Author: nfltalk

  • Big Ten, SEC power grab tough to stomach but difficult to argue amid College Football Playoff negotiations

    Big Ten, SEC power grab tough to stomach but difficult to argue amid College Football Playoff negotiations

    The expanded College Football Playoff is beginning to look like an invitational.

    The Big Ten and SEC have grown so powerful and so bold, they are acting like the world is not enough; they’ll settle for most of the expanded playoff bracket.

    The two giants have united like collegiate Wonder Twins, and their demands are extensive. The conferences, which at one point sought as many as four automatic berths each — an allowance perhaps never even considered before — in a further-expanded CFP bracket, now seem to be OK with three each. Well, that’s if the Big Ten and SEC are also automatically granted the top two seeds (which would come with byes) in a 14-team iteration of an expanded bracket that would begin in 2026. 

    “It just means more” has never meant more. 

    This is about threading a needle through access and money and scheduling and outrage and, well, egos too. There will be plenty of that in the coming days until this latest CFP disturbance is settled. And surely, some will question that teams should need to earn those top two spots by more than their conference affiliation.

    Still, a hard truth must be acknowledged: The Big Ten and SEC really do run things. They really do deserve at least some dispensation. That’s tough to swallow in a sport like college football, which has occasionally been dominated by swagger and smack talk off the field.

    What’s difficult is to watch the CFP sausage being made and stuffed through a 14-team bracket.

    The 10 FBS commissioners and Notre Dame’s administrator, who will continue to meet this month as the CFP Management Committee, are under a hard deadline. ESPN needs to know what it is on the table as it seeks to extend its media rights agreement with the CFP. The conferences need to figure out how they…

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  • NFL combine: Michigan QB J.J. McCarthy takes field in Indy after national title run

    NFL combine: Michigan QB J.J. McCarthy takes field in Indy after national title run

    J.J. McCarthy took the field on Saturday afternoon at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis in his latest quest to improve his draft stock before April.

    The former Michigan quarterback, who led the Wolverines to their first national title in decades earlier this year, didn’t participate in the broad or vertical jumps or the 40-yard dash due to what he called “hamstring tightness.” He did, though, throw in the on-field workout.

    He got some pretty good looks in, too, including one perfect deep ball.

    While it wasn’t perfect — McCarthy often struggles to throw left outside the numbers, which he did again on Saturday — he did seem to have a very large fan base watching him in Indianapolis.

    McCarthy racked up a career-high 2,991 yards and 22 touchdowns while throwing just four interceptions last season with the Wolverines. He threw for 221 yards and had three touchdowns in their overtime win against Alabama in the Rose Bowl, and then led the Wolverines to a blowout win over Washington to win the program’s first national championship since 1997.

    He quickly declared for the NFL Draft after winning the title. It’s unclear where McCarthy will fall in the draft later this spring, though Yahoo Sports’ Charles McDonald and Nate Tice had him going No. 11 overall to the Minnesota Vikings in their latest mock draft.

    While McCarthy is well aware that there are better quarterbacks than him in this year’s draft class on paper — he’s the fourth quarterback off the board in Yahoo Sports’ latest mock draft behind Drake Maye, Caleb Williams and Heisman winner Jayden Daniels — McCarthy knows he’s the only quarterback to mount an undefeated national title run, and he’s not afraid to lean into it.

    While he threw on Saturday, J.J. McCarthy didn’t run the 40-yard dash or participate in the broad or vertical jumps due to hamstring tightness. (AP/Darron Cummings)

    “You know, like, stats for me aren’t really the big thing, and all I really cared about was being the best…

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  • Tennessee offers 2026 cornerback Jaelen Waters

    Tennessee offers 2026 cornerback Jaelen Waters

    Tennessee offered a scholarship to 2026 cornerback Jaelen Waters.

    “Extremely blessed to receive an offer from the University of Tennessee,” Waters said.

    The 6-foot-2, 170-pound cornerback prospect is from Armwood High School in Seffner, Florida.

    There are not recruiting rankings currently for Waters from Rivals, 247Sports, On3 or ESPN.

    The Vols are the fifth Southeastern Conference school to offer Waters. Ole Miss was the first SEC school to offer a scholarship on Dec. 15, 2023.

