Florida State survives low-scoring affair with Louisville to win the ACC Championship

The Seminoles added a punctuation mark on a 13-0 season with a defensive victory over Louisville in the Charlotte rain.

The Florida State Seminoles outlasted the Charlotte rain and Louisville’s defense for a 16-6 victory in the ACC Championship on Saturday night, cementing a 13-0 season and likely clinching a playoff berth.

The Seminoles, who entered the game No. 4 in the College Football Playoff rankings, entered the game with visions of the semifinals. Wins by Texas and Alabama earlier on Saturday took away their margin for error, however, assuring a loss would eliminate them from the final four. Multiple injuries left the responsibility of that last win on true freshman quarterback Brock Glenn, who had thrown four career passes before Saturday’s game.

The first half was, in a word, ugly. In the opening 30 minutes, the Louisville and Florida State offenses combined for 149 total yards, 10 first downs, and 11 punts. Glenn performed admirably, completing six of his 12 passes for 44 yards, but a missed field goal from 45 yards meant Florida State only led 3-0 at halftime.

The Louisville offense didn’t come alive in the second half, but it started to stir. After gaining 69 yards as a team in the opening half, they gained 56 on the first drive of the third quarter on a drive full of runs and designed screens. The momentum resulted in a game-tying field goal.

The FSU offense wouldn’t let the momentum stay one-sided, however. Junior running back Lawrence Toafili broke off a 73-yard run just minutes later, setting the Seminoles up for the game’s first touchdown.

After exchanging a few more punts, Louisville broke off another long play. Maurice Turner found a seam and raced 41 yards deep into Florida State territory to set up another Louisville field goal.

Then, the Cardinals’ special teams made what looked like the play of the game. Florida State lined up to punt, but Louisville got pressure on Florida State punter Alex Mastromanno and tackled him before he could get the punt off, setting up the Louisville offense just 11 yards from the go-ahead touchdown.

Instead of a glory-sealing touchdown drive, however, Cardinals quarterback Jack Plummer threw an interception in the end zone to hand the Seminoles the ball back, giving FSU life after life. A few punts later, the Cardinals were forced to go for a fourth down and Plummer was pulled down for a sack, bringing the evening’s offense to a merciful end.

Florida State’s win puts them in the driver’s seat for one of the four playoff spots. The CFP committee has never left out an undefeated Power 5 conference champion. All logic points to the Seminoles ending up in the semifinals, leaving the committee to the momentous decision of whether or not to leave Alabama at home.

Tre White bails Louisville, coach Kenny Payne out of home loss to New Mexico State

Tre White had 22 points including a game-tying three to help lead the Louisville Cardinals to a narrow win over the New Mexico State Aggies.

If it weren’t for some late-game heroics by forward Tre White, the Louisville Cardinals would have suffered a home loss to a sub-250 ranked team at KenPom in New Mexico State, and you can bet the calls for coach Kenny Payne’s job would have reached a fever pitch.

However, White helped lead the Cardinals on an 8-0 run in the closing minute of regulation, including drilling a wide-open three-pointer to tie the game with less than 30 seconds to go, which forced overtime where Louisville was able to outscore the Aggies and take home a 90-84 win.

The Cardinals are now 3-3 on the season, with a home loss to Chattanooga and a pair of neutral site losses to No. 19 Texas (by just one point) and Indiana in the Empire Classic.

Louisville fans no doubt hoped the strong performances over Feast Week, even though they were both losses, would carry over to this buy-in game against the Aggies – but instead the Cardinals shot only 44.6% from the field and 20% (4-20) from beyond the arc, only managing to find any offense at the free throw line – where they ended up a whopping 49(!) times and converted 36.

New Mexico State played the final 20 seconds of overtime with only four players after six different Aggies fouled out of the contest, and their own inability to convert from deep (27.8%) or the charity stripe (52.9%) ultimately prevented them from picking up a very nice road win in Jason Hooten’s first season at the helm for the rebuilding Aggies – who have an entirely new team after last year’s season was suspended due to serious hazing allegations.

White’s 22 points were second on the team behind a monster performance from Skyy Clark, who had 29 total points on 6-8 shooting thanks to a 15-16 performance at the stripe.

Louisville will host Bellarmine (2-4) on Wednesday, ranked No. 229 at KenPom, before going on the road to take on Virginia Tech on December 3 in the first conference game of the year for Payne’s squad.

Louisville stars Jamari Thrash and Jawhar Jordan both expected to suit up against Virginia

The Cardinals’ leading rusher and receiver this season are game-time decisions Thursday night but expected to suit up, according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel.

Louisville stars Jamari Thrash and Jawhar Jordan are both expected to suit up and at least try to play on Thursday night against Virginia, ESPN’s Pete Thamel reports.

Thrash did not play last week in the Cardinals’ 34-3 win over Virginia Tech. His 712 receiving yards are second in the conference behind the Cavaliers’ Malik Washington, and the Louisville junior’s 15.5 yards per catch are the most among any ACC wideout with at least 40 receptions.

