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One Game, Every Season

CBS Sports Graphic Illustration Whether it’s the “Kick Six,” the “Bush Push” or “Mormons vs. Mullets,” the first 25 years of the 21st century have delivered a buffet of incredible college football games. Every season is a little different. Every game is an opportunity to experience something new — a combination of runs, passes and […]

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One Game, Every Season

CBS Sports Graphic Illustration

Whether it’s the “Kick Six,” the “Bush Push” or “Mormons vs. Mullets,” the first 25 years of the 21st century have delivered a buffet of incredible college football games.

Every season is a little different. Every game is an opportunity to experience something new — a combination of runs, passes and tackles that lead to wonder, astonishment and disbelief.

As college football prepares to enter a new quarter-century, we have an opportunity to look all the way back to 2000 to remember some of the great games that have defined this century so far.

To do so, CBS Sports went back in time and selected the best regular-season game, including conference championships, of every college football season from 2000-24.

Obviously, best is incredibly subjective. A Pac-12 After Dark banger might be someone’s favorite from a given season while others may prefer an old school Big Ten West rock fight. But generally, the games selected feature a combination of incredible finishes and memorable moments in games that usually had an outsized role in determining the course of the national championship picture.

One caveat before looking back at the last 25 seasons: College Football Playoff, bowl and national championship games were not considered for this piece. This is about the regular season games that shaped each season, not the fireworks seen at its conclusion.

Date: Oct. 12, 2024 | Ties or Lead Changes: 8

There were more exciting finishes (Colorado’s Hail Mary against Baylor or Alabama’s comeback against Georgia) and more exciting upsets (Vanderbilt over Alabama!) during the 2024 season. But the best football game happened in Eugene between arguably the season’s two best teams.

It was a massive matchup that lived up to the hype, including five second-half lead changes. There was plenty of drama late, too. Oregon kicked a go-ahead field goal with 1:47 remaining to take a 32-31 lead. The Buckeyes quickly advanced the ball to the Oregon 28, but a penalty, poor clock management and a rule loophole exposed by Ducks head coach Dan Lanning led to time running out on Ohio State before it could get its field goal unit on the field.

It was chaotic finish and an ultimately critical loss for the Buckeyes’ national title path. Afterward, the Buckeyes made major changes to their defense in response to what Oregon exposed. Ohio State did not allow more than 23 points in a game the rest of the way.  

(Btw, a quick hat tip here: ESPN’s Bill Connelly does an almost annual list of the best games of the season that was a great resource for this piece. Though, he had this game at 13!)

College football transfer portal 2025: Top position of need for each top-10 team during spring window

Chris Hummer

College football transfer portal 2025: Top position of need for each top-10 team during spring window

2023: No. 8 Alabama 27, Auburn 24

Date: Nov. 25, 2023 | Ties or Lead Changes: 7

Behind every great game is a great nickname or play. This dramatic finish featured “Gravedigger,” Alabama’s fourth-and-goal call from the 31-yard-line down 24-20 with 32 seconds remaining.

It looked like Alabama’s playoff hopes would come to a premature and surprising end against a 6-5 Auburn team fresh off an embarrassing loss to New Mexico State the week prior. Then Jalen Milroe found Isaiah Bond in the left corner of the end zone for one of the most famous touchdowns in Iron Bowl history.  

Alabama would go on to end Georgia’s hopes for a three-peat in the following week’s SEC championship game. Then, in perhaps the most controversial moment in CFP selection history, the committee picked 12-1 Alabama over 13-0 Florida State for the final playoff spot in the four-team field.

The Tide went on to suffer a last-second loss to eventual national champion Michigan in the CFP semifinals. Nick Saban abruptly retired a few days later.

2022: No 6 Tennessee 52, No. 3 Alabama 49

Date: Oct. 15, 2022 | Ties of Lead Changes: 9

Since the two CFP semifinals aren’t eligible for consideration — New Year’s Eve 2022 featured back-to-back incredible games — let’s turn to the Third Saturday in October. Tennessee hadn’t beaten Alabama on that date in 16 years.

This was the Vols’ best shot. Quarterback Hendon Hooker looked like a Heisman Trophy candidate, fronting the most explosive passing attack in college football. The Vols stormed out to a 28-10 second quarter advantage only for Alabama to erase that early in the third quarter. From there the teams would trade the lead five times. Reigning Heisman Trophy winner Bryce Young put Alabama in position for a go-ahead field goal with 15 seconds left, but Will Reichard’s 50-yard attempt sailed outside the uprights. Hooker completed passes of 18 and 27 yards to put Tennessee in position for a game-winning 40-yard field goal as time expired.

Young finished with 455 yards and two touchdowns. But Tennessee wide receiver Jalin Hyatt stole the show with 207 yards and five touchdowns, including scores of 60 and 78 yards in the second half.

The Vols got to smoke victory cigars on the Third Saturday in October for the first time in 16 years. Alabama, for its part, would go on to miss the CFP for only the third time in nine seasons.

2021: No. 6 Oklahoma 55, No. 21 Texas 48

Date: Oct. 9, 2021 | Ties or Lead Changes: 4

The Red River Rivalry has produced some of the wildest games in recent college football history. But the 2021 iteration was crazy even by Red River standards.  

Texas raced out to a 28-7 lead, which led to a critical moment in the lore of Oklahoma, USC and South Carolina history: Sooners coach Lincon Riley benched preseason Heisman Trophy favorite quarterback Spencer Rattler in favor of five-star freshman Caleb Williams.

Williams took the field down 35-17 midway through the second quarter. With 7 minutes remaining in the second half, Williams had helped the Sooners storm back for a 48-41 lead. Texas tied the game with 1:23 remaining thanks to a 31-yard pass from Casey Thompson to Xavier Worthy. But Williams would not be denied. He hit four straight passes to set up one of the wildest moments in the rivalry’s 120-year history — a game-winning 33-yard run by Kennedy Brooks with 10 seconds remaining.

The 103 points the team combined for were the most in Red River Rivalry history.

Date: Dec. 5, 2020 | Ties or Lead Changes: 5

2020 was a weird year, y’all. No game better represents that than “Mormons vs. Mullets,” a battle of Group of Five unbeatens that happened on two days’ notice after Liberty, due to a rash of positive Covid-19 tests, had to cancel its C-USA showdown with Coastal Carolina.

