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Tag: Missouri Tigers

  • AP Top 25 poll preview: ACC playoff picture gets messier with Georgia Tech loss and SMU win

    Eight of the top 10 teams in the AP Top 25 poll either had the day off or were given the gift of a late-season cupcake game in Week 13. No. 6 Oregon and No. 8 Oklahoma were exceptions, with ranked conference matchups against Southern California and Missouri.

    The Ducks and Sooners both maintained positioning for at-large College Football Playoff bids. Oregon beat No. 16 USC 42-27 in the teams’ first meeting as members of the Big Ten. Oklahoma improved to 9-2 with a 17-6 win over No. 23 Missouri.

    Oregon is tied with Texas Tech at No. 6 in the AP poll and is No. 7 in the CFP rankings. Oklahoma ranks No. 8 in both.

    Chaos unfolded in the Atlantic Coast Conference as No. 15 Georgia Tech was upset at home by Pittsburgh on Saturday night. The Yellow Jackets’ chances of making the conference championship plummeted, while SMU’s odds increased with a win over Louisville. No. 19 Virginia also has a good chance to make the ACC title game.

    Holding steady

    Oklahoma took care of business, knocking off Missouri and inching closer to an at-large CFP bid. John Mateer threw for 173 yards and two touchdowns. Oklahoma’s defense had two interceptions of Missouri’s Beau Pribula, who was playing for the first time since dislocating his ankle in late October, and held standout running back Ahmad Hardy to 57 rushing yards.

    — Among the Week 13 cupcakes, No. 3 Texas A&M defeated Samford 48-0 and No. 4 Georgia rolled past Charlotte 35-3. Both teams are still favorites for a first-round bye in the playoff, a position Georgia began occupying after last week’s 35-10 rout of Texas.

    — No. 1 Ohio State overcame a slow start and remained unbeaten with a 42-9 victory over Rutgers. The Buckeyes outscored the Scarlet Knights 28-6 in the second half.

    — Oregon knocked off USC 42-27. The Ducks pulled ahead with a pair of touchdowns before halftime and maintained their lead throughout the second half.

    — No. 13 Utah narrowly dodged an upset loss to Kansas State, scoring two touchdowns in the final 2:47 to overcome a 47-37 deficit and sealing the deal with a late interception.

    — No. 11 BYU beat Cincinnati 26-14 in the Big 12’s game of the week. LJ Martin rushed for 222 yards and two touchdowns to carry the Cougars.

    Falling out of the picture

    — The slide continued for a Louisville team once thought to be on its way to the ACC championship game. The Cardinals lost their third straight, 38-6 to an SMU team on the rise.

    — Missouri is at risk of falling out of the rankings after losing to Oklahoma, the Tigers’ fourth defeat this season.

    — USC’s playoff chances plummeted after a loss to Oregon that was largely viewed as an elimination game. The Trojans fell to 8-3 on the season and 6-2 in conference play.

    — In a game where a win would’ve clinched a spot in the ACC championship game, the worst-case scenario unfolded for Georgia Tech. The Yellow Jackets lost 42-28 to Pitt.

    On the rise

    — No. 24 Tulane has three straight wins and a 9-2 record after beating Temple 37-13. Tulane is a strong contender for a CFP spot, earning the No. 12 seed in the most recent bracket as the highest-ranked Group of Five team.

    — SMU’s 38-6 rout of Louisville put the Mustangs one win away from their second ACC championship game appearance in two years.

    — Pitt’s win against Georgia Tech strengthened its playoff chances, but a lot still needs to happen for the Panthers to make their first ACC title game since 2021. Pitt needs to beat Miami next week, along with a loss by either SMU or Virginia.

    ___

    Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

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  • Georgia up to No. 4 in AP poll, Sooners back in top 10 and Mean Green ranked for 1st time since 1959

    Georgia moved up one spot to No. 4 in The Associated Press poll Sunday, Oklahoma returned to the top 10 and North Texas, ranked for the first time since 1959, is among three Group of Five teams in the Top 25.

    Ohio State, Indiana and Texas A&M were the top three teams for the fifth straight week. Georgia earned its highest ranking since the first week of September and Mississippi was back in the top five after spending three weeks there at midseason.

    Oregon and Texas Tech were tied for No. 6, and Oklahoma rose three spots to No. 8 following its win at Alabama. The Sooners were last in the top 10, at No. 6, the second week of October.

    Notre Dame remained No. 9 after a 22-point win at Pittsburgh and Alabama dropped six spots to No. 10 after the Sooners ended its eight-game win streak.

    Ohio State, which rolled past UCLA to improve to 10-0 for the fourth time in seven seasons, received 57 of 66 first-place votes. Indiana, which beat Wisconsin to go 11-0 for the first time, got eight first-place votes. Texas A&M, whose comeback from a 27-point deficit to beat South Carolina was its largest ever, got one first-place vote, three less than last week.

    Georgia’s 35-10 win over Texas was its sixth straight and second over a top-10 opponent. Mississippi, which lost at Georgia a month ago, defeated Florida and is more than 100 points behind the Bulldogs at No. 5.

    The Group of Five hadn’t had three teams in the Top 25 since four appeared in last season’s final poll.

    The Sun Belt Conference’s James Madison blew out Appalachian State and moved up three spots to No. 21. North Texas is next at No. 22. The Mean Green of the American Conference clobbered UAB 53-24 on the road and have matched their best start in program history.

