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2025 MAC college football projections, preview

Bill ConnellyMay 28, 2025, 09:30 AM ET Close Bill Connelly is a writer for ESPN. He covers college football, soccer and tennis. He has been at ESPN since 2019. Open Extended Reactions “There’s a lot of people talking about Group of 5, Power 4, the money and the resources and NIL. It’s about the players […]

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2025 MAC college football projections, preview

“There’s a lot of people talking about Group of 5, Power 4, the money and the resources and NIL. It’s about the players and it’s about lining up and banging heads and [may] the best man win. You saw that [Saturday].” — Northern Illinois athletic director Sean Frazier, after the Huskies’ 2024 upset of Notre Dame

The MAC is proof that a big tent can produce occasionally incredible things. As college football keeps trending toward closing up shop and distributing more money to fewer schools, and as the idea of a so-called “super league” — one that would either limit or completely eliminate opportunities for MAC-level schools — continues to waft around, this league and its teams keep trying to find ways to make noise. NIU’s big moment in 2024 proved that, given enough opportunities, they can still do so. In the past 25 seasons, MAC teams have scored 78 wins over power-conference teams, and while nearly half of those have come from NIU (14), Bowling Green (12) and Toledo (11), 14 current and former MAC programs have posted at least one.

Current circumstances are making things awfully difficult, though. The bottom half of the MAC has always been pretty shaky, and 2024 was no exception: MAC teams occupied four of the bottom 15 slots in the year-end SP+ rankings, which also ranked 0-12 Kent State as the worst FBS team in four years. Then came a brutal offseason in which (A) NIU arranged to leave for the Mountain West in 2026, (B) MAC teams got hit harder than anyone else by the transfer portal and general attrition (the MAC’s 41.1% returning production average was more than 12 percentage points below the national average), (C) the reigning conference champion (Ohio) lost head coach Tim Albin to a Charlotte program that has had just one winning season ever in FBS, and (D) Bowling Green head coach Scot Loeffler left for an NFL position coach job in the spring.

In a college football universe with NIL money and unrestricted transfers, continuity is growing increasingly difficult in MACtion country. But the conference still boasts some proven coaches and high-level talent, and stars will inevitably emerge. Let’s preview the MAC!

Throughout the summer, Bill Connelly will preview every FBS conference, ultimately including all 136 FBS teams. The previews will include 2024 breakdowns, 2025 previews and team-by-team capsules.

2024 recap

NIU stole the early headlines, but injuries and offensive struggles rendered Thomas Hammock’s Huskies an afterthought in the conference race. By midseason, it became increasingly clear that Ohio and Miami (Ohio) were the MAC’s safest bets. Miami beat Ohio 30-20 in the regular season, but the Bobcats’ offense ignited from there, averaging 36.7 points during a season-ending seven-game winning streak that included a 38-3 throttling of Miami in the MAC championship game.


Continuity table

The continuity table looks at each team’s returning production levels (offense, defense and overall), the number of 2024 FBS starts from both returning and incoming players and the approximate number of redshirt freshmen on the roster heading into 2025. (Why “approximate”? Because schools sometimes make it very difficult to ascertain who redshirted and who didn’t.) Continuity is an increasingly difficult art in roster management, but some teams pull it off better than others.

From Miami corner Raion Strader (Auburn) to Bowling Green running back Terion Stewart (Virginia Tech) to NIU quarterback Ethan Hampton (Illinois) to Ball State tight end Tanner Koziol (Houston) to a number of high-level Ohio defenders, MAC teams lost numerous stars to power-conference schools. In all, eight MAC teams (including four with new head coaches) rank in the bottom 18 in returning production.

Toledo and Buffalo mostly avoided the same fate, however. The Rockets and Bulls both rank in the top 50 in returning production, and during an intriguing nine-win season in which his Bulls improved from 119th to 87th in SP+, second-year Buffalo head coach Pete Lembo was able to build a solid base of redshirt freshmen as well.

Despite losing Albin, Ohio attempted continuity by promoting offensive coordinator Brian Smith to head coach, and he was able to hold on to at least a few key pieces, including quarterback Parker Navarro, left tackle Davion Weatherspoon and safety DJ Walker. SP+ suggests that might be enough to keep the Bobcats in MAC contention.


2025 projections

Only four teams start out with top-100 projections, and they make sense: They’re the two who played in the title game last year (Ohio and Miami) and the two who return the most from 2024 bowl teams (Toledo and Buffalo). The odds of at least one of those teams clicking and playing at a top-50 or top-60 level are pretty good.

The odds are also pretty good that the bottom portion of the conference is going to be awfully poor. UMass returns to the MAC with a new coach (former Rutgers assistant Joe Harasymiak) and almost no expectations, and four of the bottom five slots in the recent SP+ projections went to MAC teams.

(* Akron is ineligible for the postseason due to APR issues.)

The aforementioned four top-100 teams have a combined 65% chance of winning the conference title. But I guess that means there’s still a greater than one-in-three chance of an underdog run, huh?


Five best games of 2025

Here are the five conference games that feature (A) the highest combined SP+ ratings for both teams and (B) a projected scoring margin of less than 10 points.

Oct. 11: Toledo at Bowling Green. Most of the MAC’s biggest games take place once the conference shifts to midweek MACtion games in November, but this will be an early tone-setter between a talented Toledo team with a navigable early schedule and a BGSU team with quite a few question marks and an intriguing new head coach in Eddie George.

Nov. 4: Miami (Ohio) at Ohio. Last year’s two best teams jockey for position. Miami is a projected favorite in the five games preceding this one.

Nov. 12: Toledo at Miami (Ohio). Two MACtion weeks, two huge games for Chuck Martin’s RedHawks.

Nov. 19: Miami (Ohio) at Buffalo. Make that three huge games in three weeks for Miami.

Nov. 28: Ohio at Buffalo. Buffalo’s schedule offers up a massive opportunity: After the season opener against Minnesota, Lembo’s Bulls are projected favorites in 10 straight games before Ohio visits over Thanksgiving weekend.


Conference title (and, technically, CFP) contenders

Toledo Rockets

Head coach: Jason Candle (10th year, 73-40 overall)

2025 projection: 72nd in SP+ (77th offense, 63rd defense), 8.8 average wins, 6.4 conference wins

It feels impossible to adequately evaluate Jason Candle. On one hand, despite running the program with more consistent investment and high-quality recruiting than any conference mate, he’s won only two MAC titles in 10 years. It’s always going to feel like the title rate should be higher than that for the Rockets.