Both BYU (9-0) and Coastal Carolina (9-0) were looking for a strength of schedule boost during a season in which neither program was allowed to play a true non-conference slate, so Coastal Carolina hopped on a plane and agreed to play Zach Wilson on the Cougars.

The game was way better than it had any right to be, a back-and-forth affair that came down to the final second (and yard). Wilson hit Dax Milne for 17 yards as time expired. The only problem was the goal line was 18 yards away.

With apologies to Florida vs. LSU — the “shoe” game in the Swamp that may have cost the Gators a CFP berth — there’s no better and more representative game of the 2020 season than “Mormons vs. Mullets.”

2019: LSU 46, Alabama 42

Date: Nov. 9, 2019 | Ties or Lead Changes: 1

It’s appropriate the top game of the 2019 season featured LSU leading wire to wire.

The 2019 Tigers are the greatest college football team of the 21st century (fight me!). They tore through the regular season and the playoff with a quarterback on an all-time heater (Joe Burrow) and the most talented roster of the modern era.

But the 2019 Tide also have a case for that claim; Alabama’s 2020 team is also on the best team short list. Just check out the receivers who played in the 2019 matchup as an example of the combined talent:

  • Ja’Marr Chase, LSU
  • Justin Jefferson, LSU
  • Terrace Marshall, LSU
  • DeVonta Smith, Alabama
  • Jerry Jeudy, Alabama
  • Henry Ruggs, Alabama
  • Jaylen Waddle, Alabama

Six of those seven were first-round draft picks. The other (Marshall) went in the second round.

Alabama found itself down 33-13 at halftime only to score four straight second-half touchdowns and cut the lead to four. It wasn’t enough. LSU ensured there would be no dramatic conclusion with a pair of clutch fourth quarter touchdown drives with it mattered most.

But damn it was fun. It was also the most consequential game of the 2019 season.

LSU won the battle of unbeatens — its first win over Alabama since 2011 — and would not play a game closer than 17 points the rest of the way. 

2018: No. 22 Texas A&M 74, LSU 72

Date: Nov. 24, 2018 | Ties or Lead Changes: 7 prior to OT | 14 in OT

Jalen Hurts’ redemption in the SEC Championship Game against Georgia would get the nod almost any other year. But Texas A&M’s seven-overtime win over LSU is an all-timer that changed the college football rulebook.  

This game had everything: A record-breaking seven overtimes, a premature Gatorade dump and a reported fight between Jimbo Fisher’s nephew and LSU analyst Steve Kragthorpe, who claimed he was punched in his pacemaker.  

So, yeah … everything.

This game seemed like it would end in regulation, which led to Orgeron’s premature Gatorade bath. But the officials put a second back on the clock. The Aggies took advantage of the second chance with a 19-yard touchdown pass from Kellen Mond to Quartney Davis to tie the game at 31.  

Then came seven overtimes and 84 additional points.

The game went on so long the NCAA changed how overtime works in college football. No longer do programs play an unlimited number of possessions starting from the 25-yard line until a tie is broken. Instead, teams trade 2-point plays following the conclusion of the second overtime period.

2017: No. 15 UCF 49, USF 42 

Date: Nov. 24, 2017 | Ties of Lead Changes: 5

Frankly, you could pick any of UCF’s final three games from the 2017 season. They were all bangers. But the Knights’ regular season finale stands out because of the stakes and the sheer madness of the final minutes.

UCF — just two seasons removed from an 0-12 campaign — needed one more win to finish the regular season at 12-0. The Knights had CFP hopes, too. All that stood in their way was rival South Florida, which entered the week at 9-1 and hoping to earn an AAC title game berth.

The final minutes were crazy. McKenzie Milton gave UCF an eight-point lead with 2:21 remaining. Then South Florida hit an 82-yard bomb and converted a 2-point try to tie the game. That’s when Mike Hughes, with 88 seconds left on the clock, returned the ensuing kickoff 95 yards for the game-winning score.

UCF would go on to finish 13-0 and capped the season off with a 34-27 Peach Bowl win over Auburn. The Knights, the only unbeaten team in the FBS, proclaimed themselves national champions at season end after getting left out of the CFP.

Date: Oct. 2, 2016 | Ties or Lead Changes: 5

With apologies to a very famous rendition of The Game between Michigan and Ohio State — the Buckeyes won in overtime thanks to a controversial 4th-and-1 conversion — the clash between the Tigers and Cardinals was simply too electric to leave off this list.

It helps that it featured two of the best quarterbacks of the CFP era in Lamar Jackson and Deshaun Watson. The duo combined for 601 yards passing and 253 yards rushing. But the game itself lived up to every bit of the hype. Clemson led 28-10 at half only for Louisville to storm back and take a 36-28 lead with 7:52 remaining. That’s when Watson — with help from a 77-yard kickoff return from Artavis Scott — led back-to-back touchdown drives to snatch the lead back. Louisville reached Clemson’s 12-yard line with 1:19 remaining. But the Tigers held firm, stopping Louisville one-yard short of a conversion on fourth-and-12 with 33 seconds remaining.

Jackson would go on to win the Heisman Trophy. Clemson went on to win the national championship. Flip the result of this game and the Tigers, who lost to Pittsburgh later in the regular season, may never have reached the CFP.

2015: No. 7 Michigan State 27, No. 12 Michigan 23

Date: Oct. 18, 2015 | Ties or Lead Changes: 2

There were some fantastic games in 2015: a Trevone Boykin and Patrick Mahomes shootout in Lubbock, Clemson halting a Notre Dame rally in the final moments in a top 12 showdown and Chad Kelly’s heroics in an upset 25 years in the making for Ole Miss in Tuscaloosa.

But let’s talk about the punt. You know the one. A bungled snap, a desperate spinning right-footed flail and a would-be kick that landed in the hands of Jalen Watts-Jackson for the game-winning touchdown.   

The Wolverines led 23-21 with 10 seconds remaining at their own 45-yard line. The Spartans had no timeouts. All Michigan had to do was punt the ball away and they’d win the game. It would have been a statement victory for Jim Harbaugh in Year 1, launching the Wolverines into the CFP mix.