    The last time UNT was 9-1 was in 1959, when the team then known as the Eagles was ranked two straight weeks in November, reaching No. 16. That team lost to New Mexico State in the Sun Bowl to finish 9-2. This year’s UNT team already is eligible for a second straight bowl game and is in the thick of the race for the Group of Five’s automatic CFP bid.

    In and out

    — No. 22 North Texas’ first appearance in the poll in 66 years ends the longest drought by a Bowl Subdivision team.

    — No. 23 Missouri returned after a one-week absence following a win over Mississippi State in which Ahmad Hardy became the first player since 2022 to rush for 300 yards.

    — No. 24 Tulane has won two straight since losing to UTSA and is ranked for the first time this season.

    — No. 25 Houston, fifth among teams also receiving votes last week and idle, were ranked for one week in October.

    Louisville (19), Cincinnati (22), Pittsburgh (23) and South Florida (25) dropped out.

    Poll points

    — Voters did what the CFP selection committee did last week, jumping Miami over Georgia Tech to make the Hurricanes the highest-ranked Atlantic Coast Conference team. Miami easily beat North Carolina State and moved up two spots to No. 14. Georgia Tech, which needed a field goal in the final seconds to edge one-win Boston College, slipped a spot to No. 15.

    — No. 13 Utah has outscored three opponents by a combined 153-49 since losing at BYU and has its highest ranking of the season.

    — No. 17 Texas took the biggest plunge, dropping seven spots.

    Conference call

    SEC (9): Nos. 3, 4, 5, 8, 10, 12, 17, 20, 23.

    Big Ten (5): Nos. 1, 2, T-6, 16, 18.

    Big 12 (4): Nos. T-6, 11, 13, 25.

    ACC (3): Nos. 14, 15, 19.

    American (2): Nos. 22, 24.

    Sun Belt (1): No. 21.

    Independent (1): No. 9.

    Ranked vs. ranked

    No. 16 Southern California (8-2, 6-1 Big Ten, No. 17 CFP) at No. 6 Oregon (9-1, 6-1, No. 8 CFP): Winner strengthens its position for a CFP at-large bid and keeps alive slim hopes of sneaking into the Big Ten championship game.

    No. 23 Missouri (7-3, 3-3 SEC) at No. 8 Oklahoma (8-2, 4-2, No. 11 CFP): Sooners did wonders for their playoff resume by knocking off Alabama on the road and now go for a fifth win over a Top 25 opponent.

    ___

    Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

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  • Week 8’s top 10 college football games: Georgia-Texas, Alabama-Tennessee and much more

    Week 8’s top 10 college football games: Georgia-Texas, Alabama-Tennessee and much more

    On the heels of two of the more riveting weeks of college football in recent memory comes a jam-packed Saturday that features a trio of SEC headliners, including a top-five clash between blue bloods. There’s also multiple rivalry games that feature boots (sort of), and a potential College Football Playoff showcase in Bloomington, Indiana, of all places.

    Bless this sport.

    Let’s rank the top 10 games of Week 8, starting with honorable mentions and counting down.

    Honorable Mention: Oklahoma State at No. 13 BYU, Ohio at Miami (Ohio), Virginia at No. 10 Clemson, Auburn vs No. 19 Missouri, Louisiana at Coastal Carolina, Toledo at NIU, Colorado at Arizona, James Madison at Georgia Southern, UCF at No. 9 Iowa State.

    (All point spreads come from BetMGM; click here for live odds. Stream college football on fubo.  All kickoff times are Eastern and on Saturday unless otherwise noted.)

    Let’s give flowers to two teams that have exceeded expectations in the Big 12. Both were projected to finish near the bottom of the conference, but the winner on Saturday will have played its way into the conference title conversation. Arizona State and wrecking-ball running back Cam Skattebo have been proving the doubters wrong for weeks. But the Sun Devils will be without starting quarterback Sam Leavitt due to a rib injury; fifth-year journeyman Jeff Sims will start in his place. The Bearcats and gunslinging transfer QB Brendan Sorsby will try to take advantage of a depleted ASU crossing two time zones for an early kickoff.

    Line: Cincinnati -4.5

    9. UNLV (5-1) at Oregon State (4-2), 10 p.m., Fubo, The CW

    The Rebels rebounded from an overtime loss to Syracuse by hanging a 50-burger on Utah State last week, keeping pace with Boise State in the Mountain West standings. It sets up a massive game in Las Vegas next week against the Broncos that will have huge implications on the conference race and battle for the Group of 5’s spot in the CFP. But a win this Saturday in Corvallis would add a nice bullet point to UNLV’s resume in the meantime. Oregon State, looking to recover from a surprising loss to Nevada, should eventually make for an instructive common opponent between the two. The Beavs play at Boise State next month.

    Line: UNLV -7

    8. No. 17 Kansas State (5-1) at West Virginia (3-3), 7:30 p.m., Fubo, Fox

    There are intriguing matchups involving the Big 12’s three ranked teams this week, including Oklahoma State at No. 13 BYU and UCF at No. 9 Iowa State. But K-State has the most at stake. It is the only of those three ranked squads going on the road, and the only one with a loss. Of the teams in the top five of the Big 12’s preseason poll, the Wildcats are also the only one that hasn’t been a disappointment thus far. A second defeat, however, would quickly put their conference title and CFP hopes on life support, even in the ever-chaotic Big 12. Kansas State can’t afford to stumble in Morgantown against a streaky but resilient West Virginia, in a face-off of two proficient rushing attacks.

