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A quartet of top-10 ranked teams are set to fall when the US LBM Coaches Poll releases on Sunday, Oct. 19.

No. 2 Miami was upset by Louisville 24-21 on Friday, Oct. 17, and No. 10 LSU went to Nashville and fell to No. 18 Vanderbilt 31-24. No. 5 Ole Miss, which fell to No. 7 Georgia 43-35 on the road, is also set to fall just a few spots in the rankings, along with No. 8 Texas Tech, which lost to Arizona State 26-22.

Georgia Tech will likely find itself in the top-10 of the Coaches Poll after its 7-0 start, as the Yellow Jackets defeated Duke 27-18 on the road in Week 8. No. 13 Oklahoma could also jump back into the top 10 after a slew of losses by other teams.

No. 6 Alabama also picked up its fourth consecutive ranked win after dismantling Tennessee 37-20 at home.

Here’s a look at the updated polls after Week 8 of the college football season.

College football rankings

US LBM Coaches Poll

First-place votes in parentheses.

  1. Ohio State (65)
  2. Indiana
  3. Texas A&M
  4. Alabama
  5. Georgia
  6. Oregon
  7. Georgia Tech
  8. Ole Miss
  9. Miami
  10. BYU
  11. Oklahoma
  12. Vanderbilt
  13. Notre Dame
  14. Missouri
  15. Texas Tech
  16. Virginia
  17. Tennessee
  18. Texas
  19. LSU
  20. USF
  21. Cincinnati
  22. Louisville
  23. Illinois
  24. Michigan
  25. Arizona State

Schools dropped out: No. 20 Memphis, No. 21 USC, No. 22 Utah;

Others receiving votes: Navy 59; USC 52; Utah 51; Tulane 45; Houston 34; Iowa 17; James Madison 9; Iowa State 9; San Diego State 4; North Texas 4; Washington 3; UNLV 3; SMU 3; Memphis 3; TCU 2; Pittsburgh 2; Boise State 2; Northwestern 1;

AP Top 25 poll

First-place votes in parentheses.

  1. Ohio State (60)
  2. Indiana (6)
  3. Texas A&M
  4. Alabama
  5. Georgia
  6. Oregon
  7. Georgia Tech
  8. Ole Miss
  9. Miami
  10. Vanderbilt
  11. BYU
  12. Notre Dame
  13. Oklahoma
  14. Texas Tech
  15. Missouri
  16. Virginia
  17. Tennessee
  18. South Florida
  19. Louisville
  20. LSU
  21. Cincinnati
  22. Texas
  23. Illinois
  24. Arizona State
  25. Michigan

Others receiving votes: USC 97, Utah 40, Tulane 37, Houston 34, Navy 28, San Diego St. 7, James Madison 6, Boise St. 4, TCU 2, Minnesota 1.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Former catcher Jesus Montero, who played parts of five MLB seasons with the New York Yankees and Seattle Mariners, died at the age of 35, the Yankees confirmed on Sunday.

Montero, who made his debut with the Yankees in 2011 as a rising young prospect, was involved in an automobile accident in his native Venezuela, according to local reports.

He played in just 18 games with the Yankees in 2011 before being sent to the Mariners in a deal that brought right-hander Michael Pineda to New York.

‘The Mariners were saddened to learn today of the passing of former Mariners player Jesus Montero,’ the Mariners said in a statement. ‘Our hearts go out to his family, friends and loved ones.’

Montero, who played his last MLB game in 2015, finished his career as a .253 hitter with 28 home runs and 104 RBIs over 226 games. He notched career highs in homers (15) and RBIs (63) for the Mariners over 135 games in 2012, his only full season in the majors.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Gold Fields (NYSE:GFI) has completed its AU$3.7 billion purchase of Gold Road Resources.

Gold Road rejected Gold Fields’ first acquisition proposal in March, saying it undervalued the company.

Following negotiations between the two parties, Gold Fields, through its wholly owned entity Gruyere Holdings, entered into a scheme implementation deed with Gold Road on May 5. Under the AU$3.7 billion deal, the companies agreed that Gold Road shareholders would receive fixed cash consideration of AU$2.52 per share.

