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The late crush of holiday travelers is picking up steam, with about 2.7 million people expected to board flights on Wednesday and millions more planning to drive to Thanksgiving celebrations.

Airline officials say they are confident that they can avoid the kind of massive disruptions that have marred past holiday seasons, such as the meltdown at Southwest Airlines over last Christmas.

Airlines have added tens of thousands of employees in the last couple years, and Southwest says it has bought more winter equipment to keep planes moving even during sub-freezing temperatures.

Security lines at airports could be long because of the crowds. Delta Air Lines is telling passengers to arrive at the airport at least two hours before their flight if they are traveling within the United States, three hours early if they’re flying overseas — and maybe earlier on Sunday and Monday.

The holiday will also test the Federal Aviation Administration, which faces shortages of air traffic controllers at key facilities that caused reductions in flights to the New York City area this summer and fall.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said during a news conference Monday that the government has prepared for holiday travel by hiring more air traffic controllers, opening new air routes along the East Coast and providing grants to airports for snowplows and deicing equipment.

Nearly three-fourths of flight delays are caused by weather, according to the FAA. The agency’s figures indicate that the rate of canceled flights is down this year from last year, when airlines didn’t have enough staff to handle the strong recovery in travel after the pandemic.

The Transportation Security Administration predicts that it will screen 2.7 million passengers Wednesday and a record 2.9 million on Sunday, the biggest day for return trips. That would narrowly beat TSA’s all-time mark set on June 30.

“We are ready for the holidays. We’re confident we have enough agents,” TSA Administrator David Pekoske said Tuesday on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

He urged travelers to give themself extra time to get through busy airports and be considerate of TSA agents, gate agents and flight crews and others who are giving up their holidays.

“I just ask passengers to thank people for what they’re doing. They’re making sure the system is safe and secure. That’s a tall order,” he said.

AAA predicts that 55.4 million people will travel at least 50 miles from home between Wednesday and Sunday, the third-highest forecast ever by the auto club. AAA says most of them — 49.1 million — will drive.

Drivers will get a break from last year on gasoline prices. AAA says the nationwide average for gas was down to $3.29 a gallon on Tuesday, compared with $3.66 a year ago.

Air travelers will enjoy lower prices too. Airfares in October were down 13% from last year, according to government figures, and fares around Thanksgiving have been about 14% lower than a year ago, according to the travel site Hopper.

Even so, the high cost of rent, food, health care and other expenses were weighing on people’s travel plans.

Jason McQueary, a 25-year-old social worker and graduate student said rent and other essentials eat up most of his paycheck and he was grateful for his credit card points, which brought down the cost of his roundtrip flight from Denver to Chicago from $450 to $150.

“I was just like, ‘man, I’m glad I only come home once a year,’” said McQueary, who was waiting to get picked up Tuesday after arriving to Chicago O’Hare International Airport to spend Thanksgiving with family in his hometown of Byron, Illinois.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Honda is recalling 303,700 2023 and 2024 Accords and HR-Vs because of a defect that could stop some front seat belts in the vehicles from tightening properly in a crash.

The automaker is recalling Accords built between Oct. 4, 2022, and Oct. 14, 2023, as well as HR-Vs made between April 26, 2022, and Oct. 14, 2023, it said in a filing last week with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. All of the vehicles being recalled are gas-powered, rather than hybrids.

Honda said the front seat belt pretensioners in a fraction of those vehicles were assembled without a rivet that secures the quick connector and wire plate. It said the installation of that rivet was skipped during assembly but did not explain why or how.

Without that rivet, the seat belt will not tighten to properly restrain occupants and get their bodies into a safe position in the event of a crash, making harm more likely.

The company estimated that 1% of the vehicles being recalled are defective. It said it has had seven warranty claims related to the problem and no reports of injuries or deaths.

Honda said in a statement that the owners of all affected vehicles will be contacted by mail and told to take their vehicles to authorized Honda dealers, who will replace the defective part. Customers who have already had those repairs done at their own expense may be eligible for refunds.