    Line: Kansas State -3

    7. No. 24 Michigan (4-2) at No. 22 Illinois (5-1), 3:30 p.m., Fubo, CBS

    A bit surprising for a ranked matchup to be this low on the list — except for the fact that Michigan has one of the worst offenses in college football (and maybe shouldn’t be ranked?). Illinois just needed overtime to beat a terrible Purdue team that scored 40 points second-half points. Still, hat tip to the Illini, who are 5-1 and playing the first ranked matchup at Memorial Stadium since 2000. Illinois will also honor legendary halfback Red Grange — the Galloping Ghost — a century after his epic 402-yard, six-touchdown game against the Wolverines. The Illini will sport throwback uniforms and hand-painted helmets that took 18 months to create.

    Line: Michigan -3.5

    GO DEEPER

    What does Michigan-Illinois mean? Previewing a sneaky big game for Wolverines, Illini

    Expect this one to play out differently than the 55-0 shutout that Notre Dame pitched when these teams last met in 2021. Unfortunately, injuries will be a storyline. The Irish lost All-American cornerback Benjamin Morrison to a season-ending hip injury, and Georgia Tech quarterback Haynes King will be a game-time decision after suffering a knock in last week’s win over North Carolina. If King can’t go, the job will fall to sophomore backup Zach Pyron, who has completed 5 of 7 passes and rushed for four touchdowns in limited action. Either way, the Irish can’t take this one lightly, with a remaining schedule that looks a lot tougher than we all expected, including ranked games against Navy and Army ahead of the regular-season finale at USC.

    Line: Notre Dame -12.5

    5. Nebraska (5-1) at No. 16 Indiana (6-0), Noon, Fubo, Fox

    I have thoroughly enjoyed the Indiana and Curt Cignetti media blitz this week, including this stellar profile of Cignetti by Joe Rexrode. The Hoosiers are basking in the glow of their first 6-0 start since 1967, and rightfully so. They’ve been one of the biggest surprises this season in Year 1 under Cignetti, and have yet to trail through six games. Fox’s Big Noon Kickoff is headed to Bloomington as IU faces Nebraska and freshman quarterback Dylan Raiola, who is acting wise beyond his years. Big-time game featuring a pair of top-10 defenses (and a top-five offense for Indiana). The Huskers, who have lost 25 straight to ranked opponents, will get two cracks in a row at Indiana and then at Ohio State. On the other side, another win for the Hoosiers will shift the chatter from fast start to legit Playoff contender.

    Line: Indiana -6.5

    4. No. 8 LSU (5-1) at Arkansas (4-2), 7 p.m., Fubo, ESPN

    It’s the Battle for the Golden Boot, one of the more underappreciated rivalry names and trophies in college football. LSU has won seven of the last eight matchups, but both teams are coming off mammoth victories.

    The Tigers won a classic in overtime against Ole Miss despite never leading until the game’s final play, and Arkansas popped the first leak in Tennessee’s balloon a couple of weeks ago. The Razorbacks are better than anticipated — and Sam Pittman may have saved his job — while LSU has clawed back into the top 10 and CFP picture after the season-opening loss to USC. The Tigers will need more consistency out of Garrett Nussmeier to make some noise in the SEC, but his performance at the end of the Ole Miss victory showed how high his ceiling can be.

    Line: LSU -2.5

    3. No. 6 Miami (6-0) at Louisville (4-2), Noon, Fubo, ABC

    More top-notch rivalry hardware — and footwear: The Schnellenberger Trophy, which was introduced last season and currently resides with the Cardinals. Battle for the Golden Boots???

    This game is flying under the radar thanks to a loaded SEC slate, but it should be a fun, high-scoring barnburner. Miami desperately needed a bye after a pair of close calls against Virginia Tech and Cal, but Heisman hopeful Cam Ward and the Hurricanes remain one of 11 unbeaten teams in college football. Louisville ended a two-game skid last Saturday with a win at Virginia, with a top-15 offense (7.2 yards per play) led by quarterback Tyler Shough. Miami has the top offense in FBS at 8.2 yards per play, and Ward leads all FBS quarterbacks in passing yards per game (369.8).

    Line: Miami -5

    2. No. 7 Alabama (5-1) at No. 11 Tennessee (5-1), 3:30 p.m., Fubo, ABC

    An almost top-10 matchup between two teams that are either national title contenders or complete frauds, depending on which message board thread you read. Either way, the Third Saturday in October should provide some insight, and it’s a critical one as both teams try to avoid a second loss and spiraling fan bases. This is a tough game to handicap: Alabama has a top-10 offense, Tennessee has a top-two defense, but both teams have been mercurial on the field. David Ubben did a nice job digging in on that variability for an anonymous coaching confidential on the game, and Kennington Smith III examined how first-year Alabama head coaches have fared in the Tennessee rivalry.

    Line: Alabama -3

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    What’s going on with Alabama and Tennessee? Coaches who faced them weigh in

    1. No. 5 Georgia (5-1) at No. 1 Texas (6-0), 7:30 p.m., Fubo, ABC

    Praise be: It’s our third top-five showdown of the season. The first two — Georgia vs Alabama and Ohio State vs Oregon — resulted in two of the best games of the year to this point. This is the sixth all-time meeting between Georgia and Texas and first since the 2019 Sugar Bowl.