Jason Candle’s next win at Toledo will make him the winningest coach in program history. AP Photo/Carlos OsorioOn the other hand, Candle’s Rockets have won 11 games twice and have taken down Arkansas, Iowa State, BYU, Mississippi State and Pitt (the last two were both in 2024). His next win will be his 74th at UT, passing Gary Pinkel’s total for the most in school history. He fielded some awesome offenses early in his tenure, and when the Toledo defense crumbled a few years ago, he made a fantastic defensive coordinator hire (Vince Kehres) to right the ship. He’s never finished with a losing record. Basically, he’s been good enough to keep his job but not quite good enough to get hired away by power-conference programs. And with solid continuity (especially at QB and in a very good secondary), it sure feels like he’ll have a chance at a third MAC title this season. After a season-opening visit to Kentucky, the Rockets are projected favorites in every remaining game.Beating Mississippi State (by 24!) and Pitt but losing to Akron, among others, certainly suggests things went sideways for a bit last year. The main reason was an offense that slipped to 88th in offensive SP+, the worst ranking of the Candle era. The Rockets scored 15 or fewer in four MAC games, losing all four, and the run game was the primary culprit: The Rockets were just 124th in rushing success rate. The line was leaning on youngsters, and the RBs didn’t break nearly enough tackles.Candle didn’t make any major staff changes but brought in four offensive line transfers, plus running backs Chip Trayanum (Kentucky) and Kenji Christian (NC A&T), to shore things up. If those moves work, the passing game, featuring veteran quarterback Tucker Gleason, last year’s leading receiver Junior Vandeross III and NIU transfer Trayvon Rudolph — and, perhaps, sophomore and former star recruit Zy’marion Lang — could be the primary beneficiary.

There are fewer questions on defense, where Kehres’ unit has averaged a 55.0 defensive SP+ ranking over the last three seasons. Granted, every starter in the front six is gone, but end Malachi Davis and tackle Martez Poynter are sturdy veterans, and the portal brought players like end Louce Julien (6.5 TFLs at UMass) and linebacker Hudson Miller (five starts at Purdue). The secondary was the strength of the UT defense last year, and five of last year’s top seven return, including a dynamite nickel back in Braden Awls. Sophomore transfers Amare Snowden and Braedyn Moore, both former blue-chippers from Wisconsin, could contribute quickly too.

Ohio Bobcats

Head coach: Brian Smith (first year)

2025 projection: 80th in SP+ (83rd offense, 79th defense), 7.4 average wins, 5.7 conference wins

Ohio won 10 games under Tim Albin in both 2022 and 2023 but lost an incredible 10 starters, led by quarterback Kurtis Rourke (Indiana) and all-conference tackle Kurt Danneker (Baylor), to power-conference transfers. It was an absolute bounty of talent walking out the door. And then the Bobcats won 11 games and a MAC title in 2024. It was easily one of the best coaching performances of the season. But instead of attempting to pull off a similar magic act in 2025, Albin left for a new project at Charlotte, and OC Brian Smith moved up to the bigger office.

In quarterback Parker Navarro (2,423 passing yards, 1,143 non-sack rushing yards in 2024), left tackle Davion Weatherspoon, safety DJ Walker and corner Tank Pearson, plus returning running back Sieh Bangura (who transferred to Minnesota in 2024 but returned), Smith kept some proven pieces in Athens, and by MAC standards, continuity levels aren’t too bad. But the concept of the double-dip is still a scary one. They still must replace their leading receiver, at least three starting offensive linemen, at least four rotation linemen and basically every linebacker for the second straight season. Even if you survive major turnover once, having to do so year after year — and while changing head coaches, no less — certainly brings about more opportunities for regression.

Bangura’s return is a welcome one; he and Navarro form one of the most proven MAC backfields, but they’ll have an awfully new line in front of them. Those responsible for only 20 of last year’s 70 OL starts are back, and four transfers, including small-school starters Nick Marinaro (Dartmouth) and Josh Waite (Shippensburg), might have to make immediate contributions. Leading receiver Coleman Owen is gone too, potentially leaving a big-play void.

Smith wisely held on to defensive coordinator John Hauser, whose first Bobcat defense kept opponents both inefficient and nonexplosive in 2024.

TruMediaLike Toledo, Ohio boasts far more proven entities in the back than in the front. The combination of Walker, Pearson, nickel Adonis Williams, transfers Rickey Hyatt Jr. (South Alabama) and Ronald Jackson Jr. (Montana) and perhaps a youngster like sophomore Tony Mathis should keep quarterbacks frustrated. But senior tackle Bralen Henderson will see lots of new rotation pieces around him. Senior ends Kaci Seegars and Walter Bob Jr. should be solid up front, but depth is an obvious concern. No returning or incoming linebacker logged more than 17 snaps in 2024.


Buffalo Bulls

Head coach: Pete Lembo (second year, 9-4 overall)

2025 projection: 91st in SP+ (104th offense, 78th defense), 7.7 average wins, 5.5 conference wins

Ohio’s optimistic projection is based quite a bit on the Bobcats’ strong recent history. Buffalo, however, seems to have quite a bit more in the “proven entities” department. Pete Lembo was Ball State’s head coach from 2011-15 and engineered as many bowl trips (two) as the program has seen in the nine years since his departure. He engineered immediate improvement in his return to MAC life too, and now leading rusher Al-Jay Henderson, leading receiver Victor Snow, three starting O-linemen and 12 of 17 defenders with at least 200 snaps all return. The large load of redshirts should assure solid depth.

The defense didn’t grade out any better than the offense last year, but it seems to have fewer question marks in 2025. End Kobe Stewart and linebackers Red Murdock and Dion Crawford combined for 42.5 tackles for loss, 37 run stops and 20 sacks last season — no one else in this conference boasts that kind of play-making star power. The return of 300-pound senior George Wolo (injured in 2024) should assure the requisite size up front. The secondary gave up too many big plays last season (especially considering the quality of the pass rush), but returning seven of last year’s top eight DBs and adding both a young power-conference transfer (Arizona State corner Keontez Bradley) and a small-school star (Shepherd safety Miles Greer) offers more options.

The offense has a bit more to prove, but size should help: From a pure height-and-weight standpoint, the depth chart should look like something from a power conference. Henderson measures in at 6-foot-0, 210 pounds, wideouts Nik McMillan (6-1, 224) and Chance Morrow (6-6, 195) could play big roles, and two potential all-MAC guards, Trevor Brock and Tyler Doty, average 6-6 and 325 pounds between them. Snow, a former walk-on, is a little guy in the slot (5-8, 165), but he proved steady and durable in 2024, catching at least four passes in nine games.

Note that I haven’t said a word about the quarterback position yet. With C.J. Ogbonna gone, offensive coordinator Dave Patenaude will likely be choosing between 2024 backup Gunnar Gray and, more likely, journeyman Ta’Quan Roberson. Roberson has thrown for 2,188 career yards and was decent at UConn (one of his three former schools) in 2023. He should be able to lean on a solid run game, but Ogbonna was capable of big plays here and there, and Roberson has averaged just 10.3 yards per completion in his career. MAC contention will probably require more than that.


A couple of breaks away from a run

Miami (Ohio) RedHawks

Head coach: Chuck Martin (12th year, 65-67 overall)

2025 projection: 96th in SP+ (135th offense, 35th defense), 6.5 average wins, 4.7 conference wins

Chuck Martin was designed in a lab to frustrate me. He eschews analytics as it pertains to fourth downs. (The RedHawks went for it just 11 times in 101 fourth-down opportunities, a 10.9% go rate that ranked 133rd in FBS.) He is all-in on the “play not to lose” game management approach, and it’s contributed to a 22-31 career record in one-score finishes since he began at Miami in 2014. He’s old-school in a lot of unhelpful ways.

He’s also one hell of a program builder. He took over when Miami was at a particularly low ebb, and he has built things brick by brick.

