Steelers are now first place in the AFC North following Ravens’ loss

The Browns pulled off an unbelievable win by beating the 5-2 Ravens, 29-24. The Steelers are now 1st in the AFC North following the upset.

Jaws have dropped in Pittsburgh. The Cleveland Browns have done the unthinkable, pulling off an upset victory against the Baltimore Ravens. While Steelers fans wish both rivals could have lost on Sunday, Pittsburgh now holds a half-game lead over the Ravens in the divisional race.

The Cleveland Browns entered the contest with an abysmal 1-6 record and were tasked with the impossible—stopping the 5-2 Ravens and their dynamic offense in Week 8. Browns’ starting QB Deshaun Watson suffered a season-ending torn Achilles, leaving backup QB Jameis Winston to take over the signal-calling duties. 

Winston stepped up in a big way for his team, and in some ways for the Black and Gold faithful, as he threw a game-deciding TD pass with 59 seconds remaining to seal the win against the Ravens. 

The Pittsburgh Steelers are poised to improve their record to 6-2 against the New York Giants, furthering their lead in the AFC North divisional race, on Monday Night Football, October 28th at 8:15 PM EST.

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WATCH: Former Wisconsin assistant goes viral with postgame interview after upset over Notre Dame

Former Wisconsin assistant goes viral with postgame interview after upset over Notre Dame

Former Wisconsin assistant Thomas Hammock was at the center of the college football world on Saturday.

His Northern Illinois Huskies went on the road and beat No. 5 Notre Dame, 16-14, pulling the upset of the year in college football — arguably the biggest win in Northern Illinois program history.

Related: Takeaways from Wisconsin’s uninspiring Week 2 win over South Dakota

Hammock is in his sixth season at the helm at Northern Illinois. His 26-33 overall record with the program includes a 0-6 2020 campaign and a 3-9 2022 season. But it is highlighted by a 9-5 2021 season that included a win in the MAC championship game. The Huskies most recently finished 2023 at 7-6.

Overall, he has stabilized the program in the middle of the MAC, which is far from the place in the sport occupied by Notre Dame. The Fighting Irish entered Saturday ranked near the top of the nation after a Week 1 road win at Texas A&M.

Northern Illinois’ win on a last-minute field goal in South Bend, Indiana, is the perfect David vs. Goliath upset that help define college football. His postgame interview only added to the terrific story:

https://twitter.com/ChaseDaniel/status/1832556348925735067

There is a Wisconsin connection here. Hammock coached for the Badgers from 2003-04 as a graduate assistant and from 2011-2013 as their running backs coach. He coached a few well-known Wisconsin running backs during his time with the program: Montee Ball, Melvin Gordon and James White.

The former Wisconsin assistant is finding success at Northern Illinois despite the current age of college football making it more challenging for programs at the Group of Five level. His upset over Notre Dame and subsequent viral interview is a perfect reminder that college football is about much more than which SEC team will win the College Football Playoff this year.

Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes and opinion. 

Former President Obama picks Vermont to upset Duke in the first round

Former President Barack Obama released his official March Madness bracket on Tuesday, and he doesn’t think Duke makes it to the second round.

Duke is used to being a villain come March, with many celebrity brackets including them as a first-round upset for no reason other than that they hope it happens.

Former presidents have to feel like a new one, though.

Barack Obama released his official March Madness bracket on Tuesday morning, and he thinks the Vermont Catamounts pull off the stunning upset in the first round.

Vermont, KenPom’s 104th-ranked team, has a 19-1 record since the new year began and recently won the America East Conference title over UMass Lowell.

Obama didn’t think the Catamounts’ Cinderella run extended much farther than that, however. He had Vermont losing to Wisconsin in the second round.

If there’s some small consolation for Duke fans, the former president had UNC coming up short, too. The Tar Heels reached his Elite Eight before being upset by Baylor.

Obama’s Final Four consisted of Connecticut, Baylor, Kentucky, and Purdue, with the Huskies defeating the Wildcats in the title game to defend their national championship crown.

IT’S BRACKET MADNESS: Enter USA TODAY’s NCAA tournament bracket contest for a chance at $1 million prize.

Duke women’s basketball gets massive upset over No. 6 NC State at home

The Wolfpack came into Durham as the No. 6 team in the country, but Kara Lawson’s Blue Devils made sure they left with a loss.

Everyone in Durham knew NC State would be one of Duke’s biggest tests of the year.

The Wolfpack came into Sunday’s game as the No. 6 team in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll, sporting a 23-4 record. They were the highest-ranked team in the conference coming into the week and a consistent top-five team in the nation over the past five years.