    The Dawgs are underdogs for the first time in the last 50 games (!), and might need a road win over the top-ranked team in the country to preserve their CFP hopes. Texas, meanwhile, has been stellar on both sides of the ball and is arguably in a class of its own right now, though it has yet to face an opponent as good as Georgia. Quinn Ewers did look a tad rusty in his return from injury against Oklahoma last week, so we’ll see if that lingers. But coaches we spoke with for our coaching confidential on the game see Texas having the upper hand.

    Another win for the Longhorns would cement them as the clear national title favorite. But if the chaos timeline of this college football season continues, we’ll see a slightly diminished Georgia take down the Horns in Austin, and the top of the sport will officially look as vulnerable as it has in years.

    Line: Texas -4.5

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Coaching confidential: Texas has the edge against Georgia in SEC showdown

    Photo: Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images

    The New York Times

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  • Vannini: Cotton Bowl win shows why Missouri has its sights on 2024 Playoff spot

    Vannini: Cotton Bowl win shows why Missouri has its sights on 2024 Playoff spot

    ARLINGTON, Texas — Don’t tell Missouri that New Year’s Six games outside the College Football Playoff don’t matter. If you watched the No. 9 Tigers celebrate their 14-3 Cotton Bowl win against No. 7 Ohio State, it might as well have been a championship.

    Players made snow angels in the confetti. Every staff member got a photo with someone. Nobody wanted to leave the field. Mizzou fans, who sold out their 13,000 ticket allotment in less than 18 hours, packed in more than half of the 70,000 people in AT&T Stadium. It was the Tigers’ biggest bowl win since the Cotton Bowl to cap a top-five season a decade ago. An 11th win. A reason to celebrate a breakthrough season and an upward trajectory.

    “The way (the Cotton Bowl) treated us, it felt like the Super Bowl,” head coach Eli Drinkwitz said.

    Yet Friday night again highlighted the growing bowl conundrum of the past decade and why things are going to change next season.

    The upcoming 12-team College Football Playoff was meant for teams like Mizzou — to provide access to the programs that don’t win their conference but have a top-10 season and might spring an upset or two. So they can play in a postseason game that matters, against a team that wants to be there.

    This Cotton Bowl meant everything to Mizzou. It’s hard to say the same for Ohio State. Wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr., a future top-10 pick, was here but didn’t play. The starting quarterback this season, Kyle McCord, has already committed to transfer to Syracuse and was on the sideline for the Orange’s bowl game last week. Ohio State played most of this game with its third-string quarterback.

    GO DEEPER

    Wasserman: How can Ohio State evaluate QB position with incomplete data on Devin Brown?

    That’s not to take away from Mizzou, which didn’t have any opt-outs of note. They don’t put asterisks on wins. It’s just pointing out a reality we’ve seen for several years now. The New Year’s Six was meant to be the best of both worlds, keeping traditional bowl celebrations alongside the creation of the Playoff. It didn’t take long for many star players in non-CFP games to see little point in playing and risking injury, and the transfer portal exacerbated it.

    Ohio State always expects to play for the national championship. Mizzou was picked to finish sixth in the SEC East. This sport has always been an expectations game.

    It is the end of an era, when great teams could end their season with a major bowl win and celebrate. In the 12-team CFP era, 11 teams will go home with a loss. If the 12-team CFP existed this year, Mizzou would’ve played at Oregon in an 8-9 matchup for the right to play No. 1 Michigan. Instead, Tigers fans took over Arlington and enjoyed a win. They loved it.

    “I’ll be honest, I hope we don’t lose that in the 12-team playoff, because there’s something special about having these bowl experiences,” Drinkwitz said. “But if this is the last one, wow, Mizzou did it right for ’em.”

    Mizzou isn’t done here. The win was also a 2024 statement for the Tigers, who will return the majority of their team beyond All-American running back Cody Schrader and have eyes squarely on getting one of those CFP spots, perhaps on their home field.

    “(This win) is special for our team next year,” quarterback Brady Cook said. “The guys coming back for one more, the coaches, the brotherhood. This is just going to give us more momentum.”


    QB Brady Cook threw a TD pass and had 66 rushing yards on Friday. (Kevin Jairaj / USA Today)

    Cook will be back. Star receiver Luther Burden III will be back. The Tigers will add a top-25 recruiting class that features five-star edge rusher Williams Nwaneri, the No. 2 recruit in the country in the 247Sports Composite, along with a stellar transfer class. Mizzou’s administration stepped up to keep defensive coordinator Blake Baker, whom Drinkwitz said turned down jobs elsewhere over the past month.

    Mizzou and Drinkwitz are making an impact in the places that matter in a cutthroat SEC that is about to add one of this year’s CFP teams in Texas, along with blue-blood Oklahoma. It’s a Tigers program that two years in a row gave Georgia its toughest regular-season game. This isn’t a Mizzou that will settle for bowl eligibility. It’s making waves in the name, image and likeness space, signing five-star players and not putting limits on what it can do.

    “The future is extremely bright because of the plans we have and the vision we’re carrying out,” Drinkwitz said. “It’s not just me, it’s our administration and what they’ve done … It’s what our players have done. It’s what our recruiting is doing, getting the right players to play for us.

    “With the 12-team Playoff system, this would be a game where we’re continuing to move on and have a chance to play at a higher level. Everything’s coming together now. But we understand the wind’s twice as hard at the top of the mountain.”

