logo
Where USA TODAY Sports ranks the Swamp in its top 25 college football stadium rankings

Where USA TODAY Sports ranks the Swamp in its top 25 college football stadium rankings

USA Today4 days ago
The college football offseason offers an opportunity to reflect on some of the more bird's-eye views of the sport as we await the start of the nation's favorite fall game.
Among the more common queries focus on the quality of various schools' stadiums, which serve as something of a house of worship featuring a gridiron altar that fans pray at every Saturday (with exceptions, of course). Many of these locations are among the highest-capacity venues in the nation, which adds fuel to the fervent fire that burns from within during the autumn months.
USA TODAY Sports writers Paul Myerberg and Blake Toppmeyer recently tried to tackle the topic by ranking the top 25 best college football stadiums in the country, which included the University of Florida's Ben Hill Griffin Stadium among the top 10. Known throughout the land as "the Swamp," the Gators' home field came in at No. 9 in the rankings — behind the Alabama Crimson Tide's Bryant-Denny Stadium and ahead of the Texas A&M Aggies' Kyle Field.
"As former coach Steve Spurrier aptly said, 'Only Gators get out alive' from The Swamp," they offer. "Florida has won 71.4% of its home games against SEC opponents the past 10 years, compared to 47.6% on the road in conference games. That's the definition of home-field advantage."
Ranking the Swamp according to other opinions
Oddly enough, Toppmeyer ranked Ben Hill Griffin Stadium as the top football venue in the Southeastern Conference earlier this month. Despite this, Florida's home field is the fifth-highest ranked SEC location in the latest tally.
On the other hand, Carter Bahns of 247Sports' assessment back in May — in which he ranked the top college football atmospheres — is in agreement with the latest assessment, also placing the Swamp at No. 9.
USA TODAY Sports top 25 college football stadium rankings
Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

FAMU football first 2025 practice: Competition, 'details' on forefront at training camp
FAMU football first 2025 practice: Competition, 'details' on forefront at training camp

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

FAMU football first 2025 practice: Competition, 'details' on forefront at training camp