‘The Scheme provides Gold Road shareholders with an opportunity to realise certain value for their Gold Road shares at a compelling premium,” said Gold Road Managing Director and CEO Duncan Gibbs at the time.

“This offer price represents a material premium to the undisturbed share price prior to the initial Gold Fields’ proposal and a material premium to longer term trading levels,’ he added.

Under the deal, Gold Fields will gain a 100 percent interest in the Gruyere project in Western Australia.

Gruyere, which the companies previously worked on together as a joint venture, currently holds an open-pit mineral resource of 6.04 million ounces, and ore reserves of 3.67 million ounces.

Its average annual gold production stands at at 350,000 ounces.

According to Gold Fields, all Gold Road shares are now owned by Gruyere Holdings. Following the scheme’s implementation, Gold Road is expected to apply to delist from the Australian Securities Exchange.

Securities Disclosure: I, Gabrielle de la Cruz, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

  • Lane Kiffin is considered an ideal candidate to coach the Florida Gators due to his entertaining personality and offensive coaching style.
  • Despite past interest, Kiffin may no longer desire the Florida job as he has found success and stability at Ole Miss.
  • Kiffin has transformed Ole Miss into a College Football Playoff contender, a status Florida currently lacks.

There once was a time when Lane Kiffin would have crawl-stroked through a canal full of alligators to become Florida’s football coach. He’s suited to the job.

Southern California once ranked as Kiffin’s “dream job,” but coaching the Gators would be the dream fit of program and personality.

Florida fans don’t just want to win. They want to be entertained. Steve Spurrier, with his Fun ‘N’ Gun offense and his epic zingers, spoiled them that way.

Kiffin idolized Spurrier, and, shoot, they both look good in a visor.

Since Spurrier left the Gators sideline, Florida’s been in this never-ending quest to replace him. Urban Meyer answered the bell for a spell, but the Head Ball Coach remains the gold standard in Gainesville.

With Spurrier retired, who’s more entertaining in this era of college football than Kiffin? He’s one part troll, one part “Portal King,” and another part offensive genius.

Kiffin’s the ideal candidate for Florida, after the Gators fired Billy Napier. He could breathe an instant turnaround into a languishing program.

Kiffin’s career is soaring at Mississippi. His Rebels are College Football Playoff contenders, even after a loss at Georgia. That playoff pursuit would complicate Kiffin’s exit, and it further incentivizes him to stay put. But, you’d be kidding yourself if you think he’s never cast a wistful eye at floundering Florida and fancied how he could do that job so much better than it’s been done these past several seasons.

Nowadays, Kiffin wouldn’t need to swim through gator-infested waters to coach Florida. He might only need to answer his phone.

The question I’m wondering: Does Kiffin still want this job? I’m not so sure he does. I’m not so sure he should.

The salty truth of the matter is, Florida needs Kiffin a whole lot more than he needs the Gators.

Lane Kiffin makes Ole Miss into what Florida should be

Kiffin’s winning at a rate and with a consistency level he’s never before experienced. He’s toned down his hijinks, and he’s found peace and stability in Oxford. He’s built Ole Miss into what Florida should be. He’s pumping out good quarterbacks.

Before he arrived at Ole Miss, Kiffin’s career had been anything but a smooth ride.

He became persona non-grata with Al Davis and the Raiders. He became a traitor to Tennessee. He got fired from Southern California in an office off the LAX tarmac. He subjected himself to Nick Saban’s butt-chewings.

The turbulence leveled out at Ole Miss.

Maybe, it’s the wisdom of age. Maybe, it’s all that hot yoga he does. Maybe, it was his decision to get sober. Maybe, it’s those rocking chairs Kiffin placed on his front porch to signify his acceptance and embrace of Mississippi’s slower pace of life. Maybe, it’s how he’s reunited with his family. Maybe, it was the death of his dad, Monte, and hearing from people far and wide about Monte’s impact on their life, which forced Kiffin to ponder his desire for his own legacy.