Miami, 2014-15: 5-19 record, 120.0 average SP+ ranking

Miami, 2016-22: 40-40 record, 93.9 average SP+ ranking

Miami, 2023-24: 20-8 record, 63.5 average SP+ ranking

Martin and his remarkably consistent staff — in 11 years, he’s had two offensive coordinators and three defensive coordinators — identify and develop talent well, play physical and reasonably uncomplicated ball, put major focus on special teams and create the highest floor of any MAC team.

We’re going to find out a lot about the stability of said floor in 2025. At this point I trust Martin to continue to produce solid two-deeps with athleticism that exceeds their recruiting rankings. But … damn, did the RedHawks lose a lot this offseason: Every primary offensive starter is gone, as are basically 5.5 of the starters in the defensive front six. The secondary remains mostly intact, but ace cornerback Raion Strader left for Auburn.

Martin inked only three defensive transfers — a solid show of faith in last year’s backups and potential stars like edge rusher Adam Trick and safety Silas Walters. But the offense underwent a portal overhaul: quarterback Dequan Finn (Toledo/Baylor), five receivers (including former Notre Dame blue-chipper Deion Colzie), two tight ends and three offensive linemen came aboard. Finn, running backs Kenny Tracy (injured in 2024) and Jordan Brunson should form the base of a strong run game if the offensive line holds up, and the defense gets the benefit of the doubt. But losing this much production is almost a guarantee of regression. We’ll see if Martin’s program-building prowess can prevent a collapse.

Northern Illinois Huskies

Head coach: Thomas Hammock (seventh year, 32-38 overall)

2025 projection: 106th in SP+ (133rd offense, 61st defense), 6.3 average wins, 4.5 conference wins

Like many evaluation-and-development guys, Thomas Hammock was relatively slow to embrace portal life. NIU’s head coach brought in just 15 total transfers from 2022-24, but he’s grabbed 13 this offseason. He needed reinforcements just about everywhere he looked. The Huskies’ classic upset of Notre Dame drove an eight-win season — NIU’s third winning year in four — but Hammock’s Huskies lost their starting quarterback, their top two running backs, their top four pass catchers, five of their top six offensive linemen, and 11 of 16 defenders with at least 200 snaps (including the top four defensive tackles). Defensive coordinator Nick Benedetto left for Fresno State, too.

For a wobbly offense, this turnover could be seen as an opportunity for renewal. NIU ranked 115th in offensive SP+ for each of the last two seasons; the run game was decent last season, but the Huskies ranked 103rd in yards per dropback with no discernible explosiveness in the passing game. Hammock made an inspired coordinator hire, bringing in Quinn Sanders, the University of Charleston head coach who oversaw the No. 1 offense in Division II (per SP+). Charleston combined a relentless run game with over-the-top passing; one could see how that might be appealing to the physicality-minded Hammock.

Hammock brought in quarterback Jackson Proctor, a decent dual-threat from Dartmouth, but QB appears to be Josh Holst‘s job to lose. The sophomore was strong in the Huskies’ 28-20 bowl win over Fresno State, and sophomore RB Telly Johnson Jr. became the go-to back late in the season. That’s a good starting point, but only one returning receiver gained more than 60 receiving yards, and the line will be loaded with sophomores and juniors. It’ll be big, though: Hammock has established a nice pipeline of guys listed at 6-foot-4 or taller and 300 pounds or heavier.

It’s harder to make light of the defensive turnover. NIU has averaged a top-40 defensive SP+ ranking over the last two seasons but basically returns 2.5 starters on that side of the ball. Defensive end Roy Williams and corner Jacob Finley are solid starting points on the perimeter, but new coordinator Rob Harley might need smaller-school transfers like tackle Dasean Dixon (Albany) and safety Jasper Beeler (Saginaw Valley State) to thrive quickly. Otherwise the two-deep will be loaded with freshmen and sophomores.

Bowling Green Falcons

Head coach: Eddie George (first year)

2025 projection: 111th in SP+ (98th offense, 121st defense), 5.3 average wins, 4.0 conference wins

Scot Loeffler was starting to get somewhere. After going just 7-22 in his first three seasons at BGSU, he hovered around .500 each year from 2022 to 2024, but the underlying numbers (122nd in SP+ in 2022, 94th in 2023, 77th in 2024) suggested excellent progress. In 2024, the Falcons had their best offense in nine years and their best defense in 11. But Loeffler left to become the Philadelphia Eagles’ QBs coach in late February — an understandable but extremely inconvenient move.

Eddie George comes to Bowling Green after orchestrating a revival at Tennessee State. Photo by Scott W. Grau/Icon SportswireBGSU made an intriguing replacement hire, however, in Eddie George, the Ohio State legend and, more recently, author of a nice revival at Tennessee State. After going 15-18 in his first three seasons at TSU, his Tigers jumped to 9-4 with a first FCS playoff bid last fall. He brought both TSU coordinators with him (OC Travis Partridge, DC Brandon Fisher), and after Loeffler had already added 15 transfers in the winter, George signed another 10.Translation: This is going to be a new team. BGSU’s 59 returning starts are the third lowest in a turnover-heavy conference, and 47 of those starts are from one unit (OL). The defense returns basically 0.5 starters (safety Darius Lorfils, who started six games).

I’m really intrigued by some of the defensive newcomers, though. Defensive tackle Eriq George (son of the coach) had 12.5 TFLs for TSU, and linebacker Gideon Lampron had 26.5 TFLs at Dayton. Corners Mark Cannon Jr. (Illinois State) and Jalen McClendon (TSU) combined for four picks and 32 pass breakups. Throw in some youngsters with strong recruiting rankings — defensive lineman Collins Acheampong (UCLA), linebacker Andrew Hines (Wake Forest), safety Jay’Quan Bostic (Toledo), corner Key’on Washington (West Virginia) — and George might have something here.

The offense might not have quite as much upside, but experience could produce a high floor. The line indeed returns four starters, all seniors, and veteran Drew Pyne comes over from Mizzou to lead the way at QB. The skill corps, however, is a total mystery. Tight end Arlis Boardingham (Florida) is athletic, and receivers Brennan Ridley (Hampton) and Allen Middleton (Southern Illinois) combined for 1,018 receiving yards as FCS freshmen, but it’s hard to determine who might see a ton of the ball in 2025.

Central Michigan Chippewas

Head coach: Matt Drinkall (first year)

2025 projection: 117th in SP+ (127th offense, 102nd defense), 5.3 average wins, 4.0 conference wins

Matt Drinkall inherits personnel from a team that won only 13 games in its last three years under Jim McElwain, and he might institute a pretty big stylistic shift with unproven offensive personnel. This doesn’t feel like the start of an “a couple of breaks away from a run” tale. But a friendly schedule and actual defensive continuity — a rare commodity in this conference — might make the Chippewas improvement candidates.

Drinkall brings NAIA success to the table — he improved Kansas Wesleyan from 2-9 to 13-1 with a playoff semifinal run over five years in Salina — and he was asked by Jeff Monken to modernize Army’s option attack following rule changes in 2023. The changes didn’t really take, and he was demoted to Army O-line coach in 2024, but the Iowa grad still has Midwestern ties and an interesting offensive background.