The cleats were in the grass, and the whistles were blowing on Friday, Aug. 1. That means Florida A&M football began its training camp practice in preparation for the 2025 season, which opens against Howard on Aug. 30's Orange Blossom Classic at Miami Gardens' Hard Rock Stadium. The Rattlers used their grass practice field on Friday instead of performing on Ken Riley Field at Bragg Memorial Stadium's turf. It was the first time FAMU used the practice field since the 2023 season, which ignited enthusiasm from second-year head coach James Colzie III. 'It was exciting to get back on some grass,' Colzie told the media after Friday's practice. 'I thought it was a good day for the most part. But we still got a lot of work to do.' Friday was a non-contact day for the Rattlers in Tallahassee's sizzling 90-degree weather. The opening practice for the 2025 season primarily focused on reading and reacting to plays. 'Today was a detail day for us,' Colzie explained. 'It's about steps and eyes. The majority of the time, we were stepping and looking at the right things. And then the other times when we weren't, it showed.' Quarterback battle, offense vs defense shine in FAMU football's first practice FAMU's quarterback competition is officially underway. All five Rattlers quarterbacks, Traven Green, Tyler Jefferson, RJ Johnson III, Jett Peddy, and Bryson Martin, got reps on Friday. 'You want to make sure you give everybody an opportunity to win the position,' Colzie said of the race to become QB1. 'All five guys made some good throws and made mistakes.' The quarterbacks led the offense to a win over the defense in the competition period to open practice. However, the FAMU defense got after its offense with its pass rush for the remainder of practice. 'I think the defense was a little bit upset with it,' Colzie said of the unit losing the competition period. 'We put a lot of pressure on the quarterback today. Some of it might've been a little schematic, but it's just the talent we have up front,' the FAMU coach later added. Familiar and new faces make plays to open FAMU football's training camp The Rattlers' standout players, such as HBCU National Player of the Year candidates, offensive lineman Ashton Grable, and cornerback TJ Huggins, were center stage on Friday. Colzie also gave props to All-Southwestern Athletic Conference First Team offensive lineman Charles Davis and returning players trying to crack the starting lineup in defensive lineman Nick Dimitris and defensive back Ah'Mare Lee. The FAMU coach added that the Rattlers 'had some players that stepped up that people probably didn't know.' Tulane transfer tight end Guiseann Mirtil had a touchdown catch while former Temple wide receiver Jamar Taylor Jr. made 'about two or three catches' on Friday. 'I could be here talking all day about individual performances,' Colzie said. FAMU football coach James Colzie III hopeful to minimize penalties The first day of practice will always provide some extracurricular activities. It's a time when players vehemently prove they belong, which could lead to some banter or scuffles. 'We have to hope that our emotional maturity improves,' Colzie said. 'We got in a couple of fights today, but good teams may fight every once in a while. But it can't be a 'get-out,' something that's going to cost us penalties.' Last year, penalties cost the Rattlers games as they finished with a 7-5 record in Colzie's first season as head coach. In 2024, FAMU lost 73 yards per game due to flags, among the worst of Football Championship Subdivision teams. 'I've been around here for four years, and the head coach last year,' Colzie said. 'Those are the things that hurt us. So, we have to continue to improve on that. And today, we did not do that.' Florida A&M Football 2025 Schedule Week 1: Saturday, Aug. 30 ― vs. Howard (Orange Blossom Classic at Miami Gardens' Hard Rock Stadium), 4 p.m., ESPNU Week 2: Saturday, Sept. 6 ― at Florida Atlantic, 6 p.m., ESPN Plus Week 3: Saturday, Sept. 13 ― vs. Albany State, 7 p.m., SWAC TV Week 4: BYE/OPEN WEEK Week 5: Saturday, Sept. 27 ― vs. Alabama State (SWAC), 3 p.m., HBCU GO Week 6: Saturday, Oct. 4 ― vs. Mississippi Valley State (SWAC/at Atlanta's Mercedes-Benz Stadium), 4 p.m., SWAC TV Week 7: Saturday, Oct. 11 ― vs. North Carolina Central, 3 p.m., HBCU GO Week 8: Saturday, Oct. 18 ― vs. Alcorn State (SWAC/Homecoming), 4 p.m., ESPN Plus Week 9: Saturday, Oct. 25 ― at Southern (SWAC), 5 p.m., SWAC TV Week 10: Saturday, Nov. 1 ― vs. Jackson State (SWAC), 7 p.m., ESPN Network Week 11: Saturday, Nov. 8 ― at Arkansas-Pine Bluff (SWAC), 3 p.m., HBCU GO Week 12: Saturday, Nov. 15 ― at Alabama A&M (SWAC), 3 p.m., SWAC TV Week 13: Saturday, Nov. 22 ― vs. Bethune-Cookman (SWAC/Florida Classic at Orlando's Camping World Stadium) Saturday, Nov. 29 ― NCAA FCS Playoffs Begin (If Necessary) Saturday, Dec. 6 ― SWAC Championship Game (If Necessary) Saturday, Dec. 13 ― Celebration Bowl at Atlanta's Mercedes-Benz Stadium (If Necessary) Monday, Jan. 5, 2026 ― NCAA FCS National Championship Game at Nashville's FirstBank Stadium (If Necessary)This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: FAMU football begins 2025 practice: QB comp, offense vs defense shine

Former Oregon Duck Nikko Reed makes big-time INT in Hall of Fame Game
Former Oregon Duck Nikko Reed makes big-time INT in Hall of Fame Game

USA Today

time26 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Former Oregon Duck Nikko Reed makes big-time INT in Hall of Fame Game

Football finally returned on Thursday night following a five-month long hiatus as the Los Angeles Chargers took on the Detroit Lions in the NFL's annual Hall of Fame Game. Not many starters participate in the preseason in today's league, so the matchups typically consist of young guys and players on the fringes of the roster attempting to carve out a career. This is the case for former Oregon Ducks cornerback Nikko Reed, who has reportedly been one of the biggest bright spots in Chargers training camp. He signed with Los Angeles after going undrafted this year, but he isn't letting that label hold him back or define him. Reed intercepted a pass in the first quarter during the contest against the Lions and returned it 60 yards, coming just five yards short of a score. Some defensive backs are pure gamblers, either giving up big plays or adding to their own highlight reel. This is not the case with Reed. In 13 total coverage snaps against Detroit, the former Ducks star didn't allow a single catch. He also recorded three tackles and a pass breakup to go along with his pick. According to reports from a variety of Chargers reporters, Reed has impressed all summer and has a great shot to make the team. Contact/Follow @Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions.

