Alabama’s offense chugs on. Georgia’s QB situation needs attention. Is Heisman race already decided? And Arkansas’ Twitter win among Week 7 takeaways.
Author: Dan Wolken, USA TODAY
With $1 salary, Joe Moglia may be the biggest bargain in college football
Joe Moglia, former CEO of TD Ameritrade, has agreed to forego his $177,000 salary and accept $1 this season in his unique role at Coastal Carolina.
SEC defensive meltdowns headline 10 takeaways from Week 6 in college football
Week 6 had a lot of offense, especially in the usually defensive SEC. Those breakdowns lead the 10 takeaways from Saturday in college football.
Opinion: Florida and its two Kyles could be the next gem of the SEC
Quarterback Kyle Trask and wide receiver Kyle Pitts have the Gators’ offense firing, but will their defense catch up in time for championship hunt?
Opinion: The Big 12 is in big trouble and other takeaways from college football’s Week 4
Oklahoma’s loss and Texas’ less-than-impressive win Saturday are not promising signs for the Big 12 as it hopes to get a College Football Playoff bid.
Bowing to pressure, Big Ten will begin eight-game football season in October
Big Ten presidents agreed to a plan Wednesday to move forward with an eight-game season starting Oct. 24 after postponing fall schedule in August.
Opinion: Proposed all-in NCAA basketball tournament surprisingly makes sense
The idea of a tournament with 340-something teams sounds crazy at first, but the ACC has good reason to push the proposal to the NCAA.
Opinion: Novak Djokovic’s moment of boneheadedness will ripple across tennis, U.S. Open history
Novak Djokovic may end up winning more tennis Grand Slams than anyone, but he’s going to go down in history as one of its biggest brats.
Opinion: COVID-19 will affect college football season. But how will it inform rankings of Amway Coaches Poll voters?
How do Amway Coaches Poll voters account for a team that shows up but is missing most of its wide receivers or first string offensive line?
Opinion: Athletes are paying attention, don’t like what they hear in push to start college football
Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, college athletes are paying attention like never before and organizing in ways predecessors felt were too risky.