Duke welcomed the challenge, and after four hard-fought quarters, the Blue Devils walked off with a massive 69-58 upset win for in-state bragging rights.

The Blue Devils jumped on the Wolfpack from the opening whistle, scoring 11 of the game’s first 13 points. Duke’s Reigan Richardson seemed content to beat the Wolfpack herself, scoring the game’s first four points in the opening 90 seconds.

A team as good as NC State wouldn’t go away that easily, however, as the Wolfpack fought back within five before the first quarter ended. Their senior center River Baldwin, who ended the game with a 14-point, 10-rebound double-double, scored half of her team’s points in the opening frame.

With the lead just 13-8 as the second quarter began, Blue Devils fans could be forgiven for thinking momentum sided with the seasoned NC State team. Instead, Duke came out hot again, going on a 6-2 run to open the quarter. Sophomore Emma Koabel, who averaged two points in Duke’s last nine games, made two baskets in the opening minutes en route to a three-for-four performance from the floor.

Sophomore Taina Mair started to warm up in the second as well. The former Boston College guard made a jumper in the first two minutes, but a dagger 3-pointer with 2:30 before the half made Duke’s lead double-digits. Another layup later, she led both teams with 10 points at the break.

After the upset seemed vulnerable with the Wolfpack’s closing run in the first, Duke outscored NC State 22-11 in the second quarter to open up a 16-point lead at halftime. Suddenly, what looked to be Duke’s biggest test of the year was starting to become the team’s biggest statement.

Richardson stretched the lead a little further with a jump shot that found the net in the first minute of the second half, and Mair and center Kennedy Brown made 3-pointers within a minute of each other to ballon Duke’s lead to 22 points midway through the quarter.

Brown, who stands 6-foot-6, had only made five 3-pointers for the entire season before the sequence.

The Wolfpack kept trying to force their way back into the game, but Duke never let them gain momentum. NC State’s Aziaha James made two 3-pointers to pull within 13, and Duke answered with three easy baskets to end the run. The Wolfpack made a jump shot, but Richardson buried a triple. Each NC State punch had a Blue Devils counterpunch.

The fourth quarter began with Duke holding firm control of a 15-point lead, and the rocking Cameron Indoor crowd could power the Blue Devils to the finish from there.

The upset looked to teeter for the briefest of moments when Baldwin made a jump shot to pull the Wolfpack within nine with 2:26 to play, but Mair took over once and for all to cement the upset.

She made a layup through contact, drawing the foul and adding the free throw to pull the lead back to 12. After another NC State basket, she drove to the right and laid in a floater off the backboard, screaming and pumping her fists as it found the net.

The Blue Devils coasted from there, and when the final buzzer sounded, the 11-point win was secure. Mair ended the game with 20 points and seven rebounds, and Richardson added 15 points of her own.

The statement win is Duke’s second straight triumph over a ranked team after its Thursday victory over Syracuse, and the Blue Devils move to 18-9 on the season and 10-6 in ACC play. They welcome Virginia to their home court on Thursday next.

Tobin Anderson shared a quick, but sweet, hug with his son before celebrating FDU’s win over Purdue with his team

This is such a sweet and well-earned moment for the coach.

No matter what happens from here on out in the men’s NCAA tournament, Fairleigh Dickinson will always have the moment it beat Purdue and busted — quite literally — every single bracket.

The team’s head coach, Tobin Anderson, turned out to be the star of the show. He believed in his team from the very beginning — enough to call his own shot on their win before it even seemed possible.

That belief helped him put the players in the best positions to take down the Goliath that was Purdue and that’s exactly what FDU did. Good on them.

Of course, the team had their celebratory moment after the game. But before Anderson could join them in the locker room he had to share this quick embrace with his son, who was absolutely pumped for his dad and their team.

That’s such a sweet moment. And a well-earned one, too, considering what Anderson and the rest of the FDU crew just accomplished.

As a 16-seed, FDU has absolutely shocked the world. None of this was supposed to happen. The team isn’t supposed to be in this position. Yet, here we are.

No idea where things go from here, but FDU and Anderson will always have this. It’s great to see them enjoying it together with their loved ones.

WATCH: FOX CFB expert tells the world that Alabama dynasty is fine despite LSU loss

Don’t give up on the Alabama dynasty quite yet, argues one CFB expert

The college football world has been filled with hot takes since the Crimson Tide were upset by the LSU Tigers Saturday night. While there may be some justified concerns about the Alabama program going forward, the dynasty is not dead.

Many are questioning Nick Saban after suffering two regular season SEC losses in games they were favored, including to their biggest rival the Tennessee Volunteers which snapped a 15-game series winning streak. So naturally, people are asking if things have changed in Tuscaloosa.