The company said in its filing that it received its first complaint about the problem May 23. On Sept. 20, it received the affected parts and began to investigate, and on Nov. 16 it identified a defect that necessitated the recall.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

PHILADELPHIA — A playmaker who has made his living rushing the quarterback off the edge, Haason Reddick has made several game-changing plays since joining the Philadelphia Eagles last season.

This particular play, however, won’t show up on the stat sheet as a sack or forced fumble, but rather a penalty on the Buffalo Bills and quarterback Josh Allen, who was flagged for intentional grounding on a play that could have just as easily been ruled a horse-collar tackle against Reddick during what ended up being a 37-34 Eagles overtime victory.

Facing a second-and-goal with less than two minutes left in the first half, Allen was flushed outside of the pocket on a play that started at the Eagles’ 3-yard line. As Reddick dragged him down, it appeared Reddick’s left hand first grabbed Allen by the front collar – the stretch marks afterward proved that – and again with his right hand near Allen’s neck and back of the helmet.

‘We felt that the force from the front of the collar and what pulled him down was not from the back,’ referee Shawn Hochuli told a pool reporter after the game. ‘So, that’s pretty much it. We felt he was pulled down from the front of the jersey and collar.’

The officials did eventually drop a flag – for intentional grounding on Allen. Not wanting to take a sack, Allen was able to get rid of the ball before he went down. But the refs determined no receiver was in the vicinity, although the Bills contested that claim.

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“From the information I got,’ head coach Sean McDermott said, ‘Gabe (Davis) was in the area.’

Instead of receiving a new set of downs, the Bills were pushed back for a long third-down attempt that was unsuccessful. Tyler Bass’ subsequent 34-yard attempt was blocked by rookie Jalen Carter.

On Sunday, the Bills found themselves on the wrong side of the officials’ flags at a much higher rate than Philadelphia. By the end of the first half, they’d been whistled 10 times, compared to the Eagles’ one penalty. Buffalo finished with 11 penalties total for 85 yards compared to Philadelphia’s four for 30.

“I think we shot ourselves in the foot,” center Mitch Morse said.

He added: “Every person can take it as it is and learn from them. I think in the end, it shouldn’t have played a role in us not coming out with a victory.” 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

After Ohio State’s 30-24 loss to Michigan Saturday, many college football fans were wondering where Lou Holtz was.

In his postgame interview after the Buckeyes beat Notre Dame 17-14 in South Bend, Indiana, Ohio State coach Ryan Day called out the former OSU assistant and Notre Dame head coach after Holtz questioned his team’s toughness, saying ‘I’d like to know where Lou Holtz is right now.’

Holtz was not done talking about Ohio State.

‘Losing to Michigan three years in a row is not good,’ Holtz said to former ESPN staffer Mark May, according to ABC15 Arizona. ‘What a long ride home it must be. They aren’t real happy. Three years in a row we have lost to the University of Michigan.’

May responded by echoing Holtz’s thoughts, saying ‘(Day’s) got to be in hot water.’

Holtz then began to reminisce, remembering a similar meeting with Michigan in 1968: the year Holtz was on Woody Hayes’ coaching staff at Ohio State.

‘When I coached at Ohio State under Woody Hayes, we played Michigan under the same circumstances: the winner goes to the Rose Bowl, the winner has the chance to win a national championship,’ Holtz said. ‘Fortunately, we were the ones that were able to do it. We scored late in the game versus Michigan, went for two, made it, beat them 50-14. They asked Woody, ‘Why’d you go for two?’ He said, ‘Because they wouldn’t let me go for three.’ ‘

In an appearance on ‘The Pat McAfee Show’ in September, Holtz called Notre Dame ‘a better football team than Ohio State’ before focusing his attention on Day.

