Rams fire special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn, AP source says

The Rams have fired special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn after his unit made several mistakes inLos Angeles' loss at Seattleon Thursday, a person with knowledge of the decision told The Associated Press.

The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity Saturday because the playoff-bound Rams (11-4) hadn't publicly announced Sean McVay's first significant in-season staffing change in his nine-year tenure. Assistant Ben Kotwica is expected to replace Blackburn, who was in his third season in the job.

The Rams' special teams have been generally poor all season, and the team alreadychanged kickers and long snappers last monthafter Joshua Karty and his unit missed multiple opportunities to win games against Philadelphia and San Francisco.

Special teams then played a major role in the Rams' 38-37 overtime loss to Seattle, a defeat that likely will prevent the Rams from winning the NFC West or earning the No. 1 seed.

The Rams led 30-14 in the fourth quarter when they gave up a touchdown on a 58-yard punt return by Seattle's Rashid Shaheed following a poor punt by Ethan Evans.

Harrison Mevis then missed a 48-yard field goal attempt with 2:07 to play, preventing the Rams from taking the lead.

Mevis took over after Karty missed five field goals and three extra-point attempts, and he hadn't missed a kick all season before this crucial field-goal attempt went barely wide right.

Blackburn was a linebacker for the Giants and the Panthers before beginning his coaching career.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/NFL

Rams fire special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn, AP source says

The Rams have fired special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn after his unit made several mistakes inLos Angeles' los...
Pete Golding, Ole Miss put exhausting Lane Kiffin drama in rearview with first-round CFP romp

OXFORD, Miss. — Throughout the idyllic campus square here they call The Grove, where generations of fans have thrown legendary tailgate parties, there were surprisingly few traces of the man whose name was not to be mentioned on the day Ole Miss fans had long been waiting for.

The last six weeks around here had been fully hijacked by the narcissism and deception of acoach who was both determined to leave for LSUandalmost equally determined to coach the team he built, creating a standoff that ended two days after Thanksgiving when school officials told Lane Kiffin he could either pack his bags for Baton Rouge immediately or be part of the greatest day in the modern history of Ole Miss football. But he could not do both.

Fast-forward to Saturday, and it's hard to say what would have been more painful for Kiffin: watching and tweeting from the Bayou as his formerOle Miss team won a first-round College Football Playoff game by beating Tulane, 41-10, or realizing that very few people here Saturday had much interest in making it about him the way he tends to make everything about himself.

Sure, among the hundreds of tents where fans were loading up plates with catered food and filling their red Solo cups with God knows what, there were a small handful of passive (and vulgar) references to Kiffin's departure. In one tent, a man dressed asSanta Claus took pictures in front of a sign directing Kiffin to "Geaux to Hell." In another, a sign that said "We love Jesus, Ole Miss, Elvis & Lane" had crossed out his name and replaced it with "Pete," a nod to new coach Pete Golding.

But when you're talking about someone who craves attention as much as Kiffin, sometimes the best revenge is showing that the party doesn't stop — not for him, not for anyone.

"It wasn't about showing all the noise didn't matter, it was about going out and playing at a high level like we did all season," Ole Miss receiver De'Zhaun Stribling said. "The fans brought a lot of juice. We felt it on the field. We tried to stay locked in and focused, but you can't help but look around. The fireworks, the drones, it was beautiful."

This is what catharsis looked like: As the final moments ticked away, a still-full Vaught-Hemingway Stadium sang along to "Dancing Queen," red sparklers lit up the sky and fans chanted "Pete! Pete! Pete!" as the soaking-wet head coach tossed his visor toward the stands and punched his right fist into the air.

And this is what pathetic looked like: In the third quarter, as Ole Miss was suffocating the last of Tulane's long-shot chances, thecoach who abandoned his chance to be in this CFP sent a tweetwith a graphic touting himself as the coach of teams that put up a nation-leading 512 total yards and 331 passing yards per game, both tops in college football "since coach to player headset communication."

Which one seemed like more fun?

"Sometimes you can step back and realize the moment you're in and how cool and exciting it really is and be truly happy for the players," assistant coach Joe Judge said. "Because the game is about the players. Seeing these guys achieve success and give themselves another opportunity in a couple weeks against a very good Georgia team, that was good because they stayed focused and went through a lot."