Whatever the case, Kiffin appears to be living his best life. He calls this his quest to be the higher version of himself, and it’s coinciding with the highest version of Kiffin’s coaching career.

Lane Kiffin: ‘I look at life completely different.’

Before the season, Kiffin and I talked at length about what he wants out of life, and how his desires have changed.

“The earlier version of me was like, ‘I want a statue’” Kiffin told me in April. “I wouldn’t have said that publicly, but it was like, ‘I want to win enough where they build a statue of you.’ Like, at Alabama, there are statues of the coaches. That means you made it in life.”

“I don’t even think that way anymore,” he continued. “Now, I just want to be a really good neighbor, dad, brother, coworker, boss. I look at life completely different, and a lot of that had to do with growth and my personal growth — losing my dad, seeing his legacy. He’s someone who had both those, championships and treated people (well), and just realizing which one is a lot more important.”

I’m wondering whether a guy who says all that would swim through an alligator-filled canal to get to Florida. I wonder whether this visor-wearing coach still wants to coach Florida at all, when he’s found so much rhythm and success and adoration at Ole Miss.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Here’s a quick recap of the crypto landscape for Friday (October 17) as of 9:00 p.m. UTC.

Get the latest insights on Bitcoin, Ether and altcoins, along with a round-up of key cryptocurrency market news.

Bitcoin and Ether price update

Bitcoin (BTC) was priced at US$106,495, a 1.7 percent decrease in 24 hours. Its lowest valuation of the day was US$104,747, and its highest was US$107,411.

Bitcoin price performance, October 17, 2025.

Chart via TradingView.

The Bitcoin price remains under pressure. While sizable short liquidations of both Bitcoin and Ether have provided pockets of buying relief, overall market confidence is tempered. Volatility persists, leaving the market poised for further directional cues from key upcoming earnings and economic data releases.

Ether (ETH) was priced at US$3,830.31, a 1.2 percent decrease in 24 hours. Its lowest valuation of the day was US$3,726.31, and its highest was US$3,845.65.

Altcoin price update

  • Solana (SOL) was priced at US$181.98, a decrease of 2.1 percent over the last 24 hours. Its lowest valuation of the day was US$177.43, and its highest was US$184.74.
  • XRP was trading for US$2.30, a decrease of 1.4 percent over the last 24 hours. Its lowest valuation of the day was US$2.25 and its highest was US$2.31.

Crypto derivatives and market indicators

Bitcoin derivatives metrics indicate a complex market environment with mixed signals.

While short-term buying pressure has occurred, underlying market sentiment remains bearish or neutral, with cautious trading behavior and no strong bullish conviction at this time.

Bitcoin liquidations have totaled approximately US$22.09 million in the last four hours, with short positions making up the majority, signaling a short squeeze or bullish pressure. Ether liquidations show a similar pattern, totaling US$20.86 million, the majority of which were short positions.

Futures open interest for Bitcoin has decreased by 1.56 percent to around US$70 billion, showing strong bearish sentiment. Ether futures open interest was unchanged at around US$44 billion, reflecting market neutrality.

The perpetual funding rate for Bitcoin was -0.009, and for Ether it was -0.015, indicating bearish market sentiment.

Bitcoin’s relative strength index stands at 34.05, indicating that the cryptocurrency is in a bearish/bullish/neutral momentum, phase but not yet deeply oversold.

Fear and Greed Index snapshot

CMC’s Crypto Fear & Greed Index has fallen far into fear territory, dipping to 28 on Friday from an earlier score of 32.

CMC Crypto Fear and Greed Index, Bitcoin price and Bitcoin volume.

Chart via CoinMarketCap.

Today’s crypto news to know

Japanese banks launch yen-backed stablecoin

A group of Japan’s largest banks, including MUFG Bank, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking and Mizuho Bank, are reportedly collaborating to launch a yen-backed stablecoin using MUFG’s Progmat platform.

The initiative aims to create an interoperable payment token for over 300,000 corporate clients. MUFG will be the first user for internal settlements. The stablecoin is expected to roll out by year end, potentially establishing Japan’s first unified bank-backed stablecoin network and accelerating crypto adoption in the region’s financial infrastructure.

