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Archives for December 3, 2023

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | On Jets’ Aaron Rodgers

December 3, 2023 by Terry Lyons

Embed from Getty Images

By TERRY LYONS, Editor-in-Chief of Digital Sports Desk

FLORHAM PARK – Whether you’re playing poker or watching NFL football, the old adage remains the same. “If you’ve been playing in the game 30 minutes and don’t know who the patsy is, you’re the patsy.”

While We’re Young (Ideas) is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Take the New York JAY-EEE-TEE-ESS for example: If you’ve been watching since QB Aaron Rodgers tore his Achilles’ tendon four snaps into his debut with the Green Team on September 11th, you know the giant thud the NFL season took even though New York defeated the favored Buffalo Bills, 22-16, that night in overtime. The prognosis for the 40-year old Rodgers was not good. Even a man half his age might struggle with such a gruesome injury.

After pulling off the upset that Monday night, the Jets went into a three-game tailspin but course-corrected to a 4-3 record when the beat their cross-corridor rival NY Giants as October turned to November. Then? Another four-game death spiral to their current 4-7 record in the AFC East and less than a 1% chance of making the NFL Playoffs.

With those odds, in a hand of poker or a season full of football, who is this patsy we speak of?

It’s us.

Rodgers played us like a fiddle.

Rodgers directed a four week gaslight of the gullible media (and NYJ fans) better than George Cukor could’ve imagined on his best day.

Rodgers picked the first game (Nov. 6-7, loss vs LA Chargers) of the Jets’ current four-game slide to seed the thought and the media ate it up.

“Jets’ QB Rodgers Talks December Return”

Of course social media and the hook-line-and-sinker Jets fans took it to new levels before Rodgers could light the gaslight by walking it back in a weekly (paid) interview with ESPN radio man Pat McAfee.

“Obviously, that was said with a little tongue-in-cheek there,” Rodgers told McAfee. “It’d be nice to be able to be back in a couple weeks. That’s probably not anywhere near a realistic timeline.

“It’ll be a few fortnights,” Rodgers said, to set the table for even more speculation and sports talk.

Rodgers did so as he ditched a walking boot or crutches and displayed a no limp policy as he tossed 50-yard bullets with little to zero effort – letting the B-roll flow.

Why?

It’s quite simple: Rodgers was doing what he could do to take the heat off the Jets disappointing season. Obviously, he didn’t know the Jets would skid times four, but he certainly had an idea the meat of the 2023 schedule (vs. Chargers, @Raiders, @Buffalo and v. Dolphins) would be a test far too difficult to allow inexperienced QB ZachWilson to go it alone, never mind letting the New York media hounds and the fans devour Coach Robert Saleh before Thanksgiving.

Rodgers positioned the deflector shield as the weeks of November passed by with Wilson being benched for career back-up Tim Boyle, a fifth-year man out of Eastern Kentucky. All-the-while Rodgers fueled daily stories of jogging, eyeing practice, setting a 21-day practice ‘window’ to convince team doctors he was ready to go, despite his near-record early return and the Jets’ less than 1% chance of playing a meaningful football game.

He knew the media would fall for it, and they did. After all, there was nothing else for Boomer to blabber or for SI to program in Chatbot ai until another 70 days when pitchers & catchers report.

As the jury returns, WWYI will call the smoke-screen a success as Rodgers and the Jets qualified for the Gaslight Bowl. Maybe the game’ll be orchestrated by the late director, Cokor, but they’ll need to resurrect Charles Boyer and the most beautiful Ingrid Bergman in order to stage the show,

Maybe they won’t?


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: While in the prime of his longtime run as lead NBA writer at Sports Illustrated, Jack McCallum switched assignments to the weekly Scorecardcolumn and within the creative gems of wacky weekly stories was the mainstay: It was entitled: Sign of the Apocalypse.

The only thing funnier in the entire magazine was Steve Rushin’s closing piece.