OXFORD, MISSISSIPPI - DECEMBER 20: Head coach Pete Golding of the Ole Miss Rebels is doused with water after the game against the Tulane Green Wave during the 2025 College Football Playoff First Round Game at Vaught-Hemingway Stadium on December 20, 2025 in Oxford, Mississippi. (Photo by Justin Ford/Getty Images)

As the game ended and Golding gave a handshake and embrace to his counterpart, Tulane coach Jon Sumrall, it was a scene that represented the chaotic and complicated place college football has found itself this season.

Three of the 12 CFP teams had head coaches accept other jobs prior to the playoff, stressing coaching staffs and administrations and sleep schedules. Sumrall, who is now headed to Florida, also coached Saturday just two days after his father passed away at age 77.

"It's been hard, I'm not going to deny it," Sumrall said. "My dad had had some battles health-wise since March and it's been hard, but I'm a lot of who I am because of how he raised me and I can smile knowing that I'm going to live a life that's going to honor my dad. If he was watching, he probably has some questions about how we played just like I do. I just don't have to hear them tonight from him."

Obviously, as acrimonious as the Ole Miss-Kiffin divorce was, Sumrall and Tulane are parting on the best possible terms. He even donated $100,000 to Tulane's recruiting efforts for next year on his way out the door. But what all this represents is a real conundrum for college football that will continue to simmer as the CFP evolves and possibly expands, involving more teams whose coaches are in transition.

And then there's this: Though Tulane was able to move the ball up and down the field, particularly in the first half, the 31-point margin seemed like a definitive statement about the gap between the best team in the Group of Five and one of the elite teams in the country.

A year ago, in the first-ever 12-team playoff, Boise State was a bit more competitive in its playoff game but ultimately no match for Penn State, losing 31-14.

The long history of sports suggests that eventually, one of these underdog teams is bound to pull off a playoff upset and be remembered forever in college football lore. But how many lopsided beatings will it take to get there, and how much angst will the commissioners of the power conferences be able to withstand as their members see overmatched teams take up space in the playoff bracket at the expense of programs like Notre Dame, Texas and Vanderbilt, who felt like they were good enough to be there and compete.

At the same time, it was a weekend of validation for the CFP selection committee. The key decisions they made two Sundays ago —Alabama and Miami in, Notre Dame outandchoosing not to punish Ole Miss for Kiffin's departure— all looked good in retrospect. Both theCrimson Tide and Miami won road games, and Ole Miss didn't look like a team whose coaching staff was a bit patched together as some offensive assistants following Kiffin to LSU were allowed to stick around for the CFP.

"It would be one thing, no disrespect, if this was the Pop-Tarts Bowl or something like that. That s*** would have been really hard," Golding said. "But this is the damn playoffs. So what are we talking about? These kids have gone 11-1 up to this point, a home playoff game for the first time. These dudes want to compete. They don't care who runs them out of the tunnel. That's the truth. They care about their preparation, the plan and increasing their value. The head-coaching piece is developing the culture, but that's the offseason. By this point, the thing is running the way it should. You just have to keep it on the tracks."

But Golding did use some of the time after Kiffin's departure to put his own subtle imprint on the program. In the days after being named permanent head coach, he called each player into his office and asked them one thing they liked about the way the program had been run and one thing they'd change.

So the basketball hoop Kiffin put in the team meeting room and sideline? Golding thought it was corny. Gone. The uniform policy requiring players all wear the same cleats? The team's leadership council wanted a little more individuality. When Golding announced players could experiment with different colors, the room erupted in applause.

The football part, though, didn't look much different.

"At this point, everybody wants to increase their value whether you're a coach or player," Golding said. "So from the beginning, it was in everybody's best interest in this building to coach really well and play really well because no negative could come from that. It's a pretty easy sell. It's just common sense to go play really well in a big game, in a playoff game, and go have the opportunity to play another big game and the better you play, the more money you're going to make."

And after a football game that felt a bit like an exorcism, the hope at Ole Miss is that things will now get back to normal. There will surely be a time when Kiffin is back in the center of the conversation — namely, Week 3 next season when LSU comes to Oxford — but for now it feels like everyone can move on.