Scooter Hobbs column: No easy pickings for SEC preseason poll
Scooter Hobbs column: No easy pickings for SEC preseason poll

American Press

time26 minutes ago

  • American Press

Scooter Hobbs column: No easy pickings for SEC preseason poll

Before tossing this summer's SEC preseason football media poll into its rightful home — which would be next to some used coffee grinds at the bottom of a trash can — should we dare take one last glance at the latest? I suppose such foolishness would come under the heading of 'For entertainment purposes only.' After all, the poll, which is released as the grand finalé of SEC Media Days each year, is traditionally best known for being comically wrong far more than it ever stumbles onto anything right. Add to that the fact that every year there's one anonymous vote predicting Vanderbilt to win the whole shooting match and you can understand the fanfare it generates. Yes, there are people who actually get upset about the annual Unknown Lone Vandy Voter, as if wasting one (1) vote is making a mockery of such a solemn event as a worthless, useless poll that will be forgotten while experts are still over-dissecting it before opening weekend. Anyway, it's almost become a badge of honor among the conference leadership, the big-wigs who seem to relish its release each year, an event that comes with the delightful disclaimer about just how misguided the media hacks are historically prone to be. If you, or someone you know, has a prediction addiction, please keep them away from the SEC Media preseason poll and seek professional assistance and counseling. The SEC office does not endorse, nor can it be held responsible for, the results of this or any future predictions. Or something like that. It was just last year when the official release was quick to update and point out that only nine times in the previous 32 years had the bumbling, stumbling media correctly picked the eventual conference champion. Of course, this year the conference office wasn't quite so condescending. Don't be so quick to gloat. The media — drum roll, please — actually got it right last year in picking Georgia to win. So it's up to 10 out of 33 now and … who's laughing now? We're on a roll. And that was in the first year with two extra teams, 16 I guess it's up to now, with no divisions. It's harder to pick a conference champion when you can't even remember who's in the conference this week. But last year not only did your media whiz kids get Georgia right, the preseason poll also had newcomer Texas in the top two as the team Georgia did, in fact, beat for the title. Once again, you may have noticed, Vanderbilt did NOT win the conference, but the Commodores DID beat Alabama, which might have been just as much fun. Nobody saw it coming, that's for sure. So maybe the media is on to something. Vanderbilt, for instance, this year got two votes to win it all. The converts are pouring in. Maybe it's a trend, maybe not. But with new-found respect for the long-maligned media poll, maybe we can take a last, serious look at the latest offering from the June confab. (Insert weather-worn disclaimers here.) But, OK, Texas is predicted to win the SEC. Makes sense. Arch Manning is the Longhorns quarterback. Georgia is picked to finish second and would probably be picked first if not for the Burnt Arch factor. But Georgia is now what Alabama once was and the logical next choice. Alabama is picked third because it's Alabama and if the Tide finish worse than that, Nick Saban really might come back. Then it seems, the media took the easy way out, poking around to see which teams were set at quarterback. That may be why LSU is next at No. 4 with Garrett Nussmeier, the preseason second team all-conference quarterback. It's also logical that South Carolina, with first-team preseason All-SEC quarterback LaNorris Sellers, is No. 5 and Florida, with rising star DJ Lagway, is No. 6. No. 7 Ole Miss has concerns at the position, but the media assumption may be that head coach Lane Kiffin will always find a nuisance to play the position. Texas A&M found Marcel Reed against LSU last year and if he ever figures out how to throw, the No. 8 ranking may be too low. Maybe by now you're figuring out how tough this prediction business is in the current atmosphere. That's eight teams and we're only halfway through. If that holds — and it won't — it would delegate some pretty big brand names to the bottom half. Teams like Tennessee, Auburn, Oklahoma. You figure one of those three is going to jump up among the challengers. Don't forget Missouri, either. Those Tigers were in the jumbled six-way tie for fourth place last year. Then the bottom three look pretty well settled in down there — Arkansas, Kentucky and Mississippi State. But who knows about No. 12? Maybe the uplifting Vanderbilt resurgence continues under Diego Pavia who may not have the best arm, but surely has the best name among SEC quarterbacks. This seems like a Hallmark movie waiting to happen. If so, you read it here first. * Scooter Hobbs covers LSU for the American Press. You can contact him at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store