Can it be duplicated? No.

Can it be copied? Yes.

Maybe this column should leave the word Apocalypse for McCallum’s legacy, thus pointing a synopsis on oddities in the Year(s) 2023-24 to have a new title? How about “Clues of the Cataclysm” to adorn WWYI for the year ahead?

We’ll start today: Can you BELIEVE what they’re doing to the publication we once loved? Sports Illustrated was a treasure of sports writing, sports and investigative journalism, the best of the best in sports photography and a serious record of the weekly activities in the world of sport.

Walter Iooss Jr. to Manny Milan to John Iacona to John McDonough on the photo trail were rarely matched. The SI photographers fought for access and they were usually rewarded with access. Access beyond anyone’s imagination. The late, great Lou Capazolla made sure everything went well from a technical standpoint. Freelance greats, like the NBA’s Andrew D. Bernstein or Nat Butler often earned cover shots and inside double-truck spreads.

Articles in “SI” were well reported, well written and well edited and fact checked. If I stayed-up late on 100 Sunday nights fact checking with Hank Hersch, I stayed-up another 1,000 nights (and some Monday mornings) with Franz Litz.

Not only were the stories well reported, the writers always seemed to come up with that gem. Every article had a great note or quote that you’d never heard before and it provided insight to the subject being interviewed. SI never failed.

Until now.

From this week’s New York Times: Sports Illustrated has struggled to “adapt to the digital age,” and Monday’s revelation of alleged Artificial Intelligence (generated) articles were “just the latest sign of drift at Sports Illustrated, exacerbated by a relentless pursuit of engagement with the site’s non-journalistic entities,” according to Nerkar & Draper of the Times. SI’s stewardship by Authentic Brands and the Arena Group has been “particularly rocky,” they wrote. Arena’s options for generating revenue are “somewhat limited, encouraging a daily churn of articles.” Employees have “complained publicly” that Arena has been “dismissive of concerns about article quality and a lack of editors — made worse in February when 17 members of the staff were laid off — all while enforcing weekly quotas from writers.” Authentic Brands bought SI’s intellectual property in 2019 and sold a 10-year license to “publish Sports Illustrated to TheMaven, (sic)” which has since been rebranded as the Arena Group. Since 2019, there have been “repeated rounds of layoffs” at SI and “reductions in the circulation” of the print magazine. Hundreds of sites dedicated to individual teams — helmed by non-staff writers (who are) “paid small sums — were created with little oversight and diluted what it meant for ‘Sports Illustrated’ to write something.” … SI’s problems “began before Authentic Brands and Arena,” wrote the NYT. Under its original owner, Time Inc., there “were layoffs — including the last remaining staff photographers at a publication celebrated for its sports photography” — and it went from “being a weekly print magazine to a monthly”

After an initial $1.00 come-on for the first month, a new subscription to Sports Illustrated will run $95.88 for 12 issues with both digital and print access for readers, or digital only at $5.99 a month or $59.99 a year, billed annually. Print only runs $20 for a year (12 issues) or $30 for two years (24 issues).

The result in a damn shame. A once beloved and iconic product/brand in the sports world has been reduced to alleged horse fodder.

It hurts. Yes, it hurts for anyone who thought Sports Illustrated’s best use of AI meant there was a great story upcoming on Allen Iverson.


The BIG EAST and OTHER ASSORTED COLLEGE ITEMS: St. John’s center Joel Soriano, the lone holdover from last year’s team, scored a career-high 24 points to lead the Johnnies to a 79-73 victory over West Virginia on Friday night in the Big East-Big 12 Battle. St. J newcomer Chris Ledlum added a season-high 17 points and Nahiem Alleyne had 12 of his 14 points in the second half for St. John’s (5-2), which has won three straight. … St J’s RJ Luis Jr., a talented swingman who returned in last Saturday’s rout of Holy Cross, is back on the IL. The UMass transfer is suffereng from shin splints and will be out a month, said coach Rick Pitino after the Johnnies’ win over West Virginia.