But the snap went painfully — or gloriously(?) depending on your perspective — awry. Michigan State won and went on to reach the CFP after a 12-1 regular season. Flip this result and maybe it’s the Wolverines who reach the playoff instead.

2014: No. 5 Baylor 61, No. 9 TCU 58

Date: Oct. 12, 2014 | Ties or Lead Changes: 5

Baylor began the fourth quarter with a pick-six and fell into a 58-37 hole. Then things got weird in Waco. The Bears scored three touchdowns on drives that spanned less than a minute each. TCU punted twice and failed a fourth-and-3 attempt with 1:11 remaining to give Baylor the ball at its 45-yard line.

It took advantage with a 28-yard field goal to win the game.

Bears QB Bryce Petty threw for 510 yards and six touchdowns. Three Baylor receivers — Antwan Goodley (158 yards, two TDs), Corey Coleman (144 yards, two TDs), KD Cannon (124 yards, one TD) — cleared the 125-yard barrier in a game in which the two teams combined for 119 points and 1,267 yards.

This Bears win created a massive ripple effect. TCU and Baylor finished the regular season 11-1, tying atop the Big 12 standings in a league that did not hold a conference championship game. Ohio State, also 11-1, did have another chance to play. The Buckeyes bludgeoned Wisconsin 59-0 in the Big Ten title game, a statement victory the committee very much noticed. The Buckeyes jumped from fifth to fourth in the CFP Rankings after their win. Meanwhile, the committee dropped idle TCU from third to SIXTH behind both the Buckeyes and Bears, who had entered the week ranked fifth.

Ohio State went on to win the national championship. The Big 12 quickly added a conference championship game. Two major events in college football history that likely don’t occur if TCU just holds onto a three-touchdown lead against Baylor.

2013: No. 4 Auburn 34, No. 1 Alabama 28

Date: Dec. 1, 2013 | Ties or Lead Changes: 7

It’s the Kick Six. That’s really all you need to know. That play is so memorable you can hear it:  

“There goes Davis!”

“Davis is going to run it all the way back!”

“Auburn is going to win the football game! Auburn is going to win the football game!”

That call from Auburn play-by-play announcer Rod Bramblett covered 109 yards of Chris Davis’ improbable, impossible, field goal return (!!!) that swung the 2013 season. Auburn won the Iron Bowl, went to the SEC championship and played Florida State for a national title. The top-ranked Tide? They went home, any chance at a three-peat crumbling as Davis crossed into the end zone.  

It took a very specific set of circumstances for the Kick Six to occur. Alabama running back TJ Yeldon stepped of bounds with one second remaining, which gave Nick Saban the opportunity to try a 57-yard field goal. That decision is baffling in retrospect when you consider he benched starting kicker Cade Foster — after three missed field goals — and instead pivoted to freshman Adam Griffith for the most important kick of the season. Auburn had the wherewithal to place Davis deep, giving him the opportunity to make one of the most famous plays in college football history.

2012: No. 15 Texas A&M 29, No. 1 Alabama 24

Date: Nov. 11, 2012 | Ties or Lead Changes: 1

Other than perhaps Tim Tebow, there is no bigger college football crossover star this century than Johnny Manziel. The Aggies’ party-hard, scramble-out-of-anything QB burst onto the national scene in November of 2012 when he led a wire-to-wire road upset of No. 1 Alabama.

The Tide were the reigning national champs. They’d won 13 straight. Texas A&M was just entering the SEC for the first time. It didn’t matter. Manziel couldn’t be stopped. There’s no one moment from this game that stands out above all. Texas A&M never needed an epic comeback or last-second drive. Instead, it was Manziel’s ability to extend almost every play and get out of any would-be sack. He was practically Houdini that Saturday, only he had a cannon strapped his right arm.

Manziel finished the day 24-for-31 with 253 yards passing and two touchdowns to go along with 92 yards rushing.

It’s a win that spurred Manziel to the Heisman and created a legend.

Date: Nov. 18, 2011 | Ties or lead changes: 3

Oklahoma State entered the week at 10-0 and controlled its destiny to make the BCS National Championship game. Led by eventual first-round quarterback Brandon Weeden the Cowboys were averaging more than 50 points per game.

But the game felt secondary because Oklahoma State’s women’s basketball coach Kurt Budke and assistant Miranda died in a tragic plane crash the day prior to kickoff. A few years later Oklahoma State head coach Mike Gundy said of the matchup: “Honestly, the last thing that anybody wants to do, really, is play a game.”

The Cowboys raced out to a 24-7 lead early in the third quarter but could not keep the momentum. Oklahoma State had an opportunity to win the game late, but Quinn Sharp missed a 37-yard field goal, pushing the game into overtime. Both teams scored quickly to push the game to a second overtime, but Weeden threw an interception on the first pass of the second extra period. The Cyclones won three plays later.

Oklahoma State rebounded the next week with a 34-point win over No. 14 Oklahoma, but the BCS formula chose Alabama-LSU rematch in controversial fashion; several coaches, including Saban, voted Oklahoma State 4th in the final coaches’ poll, which was part of the BCS formula.

The national title game — won by the Tide — was so contentious it helped spark the CFP system we know today with discussions about a playoff formula beginning shortly afterward.

2010: No. 2 Auburn 28, No. 11 Alabama 27

Date: Nov. 26, 2010 | Ties or Lead Changes: 2 

Nothing stopped Cam Newton during the 2010 season, including a 24-point first half deficit against reigning national champion Alabama. 

The Tigers fell behind 24-0 midway through the second quarter. From that point on Newton completed 11 of 14 passes for 198 yards and two touchdowns. He also ran for 54 sack-adjusted yards and a touchdown. 

It was hardly the most dominant performance of Newton’s Heisman season. But given the swaths of NFL players on the other sideline and the stakes — Auburn likely doesn’t make the national championship game with a loss — the comeback Newton led against the Tide is one of the most consequential in college football history. 

Shoutout to the No. 19 Nevada vs. No. 4 Boise State showdown that same day, however. Led by Kellen Moore, the Broncos saw their 24-game win streak snapped by Colin Kaepernick and the Wolf Pack in a 34-31 overtime loss. Boise State kicker Kyle Brotzman missed a 26-yard field goal at the buzzer in regulation.

