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Where will each Penn State transfer suit up in 2025, and how many are there across college football?

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Where will each Penn State transfer suit up in 2025, and how many are there across college football?

Former Penn State players will be on college football depth charts across the country this fall. One ex-Nittany Lion has already started his new season elsewhere. The rest who left via the transfer portal hit the field this week. How many former members of head coach James Franklin’s program are still in the game, and where are those who are playing in 2025? We have a full breakdown below.

Former Penn State players suiting up elsewhere on offense

WR Cristian Driver, Minnesota: Driver finished his first regular season in Minneapolis with seven catches for 49 yards and one touchdown. He also carried twice for nine yards. He currently projects to start as a backup again this fall.

RB London Montgomery, East Carolina: Montgomery netted 64 carries over 10 regular season games for 343 yards and two touchdowns. He also caught five passes for 29 yards. He is a fourth-team Phil Steele preseason All-AAC pick and could very well start for the Pirates this fall. The team’s first depth chart has him on the top line with an OR designation.

WR Malik McClain, Arizona State: McClain played just 65 snaps for the Sun Devils in 2024 before the CFP. He turned them into one catch for 43 yards in the Big 12 title game. In 2025, he is reportedly in a tight battle to win a starting job. He projects to have a sizable role in the ASU offense either way.

WR Malick Meiga, Coastal Carolina: Meiga caught just seven passes for 117 yards last year. He projects to have a big speical teams role and a minimal one on offense again in 2025.

MORE: Penn State among CFB’s best with 10 Senior Bowl Top 300 picks

QB Michael Johnson Jr., Akron: Johnson Jr., played in just one game in 2024, and it was back in September. Over 12 snaps against Howard, he netted 31 yards on a 2 of 3 day and lost eight yards on four rushing attempts. He transferred to Akron this offseason. He does not project to be the starter but could be the Zips’ top backup in 2025.

QB Christian Veilleux, Georgia State: Veilleux completed 166 of 291 passes (57 percent) for 2,047 yards in 2024. His touchdown-to-interception ratio is 13 to 10. He also rushed 28 times for 74 yards and a score. GSU added transfers to compete with Veilleux in 2025. A winner is not yet in as of the time of this story’s publication.

RB Caziah Holmes, Florida State: Holmes earned just 47 snaps over eight games on offense in 2024. Holmes was on the Seminoles’ special teams units. He carried 15 times for 84 yards and three touchdowns last year. He also had one kickoff return for 23 yards. Holmes figures to be down the depth chart again in 2025.

QB Ta’quan Roberson, Buffalo: Roberson appeared in four games last yar at Kansas State. He completed 3 of 7 passes for 18 yards. He also rushed one time for seven yards. The former Penn State passer transferred to Buffalo this offseason. The now seventh-year college player projects to be the starter entering the season, though info out of camp is limited.

OL Ibrahim Traore, Toledo: Traore was part of the Rockets’ field goal kick team in 2024. He recorded 50 snaps on it. On offense, he is a backup. He had just nine snaps in one regular season contest. He projects as a special teams starter and backup on offense again in 2025.

WR Carmelo Taylor, Lackawanna College: While technically not a transfer, Taylor is still suiting up for the Falcons at the junior college level. Over six games, he caught 11 passes for 359 yards and six touchdowns in 2024. He is back with the team in 2025.

Jerry Cross, TE, Memphis: A recent depth chart update from BWI sister site Tiger Sports Report did not cover the tight end position. Cross joined the Tigers for spring ball, which couldn’t have hurt his case to earn more playing time than he did at Penn State. He projects to share time with JUCO addition Bryan Anderson, per Phil Steele’s projected depth chart.

Omari Evans, WR,Washington: Evans missed time during spring ball due to a lower-body injury. Speaking with reporters at Big Ten Media Days, Huskies coach Jedd Fischsaid the former Nittany Lion intrigued them in the portal because of the speed he could inject into the offense. Earlier this week, On Montlake with Christian Caple put Evans in a rotational role to start.

