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  • The CFP committee watched Georgia trample Alabama and then pretended it never happened.
  • CFP committee deploys chicanery to reach the bracket destination it desired.
  • Alabama and Miami in, Notre Dame out. That’s fine, but process so messy.

I swear the SEC championship game happened. More than 77,000 fans attended it. I covered it. Millions more watched on TV as Georgia body slammed Alabama and sucked out the Tide’s soul.

If only we had known we were watching a pointless scrimmage.

The College Football Playoff committee watched that 28-7 trampling, and it didn’t move either the victor or the loser an inch in its final rankings.

It’s as if the game never happened.

I swear, it did. I swear Georgia put Alabama in a vise and limited the Tide to negative-three rushing yards.

The committee saw it, evaluated it, and decided it meant nothing.

Georgia enters the bracket at No. 3.

Alabama goes in at No. 9.

Same as they were ranked before the game.

In ranking Georgia and Alabama this way, the committee declared the SEC championship game a glorified exhibition.

SEC championship game has never meant less than it does now

The late commissioner Roy Kramer’s revolutionary brainchild of a conference championship game has never been more meaningless than it became this weekend.

It’s a cash grab. Nothing more. A once-great idea, it no longer offers utility to the current playoff structure.

You’re familiar with trophies awarded for rivalry games and bowl games. Now, we’ve got a trophy awarded to the winner of a scrimmage at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

The committee’s seeding decision revealed that, no matter what the playoff’s rules say, the SEC receives two automatic bids to the bracket: One for its conference champion and another for its runner-up.

“We evaluated all of those conference championship games,’ CFP selection committee chairman Hunter Yurachek explained on ESPN, ‘and felt like, in the end, regardless of Alabama’s performance yesterday, their body of work in those first 12 games” was sufficient for selection.

Coincidentally — or maybe not — Yurachek is the athletic director at Arkansas, an SEC member.

Let me translate Yurachek’s quote: No matter the result, the committee never had any intention of rejecting the loser of the SEC championship game from a 12-team bracket.

Maybe, you think that’s the way it should be, but that opinion doesn’t change that the committee told you this game was a meaningless exercise, at least in terms of playoff selection and seeding.

CFP selection committee devalues SEC Championship

You’ll hear the argument that, if the committee had booted Alabama after its woeful performance, that would devalue conference championship games. That’s a false narrative.

In fact, the committee devalued the SEC championship by pretending it never happened.

Again, maybe you’re OK with that. You can make the case Alabama shouldn’t drop in the rankings for getting blown out by one of the nation’s best teams, while Notre Dame and Miami sat at home.

But, then, why did Brigham Young drop behind inactive Miami in the rankings after the Cougars were blown out by one of the nation’s best teams in the Big 12 championship?

If the committee wants to pretend the SEC championship didn’t happen and that Alabama didn’t get blown out, shouldn’t they also pretend the Big 12 Championship didn’t happen and BYU didn’t get blown out?

We know the reasoning behind this.

The committee believes the SEC’s runner-up deserves an automatic bid, even if the bracket rules don’t specify this. That preservation of a bid for the SEC’s runner-up does not extend to the Big 12.

This seeding tells us Alabama had qualified for the CFP before it stepped onto the field in a rematch against Georgia.

Alabama already had suffered two losses, one of which came against a bad ACC team that finished 5-7. The Tide advanced to the SEC championship game thanks in part to the conference’s tiebreaker rules. Reaching Atlanta required Alabama to play only 50% of the conference’s membership.

Then, Georgia carved out the elephant’s eyes in delivering a third loss.

But, presto! It never happened!

Alabama becomes the first three-loss at-large qualifier in CFP history. Two years ago, the 12-1 Tide displaced undefeated Florida State, marking the first and only time a 13-0 Power Four champion didn’t make the four-team playoff.

By not dropping Alabama after this blowout loss, the committee avoided the blowback that would have erupted from Greg Sankey’s powerful “It Just Means More” pulpit.

Do ends justify means of reaching this CFP bracket?

I won’t argue the committee’s selections of Alabama and Miami or its omission of Notre Dame.

Alabama touted the best strength of schedule metrics of that bubble trio. It also owns the best win, by beating Georgia on the road in September.

Alabama possessed the same record as Miami and Notre Dame through 12 games. The Hurricanes and Irish didn’t play a 13th game. So, I understand the Tide’s case, bad though they looked Saturday.

I also understand choosing Miami over Notre Dame. They own identical records, nearly identical metrics, and Miami won a head-to-head matchup.

But, my goodness, the chicanery deployed to achieve this destination was all so ridiculous and unnecessary, and it makes this whole process look like a clown act.

Yurachek is no magician deftly operating smoke and mirrors to pull the wool over fans’ eyes. He’s just an awkward AD. He’s fooling nobody.

Alabama stayed at No. 9 because the committee wanted to preserve a spot for the SEC’s runner-up. Meanwhile, BYU dropped one spot, because the committee decided to push Notre Dame and Miami next to each other in the rankings and finally acknowledge Miami’s head-to-head advantage.

Selecting Miami gave the ACC a playoff representative after five-loss Duke won the conference and foiled the ACC’s automatic bid. In an odd twist, Virginia losing to Duke probably delivered a fatal blow to the Irish. The committee couldn’t justify taking Duke, so it created a spot for Miami and booted Notre Dame.

Here’s how it should have went down, to avoid this messy eyesore: The committee should have ranked Alabama No. 9 and positioned Miami at No. 10 in the penultimate rankings. That would have given advance notice that the committee no longer would pretend the Irish didn’t lose to Miami.

Then, after Georgia trounced Alabama, the committee could have moved Miami up to No. 9, dropped Alabama to No. 10 and not acted as if the SEC championship game didn’t occur.

Instead of doing that, the committee head-faked for a month that it preferred Notre Dame to Miami, only to realize the stupidity of that, because Miami beat Notre Dame and they owned matching 10-2 records and similar metrics.

There’s logic in the final at-large choices, but there’s no lucidity in the path the committee charted to reach this destination.

Facing a tough decision, the committee chose to pretend the SEC championship game didn’t happen. In doing so, it devalued a once-revolutionary contest that used to mean so much.

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

The clock is ticking – on the year and the 2025 NFL regular season.

It will soon be ticking at the 2026 NFL Draft, but who will own that top spot when the dust settles? There are only four weeks left after the Week 14 slate to determine the final order – at least until the inevitable trades shake it up even further.

Plenty of familiar teams headline the group again this time of year. The Tennessee Titans, New York Giants, New Orleans Saints, Las Vegas Raiders and Cleveland Browns all entered Week 14 in possession of a top-five pick. Will they be able to say the same after the week is over?

Here’s a look at the 2026 NFL Draft order as Week 14 results come in.

2026 NFL Draft order

Here’s a look at the updated first-round order as Week 14 results come in, according to Tankathon, which calculates strength of schedule differently from the NFL:

  1. New York Giants: 2-11 record; .534 strength of schedule
  2. Las Vegas Raiders 2-11; .548 SOS
  3. Tennessee Titans: 2-11; .573 SOS
  4. Cleveland Browns: 3-10; .486 SOS
  5. New Orleans Saints: 3-10; .498 SOS
  6. Washington Commanders: 3-10; .511 SOS
  7. New York Jets: 3-10; .541 SOS
  8. Arizona Cardinals: 3-10; .570 SOS
  9. Atlanta Falcons (pick belongs to Los Angeles Rams): 4-9; .502 SOS
  10. Cincinnati Bengals: 4-9; .523 SOS
  11. Minnesota Vikings: 5-8; .523 SOS
  12. Miami Dolphins: 6-7; .482 SOS
  13. Baltimore Ravens: 6-7; .509 SOS
  14. Kansas City Chiefs: 6-7; .511 SOS
  15. Dallas Cowboys: 6-6-1; .447 SOS
  16. Carolina Panthers: 7-6; .516 SOS
  17. Detroit Lions: 8-5; .498 SOS
  18. Indianapolis Colts (pick belongs to Jets): 8-5; .518 SOS
  19. Pittsburgh Steelers: 7-6; .511 SOS
  20. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: 7-6; .514 SOS
  21. Houston Texans: 8-5; .541 SOS
  22. Los Angeles Chargers: 8-4; .466 SOS
  23. Philadelphia Eagles: 8-4; .489 SOS
  24. Chicago Bears: 9-4; .448 SOS
  25. Buffalo Bills: 9-4; .468 SOS
  26. San Francisco 49ers: 9-4; .489 SOS
  27. Jacksonville Jaguars (pick belongs to Browns): 9-4; .495 SOS
  28. Green Bay Packers (pick belongs to Cowboys): 9-3-1; .475 SOS
  29. Seattle Seahawks: 10-3; .484 SOS
  30. New England Patriots: 11-2; .376 SOS
  31. Los Angeles Rams: 10-3; .518 SOS
  32. Denver Broncos: 11-2; .436 SOS

2026 NFL mock draft

This is how USA TODAY Sports’ Ayrton Ostly projected the top five picks in his latest mock draft:

  1. Tennessee Titans: LB/Edge Arvell Reese, Ohio State
  2. New York Giants: WR Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State
  3. New Orleans Saints: QB Fernando Mendoza, Indiana
  4. Las Vegas Raiders: QB Ty Simpson, Alabama
  5. Cleveland Browns: QB Dante Moore, Oregon
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Los Angeles Lakers’ starting lineup was back at full strength with the return of LeBron James and Luka Dončić. And the superstar duo played a big part in the team’s 112-108 road win against the Philadelphia 76ers.

James was back on the court after missing the Lakers’ previous game due to his ongoing sciatica and a new injury: left foot joint arthritis. He had already missed the first 14 games of the season and all of the preseason while dealing with the sciatica.

James entered Sunday’s game averaging 14 points, 7.8 assists and 4.3 rebounds per game in his first six games played this season. With the win in Philadelphia, he moved ahead of Robert Parish (1,014) for second place on the NBA’s all-time list for regular-season career wins.

Dončić became the eighth player in the Lakers’ history to record a 30-point, 15-rebound, 10-assist triple-double performance.

He returned to the team following a trip to Slovenia for the birth of his second daughter. Dončić was originally listed as out earlier in the week and missed the last two games due to ‘personal reasons.’