We probably won’t see much of an option attack with incumbent Joe Labas the likely starting QB. Labas started half of 2024 before a season-ending injury; his full-season numbers (seven TDs, seven INTs) were colored by a horrid, five-INT performance against Florida International, but he wasn’t much of a runner regardless. The return of slot man Tyson Davis (injured in 2023) assures at least one experienced wideout, but no other returnee had more than 66 receiving yards in 2024, and Tulane transfer Trey Cornist is officially the most proven running back … with 149 rushing yards last year. Drinkall is an O-line guy, and CMU should have good size up front, plus maybe some help from FCS transfers John Iannuzzi (Columbia) and Jacob Russell (Valpo).

Veteran Sean Cronin, most recently Army’s D-line coach, takes over as defensive coordinator, and his No. 1 task is bringing stability to a dramatically all-or-nothing unit: CMU ranked 11th nationally in stuff rate and 13th in sack rate but gave up a spectacular number of big plays. Linebackers Jordan Kwiatkowski and Dakota Cochran (combined: 23.5 TFLs) are thrilling, and safety Caleb Spann thrives near the line of scrimmage. They are undeniable playmakers, and cornerback Kalen Carroll (Cincinnati) is one of the conference’s few incoming power-conference starters. But glitches were devastating in 2024, and Cronin will likely dial the risk profile back a bit.

Eastern Michigan Eagles

Head coach: Chris Creighton (12th year, 57-75 overall)

2025 projection: 113th in SP+ (116th offense, 111th defense), 5.1 average wins, 3.5 conference wins

Chris Creighton has been pulling off .500ish seasons at EMU for long enough that we’re forgetting how impressive going .500 at EMU really is. The Eagles won five games just three times in the 24 seasons before Creighton’s arrival from Drake in 2014, and now they’ve bowled six times in the past nine years. Collapsing from 5-2 to 5-7 last year, thanks to both epic injury issues and close defeats, was a genuine disappointment instead of a roundabout accomplishment.

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With so many MAC programs dealing with major turnover, this would feel like an opportunity for Creighton and EMU … if they weren’t dealing with the same thing. The Eagles return only four players who started more than five games last season, though the injuries meant that quite a few of the returnees saw the field. That’s especially true on defense, where 11 returnees started at least once. Still, Creighton brought in seven defensive transfers (plus four JUCOs) to assure a rebound for a unit that collapsed from 67th to 115th in defensive SP+. New playmakers need to emerge, but defensive end Jefferson Adam made 5.5 TFLs in just 185 snaps, and nickel back Barry Manning had three run stops and two pass breakups in 193 snaps; both could become stars with starter-level playing time.

The offense collapsed to 130th in offensive SP+ in 2023 but rebounded a bit last year despite 18 guys starting at least one game. Only six of those 18 return, but I’m intrigued by newcomers like quarterback Cameron Edge (Maryland) and running back James Jointer Jr. (Liberty), and receiver Terry Lockett Jr. is one of the league’s more explosive returning wideouts. The bar for further improvement is pretty low — just keep guys semi-healthy, and you could return to the top 100.

Since Creighton’s arrival, only NIU has played in more one-score games among MAC teams than EMU — almost surprising considering EMU’s fast-paced offense and fourth-down willingness — and that dynamic probably won’t change in 2025: Ten of the Eagles’ 12 games are projected within single digits, and six of the last eight are projected within a touchdown. Win the close ones they didn’t win last year, and 2025 will be pretty exciting.


Just looking for a path to 6-6

Western Michigan Broncos

Head coach: Lance Taylor (third year, 10-15 overall)

2025 projection: 118th in SP+ (112th offense, 117th defense), 4.8 average wins, 3.5 conference wins

After back-to-back losing seasons for a seemingly stalling WMU program, 2024 brought some positivity: Thanks primarily to a 5-1 record against teams ranked in the triple digits in SP+, Lance Taylor’s Broncos eked out six wins and a bowl bid.

In terms of balancing efficiency and explosiveness, the WMU offense was one of the more well-rounded in the conference.

TruMediaWalt Bell’s offense is predicated around strong rushing and quick passing; it’s an obvious concern that only 2.5 starters return (tight end Blake Bosma, guard John Hofer and receiver and seven-game starter Malique Dieudonne), but junior running back Jalen Buckley (683 yards, nine TDs) is good, Bosma (88% catch rate) is an efficiency cheat code, and Taylor brought in intriguing power-conference transfers such as running back Cole Cabana (Michigan), receiver Christian Leary (Alabama/Georgia Tech) and linemen Raheem Anderson (Michigan) and Hunter Whitenack (Illinois). Quarterback Hayden Wolff is gone, but I think either sophomore Broc Lowry or JC All-American Brady Jones will fill in pretty well there.

The defense hasn’t yet generated any traction under Taylor, who is on his third coordinator in three years. New DC Chris O’Leary was a Notre Dame analyst and, in 2024, the safeties coach for Jim Harbaugh’s L.A. Chargers. This feels like a high-ceiling, low-floor hire, and O’Leary’s success in 2025 will be derived primarily from a number of smaller-school transfers, the most intriguing of which are probably defensive end Kershawn Fisher (Nicholls), linebacker Sefa Saipaia (Ferris State), corner Jordon Thomas (Eastern Kentucky) and safety Marvin Smith (Alabama A&M). Returning safety Tate Hallock is a keeper, but newcomers will tell the tale.

Akron Zips

Head coach: Joe Moorhead (fourth year, 8-28 overall)

2025 projection: 132nd in SP+ (131st offense, 120th defense), 4.5 average wins, 3.2 conference wins

In three years at Akron, Joe Moorhead has proved to be a pretty solid talent evaluator, and going 4-8 in 2024 — after the Zips went a combined 7-47 from 2019-23 — was an undeniable success. But hard jobs remain hard in perpetuity; Moorhead hasn’t made any progress on offense (average offensive SP+ ranking: 126.7), the Zips’ APR scores have dropped enough to get them banned from the postseason (not that six wins was particularly likely anyway), and Moorhead’s primary reward for solid talent identification is that said talent has been plucked away: Seven Zips transferred to power-conference teams this offseason.

It’s kind of a lost year already, in other words. But in Michael Johnson Jr. (Syracuse), running back Chris Gee (Colgate), O-lineman Allen Jones Jr. (West Alabama), prolific linebacker Cam Hollobaugh (Walsh), safety Mehki Flowers (Penn State) and others, Moorhead’s 2025 transfer haul has decent upside. So, too, might returnees like veteran quarterback Ben Finley, 6-foot-7 defensive end Bruno Dall, linebacker Shammond Cooper (injured in 2023) and junior corner Elijah Reed.

Akron is a projected favorite in only three games but is a projected one-score underdog in five others — overachieving against projections just a little could make this a decent season, even if bowling is already off the table.

Ball State Cardinals

Head coach: Mike Uremovich (first year)

2025 projection: 134th in SP+ (123rd offense, 131st defense), 3.4 average wins, 2.5 conference wins

After the slow rise and equally slow fall of the eight-year Mike Neu era, Mike Uremovich takes the reins at BSU. The NIU grad and former Temple and NIU offensive coordinator knows the MAC and has crafted success from limited Midwestern resources at both NAIA’s St. Francis (Illinois) and FCS’ Butler. His 2024 Butler team ranked 35th in SP+, easily the highest in the non-scholarship Pioneer Conference.