Tyler Johnson, WR,East Carolina: Johnson is not mentioned in any of the school website’s three preseason camp updates. But, he was on campus for spring ball and is in a room that’s strong at the top but has tons of opportunity from there based on returning production. The trail of info is pretty cold at that point though, otherwise.

Keyvone Lee, RB, UNLV: Lee carried five times for five yards in the Runnin’ Rebels’ 38-31 win over Idaho State last Saturday. He also lost a yard on one reception and seems to be pretty far down the depth chart.

Chase Meyer, K, CalAccording to California Golden Bears on SI reporter Jeff Faraudo, Meyer will handle short field goals and extra points while a different kicker will handle kickoffs and long field goals. Meyer was 17 of 20 on field goals two years ago at Tulsa but never attempted a kick during his one season in State College.

JB Nelson, OL, Kansas State: The Wildcats started Nelson at right guard in his first career game with the team. He ended up playign 37 of the team’s 59 snaps on offense in addition to three snaps on special teams.

Beau Pribula, QB, Missouri: The former Penn State passer could not win the Tigers’ starting job outright during preseason camp. He and Sam Horn, a returner who missed all of the 2024 season due to injury, will both play in the team’s opener with Central Arkansas as the competition between them rages into the regular season.

“I informed the team this afternoon that both quarterbacks will play in the first game,” Missouri coach Eliah Drinkwitz said in a team statement. “I want to see them in a game-day situation to make a final determination.”

Harrison Wallace III, WR, Ole Miss: Per Billy Embody at BWI sister site Rebel Grove, the SEC team feels good about Wallace III making an early impact this fall. The buzz around the former Nittany Lion has been strong this spring — from the Rebel Grove guys and others in the media space down there — to make one thing that the former four-star recruit will likely earn a starting role to start the year.

Former Nittany Lions lining up elsewhere on defense

DL Davon Townley, Missouri State: Townley played in only four games in 2024. He made 13 tackles (2.5 for loss) and had 1.5 sacks and two quarterback hurries. He’s back with the same team in 2025.

DL Jordan van den Berg, Georgia Tech: In 2024, van den Berg was part of the Yellow Jackets’ field goal block and field goal teams. On defense, he took the team’s third-most defensive tackle snaps with 348. He turned those into 20 tackles, a sack, and two fumble recoveries. In 2025, he is in line to be a heavily used starter again.

P Alex Bacchetta, Rice: Bacchetta was the team’s starting punter in 2024. He sent 50 punts for an average of 41.18 yards per boot. He also boomed 10 punts for 50-plus yards. And, he put the Owls’ opponent inside of its own 20-yard line 11 times. There’s no reason to think that he won’t be the starter in 2025.

DL Rodney McGraw, Western Michigan: McGraw appeared in all 12 games this season, finishing with 195 snaps on defense in 2024. He posted 21 tackles and a sack on the season. Now a senior, Phil Steele projects him as a backup again in 2025.

DL Ken Talley, Arkansas: Talley made six snaps and had 1.5 sacks over 152 snaps and 10 games for Michigan State in 2024. He moved onto Arkansas this offseason. On3 sister site HawgBeat projects that he will start 2025 as a backup for the Razorbacks.

DT Cole Brevard, Texas: The former Penn State defensive tackle hit the portal this offseason to go to Texas. “You go into it for positions of need from a depth perspective, and I think Cole provides that,” Longhorns coach Steve Sarkisian said in December. However, he could start for UT in Week 1 at Ohio State. Brevard was a backup defensive tackle for Purdue last uyear. He owned 392 snaps over 11 games this season. His season stat line featured 19 tackles and 1.5 sacks in 2024.

DL Jamari Buddin, Grand Valley State: Buddin recorded nine tackles (two for loss) over nine games for 11-2 Grand Valley State. He is back with the team in 2025, per its roster.