LeBron James stats vs. 76ers

  • Points: 29
  • FG: 12-for-17 (4-for-6 from 3-point line)
  • Free Throws: 1-for-2
  • Rebounds: 7
  • Assists: 6
  • Steals: 1
  • Blocks: 1
  • Turnovers: 2
  • Fouls: 1
  • Minutes: 34

Luka Doncic stats vs. 76ers

  • Points: 31
  • FG: 9-for-24 (2-for-9 from 3-point line)
  • Free Throws: 11-for-14
  • Rebounds: 15
  • Assists: 11
  • Steals: 0
  • Blocks: 2
  • Turnovers: 5
  • Fouls: 1
  • Minutes: 39
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Perth, Australia (ABN Newswire) – Locksley Resources Limited (ASX:LKY,OTC:LKYRF) (FRA:X5L) (OTCMKTS:LKYRF) announced the successful completion of a heavily oversubscribed capital raising (‘Placement’), securing firm commitments to raise approximately A$17 million via a placement of new shares at A$0.24 per share to domestic and international professional and institutional investors.

HIGHLIGHTS

– A$17 million raised at A$0.24 per share through an oversubscribed placement to domestic and international institutional and sophisticated investors

– Cornerstone U.S. institutional support provides strong strategic validation of Locksley’s role in advancing onshore supply of antimony and rare earths for U.S. national security and industrial supply chains

– Strengthened balance sheet enables rapid progression of Locksley’s U.S. Mine to Market strategy while complementing ongoing engagement with federal funding and grant programs

– Funding accelerates drilling, downstream technology development, and project execution, while deepening engagement with U.S. institutional partners and key government agencies

– Locksley Investor Webinar – See link below

The Placement was led by well established U.S. institutional investors, providing a strong endorsement of Locksley’s strategy to deliver a fully integrated U.S. based ‘Mine to Market’ critical minerals supply chain. Their participation brings not only capital but aligned sector expertise and ongoing engagement that supports the Company’s downstream development objectives within the United States.

The raise was conducted under the Company’s refreshed placement capacity pursuant to ASX Listing Rules 7.1 and 7.1A, following shareholder approval at the Annual General Meeting held on 28 November 2025.
Strategic Execution Enabled by the Placement

Proceeds from the Placement will accelerate execution across the following:

– Rapid Advancement of drilling, assay programs and structural mapping to define mineralisation across the Mojave Project

– Acceleration of downstream processing and American-made conversion planning for antimony products

– Enhanced positioning for engagement with federal level funding initiatives, supporting Locksley’s role within the U.S. critical minerals ecosystem

– Accelerated progression toward first-mover status in restoring domestic U.S antimony supply, aligned with national security and industrial demand

– Continuous parallel execution of permitting, stakeholder engagement, engineering and project scheduling

Locksley Managing Director, Kerrie Matthews, commented:

‘The depth of support across both international and Australian institutional markets represents a strong validation of our strategic pathway. In particular, the strong level of U.S. participation aligns directly with our downstream ambitions and reinforces the commercial relevance of our development plan.

The involvement of leading U.S. institutional investors is more than capital allocation; it is a strategic endorsement of Locksley’s emerging role within the domestic U.S critical minerals sector. This support comes at a time when the U.S administration is emphasising critical minerals as a national security priority and seeking to reduce reliance on foreign-controlled processing capacity.

With this institutional backing, Locksley is positioned to advance its contribution to a U.S. based supply chain for antimony and rare earths.

Importantly, this funding allows us to execute at pace while continuing to progress federal engagement initiatives. The capital secures our ability to accelerate exploration, development planning, and downstream partnerships, unlocking the full potential of the Mojave Project.

We are delighted to welcome these new investors to the register and look forward to working with partners who can support our long-term growth agenda.’

Investor Webinar – U.S Development Progression & Execution Strategy

Locksley invites shareholders and investors to attend a live Investor Webinar to discuss recent milestones and provide an update on the advancement of its U.S Mine to Market execution pathway and upcoming development milestones.

ZOOM WEBINAR: TUESDAY, 9th DECEMBER 2025 at 1:00pm AEDT / 10:00am AWST
REGISTRATION LINK:
https://www.abnnewswire.net/lnk/85LT5VD6

Placement Details:

The Placement was managed by Alpine Capital Pty Ltd and Titan Partners Group, a division of American Capital Partners, acting as Joint Lead Managers.

Settlement of the Placement is expected to occur on or around 11 December 2025, with new shares to rank equally with existing fully paid ordinary shares. An Appendix 2A and cleansing notice will be released to the ASX in due course.

The Placement is structured under a single tranche comprising 70,833,334 new Securities to raise approximately A$17,000,000, conducted under the placement capacity of the Offer in accordance with ASX LR 7.1 & LR 7.1A.

About Locksley Resources Limited:

Locksley Resources Limited (ASX:LKY,OTC:LKYRF) (FRA:X5L) (OTCMKTS:LKYRF) is an ASX listed explorer focused on critical minerals in the United States of America. The Company is actively advancing exploration across two key assets: the Mojave Project in California, targeting rare earth elements (REEs) and antimony. Locksley Resources aims to generate shareholder value through strategic exploration, discovery and development in this highly prospective mineral region.

Mojave Project

Located in the Mojave Desert, California, the Mojave Project comprises over 250 claims across two contiguous prospect areas, namely, the North Block/Northeast Block and the El Campo Prospect. The North Block directly abuts claims held by MP Materials, while El Campo lies along strike of the Mountain Pass Mine and is enveloped by MP Materials’ claims, highlighting the strong geological continuity and exploration potential of the project area.

In addition to rare earths, the Mojave Project hosts the historic ‘Desert Antimony Mine’, which last operated in 1937. Despite the United States currently having no domestic antimony production, demand for the metal remains high due to its essential role in defense systems, semiconductors, and metal alloys. With significant surface sample results, the Desert Mine prospect represents one of the highest-grade known antimony occurrences in the U.S.

Locksley’s North American position is further strengthened by rising geopolitical urgency to diversify supply chains away from China, the global leader in both REE & antimony production. With its maiden drilling program planned, the Mojave Project is uniquely positioned to align with U.S. strategic objectives around critical mineral independence and economic security.

Tottenham Project

Locksley’s Australian portfolio comprises the advanced Tottenham Copper-Gold Project in New South Wales, focused on VMS-style mineralisation

Source:
Locksley Resources Limited

Contact:
Kerrie Matthews
Chief Executive Officer
Locksley Resources Limited
T: +61 8 9481 0389
Kerrie@locksleyresources.com.au

Jane Morgan
Investor and Media Relations
T: +61 (0) 405 555 618
jm@janemorganmanagement.com.au

News Provided by ABN Newswire via QuoteMedia

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Saturday night’s Big Ten Championship game between the nation’s top two teams didn’t disappoint. And in a twist to the script, it was No. 2 Indiana to pull off its first win over Ohio State since 1988.

Indiana, which began the 2025 season as the losingest program in FBS history, won a Big Ten championship for the first time since 1967.

Indiana (13-0) will be the No. 1 team in Sunday’s College Football Playoff bracket reveal. Ohio State (12-1) will likely still land in the top four and receive a first-round bye.

In two seasons, Curt Cignetti has turned a perennial and historic loser into a playoff team in back-to-back years and now Big Ten champions.

‘This is the greatest turnaround in the history of our sport…,’ Fox’s Urban Meyer said postgame. ‘It’s not even close… This is the best coaching job I’ve ever seen in my life.’

The Hoosiers defense bottled up the Buckeyes’ high-powered offense and Fernando Mendoza made the throws he had to make to lead Indiana to a 13-10 win at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

Buckeyes kicker Jayden Fielding missed a 27-yard field goal attempt with 2:48 left that would have tied the score.

In the Heisman Trophy showcase between leading contenders Julian Sayin and Mendoza, neither had a massive game, but both were efficient.

Sayin got Jeremiah Smith and Carnell Tate involved, but Indiana did a good job (for the most part) keeping the Buckeyes receivers in front of them.

Mendoza was solid for IU, bouncing back from a rough hit on the first play of the game that sent him briefly to the sideline. Mendoza hit Elijah Sarratt on his trademark back-shoulder touchdown in the third quarter to take the lead. It marked the first time Ohio State had trailed in a second half all season.

Mendoza’s pass on 3rd-and-6 with 2:41 left to Charlie Becker for a 33-yard gain helped ice the game. Mendoza finished 15-of-23 for 222 yards, a touchdown and an interception.

Sayin went 21-of-29 for 258 yards with a touchdown and interception.

Here’s how it happened:

HIT REFRESH FOR UPDATES.

Ohio State vs Indiana score

Ohio State vs Indiana football live updates

0:17 4Q: Ohio State needs a prayer

Indiana burns clock and the rest of Ohio State’s timeouts but have to punt the ball back to Buckeyes at their own 14-yard line.

2:00 4Q: Indiana 13, Ohio State 10

On 3rd-and-6 with 2:41 left Fernando Mendoza hits Charlie Becker again down the sideline for a 33-yard gain. A perfect pass. A Heisman moment. Wow. Buckeyes have just one timeout left.

2:48 4Q: Jayden Fielding shanks 27-yard FG attempt, Indiana still leads

On 3rd-and-1 Rolijah Hardy knocks away the pass in the end zone to force an Ohio State field goal. AND HE MISSES IT. Jayden Fielding hooks it from 27 yards out. INDIANA 13, OHIO STATE 10.

4:10 4Q: Buckeyes driving, burning up clock

A long, time-consuming drive from Ohio State as Julian Sayin starts to cook and a key Indiana penalty gives Buckeyes a first down deep inside Hoosiers territory. INDIANA 13, OHIO STATE 10.

10:45 4Q: Indiana flips field, punts back to Ohio State

Hoosiers get a few first downs and flip the field position. Indiana punts and Ohio State will start drive at their own 10-yard line. INDIANA 13, OHIO STATE 10.

END 3Q: Indiana 13, Ohio State 10

The Hoosiers are one quarter away from their first Big Ten championship since 1967. It’ll be 1st-and-10 for IU from their own 17-yard line after 12-yard completion to EJ Williams.

1:04 3Q: Review overturns Buckeyes’ first down on 4th-and-1

It’s a good response from the champions. Buckeyes’ first second-half deficit doesn’t last long. Julian Sayin engineers an efficient 12-play drive, mixing in his tight ends with Jeremiah Smith (who has over 100 yards receiving already).

OSU goes for it on 4th-and-1 from the Indiana 6-yard line, and Sayin sneaks forward and the call of first down is overturned on review. Indiana ball. Huge turn of events. INDIANA 13, OHIO STATE 10.

8:02 3Q: Fernando Mendoza hits Elijah Sarratt for go-ahead TD

TOUCHDOWN! Fernando Mendoza hits Elijah Sarratt on a back-shoulder fade in the end zone from 17 yards out. The Buckeyes are trailing in the second half for the first time all season.

