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UNC Basketball face off against Big 12 school in exhibition game

UNC Basketball face off against Big 12 school in exhibition game

USA Today13-06-2025
UNC Basketball face off against Big 12 school in exhibition game UNC will face one of its former top recruiting targets in an October exhibition.
Thanks to another strong incoming high school recruiting class, combined with a significantly-improved transfer portal class, the UNC basketball team has a strong outlook heading into its 2025-2026 season.
The crown jewel of North Carolina's 2025 recruiting class is 5-star power forward Caleb Wilson, who committed to Hubert Davis' program in January. Lacking height on their roster last year, the Tar Heels snagged a pair of tall, talented post players in Henri Veesaar and Chapel Hill native Jarin Stevenson.
We also know a little bit about UNC's schedule, with a few non-conference matchups released for this fall. North Carolina will play both St. Bonaventure and Michigan State in the Fort Myers (Fla.) Tip-Off during Thanksgiving Week, travel to Kentucky for the ACC-SEC Challenge on December 2, then travel to Atlanta (Ga.) for a CBS Sports Classic matchup with Ohio State.
On Friday afternoon, the Tar Heels released another teaser for their 2025-2026 schedule: an October 24 exhibition game in Salt Lake City, Utah against the BYU Cougars.
BYU, which is coming off a Sweet 16 appearance in March, should be one of the top teams across college basketball this coming season. The Cougars fared well in the transfer portal themselves, but their top roster highlight will be AJ Dybantsa. Ranked the Class of 2025's top recruit, Dybantsa chose BYU over UNC during his recruiting cycle.
This is the second-consecutive season North Carolina will open its season with a high-profile exhibition matchup. The Tar Heels traveled to face the Memphis Tigers on October 15, 2024, a 84-76 victory highlighted by Seth Trimble's 33-point outburst.
Follow us @TarHeelsWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of North Carolina Tar Heels news, notes and opinions.
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The 2025 College Football Playoff chase will be impacted by these 20 players
The 2025 College Football Playoff chase will be impacted by these 20 players

New York Times

time13 hours ago

  • New York Times

The 2025 College Football Playoff chase will be impacted by these 20 players

There weren't many college football fans outside of the Dallas-Fort Worth area who knew much about Kevin Jennings this time last year. The former three-star recruit began the 2024 season as a backup quarterback but replaced starter Preston Stone a month into the season and led SMU to an ACC title game appearance and the College Football Playoff. Advertisement Indiana was picked to finish 17th in the Big Ten preseason poll a year ago, but went 11-1 in the regular season and crashed the CFP with a bunch of transfers from James Madison. The point? There is so much we don't know about who will impact the race for the 12 spots in the Playoff. That won't stop us from speculating. Here are 20 players — or in some cases, position groups — on contending teams who could go a long way in determining which teams will have an opportunity to play for a national championship. We're focusing on players who have yet to see significant snaps for their current team or are new to the Power 4 level. We will start with the non-quarterbacks. 1. Penn State's receivers: The Nittany Lions' national title hopes will likely hinge on whether Kyron Hudson (USC), Trebor Pena (Syracuse) and Devonte Ross (Troy) can provide reliable pass-catching options for senior QB Drew Allar. 2. Ohio State left tackle Ethan Onianwa: Onianwa, ranked 10th on our top-100 transfers list, has lost more than 20 pounds since arriving on campus in January. He's leveling up in competition after starting 34 games at left tackle in his career at Rice. 3. Oregon running back Makhi Hughes: Hughes is a proven commodity from the Group of 5 ranks after rushing for 2,779 yards and 22 touchdowns in the last two seasons at Tulane. That said, the Ducks are counting on four new starters on the offensive line — including three transfers — to open holes for their new lead back. 4. LSU's offensive line: We told you why the Tigers won the transfer portal in the offseason. Ultimately, the success of star quarterback Garrett Nussmeier will come down to whether transfers Braelin Moore (Virginia Tech) and Josh Thompson (Northwestern) — who have a combined 45 starts — are as good as the guys they're replacing. LSU had four offensive linemen drafted off last season's 9-4 team. Advertisement 5. Miami safety Zechariah Poyser: Mario Cristobal signed six defensive backs in the portal and hired defensive coordinator Corey Hetherman to patch up the holes that cost the Hurricanes a trip to the ACC title game. Poyser, a redshirt sophomore from Conference USA champion Jacksonville State, wore the green dot on his helmet during the spring and will be the new maestro on the revamped back end for the Canes. 6. Texas A&M receiver KC Concepcion: The Aggies came close to reaching the SEC Championship Game in Mike Elko's first season. Quarterback Marcel Reed, five starters on the offensive line and the entire backfield return. What's needed is a dynamic playmaker at receiver, and Concepcion, the 2023 ACC Rookie of the Year, has the talent and experience to fill the void. 7. Clemson defensive end Will Heldt: It's easy to forget Clemson's defense wasn't very good last season — especially against the run. Peter Woods and T.J. Parker are arguably the best tackle-edge combo in college football, but they need help. Heldt arrives from Purdue and should be even more productive (he had five sacks in 2024) now that he is playing with far more talent. 8. Arizona State running back Kanye Udoh: Cam Skattebo's impact on the Sun Devils last season didn't become evident on a large scale until late in the season. Udoh, who is bigger than Skattebo at 6-1, 220 pounds, enters the lead back role with a stronger resume than his predecessor. 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Notre Dame's starting quarterback: Marcus Freeman has yet to announce if redshirt freshman CJ Carr (four career snaps) or redshirt sophomore Kenny Minchey (17 career snaps) will start the opener at 10th-ranked Miami. Neither has played much to this point. That's a different approach after Notre Dame went with seasoned transfers in the last two seasons — Riley Leonard (Duke) and Sam Hartman (Wake Forest). 5. Oregon's Dante Moore: The redshirt sophomore and former five-star recruit from Detroit started five games as a true freshman at UCLA two seasons ago. His 461 career snaps at the Power 4 level are valuable for the defending Big Ten champions as they look to replace Heisman finalist Dillon Gabriel and eight other starters on offense. 6. Alabama's Ty Simpson: Kalen DeBoer named Simpson, a former five-star recruit who is in his fourth year in Tuscaloosa, as the starter over 2024 Washington transfer Austin Mack and five-star freshman Keelon Russell. Simpson played 71 snaps last season behind Jalen Milroe, but saw his most meaningful action two years ago off the bench when he led Alabama to a 17-3 come-from-behind win at South Florida. Advertisement 7. Michigan's Bryce Underwood: Michgian coach Sherrone Moore said he'll announce the starter the week of the opener against New Mexico. Underwood, the No. 1 overall recruit in the Class of 2025, is the favorite. Either way, the 2023 national champions will have an upgrade at the position after an abysmal offensive season in 2024. Fresno State transfer Mikey Keene has started 34 games in his career and completed 70.5 percent of his passes last season for 2,892 yards and 18 touchdowns, but he hasn't been taking a lot of reps as he recovers from injury. 8. 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The optimism centers around the arrival of Dampier and the return of all five starters on the offensive line. Dampier ran for 1,166 yards and threw for 2,768 and 12 touchdowns last season at New Mexico. (Photo of Makhi Hughes: Matthew Dobbins / Imagn Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