Mehki Flowers, S, Akron: Flowers is actually listed as a defensive back on the Zips’ roster, which makes one wonder if he isn’t getting reps at both corner and safety this summer. He projects to start the year in the backup role, though it would be silly not to note how scarce the info is right now on Joe Moorhead’s team.

Cam Miller, CB, Rutgers: Miller had some productive moments for the Lions before electing to leave the team’s loaded cornerbacks room for Piscataway. Two former Penn State analysts, Robb Smith and Vic Hall, are now on the Scarlet Knights’ staff as the co-DC and safeties coach, respectively. They know Miller’s game. A pre-camp projected depth chart from On3 sister The Knight Report put Miller in a starting role. We have no reason to think he’s lost it during camp.

Tyrece Mills, S, UCONN: Phil Steele’s preseason depth chart for the Huskies projects Mills to start at one safety spot. Considering his past college experience, it’s a fair assumption to make. But, there’s little out there confirming it before kickoff.

Jon Mitchell, CB, Georgia TechBWI sister site Jackets Online reports that Mitchell has flashed some during his first camp with the Yellow Jackets. But, he still projects to open the year in a backup role at his new school a week or so before the opening.

Joseph Mupoyi, DL, North Carolina: A player with a ton of potential and strong traits who always had to refine the football side of things, Mupoyi left after spring ball to become a Tar Heel. Work remains to round out his game, and so there’s no indication at the moment that he’ll contribute in Chapel Hill this year.

Ta’Mere Robinson, LB, USC: Robinson has reportedly flashed some in camp but continues to be in a scrap for playing time. USC coach Lincoln Riley told reporters that two Trojans have separated themselves at linebacker — neither of which was the former Penn State defender — putting Robinson in the next tier of playing, trying to climb the depth chart.

Smith Vilbert, DE, North Carolina: Vilbert was originally returning to Penn State for a seventh season. Then, he switched gears and left for Chapel Hill. He’s one of many new faces in a defensive line room that is still establishing a pecking order. That makes what his role will be for the opener unclear at this point in time.

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Why the College Football Playoff system isn’t to blame for lopsided postseason

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Everybody wants to fix the College Football Playoff, but nobody seems to know how. There’s a good reason for this. It’s because the College Football Playoff isn’t broken … college football is.

On Saturday, college football die-hards and casuals alike tuned in to watch two games that were largely decided before a snap ever took place. Sure, the possibility of an upset always looms, but the first quarters of Ole Miss’s 41-10 win over Tulane or Oregon’s 51-34 win over James Madison made it clear quickly how those games would go. They were results that would do nothing to slow the ceaseless wave of the college football literati who had spent the last few weeks gnashing their teeth in despair over the possibility these blowouts would happen and what it would all mean.

But the pearl-clutching, hemming and hawing are all directed at the wrong target. What we’re seeing in the College Football Playoff is the result of a far bigger problem in the sport. College football has always been a top-heavy sport, and while we’ve seen a more even distribution of that weight up top thanks to NIL and the transfer portal (the GLP-1 of college football), on the whole, the sport is more top-heavy than ever before.

Resources, talent shifting in one direction

There is far more talent available and far more money coming in than at any time before, and it’s all flowing overwhelmingly in one direction.

If you look at the top recruiting classes for the 2026 cycle, you’ll notice a couple of things. The first is that, for the first time since 2008, the top class in the country belongs outside of the SEC. USC took the honors this year, the first non-SEC program to do so since Miami way back when. Furthermore, Alabama is the only SEC school to finish in the top four, but while that’s nice to see as far as spreading the talent around, it ignores the larger picture.

Sure, the Big Ten has the top spot, but 23 of the top 35 classes call the Big Ten or SEC home. The only non-Big Ten and SEC schools to crack the top 20 were Notre Dame, Miami, Florida State, North Carolina, Texas Tech and Clemson. Of those six, only Notre Dame and Miami are in the top 10, and Miami is 10th.