To be honest, it felt a little bit like they had already. This is Golding's team, Golding's town and now Golding's playoff run.

"The ability to make decisions, things you've been talking through for years, to finally be the last voice, it kind of hit me some," he said. "And then you're just more the excited for the players, how they responded. Some of those hugs will get you a little bit. There's been so much work you couldn't take a deep breath.

"Then the game got to a point where you could look around some. And it was pretty damn cool."

Pete Golding, Ole Miss put exhausting Lane Kiffin drama in rearview with first-round CFP romp

OXFORD, Miss. — Throughout the idyllic campus square here they call The Grove, where generations of fans have thrown lege...
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - DECEMBER 20: Lejuan Watts #3 and Christian Anderson #4 of the Texas Tech Red Raiders react during the first half of the SentinelOne Showdown against the Duke Blue Devils at Madison Square Garden on December 20, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images)

Christian Anderson caught fire, and short-handed Texas Tech stole the show at a Duke-friendly Madison Square Garden on Saturday night in the SentinelOne Classic.

Anderson erupted for 23 of his 27 points in the second half, during which the Red Raiders dug themselves out of a 17-point hole despite injuries and foul trouble.

No. 19 Texas Tech (9-3) snapped a six-game losing streak against AP Top 25 opponents by beating previously undefeated and No. 3 Duke (11-1).

In the process, the Red Raiders secured their first victory over a top-five team since 2022.

THE CHRISTIAN ANDERSON GAME 🤯Anderson drops 27 points at MSG to comeback down 17 against No. 3 Duke😳pic.twitter.com/Gj2KjGMDbh

— B/R Hoops (@brhoops)December 21, 2025

In large part thanks to three quick buckets from forward LeJuan Watts, Texas Tech staked itself to a 9-0 lead. Duke didn't score until close to two and a half minutes in.

Nikolas Khamenia ended the drought with a 3-pointer. Outside shooting invited the Blue Devils back into the game. While the Red Raiders shot only 1 of 9 from beyond the arc in the opening frame, Duke posted a 50% clip from deep, going 7 of 14 from 3.

Freshman wing Dame Sarr hit three of them, including one that broke a 21-21 tie. That was the start of the Blue Devils outscoring Texas Tech 25-15 over the final seven minutes and change in the first half.

It didn't help that Red Raiders leading scorer JT Toppin got in foul trouble. He picked up his third personal with 3:40 before intermission.

A 10-2 run, which included a hook from Watts and a timely corner 3 from Jaylen Petty, cut Texas Tech's deficit to single digits less than seven minutes into the second half.

But then Watts picked up a costly foul after Duke forward Maliq Brown stole the ball back from him. Brown made up for mishandling an alley-oop pass by converting an and-1.

With both Watts and Toppin on the bench with four fouls apiece, Texas Tech made another move. This time, Anderson drilled a 3 even though he was fouled by Blue Devils guard Caleb Foster. He netted the ensuing free throw to make it a 63-55 game.

Watts fouled out with 11:33 to go and 20 points to his name, joining guard Leon Horner, who had fouled out moments earlier.

That left the Red Raiders with a lineup of four guards and Toppin. They came into the night without Luke Bamgboye and Marial Akuentok available in the front court.

Nolan Groves, a 6-foot-5 freshman guard, was tasked with covering Duke star forward Cameron Boozer for stretches.

And still, Texas Tech remained competitive. The Red Raiders collected three offensive rebounds on one possession, the last resulting in an Anderson putback that pulled them within two points of Duke.

CHRISTIAN ANDERSON 😤We are on a 10-0 run with 10:02 left in the second half.pic.twitter.com/RL66VDbCLg

— Texas Tech Basketball (@TexasTechMBB)December 21, 2025

After Boozer and the Blue Devils answered, Anderson sparked an 8-0 surge with back-to-back triples, keeping Texas Tech in striking distance.

Although Cayden Boozer landed a floater in transition to put Duke ahead 76-71, Anderson countered again. He pulled a deep 3 over 6-foot-11 Blue Devils big man Patrick Ngongba II. Soon after, he dished a pick-and-roll pass to Toppin, who cashed in for a game-tying basket.

