3-on-3 pro basketball league owned by rapper Ice Cube


    Dazeran Jones experienced a passion for the sport on a larger scale when he played collegiately for N.A.I.A Warner University and later spent time with the Jacksonville Giants of the American Basketball Association.

    “This is my first championship trophy,” he said, pointing to a championship ring. “This one means a lot to me because it’s a big ring. Like, we earned it — game by game, practicing every day, fighting through adversity.”

    Unfortunately, Jones faced his biggest challenge when a foot injury forced him to end his playing career. But he wasn’t ready to give up the game, and he found unique ways to stay in the sport. In 2022, Jones started a career as a motion-capture actor for the popular video game series, NBA 2K. That role also helped him land a part in the reboot of the movie, “White Men Can’t Jump.” 

    “I started taking acting a little more seriously after that,” he said. “I still have a lot to learn, but that jump-started an acting career through basketball.”

    Jones missed the game itself, though, and decided to try out for the Big3, a 3-on-3 pro basketball league owned by rapper Ice Cube. Although he initially went undrafted, he received a call a couple of weeks later from the team “The Killer 3s,” expressing interest.

    Dazeran Jones playing in the Big3. (Photo Courtesy: Dazeran Jones)

    “Everybody embraced me from here to here, from Ice Cube to the regular staff,” he said. “I met a lot of different people, a lot of greats. Probably everybody touched the NBA in that league, other than two or three players out of the whole league. These were once lottery picks. These are legends.”

    Now, Jones gets to play alongside the men he grew up watching. To prepare for the upcoming Big3 season, he trains with his childhood best friend, Terry Rose, on the same court where he first played.

    “We train every day if we can,” Rose said.

    Not only does this opportunity serve as inspiration for Jones’ children, it’s also a reminder to the community he loves.

    “There’s more than one way to get to Walmart,” he said.

    Or, in Jones’ case, more than one way to reach a goal.

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    Alexis Jones

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  • USF women’s basketball showing some serious puppy love

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    TAMPA, Fla. — Every dog has its day.

    That’s why the USF Bulls are dedicating a game day to the dogs.


    What You Need To Know

    •  The USF women’s basketball team is hosting Temple on Saturday at 7 p.m. for their annual Dog Adoption Game
    •  There will be several local pet rescue and shelter organizations on hand with information about adoption
    •  Fans are also encouraged to bring pet food and supplies to be donated to the various shelters


    The women’s basketball team was treated to some special guests at a recent practice — the Bulls opened up their practice court to pair of puppies.

    At Saturday’s game against Temple, they’re opening up the Yuengling Center to the dogs, to shine a spotlight on several Tampa Bay pet rescue and animal shelters, a cause near and dear to USF head coach Jose Fernandez.

    “I think there’s an incredible need, not only in the Tampa Bay community, but all over the United States to get these guys a nice home,” Fernandez said.

    Coach Fernandez and his wife, Tonya, have opened their home to rescue dogs. They currently have eight dogs.

    Eight dogs that were unwanted and abandoned, until the Fernandez’s opened up their home and their hearts.

    “It’s unconditional love. You can have whatever day that you have, whether it’s good or bad, and when you come home, the excitement,” he said.

    That’s what the Bulls are hoping their annual Dog Adoption Awareness Game on Saturday will showcase — the importance of adopting, not shopping.

    With so many available dogs in shelters all over the Bay Area, especially after back-to-back hurricanes wreaked havoc and landed many more animals in the shelters, the need for forever homes is paramount.

    “Anything we can do to help these guys find a home, these little guys and gals find a home,” Tonya Fernandez said. “There’s just so many. There’s so many dogs out there who need homes.”

    There will be several local shelter and rescues organizations at the game, including:

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    Katherine Smith

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  • 6 former Seminoles suing FSU’s basketball coach over NIL payments

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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Six former Florida State basketball players sued Seminoles coach Leonard Hamilton on Monday, alleging he failed to make good on a promise to get each of them $250,000 in name, image and likeness compensation.


    What You Need To Know

    • Six former Seminoles basketball players are suing FSU coach Leonard Hamilton
    • Their lawsuit alleges that they were each promised $250,000 in name, image and likeness compensation but did not receive it
    • An attorney was not listed for Hamilton on the lawsuit
    • None of the players listed in the complaint remain on FSU’s basketball team

    The plaintiffs — Darin Green Jr., De’Ante Green, Cam’Ron Fletcher, Josh Nickelberry, Primo Spears and Jalen Warley — filed suit in Leon County Circuit Court. Their attorney, Fort Lauderdale-based Darren Heitner, shared the 20-page complaint with The Associated Press. Yahoo Sports first reported the case.