Pete Golding shows he’s in charge as Ole Miss dominates without Lane Kiffin: ‘He controls what he wants’

John Talty

Pete Golding shows he's in charge as Ole Miss dominates without Lane Kiffin: 'He controls what he wants'

Damage done by mass realignment

Recruiting rankings are not the only area in which the Big Ten and SEC have consolidated power. They’re just another result of that consolidation. In the last 15 years, the Big Ten has added Nebraska, Maryland, Rutgers, UCLA, USC, Oregon and Washington to the fold. Taking the last four essentially killed the Pac-12, while reaching out and taking Nebraska caused a destabilizing effect on the Big 12. An instability the SEC was all too happy to take advantage of as it poached Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas and Texas A&M from the league over the last 15 years, too. Both leagues will exist in 2026 but largely in name only. Clearly, the Big 12 has survived the attacks much stronger than the Pac-12 has, but the league has seen all of its biggest brands taken from it, which leaves it at a disadvantage when it comes to finding a television deal, causing the gap to grow only wider.

Perhaps that’s why, while we were all forced to suffer the horrors of two uncompetitive football games on Saturday, Arizona State’s Kenny Dillingham was sending out a call to any possible billionaires who wanted to buy him a new roster. Because that’s where we are now with NIL. The sport dragged its collective feet and ignored the giant tidal wave coming at it for decades, only to dive in full speed ahead on openly paying players (some of) what they’re owed. Only, you know, with hardly any regulations or guidelines that everybody can follow and no viable way to enforce them. Whose fault is that? I don’t know? Everybody’s?

Anyway, right now, people are looking at the Group of Five as the problem with the playoff, but believe me: if finances continue to work the way they’re working in this sport, it’s only a matter of time before the ACC and Big 12 get the same treatment people are giving Tulane and James Madison. After all, it’s the Big Ten and SEC who have been handed complete control of the future of the format as a compromise to simply let the ACC and Big 12 continue to exist.

Big Ten, SEC will win out in the end

But, the truth is, the Big Ten and SEC have always controlled the College Football Playoff. The Big Ten and SEC have won nine of the first 11 College Football Playoffs. Clemson is the only team from outside those leagues to win it, and it’s done so twice. Of course, Clemson has only made the field once since the NCAA stopped forcing transfers to sit out a year after changing schools and hasn’t won a playoff game at all. That’s mostly due to Clemson’s stubbornness, but it’s fitting nonetheless.

To drive the point home even further, of the 22 teams that have played in a College Football Playoff National Championship, 16 currently reside in the Big Ten or SEC. Clemson (4x), TCU and Notre Dame are the only teams to get there who aren’t in those leagues (Oregon and Washington made it while still members of the Pac-12, but are now in the Big Ten).

As the Big Ten and SEC expanded, the Big 12 and ACC did what they had to do to try to keep up. All of which has led to bloated conferences spanning the entire continent where you only play half the league in any given season, leading to ridiculous tie-breaker scenarios that end up with a five-loss Duke winning the ACC, which puts those damned Dukes of James Madison in the field!

So what’s the solution? How do we fix it all? I don’t know that you can, but I do believe there’s a natural outcome from all of this that at least leads to equilibrium of some sort.

You simply let nature take its course. Let the Big Ten and SEC finish what they started. Whether you’re excited about it or not — and believe me, I am not — the Super League or whatever dumb name you want to give it is coming. I don’t know if it will be the result of a hostile takeover by the Big Ten and SEC pilfering all the remaining valuable brands once the current television deals expire, or if it’ll be the result of a compromise between the four leagues to break off from the NCAA and form their own, fully professionalized league. But whatever the method, and whatever the final makeup of the schools involved, it is coming.

And when it does, your College Football Playoff will finally be “fixed.” The blowouts, however, will continue.





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Kickin’ It with Kiz: We comin’? They leaving. CU stars dump Coach Prime for greener pastures

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These young men leaving the CU football program want wins. Wins equal NIL money.