Toppin then hit a turnaround jumper over Boozer to give Texas Tech its first lead since midway through the first half. Anderson gave the Red Raiders a cushion with a head-turning and-1 that saw him muscle his way inside and get a layup to go after it danced around the rim.

With Texas Tech leading 81-77, the Boozer twins gave Duke a chance on a night when they combined for 36 points. Cayden made a corner 3. Cameron followed that long-range conversion with a trip to the charity stripe. Except he made just 1-of-2 free throws. Duke clocked out only 17 of 29, or 58.6%, from the free throw line.

Anderson drew a foul on Foster with 3.4 ticks left. He made the first free throw and not the second, but that was enough.

Cameron Boozer's 3-pointer at the buzzer was short.

Duke entered the matchup with a healthier lineup and a more impressive non-conference résumé. Jon Scheyer's Blue Devils had already taken down four ranked opponents this season.

Texas Tech had played three and lost to each of them. Grant McCasland's team turned the tide Saturday night in New York with a big upset in The Big Apple.

No. 19 Texas Tech rallies from 17-point second-half deficit to knock off No. 3 Duke despite injuries and foul trouble

Christian Anderson caught fire, and short-handed Texas Tech stole the show at a Duke-friendly Madison Square Garden on Saturday night in th...
No. 6 Ole Miss begins Pete Golding era with CFP rout of No. 11 Tulane

There was quite a bit confronting No. 6 Ole Miss leading up to the team's first College Football Playoff game.

Now there's more ahead for the Rebels.

Trinidad Chambliss threw for 282 yards and accounted for three touchdowns that combined with Ole Miss' strong defensive performance for a 41-10 victory over No. 11 Tulane under new coach Pete Golding in a College Football Playoff first-round game Saturday at Oxford, Miss.

"(This team) has been through a lot the last few weeks," said Golding, who replaced the departed Lane Kiffin. "... This is the playoffs."

Ole Miss (12-1) heads to the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 1 in New Orleans to face No. 3 Georgia in the quarterfinals. It will be a rematch of the Rebels' only loss this season -- by a 43-35 score on Oct. 18 on the Bulldogs' home field.

Golding's first game as head coach coincided with the Rebels' first CFP game, and it was mostly a smooth day as the Southeastern Conference team rolled to its second victory this season against Tulane. The new coach was doused with liquid, presumably water or Gatorade, as part of the on-field celebration.

Golding pumped his fist above his head as he headed off the field to a huge ovation. He said his players should feel elated as well.

"Those are memories they're going to remember for the rest of their lives," Golding said.

Chambliss threw for one touchdown and had rushing scores from 4 and 8 yards. He was 23-for-29 in the air without an interception.

Tulane (11-3) played under coach Jon Sumrall in his final game before he takes over at Florida. Quarterback Jake Retzlaff was 20-for-35 passing for 306 yards, one touchdown, and one interception. Shazz Preston caught five passes for 125 yards.

"It's not OK we lost," Sumrall said. "I also told them it doesn't change I feel about them. This team will walk together forever as champions, because we won a conference championship."

Golding, who rose from defensive coordinator to head coach when Kiffin bolted for LSU on Nov. 30, watched his defense keep Tulane out of the end zone until four minutes remained in the game.

Sumrall spent two seasons at Tulane, compiling a 20-8 record.

"It has been an honor and a privilege," Sumrall said. "Winning a conference championship this year was special, something I'll remember forever. Just really proud of how the team came together. ... I have a little bit of a bad taste in my mouth from (this last game)."

Sumrall was slow to leave the field following the game, sharing some hugs.

"I think about the fans," he said, hoping he made a positive impact. "I'm a passionate, fiery guy. I think that fits in New Orleans. It fits Tulane."

Kewan Lacy of Ole Miss rushed for 87 yards with a touchdown on 15 carries.

Lacy scored the game's first touchdown on a 20-yard burst up the middle as the Rebels went 75 yards in three plays to score 59 seconds into the game.

Following Jaylon Braxton's interception in the red zone, Ole Miss was quickly in the end zone again. The Rebels covered 60 yards in four plays as Chambliss ran 4 yards to make it 14-0 at the 7:26 mark of the first quarter.