    The former players allege Hamilton promised them the money from his “business partners.” The lawsuit says they walked out of a practice last season over the missed payments and intended to boycott a Feb. 17 game against Duke. They ended up playing — the Seminoles lost 76-67 — amid a guarantee from Hamilton that they would be paid, but they never were, according to the suit.

    No attorney for Hamilton was listed in the lawsuit. FSU hosts Syracuse on Saturday.

    The complaint includes multiple text-message exchanges between players and some between players and Hamilton.

    FSU finished 17-16 last season, including 10-10 in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The 76-year-old Hamilton is in the final year of his contract. The Seminoles are 9-4, including 0-2 in league play.

    None of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit remain with the team. Green, who transferred to FSU from UCF, and Nickelberry exhausted their college eligibility last spring, and the four others transferred. Spears is now at UTSA, Fletcher is at Xavier, De’Ante Green is at USF and Warley is at Gonzaga.

    The lawsuit is the latest in a growing number of NIL legal battles.

    Matthew Sluka, a starting quarterback for the UNLV football team, left the program after three games in September, saying he was never paid a $100,000 NIL deal. Former Florida quarterback signee Jaden Rashada, now playing at Georgia, sued Gators coach Billy Napier last year over an unpaid $13 million NIL deal. And several Tulsa players claim they were never paid thousands in NIL commitments made by former coach Kevin Wilson.

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    Associated Press

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  • South Florida ‘can’t wait to play’ in Hawaii Bowl after long travel to islands

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    HONOLULU — South Florida receiver Sean Atkins had to check over his shoulder at the scenery and glance at the geolocator on his phone a couple times to make sure that present circumstances were, in fact, reality.

    The 5-foot-10 Atkins walked on at the Tampa-based school in 2019 and over the course of six years built himself into an all-conference target at slotback, all with the same Bulls program — a rare tale in modern times of college football.


    What You Need To Know

    • South Florida, a 6-6 team out of the American Athletic Conference, emphasized how much it wanted to be in the Hawaii Bowl to face San Jose State upon arrival in the islands this week
    • The Bulls are attempting to become the third straight team from the South to win the Hawaii Bowl against an opponent from the Western U.S.
    • San Jose State will be without All-America receiver Nick Nash for the 3 p.m. Tuesday game at the Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex as he focuses on his pro career
    • USF receiver Sean Atkins, a six-year player and former walk-on, can become the Bulls’ career receiving yardage leader with a big game

    Looking out over Waikiki Bay at the Hawaii Bowl introductory press conference at The Royal Hawaiian on Friday, Atkins smiled as he took stock of how far he’d come, in both figurative and literal senses.

    This was the payoff.

    “It means everything to me,” Atkins, of Viera, Fla., told Spectrum News. “You go play college football for experiences like this and starting out from the bottom, I just appreciate everything. I never thought I would be here (in Hawaii), especially from football. Being able to have such an impact on the field in the game. Super grateful for grateful for that and to be here.”

    That stands in contrast to San Jose State’s consensus All-America receiver Nick Nash, who announced on Wednesday he was opting out of the game to focus on his pro career. SJSU is also without two cornerbacks and its backup quarterback.

    Atkins has 2,063 career receiving yards and needs 74 in his career finale at 3 p.m. Tuesday at the Clarence T.C. Athletics Complex to become USF’s career leader.

    He became the first 1,000-yard receiver in program history in 2023 as an All-American Athletic Conference second-teamer and posted 677 this season to make the third team.

    In an age of postseason portal transfers and bowl opt-outs, Atkins stressed that the Bulls (6-6) wanted to be here to face San Jose State (7-5) in an ESPN-televised game.

    “I don’t feel like a lot of people ended up leaving. And I just feel like all the guys really enjoy playing football with one another and just kind of playing for Coach (Alex) Golesh, I feel like we have a unique group and can’t wait to play.”

    Golesh said he admires SJSU’s first-year coach Ken Niumatalolo, the winningest all-time coach at Navy who enters this game mere days after the passing of his father.

    USF seeks to become the third straight team from the South to make the long journey to the islands (over 4,600 miles in USF’s case) and prevail over a Western U.S. team in the Hawaii Bowl; Middle Tennessee beat San Diego State 25-23 in 2022 and Coastal Carolina topped San Jose State 24-14 last year.

    Golesh, the Bulls’ second-year coach, said managing the travel via a 12-hour direct flight from Tampa and associated logistics were one of the program’s biggest emphases heading into the trip.