– Joe, ninja-like tendencies

Kiz: Maybe it was Deion Sanders’ magnetic personality that attracted wide receiver Omarion Miller and safety Tawfiq Byard to Boulder. But they’re both hitting the transfer portal, because, as it turns out, the Buffs’ top offensive playmaker and most impactful defender from a wretched 3-9 CU team find money more attractive than Coach Prime. We comin’? They leavin’. Louis Vuitton cuts both ways, eh? 

Maybe it’s not such a doom-and-gloom situation with Sanders and the Buffs if other football programs are getting hit by the transfer portal in the same way.

– S.D., Buffs fan

Kiz: Can you handle the truth? Sanders came to Boulder to make the CU football program a pro showcase for his son and Travis Hunter. Coach Prime also got his bag. More power to him. But CU was so busy countin’ the money from the increased attention that athletic director Rick George was blind to what’s painfully obvious now. The University of Colorado is not a serious football program. As a coach, is Prime ready to get serious about becoming something more than an Aflac pitchman? We’re fixing to find out.

The NIL mess has ruined college football, Kiz.

– Allison, chasing the sun

Kiz: I am all for an athlete at a big-time football school getting paid, because it’s a strenuous and pressurized job. Always has been. But college football has become a game without any semblance of financial rules, loyalty or ethics. That’s not sport, it’s chaos. College football is my first love. So, this mess not only hurts my heart, but it also gives the Buffs next to no shot at winning another national championship.

The college football system is a wreck. So much is wrong that I wonder how you begin to fix it. The question isn’t: What would you do to fix it? In a practical sense, it’s more like how do you convince people to make the necessary changes?

– Z., Denver

Kiz: ESPN should replace its happy little charade of bowl week with more meaningful programming and call it tampering week. Texas at San Antonio playing Florida International in a bowl on the day after Christmas is a complete waste of everybody’s time, especially when you consider UTSA coach Jeff Traylor expects 20 of his players to opt out of their last dance with teammates. “I hate what’s going on in college football,” Traylor said. “It’s sad, it really is sad. I never thought we’d be punished for making a bowl game by being leveraged, that if you don’t give (players) a certain number, they’re not going to play in a bowl.” Nothing short of a collective bargaining agreement, with binding contracts between players and college teams, is going to fix this mess.

And today’s parting shot warns the Broncos to not start taking their football magic for granted.

Beware the Jags. The Broncos will be facing a tough test. Denver needs to keep its edge. Jacksonville quarterback Trevor Lawrence is playing at a high level. Fingers and toes crossed.

– Z.G., true Bo-liever





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I’m deeply disturbed by what just happened with BYU’s football coach

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We continually talk about serving the collective good, creating inclusive environments and making ethical choices. The spectacle of multimillion-dollar contracts in athletics sends a conflicting message.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) BYU Cougars head coach Kalani Sitake as BYU hosts TCU, NCAA football in Provo on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025.

Since the onslaught of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) deals in college sports, Brigham Young University has made it clear that it is not just willing to play the game — it is willing to pay top dollar.

The recent contract our football coach signed is the latest example. As a BYU student, I am deeply disturbed by the attitude our university has taken toward athletics.

Although the numbers are not officially confirmed, Coach Kalani Sitake’s new annual salary is reportedly in the ballpark of $9 million. Those millions could provide clean drinking water and food to people around the world; it could fund thousands of full tuition scholarships at BYU each year. Yet that same money is tied up in a single athletic contract. What does this suggest about BYU’s priorities?

I am not against sports, nor do I begrudge athletes or coaches for earning compensation. But BYU’s approach raises difficult questions about our values. President Shane Reese is clearly a big proponent of BYU athletics, but the frequency with which he attends sporting events, speaks of athletic outcomes and invests his bully pulpit and limited time in sports, can feel to the rest of campus like our academic focus lags behind. BYU cannot control what donors do with their money, but it can choose what it does with donor money, and that’s what students, faculty and Cougar Nation are watching.

BYU’s mission emphasizes providing an education that is spiritually strengthening, intellectually enlarging and character-building, with a focus on service and the full realization of human potential. How then, do we justify advocating for self-reliance, helping the poor and the needy and promoting ethical values while simultaneously celebrating multimillion-dollar contracts in athletics?