Uniswap expands to Solana blockchain

Uniswap has expanded its web app to support the Solana blockchain, enabling users to trade Solana-based tokens, the platform announced in a blog post on Wednesday (October 15). This move broadens Uniswap’s reach beyond Ether, lowering transaction costs and speed for DeFi traders using Solana’s high-performance network.

Ripple adds US$1 billion to XRP treasury

Ripple will reportedly add a US$1 billion purchase of its native XRP cryptocurrency to its digital asset treasury.

Sources for Bloomberg said the treasury funds, which will be raised through a special purpose acquisition company, will be used to support Ripple’s ecosystem development, liquidity provision and strategic partnerships, reinforcing Ripple’s commitment to growing XRP’s adoption in global payments.

Securities Disclosure: I, Meagen Seatter, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

China has accused the US of “seriously distorting and exaggerating” Beijing’s newly expanded rare earths export controls, but signaled a willingness to hold talks before an expected meeting between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping later this month.

“The US interpretation seriously distorts and exaggerates China’s measures, deliberately creating unnecessary misunderstanding and panic,” Ministry of Commerce spokesperson He Yongqian said Thursday (October 16).

According to the Global Times, he emphasized that Beijing’s restrictions are intended to protect national security and prevent the misuse of rare earths in military applications, not to destabilize global markets.

The remarks follow a sharp escalation in rhetoric between the two countries after China expanded its export controls last week to include five additional rare earth elements: holmium, erbium, thulium, europium and ytterbium.

The new rules will take effect in stages starting November 8, coinciding with the expiry of a six month trade truce between Washington and Beijing. Foreign companies that use Chinese materials or equipment to produce rare earths products will require Chinese export licenses, even if no Chinese firm is directly involved in the transaction.

Beijing has also vowed stricter scrutiny of applications tied to advanced semiconductors and defense systems, such as 14 nanometer chips and artificial intelligence used in weapons platforms.

Washington pushes back against Beijing

Top US officials have accused Beijing of attempting to weaponize its dominance in the global rare earths supply chain, which accounts for about 70 percent of global production and more than 90 percent of processing capacity.

At a press briefing on Wednesday (October 15), US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer called China’s new measures a “global supply chain power grab” and warned that Washington and its allies “would not accept the restrictions.”

However, he also said China has not yet implemented the full regulatory system and suggested there is still room to de-escalate. “These are drafted, or in draft, so it’s quite real,” Greer said.

“But our expectation is that they won’t implement this, and that we’ll be able to be back to where we were a week ago, where we had the tariff levels we’ve agreed to and the flow of rare earths that we agreed to.”

Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent echoed the sentiment, telling CNBC that the Trump administration does not want to further inflame tensions, but will act decisively if Beijing moves forward with its restrictions.

“When we get an announcement like this week with China on the rare earths, you realize we have to be self-sufficient, or we have to be sufficient with our allies,” Bessent said.

He also accused China of using its dominance in rare earths refining and processing to slash prices and drive foreign competitors out of the market. Trump has threatened to impose 100 percent tariffs on Chinese goods starting on November 1 — or sooner — if Beijing moves ahead with the export controls.

Despite the mounting friction, both sides remain committed to a scheduled meeting between Trump and Xi in South Korea later this month, highlighting the indispensable nature of rare earths to modern industry.

They are used in electric vehicles, wind turbines, smartphones and, crucially, in US military systems such as F-35 fighter jets, Tomahawk missiles and Predator drones. Each F-35 is estimated to require more than 400 kilograms of rare earths for its stealth coatings, motors and radar systems.

US eyes new critical minerals sources

In response to China’s dominance, Washington has ramped up efforts to secure alternative sources of critical minerals.

The Department of Defense earlier this year struck a deal with MP Materials (NYSE:MP), the largest US rare earths producer. It includes an equity stake, a price floor and an offtake deal to guarantee supply for defense applications.