    Come November 2024, college football could see upward of 30 or 40 teams in the Playoff hunt. Teams like Mizzou. That’s the excitement to come. Instead of hoping for a New Year’s Six opponent that may or may not care to be there, the Tigers could have a path to a national championship.

    That may seem unlikely or unrealistic. Then again, so did this season.

    “Going from unranked to top 10 was pretty special,” Drinkwitz said. “But why stop now?”

    (Top photo of Luther Burden III: Sam Hodde / Getty Images)

    The New York Times

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  • Listen Live: Missouri Tigers vs. Georgia Bulldogs 11/4

    Listen Live: Missouri Tigers vs. Georgia Bulldogs 11/4

    The No. 14 Missouri Tigers are headed to Athens, GA, to take on the No. 1 Georgia Bulldogs on November 4 at 3:30pm ET.

    You can listen to every snap live from Sanford Stadium on the SiriusXM App and in car radios with your choice of the home or away feed.


    Stream the Georgia Bulldogs broadcast (Ch. 962)

    Stream the Missouri Tigers broadcast (Ch. 963)


    Home: Georgia Bulldogs

    • Georgia boasts top-tier status in both scoring offense and defense. Their offense yields 40.5 points per game, while their defense limits opponents to just 14.8 points on average.
    • Georgia’s rushing game is led by senior Daijun Edwards, who’s gained 556 yards and reached the end zone eight times. In the face of running back injuries, sophomore WR Dillon Bell has stepped up, gaining 124 yards with a 5.4-yard average and two touchdowns.
    • Quarterback Carson Beck, with a perfect 8-0 record, is on pace for a record-breaking 73.0 completion percentage, ranking seventh nationally. Additionally, he holds the seventh spot in passing yardage per game (307.8) and 12th in passing efficiency (166.2).

    Away: Missouri Tigers

    • On the other side of the field, the Missouri Tigers are off to their best start since 2013 securing their highest ranking in the national polls since 2014, currently at No. 14.
    • Missouri’s offense is averaging 33.9 points per game, with a solid defensive record allowing just 23.3 points per game. In the Red Zone, they excel with a 34-out-of-35 conversion rate, 24 of which result in touchdowns.
    • RB Cody Schrader is the heart of their ground game, accumulating 807 yards and nine touchdowns. He averages 100.9 yards per game. QB Brady Cook shines with a remarkable 69.8 percent completion rate, passing for 2,259 yards, 15 touchdowns, and only 3 interceptions.

    Georgia Bulldogs Home Feed:

    SiriusXM channel 191 in your vehicle

    Channel 962 on the SiriusXM App

    Missouri Tigers Away Feed:

    SiriusXM channel 192 in your vehicle

    Channel 963 on the SiriusXM App


    Want to listen to more games? Throughout the 2023 College Football season, SiriusXM listeners get access to dozens of game broadcasts each week involving teams from the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12, SEC, and other conferences — plus Army, Navy, HBCU football and more. For more information about SiriusXM’s college football offerings, click here.


    Matthew Fanizza

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  • How Chiefs QB Blaine Gabbert mastered the art of the backup

    How Chiefs QB Blaine Gabbert mastered the art of the backup

    It is Blaine Gabbert’s first OTA practice with the Kansas City Chiefs after joining the team in April. Coach Andy Reid is empowering Patrick Mahomes, telling him to push limits and see what he can get away with on this day. Mahomes is smiling, laughing and talking smack.

    Seeing Mahomes having a blast is making Gabbert have a blast.

    Now Gabbert is smiling and laughing.

    “Super fun,” Gabbert says. “Super fun for me to be out there and for me to be in that room. This great game gives us a lot of happiness.”

    Others who have traveled similar paths did not feel what Gabbert feels. They felt bitterness, anger and disillusionment. Some wanted to cut ties and start a new life in anonymity.

    The first pass Gabbert ever threw in organized football was a touchdown. He was a fifth grader in Ballwin, Mo., playing on Parkway West’s sixth-grade team.

    He killed it in high school, and Rivals ranked him the No. 1 quarterback in the country, ahead of Andrew Luck. He could have gone to almost any college. He chose Missouri, where he led an upset of No. 1 Oklahoma in 2010.

    NFL teams saw a quarterback who was big (6-foot-4, 234 pounds), athletic, fast (he ran a 4.66 40-yard dash) and smart (he scored a 42 on the Wonderlic), who could throw a football through drywall. Analysts called him the potential first pick in the 2011 draft. Many scouts rated him ahead of Cam Newton, who was chosen first.

    “The pieces for long-term success are there,” one general manager said before the draft.

    Gabbert was chosen 10th. Six years later, Mahomes was chosen 10th.

    In an alternate universe, Gabbert would have walked into a situation like Mahomes did, and Gabbert’s career would have played out in another manner altogether.

    In this universe, he’s a 33-year-old with 13 career wins as a starter.

    He has been a backup to Luke McCown, Chad Henne, Colin Kaepernick, Carson Palmer, Marcus Mariota, Jameis Winston, Tom Brady and now Mahomes.

    So where does Blaine Gabbert get off having so much fun?


    Once a blue-chip prospect, Blaine Gabbert is more than content to back up the stars of the game, including Tom Brady and now Patrick Mahomes in Kansas City. (David Eulitt / Getty Images)

    The Chiefs installed a Hail Mary pass recently. To illustrate, coaches showed the play run by the Jacksonville Jaguars 12 years ago. It was Gabbert throwing a 36-yard touchdown pass to Mike Thomas as the first half expired — one of the few pleasant memories from Gabbert’s rookie season.