NIL deals became legal in 2021, creating opportunities for college athletes to profit from endorsements and sponsorships. BYU has clearly embraced this reality, investing heavily to compete financially and attract top talent. While the university maintains that its mission remains intact, the optics are hard to ignore. Students who work campus jobs are still earning sometimes under $10 an hour, while they see athletes and coaches earning millions. Professors researching cures for cancer, promoting democratic ideals, championing global ecological stewardship and strengthening families earn less than our assistant coaches. What message does this send about fairness, value and the culture we are promoting on campus?

Some defenders of this system argue that the sports budget is separate from university funds, and, technically, that is true. But every time BYU’s name, logo or likeness is used in media coverage, sponsorships or promotions, the university’s reputation is leveraged for profit. The supposed separation of funds does little to address the ethical and practical implications for the rest of the student body. What we are celebrating now is a kind of hypocrisy — one that contradicts the core principles meant to guide the university community.

In our classes, we talk often about serving the collective good, creating inclusive environments and making ethical choices. Yet, the spectacle of multimillion-dollar contracts in athletics sends a conflicting message. Sports can inspire and unite communities, and I have no wish to diminish athletic achievement. But BYU has to ask: Are we actually serving our mission, or are we just keeping people entertained with bread and circus?

I don’t see BYU’s attitude toward sports changing anytime soon. But the next time a student faces a family member with cancer, a community is devastated by a natural disaster or any urgent need arises, I expect BYU administrators, mega-donors and alumni to respond just as quickly and generously as they did to retain a football coach.

(Elias Johnson) Elias Johnson is a senior at Brigham Young University.

Elias Johnson is a senior honors student studying biodiversity in conservation at Brigham Young University.

The Salt Lake Tribune is committed to creating a space where Utahns can share ideas, perspectives and solutions that move our state forward. We rely on your insight to do this. Find out how to share your opinion here, and email us at voices@sltrib.com.



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NCAA reaches settlement over NIL lawsuit with Tennessee, other states – The Daily Beacon

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The NCAA has reached a settlement in principle with several states, including Tennessee, surrounding a lawsuit of name, image and likeness. Tennessee attorney general Jonathan Skrmetti announced the settlement in a statement Friday.

The lawsuit began when Skrmetti sued the NCAA alongside Virginia attorney general Jason Miyares. It was filed Jan. 31 of last year following an NCAA investigation into Tennessee and Spyre Sports. Prior to the lawsuit, Tennessee athletic director Danny White and chancellor Donde Plowman responded in statements against the NCAA.

A federal judge gave the plaintiffs a preliminary injunction on Feb. 23, temporarily suspending the NCAA’s regulations on name, image and likeness. Nine days later, the NCAA decided to pause the investigation into Tennessee athletics and Spyre Sports.

“We’ve been fighting hard to protect Tennessee student-athletes,” Skrmetti said in a statement. “Last year, we blocked the NCAA’s unlawful enforcement against Tennessee students and schools, and now this settlement in principle lays the groundwork for a permanent solution.”

Per the statement, the settlement will allow students to retain rights from NIL and not allow the NCAA to ban NIL recruiting procedures. Finalization of the settlement is scheduled for March 17.

Prior to the most recent investigation, the NCAA investigated the Tennessee football program, finding several violations from September 2018 to November 2020. The violations, numbering in their hundreds, resulted in significant punishment against Tennessee football.

Required reading

Why Donde Plowman sent a letter to NCAA President Charlie Baker

State of Tennessee, NCAA conclude preliminary injunction hearing, expect decision in ‘short order’

Injunction granted in Tennessee vs. NCAA, court freezes NIL rules

Breaking down the state of Tennessee’s suit against the NCAA

Who is Jonathan Skrmetti? The Tennessee attorney general who isn’t scared

States of Florida, New York, District of Columbia join Tennessee’s antitrust suit against NCAA

Why adding Florida, New York, District of Columbia will benefit Tennessee in antitrust suit against NCAA



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James Madison vs. Oregon prediction: Odds, picks, best bet for College Football Playoff

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James Madison vs. Oregon. In the College Football Playoff. These are the weirdest of times.