The key play was on 3rd-and-2 deep in their own territory, Mendoza airs it out to Charlie Becker for 51 yards. Mendoza is 11-of-18 for 155 yards. INDIANA 13, OHIO STATE 10.

11:32 3Q: Hoosiers force punt to open half

Back-to-back sacks by Indiana including an in-the-grasp call, despite Julian Sayin spinning out of the tackle, forces a 3rd-and-27. The IU defense forces a punt on opening drive of the second half. OHIO STATE 10, INDIANA 6.

HALFTIME: Ohio State 10, Indiana 6

The Hoosiers have been able to move the ball on Ohio State, but have only three field goal attempts to show for it (two made, one missed).

Ohio State QB Julian Sayin has 109 passing yards and has gotten Carnell Tate and Jeremiah Smith involved, but Indiana is bending, not breaking.

0:30 2Q: Ohio State seems content with a modest first-half lead

Isaiah Jones gets his second sack of the day to torpedo this drive. Ohio State had three timeouts and had the ball near midfield but decided not to call timeout. OHIO STATE 10, INDIANA 6.

2:00 2Q: Ohio State 10, Indiana 6

2-minute timeout. Buckeyes have a 1st-and-10 at their 36-yard line. Ohio State gets the ball first after halftime, so this is a huge series for Indiana’s defense.

2:47 2Q: Hoosiers move the ball, have to settle for FG

On a 4th-and-2 from the Ohio State 39-yard line, Fernando Mendoza side-arms it to Riley Nowakowski for a first down to keep the drive alive. Buckeyes defensive end Caden Curry continues to eat in his return home, with another sack. He’s been everywhere for Ohio State and forces Indiana to settle for a Nico Radicic 32-yard field goal.

Hoosiers have moved the ball. Three field goal attempts on five drives so far. But can’t beat No. 1 with field goals. OHIO STATE 10, INDIANA 6.

10:08 2Q: Indiana holds Ohio State to short FG

Julian Sayin airs it out for Jeremiah Smith for a 54-yard strike, and Buckeyes get an extra 15 yards for an illegal hands to the face penalty. But an Isaiah Jones sack on 3rd-and-goal forces Ohio State into a short field goal from Jayden Fielding. Key hold there for the Hoosiers. OHIO STATE 10, INDIANA 3.

13:31 2Q: Nico Radicic misses his first FG of year

Indiana drive stalls with a third-down sack and Nico Radicic misses from 40 yards out. Uncharacteristic from Big Ten kicker of the year. Hoosiers can’t make mistakes if they want to beat defending national champs. OHIO STATE 7, INDIANA 3.

END 1Q: Ohio State 7, Indiana 3

A defensive pass interference on another deep shot from Indiana moves the ball 15 yards and then Kaelon Black busts loose for a 37-yard gain. IU will open second quarter at Buckeyes’ 22-yard line. OHIO STATE 7, INDIANA 3.

0:46 1Q: Julian Sayin finds Carnell Tate wide open for TD

TOUCHDOWN! Julian Sayin takes his time, eludes the rush and finds a wide open Carnell Tate in the end zone for a 9-yard score. Both teams turn interceptions into points. Hoosiers got a field goal, Buckeyes get a touchdown. OHIO STATE 7, INDIANA 3.

1:41 1Q: Ohio State’s Davison Igbinosun gets pick deep in Indiana territory

INTERCEPTION! Ohio State gets a turnover of its own. Lorenzo Styles blows up a WR screen pass and the ricochet of the ball lands in the hands of Buckeyes DB Davison Igbinosun. Ohio State ball at Indiana’s 25-yard line. INDIANA 3, OHIO STATE 0.

3:07 1Q: Indiana WR Omar Cooper Jr. injury update questionable

The Hoosiers standout receiver tweaked his right leg on the missed deep shot on their first drive. He went into the medical tent and is going back to the locker room. Questionable to return.

3:07 1Q: Indiana gets third-down sack, forces Buckeyes punt

Rolijah Hardy with a sack on 3rd-and-5 near midfield and the Hoosiers force a punt. Julian Sayin has been getting the ball to Jeremiah Smith (three catches already), but Indiana is keeping him in front of them. INDIANA 3, OHIO STATE 0.

6:51 1Q: Hoosiers turn turnover into points with FG

Indiana picks up one first down but has to settle for a Nico Radicic 29-yard field goal. Hoosiers on the board first. INDIANA 3, OHIO STATE 0.

8:57 1Q: Louis Moore intercepts Julian Sayin

INTERCEPTION! Louis Moore steps in front of a Julian Sayin third-down pass and returns it to Ohio State 23-yard line. INDIANA 0, OHIO STATE 0.

10:35 1Q: Caden Curry sack ends Indiana’s first drive

IU overcomes the Fernando Mendoza brief injury and picks up two first downs. Hoosiers take a deep shot from midfield to Omar Cooper, but receiver can’t come down with the catch. On third down, Caden Curry — the Greenwood, Indiana product — gets the sack and IU has to punt it away.

Buckeyes will start their first drive at their own 12-yard line. INDIANA 0, OHIO STATE 0.

14:51 1Q: Fernando Mendoza down with injury

Fernando Mendoza takes a shot from Ohio State DE Caden Curry and is down on the first play of the game. His younger brother Alberto comes in for one snap.

Fernando is back in the game. Keep on an eye on how he’s moving.

And we’re underway… Ohio State kickoff through the end zone.

Fox crew predictions clean sweep for Ohio State win vs Indiana

  • Brady Quinn: Ohio State, 23-17
  • Mark Ingram: Ohio State, 30-24
  • Matt Leinart: Ohio State, 31-17
  • Urban Meyer: Ohio State, 31-21

Pregame comments from Ryan Day, Curt Cignetti

Ohio State vs Indiana injury update: Availability report

What time does Ohio State vs Indiana start?

  • Date: Saturday, Dec. 6
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET
  • Where: Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, Indiana

Ohio State vs Indiana will kick off at 8 p.m. ET on Saturday, Dec. 6 from Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana.

What TV channel is Ohio State vs Indiana on today?

  • TV channel: Fox
  • Livestream: Fubo (free trial)

The Big Ten championship game between Ohio State and Indiana will be broadcast on Fox.

Streaming options for the game include Fubo, which carries Fox and offers a free trial to new subscribers.

Ohio State vs Indiana predictions for Big Ten championship

  • Ohio State 27, Indiana 17: Curt Cignetti’s offense feasts on most Big Ten defenses. This is not your ordinary Big Ten defense, though. The Buckeyes keep winning with an anaconda defense that suffocates opponents. Pair that with steady-handed quarterback Julian Sayin and the best receiving corps in the country, and you get the nation’s most complete team. I’ve been on the Buckeyes to win the national championship since August. I’m not fading them now. — Blake Toppmeyer
  • Indiana 27, Ohio State 24: I just can’t get over what the Ohio State defense has faced, instead of what it has done. Who have the Buckeyes played this season that could actually stress their defense? Texas? In Arch Manning’s first start? Washington? Illinois? Come on. The Hoosiers will be a completely different animal, a multiple offense with an accurate quarterback who can make every throw — and scramble and get critical yards. One more thing: Hoosiers have 34 sacks and have forced 24 turnovers. The defense will get enough stops, and Indiana will be the No.1 seed in the CFP. — Matt Hayes
  • Ohio State 34, Indiana 16: Ohio State’s historically good defense is going to be tested by Indiana and possible Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza. This is a group with no weak links, nearly unmatched depth and all-everything talent such as safety Caleb Downs, who might be the best pound-for-pound player in college football. The Buckeyes are on a collision course for a repeat national title and won’t be tripped up even by the mighty Hoosiers. — Paul Myerberg

Ohio State vs Indiana odds Big Ten championship

Odds courtesy of BetMGM, as of Thursday, Dec. 4:

  • Spread: Ohio State (-4)
  • Over/under: 47.5
  • Moneyline: Ohio State -200 | Indiana +165

Ohio State football schedule 2025

Here’s a look at Ohio State’s schedule in 2025, including past scores.

  • Saturday, Aug. 30: No. 2 Ohio State 14, No. 1 Texas 7
  • Saturday, Sept. 6: No. 1 Ohio State 70,Grambling State 0
  • Saturday, Sept. 13: No. 1 Ohio State 37, Ohio 9
  • BYE
  • Saturday, Sept. 27: No. 1 Ohio State 24, Washington 6*
  • Saturday, Oct. 4: No. 1 Ohio State 42, Minnesota 3*
  • Saturday, Oct. 11: No. 1 Ohio State 34, No. 17 Illinois 16*
  • Saturday, Oct. 18: No. 1 Ohio State 34, Wisconsin 0*
  • BYE
  • Saturday, Nov. 1: No. 1 Ohio State 38, Penn State 14*
  • Saturday, Nov. 8: No. 1 Ohio State 34, Purdue 10*
  • Saturday, Nov. 15: No. 1 Ohio State 48, UCLA 10*
  • Saturday, Nov. 22: No. 1 Ohio State 42, Rutgers 9*
  • Saturday, Nov. 29: No. 1 Ohio State 27, No. 15 Michigan 9*
  • Saturday, Dec. 6: No. 1 Ohio State vs No. 2 Indiana | Fox, 8 p.m. ET**
  • * – denotes Big Ten game
  • ** – denotes Big Ten championship game

Indiana football schedule 2025

Here’s a look at Indiana’s schedule in 2025, including past scores.

  • Saturday, Aug. 30: No. 19 Indiana 27, Old Dominion 14
  • Saturday, Sept. 6: No. 21 Indiana 56, Kennesaw State 9
  • Friday, Sept. 12: No. 19 Indiana 73, Indiana State 0
  • Saturday, Sept. 20: No. 17 Indiana 63, No. 8 Illinois 10*
  • Saturday, Sept. 27: No. 12 Indiana 20, Iowa 15*
  • BYE
  • Saturday, Oct. 11: No. 7 Indiana 30, No. 2 Oregon 20*
  • Saturday, Oct. 18: No. 3 Indiana 38, Michigan State 13*
  • Saturday, Oct. 25: No. 2 Indiana 56, UCLA 6*
  • Saturday, Nov. 1: No. 2 Indiana 55, Maryland 10*
  • Saturday, Nov. 8: No. 2 Indiana 27, Penn State 24*
  • Saturday, Nov. 15: No. 2 Indiana 31, Wisconsin 7*
  • BYE
  • Friday, Nov. 28: No. 2 Indiana 56, Purdue 3
  • Saturday, Dec. 6: No. 1 Ohio State vs No. 2 Indiana | Fox, 8 p.m. ET**
  • * – denotes Big Ten game
  • ** – denotes Big Ten championship game

Our team of savvy editors independently handpicks all recommendations. If you purchase through our links, the USA Today Network may earn a commission. Prices were accurate at the time of publication but may change.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The NCAA Division I volleyball tournament’s second round concluded on Saturday.