On Tuesday, Providence used a 13-1 run late in the first half in an 86-52 handling of Wagner. Guard Ticket Gaines scored a team-high 21 points, all on 3-point field goals. Bryce Hopkins added 20 points and six rebounds. The Friars (6-1) held the Seahawks to 27.7 shooting from the field. … ESPN has six BIG EAST teams penciled-in to its early 68-team bracket predictor, namely: UConn, Marquette, Villanova, Creighton, Xavier and Providence. … Xavier has fallen to (4-4) overall while Creighton and Providence have surged to (6-1) on the early season.

Conference leader and defending NCAA champion Connecticut lost to Kansas, 69-64, in its BIG EAST vs BIG 12 showdown on Dec. 1.

HOLIDAY SPIRIT: In the spirit of the holidays – (Psst, Christmas is 22 days away) – you might need a unique gift for your favorite sports (or GOLF) fan. There are two options. First a subscription to this weekly publication. – “While We’re Young (Ideas)” which brings a full column of notes, some great quotes, newsworthy stories or opinions about an issue in the news – usually sports industry news. Secondly, the popular e-Newsletter PGA Tour Brunch will be publishing again – usually six days a week – when the Tour cranks it up at The Sentry in Maui – January 4-7, 2024. Sign-up for one, both or get in touch if you have something else in mind (a business deal for the sports news or golf industry – hint, hint). For insight and an easy navigation tool to follow the Tour —> Click HERE.

NFL POWER RANKINGS: As of the completion of Thanksgiving Weekend competition, there are very few elite teams in the National Football League. While there might be a chance for some team from the middle to become a Cinderella Story, that chance is slim. Here are the best teams:

1. Philadelphia Eagles

2. San Francisco 49ers

3. Baltimore Ravens

4. Kansas City Chiefs

5. Miami Dolphins

6. Dallas Cowboys

NFL PARITY or MEDIOCRITY: The vast majority of the NFL squads this season are in the valley of unmistaken, god-awful mediocrity. It’s as though NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell snuck into Lester Bangs’ mind (played by the late Philip Seymour Hoffman in the fabulous motion picture, Almost Famous), crept into the hellish cages of every football coach every made and stole both the concept and quote of: “You’ll meet them all again on the long journey to the middle.” Yes, the middle of the NFL – too high for. atop draft selection and too low for serious playoff contention. Here are my inglorious middles of each NFL Conference:

AFC: Jacksonville Jaguars, Buffalo Bills, Pittsburgh Steelers, Denver Broncos, Indianapolis Colts, Cleveland Browns, Houston Texans, Las Vegas Raiders, Cincinnati Bengals, Los Angeles Chargers, Tennessee Titans.

NFC: Detroit Lions, Minnesota Vikings, Seattle Seahawks, Atlanta Falcons, Green Bay Packers, New Orleans Saints, Los Angeles Rams,


NFL BEYOND HOPE in 2023: These clubs are horrible and will compete for the top one, two or three picks in the 2024 NFL Draft, but the teams are so deplorable not even the No. 1 pick will help much. They are not divided by conference but listed by inverse order of ineptitude:

8. New York Giants

7. Tampa Bay Bucs

6. Washington Commanders

5. New York Jets

4. Chicago Bears

3. Arizona Cardinals

2. New England Patriots

1. Carolina Panthers


EARLY NBA LOOK: NBA teams are approaching the 20-game mark and, by now, the preseason prognostications have been thrown out with the trash. It is time for the NBA Look with More Perspective.

In the East, there are three teams with a very good chance of making it to the 2024 NBA Finals and they are:

1. Boston Celtics

2. Milwaukee Bucks

3. Philadelphia 76ers

In the West, there’s only one team – the Denver Nuggets – and – setting aside serious injuries – they are a lock.