Jordan, the ACC’s second-leading rusher with 881 yards this season, was limited to just 14 carries for 57 yards last week as he dealt with a hamstring injury. He’s scored 12 total touchdowns this season, trailing only North Carolina‘s Omarion Hampton in the conference.

Cardinals cornerback Jarvis Brownlee Jr. will not play.

Louisville’s game against Virginia kicks off at 7:30 p.m. ET on Thursday.

Louisville star receiver Jamari Thrash out against Virginia Tech

The star Cardinals wide receiver, second in the ACC with 712 receiving yards, will miss the game with an upper body injury.

The Louisville Cardinals look to get a firmer grip on an ACC title game appearance on Saturday, but they’ll have to do it without star receiver Jamari Thrash.

Thrash won’t play against Virginia Tech on Saturday, according to a report from ESPN’s Pete Thamel. The wideout was limited in practice this week with an upper-body injury.

Thrash leads the Cardinals and is second in the ACC with 712 receiving yards. He’s reached the end zone six times on 46 receptions, and his 15.48 yards per catch is the most of any receiver in the conference with at least 30 receptions.

No other Louisville receiver has reached 230 yards yet on the season.

Louisville plays Virginia Tech at 3:30 p.m. Eastern time. The Hokies and the Cardinals are the only two ACC teams with a single conference loss, leading the race for the second bid to the conference title game and a date with undefeated Florida State.

Best Amazon Prime Big Deals Day deal for each team in the US LBM Coaches Poll

View our favorite Amazon Prime Big Deals Day deals for each team in the US LBM Coaches Poll Top 25.

The college football season is heating up and ranked teams are headed in all directions in the US LBM Coaches Poll.

Oklahoma leapfrogged Texas after a convincing win over their rivals. Following suit was another riser in Louisville, who sent Notre Dame down the ladder after a big home win.

No matter what team you pull for, it’s the perfect time to show your support. Amazon Prime Big Deals Day has arrived.

Amongst the slew of deals available on Tuesday, Oct. 10 and Wednesday, Oct. 11, college football’s top-25 will be well represented in the Amazon savings.

Check out our list of featured Amazon Prime Day offers for each team currently in the US LBM Coaches Poll top-25 right here:

Louisville could be 2023’s TCU, according to Timanus’s Week 6 overreactions

After a multi-score victory over Notre Dame to stay undefeated, USA Today’s Week 6 Overreactions say Louisville could match TCU’s 2022 magic.

The Louisville Cardinals would not have been top of mind if you asked anyone for a preseason ACC favorite. Through six weeks, however, they’re the first team in the conference to bowl eligibility and one of three remaining unbeatens after a 33-20 home victory over Notre Dame. But who says the magic needs to stop there?

USA Today’s Eddie Timanus, among his Week 6 Overreactions, said the Cardinals could emulate the TCU Horned Frogs’ CFP run from a season ago, with similar themes in a new head coach, a roster rebuilt through the transfer portal and excellent close-game luck.

Again, it’s important to keep in mind that Timanus framed this as an overreaction, not a prediction. But Timanus pointed out that the Cardinals just need to finish in the top 2 of the ACC to play in the title game and they don’t play North Carolina or Florida State, the other premiere teams thus far.

In all likelihood, a situation like TCU might be a once-in-a-decade situation. There have been 36 College Football Playoff teams since the format’s inception. 30 of them have either been an SEC team, Clemson, Ohio State, Michigan, or Notre Dame.

But there’s some foundation there, and that’s all Timanus is pointing out. The Cardinals control their own destiny for the rest of the regular season. Louisville has maybe the two most electric position players in the conference in Jawhar Jordan and Jamari Thrash, who they can rely on similar to how the Horned Frogs relied on Quintin Johnston. Quarterback Jack Plummer can’t match Max Duggan as a dual threat, but he has 11 touchdowns and four interceptions against Power 5 opponents. The Cardinals are fourth in scoring offense and third in scoring defense in the ACC.

The ACC seems a bit too top-heavy compared to last year’s Big 12 to feel anything more than a faint hope for another Cinderella story. Oklahoma and Texas were rebuilding a season ago, especially with the Sooners an uncommon 6-7. TCU still didn’t win the conference, either, needing the Pac-12 and ACC to both produce multi-loss champions to sneak into the dance.

Florida State hasn’t looked dominant since Week 1, but they still knocked the doors off LSU. North Carolina has the conference’s best player in quarterback Drake Maye, and their defense and rushing attack have shown up consistently throughout the year.

Louisville still has a couple of major tests left this season, with Duke, Miami, and Kentucky all on the schedule. And their white-knuckle scuffle with N.C. State showed any week could pop the balloon. But the path exists, and the similarities aren’t nothing.

Louisville dynamic duo leads ACC in rushing, receiving

Louisville’s offense is 13th in the country in total yards so far this season. Jawhar Jordan and Jamari Thrash alone account for 47% of that total.

The most electric duo in college football this season might not be from the program you’d expect.