‘You look at coach (Ryan) Day − and I coached at Ohio State under Woody Hayes,’ Holtz said. ‘We won the national championship when I was there. I’m proud of that. However, he has lost to Alabama, Georgia, Clemson, Michigan twice. And everybody (that) beats him, does so because they are more physical than Ohio State. And I think Notre Dame will take that same approach.’

These comments riled up Day in his postgame interview after the Notre Dame game.

‘What he said about our team, what he said about our team, I cannot believe. This is a tough team right here. We’re proud to be from Ohio and it’s always been Ohio against the world. And it will continue to be Ohio against the world. But I tell you: I love those kids and we have a tough team.

‘Everybody’s questioning these kids all the time. We had one bad half the last couple years. That’s it. Everybody wants to question these guys. These guys are warriors that can win. … I’m emotional about this for a reason. A lot of people question these kids and say a lot about them. And I love them. When someone attacks your family, to come in and win is special. It’s a great win for our program and a great win for Ohio State.’

Ohio State’s three-game losing streak against Michigan is its first since 1995-97.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

After an eventful Thanksgiving and Black Friday slate, there were only 11 games Sunday in the NFL.

Still, with the calendar quickly turning toward December, the playoff picture is starting to take shape. There’s a logjam in the AFC, with 12 teams with at least five victories. The hottest of the bunch is the Denver Broncos, who are tied with league-leading Philadelphia Eagles for the longest active winning streak. Headed in the opposite direction is the squad Philadelphia just played, the Buffalo Bills, who failed to capitalize on key opportunities with drops and missed field goals.

Elsewhere in the conference, the Jacksonville Jaguars are flying under the radar, riding a fierce defense to be a dark horse contender for homefield advantage in the AFC.

Here are the winners and losers from Sunday of Week 12.

WINNERS

Jags take commanding lead in AFC South, but some issues linger

This was massive for the Jaguars. They topped a young and plucky Houston Texans team that was just one game back in the division. Jacksonville (8-3) went on the road and fended off a late comeback attempt to secure a 24-21 win, putting the team in position to repeat in the AFC South and compete for the No. 1 overall seed in the conference.

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The pass rush harassed Texans rookie quarterback C.J. Stroud with four sacks, many in key situations. Jacksonville converted seven of 13 third downs. Quarterback Trevor Lawrence racked up 364 yards on mostly clean play. But there are still issues to address. Offensive coordinator Press Taylor at times appeared to overthink his play calls. With one second left in the first half and the Jaguars at the Texans’ 1-yard line, Taylor called a toss right that was stuffed. Lawrence was late and off-target on some throws, leaving yards and points on the field. And coach Doug Pederson’s game management decisions may have yielded advantages back to the Texans.

Saint-killers Jessie Bates, Bijan Robinson propel Falcons to first

The NFC South is the lone division in football to lack a single team above .500, but the Atlanta Falcons took an early edge in what was essentially a battle for first place against the New Orleans Saints. And in the 24-15 victory, it was two players in particular, safety Jessie Bates III and running back Bijan Robinson, who showed out for Atlanta (5-6).

Let’s start with Bates, whose masterful read of a Derek Carr pass in the red zone, breaking on it well before the play had developed in earnest, led to a 92-yard pick-six early in the game that set the tone. Bates would later punch out a fumble − again in the red zone − that the Falcons recovered. Atlanta scored a touchdown nine plays later, via a 26-yard pass to Robinson, meaning that the Falcons scored 14 points off Bates’ two forced turnovers. He also led Atlanta with 12 tackles. Robinson, meanwhile, totaled 123 total yards and two scores, and the defense prevented New Orleans (5-6) from scoring a touchdown.

Steelers far better on offense, but need more scoring

Paired with quarterbacks coach Mike Sullivan as play caller, interim offensive coordinator Eddie Faulkner orchestrated the most productive day the Pittsburgh Steelers have had in years in a 16-10 defeat of the Cincinnati Bengals. Pittsburgh had been averaging just 280.1 yards of offense this season, which was 28th in the NFL. It had not outgained a single opponent.