FOX college football expert, Joel Klatt, is here to tell people that the Tide will be fine. Klatt has been one of the biggest critics of Alabama in the past, so for him to say Alabama is fine speaks volumes.

In all honesty, both of the games the Tide lost could have gone either way just as easily. Alabama lost on the last play of the game in both games and they were on the road in some insane environments.

Klatt puts it all into perspective by saying, “Alabama is still Alabama. It takes unbelievable venues and great performances from elite teams that have to scratch by a play or a kick here or there in order to beat them. They’re gonna be okay. And this isn’t even a great Alabama team.”

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Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Sam Murphy on Twitter @SamMurphy02.

Let us know your thoughts, comment on this story below. Join the conversation today!

Freeman on Notre Dame upset of No. 4 Clemson: ‘I really didn’t want to leave the field’

Was Saturday night a turning point of the Freeman Era?

Marcus Freeman has been Notre Dame’s head coach for less than a calendar year and just wrapped up his tenth game at the helm.  Overall his squad is 6-4 counting last season’s Fiesta Bowl defeat and has losses at home to lowly Marshall and Stanford.  To confuse things a bit they also have road wins over North Carolina and Syracuse, both of which were ranked in the College Football Playoff’s top 20 this past week.

And now Freeman has a win over a top-five team as Notre Dame manhandled No. 4 Clemson 35-14 on Saturday night.  For those who didn’t see the game, the final score is closer than the actual play on the field.

Here is everything Freeman had to say after what is easily the biggest win of his young head coaching career.

Dabo calls Notre Dame’s upset of Clemson ‘an *** kicking’

No lies detected!

You can say a lot of things about Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney but you can’t question his vision.  Following Notre Dame’s 35-14 victory over No. 4 Clemson on Saturday night which wasn’t as close as the final score indicated, Swinney confirmed exactly what we all watched.

“That was an ass-kicking. Period,” Swinney said.  “I mean that’s what it is.  Just flat-out got our tails handed to us.  In 14 years it hasn’t happened a lot, but it’s happened a couple of times.”

Clemson’s defensive line is widely regarded as one of the nation’s best.  Their 89.7 rushing yards allowed per game entering Saturday night at Notre Dame certainly spoke to that.  The 263 rushing yards they allowed to the Fighting Irish told a different story though and one that Swinney was clearly not happy with.

“I don’t even want to comment on it right now,” Swinney said of the issues Clemson had stopping Notre Dame’s three-headed rushing attack.  “They just physically kicked our butt. Period. The end.”

Notre Dame benefited from a blocked punt that was returned for a touchdown early and never looked back as the win was the first by an unranked Notre Dame team over a top-five opponent since the Irish upset Dan Marino’s No. 1 Pitt team back in 1982.

“Sometimes you just have a night where it all goes against you and all you can do is give Notre Dame credit for that.”

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More Notre Dame-Clemson postgame coverage:

Instant takeaways as Notre Dame routs No. 4 Clemson

5 stars: Great, good, and bad of Notre Dame’s thrashing of Clemson

Twitter reacts to Notre Dame’s upset blowout win over Clemson

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Notre Dame stunned by Stanford: Best photos

Inexplicable.

Some people claim there are such things as good losses although we’re not in that group.

Everyone knows there are such things as bad losses and lord knows Notre Dame fans have seen enough of those over the years.

Then there is this category of downright epically awful losses and that’s what a sold out home crowd at Notre Dame Stadium was witness to on Saturday night as the hosts laid a complete egg in their 16-14 loss against previously 1-4 Stanford.

Stanford hadn’t beaten an FBS team in 378 days previous to beating Notre Dame on Saturday night and it’s not one that the locals will soon forget about in South Bend.

If you can stomach it, here are the best photos from the forgettable night for the Fighting Irish.

Notre Dame-Stanford: 5 instant takeaways

This was beyond pathetic.

Notre Dame and Stanford met in a game that appeared on paper to be about as one-sided as you could hope for if you’re a Fighting Irish fan.  But that’s why the old saying goes “and that’s why they play the games!”

Notre Dame came out of the gate and I struggle to find the proper word to describe their effort.

Awful.

Pathetic.

Uninspired.

Disinterested.

In a game Notre Dame was favored by 16.5 points, the Irish looked like the uninspired ones who were coming off a heartbreaking loss on their home field before having to travel on a nearly five hour flight.

Here are five instant takeaways from Notre Dame’s truly abysmal showing against Stanford as the Irish were shocked 16-14 by the Cardinal.