2009: No. 3 Texas 13, No. 22 Nebraska 12 

Date: Dec. 5, 2009 | Ties or Lead Changes: 4

You’ll remember this as the day single-handedly Ndamukong Suh wrecked Texas’ offense and nearly cost the Longhorns a spot in the BCS title game.

Texas came into the week averaging 43 points per game. Suh ensured the Longhorns got nowhere close to that total. He logged 4.5 sacks and helped limit Texas to 18 rushing yards on 38 attempts.

The game came down to the final second. Literally. McCoy, chased by Suh (of course), threw a pass out of bounds as the clock expired, leading to a massive Huskers celebration. But the officials put one second back on the clock after a review.

Texas kicker Hunter Lawrence then hit a 46-yarder to secure a a Big 12 championship and national title bid. 

2008: No. 7 Texas Tech 39, No. 1 Texas 33

Date: Nov. 1, 2008 | Ties or Lead Changes: 3

With apologies to Tim Tebow’s post-Ole Miss promise, this is THE Michael Crabtree catch — one of the most famous moments in college football history. There was plenty at stake, too, with both teams entering the week at 8-0 with national title aspirations.

Scoring opened with a safety as Texas Tech stuffed Texas on its goal line. Led by quarterback Graham Harrell, the Red Raiders raced out to 22-3 lead. Texas would storm back, scoring a go-ahead touchdown with 89 seconds left.

Texas Tech made it to Texas’ 28-yard line with 21 seconds remaining. Then Harrell’s pass bounced off receiver Edward Britton and into the hands of Texas freshman safety Blake Gideon. 

“Deflected. Interception, Texas!” said ABC announcer Brent Musburger. 

But … 

Gideon dropped it, leaving eight seconds left on the clock.

Harrell threw deep, finding Crabtree along the right sideline at around the 5-yard line. Crabtree turned, spun out of a would-be tackle and walked in for the biggest touchdown in Red Raiders history.

One play that completely changed the 2008 national championship race. Texas had the pole position but was jumped by Oklahoma in the BCS standings — despite the Longhorns’ 45-35 head-to-head win earlier in the year — for the right to play Florida in the national title game. Florida beat the Sooners 24-14, giving Tebow a second national championship and ensuring his status as a college football legend.

Date: Sept. 1, 2007 | Ties or Lead Changes: 7

It’s the most famous upset in college football history.

Well, I guess it’s an upset? Can an upset really be the case if Vegas didn’t even bother to set a betting line? We’ll still go with it. The Wolverines, fresh off an 11-2 season, were a preseason top-five team. The Mountaineers weren’t even a member of the FBS at the time.  

But something often lost in the lore of this game is App State’s resume. The Mountaineers were the top-ranked FCS team in the country entering the 2007 season and coming off back-to-back national championships under head coach Jerry Moore.

There were two lead changes in the final minutes of this classic. The Wolverines were down 11 late in the third quarter but retook the lead with 4:31 remaining. From there, the Mountaineers threw an interception, Michigan missed a 43-yard field goal, App State went 69 yards in 1:11 to kick a go-ahead field goal and the Mountaineers capped it off by blocking a 37-yard field goal attempt as time expired to secure the upset.

App State went on to win its third-straight FCS national championship.

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2006: No. 1 Ohio State 42, No. 2 Michigan 39

Date: Nov. 18, 2006 | Ties or Lead Changes: 3

The first regular-season “Game of the Century” of the 21st century — the phrase is always amusing given how often these games occur — this matchup pitted the two top-ranked teams in the country in a regular season finale that would determine at least one spot in the BCS national title game.

The Game also took on additional meaning as it was played a day after legendary Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler died.

Troy Smith’s monster performance essentially ended all Heisman Trophy debate. He finished with 316 yards and four touchdowns through the air and led the Buckeyes on a critical 83-yard fourth quarter touchdown drive that put them up 42-31 with 5:27 remaining. Michigan responded with a touchdown, but Ohio State iced the game three plays later with a game-winning third-down conversion.

This game was so big that ABC moved it off its traditional noon starting time to 3:30 p.m. ET. Nearly 22 million tuned in to watch, making it the most-viewed regular season college football game in 16 years.

Michigan argued, even with a loss, it should make the BCS national title game. Instead, the Buckeyes went on to play Florida, losing in a 41-14 rout.

2005: No. 1 USC 34, No. 9 Notre Dame 31

Date: Oct. 15, 2005 | Ties or Lead Changes: 10

This is where I remind you that postseason games aren’t eligible, thus the 2005 national championship classic between USC and Texas cannot be selected.

So, we turn to the “Bush Push.”

The play would look very normal by today’s “Brotherly Shove” standards. But back then it was an illegal maneuver when Reggie Bush pushed Matt Leinart into the end zone for a game-winning touchdown as time expired. The penalty wasn’t called, leading to one of the most controversial plays in college football history and USC’s 28th consecutive win.

This game had plenty going for it outside of the ending. Leinart and Brady Quinn were two of the top quarterbacks in the country and the fourth quarter included four lead changes.

Notre Dame finished the regular season at 10-2 while USC went 12-0 and reached the national title game. Flip the result and the Irish, who finished No. 6 in the final BCS poll, likely play Texas for the national title instead of USC.

2004: No. 2 Oklahoma 42, No. 22 Texas A&M 35

Date: Nov. 6, 2004 | Ties or Lead Changes: 5

Week 11 was the most dramatic of the 2004 season. Vince Young helped No. 6 Texas storm back from 28 down to beat No. 19 Oklahoma State, No. 4 Cal needed a fourth-quarter comeback to beat Oregon and even top-ranked USC needed a comeback, erasing a 13-point Oregon State lead for a 28-20 win.

But arguably the best game of the day (and season) happened at Kyle Field where the No. 2 Sooners twice faced a 14-point deficit. Reigning Heisman Trophy winner Jason White tied a Sooners school record with five passing touchdowns while freshman superstar running back Adrian Peterson cleared the 100-yard barrier for the ninth straight game. Aggies fans wonder “what if” in this one given that A&M starting QB Reggie McNeal was forced out of the game with an injury midway through the third quarter. The Aggies would put together a 50-yard drive to tie the game late in the fourth quarter, but it stalled at OU’s 38-yard line.