No. 1 seeds Nebraska, Texas, Pitt and Kentucky advanced to the Sweet 16.

Cal Poly defeated No. 4 seed USC in the second round of the tournament play on Friday, the biggest upset of the tournament thus far.

The 2025 NCAA volleyball Final Four will be held at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri. It’s the third time since 2010 that the venue, formerly known as the Sprint Center, has hosted the volleyball national championship.

What time is NCAA volleyball tournament?

  • Date: Saturday, Dec. 6
  • Start time: Eight matches, beginning at 6 p.m. ET Saturday. Match-by-match times below.

How to watch NCAA volleyball tournament

  • Streaming: ESPN+ ∣ Fubo (free trial)

The 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament will air across the ESPN and ABC family of networks. All first- and second-round games can be found streaming on ESPN+, ESPN’s subscription streaming service, and Fubo, which offers a free trial to potential subscribers.

Watch the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament live with Fubo (free trial)

Follow along with USA TODAY Sports for live updates, scores and schedule for the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament:

Saturday’s NCAA women’s volleyball tournament

Stanford 3, Arizona 1

The Cardinal advance, 25-16, 25-27, 25-17, 25-20.

SMU 3, Florida 0

The Mustangs win the first match 25-11, 25-21, 26-24.

Texas A&M 3, TCU 1

The Aggies won 23-25, 25-23, 25-22, 29-27 in the closest match of the game.

Nebraska 3, Kansas State 0

The Huskers are now 32-0 after the sweep, 25-17, 25-21, 25-16.

Minnesota 3, Iowa State 0

The Gophers eliminate the Cyclones 25-22, 25-21, 25-14.

Texas 3, Penn State 0

Texas eliminates defending champion Penn State, 25-16, 25-9, 25-19.

Pittsburgh 3, Michigan 0

No. 1 seed Pitt won 25-23, 25-23, 25-18 to eliminate Michigan.

Louisville 3, Marquette 2

Louisville staved off an upset 21-25, 25-11, 23-25, 25-19, 15-12.

NCAA volleyball second-round matchups, game times

The second round concludes Saturday Dec. 6.

Lexington bracket

  • No. 1 Kentucky 3, No. 8 UCLA 1 (30-28, 25-16, 28-30, 25-17)
  • No. 3 Creighton 3, No. 6 UNI 1 (25-18, 23-25, 25-22, 25-21)
  • No. 2 Arizona State 3, Utah State 1 (25-15, 25-18, 22-25, 25-15)
  • Cal Poly 3, No. 4 USC 2 (25-19, 25-20, 20-25, 14-25, 15-7)

Austin bracket

  • No. 4 Indiana 3No. 5 Colorado 0 (25-20, 25-17, 25-23)
  • No. 3 Wisconsin 3, North Carolina 0 (25-14, 25-21, 27-25)
  • No. 1 Texas 1, No. 8 Penn State 0 (25-16, 25-9, 25-19)
  • No. 2 Stanford 3, Arizona 1 (25-16, 25-27, 25-17, 25-20)

Pittsburgh bracket

  • No. 3 Purdue 3, No. 6 Baylor 1 (25-16, 25-19, 23-25, 25-20)
  • No. 1 Pittsburgh 3, Michigan 0 (25-23, 25-23, 25-18)
  • No. 2 SMU 3, Florida 0 (25-11, 25-21, 26-24)
  • No. 4 Minnesota 3, No. 5 Iowa State 0 (25-22, 25-21, 25-14)

Lincoln bracket

  • No. 4 Kansas 3, No. 5 Miami 1 (25-17, 25-22, 22-25, 27-25)
  • No. 2 Louisville 3, Marquette 2 (21-25, 25-11, 23-25, 25-19, 15-12)
  • No. 1 Nebraska 3, Kansas State 0 (25-17, 25-21, 25-16)
  • No. 3 Texas A&M 3, No. 6 TCU 1 (23-25, 25-23, 25-22, 29-27)

NCAA volleyball first-round results

Lexington bracket

  • No. 1 Kentucky 3, Wofford 0 (25-11, 25-19, 25-12)
  • No. 8 UCLA 3, Georgia Tech 2 (24-26, 25-19, 25-23, 25-18, 15-10)
  • Cal Poly 3, No. 5 BYU 2 (25-19, 17-25, 20-25, 25-20, 15-10)
  • No. 4 USC 3, Princeton 0, (25-19, 25-12, 25-13)
  • No. 3 Creighton 3, Northern Colorado 2 (12-25, 25-23,25-23,17-25, 8-15)
  • No. 6 Northern Iowa 3, Utah 2 (15-25, 21-25, 26-24, 25-20, 15-10)
  • Utah State 3, No. 7 Tennessee 2 (25-19, 25-15, 19-25, 25-18, 15-11)
  • No. 2 Arizona State 3, Coppin State 0 (25-11, 25-14, 25-12)

Austin bracket

  • No. 1 Texas 3, Florida A&M 0 (25-11, 25- 8, 25-14)
  • No. 8 Penn State 3, South Florida 1 (25-23, 12-25, 25-21, 25-19)
  • No. 5 Colorado 3, American 0 (25-16, 25-19, 25-16)
  • No. 4 Indiana 3, Toledo 0 (25-18, 25-15, 25-17)
  • No. 3 Wisconsin 3, Eastern Illinois 0 (25-11, 25-6, 25-19)
  • North Carolina 3, No. 6 UTEP 1 (24-26, 25-11, 25-18, 25-21)
  • Arizona 3, No. 7 South Dakota State 1 (25-21, 22-25, 25-15, 25-15)
  • No. 2 Stanford 3, Utah Valley 1 (21-25, 25-21, 25-13, 25-14)

Pittsburgh bracket

  • No. 1 Pitt 3, UMBC 0 (25-10, 25-17, 25-13)
  • Michigan 3, No. 8 Xavier 0 (25-19, 25-15, 25-23)
  • No. 5 Iowa State 3, St. Thomas-Minnesota 2 (21-25, 25-13, 25-16, 21-25, 15-8)
  • No. 4 Minnesota 3, Fairfield 0 (25-12, 25-7, 25-13)
  • No. 3 Purdue 3, Wright State 0 (25-13, 25-21, 25-19)
  • No. 6 Baylor 3, Arkansas State 2 (23-25, 25-20, 30-28, 23-25, 15-10)
  • Florida 3, No. 7 Rice 0 (27-25, 25-23, 25-19)
  • No. 2 SMU 3, Central Arkansas 0 (25-13, 25-13, 25-13)

Lincoln bracket

  • No. 1 Nebraska 3, LIU 0 (25-11, 25-15, 25-17)
  • Kansas State 3, San Diego 2 (21-25, 25-17, 26-28, 25-22, 15-12)
  • No. 5 Miami 3, Tulsa 1 (25-22, 13-25, 25-22, 25-20)
  • No. 4 Kansas 3, High Point 0 (25-20, 25-15, 25-18)
  • No. 3 Texas A&M 3, Campbell 0 (25-20, 25-10, 25-13)
  • No. 6 TCU 3, Stephen F. Austin 0 (25-8, 26-24, 25-20)
  • Marquette 3, Western Kentucky 0 (25-22, 25-21, 25-16)
  • No. 2 Louisville 3, Loyola Chicago 0 (25-17, 25-9, 25-12)

NCAA volleyball tournament rounds

  • Second round: Dec. 6
  • Regionals: Dec. 11 and 13 or Dec. 12 and 14
  • Semifinals: Thursday, Dec. 18
  • National championship: 3:30 p.m. ET on Sunday, Dec. 21

All games on ESPN Unlimited, ESPN, ABC

NCAA volleyball games Friday

Cal Poly 3, USC 2

Cal Poly 3, No. 4 USC 2 (25-19, 25-20, 20-25, 14-25, 15-7)

Final: Stanford 3, Utah Valley 1

No. 2 Stanford 3, Utah Valley 1 (21-25, 25-21, 25-13, 25-14)

Final: Arizona State 3, Utah State 1

No. 2 Arizona State 3, Utah State 1 (25-15, 25-18, 22-25, 25-15)

Final: Nebraska 3, Long Island University 0

No. 1 Nebraska swept Long Island University 25-11, 25-15, 25-17

Final: No. 3 Wisconsin 3, North Carolina 0

No. 3 Wisconsin swept North Carolina 25-14, 25-21, 27-25

Final: No. 3 Creighton 3, No. 6 UNI 1

No. 3 Creighton defeated No. 6 UNI 25-18, 23-25, 25-22, 25-21

Final: No. 4 Minnesota 3, Fairfield 0

No. 4 Minnesota swept Fairfield 25-12, 25-7, 25-13

Final: Texas 3, Florida A&M

No. 1 Texas swept Florida A&M (25-11, 25- 8, 25-14)

Final: Arizona 3, No. 7 South Dakota State 1

Arizona defeated No. 7 South Dakota State 25-21, 22-25, 25-15, 25-15

Final: Kentucky 3, UCLA 1

No. 1 Kentucky defeated No. 8 UCLA 30-28, 25-16, 28-30, 25-17

Final: Kansas 3, Miami 1

No. 4 Kansas defeated No. 5 Miami (25-17, 25-22, 22-25, 27-25)

Final: Texas A&M 3, Campbell 0

Texas A&M swept Campbell 25-20, 25-10, 25-13

Final: SMU 3, Central Arkansas 0

No. 2 SMU swept Central Arkansas 25-13, 25-13, 25-13

Final: Purdue 3, No. 6 Baylor 1

No. 3 Purdue defeated No. 6 Baylor 1 (25-16, 25-19, 23-25, 25-20)

Final: No. 4 Indiana 3, No. 5 Colorado 0

No. 4 Indiana swept No. 5 Colorado (25-20, 25-17, 25-23)

Final: Kansas State 3, San Diego 2

Kansas State defeated No. 8 San Diego 21-25, 25-17, 26-28, 25-22, 15-12

Final: Pitt 3, UMBC 0

No. 1 Pitt swept UMBC 25-10, 25-17, 25-13

Final: Penn State 3, South Florida 1

No. 8 Penn State defeated South Florida 25-23, 12-25, 25-21, 25-19

No. 8 Penn State took the first set 25-23, while South Florida took the second set 25-12. The defending champions won the third set 25-21 and the fourth 25-19 to win, 3-1.