The Steelers (7-4) easily outpaced Cincinnati’s 222 yards with 421, marking their first 400-yard day in 59 games, including all 44 of ex-coordinator Matt Canada’s tenure. Faulkner, who also serves as running backs coach, dialed up an efficient rushing attack, enacted a downfield passing philosophy that had previously been non-existent, and the Steelers converted a season-high eight third downs. Running back Najee Harris posted 99 rushing yards with a 6.6 yards-per-carry average − both season highs. Quarterback Kenny Pickett’s 278 passing yards were also a season best. Now, Pittsburgh needs to turn that into more points. It scored 16 against the Bengals on just one-of-four in red zone tries.

Broncos keep on rolling

It has been a complete turnaround for Sean Payton’s Denver Broncos squad, which is tied with the Eagles for the longest active winning streak in the NFL at five games after downing the Cleveland Browns 29-12. The catalyst has been on the defensive side; coordinator Vance Joseph’s group has now forced a turnover in eight consecutive games, with 16 total takeaways during the winning streak.

The Broncos (6-5) started the day in 10th in the AFC, three spots behind the final wild card. After dominating the Browns, they moved up just one spot but climbed to over .500 for the first time since Week 3 of last season. Denver has a manageable remaining schedule and is a real threat for the postseason. Quarterback Russell Wilson’s numbers (13-of-22 for 134 yards with one touchdown) continue to remain rather pedestrian, but his turnover-free efficiency is allowing the Broncos to do just enough to win.

LOSERS

Caleb Williams or Drake Maye, who could be headed to Patriots

The New England Patriots lost their game against the New York Giants 10-7, sending them to a 2-9 start that marks the franchise’s worst since 1993, when it began the year 1-11. They appear like a team poised to end up with one of the top selections in the 2024 NFL draft, which likely means they would be a strong candidate to pick one of the top two passers, if available.

New England is currently sitting with the No. 3 pick in the draft order, but the team ahead of them, the Arizona Cardinals, haven’t had their bye yet and are 2-10. Bill Belichick could be gone next season, and the team is almost certainly facing a massive overhaul. But even if the Patriots luck out and are able to draft USC’s Caleb Williams or North Carolina’s Drake Maye, the franchise is facing dark days ahead. The offense is entirely devoid of star talent, particularly at receiver and offensive line, and the unit is several pieces away from being competent. No quarterback can mask that.

Another close game, another loss for the Chargers

Technically, this one won’t go down as a one-score game, since Baltimore Ravens receiver Zay Flowers scampered off with a touchdown in garbage time of the Los Angeles Chargers’ 20-10 loss. But for all intents and purposes, this was very much a close game, where the Chargers have struggled for several seasons now. Los Angeles is 0-5 in games decided by three points or fewer. The Chargers were down three with a minute-and-a-half to play when Flowers scored.

Still, this is the brand of football that has been set by coach Brandon Staley and, frankly, many of his predecessors. The Chargers are loaded with talent on both sides but simply cannot get out of their own way with self-inflicted errors like turnovers (four Sunday against the Ravens), drops, penalties, indefensible execution in high-leverage situations (one-of-three in red zone attempts) − essentially, many of the traits of a poorly coached team.

Missed opportunities sink Bills

Super Josh returned, but the valiant effort by Bills quarterback Josh Allen was squandered because the offense left far too many points on the field. Many will point to the miscommunication in overtime between Allen and receiver Gabe Davis, as Davis leaked past an Eagles cornerback for a would-be game-winning touchdown, but Allen appeared to expect Davis to be running a different route. It was big, but that was just one miscue.

Running back James Cook dropped a would-be score in the first quarter. On the following two plays, a pair of penalties pushed Buffalo out of field goal range. Kicker Tyler Bass had one field goal blocked and he missed another. While Allen does have at least one interception in eight consecutive games, Buffalo (6-6) has been markedly better in recent weeks. Still, against great teams like the Eagles, the Bills can’t afford missed chances, especially in close games.