    USF, treating the game as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, even added a second plane so some athletic department staff members didn’t get left behind. The Bulls were all business in the Boca Raton Bowl last year, blanking Syracuse 45-0.

    “The travel piece was probably what we spent a lot of time working through,” Golesh said. “We’ve got a really, really good operations team. It’s their second time here in the last two weeks; they came out a week and a half ago just to make sure logistically it was all set up right.”

    Golesh said USF would try to replicate a normal game week after the Bulls arrived on Wednesday. They treated Thursday as a typical game week Monday and got in a practice Friday at Farrington, where they will train until gameday at the Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex.

    The weather in Florida is similar, Golesh pointed out, aside from the humidity.

    “I think the adjustment now is over,” Golesh said. “We’ve got to go to work and prepare as we would for a normal game.”

    Brian McInnis covers the state’s sports scene for Spectrum News Hawaii. He can be reached at brian.mcinnis@charter.com.

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    Brian McInnis

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  • Florida trounces Tulane 33-8 in the Gasparilla Bowl

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    TAMPA — DJ Lagway shrugged off a couple of first-half turnovers and threw for 305 yards and a touchdown to lead Florida to a sloppy, but dominating 33-8 victory over Tulane in the Gasparilla Bowl on Friday.

    Trey Smack kicked a Gasparilla Bowl-record four field goals for the Gators (8-5), who also got a late TD run from walk-on running back Anthony Rubio, son of U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, to finish the season on a four-game win streak.

    Tulane (9-5), which played without starting quarterback Darian Mensah, was outgained 529 yards to 194 and didn’t score until Ty Thompson threw a TD pass in the final minute.

    A true freshman who sparked Florida’s turnaround from a 3-3 start to the season, Lagway finished 22-of-35 passing with two interceptions that contributed to the Gators only leading 6-0 at halftime. Late in the game, Lagway mishandled a snap on fourth-and-1 only to have running back KD Daniels scoop up the ball and run 25 yards for a touchdown.

    Rubio entered in the fourth quarter. With 449-pound defensive lineman Desmond Watson lined up in the backfield behind him, he ran for 8 yards on his first carry and eventually finished a nine-play drive with a 9-yard run that increased Florida’s lead to 33-0.

    The Gators won five of seven after their disappointing start to the season, with most of the surge coming after athletic director Scott Strickin guaranteed coach Billy Napier would return in 2025. Lagway became the starting quarterback after Graham Mertz was lost to a season-ending knee injury in October.

    Tulane, which lost its last three games, played without Mensah, who entered the transfer portal and decided to continue his career at Duke.

    Thompson, who transferred to Tulane from Oregon in 2024, made his first college start — and possibly played his final game for the Green Wave. He also has entered the transfer portal, with the intent of finding a team that wants him to start full-time, though he hasn’t ruled out the possibility of returning to the Green Wave.

    Tulane avoided a shutout when Thompson tossed a 16-yard TD pass to Mario Williams. The Green Wave quarterback finished 11 of 29 for 125 yards and three interceptions.

    Takeaways

    Lagway showed flashes of why Florida feels good about its future with him running the offense, but also made some poor decisions with the ball. His end-zone interception cost the Gators at least three points, and he also was unable to get the ball into the end zone after a 38-yard completion to Chimere Dike gave Florida a first down at the Tulane 3 early in the third quarter. Thompson’s audition for a shot at the Green Wave’s starting job did not go well. The junior generally is a better runner than passer, however he wasn’t effective doing either against the Gators.

    Up next

    Florida opens next season at home against LIU, while Tulane hosts Northwestern. Both teams begin Aug. 30.

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    Associated Press

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  • Florida, Tulane excited about opportunity to end season with Gasparilla Bowl win

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    TAMPA, Fla. — Florida is brimming with confidence after turning its season around. Tulane is looking to regain some swagger.

    The Gators (7-5) and Green Wave (9-4) meet in Friday’s Gasparilla Bowl, with Florida playing just two hours south of its campus and aiming to build on a late surge under coach Billy Napier.


    What You Need To Know

    • Florida and Tulane will play in the Gasparilla Bowl in Tampa on Friday
    • The Gators won its last three regular-season games and signed a strong recruiting class
    • The Green Wave lost their past two games, and their starting quarterback has entered the transfer portal
    • Florida linebacker Shemar James plans to play but says he hasn’t decided whether to the NFL Draft after that

    Tulane, which has lost its past two games, is trying to finish strong against a Power Four opponent after tumbling out of the Top 25.