Final: Iowa State 3, St. Thomas-Minnesota 2

No. 5 Iowa State defeated St. Thomas-Minnesota 21-25, 25-13, 25-16, 21-25, 15-8

St. Thomas took the first set 25-21, while Iowa State took the second, 25-13, and third, 25-16. St. Thomas forced a decisive fifth set by taking the fourth 25-21, but Iowa State closed it out 15-8 in the fifth.

Final: Louisville 3, Loyola Chicago 0

No. 2 Louisville swept Loyola Chicago 25-17, 25-9, 25-12.

Final: TCU 3, Stephen F. Austin 0

No. 6 TCU swept Stephen F. Austin 25-8, 26-24, 25-20.

Final: Florida 3, Rice 0

Florida swept No. 7 Rice 27-25, 25-23, 25-19.

Final: Michigan 3, Xavier 0

Michigan swept No. 8 Xavier 25-19, 25-15, 25-23

Final: Marquette 3, Western Kentucky 0

Marquette swept No. 7 Western Kentucky 25-22, 25-21, 25-16.

NCAA volleyball games Thursday

Final: USC 3, Princeton 0

No. 3 seed USC swept Princeton 25-19, 25-12, 25-13

Final: Kentucky 3, Wofford 0

No. 1 Kentucky swept Wofford 25-11, 25-19, 25-12

Final: Arizona State 3, Coppin State 0

No. 2 Arizona State swept Coppin State 25-11, 25-14, 25-12

Final: Wisconsin 3, Eastern Illinois 0

No. 3 Wisconsin swept Eastern Illinois 25-11, 25-6, 25-19

Final: Purdue 3, Wright State 0

No. 3 Purdue swept Wright State 25-13, 25-21, 25-19

Final: Creighton 3, Northern Colorado 2

No. 3 Creighton swept Northern Colorado 12-25, 25-23,25-23,17-25, 8-15

Final: Kansas 3, High Point 0

No. 4 Kansas swept High Point 25-20, 25-15, 25-18

Final: Cal Poly 3, BYU 2

Cal Poly defeated No. 5 BYU 25-19, 17-25, 20-25, 25-20, 15-10

Final: Utah State 3, Tennessee 2

Utah State defeated No. 7 Tennessee 25-19, 25-15, 19-25, 25-18, 15-11

Final: North Carolina 3, UTEP 1

North Carolina downed No. 6 UTEP 24-26, 25-11, 25-18, 25-21

Final: Northern Iowa 3, Utah 2

No. 6 Northern Iowa defeated Utah 15-25, 21-25, 26-24, 25-20, 15-10

Final: UCLA 3, Georgia Tech 2

No. 8 UCLA defeated Georgia Tech 24-26, 25-19, 25-23, 25-18, 15-10

Final: Baylor 3, Arkansas State 2

No. 6 Baylor defeated Arkansas State 23-25, 25-20, 30-28, 23-25, 15-10

Final: Miami 3, Tulsa 1

No. 5 Miami defeated Tulsa 25-22, 13-25, 25-22, 25-20

Final: Indiana 3, Toledo 0

No. 4 Indiana swept Toledo 25-18, 25-15, 25-17

Final: Colorado 3, American University 0

Colorado eliminated American 25-16, 25-19, 25-16

NCAA volleyball tournament automatic qualifiers

Here’s a look at the 31 teams that earned automatic berths to the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament by virtue of winning their conferences:

  • ACC: Stanford
  • American: Tulsa
  • American East: UMBC
  • Atlantic Sun: Central Arkansas
  • Atlantic 10: Loyola Chicago
  • Big East: Creighton
  • Big Sky: Northern Colorado
  • Big South: High Point
  • Big Ten: Nebraska
  • Big 12: Arizona State
  • Big West: Cal Poly
  • CAA: Campbell
  • Conference USA: Western Kentucky
  • Horizon: Wright State
  • Ivy: Princeton
  • MAAC: Fairfield
  • MAC: Toledo
  • MEAC: Coppin State
  • Missouri Valley: Northern Iowa
  • Mountain West: Utah State
  • NEC: LIU
  • Ohio Valley: Eastern Illinois
  • Patriot: American
  • SEC: Kentucky
  • SoCon: Wofford
  • Southland: Stephen F. Austin
  • SWAC: Florida A&M
  • Summit: St. Thomas
  • Sun Belt: Arkansas State
  • WAC: Utah Valley
  • WCC: San Diego

When is the NCAA volleyball Final Four in 2025?

  • Dates: Thursday, Dec. 18 and Sunday, Dec. 21

The two semifinal matches in the Final Four of the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament will take place on Thursday, Dec. 18 and will be followed three days later by the national championship game on Sunday, Dec. 21.

NCAA volleyball tournament champions

Penn State is the reigning NCAA volleyball champion, having defeated Louisville in four sets last year in the national title game. It was the Nittany Lions’ eighth volleyball championship since 1999.

Here’s a look at the past 10 NCAA volleyball champions:

  • 2024: Penn State
  • 2023: Texas
  • 2022: Texas
  • 2021: Wisconsin
  • 2020: Kentucky
  • 2019: Stanford
  • 2018: Stanford
  • 2017: Nebraska
  • 2016: Stanford
  • 2015: Nebraska

For the full list of champions, click here.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The domination has ended for Merab Dvalishvili.

In shocking fashion, Dvalishvili lost to Petr Yan by unanimous decision in a bantamweight title bout at UFC 323, ending Dvalishvili’s championship reign atop the 135-pound division and his 14-bout winning streak.

Dvalishvili, a 34-year-old Georgian, had not lost a fight since 2018 during a run that included three title defenses.

But a rematch with Yan derailed it all.

The two men fought first in 2023, when Dvalishvili won by unanimous decision. But this time, in the rematch, Yan punished Dvalishvili with his fists, kicks and even takedowns. He also showed remarkable defense in fending off most of Dvalishvili’s takedown attempts.

The judges scored it 49-46, 49-46, 48-47 in favor of Yan.

“I feel very happy. I worked so hard,’’ Yan said through an interpreter after the five-round fight. “I prepared so hard for this moment.’’

Dvalishvili’s face, bloodied and battered, also demonstrated the pain Yan inflicted.

Yan, the 32-year-old Russian, improved to 20-5 (12-4 UFC) after winning his fourth fight in a row.

Dvalishvili’s record dropped to 21-5 (14-3 UFC).

Dvalishvili said he was trying to make it an entertaining fight by standing toe-to-toe with Yan, “and he was a better fighter today.’’

Moments after Yan was awarded the championship belt, Dvalishvili also said, “Congratulations to him, but I want a rematch.’’

USA TODAY Sports provided round-by-round analysis for the Dvalishvili-Yan fight and the rest of the main card:

Petr Yan def. Merab Dvalishvili by unanimous decision: Round-by-round analysis

Round 1

Petr Yan entered the octagon and turned a cartwheel. No telling how that flair might serve him now that Merab Dvalishvili has entered the octagon, too, with the fight set to begin.

Merab on the move, and Yan shadowing. Merab lets fly with a right and lands a right overhand. Yan taking his time. Eats another right from Merab, and he better start punching soon. Merab showing aggression.

Merab charges forward and unloads as Yan looks mostly concerned about covering up. Yan connects with a couple of jabs and Merab throws heavy punches, mostly missing. Yan connects with a big right! Then a left. But Merab scores a takedown, and he needs to wrap up Yan. Yan clearly has the ability to turn Merab, but not if he’s wrapped up. Yan fighting the takedown and getting kneed in the glutes and squirms loose. But Merab wraps up Yan again and attempts another takedown. Fans boo. Dvalishvili 10, Yan 9

Round 2

Merab rushes out behind a big right. He’s remained the aggressor and looks for another takedown. Yan defending well and Merab determined to score this takedown. But Yan breaks free.

Yan connects with a jab. A hard jab. Merab lunges. Reportedly, Merab has failed to score any takedowns. Unreal. Now, Yan scores the takedown! Then Merab pulls the reversal! And Yan reverses Merab!

They’re clinched on the fence but Yan is in a headlock. Now they shake loose. Yan scores with another wicked jab. Merab is keeping Yan tied up and gains a reprieve from Yan’s fists. Yan scores with a right. Merab’s face is badly bloodied. Dvalishvili 20, Yan 18

Round 3

Merab’s nose looks like it might be broken. No question it’s bloody and battered. Merab lands a hard right and Yan scores a big takedown. Merab on the rampage but Yah slugs him square in he face.

Merab slings Yan over his shoulder, slams him to the mat and back up pops Yan. They’re trading blows, but both look exhausted. Merab attempts a takedown and Yan fights it off.

Yan lands a right and then a jab. Merab goes for yet another takedown. More terrific takedown defense by Yan. Merab charging ahead. Yan lands a vicious kick to the body. Merab is hurt. Dvalishvili 29, Yan 28

Round 4

Yan opens with a hard low leg kick. Merab shows no ill effects from that kick to the abdomen. Yet. He’s attempting yet another takedown and gets taken down instead.

Merab going for a choke here. Yan shakes free of the submission attempt and now has Merab’s back. Yan lands a kick and he’s on the move. Merab stays aggressive. Another takedown attempt and Yan defends again.

Yan landing with that jab repeatedly and scores with another hard left shot to the body. Another hard body shot by Yan. Yan pounds Merab with a vicious left, and then a big right followed by an elbow. Yan is taking over. Dvalishvili 38, Yan 38

Round 5

Yan comes out assertively with side kicks to the legs. Merab firing punches and Yan responds with a leg kick. Now he scores with a left hook to Merab’s body. They trade big punches, and Yan appears to get the best of the exchange.

Yan lands a couple of lefts. He looks patient and dangerous. Merab wraps up Yan but Yan fights him off YET again! Blood is everywhere – mostly Merab’s. Merab’s face is a bloody mess. He’s firing punches but doesn’t look certain about what he wants to do. Now he’s looking for a submission.

Yan shakes free and gets on top. He scores with a knee and elbow before they separate. Yan lands another crushing body kick. Crowd cheering, clock running out and Yan scores his fifth takedown of the fight! Yan 48, Dvalishvili 47

Joshua Van def. Alexandre Pantoja by TKO

The fight lasted 26 seconds, and it was as shocking as it was excruciating.

At 24, Van becomes the second youngest champion in UFC history after Pantoja appeared to seriously injure his arm just as the flyweight bout was getting underway.