Need a College Football Playoff expansion plan that makes sense? Look to the FCS format
Need a College Football Playoff expansion plan that makes sense? Look to the FCS format

New York Times

time13 hours ago

  • New York Times

Need a College Football Playoff expansion plan that makes sense? Look to the FCS format

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And it would work. Also, it allows the two wealthiest conferences — the Big Ten and SEC — more teams into the field, via at-large selection. Upset that 9-3 Alabama didn't make it last year? South Carolina, Ole Miss, Missouri and Illinois — also all 9-3 last year — would have made it in such a format. So would Miami from the ACC and BYU from the Big 12, a team that somehow wasn't even in the conversation despite an impressive 10-2 campaign and a road win over a team that made the Playoff last year, SMU. At the end of the day, chances are the SEC and Big Ten would gobble up a large chunk of those 14 at-larges, and the Big 12 and ACC would get a few extras, too. Everybody wins. Advertisement But the FCS format would also create opportunities for schools in other conferences as well. Instead of having 68 teams outside the Power 4 vie for one berth, the American, Conference USA, MAC, Mountain West, Pac-12 (once it has eight teams again in 2026) and Sun Belt would each get one team in the field. Though having a true Cinderella in the CFP is much less likely to develop than it is in the NCAA basketball tournament or other sports because of football's physical nature and the role depth plays, it's still fairer than what we have now. The fact that we have allowed college football as a sport to predetermine which conferences get autobids and which don't without any officially stated objective criteria never sat right with me. If you purport to all be in the same subdivision — the FBS — then every league's champion deserves respect and a seat at the table. 'People have been grandfathered in over the course of time and some have a seat at the table and some don't and they're deemed Autonomous Four and everyone else is not, and here's your one seat at the table to get to the CFP,' Boise State athletic director Jeramiah Dickey told The Athletic in May. 'That just doesn't feel right.' A system like this works in other sports as well, most notably in basketball every March. It works in the NFL — division champions get an auto bid, then wild-card teams get the rest of the berths (via records, not a committee, of course). The biggest sport that has a system similar to what the Big Ten is proposing is European soccer, via the Champions League. Some leagues, like the Premier League, get more bids to the tournament each year than others. It's wildly popular — I'm a fan and I watch it annually — and some may argue that something akin to the Big Ten's proposals makes sense because college football operates more like European soccer than it does the NFL. They have a point, but I still say, why not create a system that gives both equal access to each conference and still allows the 'big dogs' the added opportunities they desire? Advertisement A 24-team field, using the FCS format, would have looked like this last year, using the final CFP rankings and a straight seeding format. For the unranked G5 champs, I used Chris Vannini's final 134 to order them. Byes: Remaining seeds: Now, I know what you might be thinking. The Big Ten isn't doing this for fairness — it's doing it for money. It's true. The idea of installing multiple automatic bids for conferences is a money play. I don't see hordes of fans calling for conferences to get multiple bids. Only conference commissioners — or their coaches, who follow their lead — are advocating for a bigger piece of the financial pie, which, by the way, the Big Ten and SEC already get. When is enough enough? An expanded Playoff is going to mean more money, no matter what format it is, autobids or not. That's not to say the FCS format is necessarily the best solution available. There are other alternatives, like keeping the 12-team format (nothing wrong with that! We're only one year in!) or eliminating autobids, taking the top 12/16/24 teams regardless of conference affiliation. But that increases subjectivity even more. And if you're concerned about going to 24 teams creating a precedent that we're always going to look to expand further, I'm sorry to inform you: We got on that path as soon as we established a Playoff. There will always be advocacy for expansion as long as expanding the postseason equates to more dollars. Even the FCS format has undergone expansion multiple times, from four in 1978 (sound familiar?) to eight in 1981, 12 in 1982, 16 in 1986, 20 in 2010 and the current 24-team format in 2013. If we're going to change the College Football Playoff format, let's do it in a way that doesn't perpetuate an inherently unfair postseason system through multiple conference autobids. Let's use something that has proven to work. It's right there if the power brokers are willing to just open their eyes and ears and, for once, consider the greater good of the sport. (Photo of Cam Miller: George Walker / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

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