Uremovich’s offense is generally built around adapting to player strengths, and the primary strength of his 2025 Cardinals might be versatility. Senior quarterback Kiael Kelly is a better athlete than passer, and running back transfer Qua Ashley (Kennesaw State) caught 28 balls out of the backfield last year. Throw in slot man (and punt returner) Qian Magwood and 5-foot-8 Bucknell WR transfer Eric Weatherly, and you’ve got a set of bouncy and versatile, if not particularly large, skill-corps guys. They could also have the largest pair of tackles in the MAC with returnee Chris Hood (6-foot-10!) potentially pairing with Butler transfer Adam Dolan (6-foot-8), for whatever that’s worth.

Despite BSU’s defensive collapse, Uremovich kept coordinator Jeff Knowles in place, and with good reason: He was Uremovich’s DC at Butler in 2023. The defensive front returns disruptive options in linebacker Joey Stemler and tackle Darin Conley, but a poor secondary has been overhauled. Uremovich brought in 10 defensive transfers, but only three are seniors — this might be a multiyear rebuild on D.

UMass Minutemen

Head coach: Joe Harasymiak (first year)

2025 projection: 13th in SP+ (119th offense, 135th defense), 3.5 average wins, 2.2 conference wins

It’s been a pretty directionless FBS run for UMass. The Minutemen spent their first four FBS seasons in the MAC before choosing independence over all-sports membership, but after nine years and just 18 wins, they’re back. At head coach, they’ve tried veteran retreads (Mark Whipple, Don Brown) and young hotshots (Walt Bell), and nothing has generated traction. Now it’s time to go Full Rutgers. Massachusetts native Joe Harasymiak takes over after three years as Greg Schiano’s defensive coordinator at RU. Schiano is the ultimate, obsessive “skip no steps” program builder, and one can see the appeal to such an approach at UMass.

Harasymiak brought in 34 transfers, but while a few of them are seniors who could contribute quickly — quarterback Grant Jordan (Yale), offensive lineman Mike Entwistle (Harvard), defensive end Josh Nobles (Jackson State), linebacker Timmy Hinspeter (Rutgers), safety Malcolm Greene (Virginia) — some of the more intriguing players on the roster are underclassmen.

Redshirt freshman quarterback AJ Hairston could fend off both Jordan and Utah transfer Brandon Rose for playing time at QB, while transfers like running back Rocko Griffin (UTSA), receiver Tyree Kelly (USF), tackle Malachi Madison (Virginia Tech), linebacker Nick Hawthorne (Boise State) and disruptive safeties Kendall Bournes (Concord) and Zeraun Daniel (Georgetown) are all juniors or younger.

This is going to take some time. UMass is a projected favorite in only one 2025 game, but hey, when you’ve averaged only two wins per season in FBS, the bar for progress is awfully low.

Kent State Golden Flashes

Interim head coach: Mark Carney

2025 projection: 136th in SP+ (134th offense, 133rd defense), 2.8 average wins, 2.2 conference wins

If the bar is low at UMass, it’s just laying on the floor at Kent State. Under head coach Kenni Burns, the Golden Flashes went just 1-23 in two seasons, but it’s actually even worse than that: In my year-end, all-division SP+ rankings, they not only ranked a distant last among the 134 FBS teams, they ranked 227th overall, behind 79 FCS teams and 14 Division II teams. They would have been well below average in the FCS’ Missouri Valley Football Conference. Hell, they’d have been fourth in D2’s GLIAC. This was an utterly atrocious football team.

That just means there’s nowhere to go but up, right? Even with Burns getting dismissed at just about the most awkward possible time of year (mid-April) and offensive coordinator Mark Carney taking over as interim head coach, it’s going to be almost impossible to be that bad again.

I’m not going to try to sell you on the merits of transfers like quarterback CJ Montes (Fordham), offensive lineman Jamarcus Hill (Southeast Missouri), defensive end Jamond Mathis (Southern Illinois) and defensive tackle Thomas Aden (Pitt) or genuinely decent returnees like guard Dustyn Morell or nickelback Canaan Williams. I’m just going to note that, with so many other MAC teams facing major turnover, Kent State could be close enough to the rest of the pack to win a game or two. And when the bar is set at “midtier GLIAC team,” it’s pretty easy to maybe show a sign or two of progress.

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Recruiting the Mercers; OSU’s NIL gameplan; Finebaum’s foibles

Bucknuts.com’s Steve Helwagen hosted his weekly Chat on Monday night on The Front Row message board. Check out the transcript below. Programming Note: Steve will again join Ohio State Buckeyes Live at 11 a.m. Wednesday. Check out The Front Row for access details after 11 a.m. on Wednesday. ButlerBuck: Players may want all they can […]

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Bucknuts.com’s Steve Helwagen hosted his weekly Chat on Monday night on The Front Row message board. Check out the transcript below.

Programming Note: Steve will again join Ohio State Buckeyes Live at 11 a.m. Wednesday. Check out The Front Row for access details after 11 a.m. on Wednesday.

ButlerBuck: Players may want all they can get as a HS kid.

For hoops, Anthony Davis and Cooper Flagg would have been the #1 draft pick whether they went to a blue blood or not.

For football, getting that development during college is more important since the NFL watches you for 3 years.

Will kids get that idea/does OSU use that as a basketball recruiting pitch from OSU or another pigskin blue blood?

OSU hoops would use that to recruit those 5* players….you’ll be #1 wherever you go.  You just need to get the most playing time you can. You’ll get all the minutes you can play here. At UK and Duke, maybe not

Helwagen: Yeah, lot of ifs in there. Every kid’s upbringing, wherewithal and recruitment is different. Some have to have as much as they can get their hands on as soon as possible. Some are interested in being one and done and on to the league. Some are content to play the long game to prolong their development and maximize their pro value.

So, yeah, you can look at it and say Ohio State can help you get there. But if you watched the NBA Finals, here were the schools of the starters:

Pacers: Pascal Siakam (New Mexico State), Aaron Nesmith (Vanderbilt), Myles Turner (Texas), Andrew Nembhard (Gonzaga), Tyrese Haliburton (Iowa State)

Thunder: Chet Holmgren (Gonzaga), Jalen Williams (Santa Clara), Isaiah Hartenstein (Germany/Lithuania), Lu Dort (Arizona State), Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Kentucky)

Only one real blueblood there. You can get there from anywhere, so why not Ohio State? Of course, will need Ohio State to be competitive in the pay department.

foxr2001: Don’t know if you can answer this and has nothing to do with OSU. BTN has aired a few US women’s volleyball games, which has nothing to do with the B1G. I can only imagine its some reciprocal agreement with FOX that they (BTN) air events when FOX doesn’t have room on their schedule or something like that. Any intel on why these are airing on BTN?

Two other completely different questions for you. The Columbus Dispatch said that McGuff was able to drive again, presumably meaning that his license was temporarily suspended. The article didn’t go into much detail about his current status though. Has his DUI arrest already been processed and if so, what penalty(ies) did he receive? Did the university do anything to him or are they going to like suspend him for a few games? Hey, maybe OSU will suspend him in the MIDDLE of the non-conference schedule when we are playing our easiest two games!