Through three games, Louisville running back Jawhar Jordan and wide receiver Jamari Thrash have been an unsolvable puzzle for opposing defenses. The Cardinals have 1,586 yards of total offense, the 13th-most in the NCAA, and 15 touchdowns in their first three games.

Jordan and Thrash have combined for 743 yards and eight of those touchdowns, just between the two of them. Yes, two players have combined for 47% of the production of the nation’s 13th-most prolific offense.

Jordan ran for 231 yards on just 14 carries across his first two games, a clip of 16.5 yards per carry, with a trio of touchdowns. He came down to Earth in Week 3 with a measly 113 yards on 18 carries, only good enough for 6.3 yards per attempt, and a single touchdown, giving him 344 yards for the season.

There are 14 running backs with at least 300 yards on the ground this season. All of the other 13 have at least 40 carries. Four of them have more than 60 carries. Jordan has 32.

The junior running back also has 58 receiving yards on five catches, bringing his average to 10.9 yards per touch. A first down every time he gets his hands on the ball.

As staggering as Jordan’s numbers are, Thrash might be even more explosive. The junior wide receiver leads the ACC with 329 receiving yards on just 14 catches, an average of more than 23 yards per reception. He’s surpassed 80 yards in each of his three games this season, including 159 yards against Indiana in Week 3, despite never catching more than seven passes in a single game.

The duo have combined for eight touchdowns, 16 more first downs, and 10 plays of 20 or more yards this season on just 52 total touches.

Louisville hasn’t played the most cupcake of schedules either, with wins over Georgia Tech and Indiana in its first three games. If Jordan and Thrash can keep the pace during conference play, they could provide a nightmare 1-2 punch for ACC defensive coordinators.

2023 NCAA women’s Sweet 16: Latest bracket, schedule, and how to watch

There are few surprises with Miami, Colorado, and Ole Miss in the mix of teams, but stalwarts are also accounted for in South Carolina, Iowa, and UConn.

The Sweet 16 is upon us and games begin Friday, March 24. There are four matchups on Friday and four matchups on Saturday. There are few surprises with Miami, Colorado, and Ole Miss in the mix of teams, but stalwarts are also accounted for in South Carolina, Iowa, and UConn.

Sweet 16 Schedule: (All game times are eastern)

Friday, March 24 — Sweet 16

  • No. 4 Villanova vs. No. 9 Miami | 2:30 p.m. | ESPN
  • No. 2 Utah vs. No. 3 LSU | 5 p.m. | ESPN
  • No. 2 Iowa vs. No. 6 Colorado | 7:30 p.m. | ESPN
  • No. 5 Louisville vs. No. 8 Ole Miss | 10 p.m. | ESPN

Saturday, March 25 — Sweet 16

  • No. 2 Maryland vs. No. 3 Notre Dame | 11:30 a.m. | ESPN
  • No.1 South Carolina vs. No. 4 UCLA | 2:00 p.m. | ESPN
  • No. 2 UConn vs. No. 3 Ohio State | 4 p.m. | ABC
  • No. 1 Virginia Tech vs. No. 4 Tennessee | 6:30 p.m. | ESPN2

Only two No. 1 seeds remain in the tournament and this is the first time since 1998 that the Sweet 16 will be without two of its No. 1 seeds.

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Power ranking the 16 remaining teams in the women’s tournament

The frontrunners in the tournament are still the top-seeded teams, but lower-seeded teams are peaking at just the right time and anything can happen in March.

The tournament’s second round has come and gone with upsets galore busting everyone’s brackets. Ole Miss’s upset of No. 1 seeded Stanford shattered the last bracket.

The team field is a bit diverse with only two No. 1 seeds remaining in the tournament, South Carolina and Virginia Tech, respectively. Ole Miss, Miami, and Colorado shocked viewers when they took down their opponents and made it into the Sweet 16.

The frontrunners in the tournament are still the top-seeded teams, but lower-seeded teams are peaking at just the right time and anything can happen in March.

With that said College Sports Wire tried to rank the remaining teams in the Sweet 16.

Skyy Clark commits to Louisville not longer after former team eliminated

The timing was just a coincidence. Right?

The hits keep coming for the Illinois Fighting Illini men’s basketball program.

They were eliminated from the NCAA Tournament in the Round of 64 by the Arkansas Razorbacks, 73-63. The team went into the half down by 10 and despite matching Arkansas point for point, they couldn’t close the gap. It was down to a five-point margin with 2:05 left in the game but the Hogs were too much for them.

Shortly after the game had gone final, former player Skyy Clark took to Twitter to announce that he would commit to the University of Louisville and Kenny Payne. Clark entered the transfer portal on Mar. 12 and found his new team just four days later.

Clark appeared in 13 games for the Fighting Illini averaging 7 points, 3.7 rebounds, and 2.1 assists per game. He shot 41.1% from the field, 33.3% from beyond the arc, and 69.6% from the charity stripe.

Clark’s best game came against Lindenwood when he shot 8-9 from the field with three shots from beyond the arc finding the bottom of the net. He scored 19 points with three rebounds and four assists.

The Cardinals now have a new guard to deploy in the 2023-24 season.

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