    Without a collective bargaining agreement, NFL teams had locked out players in the 2011 offseason. When the lockout ended on July 25, Gabbert had not had a single day of professional coaching, and the situation he walked into couldn’t have been more dysfunctional.

    Head coach Jack Del Rio later said he had no idea general manager Gene Smith planned to trade up from 16 to select Gabbert. And he wasn’t on board with the choice. “He wasn’t a first-rounder,” Del Rio said.

    David Garrard was supposed to be the starting quarterback and the plan was for Gabbert to sit and learn, but the team cut Garrard just before the start of the season. McCown struggled through the first two games, and then it was Gabbert’s turn.

    “He was the kind of guy that, because of his college experience, probably needed to sit and watch and really get comfortable with things at the beginning of his career,” McCown says of Gabbert, a college starter for two seasons who played almost exclusively in the shotgun at Missouri. “It was an unfortunate circumstance for him to have to play at that time.”

    Gabbert’s primary receivers were Thomas and Jarrett Dillard, neither of whom lasted two more years in the league. In Gabbert’s fifth career start, his grit was questioned on national television by then-“Monday Night Football” analyst Jon Gruden.

    At 22, Gabbert became the youngest quarterback in NFL history to start 14 games. He lost 11 of them. His passer rating of 65.4 was the worst in the league. On one December day, Del Rio was fired and Wayne Weaver sold the team.

    “Yeah, it was a sh– show to be completely honest,” Gabbert says charitably.

    It didn’t get much better in subsequent seasons. Six games into Year 2, he tore the labrum in his non-throwing left shoulder. Gabbert tried to play for four games before acquiescing to season-ending surgery.

    By early October of his third season, he had a broken thumb, a lacerated hand that required 15 stitches and a hamstring injury. Gabbert was benched and didn’t play the final 11 games. He endured four head coaches in three years in Jacksonville, then was traded to San Francisco for a sixth-round pick.

    In his second season with the 49ers, Gabbert was given the starting job by coach Jim Tomsula after Kaepernick slumped. There were scrapbook memories from that season, including a 26-20 victory against the Chicago Bears in which Gabbert ran for a 44-yard touchdown with 1:42 remaining and threw a 71-yard touchdown pass in overtime to win the game.

    The following year, coach Chip Kelly named Gabbert the opening-day starter but benched him after a 1-4 start. From there, it was one year with the Arizona Cardinals and another with the Tennessee Titans.

    By the time he signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2019, Gabbert had played in eight offenses in eight seasons. His beginnings in Tampa were promising, but a dislocated shoulder in a preseason game necessitated surgery and prevented him from playing that season. Of all the low points in Gabbert’s career, that was the lowest.

    Gabbert has done much to make his father, Chuck, proud. He has become the kind of husband to Behkah and father to Leyton that Chuck hoped he would be.

    Last December, Blaine and his brothers, Tyler and Brett, were riding two jet skis about a mile off the south end of Davis Island in Tampa, where Blaine lives, when he heard something that sounded like a pop in the distance. He saw the rotor of a helicopter sticking out of the water.

    They motored to the area where they came upon an oil slick and hydraulic fluid in the water and four people — the pilot, a father, a mother and their son — covered in oil, shivering and trying to stay afloat.

    Some would have feared an explosion — reasonably so — and turned around. Blaine and his brothers motored to the crash scene, helped the survivors onto their jet skis and probably saved their lives.

    Chuck is proud of Blaine, Brett and Tyler for the way they responded. But he’s also proud — really proud — of Blaine’s resolve and the way he has built a career from the ashes.

    “He’s always approached things positively and given it 110 percent,” Chuck says. “It’s how he’s persevered through the good times and challenging times.”

    For every Alex Smith who stumbles out of the gate but eventually finds his stride, 10 first-round quarterbacks fall and never get up — players such as Jake Locker, Ryan Leaf, JaMarcus Russell, Rick Mirer, Joey Harrington, Tim Couch, Cade McNown, Matt Leinart, Josh Freeman and Johnny Manziel.

    The NFL had told Gabbert repeatedly he wasn’t as good as he was supposed to be.

    He should have believed it.

    He should have lost the sometimes unreasonable self-assurance that convinces quarterback heroes to zip laser passes into tight windows with games, seasons, contracts and careers on the line.

    He should have been scarred.


    Back to that rookie year — that awful rookie year, that vital rookie year.

    Gabbert is the starter, but McCown isn’t coasting.

    In the Jaguars’ weight room, Gabbert takes a medicine ball between his legs, then throws it behind him and over his head against a wall. Then McCown does it. It’s a “Granny Toss” competition to see who can throw the ball higher.

    Then, on the field, they compete in an accuracy contest to make throws through a target with a net attached to it from different spots on the field.

    Finally, they race from sideline to sideline.

    McCown was competing with Gabbert because it was enjoyable. But he also wanted to show him how a backup could maintain his edge.

    McCown worked and prepared as if he were the starter even though he wasn’t.

    “Luke showed me early on you can never really let your mind slip into the mentality of, ‘I’m just a backup and that’s all my role is,’” Gabbert says.