Other question, no one here at Bucknuts has mentioned Cleveland getting an WNBA franchise. I imagine you are a Cavs fan, how do you feel with the city sharing the court with a women’s team? Do you think, with the improved success in the WNBA that this franchise will survive, unlike Cleveland’s earlier WNBA franchise?

Thanks Steve.

Helwagen: I was not aware BTN was airing women’s USA volleyball events, but it makes sense if FOX needs an outlet that they do that. ESPN puts some NCAA events it can’t get on ESPN or ESPN2 on SEC Network (usually involving an SEC team). Big Ten is big in volleyball and maybe they rationalized some of the players were from Big Ten schools.

Have not heard anything about McGuff or his status. I assume the judge in his case has granted him work driving privileges. I assume if Ohio State is going to suspend him, it will happen before the season starts. No idea when his next court appearance would be. I will try and check on that. Not sure how he beats the rap if they play the video at trial, unless he can prove he was drugged somehow.

Don’t really have a thought about the WNBA in Cleveland. It seems the league has 10-12 needle movers who draw crowds. People will come there to watch Caitlin Clark and some of the others. But to win and contend you need stars. Those are hard to come by. Good luck and, I agree, I hope it goes better than the last time. Sophie Cunningham’s comments about why would anybody want to play in Cleveland were not the least bit helpful. LOL



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What’s next for College Football Playoff format? SEC commish says it could stay the same if sides remain divided

ATLANTA — Behind the main podium on the center stage of SEC media days, Greg Sankey gives the media masses before him a reminder of all of the uncertainties facing college athletics. There are growing pains with the industry’s new revenue-sharing concept, the latest of which puts the entire enterprise in a murky situation. The […]

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ATLANTA — Behind the main podium on the center stage of SEC media days, Greg Sankey gives the media masses before him a reminder of all of the uncertainties facing college athletics.

There are growing pains with the industry’s new revenue-sharing concept, the latest of which puts the entire enterprise in a murky situation. The NCAA’s governance model is undergoing change, too. The future structure of bowl games is a bit unknown and so too are NCAA eligibility standards that are under attack in court from players themselves.

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“There’s a lot going on,” Sankey espoused from the stage.

But perhaps the most noteworthy of those items, certainly the one drawing the most attention from football fans, is a little thing called the College Football Playoff.

Though Sankey didn’t reveal much groundbreaking or new about the future of the playoff — the format starting next year remains unclear — his time spent on the issue is a good reminder of how important and divisive the subject is.

Here’s the gist: The CFP’s original 12-year contract with ESPN ends after this season, and a new six-year extension struck with the network last spring begins in 2026 with, what was believed to be, a new, potentially expanded playoff. An important note to this is that the SEC and Big Ten hold authority over a future format and must agree on a model before it moves forward, according to CFP director Rich Clark — the result of a memorandum signed by the 10 FBS conferences and Notre Dame last year.

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Here’s the problem: The SEC and Big Ten, thought at first to be aligned behind a format with multi-automatic qualifiers for a single conference, is not aligned after all. And it’s unclear if they will get aligned before Dec. 1 — the date ESPN executives gave to CFP leaders as a deadline for any decisions for the 2026 playoff.

As Sankey noted in his comments here Monday — the kickoff to the four-day SEC media days extravaganza in downtown Atlanta — there is a real possibility that the playoff remains, at least for next year, at its current 12-team format and not the 14- or 16-team model that’s been discussed. “That can stay if we don’t agree,” Sankey said.

But why don’t they agree?

Well, many thought they were close to agreeing on what’s been deemed a “4-4-2-2-1” format that grants twice as many automatic qualifiers to the SEC and Big Ten (4 each) as the ACC and Big 12 (2 each). Though many of its athletic directors supported the Big Ten’s multi-AQ model, SEC coaches spoke against it enough in May during the league’s spring meetings that the focus, at least for the SEC, shifted toward a format with a bigger at-large pool, such as what’s termed a “5+11” format: five automatic qualifiers for conference champions, plus 11 at-large selections.

ATLANTA, GA - JULY 14: SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey addresses the media during SEC Football  Media Days on July 14, 2025, at the College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by Jeffrey Vest/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey addresses the media during SEC media days on July 14. (Jeffrey Vest/Getty Images)

(Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Big Ten administrators have noted gripes with this format, including the fact that the SEC plays one fewer conference game (eight) than its own league (nine) — a potential advantage in playoff selection for a postseason with a big at-large pool.

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Is the simple solution the SEC moving to nine conference games, both leagues then agreeing on a 5+11 model and then everyone going about their business? Perhaps.

But enough SEC coaches and administrators are against a move to nine conference games without a change to the criteria that the CFP selection committee uses to make its at-large picks.

And many of them believe that the SEC’s eight-game conference schedule is just as tough or more difficult than the Big Ten’s nine-game conference schedule — something Sankey even suggested from the podium Monday. Every SEC team plays a ninth game against a power conference team — a conference requirement that, Sankey noted, not everyone else has (the Big Ten does not have that requirement).

Round and round, this goes. Where it ends, no one seems to know.

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CFP officials are in the midst of making adjustments to the selection criteria used by the committee. Here in Atlanta, more specifics were revealed on those two changes.

For one, CFP staff proposed to commissioners an adjustment to the committee’s strength-of-schedule ranking that gives more weight to games played, for instance, against the top 30-40 programs in the country.

Secondly, a new data point, “strength of record,” has been created, Sankey said, that grants more weight to good wins and doesn’t penalize programs as much for losses against ranked or top teams.

“If we’re talking about win-loss records, they’re not all the same, based upon what conference you’re in and who you play,” LSU coach Brian Kelly said. “What’s the selection process going to be? That will generate the answer to the other questions — how many teams (in the playoff) and what your conference schedule looks like.”

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Are these changes enough to convince SEC officials to move to a ninth conference game? It’s uncertain, but that decision likely needs to be made for 2026 by the time this football season kicks off. It’s why many believe the league continues to lean toward remaining at eight SEC games and, thus, the playoff may remain at 12.

“Much more work is needed,” Sankey said of the criteria changes. “We have to see the homework, but the direction of the discussion is viewed positively with the need for timely decision making.”

And what of the Big Ten? The league holds its football media days next week in Las Vegas, as well as meetings among their athletic directors where, surely, the playoff discussion will be a topic.

Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti, meanwhile, has remained mostly quiet during this summer of playoff drama. He did record a 30-minute interview with Fox’s Joel Klatt last month where Petitti re-emphasized his support for the 4-4-2-2-1 as a way to eliminate the subjectivity of the selection committee, incentivize more top-25 non-conference matchups among the power leagues and hold play-in style conference games at the year’s end.

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“We are not asking to be handed anything,” Petitti told Klatt. That’s a reference toward those who claim that the 4-4-2-2-1 format unfairly preordains qualifying spots. “We want to play tough play-in games. We want to create incentive for schools to schedule (tougher) non-conference games. … I think fans want to see more of these non-conference games earlier in the season. Everybody is pointing to Texas-Ohio State (this year). We want more of that.”

Last week from Big 12 media days in the Dallas suburb of Frisco, commissioner Brett Yormark publicly “doubled down” on his support for the 5+11 model and suggested that the Big Ten’s proposal is a professionalized concept that would negatively impact college athletics.

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“We continue to believe the 5+11 model is the right playoff format,” Yormark said. “We want to earn it on the field. We do not need a professional model. We are not the NFL. We are college football and we must act like it.”