1. Denver Nuggets

Everyone else is playing for a losing bid in the Western Conference Finals.

IN-SEASON TOURNEY: As written once before, there might be a competitive advantage to teams eliminated from the Knock-Out round of the first NBA In-Season Tournament. The teams advancing theoretically play the better teams, while the teams eliminated will play their make-up games against other eliminated clubs.

As noted up top, as fans face a deep and dark December, there is hope on the horizon as we prepare for Pitchers & Catchers reporting day on February 14, 2024 and the first Grapefruit and Cactus League games on February 24, 2024. (2/24). Other important dates for the upcoming ‘24 MLB season are:

March 20-21 – MLB Seoul Series ((Dodgers vs Padres)

March 28 – Opening Day

April 15 – Jackie Robison Day

April 27-28 – MLB Mexico City Series (Astros vs. Rockies)

June 8-9 – MLB London Series (Mets vs Phillies)

June 20 – MLB at Rickwood Field (Birmingham) – (Cardinals vs. Giants)

July 12-16 – MLB All-Star Game Festivities – (Arlington, Texas)

September 15 – Roberto Clemente Day (MLB-wide)


Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: TL's Sunday Sports Notes

NFL: Week 13 Previews

December 3, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

NFL – Week 13 Previews

Indianapolis Colts (6-5) at Tennessee Titans (4-7)
The Colts presently occupy the seventh and final playoff spot in the AFC. That’s a big credit to the running game, including Zack Moss, who’ll start with Jonathan Taylor (thumb) on the shelf again. Moss has rushed for a team-high 672 yards and five touchdowns on 141 carries — all career highs. His best game came in a 23-16 win against Tennessee on Oct. 8, gashing the Titans for 165 yards and two scores on 23 attempts. The Titans are mathematically alive for a wild-card spot but probably need to win out. The Titans were able to snap a three-game skid last week, edging Carolina 17-10 as Derrick Henry ran for two touchdowns. He’s averaging 107.8 rushing yards in home games this season.

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Los Angeles Chargers (4-7) at New England Patriots (2-9)
The Patriots have won the past six meetings with the Chargers, but that might be the only streak New England wants to discuss these days. Mac Jones is being benched in favor of Bailey Zappe (2-0 career as a starter), with the Patriots seeking a spark offensively. New England is putting up 13.5 points per game and has a turnover margin of minus-8. The Chargers’ situation isn’t nearly as dire, but Los Angeles is starting to see its playoff hopes fade. Since back-to-back wins over the Bears and Jets, the Chargers have dropped three straight games, including last Sunday’s 20-10 setback against the Baltimore Ravens.

Detroit Lions (8-3) at New Orleans Saints (5-6)
Quarterback Jared Goff spent part of Wednesday running through ball security drills, and he wasn’t alone. The Lions lost three fumbles with one takeaway in a 29-22 home loss to the Packers on Thanksgiving Day, four days after struggling to a 31-26 victory over Chicago, when Goff was picked off three times. The Saints are tied for fourth in the NFL with 20 takeaways. But New Orleans is trying to move past a 24-15 loss at Atlanta last week and has its own issues in the red zone. The Saints were stifled by the Falcons last week, reaching the red zone five times without scoring a touchdown. While the Saints netted five field goals, two of the possessions inside the 20 ended in turnovers, including a game-changing pick-6 thrown by Derek Carr.

Atlanta Falcons (5-6) at New York Jets (4-7)
All the Jets want for Christmas is their No. 1 QB, but Aaron Rodgers might be weeks — or months — away from taking his next snap. It’s up to Tim Boyle to move the Jets toward the playoffs to keep Rodgers’ return this season in play. Boyle hit RB Breece Hall for a career-high seven catches last week. Atlanta’s record may not look much better than that of the Jets, but the Falcons are leading the NFC South after beating the New Orleans Saints 24-15 last Sunday. Atlanta is 3-0 against division competition and 2-6 against all other teams. Desmond Ridder took back starting quarterback duties last week after a two-week benching and completed 13 of 21 passes for 168 yards, a touchdown and two picks — including one near the Saints’ goal line.