Separately, the Trump administration is reportedly exploring a potential investment in Critical Metals (NASDAQ:CRML), a US-listed firm developing Greenland’s vast Tanbreez rare earths deposit.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

The No. 21-ranked Trojans fell to longtime foe and No. 15 Notre Dame by a score of 34-24 at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Indiana, on Saturday, Oct. 18. 

It is the second loss of the season for Lincoln Riley’s squad, which now drops to 5-2 overall on the season.

Notre Dame separated itself from USC late in the third quarter and into the fourth quarter. The Trojans’ slide started with Jayden Maiava under-throwing a pass downfield into the hands of Notre Dame cornerback Christian Gray. The interception by Gray came after USC’s special teams unit gave up a 100-yard kickoff return to Jadarian Price.

Then, on the Trojans’ next drive, wide receiver Makai Lemon got the ball knocked out of his hands at the conclusion of a jet sweep play that turned into a flea flicker throwing attempt as the Fighting Irish rushed him to the sidelines. Lemon’s fumble resulted in a 2-yard rushing touchdown from Notre Dame quarterback CJ Carr.

Maiava would throw his second interception on USC’s final offensive play of the night as he tried to go downfield on third-and-17 to Walker Lyons, but it instead sailed into the hands of Notre Dame’s Luke Talich.

The Trojans’ defense did a nice job handling Carr on the night, but they had no answers whatsoever for the Fighting Irish’s explosive running game with Jeremiyah Love and Price. Notre Dame finished with 306 rushing yards on the night, with 228 of those coming from Love himself.

So, where will the Trojans fall in the latest top 25 rankings following the defeat? Here’s where they may land:

USC rankings: How far will Trojans drop after Notre Dame loss?

While the loss is certainly not a “bad loss” by any means since it came against a top-15-ranked team and was an out-of-conference loss, USC will certainly see a drop in the top-25 rankings.

The question that is now presented is the type of slide Riley’s squad will experience, largely in part to the very slight difference of USC’s current ranking in the US LBM Coaches Poll and the AP Top 25 poll. The Trojans entered the day ranked No. 21 in the Coaches Poll and No. 20 in the AP poll. That one-spot difference could either keep the Trojans in the top 25 or take them out of it for the second time this season, depending on how voters cast their ballots, of course.

Despite the loss, USC still has multiple paths to the College Football Playoff. The likely path for the Trojans to get into the 12-team CFP field, now with two losses on the season, is to earn the automatic bid by winning the Big Ten Conference.

As things stand right now, the Trojans have two remaining ranked opponents on their schedule, according to the latest AP Top 25 poll, in No. 25 Nebraska and No. 8 Oregon. The Cornhuskers will no longer be a ranked opponent for USC when the two programs meet on Nov. 1, as Nebraska fell to Minnesota on Friday, Oct. 17. 

Here’s how the rest of the top 25 fared in Week 8, and how those games might affect the Trojans’ ranking:

Rankings reflective of the latest US LBM Coaches Poll

  • No. 1 Ohio State: Beat Wisconsin
  • No. 2 Miami: Lost to Louisville 
  • No. 3 Indiana: Beat Michigan State
  • No. 4 Texas A&M: Beat Arkansas 
  • No. 5 Ole Miss: Lost to No. 7 Georgia
  • No. 6 Alabama: Beat No. 11 Tennessee
  • No. 7 Georgia: Beat No. 5 Ole Miss
  • No. 8 Texas Tech: Lost to Arizona State
  • No. 9 Oregon: Beat Rutgers
  • No. 10 LSU: Lost to No. 18 Vanderbilt
  • No. 11 Tennessee: Lost to No. 6 Alabama
  • No. 12 Georgia Tech: Beat Duke
  • No. 13 Oklahoma: Beat South Carolina
  • No. 14 BYU: In action vs. No. 22 Utah
  • No. 15 Notre Dame: Beat No. 21 USC
  • No. 16 Missouri: In action vs. Auburn
  • No. 17 Texas: Beat Kentucky
  • No. 18 Vanderbilt: Beat No. 10 LSU
  • No. 19 Virginia: Beat Washington State
  • No. 20 Memphis: Lost to UAB
  • No. 21 USC: Lost to No. 15 Notre Dame
  • No. 22 Utah: In action vs. No. 14 BYU
  • No. 23 South Florida: Beat FAU
  • No. 24 Cincinnati: Beat Oklahoma State
  • No. 25 Illinois: BYE