Tulane opened the second-quarter scoring on Patrick Durkin's 39-yard field goal. Ole Miss regained the 14-point edge on Lucas Carneiro's 42-yard field goal, then a red-zone fumble in the final minute of the first half prevented the Rebels from further adding to the lead.

Ole Miss made it comfortable by scoring on its first two possessions of the second half. Chambliss threw 13 yards to De'Zhaun Stribling and Carneiro kicked a 48-yard field goal.

The final score wasn't much different than the teams' first meeting this season. The Rebels topped Tulane in a 45-10 romp on Sept. 20 in the same stadium.

--Field Level Media

No. 6 Ole Miss begins Pete Golding era with CFP rout of No. 11 Tulane

There was quite a bit confronting No. 6 Ole Miss leading up to the team's first College Football Playoff game. ...
Sharp scores 22 points to lead No. 8 Houston over No. 14 Arkansas, 94-85

NEWARK,N.J. (AP) — Emanuel Sharp scored 22 points, Kingston Flemings added 21 and No. 8 Houston used some excellent long-range shooting to beat No. 14Arkansas94-85 on Saturday.

The Cougars (11-1) shot 44% from 3-point distance (11 for 25) and 52% from the field overall in winning their fifth straight game.

Freshman guard Darius Acuff Jr. led Arkansas (9-3) with 27 points and seven assists. Malique Ewin added 20 points and nine rebounds off the bench for the Razorbacks, who had won four in a row.

Milos Uzan scored 13 points and Ramon Walker Jr. added 12 off the bench for the Cougars. Sharp moved past Hakeem Olajuwon into 22nd place in Houston history with 1,341 career points.

The Razorbacks led for just 1:14 early in the game and never got closer than seven in the second half. Arkansas took 35 free throws but made only 21 (60%).

The Cougars scored 19 points off 12 Arkansas turnovers.

Houston took its largest lead of the second half when Chase McCarty nailed a 3-pointer to put the Cougars ahead 83-67 with 6:47 to play.

Trevon Brazile, the Razorbacks' leading rebounder and one of their top scorers, had just five points in a limited role. He picked up two fouls in the first six minutes and didn't return until the start of the second half with Arkansas trailing 49-41.

Brazile, the reigning SEC player of the week, had been on a tear over his previous five games. The senior forward averaged 17.3 points, 7.2 rebounds and 2.2 steals during that span while shooting 66.7% from beyond the arc.

Houston used a 21-2 run midway through the first half to grab a 40-20 lead. Flemings and Isiah Harwell contributed six points apiece in the spurt.

The schools played one another at least twice each year from 1975-76 through the 1990-91 season as Southwest Conference rivals.

Houston hosts Middle Tennessee on Dec. 29.

Arkansas hosts James Madison on Dec. 29.

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphereandhere(AP News mobile app). AP college basketball:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

Sharp scores 22 points to lead No. 8 Houston over No. 14 Arkansas, 94-85

NEWARK,N.J. (AP) — Emanuel Sharp scored 22 points, Kingston Flemings added 21 and No. 8 Houston used some excellent long-...
3 players ejected after fight breaks out in fourth quarter of Eagles' win over Commanders

Tempers flared Saturday late in a29-18 Philadelphia Eagles victory over the Washington Commandersat Northwest Stadium.

Three players were ejected after a fight broke out with less than five minutes remaining in the fourth quarter: Eagles right guard Tyler Steen and a pair of Commanders defenders, defensive tackle Javon Kinlaw and safety Quan Martin.

Chaos ensued following an Eagles two-point conversion that put them up 29-10.

Things getting chippy here between the Eagles and Commanderspic.twitter.com/1FYV4JplMH

— FOX Sports: NFL (@NFLonFOX)December 21, 2025

Saquon Barkley, who used his signature jump cut and spin move combo to spring a 48-yard scamper earlier in the drive, found pay dirt again in the aftermath of a touchdown scored by fellow Philadelphia running back Tank Bigsby.

As Barkley returned to the sideline after breaking the plane for two points on a night whenkicker Jake Elliott struggled mightily, a brawl took place behind him, all the way back near the end zone.