There were other entertaining games from the 2004 season that could have fit. But given the controversy that came with Oklahoma’s selection to the BCS national title game over fellow unbeaten Auburn, this game gets the nod due to its overall importance.

This is the year the BCS really began to bust. Not only did Auburn get left out at 12-0, but so did Utah and Boise State.

2003: Cal 34, USC 31 in 3OT

Date: Sept. 27, 2003 | Ties or Lead Changes: 9

USC’s 34-game win streak from 2003-05 is one of the most impressive in college football history. But that streak would be considerably longer (46 games!) if not for Cal’s 2003 upset.

For a JUCO QB making his just his second career start, Cal’s Aaron Rodgers had a pretty good day. He completed 17 of 21 passes for 203 yards and two scores in the first half before exiting with a knee injury early in the third quarter. Rodgers led Cal to a 21-7 halftime lead, but his last pass of the game — a tipped INT that turned into a pick-six — made it 21-21 with 7:26 left in the third quarter. There wouldn’t be a ton of scoring from there. Cal hit a 51-yard-field goal early in the fourth quarter. Then the Bears attempted another with five minutes remaining only for it to be blocked. USC would kick a 33-yarder to send it to overtime.

Things got weird from there. USC fumbled on the goal line during its first possession. Cal had a chance to win it with a 29-yarder, which was again blocked. The next overtime saw both teams scored touchdowns. USC opened the third overtime with a missed 39-yard field goal. Then Bears kicker Tyler Fredrickson won it — after two straight misses — with a 38-yarder.

USC’s loss mattered quite a bit to the national championship race.  

At season’s end Oklahoma (which had just lost 35-7 in the Big 12 championship game), LSU and USC each finished with a single loss. While USC finished No. 1 in the AP and Coaches Poll, it ranked behind LSU and Oklahoma in the BCS formula. Thus, the Sooners played the Tigers for a national title.

LSU won. But USC beat Michigan in the Rose Bowl and the AP voters left the Trojans at No. 1 in their poll, which resulted in the only split national championship of the BCS and CFP era.   

2002: No. 16 LSU 33, Kentucky 30

Date: Nov. 9, 2002 | Ties or Lead Changes: 6

We love a premature Gatorade bath around these parts, and Kentucky gave coach Guy Morriss one of the most famous in history. The Wildcats were down 10 points early in the fourth quarter but rallied to hit a go-ahead field goal with 11 seconds remaining.

That’s when Morriss got soaked in celebration.

But LSU had time for two plays. The first was a 17-yard pass from Tigers QB Marcus Randall to receiver Michael Clayton. That gave the Tigers two seconds to go 74 yards. Head coach Nick Saban helped dial up “Dah Right 93 Berlin.” Randall scrambled to his right and heaved the ball some 60 yards. Several Kentucky players had a chance to bat the ball down. Instead, it deflected off a Wildcats defender and found its way into the hands of LSU wide receiver Devery Henderson just shy of the 15-yard line. Henderson broke through an attempted tackle and completed what is now known as the “Bluegrass Miracle.”

2001: Stanford 49, No. 5 Oregon 42  

Date: Oct. 20, 2001 | Ties or Lead Changes: 8

Joey Harrington and Oregon looked like a legit national title threat through six weeks of the regular season. The Ducks raced out to 6-0, including early season wins over Wisconsin and USC.

The Ducks were well on their way to 7-0 entering the fourth quarter. They led 42-28 then, in the words of an AP story from that day, “the Ducks came back to Earth with a spectacular thud.”

And the collapse, which snapped Oregon’s FBS-best 23-game home win streak, was spectacular. Stanford outscored Oregon 21-0 in the fourth quarter thanks to a pair of blocked punts and a Harrington interception, all of which turned into touchdowns.

The QB known as “Captain Comeback” had an opportunity to give Oregon the lead back down 49-42 with 1:05 remaining. But the Ducks’ drive halted at Stanford’s 37-yard line after four straight incompletions.

Oregon finished the season at 10-1. Nebraska, at 11-1, got a national title bid instead.  

2000: No. 7 Miami 27, No. 1 Florida State 24

Date: Oct. 7, 2000 | Ties or Lead Changes: 3

Wide Right III.

That’s how this clash between two late-90s and early-2000s juggernauts will always be remembered. The top-ranked Seminoles were unbeaten and coming off a national title. Miami, also unbeaten, was just hitting its stride ahead of a dominant 2001 national championship run.

Outside of Norman, Oklahoma, these were the two best teams in the country with a combined 26 eventual NFL draft picks in their starting lineups, per The Athletic.

Miami raced out to a 17-0 halftime lead. But Florida State clawed back thanks to the play of eventual 2000 Heisman winner Chris Weinke, who finished the day with a career-high 496 yards passing and three scores. His final touchdown throw came with 1:37 remaining, giving FSU a 24-21 lead. Miami and QB Ken Dorsey responded quickly, going 6-for-7 on the next drive, dropping dimes to eventual NFL stars Santana Moss, Reggie Wayne and Jeremy Shockey, who caught the go-ahead touchdown with 46 seconds remaining.

That left just enough time for another Bobby Bowden field-goal-caused heartbreak. Florida State pushed the ball into position for a potential game-winning 49-yard attempt. But the ball sailed wide right off Matt Munyon’s leg, snapping FSU’s 26-game regular season win streak.

As fans filed out of the Orange Bowl the words “WIDE RIGHT III” flashed across the screen, a reminder of previous kicking-related heartbreaks for Bowden against Miami from the 1991 and 1992 seasons that likely cost the Seminoles a pair of national titles. 