Pantoja, 35, attempted a head kick and Van caught his left. That left Pantoja spinning and looking for a place to land.

But as he fell, Pantoja landed on his left arm and it didn’t look good. He made it clear he couldn’t continue and the referee halted the fight. Dana White said afterward that Pantoja had suffered a shoulder injury.

The only younger champion in UFC history was Jon Jones, who won his first belt at 23.

Van improved to 16-2 and Pantoja fell to 30-6.

Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van: Round-by-round analysis

Round 1

Flyweight champion Alexandre Pantoja already looks like one of the best ever to fight in the division. But 24-year-old contender Joshua Van looks to change the narrative with a massive upset.

Pantoja opens with a leg kick and the punches already are flying. Pantoja suffers an arm injury and the fight is over! Pantoja cannot continue! 

Tatsuro Taira def. Brandon Moreno by TKO

Taira proved to be a quicker learner in his victory over Moreno in the flyweight bout.

Taira spent most of the first round fighting off a possible submission after trying to take down Moreno but slipping into Moreno’s clutches.

Taira took Moreno down again in Round 2 and he kept him there – long enough to pound him with punches before the referee halted the fight.

Taira, the 25-year-old from Japan, improved to 18-1. Moreno, the 31-year-old from Mexico, fell to 23-9-2.

Brandon Moreno vs. Tatsuro Taira: Round-by-round analysis

Round 1

Brandon Moreno, the former two-time UFC flyweight champion, is looking to fight for the title again. The path leaves him face-to-face with Tatsuro Taira.

Taira opens with a fast right that misses the target – violently. Taira attempts a takedown but Moreno ends up on top and is locking in a body triangle. Taira looks helpless but not in danger of submitting. The problem: 2:45 left to go and no clear exit for Taira.

Taira starts to throw punches, but there’s not much room to operate. The hold is weakening and the fans boo. But Moreno is retightening the triangle. Taira throwing punches, so clearly he’s getting adequate air and the crowd is losing patience. Taira breaks free and fails to score before the round ends. Moreno 10, Taira 9

Round 2

Moreno scores with a jab and a right hook. Moreno fires another jab and connects with a low leg kick. Connects with another left. Taira looks … a little unsure of himself. Now he unloads with punches and scores a takedown.

Taira now throwing hard punches to Moreno’s head and face. A flurry of big punches and the referee stops the fight! It’s over! It’s Taira by TKO.

Payton Talbott def. Henry Cejudo by unanimous decision

Talbott knocked off the legendary Cejudo and had a message after winning the flyweight bout by unanimous decision. A fight that sent Cejudo back into retirement.

“Guys, give it up for Henry Cejudo, the savior of the flyweight division,’’ Talbott said. “Love him or hate him, everyone watched.’’

It was riveting theater again, as the 38-year-old Cejudo brawled with the 27-year-old Talbott. He had the heart of a champion – a former Olympic gold medalist wrestler and former two-division UFC champion (flyweight and bantamweight).

But Talbott was too good and too young on a night that ended with Cejudo’s face covered with blood and pride. Talbott improved to 11-1 and Cejudo fell to 16-6.

Henry Cejudo vs. Payton Talbott: Round-by-round analysis

Round 1

Legend Henry Cejudo hasn’t looked so legendary while losing his last three fights. Can he avoid yet another loss against 27-year-old Payton Talbott?

Cejudo opens with a couple quick low leg kicks. Talbott lands a huge right. But Cejudo marches forward and lands another low leg kick. Talbott lands another left as Cejudo keeps firing those low leg kicks. Talbott noticeably taller. But nothing new for Cejudo.

Cejudo bleeding from the nose and now he’s getting kneed and Talbott lands a left. Cejudo drops Talbott with a right but Talbott quickly back up. And Talbott has tattooed Cejudo’s face and then scores a takedown. In fact, sticks out his tongue in celebration. Talbott scores with a couple of elbows and lands a flurry of shots before Cejudo scrambles to his feet. And Talbott takes him down again HARD seconds before the round ends. Talbott 10, Cejudo 9

Round 2

Talbott drops Cejudo with a right but he quickly scrambles to his feet and now Cejudo is on top! The former Olympic gold medalist wrestler, of course. Cejudo on top but not throwing punches, maybe just catching his breath? Crowd growing restless.

About three minutes left. How will Cejudo use the time? Talbott scrambles to his feet, but Cejudo still has his back. Now they’re separated and Talbott is firing punches and clips Cejudo with a stiff left. Talbott is pouring it on!

Cejudo fighting back and it’s a bloody war. Cejudo a bloody mess but still fighting. Cejudo’s left eye just covered with blood. Round ends. Incredible. Talbott 20, Cejudo 18

Round 3

Cejudo scores with a hard low leg kick. And now he’s firing punches and kicks. Talbott knees Cejudo and he just looks sharper and fresher. Cejudo has no answer for the long limbs that have bloodied his face.

Now they’re clinched. Cejudo’s right eye bleeding again as they’re clinched. Talbott drives his knee into Cejudo’s body but suddenly Cejudo scores the takedown. Talbott quickly back on his feet. Talbott drive his knee into Cejudo’s chest and it’s getting ugly.

Cejudo attempts another takedown but Talbott fends it off. Hard to know who’s wearing whose blood. Talbott pouring it on, but Cejudo swinging for the fences, too. Talbott points to the center of the mat and they brawl as the final seconds elapse. Talbott 30, Cejudo 27

Jan Blachowicz vs. Bogdan Guskov declared majority draw

It’s almost impossible to imagine the 42-year-old Blachowicz reigning atop the light heavyweight division again. But retirement doesn’t appear to be imminent, either.

Despite suffering a beating in the second round, Blachowicz rallied and earned a majority draw against Guskov.

He weathered a flurry of Guskov’s elbows and fists after getting dropped in the second round, then fought his way back in the three-round bout behind an aggressive, jab-heavy attack.

One judge scored it 29-28 for Blachowicz and the two other judges scored it 28-28 – meaning they scored the second round 10-8 in favor of Guskov but gave the first and third rounds to Blachowicz.

Jan Blachowicz vs. Bogdan Guskov: Round-by-round analysis

Round 1

Jan Blachowicz, the former light heavyweight champion, enters this fight having won just one of his last five bouts. At 42, can he get back on track against 33-year-old Bogdan Guskov?

Fighters circling, measuring. Guskov throws a few jabs, not with any serious intention. Blachowicz connects with a low leg kick, tries to follow up with a jab that falls short. Waiting for violence to ensue. Blachowicz scores with a jab and connects with another low level kick. Another kick. But no one is going for broke yet.

Guskov connects with a straight left that backed up Blachowicz. But Blachowicz responds with a couple of lefts. They traded kicks. Jabs are ruling this round. The crowd is getting a little restless. Now whistling ensues. Blachowicz has pounded Guskov’s left leg, but he lands a flurry of punches. Blachowicz 10, Guskov 9

Round 2

Blachowicz sticks Guskov with a solid left and connects with another leg kick. Then Guskov scores with a big right and down goes Blachowicz as Guskov begins the ground and pound and tries to finish the job. Guskov connects with two more big shots.

Blachowicz has Guskov in a heel locker but he breaks free. Lots of time left as Guskov sets up for more ground and pound. Blachowicz taking lots of punishment as Guskov throws elbows and opens up a cut on Blachowicz’s right eye.

Guskov in total control and Blachowicz winces as the punishment continues. Blachowicz punching back, but with no authority. Guskov capitalizing with sharp elbows. Blachowicz 19, Guskov 19

Round 3

Blachowicz comes out with surprising assertiveness, but Guskov scores with a left jab that rattles Blachowicz. Guskov connecting with big shots. Blachowicz still stalking at times and showing some energy. Throwing impressive jabs, but Guskov fires back with a hard right.

Blachowicz is revving up and fires away despite blood running into his left eye. Guskov retreating and growing strangely apprehensive. It’s Blachowicz who’s fighting with more aggressiveness.

They’re at the center of the octagon. Blachowicz knocks Guskov down with a right as the round comes to a close! Unbelievable! Blachowicz 29, Guskov 28

UFC 323 results: Prelims

  • Manuel Torres def. Grant Dawson by TKO (1st round), lightweight
  • Chris Duncan def. Terrance McKinney by submission (anaconda choke, 1st rd), lightweight 
  • Maycee Barber def. Karine Silva by unanimous decision, women’s flyweight
  • Fares Ziam def. Nazim Sadykhov by TKO (2nd rd), lightweight

UFC 323 results: Early Prelims

  • Brunno Ferreira def. Marvin Vettori by unanimous decision, middleweight
  • Jalin Turner def. Edson Barboza by TKO (1st rd), lightweight
  • Iwo Baraniewski def. Ibo Aslan KO (1st rd), light heavyweight
  • Mansur Abdul-Malik def. Antonio Trocoli by submission (guillotine choke/1st rd), middleweight
  • Mairon Santos def. Muhammad Naimov by TKO (3rd rd), featherweight

UFC 323 predictions: Dvalishvili vs. Yan expert picks

Sporting News: Merab via unanimous decision

Daniel Yanofsky writes: ‘Has Yan improved his takedown defense (85%) since the last fight? Even against other opponents, they aren’t on the same level as Merab. Even if injuries may have affected Yan last time, it appears nothing can stop Merab, especially on the floor. Expect the same result here.’

Action Network: Merab Dvalishvili

Billy Ward writes: ‘With the champion only about two years older than the challenger, it’s also hard to say that time could be the equalizer here, as both men are in roughly the same stage of their careers. For all of those reasons, the roughly four-to-one odds on ‘The Machine’ to retain his title feel about right.’

Score and Stats: Merab Dvalishvili

Rick Rockwell writes: ‘You can throw caution to the wind and bet on a KO upset, but I don’t see it happening. Merab wins with defense, timing, pacing, and suffocating wrestling. Yan didn’t have an answer for that in 2023, and he won’t have an answer for it now.’

UFC 323 odds: Dvalishvili vs. Yan fight

Odds via BetMGM as of Thursday.

  • Merab Dvalishvili (-500) vs. Petr Yan (+340); For bantamweight title

UFC 323: Dvalishvili vs. Yan fight card

Fight card according to ESPN:

Fight card according to ESPN.