Yormark says ACC commissioner Jim Phillips agrees with him as well and that he plans to publicly join him in the argument during ACC media days next week in Charlotte.

Meanwhile, back here in Atlanta, the CFP’s future format and the SEC’s future conference football schedule lingers over this four-day event as it has for years now.

It seems again the SEC holds the proverbial cards on the future of the CFP. Sankey gestures towards Yormark’s comments last week on “doubling down.”

“That’s part of the gambling the experience,” he said. “You always want to have a good hand to play. I think we have the best hand.”



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Kendrick joins softball coaching staff

Marc Kendrick is here, a new softball assistant coach at Montana, because after three seasons working at Tennessee Tech, the lure of moving to and coaching in a true college town was too good of an opportunity to pass up.   That’s the trouble with coaching in Cookeville, with the Volunteers 100 miles to the […]

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Marc Kendrick is here, a new softball assistant coach at Montana, because after three seasons working at Tennessee Tech, the lure of moving to and coaching in a true college town was too good of an opportunity to pass up.
 
That’s the trouble with coaching in Cookeville, with the Volunteers 100 miles to the east, the Commodores 80 miles to the west. The shadows loom large from both directions.
 
“We’re the only thing in town, but since it’s Tennessee, people are either a University of Tennessee fan or a Vanderbilt fan,” Kendrick said. “We never had that true atmosphere. That’s something I’m excited about, being where there is only one team that matters, where the expectation is to win.
 
“Stef said, once you get out here and visit, you’ll understand. When I got out there, I was like, okay, I understand.”
 
He’s also here because of head coach Stef Ewing, who has a reputation as a program builder, who told Kendrick during the interview process: The defense? It would be yours, all yours. Make us great.
 
“I’m a defense-oriented person. Stef giving me the reins of the defense, that’s my strong suit. Let me go at it,” he said. “I’m constantly thinking, how do I defend this or how do I defend that? I’m always looking for that little edge.”
 
He’s been in this position before as an assistant coach, Tennessee Tech going 6-44 in his first season with the program in 2023, nearly mirroring Montana’s record of 8-42 this past spring.
 
The Golden Eagles bettered their record to 23-24 in Kendrick’s second year at the school, making Tennessee Tech the nation’s most-improved program in 2024, going in the right direction by 18.5 additional wins, topping D1Softball.com’s list of “Quick-Change Artists.”
 
“I know a little bit about Stef’s history, how she took (Cal State) San Marcos, which wasn’t very good, and got them to the World Series and winning 40 games in a season,” he said. “I know her track record is to take programs and turn them around in a short period of time.
 
“Overall, the environment, the vibe, the way Stef and (pitching coach Megan Casper) and I got together, it was, how do I not say yes to this?”
 
He’s here, in the world of softball, this coach who was once a baseball-loving kid in Southern California, who dreamed of one day breaking Cal Ripken Jr.’s consecutive-games-played record, who played at Long Beach Polytechnic High, who spent weekends at his grandma’s side, going to Angels games before settling into a 9-to-5 job in Orange County, because how could he say no to family?
 
“I got talked into it by my cousin, who asked me to come out and help coach softball. Um, no,” he told her. But it was his god-daughter’s team, she told him. You’re really going to say no to that face? “She pulled that card on me.”
 
That led to a rec championship, which led to a high school job – wait, I can get paid for this? – which led to getting his foot in the door of travel ball, with Batbusters. “Okay, this is something I’m passionate about and love doing. At first it was something I did, then it was God saying, go be a coach.”
 
If the brass ring was the college game, he knew he needed to go back to school and get his degree to become marketable, an AA coming from Santiago Canyon College in 2018, a bachelor’s degree in kinesiology from Cal State Fullerton in 2020, a master’s degree from Cal Baptist in 2022, where he was a graduate assistant for the softball team.
 
Was it too much to pack into a single day, all he was trying to do? Not for this son of the military, born in San Diego, then coming of age in Long Beach, then San Pedro, the Navy keeping the family moving but never out of Southern California.
 
“I didn’t move around a lot, but I definitely have those military aspects in my blood, if you will, that mentality of how to go about things a certain way,” he said.
 
All that time in and around softball in Southern California, and he never did cross paths with Ewing, who was at San Marcos from 2019 to ’24.
 
“We were probably three levels of separation,” Ewing says. “When I saw the people on his list of references, I said, I know all these people. It was hard for me to believe we’d never met.”
 
She read through his resume, his list of references, then started reading through his letters of recommendation, starting with the usual voices, the coaches with whom he’d worked, then getting into the unusual, written testaments from former players.
 
“It was one of the most impressive things I’ve seen from an assistant coach, these letters from previous players stating why they liked him so much, not just letters from professionals,” Ewing said.
 
Done as a GA at Cal Baptist, he got on with first-year coach Danielle Penner at Tennessee Tech prior to the 2023 season, rode out the 6-44 first year before being part of the nation’s best turnaround in 2024, doing the less-visible work of solidifying the team’s defense, all aspects of the sport right in his wheelhouse.
 
“You can tell when someone has the softball sickness if it’s all they talk about,” Ewing said. “He has it. It’s exciting for me to bring someone in to bounce ideas off of, not hire a yes-man. I want him to push me as a head coach and bring me his ideas.
 
“Let’s brainstorm, let’s get to the drawing board. Let’s figure out what’s best for the team, how we are going to make it better. He was looking for that in his next role, to have his voice heard and to be able to bring ideas.”
 
Was he ever. “The fact she’s very open-minded, okay, let’s figure this out, I love that,” Kendrick said. “One day when I’m a head coach, that’s how I want to be. I want to have a bunch of coaches around me who go back and forth and figure out the best way. That’s something that drew me to Stef.”
 
Kendrick replaces Tyler Jeske on Ewing’s staff, Jeske departing his position at season’s end, right when Kendrick was beginning his own search in earnest. He never would have guessed Montana but he’ll be in Missoula next month, coaching his new team shortly after the fall semester commences.
 
“When Stef brought me up for my interview, with everything the University of Montana has to offer, it was, how do I not say yes to this offer?” Kendrick said.
 
Ewing will move to the offensive side of the ball full-time come the fall, with Kendrick taking over a defense that ranked 232nd nationally last season with a fielding percentage of .952. Casper will have an improved pitching staff to work with, and Makena Strong goes from player to graduate assistant coach.
 
“On the field, he’ll be another source of energy for us,” said Ewing of Kendrick. “With Makena, all of a sudden we’re four people strong and will be able to do a lot more at practices.
 
“I loved a lot of the things he had to say. He’s a worker. He can throw batting practice, he loves to do camps, he comes from a military family, so he’s on top of things and very organized. He checks a lot of boxes. I think he’s going to bring a lot to the program.”
 
And he opens up a new recruiting area, with Montana looking to expand its reach beyond the West. “More and more young women reach out to us from the Midwest, Texas, the South,” says Ewing. “He brings knowledge of a different region of the country. It allows us to cast a wider net.
 
“He’s passionate about recruiting, which will be huge for us. That’s the name of the game. It doesn’t matter how good of a coach you are if you can’t find good kids.” Or good assistant coaches.