College Sports

Team USA Defeats Germany, 6-3, in Men’s Worlds Preliminary Round Action

Just 1:42 into the contest, Tage Thompson (Orange, Conn./Buffalo Sabres/University of Connecticut) opened the scoring to give the U.S. an early lead, capitalizing with a wrister from the left circle off a feed from Zach Werenski (Grosse Pointe, Mich./Columbus Blue Jackets/University of Michigan) on the power play. Frank Nazar (Mount Clemens, Mich./Chicago Blackhawks/University of Michigan) doubled the advantage at the […]

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Just 1:42 into the contest, Tage Thompson (Orange, Conn./Buffalo Sabres/University of Connecticut) opened the scoring to give the U.S. an early lead, capitalizing with a wrister from the left circle off a feed from Zach Werenski (Grosse Pointe, Mich./Columbus Blue Jackets/University of Michigan) on the power play.

Frank Nazar (Mount Clemens, Mich./Chicago Blackhawks/University of Michigan) doubled the advantage at the 9:44 mark when a feed from Cutter Gauthier (Scottsdale, Ariz./Anaheim Ducks/Boston College) deflected off Nazar’s skate at the top of the crease and into the back of the goal. 

With 5:43 remaining in the opening frame, Thompson carried the puck into the offensive zone, weaved through the German defense and fired a shot on goal that rebounded to the left circle where Drew O’Connor(Chatham, N.J./Vancouver Canucks/Dartmouth College) put it into an empty net to make it 3-0.

At the 8:43 mark of the middle stanza, Germany’s Eric Mik picked up a power play tally with a short-side shot from the left circle to cut the lead to 3-1. 

Jonas Muller brought Germany within one goal with 5:17 to play in the second period, with his wrist shot finding the top corner of the net from the slot.

Just 48 seconds later, Germany’s Wojciech Stachowiak scored on the power play to even the game, redirecting a shot from the point on the back door past netminder Joey Daccord (North Andover, Mass./Seattle Kraken/Arizona State University).  

Garland buried what proved to the game-winning goal on the power play 4:50 into third period with a one-timer from the slot off a feed from Clayton Keller (St. Louis, Mo./Utah Mammoth/Boston University). 

Logan Cooley (Pittsburgh, Pa./Utah Mammoth/University of Minnesota) scored an important insurance marker at 16:31 after Keller intercepted a pass behind the net, fed Garland in the left circle who found a wide-open Cooley on a cross-ice feed. Keller accounted for the 6-3 final with an empty-net goal at 18:07.

Daccord picked up the win in the U.S. goal with 18 saves.

Team USA is back in action tomorrow (May 18) against Kazakhstan. Puck drop is set for 10:20 a.m. ET, live on NHL Network. 

NOTES: The U.S. outshot Germany 44-21 … Team USA was 2-5 on the power play, while Germany was 1-2 … Conor Garland, with a goal and three assists, was named the U.S. Player of the Game.





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Free museums abound in Pa. Find the one for you with this guide.

This story first appeared in PA Local, a weekly newsletter by Spotlight PA taking a fresh, positive look at the incredible people, beautiful places, and delicious food of Pennsylvania. Sign up for free here. Summer is the season for day trips and exploring new places. But when you’re planning excursions, the costs can quickly […]

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This story first appeared in PA Local, a weekly newsletter by Spotlight PA taking a fresh, positive look at the incredible people, beautiful places, and delicious food of Pennsylvania. Sign up for free here.

Summer is the season for day trips and exploring new places. But when you’re planning excursions, the costs can quickly add up.

Good news for your wallet: PA Local is here to help! This guide includes 29 museums and historic sites across Pennsylvania that you can visit at no cost — plus an iconic one that charges just $1.

They range in size — some can be toured in half an hour, while others can fill half a day — but they’re all a bargain. So when you make plans for your next trip around the commonwealth, be sure to add some of these spots to your itinerary.

For a science-themed outing

When you think of Philadelphia museums, its massive art galleries and history collections likely come to mind. But there’s also a solid handful of free science-oriented options to round off a day in the City of Brotherly Love. The Wagner Free Institute of Science houses thousands of fossils and minerals; the Science History Institute offers an hour’s worth of exhibits on 500 years of scientific practices and discoveries; and the Fairmount Water Works Interpretive Center offers a quick look at the region’s watershed.

At Penn State University in State College, there’s multiple science offerings: the Frost Entomological Museum, a small collection focused on Pennsylvania arthropods, and the EMS Museum & Art Gallery, where you can view materials related to earth and mineral science.

In Erie, you can enjoy some time outdoors at Presque Isle State Park before stopping by the Tom Ridge Environmental Center, which boasts interactive exhibits.

And if you find yourself with a free evening in Pittsburgh, the Allegheny Observatory seasonally offers two-hour tours geared toward adults. (Reservations are required, and you have to stay with your guide the whole time.)

To learn about history

Pennsylvania is old, so there’s history to be found in nearly every corner.

In Philadelphia, you can visit the Liberty Bell for free and tour Independence Hall for $1. If you want to see something a little less mainstream, there’s the Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site, a house where the famous author and poet once lived (currently closed for renovations but scheduled to reopen late summer), or the Temple Shoe Museum, a small collection of footwear-related exhibits you can view by appointment only. The Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History is another free option, and you can easily spend a few hours there.

Just outside of Philly, there’s Valley Forge, where Washington’s army stayed for a winter during the American Revolution. It has a museum exhibit at the Visitor Center. War history buffs in the Philly suburbs can also stop by the Bucks County Civil War Museum in Doylestown during its small window of public hours on Saturdays.

Fayette County is home to Fort Necessity National Battlefield, the site of the first fight in the French and Indian War. There’s an interpretive and education center on site focused on both the battle and the National Road, America’s first federally funded highway.

In Berks County, the Conrad Weiser Homestead — once home to an 18th century German immigrant who served as a liaison for the Pennsylvania government in its dealings with Native American tribes including the Iroquois and Lenape — sits on 26 acres and has three tourable buildings.

If you’re a train lover, head to Scranton to check out Steamtown, a historic site and museum that focuses on the early days of American railroads and the people who kept them chugging. Or you can check out Harris Tower in Harrisburg, where a group of enthusiasts maintains a seasonal railroad museum. It’s open Saturdays between the last weekend in May and the end of October.

Another seasonal option is the Appalachian Trail Museum in Cumberland County. This volunteer-run museum tells the story of the popular hiking trail since its beginnings a century ago.

And we can’t forget about Gettysburg. You’ll obviously want to see the Civil War battlefield and its museum and visitor center — but did you know you can also tour the nearby farm of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower?