Main Card:

  • Merab Dvalishvili vs. Petr Yan; For bantamweight title
  • Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van; For flyweight title
  • Brandon Moreno vs. Tatsuro Taira; Flyweight
  • Henry Cejudo vs. Payton Talbott; Lightweight
  • Jan Blachowicz vs. Bogdan Guskov; Bantamweight

Prelims:

  • Grant Dawson vs. Manuel Torres; Lightweight
  • Chris Duncan vs. Terrance McKinney; Lightweight
  • Maycee Barber vs. Karine Silva; Women’s flyweight
  • Nazim Sadykhov vs. Fares Ziam; Lightweight

Early Prelims:

  • Marvin Vettori vs. Brunno Ferreira; Middleweight
  • Edson Barboza vs. Jalin Turner; Lightweight
  • Ibo Aslan vs. Iwo Baraniewski; Light Heavyweight
  • Mansur Abdul-Malik vs. Antonio Trocoli; Middleweight
  • Muhammad Naimov vs. Mairon Santos; Featherweight

UFC 323 preliminary and main card start times

Here are your start times.

  • Early Prelims: 6 p.m. ET (FX, ESPN+, Disney+)
  • Prelims: 8 p.m. ET (ESPN2, FX, ESPN+, Disney+)
  • Main card: 10 p.m. ET (PPV on ESPN+)

UFC 324 moves to Paramount+, ending PPV era for UFC

After UFC 323, the organization now moves on from its PPV model with ESPN and ESPN+. With its seven-year, $7.7 billion deal with Paramount, the promise is upwards of 40 UFC events a year. It all begins in 2026 with UFC 324 on Jan. 24, which will broadcast on streaming service Paramount+.

UFC 323 odds: Merab Dvalishvili vs Petr Yan full card

Fight card according to ESPN: Odds via BetMGM as of Thursday.

Main Card:

  • Merab Dvalishvili (-500) vs. Petr Yan (+340); For bantamweight title
  • Alexandre Pantoja (-265) vs. Joshua Van (+200); For flyweight title
  • Brandon Moreno (+110) vs. Tatsuro Taira (-140); Flyweight
  • Henry Cejudo (+200) vs. Payton Talbott (-265); Lightweight
  • Jan Blachowicz (-140) vs. Bogdan Guskov (+110); Bantamweight

Prelims:

  • Grant Dawson (-235) vs. Manuel Torres (+180); Lightweight
  • Chris Duncan (-195) vs. Terrance McKinney (+150); Lightweight
  • Maycee Barber (-180) vs. Karine Silva (+140); Women’s flyweight
  • Nazim Sadykhov (+115) vs. Fares Ziam (-145); Lightweight

Early Prelims:

  • Marvin Vettori (-120) vs. Brunno Ferreira (-110); Middleweight
  • Edson Barboza (+200) vs. Jalin Turner (-265); Lightweight
  • Ibo Aslan (+165) vs. Iwo Baraniewski (-215); Light Heavyweight
  • Mansur Abdul-Malik (-1000) vs. Antonio Trocoli (+560); Middleweight
  • Muhammad Naimov (+220) vs. Mairon Santos (+295); Featherweight

Ring walk time for Dvalishvili and Yan main event

The Merab Dvalishvili and Petr Yan fight card consists of 14 fights and will begin at 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, December 6, 2025, with early prelim fights. The main event for the Dvalishvili vs Petr Yan fight is expected to be around 11:30 p.m. ET. However, the duration of the undercard will impact the actual start.

Where is UFC 323: Dvalishvili vs Yan?

UFC 323: Merab Dvalishvili vs Petr Yan will be held at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025.

UFC 323 live stream

The Merab Dvalishvili and Petr Yan prelims and early prelims fights will be available to stream on ESPN+ and Disney+, while the main card will be streamed on ESPN Pay-Per-View.

UFC 323 price

UFC events are available to ESPN+ subscribers. The cost of the service is $10.99 a month or $109.99 for the year. The PPV is available for an additional $79.99.

Merab Dvalishvili vs Petr Yan: Tale of the tape

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Duke has won the ACC championship and thrown the College Football Playoff picture into chaos. Its coach believes the Blue Devils should be in the bracket.

By beating Virginia on Saturday, Dec. 6, Duke has opened up the final automatic bid. Typically, it would make sense for the ACC champion to automatically be in, but the Blue Devils present an unusual case. They are 8-5 and weren’t ranked in any poll, including the College Football Playoff rankings, coming into conference championship week.

However, No. 19 James Madison was in the CFP rankings at No. 25 and won the Sun Belt. Therefore, it looks like the Dukes would get in given the criteria for the field is the five highest-ranked conference champions and seven at-large teams. 

Regardless, Duke coach Manny Diaz spent his postgame interview vouching for his team to be in the playoff, seemingly claiming James Madison doesn’t have a resume like the Blue Devils.

‘They don’t have wins like this. They don’t have a win against a team like that. That’s a big-time team right there in Virginia,’ Diaz said on the ESPN broadcast. ‘Seven wins in this conference, seven Power Four wins compared to zero. That’s a playoff team. Darian Mensah may be the best damn quarterback in the country. These guys deserve to be in.’

While James Madison doesn’t have any Power Four wins, with its lone loss coming against Louisville, the Dukes also went 12-1 on the season, and two of Duke’s five losses came against Group of Five teams in Tulane and Connecticut.

The Blue Devils will have to wait for the playoff reveal show at Noon ET on Sunday, Dec. 7 to see if they will be able to play for a national championship.

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A Power Four conference champion was determined Saturday night — even though the winner of the game may not earn a College Football Playoff berth.

The 2025 ACC football season wrapped up on Saturday, Dec. 6 with Duke outlasting No. 16 Virginia (No. 17 CFP) 27-20 in overtime at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina to win the ACC Championship game for the first time in program history.

Watch the ACC championship game on Fubo (free trial)

The win improves the Blue Devils to 8-5, though it’s unlikely they’ll be able to leapfrog No. 19 James Madison (No. 25 CFP) in the playoff selection committee rankings. Duke was unranked in last week’s committee rankings. Because of that, the ACC could be shut out of the playoff, with No. 13 Miami (No. 12 CFP), as a potential at-large participant, standing as its best hope to make the field.

The Cavaliers had been one of the best stories in college football this season and will finish the regular season with a 10-3 record after going just 11-23 in their previous three seasons under coach Tony Elliott. It’s Virginia’s first 10-win season since 1989.

Duke was in the ACC Championship game despite finishing just 7-5 in the regular season. A 6-2 record in conference play, however, sent it to Charlotte after a convoluted series of tiebreakers notably left out Miami.

Duke led 20-10 with four minutes remaining, but Virginia mounted a furious comeback to tie the game on an 18-yard Chandler Morris touchdown pass to Eli Wood with 22 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter. In overtime, the Blue Devils got a touchdown pass from Darian Mensah on fourth-and-goal from the 1-yard line and intercepted Morris on the first play of the Cavaliers’ ensuing possession to end the game.

USA TODAY brought you live updates, scores and highlights from the game. Here are the highlights:

Virginia vs Duke score

This section will be updated throughout the game.

Virginia vs Duke updates

FINAL: Duke 27, Virginia 20

Virginia INT ends game, gives Duke ACC championship

After a roughing-the-passer penalty pushed Virginia back to the 40-yard line to start its drive. The Cavaliers went with some trickery on their first play, with Chandler Morris ending up with the ball and firing the ball to Eli Wood. Duke linebacker Luke Mergott, however, steps in to intercept the pass and end the game. It’s Mergott’s first career interception.

Duke has won the ACC championship.

Duke gets TD on first drive of OT

Duke has little trouble moving it up the field, getting a first-and-goal at the Virginia 1-yard line before the Cavaliers hold firm, stopping the Blue Devils on three straight plays. Manny Diaz opts to go for it on fourth-and-goal from the 1, with Darian Mensah rolling out and finding Jeremiah Hasley in the end zone.

Duke is now four for four on the day on fourth down.

End of fourth quarter: Duke 20, Virginia 20

After a short kickoff return, Duke opts to take a knee and send the game to overtime. Virginia wins the toss and decides to play defense first.

Of note, the Cavaliers have won three overtime games this season, so they’ve got plenty of experience with this situation, albeit not with these kinds of stakes.

Virginia ties game on Chandler Morris TD pass

Virginia’s furious comeback has us on the brink of overtime. The Cavaliers go 96 yards in 10 plays and just 1:22, with a Chandler Morris 18-yard touchdown pass to Eli Wood serving as the exclamation point. The extra point is good and we’re tied, 20-20, with 22 seconds left. Wood stepped out of bounds, but it was determined that he was forced out by the Duke defensive back and he re-established himself on the field before hauling in the catch.

Duke does have two timeouts left, though it’s fair to wonder whether the Blue Devils want to be too aggressive and not risk a turnover.

Virginia forces Duke punt, will have chance to tie

It all comes down to one drive.

Virginia’s defense stands tall, stuffing Duke on back-to-back plays from the Blue Devils’ 48-yard line. The second of those stops, a Nate Sheppard 2-yard run on third-and-8 ended with Sheppard going out of bounds, stopping the clock with 1:51 remaining and allowing the Cavaliers to hold on to their two timeouts.

Virginia takes over at its own 4-yard line after a 46-yard punt and will have 1:44 to try to mount a game-tying drive, along with two timeouts.

Virginia FG makes it a one-score game

It’s not quite over yet in Charlotte. Thanks in large part to a 25-yard pass from Chandler Morris to Cam Ross, Virginia goes 50 yards in eight plays, with Will Bettridge finishing it off with a 42-yard field goal.

Duke’s lead is down to seven, 20-13, with 3:54 left. After the kickoff, the Blue Devils take over at their own 25-yard line. The Cavaliers still have all three of their timeouts, as well as the two-minute timeout.

Duke FG extends lead over Virginia to 10

Duke capitalizes on the short field, getting a 23-yard Todd Pelino field goal to push its lead over Virginia to 10, 20-10, with 5:02 left.

The Blue Devils very nearly got seven points instead of three, with Darian Mensah connecting with Cooper Barkate for a 30-yard pickup to the Cavaliers’ 3-yard line. They’re not able to get any closer to the end zone, though, and ultimately settle for a field goal. But with a two-possession lead with five minutes left, Duke’s chances of a conference title just got that much better.

Chandler Morris INT gives Duke ball in Virginia territory

Duke makes good on pinning Virginia deep. On a third-and-9 from his team’s own 2-yard line, Chandler Morris tosses it deep, but there isn’t a receiver in the area and Blue Devils safety Caleb Weaver makes a diving catch to pick it off at the Cavaliers’ 33-yard line. Looked to be a potential miscommunication between Morris and his receiver.

With 7:21 remaining, Duke has the chance to burn some clock and, more importantly, stretch its lead to two possessions.