Arizona Cardinals (2-10) at Pittsburgh Steelers (7-4)
Arizona arrives in full rebuilding mode, armed with the second-worst record in the NFL, and brings James Conner for a reunion with his old team after he missed more than a month with injuries. He has rushed for 526 yards on 104 attempts in eight games. The Cardinals were ripped by their own coach for their effort following last week’s 37-14 home loss to the Los Angeles Rams. They’ll need extra effort to contain Steelers pass rusher T.J. Watt, who is tied for the league lead in sacks with 13.5. The Steelers are leaning heavily on Watt and their defense to contend for a wild-card spot in the AFC and are currently second in the North division, 1 1/2 games behind the Baltimore Ravens.

Miami Dolphins (8-3) at Washington Commanders (4-8)
What in the world is Ron Rivera planning to do with the Miami Dolphins’ offensive machine after being blasted for an average of 38 points in the past two games? Dallas whipped Washington 45-10 last week, resulting in Rivera firing defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio. The Dolphins average 30.8 points per game and the Commanders only hope might be matching Miami’s scoring output. Washington can move the ball. Sam Howell leads the NFL in completions (323) and passing yards (3,339) through the first 12 weeks of the season. The issue for the Commanders has been protecting Howell in the pocket. He’s on pace to shatter the NFL single-season record for times sacked.

Denver Broncos (6-5) at Houston Texans (6-5)
Don’t look now, but the Broncos are tied for the NFL’s longest winning streak at five games as they go head-to-head with potential wild-card competition in Houston. QB Russell Wilson’s next TD pass would push him past Dan Marino for second-most in his first 12 seasons (Marino had 328). The Texans are thrilled with the development of their own franchise quarterback, C.J. Stroud. He’s second in the NFL in passing yards and is the only rookie with four consecutive 300-yard games.

Carolina Panthers (1-10) at Tampa Bay Buccaneers (4-7)
For the second December in a row, the Buccaneers play the Panthers with an interim head coach at the helm in Carolina. Chris Tabor jumped into the head-coaching role Monday when Frank Reich was fired. The Buccaneers aren’t exactly in a groove, but they’re still squarely in the hunt for the division title behind a reclamation project well known to the Panthers, Baker Mayfield. The Buccaneers get two swings at the Panthers in the next five weeks, the second one being the Jan. 7 finale. Mayfield began last season with Carolina and lasted seven games, with the team posting a 1-6 record, before he was released.

Cleveland Browns (7-4) at Los Angeles Rams (5-6)
If you had Joe Flacco starting for the Browns on your bingo card, we need visual evidence. That’s the potential reality for Cleveland with Dorian Thompson-Robinson (concussion) iffy, setting up a matchup of 38-year-old Flacco and 35-year-old Matthew Stafford in L.A. The Browns (7-4) hold the No. 6 seed in the AFC, one game clear of the seventh-seeded Indianapolis Colts. In last Sunday’s 37-14 win against the Arizona Cardinals, Stafford passed for 229 yards and a season-best four touchdowns — two each to Kyren Williams and tight end Tyler Higbee. Williams has been the team’s top playmaker as a rookie despite missing four games with an ankle injury.

San Francisco 49ers (8-3) at Philadelphia Eagles (10-1)
The Eagles can clinch a playoff berth this weekend, a significant statement considering they are the sole team in position to secure a postseason spot with five weeks remaining in the regular season. In a return to the scene of last season’s NFC Championship Game, the 49ers are back to purring with Brock Purdy at quarterback, logging three consecutive wins to erase a three-game losing streak. Their last visit was marred by an elbow injury to Purdy as the Eagles cruised to the 31-7 win that elevated them into the Super Bowl. Come Sunday, Purdy is healthy and teammate Christian McCaffrey is flourishing, while Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts is once again enjoying a solid season. Philadelphia owns the best record in the NFL after posting four straight comeback wins and recording five consecutive overall wins. San Francisco leads the NFC West after winning its past three games. Purdy was injured eight minutes into the playoff loss last season. He leads the NFL with a 70.2 completion percentage and benefits from McCaffrey, who leads the NFL in rushing yards and touchdowns (16).