    “It’s a tough draw. We all know that,” Green Wave coach Jon Sumrall said. “We’re playing Florida in their backyards, and they are playing like one of the best three or four SEC teams the last month of the season.”

    Florida won its last three regular-season games, rallied on the recruiting trail to finish with the 11th-ranked class and has several upperclassmen returning in 2025 — including defensive tackle Caleb Banks, defensive end Tyreak Sapp and All-American center Jake Slaughter.

    All of that happened after Athletic Director Scott Stricklin guaranteed the once-embattled Napier would return in 2025.

    “We’ve gotten to a place where we think we could beat anybody,” Napier said. “This team has a ton of confidence. I think that comes from the work. I think they realize the results that they’ve gotten are because of the mindset and the approach they’ve taken toward the work.

    “So we’ve seen that carry over. Lot of other things have happened in a positive light as well. Signing Day went well. I think we’ve been able to retain a huge portion of our roster for next year.”

    Florida has lost a few key pieces since beating rival Florida State to cap its winning streak, most notably defensive ends Jack Pyburn and T.J. Searcy.

    Still, the Gators seem to have more momentum than Tulane.

    The Green Wave were ranked 18th before dropping its regular-season finale to Memphis, then losing to Army in the American Athletic Conference Championship Game.

    Sumrall’s team will play the Gasparilla Bowl without standout quarterback Darian Mensah, who entered the transfer portal and committed to continue his career at Duke.

    Mensah, though, is one of just a few Tulane starters not expected to play. Thirteen seniors are practicing and plan to play, including wide receiver Mario Williams and offensive linemen Josh Remetich.

    “The last two games have been an emotional roller coaster for us. … Just being able to go down there and play against an SEC opponent is really something I don’t take for granted,” Remetich said. “It’s a great team, a great opportunity for us to prove a point.”

    Undecided

    Florida linebacker Shemar James, who plans to play Friday, said he hasn’t made a decision about whether he will return to the Gators in 2025 or declare for the NFL Draft.

    Chance to make an impression

    Quarterback Ty Thompson, who transferred to Tulane from Oregon in 2024, is expected to make his first college start — and possibly play his final game for the Green Wave.

    Thompson has entered the transfer portal with the intent of finding a team that wants him to start full time. But he remains on good terms with Sumrall and could return to the Wave.

    Homecoming

    Wide receiver Mario Williams played for Lincoln Riley at Oklahoma and USC before spending his final college season at Tulane. Now he’s set to play his final game with the Green Wave in his hometown of Tampa.

    Williams set career highs with 54 catches for 940 yards this season. He needs 60 yards to become the eighth 1,000-yard receiver in Tulane history and the first since Ryan Grant in 2013.

    “I just want to have fun,” Williams said when asked about choosing to play over the option of skipping the game to focus exclusively on NFL Draft preparations. “I’m going to go out there and make plays. It was a great decision for me and my family — and also this team — to come here.”

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    Spectrum Sports Staff

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  • Leaving Behind a Legacy At USF

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    TAMPA, Fla. 

    The game of golf is all about routine. It’s doing the little things that could make the biggest difference.

    USF Senior Jake Peacock has separated himself as one of the best golfers in the country. This fall the Georgia native tee’d up his senior year with a win and two top ten finishes to help the Bulls crack the NCAA top 25.

    “I’m just focusing on what I can control, said the Bulls Senior, how I can get better and I think that’s going to give us the best chance of punching our ticket to the national championship”.

    Jake has had a club in his hand since he was 15-months old, sort of, his parents handed him a snorkel and he started swinging it like a golf club and soon he was hitting pennies off the carpet against the wall with it.

    Competing since he was 7 years old, the Bulls senior has become one of the most accomplished golfers in school history. Last year he became just the fifth player in the programs history to capture an Individual Conference title.

    He’s a solid ball striker from tee to green, said his head coach Steve Bradley but on the greens he’s superior and that will be ultimately what he will have success with and making it as a professional golfer”.

    Jake, like the rest of his teammates is using this time to prepare for the big spring season ahead. One which will include defending a conference and individual title with the ultimate goal of a 4th trip to the national championship.

    No matters what happens this fall, Jake Peacock has made his mark on the Bulls Golf program that will be remembered for a long time.

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    Mike Cairns

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  • USF Education Day finds new fans and future players

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    TAMPA, Fla. — The screams were deafening at times.

    This wasn’t your usual basketball crowd.


    What You Need To Know

    • USF women’s basketball team hosted its annual Education Day.
    • Students from all over the Tampa Bay area filled the Yuengling Center. It was the largest home crowd in program history.
    • For Charlotte Ketcham, a fifth grader from Lamb Elementary, it was her first game in person. And now she wants to play basketball.