    Waters has scholarship offers from Tennessee, Notre Dame, USC, Colorado, Texas, West Virginia, UCF, South Carolina, Florida, Ole Miss, Michigan State, Iowa State, Penn State, USF, Toledo, Jackson State and Western Michigan.

    Western Michigan was the first school to offer a scholarship to Waters on Oct. 10, 2023.

    Story originally appeared on Vols Wire

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  • 2024 NFL Combine takeaways, grades for top TE prospects, plus other winners and losers

    2024 NFL Combine takeaways, grades for top TE prospects, plus other winners and losers

    Day 2 of on-field drills at the NFL Combine in Indianapolis ended with tight ends demonstrating their athletic gifts inside Lucas Oil Stadium. No, this isn’t a loaded tight end group like we had a year ago, a few prospects elevated their stock with strong performances.

    Here are some of the winners and losers from Friday’s on-field drills in Indianapolis, starting with a look at the measurements of the prospects in CBS Sports’ top 100 consensus rankings.

    Brock Bowers, Georgia

    N/A

    N/A

    N/A

    Ja’Tavion Sanders, Texas

    4.69

    N/A

    N/A

    Ben Sinnott, Kansas State

    4.68

    40″

    10-foot-6

    Cade Stover, Ohio State

    4.65

    34.5″

    9-foot-8

    Grading the top-rated TEs

    Brock Bowers, Georgia: N/A

    Bowers opted against working out at the combine, and with seemingly such a “lead” on the rest of the tight ends in this class, that decision makes plenty of sense. He measured in just over 6-foot-3 and 243 pounds with quality length — nearly 33″ inches. No major changes here. 

    Ja’Tavion Sanders, Texas: B

    While I don’t think Sanders is a total burner at the tight end spot, barely running under 4.70 seconds surprised me a bit, especially for someone who was a monster high school recruit and did hit plenty of long plays in college. I would’ve liked to see some jumps from him, too, but he decided to wait until his pro day. He does have big hands, over 10 inches. That’s a plus. 

    Ben Sinnott, Kansas State: A

    A 4.68-second 40-yard dash for the nearly 6-foot-4 and 250-pound Sinnott was rock solid, and his jumps were eye-opening. It’s rare we see tight ends hit 40 inches in the vertical, and the 10-foot-6 broad will be close to the 94th percentile at the position since 1999 at the combine. Sinnott is in the discussion to be the second or third tight end off the board now, if he wasn’t already before the combine.  

    Cade Stover, Ohio State: B

    While his jumps didn’t compare to Sinnott’s and a few other tight ends, Stover ran a respectable 40-yard dash in the group…

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  • College football rankings: Georgia, Ohio State, Texas lead top 25 entering spring practices for 2024 season

    College football rankings: Georgia, Ohio State, Texas lead top 25 entering spring practices for 2024 season

    1

    As the NCAA struggles to find an identity amid this changing landscape, court battles stir and name, image and likeness engulfs the sport, some things remain the same. The Bulldogs are on track to win three national championships in four years as a top-ranked recruiting class will bolster a top-15 transfer portal class that should help shore up a program still fuming after losing by three to Alabama in the SEC Championship Game and missing out on the CFP. Way-too-early ranking: 1 
    2

    Ryan Day has accomplished one of the most significant roster flips in the short history of the transfer portal. Since we last ranked the Buckeyes, Day has landed one of the best portal classes in the country, changed offensive coordinators — twice — and gotten millions in support from NIL collectives. This is how it looks when you have to beat Michigan … or else. Way-too-early ranking: 6 
    3

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  • Howie Roseman explains where Eagles went wrong with Nolan Smith

    Howie Roseman explains where Eagles went wrong with Nolan Smith

    Howie Roseman explains where Eagles went wrong with Nolan Smith originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

    Why draft Nolan Smith in the first round and then not play him?

    Good question.

    And a question with no valid answer.

    Smith, the 30th pick in last year’s draft, had a promising training camp, then disappeared once the season began.

    He never played more than nine snaps in the Eagles’ first 10 games and averaged just 6.1 snaps per game through the Chiefs game. At one point in the middle of the season, he played just 11 snaps in a three-game stretch.

    His numbers nudged up after that, but even with 41 snaps in the season finale against the Giants – most after the game had been decided – he averaged only 11 snaps per game.

    Even late in the season, when the edge rushers weren’t making an impact – four sacks the last eight games, none the last four – Smith rode the bench.