    Blaine Gabbert credits Luke McCown for teaching him how to be the ideal backup quarterback during their time together in Jacksonville. (Brian A. Westerholt / Getty Images)

    Fortunately for Gabbert, McCown was a better teacher than a quarterback. By the time they came together, McCown had been a No. 2 for the Browns, Bucs and Jaguars and was the ideal blend of wisdom and kindness.

    Many have struggled with the incongruity of being forced into a game after only running the scout team in practice. McCown showed Gabbert how to benefit from practices even when he wasn’t getting reps with the offense. McCown would stand behind the starter and think about what he would do in each situation. Then, when he ran the scout team, he used his own offense’s verbiage to describe the opponent’s plays.

    McCown helped prepare Gabbert for the rough waters to come, making him understand it’s easier to swim with the tide even if you prefer to go in another direction.

    “Luke told me that year that if you play this game long enough, you’re going to be cut, traded, released, put on IR,” Gabbert says. “Things will happen you wish didn’t happen. But it’s how you keep pushing forward and maintain confidence in yourself. That’s how you get through those tough times.”

    One day, Gabbert may tell his grandchildren about sharing a meeting room with Mahomes and Brady. And he also will tell them about McCown because no teammate was more critical to his development, really to his career.

    Through McCown, Gabbert came to understand the art of the backup.

    The backup, McCown taught Gabbert, must live in the space between confidence and humility, between competitiveness and acceptance, between contribution and sacrifice.


    The bookend to Gabbert’s quarterback education came in Tampa. It’s where, with help from Brady, everything Gabbert had learned from McCown was reinforced and validated.

    Brady was on a plane above everyone, but two days before every game, Gabbert had a chance to prove what he was about in competitions that were “epic,” according to then-Bucs quarterbacks coach Clyde Christensen. They started with tests of accuracy, in which Christensen graded every throw. There would be a bonus round, maybe throws at a blocking dummy on a golf cart flashing across the back of the end zone.

    The weekly winner took possession of a gaudy red belt with the inscription “Top Gun Champion” and featured a photo of Tom Cruise.

    Gabbert often got the better of Brady, who was well into his 40s by then. The younger pushed the older in agility and speed drills as well.

    And then there were meetings and tape sessions.

    “What do you think of this play’s chances?” Gabbert would ask him.

    “Why don’t you like this?”

    “Why is this better?”

    “What is our plan if this happens?”

    Gabbert was helping Brady. And there is no question Brady was helping Gabbert.

    Brady, more than any other quarterback Gabbert had known, prepared purposefully. From watching and listening to him, Gabbert learned to do everything on the practice field with intention, discipline and detail.

    When Brady was about 31 — the same age Gabbert was when they were together — he altered his training methods with an eye on preservation. Through long conversations and demonstrations, he shared his approach, which Gabbert adopted. Now Gabbert is a disciple of TB12, wholly bought into the body work, massages, pliability and muscle activation that helped Brady go longer better than anyone ever.

    Brady worked and worked, and Gabbert was by his side almost always, absorbing and elevating. Their time together was mostly about football, but there was more — they hit the golf course, the beach and a pool. Gabbert says he spent more time with Brady over three years than anyone else, including his wife, and still considers Brady his dear friend.

    The high point of all these NFL years for Gabbert was winning Super Bowl LV as Brady’s backup and knowing he played a role. Before the Bucs began practicing for the Chiefs, Gabbert, Brady and practice squad quarterback Ryan Griffin watched tape at Brady’s and came up with plays to recommend to the coaches.

    What they suggested was implemented, and what was implemented worked.

    The chemistry between Brady — the sixth-round pick who exceeded expectations — and Gabbert — the 10th pick of the draft who failed to meet expectations — was sublime.

    It wasn’t because Gabbert was resigned. It was because he was determined.

    “You know, I think Blaine Gabbert believes that if somehow he had to play 17 games this year, they’d still win the Super Bowl,” Christensen says. “He would have that kind of confidence. And he should. I think he could have been a really good starter in the league. He has that kind of talent. He’s athletic, as tough as could be, and he works.”

    The result is what Christensen calls an “elite” backup. And an elite backup, he will tell you, is rare.

    “Sometimes you get a backup and he doesn’t get it,” says Christensen, who has coached offense for the better part of 43 years. “He talks too much. He talks at the wrong time. He says the wrong thing. He doesn’t know when to just be quiet and let things be. You know, you can get a backup who’s undercutting everything. Blaine has a feel.”

    What Gabbert did on his jet ski last December was selfless. What he did for the Bucs was selfless.


    Reid recognized an elite backup when he saw one.

    In the offseason, Reid identified the free agent as the ideal successor to the retiring Chad Henne.

    The Buffalo Bills, Green Bay Packers and Las Vegas Raiders also expressed interest. The Chiefs, money aside, had more to offer — one of the NFL’s most talented rosters, proximity to family and the opportunity to work with a coach and quarterback well on their way to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

    Gabbert has lasting affection for many of his head coaches, especially Mike Mularkey, Jim Harbaugh, Tomsula, Bruce Arians, Mike Vrabel and Todd Bowles.

    And now there is Reid. He has been impressed with Reid’s warmth and style, to say nothing of his resume.

    “He loves the input from the quarterback,” Gabbert says of his 10th NFL head coach. “He lets you play free, lets you play your game. And that’s ultimately what quarterbacks love. He’s just a rock star.”

    Mahomes reminds him of Brady because both are meticulous about how they want plays run.

    “There are a lot of similarities between him and Tom when you’re dealing with the timing of man breaks, route depths, where he wants guys to be in certain coverages, things like that,” Gabbert says.