    The USF women’s basketball team had never had this many eyes on them at home. Students from Tampa Bay area schools filled the Yuengling Center to check out the Bulls in action.

    What happens when you host thousands of school kids? You get the largest home crowd in program history. Education Day at USF filled the stands and hopefully hooked some future Bulls.

    “What you want, is hopefully, some of these kids go home and they talk to their parents and loved ones that they had a great time and they want to come back,” Head Coach Jose Fernandez said.

    That’s exactly what happened to Charlotte Ketcham. She attended her first USF basketball game with her Lamb Elementary School fifth grade class. The trip to the Yuengling Center was a reward for perfect attendance.

    After seeing the Bulls up close and personal, Charlotte isn’t just a USF fan. She’s a basketball fan too. And her first live game has sparked an interest in becoming a participant, not just a bystander.

    “I feel like it will be a really fun sport for me to play,” Charlotte said. “The team, USF, it looks really fun.”

    There’s been a surge in women’s basketball interest. Thanks in part to Caitlin Clark, attendance is up and TV viewership is up. Last year, for the first time, the Women’s NCAA Basketball Championship Game TV audience outdrew the men’s title game – not just by a little, but by more than four million viewers. That interest is trickling down to the youth.

    It’s how the sport can grow, from not just a moment, but to a movement. And that’s why USF hosts its annual Education Day game. Because they might just find a future Bull.

    “Hey, you know what, I want to be a basketball player one day,” Coach Fernandez said. “You know where I want to study, the University of South Florida.”

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    Katherine Smith

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  • Malzahn explains move to Florida State

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    TALLAHASSEE — Near Gus Malzahn’s new office hangs a picture of Kelvin Benjamin hauling in a touchdown pass from Jameis Winston, the play that helped Florida State beat Malzahn and his Auburn Tigers in the 2013 national championship game.

    It’s a daily reminder of Malzahn’s connection to the Seminoles.

    “I’ve got to walk by the picture of the guy catching the ball as I go to the office every day,” Malzahn said Wednesday. “That was a real special game. There were a lot of great players on the field. It went down to the very end. It was probably entertaining or a great game to watch. It was tough, obviously, to be on the losing side.”

    Malzahn is on the opposite side now. He resigned as UCF’s head coach last month to become Mike Norvell’s offensive coordinator in Tallahassee. Their link goes back even further than Malzahn’s title-game loss to the Seminoles.

    Malzahn, 59, said he chose to return to his coaching roots rather than remain a head coach distracted by new-age responsibilities. Malzahn walked away from $15 million guaranteed — he was set to make $5 million in 2025 and had three years remaining on his contract with the Knights — for a different coaching lifestyle. He signed a three-year deal with FSU that will pay him $1.5 million in 2025.

    “The job description of a head college football coach has changed dramatically in the last two years with everything — transfer portal to collectives to agents and everything that goes with that,” Malzahn said. “I’m just an old-school football coach.

    “I love coaching football, and head coaches, it’s hard to do that a lot. So that had something to do with it. And then the opportunity and being familiar with Mike and having so much respect for this university, coached against this university in the national championship. I know what this place is capable of doing.”

    Malzahn has been mostly successful during a career that began at an Arkansas high school and included head-coaching stops at Arkansas State, Auburn and UCF. The Knights won nine games in 2021 and ’22 in the American Athletic Conference before making the jump to the Big 12, where they finished 6-7 last year and 4-8 this season.

    Malzahn helped Auburn win the 2010 national title as an offensive coordinator and was a play or two away from winning another in 2013. Now he’s in Tallahassee to help turn around a storied program that’s fallen on hard times.

    Malzahn was part of a Tulsa staff that hired Norvell as a graduate assistant in 2007. They didn’t work together very long but have remained close through the years.

    Malzahn is now tasked with jump-starting an offense that was among the worst in major college football this season, averaging 15.4 points and ranked 131st out of 134 schools.

    “I’m a big believer you got to run the football downhill,” Malzahn said. “It makes everything better as far as pass protection, better on the quarterback, everything. … And we’ll get that done.”

    Malzahn will replace Norvell as the team’s primary play-caller.

    “Our foundation on offense is from the same family,” Malzahn said. “He’s got his own wrinkles, and I’ve had my own wrinkles. But there is a lot more things that are in common. We still have the same terminology, the way we identify things like formations and player alignment, numbers.

    “That’s why it’s a really, really easy transition. We’re going to play fast. I think that’s the No. 1 thing. We’re going to play fast.”

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    Associated Press

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