When the field expanded to 12 teams, it meant we were eventually going to get a matchup like this.

On one side of the field stands Oregon, a juggernaut backed up by one of the most robust NIL budgets in the country, and on the other, James Madison, playing in just its fourth season at the FBS level.

James Madison now heads across the country to Eugene as 21-point underdogs, hoping to pull off one of the most profound upsets in the history of the sport.

James Madison vs. Oregon odds, prediction

The Dukes were unquestionably one of the best teams in the Group of 5 this season, but they also ranked 121st in strength of schedule, with their only loss coming against their lone Power 4 opponent — Louisville.

You can only beat the teams in front of you, however, and James Madison did that in style in 2025.


Brandon Finney #4 of the Oregon Ducks reacting during the second half against the Washington Huskies.
Brandon Finney of Oregon celebrates. Getty Images

The Dukes had an average margin of victory of 21.5 points, went 8-5 against the spread and won eight games by at least three possessions.

James Madison hit the 45-point mark five times, including against a couple of decent sides in Old Dominion and Texas State.

That kind of scoring power certainly makes the Dukes a tough out as a 21-point underdog, especially since James Madison excels at controlling the clock.

Only two teams (Army, Miami) average more time of possession per game than the Dukes, who lean into the run more than just about anybody outside of the Service Academies.


Betting on College Football?


Whether or not the Dukes will be able to pull that kind of game plan off against an elite Oregon defense remains to be seen, but it bodes well for James Madison’s chances to cover a large spread that it is committed to the run. That should keep the clock moving, which is a great thing for underdog bettors.

Oregon is likely going to prove to be too much for James Madison over the course of 60 minutes, but the Dukes are uniquely set up to be a thorn in the Ducks’ side on Saturday night.

The Play: James Madison +21 (-110, bet365)


Why Trust New York Post Betting

Michael Leboff is a long-suffering Islanders fan, but a long-profiting sports bettor with 10 years of experience in the gambling industry. He loves using game theory to help punters win bracket pools, find long shots, and learn how to beat the market in mainstream and niche sports.



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Freshman Ebuka Okorie scores season-high 32 to lead Stanford over Colorado 77-68

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PHOENIX (AP) — Freshman Ebuka Okorie scored a season-high 32 points to help Stanford beat Colorado 77-68 on Saturday night in the Hall of Fame Series at Mortgage Matchup Center.

Okorie made 6 of 13 shots with two 3-pointers and 18 of 21 free throws for the Cardinal (10-2). He entered averaging 21 points per game.

Benny Gealer hit three 3-pointers and scored 13, adding three steals for Stanford in a third straight victory. Chisom Okpara scored 11 but made only 3 of 12 shots and 4 of his 10 free throws.

Barrington Hargress had 16 points and six assists to pace the Buffaloes (10-2). Sebastian Rancik totaled 14 points and eight rebounds, while reserve Isaiah Johnson scored 11.

Rancik and Hargress both had nine points by halftime to help Colorado build a 35-33 lead.

Hargress followed his 3-pointer with a fastbreak layup, and the Buffaloes took their largest lead at 29-22 with five minutes left. Gealer had 3-pointers on both sides of one by Ryan Agarwal, and the Cardinal used a 9-2 run to tie it 33-all. Felix Kossaras scored with 1:37 remaining for the final points of the half.

Gealer hit a 3-pointer to tie it 37-all, sparking a 9-0 run for a six-point lead, and the Cardinal led for the final 18:20. Oskar Giltay scored to give Stanford its largest lead at 65-49 with six minutes left.

Up next

Stanford: Hosts Cal State Northridge on Saturday.

Colorado: Hosts Northern Colorado on Dec. 28.

___

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