    Mahomes asks him questions about what Brady thought or what he would have done in certain circumstances. Chiefs teammates treat Gabbert with reverence and call him “O.G.” as in Original Gangster. He is recognized now as someone who has lived many quarterback lifetimes.

    It is a new role for him, big brother instead of little.

    Gabbert might have had better opportunities to play if he had signed with other teams. But in Kansas City, he has an opportunity to enhance Mahomes.

    He doesn’t need this — doesn’t need the pressure of running onto the field to replace an injured starter in a desperate moment as hope drains from a sideline, doesn’t need the stress of watching a hungry, no-name quarterback cheered as he attempts to take his job, doesn’t need to be playing in the third quarter of a preseason game, doesn’t need to risk his mobility and his mind.

    In addition to a Super Bowl ring, Gabbert has earned nearly $30 million in his career. A house on the water and a life without clocks is waiting.

    But there is this. “I love the game of football,” Gabbert says.

    Maybe a completely different story would have been written if Gabbert had been drafted by a model organization with a Hall of Fame head coach and a lineup filled with playmakers.

    Maybe he would have turned patience and stability into touchdowns and playoff wins.

    The well-meaning will often ask if he’s disappointed by how his career has gone.

    “That’s almost an insult,” he says. “I’m going into Year 13 in the National Football League. I think that’s pretty f—— awesome. There have been a lot of ups and downs and arounds, and I don’t think some people would have persevered the way I did. There always are things you wish you could have changed. But I sleep damn well at night knowing I tried to put my best foot forward every day. And you know, everything happens for a reason. If things didn’t happen the way they did, I wouldn’t be where I am today.”

    Gabbert is in Kansas City.

    He’s an elite backup and the O.G.

    And he’s having a blast.

    (Illustration: Sean Reilly / The Athletic; photos: David Eulitt and Norm Hall / Getty Images)


    “The Football 100,” the definitive ranking of the NFL’s best 100 players of all time, goes on sale this fall. Preorder it here.

    The New York Times

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  • Logo Brands Catches a New Strategic Partnership With University of Missouri

    Logo Brands Catches a New Strategic Partnership With University of Missouri

    This contract includes the rights to exclusively produce tailgating equipment, inflatable sports balls, soft-sided coolers, and more.

    Press Release


    Aug 26, 2022

    Logo Brands, Inc. has announced the signing of a five-year strategic licensing agreement with the University of Missouri, beginning ­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­Jan. 1, 2023, making Missouri the company’s 29th strategic collegiate licensing agreement. 

    While Logo Brands had a previous strategic partnership with this university, the new agreement grants Logo Brands exclusive rights to manufacture, produce, and distribute tents, chairs, stadium seating, soft-sided coolers, tables and inflatable sports balls for the university. Logo Brands will continue to offer additional products for the university, including tote bags, blankets, pillows, drinkware, and inflatables.

    “We are so excited about this extended partnership with Missouri that will grow and impact their retail presence. Our goal is to consistently service our university partners, customers, and retailers at the highest level,” said Kris Talley, SVP of Sales and Marketing at Logo Brands.

    This agreement also allows Logo Brands to further partner with Missouri in custom marketing activations, innovative products, and priority on-campus inventory availability. Officially licensed Missouri lifestyle and outdoors merchandise will be available to fans both in-venue and on various e-commerce channels in the United States. 

    Logo Brands will continue to produce and distribute Missouri Tigers products through Rally House, Cracker Barrel, Walmart, Academy Sports & Outdoors, Sam’s Club, and other major retail outlets in addition to Missouri’s on campus bookstore, The MIZZOU Store, and the Logo Brands e-commerce site.

    After being established in 1839 as the first public university west of the Mississippi River, the University of Missouri became home to the world’s first journalism school and also started the tradition of homecoming. Mizzou is known for its 20 D1 athletics programs, diverse student opportunities, and campus-wide sustainability efforts while being home to the oldest college rivalry west of the Mississippi River, with Kansas.

    Missouri will be the 29th university, 10th from the SEC, to enter into a strategic licensing agreement with Logo Brands.

    About Missouri

    Founded in 1839 in Columbia, the University of Missouri is a public research university that belongs to the people of Missouri. The first public university west of the Mississippi River, Mizzou is a member of the competitive SEC conference, a committed flagship and land-grant institution — and a proud member of the prestigious AAU which features the top research universities in the country. With an enrollment of over 30,000 students, Mizzou is a $2.2 billion global enterprise, with areas of strength including media, agriculture and plant science, human and animal health, sustainable energy and more. A pioneer of experiential learning and the famed Missouri Method, Mizzou is a place where hands-on learning leads to world-class research and unparalleled student success. Visit missouri.edu to learn more.

    About Logo Brands

    Logo Brands is a leading manufacturer of officially licensed products for more than 450 teams and organizations including collegiate, NFL, MLB, NHL, NBA, MLS, and NASCAR. The company’s assortment spans the categories of outdoor lifestyle, indoor living and on-the-go with more than 900 different product lines in the company’s history. Logo Brands began as a family business in 2000 by shipping tailgate chairs from a garage just outside of Memphis, Tennessee. Its headquarters are now in Franklin, Tennessee.

    MEDIA CONTACT: Natalie Hill, 615-716-4901, natalie@logobrands.com

    Follow on Instagram: @logobrandsinc

    Source: Logo Brands

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