Duke punts, pins Virginia deep

The Blue Devils aren’t able to get past the Virginia 47-yard line, with a Darian Mensah pass on third-and-6 getting batted down before it could get to Cooper Barkate. A 47-yard punt from Kade Reynoldson is downed at the Virginia 1, where the Cavaliers will take over with 8:46 remaining.

Duke stops Virginia on fourth down, takes over

A huge play from a Duke defense that’s been uncharacteristically strong most of the night, with Chandler Morris sailing a pass high to Trell Harris in the end zone as Harris was covered by a pair of Duke defensive backs on fourth-and-5 from the Blue Devils’ 24-yard line.

Duke will take over at its own 24-yard line with 14:24 left in the game.

Third quarter: Duke 17, Virginia 10

Virginia will start the fourth quarter with a third-and-9 at the Duke 28-yard line.

Duke pushes lead back to seven with FG

Duke stretches its lead back to seven with a field goal of its own, with Todd Pelino knocking through a 27-yard field goal after a six-play, 63-yard drive. Much of that yardage came on a 38-yard pass from Darian Mensah to Cooper Barkate that got the Blue Devils down to the Virginia 15-yard line after a face mask penalty was tacked on to the reception.

Duke had been set to go for a fourth-and-2 from the Virginia 7, but a false start penalty knocked the Blue Devils back five yards. Manny Diaz opts for the sure three points, giving his team a 17-10 lead with 3:53 left in the third quarter.

Virginia cuts into Duke lead with FG

The Cavaliers get all the way down to the Blue Devils’ 2-yard line on their opening drive of the second half, but Duke’s defense stands tall from there, dropping Virginia for a 5-yard loss and then forcing Chandler Morris into an incompletion.

Still, the Cavaliers cap off a 17-play drive with a 24-yard field goal from Will Bettridge to get within four, 14-10, with 7:19 remaining in the third quarter.

Halftime: Duke 14, Virginia 7

Duke holds a 14-7 lead over Virginia at halftime. The Blue Devils have a 170-115 advantage in total yards, with the Cavaliers running only 23 plays and Duke leading the time of possession battle 20:29-9:31.

Virginia is set to receive the opening kickoff of the second half.

Duke punts

Duke goes three-and-out and punts away to Virginia, which will take over at its 30-yard line with 1:43 left.

Virginia punts

For the first time tonight, we have a punt. A Chandler Morris pass on third-and-9 from the Virginia 48-yard line falls incomplete and the Cavaliers opt to punt. The ball bounces into the end zone for a touchback, giving Duke the ball at its own 20 with 2:55 remaining in the first half.

Nate Sheppard TD run puts Duke back ahead of Virginia

Duke has another lengthy touchdown drive, this one going 75 plays in 13 plays in 8:02. It’s punctuated by a 16-yard Nate Sheppard touchdown run to give the Blue Devils a 14-7 lead with 6:14 left in the first half.

Duke yet again comes up with big plays with it needed them, converting on two fourth downs on the drive, one of which came on a fake punt from its own 33-yard line. It’s the Blue Devils’ third-consecutive game with a special teams fake for a first down.

Chandler Morris TD pass ties Virginia with Duke

Darian Mensah’s interception proves to be costly, turning what could have been a 14-point lead into a tie ballgame.

On a first-and-10 from the Duke 11-yard line, Chandler Morris dumps it off to running back J’Mari Taylor, who cuts and plows through the Blue Devils’ defense for a touchdown, tying the game after the extra point with 14:16 left in the first half.

End of first quarter: Duke 7, Virginia 0

Virginia has a second-and-1 at the Duke 14-yard line once the second quarter begins.

Darian Mensah INT gives Virginia ball back

Shortly after Duke benefits from a momentum swing, the Blue Devils give the ball right back. On a second-and-14 from the Duke 24-yard line, two plays after Virginia’s missed field goal, Darian Mensah throws an interception right to Cavaliers safety Corey Costner, who returns it to the Duke 23-yard line with 47 seconds left in the quarter.

Virginia misses FG

The Cavaliers have a nice response to Duke’s opening touchdown drive, getting as far as the Blue Devils’ 20-yard line. From there, though, they’re dropped for a 2-yard loss on a rushing attempt, Chandler Morris is brought down for a sack on third down and Will Bettridge misses a 45-yard field goal wide left.

Duke will take over at its own 28 with about two minutes left in the first quarter.

Duke scores TD on first drive

After days of jokes about how it made the conference championship game, Duke showed on its first drive that it just might belong on this stage. The Blue Devils go 75 yards in 15 plays and 9:38, capped off by a 12-yard touchdown pass from Darian Mensah to Jeremiah Hasley.

It’s the longest opening drive by plays and time of possession in ACC Championship game history.

There were several instances on the possession that it seemed like Duke might not get any points, let alone seven. The Blue Devils faced four third-downs, converting three of them, and went for it on a fourth-and-2 from the Virginia 41-yard line.

Pregame

How did Duke get into the ACC championship game?

Despite going 7-5 in the regular season, which included losses to Tulane and UConn, Duke finds itself 60 minutes away from a conference title. How, exactly, did the Blue Devils get there?

Even with its subpar overall mark, coach Manny Diaz’s team went 6-2 in conference play, putting it in a five-way tie for second place in the conference standings behind Virginia. Duke ended up getting the edge over the four other teams because of the ACC’s sixth tiebreaker: conference opponent record. Duke’s ACC opponents had a combined win percentage of .500, while Miami and Georgia Tech came in behind them at .438.

Virginia football injury updates

Here’s a look at the injury situation for Virginia heading into its ACC championship matchup against Duke, according to the ACC’s latest athlete availability report:

Out

  • CB #1 Dre Walker
  • WR #2 Andre Greene Jr.
  • LB #5 Kam Robinson
  • DB #7 Ja’Maric Morris
  • CB #9 Jam Jackson
  • TE #9 Dakota Twitty
  • QB #19 Grady Brosterhous
  • RB #20 Xavier Brown
  • RB #28 Noah Vaughn
  • S #38 Armstrong Jones
  • OL #54 Makilan Thomas
  • DL #56 Tyler Simmons
  • OL #56 Tyshawn Wyatt
  • OL #71 Monroe Mills
  • WR #80 Trevor Ladd

Game-time decision

  • WR #6 Cam Ross
  • WR #8 Jayden Thomas
  • OL #52 McKale Boley

Ross is the Hoos’ third-leading wide receiver this season, with 459 receiving yards and two touchdowns.

Duke football injury updates

Here’s a look at the players who will be out for Duke in Saturday’s ACC championship game against Virginia, according to the ACC’s latest athlete availability report:

  • S #1 Terry Moore
  • CB #5 Kimari Robinson
  • DE #14 Bryce Davis
  • LB #24 Bradley Gompers
  • LB #31 Elliott Schaper
  • LB #36 Nick Morris Jr.
  • OL #52 Micah Sahakian
  • OL #73 Evan Scott
  • OL #78 Nathan Kutufaris

ACC championship game odds

Virginia is favored by -3.5 over Duke in the ACC championship game, according to the latest odds from BetMGM.

Who is calling the ACC championship game?

The ACC championship game between Virginia and Duke will be airing on ABC, with Sean McDonough (play-by-play) and Greg McElroy (analyst) on the call while Molly McGrath and Taylor McGregor report from the sideline.

What time does Virginia vs Duke start?

  • Date: Saturday, Dec. 6
  • Time: 8 p.m. ET
  • Where: Bank of American Stadium (Charlotte, N.C.)

Virginia vs Duke will kick off at 8 p.m. ET on Saturday, Dec. 6 from Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina.

What TV channel is Virginia vs Duke on today?

  • TV channel: ABC
  • Livestream: Fubo (free trial)

The ACC championship game between Virginia and Duke will be broadcast on ABC. Streaming options for the game include Fubo, which carries ABC and offers a free trial to new subscribers.

Virginia vs Duke predictions

Craig Meyer, USA TODAY Sports: Duke 27, Virginia 24

The Blue Devils were handled by the Cavaliers in their regular-season matchup, but Virginia, for all of its success, has been inconsistent this season. With a better effort from quarterback Mensah this time around, Duke earns a tight win and potentially shuts the ACC out of the playoff.

Virginia football schedule 2025

Here’s a look at Virginia’s schedule in 2025, including past scores.

  • Saturday, Aug. 30: Virginia 48, Coastal Carolina 7
  • Saturday, Sept. 6: NC State 35, Virginia 31
  • Saturday, Sept. 13: Virginia 55, Williams & Mary 16
  • Saturday, Sept. 20: Virginia 48, Stanford 20 *
  • Friday, Sept. 26: Virginia 46, Florida State 38 (2OT) *
  • Saturday, Oct. 4: Virginia 30, Louisville 27 (OT) *
  • Saturday, Oct. 11: BYE
  • Saturday, Oct. 18: Virginia 22, Washington State 20
  • Saturday, Oct. 25: Virginia 17, North Carolina 16 (OT) *
  • Saturday, Nov. 1: Virginia 31, Cal 21 *
  • Saturday, Nov. 8: Wake Forest 16, Virginia 9 *
  • Saturday, Nov. 15: Virginia 34, Duke 17 *
  • Saturday, Nov. 22: BYE
  • Saturday, Nov. 29: Virginia 27, Virginia Tech 7 *
  • Saturday, Dec. 6: Virginia vs Duke | ESPN, 8 p.m. ET **

* – denotes ACC game

** – denotes ACC championship game

Duke football schedule 2025

Here’s a look at Duke’s schedule in 2025, including past scores.

  • Thursday, Aug. 28: Duke 45, Elon 17
  • Saturday, Sept. 6: Illinois 45, Duke 19
  • Saturday, Sept. 13: Tulane 34, Duke 27
  • Saturday, Sept. 20: Duke 45, NC State 33 *
  • Saturday, Sept. 27: Duke 38, Syracuse 3 *
  • Saturday, Oct. 4: Duke 45, Cal 21 *
  • Saturday, Oct. 11: BYE
  • Saturday, Oct. 18: Georgia Tech 27, Duke 18 *
  • Saturday, Oct. 25: BYE
  • Saturday, Nov. 1: Duke 46, Clemson 45 *
  • Saturday, Nov. 8: UConn 37, Duke 34
  • Saturday, Nov. 15: Virginia 34, Duke 17 *
  • Saturday, Nov. 22: Duke 32, North Carolina 25 *
  • Saturday, Nov. 29: Duke 49, Wake Forest 32 *
  • Saturday, Dec. 6: Virginia vs Duke | ESPN, 8 p.m. ET **

* – denotes ACC game

** – denotes ACC championship game

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