If you like art

Art lovers who find themselves in the Lehigh Valley are in luck, because the Allentown Art Museum started offering everyday free admission in 2022. Exhibits range from Renaissance and Baroque art to Tiffany glass.

In Pittsburgh, you can see the Frick Art Museum’s permanent collection, with its Chinese porcelain and Flemish tapestries, for free. (If you want to see any special exhibitions, you’ll have to pay.) Thirty miles southeast in Greensburg, the Westmoreland Museum of American Art features paintings, sculptures, and gardens, and it offers free guided tours most Saturdays.

For the modern-day renaissance person, a tour of the state capitol in Harrisburg is a great option. You’ll learn about history and government, and your guide will also show you the building’s breathtaking art while briefing you on the Pennsylvania artists who made it.

And if you happen to be spending some time on or near a college campus, you may very well be able to see some art for no charge. To name a few options, you’ll find the Berman Museum at Ursinus College; the Phillips Museum of Art on Franklin & Marshall’s campus; the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania; the Palmer Museum of Art on Penn State’s main campus; and the University Museum and Kipp Gallery at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. (Note: Some of these museums are only open while their home colleges are in session, meaning they might not be the best summer pick. Make sure you check operating hours and dates when planning your visit.)

You might also be able to see art on display right in your own community during a First Friday event. Although these monthly evening events often aim to give artists the opportunity to sell their work, you can usually just look and appreciate it at no cost. Some places also offer free activities or live music. Communities big and small host First Fridays — for example, Lancaster, Meadville, Pittsburgh, Scranton, Wellsboro, and many more.

Did we miss your favorite free museum in Pennsylvania? If so, let us know what it is and why it’s awesome.

BEFORE YOU GO… If you learned something from this article, pay it forward and contribute to Spotlight PA at spotlightpa.org/donate. Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability journalism that gets results.



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DISTRICT SOCCER

PORT ANGELES — The Sequim boys soccer players and coaches both said they’ve been working hard this season to improve the team’s set pieces. On Thursday night, that work paid off. The Wolves scored two goals on headers off corner kicks, and those two scores held up in a 2-0 win at Wally Sigmar Field […]

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DISTRICT SOCCER

PORT ANGELES — The Sequim boys soccer players and coaches both said they’ve been working hard this season to improve the team’s set pieces.

On Thursday night, that work paid off.

The Wolves scored two goals on headers off corner kicks, and those two scores held up in a 2-0 win at Wally Sigmar Field over Bremerton as Sequim moved on to a winner-to-state match in the District 3 tournament.

Sequim (8-9-0) will next play Fife (14-3-1) at Harry Lang Stadium in Lakewood at 11 a.m. today, with the Port Angeles-Franklin Pierce game immediately following at the same venue. That is also a winner-to-state game. Those games will be broadcast on the NFHS Network.

Coach Dave Breckenridge said his team kept its composure in the face of Bremerton’s physical style of play. One Bremerton player was given a red card out of the game late in the second half.

“We didn’t play their game, and we kept our composure. We didn’t stoop to their level,” Breckenridge said. He said the team has been working hard in
practice on corner kicks and set pieces.

“We’ve been working on that for weeks,” Breckenridge said.

“We’ve struggled all year with it,” said Nico Musso, who had Sequim’s second goal. “All the work we’ve done finally paid off.”

Bremerton (5-14) was the surprise team of the tournament, making it to the third round despite its poor record by beating Clover Park (10-5-2). The Knights also narrowly lost to a good Franklin Pierce team 2-1 and for the most part gave the Wolves all they could handle despite being shorthanded.

Evan Cisneros had a couple of good chances early against the Knights. He had a shot in the 16th minute that actually got through the Bremerton goalkeeper, but the ball stayed out. In the 21st minute, Cisneros had a high shot that forced the keeper to make a leaping save.

That shot helped create a corner kick, however. Sebastian Buhrer took the corner and Cisneros was rewarded when he headed the cross in for the Wolves’ first goal.

Sequim’s second goal in the 49th minute was nearly identical to the first, just at the other end of the field. Josh Alcaraz took the corner kick and this time Musso headed the ball in to give the Wolves an insurance goal. That score held up for the next 30-plus minutes as Bremerton put some pressure on but never got a shot past Sequim keeper Nolan Valenzuela.

It was the second postseason win for the Wolves, who also beat Steilacoom 2-1 in overtime in the district opener on the same field.

“This feels good,” Musso said. “The last two years, we haven’t even come close to making state. We’ve been building our chemistry and we’re getting there. I think we can get it.”

________

Sports Editor Pierre LaBossiere can be contacted at 360-417-3525 or
sports@peninsuladailynews.com.


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Prominent College Football Head Coach Predicts Sky-High NIL Spending in 2025

NIL expenditures have skyrocketed over the past few seasons in college football, with the nation’s top programs all struggling to keep up with one another. As spending has grown, so has the debate surrounding the current state of NIL in sports. Even the President of the United States has gotten involved in the discourse. There […]

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NIL expenditures have skyrocketed over the past few seasons in college football, with the nation’s top programs all struggling to keep up with one another.

As spending has grown, so has the debate surrounding the current state of NIL in sports.

Even the President of the United States has gotten involved in the discourse.

There are various opinions circulating about what needs to be done moving forward. A common theme among them seems to be that while student athletes deserve to get paid, there needs to be some level of structure in the system to preserve the long-term viability of college athletics as a whole.

The upcoming House vs. NCAA settlement ruling could offer some guidelines to the NIL landscape. However, until the settlement is approved, spending will only continue to skyrocket, particularly among the upper echelons of college football.

Recently-extended Illinois Fighting Illini head coach Bret Bielema has a pretty good idea of what the nation’s top teams are shelling out, and he recently touched on the topic in an interview.

According to 247Sports’ Carter Spahn, Bielema made a pretty astonishing prediction.

“You’re going to see teams this year in college football — just because I know the landscape that I’m dealing with — that are probably in the neighborhood of 30-35,” Bielema said. “Maybe even some of them close to $40 million rosters, which is insanity at its best, but it’s also awesome for our kids.”