Final projection for USC: No. 24

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The No. 11-ranked Vols dropped their annual ‘Third Saturday in October’ rivalry game to No. 6 Alabama 37-20 on Saturday, Oct. 18 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

It is the 11th consecutive loss in Tuscaloosa for Tennessee, which entered the night looking to win back-to-back games in the rivalry series for the first time in over two decades. Instead, it’s the Crimson Tide smoking the postgame victory cigars.

The Vols dug themselves into a hole just before halftime and were unable to dig themselves out of it. At the Alabama 1-yard line with 9 seconds remaining in the first half, Tennessee quarterback Joey Aguilar decided to throw the ball and it was intercepted by Zabien Brown, who took it to the house for a 99-yard touchdown to put the Crimson Tide up 23-7.

That wasn’t the only poor decision of the night from Aguilar. Earlier in the second quarter, the 6-foot-3 quarterback was sacked by the Crimson Tide defense in the end zone for a safety. Aguilar finished 28 of 44 passing for 268 yards with a touchdown and an interception on the night.

Tennessee is now 0-2 against top-six ranked opponents this season, with the other loss coming to then-No. 6 Georgia at home in Knoxville on Sept. 13.

So, where will the Vols fall in the latest top 25 rankings following the defeat? Here’s where they may land:

Tennessee rankings: Where will Vols fall to after Alabama loss?

Though it is a painful loss for Tennessee, as it adds a second loss to the resume for Josh Heupel’s squad, the loss to Alabama by no means is a ‘bad’ loss or a ‘season-crushing’ loss.

It will still drop the Vols a spot or two in the top 25 rankings when they are released on Sunday afternoon.

Tennessee did not receive any help from the teams around it in the top 25 polls, as No. 12 Georgia Tech, No. 13 Oklahoma, No. 14 BYU and No. 15 Notre Dame all won their games. There were also two top 10 teams near Tennessee in the polls that sustained losses: No. 8 Texas Tech to unranked Arizona State and No. 10 LSU to Diego Pavia and No. 18 Vanderbilt. Depending on how the voters for the US LBM Coaches Poll and AP Top 25 poll view those top-10 losses, they could send Tennessee out of the top 15.

The Vols have two more chances at boosting their College Football Playoff resume with top-25 ranked teams, as Tennessee still has to face No. 13 Oklahoma and No. 18 Vanderbilt. Those are now the biggest games left on the season for Tennessee; a third loss to one of those teams or an additional loss to either Kentucky, New Mexico State or Florida will surely take the Vols out of contention for the SEC championship game and College Football Playoff.

Here’s how the rest of the top 15 fared in Week 8, and how those games might affect the Vols’ ranking:

Rankings reflective of the latest US LBM Coaches Poll

  • No. 1 Ohio State: Beat Wisconsin
  • No. 2 Miami: Lost to Louisville 
  • No. 3 Indiana: Beat Michigan State
  • No. 4 Texas A&M: Beat Arkansas 
  • No. 5 Ole Miss: Lost to No. 7 Georgia
  • No. 6 Alabama: Beat Tennessee
  • No. 7 Georgia: Beat No. 5 Ole Miss
  • No. 8 Texas Tech: Lost to Arizona State
  • No. 9 Oregon: Beat Rutgers
  • No. 10 LSU: Lost to No. 18 Vanderbilt
  • No. 11 Tennessee: Lost to No. 6 Alabama
  • No. 12 Georgia Tech: Beat Duke
  • No. 13 Oklahoma: Beat South Carolina
  • No. 14 BYU: Beat No. 22 Utah
  • No. 15 Notre Dame: Beat No. 21 USC

Final projection for Tennessee: No. 17

This post appeared first on USA TODAY