Kansas City Chiefs (8-3) at Green Bay Packers (5-6)
Kansas City has put plenty of pressure on opposing teams this season. The Chiefs, who lead the AFC West by two games over the Broncos, won Jordan Love’s debut NFL start in November 2021, 13-7. Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes passed for 298 yards and two touchdowns in the win. Running back Isiah Pacheco scored twice on the ground, and Rashee Rice and Justin Watson notched one touchdown reception apiece. TE Travis Kelce has at least six catches in eight of his past nine games. The trip to northern Wisconsin will carry special meaning for Kansas City coach Andy Reid. He started his NFL coaching career in Green Bay, where he worked from 1992-98 as a tight ends coach, an assistant offensive line coach and eventually a quarterbacks coach. Brett Favre and the Packers won the Super Bowl during the 1996 season with Reid on the staff.

 

Filed Under: Boston Sports, NFL, Patriots Tagged With: NFL, NFL Previews

NCAA Football: Let’s Go Bowling

December 3, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

ATLANTA – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – Alabama QB  Jalen Milroe passed for two touchdowns and No. 8 Alabama rolled to a crucial upset by dispatching top-ranked Georgia 27-24 in the Southeastern Conference title game on Saturday in Georgia.

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Jermaine Burton and Jamarion Miller caught touchdown passes and Roydell Williams scored on a run as the Crimson Tide (12-1) won their 11th consecutive game. The victory snapped Georgia’s SEC record 29-game winning streak and greatly bolsters Alabama’s hopes of crashing the four-team College Football Playoff field.

Kendall Milton rushed for two touchdowns and Carson Beck added one for Georgia (12-1). Beck completed 21 of 29 passes for 243 yards. Bulldogs star Brock Bowers played despite an ankle injury but was largely ineffective, with five receptions for 53 yards.

Milroe was 13-of-23 passing for 192 yards for the Crimson Tide and was named MVP of the game. The two-time defending national champion Bulldogs lost to Alabama for the eighth time in the past nine meetings.

No. 7 Texas 49, No. 18 Oklahoma State 21

Quinn Ewers passed for a record 452 yards and four touchdowns, and the Longhorns’ defense did the rest in a shellacking of the Cowboys in the Big 12 championship game in Arlington, Texas.

Texas (12-1) captured its first Big 12 title since 2009. Ewers completed his first 12 passes of the game to eight different receivers and finished 35-for-46 while throwing for the most yards ever in a Big 12 championship game.

The Longhorns’ defense did not allow Oklahoma State (9-4) to broach the 200-yard barrier until the 10-minute mark of the fourth quarter. Cowboys quarterback Alan Bowman threw for 250 yards and three touchdowns, but star running back Ollie Gordon, the Big 12’s offensive player of the year, managed only 34 yards on 13 carries.

SMU 26, No. 22 Tulane 14

Kevin Jennings threw a touchdown pass in his first college start, the Mustangs’ defense dominated and SMU defeated the Green Wave in the American Athletic Conference championship game in New Orleans.