During the play, Commanders safety Will Harris stuck his hand up the grill of Eagles receiver Darius Cooper, who took issue with that and confronted Harris afterward. Things snowballed from there.

Commanders cornerback Mike Sainristil tugged on Cooper as the receiver was backed up by Eagles offensive linemen Landon Dickerson and Fred Johnson, whom Commanders defensive tackle Daron Payne subsequently shoved.

Steen appeared to escalate the situation, throwing a jab at Sainristil, who swiped back but wasn't ejected. Steen was then swarmed by Commanders players. Kinlaw swung, and so did Martin. Kinlaw was part of the group that brought Steen to the ground. Martin came away with Steen's helmet.

Fox Sports' Greg Olsen noted on the broadcast that, when the dust finally settled, there were six flags on the grass as well as an official's hat.

Sainristil was asked about the fight postgame.

"I don't know. I just know that I saw my brothers out there, so I'm going to do everything to protect my brothers," he said,via The Athletic's Nicki Jhabvala.

Sainristil was asked if anything specific was said.

"Nah, no clue," he said.

Barkley said afterward that neither team likes the other after their five games over the past two years.

"It's chippy out there," Barkley said. "We have a lot of history with this team, especially since I've been here, and then have it in the past. But this team don't like us. This is the truth. We don't like them either."

"This team don't like us... we don't like them either."Saquon Barkley talks about the tense atmosphere both on and off the field tonight ⬇️pic.twitter.com/hoLnFFEfHQ

— FOX Sports: NFL (@NFLonFOX)December 21, 2025

The fight was ugly. So was the divisional clash at times. Elliott missed a pair of field goals in the first half. Both teams turned the ball over. Washington took on even more injuries.

And yet, the Eagles emerged victorious. This Philadelphia group is thefirst team to win the NFC East in back-to-back seasons since the 2004 Eagles.

3 players ejected after fight breaks out in fourth quarter of Eagles' win over Commanders

Tempers flared Saturday late in a29-18 Philadelphia Eagles victory over the Washington Commandersat Northwest Stadium. ...
Iowa State QB to transfer, could follow former coach to Penn State

Quarterback Rocco Becht will leave Iowa State and enter the transfer portal to "pursue new opportunities for my senior season," he posted on social media Saturday.

"I've had meaningful conversations with Coach Jimmy Rogers, and I'm confident he will elevate this program to new heights," Becht posted in announcing the decision to leave. "This decision was not taken lightly -- it comes from a path of growth, purpose and belief in where my path is leading me."

Becht will immediately become one of the top available starting quarterbacks in the portal, having tallied 26 wins for the Cyclones over his past three seasons at the helm.

His 64 touchdowns passes and 83 total touchdowns at Iowa State rank in the top five among projected returning quarterbacks. Only TCU transfer Josh Hoover has more passing yards than Becht's 9,274 passing yards among that same group of players expected to return to college football.

The redshirt junior with one year of eligibility remaining has also rushed for 499 yards and 19 touchdowns in his career.

Becht's coach at Iowa State, Matt Campbell, took the head coaching position for the Nittany Lions on Dec. 8, making Penn State a likely projected landing spot for Becht, but ESPN reported Saturday Becht is expected to entertain multiple offers.

In 2024, Becht led Iowa State to an 11-3 record, the first time in school history the team had double-digit wins. The Cyclones reached the Big 12 title game that year, losing to Arizona State, but won the Pop-Tarts Bowl 42-41 over Miami.

The Cyclones finished this season at 8-4, with Becht dealing with injuries, including an AC sprain in his throwing shoulder and he underwent labrum surgery on his non-throwing shoulder earlier this month. Becht passed for 2,584 yards and 16 touchdowns against nine interceptions and also rushed for eight scores.

"You embraced me, supported me, and pushed me to become better -- not only as a player, but as a man," Becht posted Saturday. "Iowa State will forever be a part of who I am. Thank for you for every moment, every cheer and every ounce of belief you poured into me. I'll always represent Cyclone Nation with pride."

Iowa State decided not to play in a bowl game after Campbell departed for Penn State.

--Field Level Media

Iowa State QB to transfer, could follow former coach to Penn State

Quarterback Rocco Becht will leave Iowa State and enter the transfer portal to "pursue new opportunities for my s...

 

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