Bielema has long supported NIL but acknowledges that not every team has the same resources. After all, the Fighting Illini are far from a football powerhouse, so while teams like Ohio State may be able to afford to spend $40 million, Bielema doesn’t have that luxury.

“Last year, we finished fifth in our 18-team conference,” Bielema said. “We had about a $5 million pool that we were working off of, but the four teams ahead of us, I think, were north of $20 million. You can pull that off once in a while, but to pull that off year in and year out is just not in the deck of cards that we’re dealt.”

College football, in many ways, has always been a story of the “haves” and the “have-nots.”

Elite programs have always had an easier time hoarding top talent, but NIL has seemingly grown this disparity far more than ever.

$40 million in NIL may seem absurd now, but without some change in the near future, that figure could end up looking like small potatoes five years down the line.

More NIL News





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Kirby Smart’s NIL comments at Georgia after Jackson Cantwell’s pledge to Miami draws reaction

(Photo: Andrew Ivins, 247Sports) Notes Dawg247’s Kipp Adams, Georgia is preparing for a House settlement that could provide some structure, with the ability to pay athletes directly from a $20.5 million pool on July 1, with about $13.5 million expected to go to football players. “It’s trying times, because not everybody knows kind of what we’re playing by, […]

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(Photo: Andrew Ivins, 247Sports)

Notes Dawg247’s Kipp Adams, Georgia is preparing for a House settlement that could provide some structure, with the ability to pay athletes directly from a $20.5 million pool on July 1, with about $13.5 million expected to go to football players.

“It’s trying times, because not everybody knows kind of what we’re playing by, you know, in terms of the rules and everything,” Smart said. “But it’ll work itself out. It’s one of those challenging times for everybody. Our coaches and assistants are the ones on the road having to deal with it, and the head coaches are out trying to raise money and playing golf tournaments.”



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NFL lineman Dan Skipper says college players need to love misery of football

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — For former Arkansas Razorback turned Detroit Lions offensive lineman Dan Skipper, it’s pretty easy to see how bad chasing NIL dollars has been for athletes when it comes to trying to transition to the NFL. Skipper not only knows what it takes to hold onto a professional football career at the highest […]

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FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — For former Arkansas Razorback turned Detroit Lions offensive lineman Dan Skipper, it’s pretty easy to see how bad chasing NIL dollars has been for athletes when it comes to trying to transition to the NFL.

Skipper not only knows what it takes to hold onto a professional football career at the highest level for multiple years, but also has first-hand knowledge as to how poorly developed many big money NIL players are when they first arrive in the NFL. One of the first things done now is to have players go around and say where they are from and how much they made in NIL at that school.

In an interview with “The Coaches Pod” last week, Skipper said he’s stunned at how much players are making as a large percentage are taking pay cuts to come to the NFL. He’s even more shocked to see these high dollar players get on the field and prove they aren’t worth anywhere near the money they are being paid.

“Kids spouting out, you know, $300,000, $400,000, yada yada yada, $2.2 [million],” Skipper said. “And I think there were three or four kids in the [$400,000] to $600,000 range who weren’t even on [practice] squad at the end of it. Like, that’s insane. Are you making half a million dollars in college and you’re not one of the best, you know, 53 plus 16 times 32, plus [all the players on injured reserves]?”

In some cases they players weren’t only so poorly developed at football that they couldn’t even make the practice squad. There were high dollar players who straight up couldn’t play football at all, which was highly perplexing the NFL players working alongside them.

“We saw it last year,” Skipper said. “You know, kid made $500,000 in college, could not play a lick of football. I don’t know. You can’t develop [bouncing school to school in] football. It’s not basketball. Like football, you get better playing next to people consistently, right? You go from fall camp, play all fall next to someone, spring ball, all summer workout. You know, and feel where these guys are, and you know where each other’s at. You can’t just, fall camp, see you later. Fall camp, see you later. It’s just not how you get better at this game.”

One consistent thing he noted when analyzing last year’s draft was how many successful players stayed at the same school all the way through. Skipper views it almost as harmful to players to line their pockets with so much money at a young age, only to have them fall off a steep cliff when their NFL dreams come immediately crashing down.

“You take your Top 10 quarterbacks every year and say they’re each getting $2 million for a round number,” Skipper said. “All right, so there’s $20 million in those kids. Of those 10, maybe one or two of them are any good in the league. There will be four or five that float around and [practice] squad their way through it, if they’re smart enough, or, you know, have a trait or something of that nature. But you go from $2 million at, you know, 19-20 years old to, oh, now you’re gonna go sell insurance. Like, are we really doing these kids a favor?”

For him, learning to value money while being on his own for the first time was important. Continuing to develop as he chased the NFL contract carrot in college helped him to appreciate small things while avoiding trouble.

“I know if I had any sort of cash in college, it wouldn’t have been good for me,” Skipper said. “We’d make $100 working security [at local bars or Wal-Mart AMP]. We thought we were high on the hog. Go to Goodwill, buy a Lazy Boy, throw to the bed of a truck, cooler of beer and you’re good to go.”

The biggest think Skipper has seen is a change in motivation, which is not a good thing. He is a firm believer that money can’t be the driving force behind wanting to play and grow in football.

“When you’re knee high to a grasshopper, you play because you love to hit someone,” Skipper said. “[Chasing money is] not why you started playing football … I want to hit someone, you know. And then it changed. I want to play on Friday nights. I want to be a varsity player. And then it was, you know, play on Saturdays. Get a couple offers. I want to play in the SEC. Like, all these goals and dreams change, and then, I don’t know, but football is just, if you’re in it for the money at 18 or 19, I don’t know.”

Still, he wants to be clear. Football, especially at the professional level, takes too much of a toll not to want and need quality compensation no matter how much someone loves the game.

“I’m 30, and I still love the game,” Skipper said. “The money’s great. I wouldn’t play for free. Let’s get that clear this year. Let’s get that clear. I’m not playing for free, but at the same point, like you have to love the misery of it. There’s nothing fun about getting in this yard and pushing a prowler on this thing when it’s, you know, 100 degrees with 90% humidity. That is horrible, but I know I need to do it to be ready. There’s nothing fun about squatting 600 pounds once a week all year long. That’s what it takes.”



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