    He didn’t do a ton with the snaps he did get. A sack. Three QB hits. A tackle for loss. Eighteen tackles. But can you even fairly evaluate a player who’s barely playing?

    Nope.

    Both defensive coordinators are gone, and on Tuesday Howie Roseman admitted what we all knew.

    Smith should have played more.

    “In retrospect, just seeing him certainly in the playoff game, one of the guys who played well in the playoff game, maybe giving him a little bit more time during the year and experience, we talked about that,” Roseman said at the combine in Indianapolis.

    “He’s got all the right tools in his body. He’s got the right mentality. And at the same time, he’s got to go out and show it.”

    Smith played 16 snaps in the wild-card loss to the Bucs and it was by far his best game. He split a sack with Fletcher Cox, had four tackles in just 16 snaps and he had a quarterback hit. Pro Football Focus gave him the 4th-highest grade of all edge rushers wild-card weekend at 84.9 (Brandon Graham was highest at 90.2).

    Where was that all year?

    Sitting on the bench for 84 percent of the Eagles’ defensive…

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  • New Pac-12 commissioner, WSU’s Schulz vow to press forward in murky NCAA straits

    New Pac-12 commissioner, WSU’s Schulz vow to press forward in murky NCAA straits

    Feb. 29—On the day when the official schedule for Washington State’s football team was announced, about the only thing WSU President Kirk Schulz could guarantee about the future for Cougar fans: They get some “terrific” new college towns to visit on Saturdays.

    Schulz joined newly appointed Pac-12 Commissioner Teresa Gould for a news conference Thursday where they vowed to keep fighting to ensure that the conference’s only remaining members, Oregon State and WSU, continue to get a chance to play for championships and a share of revenues amid a college landscape that is changing seemingly by the hour.

    Gould sat for her first meeting last week as part of the College Football Playoff selection committee when it decided on a new 12-team playoff system for the upcoming and 2025 seasons. Of those 12 teams, five slots will be reserved for the five-highest ranked conference champions and seven at-large selections.

    Gould noted that college presidents and conference commissioners have agreed on nothing for 2026 and beyond.

    “I think none of us would have ever anticipated the amount of change that is going on right now,” said Gould, responding to a question. “Yesterday looks different than today. And, who knows what the headline is going to be tomorrow.”

    Gould officially takes over Friday for former Commissioner George Kliavkoff, who was ousted by a vote of Schulz and Oregon State president Jayathi Murthy, who are the only two remaining Pac-12 governing board members after the conference’s other 10 schools departed for the Big Ten, Big 12 and Atlantic Coast conferences.

    Schulz and Murthy hired Gould, who had been serving as the senior associate commissioner under Kliavkoff.

    “Just to be clear, we are very much in the infancy stages of talking about what happens beyond 2026,” Gould said, referring to the College Football Playoff…

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  • NFL tested optical tracking on line-to-gain rulings during 2023 season, unclear how many owners support it

    NFL tested optical tracking on line-to-gain rulings during 2023 season, unclear how many owners support it

    Getty Images

    There could be a dramatic change coming to the way the NFL operates on a down-to-down basis. 

    According to CBS Sports NFL Insider Jonathan Jones, the league tested optical tracking on line-to-gain rulings at both MetLife Field and Hard Rock Stadium throughout the 2023 season, as well as at the Super Bowl earlier this year. If there is support from enough owners, the league could move to optical tracking rather than the so-called “chain gang” as early as the 2024 season, Jones reports.

    At the moment, it’s unclear how much support there is among ownership to make the switch. And as Jones notes, it could be difficult to outfit all 30 NFL stadiums and international stadiums with the requisite technology in time for the upcoming season. But it’s notable that it is being tested, because it indicates a willingness to move in that direction in the future.

    Line-to-gain and spot-of-the-ball issues are not of the judgment call variety that the NFL can’t feasibly eliminate. If the league can ensure a way that the ball is spotted more accurately than it is with the current, obviously archaic system of referees eyeballing it from yards away from the play, it should do just that. 

    Of course, what the league “should” do has never really stopped it from doing certain things before, so nothing is guaranteed. But if the league can make sure the technology works and can be installed where it needs to be installed, it should be a no-brainer to get this passed by the competition committee and then a full ownership vote.

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