Jennings, a redshirt freshman who had thrown just 24 passes this season, stepped in for injured Preston Stone and overcame three turnovers by passing for 203 yards and rushing for 63. The Mustangs (11-2) won the conference title in their last season before departing for the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Michael Pratt passed for 238 yards, but Makhi Hughes, the AAC’s leading rusher who rushed for at least 100 yards in seven of his past eight games entering Saturday, managed just 44 yards on 11 carries for the Green Wave (11-2), who had won 10 straight games.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NCAA, NCAA Football Tagged With: Alabama, Georgia, NCAAF

Florida State Makes a Statement

December 3, 2023 by Digital Sports Desk

CHARLOTTE – (Staff and Wire Service Report) – No. 4-ranked Florida State relied on a smothering defense and a two-headed ground attack to defeat No. 14 Louisville 16-6 in the ACC championship game Saturday night in North Carolina.

Embed from Getty Images

Now the Seminoles (13-0) will await their postseason fate as the College Football Playoff committee weighs where to rank them without their injured star quarterback, Jordan Travis.

With No. 2 quarterback Tate Rodemaker held out Saturday due to a concussion, true freshman Brock Glenn made his first start and completed 8 of 21 passes for 55 yards.

Lawrance Toafili took 10 carries for 118 yards and the game’s only touchdown and Trey Benson added 67 rushing yards for Florida State.

Meanwhile, Louisville (10-3) was held to 188 total yards, with Jack Plummer going 14-for-36 for 111 yards and an interception. Braden Fiske had three of Florida State’s seven sacks, including one on fourth down with 2:35 to play. Jared Verse recorded two sacks.

The teams combined to start 0-for-9 on third downs as defense dominated the first quarter. A premature snap spoiled the Seminoles’ fifth third-down attempt, but Ryan Fitzgerald got them on the board with a 45-yard field goal with 10:32 before halftime.

Later, a 24-yard Louisville punt set Florida State up at the Cardinals’ 38-yard line for a 2-minute drill. But after Glenn lost 9 yards on a sack, Fitzgerald’s second 45-yard field-goal attempt of the night missed wide left, and it was just 3-0 at halftime.

The Cardinals went 56 yards in 13 plays on their first drive of the second half, ending in Brock Travelstead’s 36-yard field goal to tie the game. Jamari Thrash had two 11-yard receptions to power the drive.

But the Seminoles immediately responded when Toafili took a direct snap, hung back momentarily, then ran 73 yards down the right sideline to the Louisville 2. Toafili powered into the end zone on the next play at the 6:20 mark of the third quarter.

After Travelstead’s 33-yard field goal cut it to 10-6 with 13:36 left in regulation, Louisville forced a three-and-out. The Cardinals broke through the Seminoles’ punt protection and Jimmy Calloway tackled punter Alex Mastromanno at the 12-yard line.

But on third down, Plummer forced a throw in the middle of the end zone and Tatum Bethune intercepted it to quash Louisville’s golden opportunity.

Louisville’s final three drives netted a loss of 15 yards. Fitzgerald converted from 33 yards and 40 yards during the final 3:13 for the Seminoles’ final margin.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NCAA, NCAA Football Tagged With: ACC Championship, Florida State, Louisville

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Sunday Sports Notebook

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TL's Sunday Notes | March 30

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While We're Young (Ideas) and March Go Out Like a Lyons
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Gotta Give Pitino the credit. Constant and Full-Court Press made the difference and his players were in condition to wear down UConn. digitalsportsdesk.com/st-johns-defeats-mighty-uconn/ ... See MoreSee Less

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Groundhog Day!

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Plenty O' Notes and a Look at Boston Pro sports for 2025 - ... See MoreSee Less

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TL's Sunday Sports Notes | Jan 12 - Digital Sports Desk

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In each round-up, there are far too many questions and not nearly enough definitive answers to the woes facing the New England clubs, the Celtics included. It might be time for some major shake-ups at...
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4 months ago
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The first Sunday Sports Notes of 2025 | Including Some Predictions

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TL's Sunday Sports Notes | Jan 5 - Digital Sports Desk

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KEY DATES IN 2025: Everyone needs to circle these dates on their sports calendar: KEY DATES IN 2025: Everyone needs to circle these dates on their sports calendar:
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