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The Jordan Brand Family Celebrates 40 Years of Greatness

“Welcome to Jordan Board of Greatness 2025.” With those words, Michael Jordan opened this year’s Board of Governors (BOG) gathering – setting the tone for a weekend rooted in reflection, connection, and vision. As Jordan Brand continues its celebration of 40 Years of Greatness, this moment served as a powerful checkpoint: a chance to honor […]

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The Jordan Brand Family Celebrates 40 Years of Greatness

Welcome to Jordan Board of Greatness 2025.”

With those words, Michael Jordan opened this year’s Board of Governors (BOG) gathering – setting the tone for a weekend rooted in reflection, connection, and vision. As Jordan Brand continues its celebration of 40 Years of Greatness, this moment served as a powerful checkpoint: a chance to honor the journey so far while actively shaping what comes next. Jordan Brand has shared a behind-the-scenes look to this celebration of greatness.


The gathering featured over 20 JB athletes- including Jalen Hurts and Carmelo Anthony 

Of course, such an important meeting could only be held in in Greece- the birthplace of the Olympics. The event brought together more than 20 athletes representing multiple sports – including basketball, training, and U.S. football – alongside entertainers like Miguel and Anthony Anderson.  To Jordan Brand, the setting was both symbolic and intentional: a place to reflect on legacy while building momentum for the future.

The rosterm which is hand- picked by Jordan himself, currently consist of names like Nigel Sylvester, Jalen Hurts, Carmelo Anthony, Kiefer Ravena and more.

One of the many perks of recieving that BOG invitation is, of course, the freebies. Each year, Jordan Brand produces an incredibly limited run of sneakers exclusive to the meeting. This year- the Air Jordan 1 Low OG takes center stage. The hits of blue stand out over the muted upper, creating for a sneaker reminiscent of the beautiful Greek water. The sneaker appears to be limited to 180 pairs.


The BOG AJ1 Low OG appears to be limited to 180 pairs 

In his welcome, MJ emphasized the importance of coming together face-to-face – to celebrate successes, learn from challenges, and align on what’s next. Athletes were invited not just to attend, but to actively contribute to the Brand’s future. Through collaborative sessions and open dialogue, they shared feedback, exchanged ideas, and explored their role in Jordan Brand’s evolving strategy. A highlight of the weekend was a candid Q&A with MJ, where he spoke about the meaning of greatness and the power of showing up with purpose.


Attendees share their thoughts on upcoming Jordan Brand product 

At its core, the gathering was about strengthening the Jordan Family – creating space for athletes to connect, bond, and be part of something bigger than themselves.

Behind the scenes photos courtesy of Jordan Brand

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Colton Book Selected in Ninth Round of MLB Draft by Chicago Cubs

Story Links ATLANTA – Saint Joseph’s lefthander Colton Book was drafted by the Chicago Cubs in the ninth round of the 2025 Major League Baseball Draft on Monday.  Book was chosen with the 271st overall selection.   “We are very excited for Colton on being selected by the Cubs,” head coach Fritz Hamburg […]

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ATLANTA – Saint Joseph’s lefthander Colton Book was drafted by the Chicago Cubs in the ninth round of the 2025 Major League Baseball Draft on Monday.  Book was chosen with the 271st overall selection.
 
“We are very excited for Colton on being selected by the Cubs,” head coach Fritz Hamburg said.  “I know he has been looking forward to this day for some time, but it happened because of his commitment, focus, and hard work toward furthering his game each and every day.  He lived true to being consistent and he dedicated himself to being the very best; what he accomplished this season was truly outstanding.”
 
Book was named the Atlantic 10 Pitcher of the Year and earned a spot on the ABCA All-East Region First Team after turning in one of the most outstanding seasons by a hurler in SJU history.  The native of Manheim, Pennsylvania, was a four-time Atlantic 10 Pitcher of the Week on the way to First Team All-Conference accolades; he was also named the College Baseball Foundation’s National Pitcher of the Week on February 25.
 
The southpaw is the first pitcher in Saint Joseph’s history to strike out 100 batters in a season, setting a new program record with 122 punchouts for the year, and fanned 13 or more on four different occasions.  He spent the season ranked among the top three in Division I in strikeouts before finishing the regular season fifth in the nation.  Also ranking in the top 12 in the country in both WHIP and strikeouts-per-nine-innings at the end of the regular season, Book showed his durability by throwing at least six innings in 10 of his starts, with five starts of seven frames or more. 
 
“On behalf of our program here on Hawk Hill, we thank him for all that he did to help our program, but most importantly, we congratulate him on a job well done,” Hamburg said.  “We look forward to following his journey in professional baseball!”
 
Book is the 14th Hawk to hear his name called in the draft during Hamburg’s tenure and the 34th overall in program history.
 



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Argument over ‘valid buisiness purpose’ for NIL collectives threatens college sports settlement

“This process is undermined when the CSC goes off the reservation and issues directions to the schools that are not consistent with the Settlement Agreement terms,” attorney Jeffrey Kessler wrote to NCAA outside counsel Rakesh Kilaru in a letter obtained by The Associated Press. Yahoo Sports first reported details of the letter, in which Kessler […]

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“This process is undermined when the CSC goes off the reservation and issues directions to the schools that are not consistent with the Settlement Agreement terms,” attorney Jeffrey Kessler wrote to NCAA outside counsel Rakesh Kilaru in a letter obtained by The Associated Press.

Yahoo Sports first reported details of the letter, in which Kessler threatens to take the issue to a judge assigned with resolving disputes involved in the settlement.

Kessler told AP his firm was not commenting on the contents of the letter, and Kilaru did not immediately respond to AP’s request for a comment.

Yahoo quoted a CSC spokesman as saying the parties are working to resolve differences and that “the guidance issued by the College Sports Commission … is entirely consistent with the House settlement and the rules that have been agreed upon with class counsel.”

When NIL payments became allowed in 2021, boosters formed so-called “collectives” that were closely tied to universities to work out contracts with the players, who still weren’t allowed to be paid directly by the schools.

Terms of the House settlement allow schools to make the payments now, but keep the idea of outside payments from collectives, which have to be approved by the CSC if they are worth $600 or more.

The CSC, in its letter last week, explained that if a collective reaches a deal, for instance, for an athlete to appear on behalf of the collective, which charges an admission fee, that collective does not have a “valid business purpose” because the purpose of the event is to raise money to pay athletes, not to provide goods or services available to the general public for profit.

Another example of a disallowed deal was one an athlete makes to sell merchandise to raise money to pay that player because, the CSC guidance said, the purpose of “selling merchandise is to raise money to pay that student-athlete and potentially other student-athletes at a particular school or schools, which is not a valid business purpose.”

Kessler’s letter notes that the “valid business purpose” rule was designed to ensure athletes were not simply being paid to play, and did not prohibit NIL collectives from paying athletes for the type of deals described above.

To prevent those payments “would be to create a new prohibition on payments by a NIL collective that is not provided for or contemplated by the Settlement Agreement, causing injury to the class members who should be free to receive those payments,” Kessler wrote.

___

AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports

FILE - Tennessee pitcher Liam Doyle (12) throws to a batter during an NCAA regional baseball game against Miami on May 30, 2025, in Knoxville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Wade Payne, File)

Credit: AP

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Credit: AP





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