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INGLEWOOD, Calif. — The Baltimore Ravens found themselves in familiar territory Sunday night against the Los Angeles Chargers.

Clinging to a slim fourth-quarter lead, the Ravens defense had an opportunity to make a game-sealing stop. Baltimore had fourth-quarter leads against the Indianapolis Colts, Pittsburgh Steelers and Cleveland Browns before squandering all three contests.

Experience sometimes can be the best teacher.

On fourth-and-6 with 1:57 in the fourth quarter, the Chargers were down 13-10. Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert audibled at the line of scrimmage before receiving the ball in shotgun. Ravens cornerback Arthur Maulet came blitzing around the edge unblocked and forced Herbert into an errant desperation throw that was eventually called intentional grounding. The Chargers turned the ball over on downs in what was theoretically the game-deciding play. Baltimore’s offense took over possession and scored a touchdown three plays later for good measure to lift the Ravens to a 20-10 win.

No late-game collapse.

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‘This is a good showing where we are at as a team,’ Ravens safety Kyle Hamilton said. ‘How good we are. Also 9-3, those three loses we feel like we could’ve won easily.’

The Ravens used past late-game blunders as motivation when faced in a similar situation Sunday night. The Ravens are now riding a two-game winning streak and are atop of the AFC at 9-3 entering a Week 13 bye.

‘We wanted to get the win just so we can get out and have a good bye (week),’ Ravens linebacker Patrick Queen said. ‘We just got to build on that. When we get those chances in the fourth quarter, make those stops.’

Sunday night’s game, though, was an illustration that the Ravens are currently the best team in the AFC and not just by virtue of owning the conference’s top record.

The Ravens can beat their opponents in a variety of ways.

There’s passing. Dual-threat quarterback Lamar Jackson is on pace to have a single-season career-high in passing yards. Even without standout tight end Mark Andrews, the Ravens can fill his void with wide receivers Zay Flowers, Odell Beckham, Rashod Bateman and tight end Isaiah Likely.

Baltimore has an established rushing attack. The Ravens amassed 197 rushing yards against the Chargers in a game in which Jackson became the fourth quarterback in NFL history to eclipse 5,000 career rushing yards.

And Justin Tucker is the best kicker in football (although he uncharacteristically missed a 44-yard field goal Sunday night).

However, it’s the Ravens defense that undoubtedly makes Baltimore the most dangerous team to knock the defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs off the AFC’s throne. Baltimore’s defense forced four takeaways versus the Chargers and held Herbert to his third lowest passing yards output of the season. The Ravens rank top two in both total defense and points allowed, and have a league-best 47 sacks entering their bye.

‘I think we’re becoming what we’re capable of becoming, but it’s not over yet,’ Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. ‘We have a lot of work to do. Guys are going to get a little time (off), a little spirit, a little mind, a little body (rest), take care of their families, and then get back next Monday, and we’ll be ready to come out of the gates for the final part of the season.’ 

The Ravens have five games remaining in the regular season and control their own destiny at the top of AFC. Even without their star tight end, they are the most complete team in football. Their ability to win in a variety of ways and rebound from what previously ailed them might just be what propels them. It’s precisely why they currently have the top record in the conference.

‘Getting to the Super Bowl is the goal, but we’re just going to take it a week at a time. That’s all we can do,’ Jackson said. ‘We can’t worry about the No.1 seed or anything like that. It’s the NFL, anything can happen any given Sunday, Thursday, whenever you play, Monday. We just have to keep focusing (and) keep trying to win these games because it’s a tough league.’ 

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

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The Buffalo Bills defense squandered leads late in the fourth quarter and overtime in a backbreaking road loss to the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday.

They also lost their cool in a sideline interaction with Eagles fans.

Video posted to X shows a confrontation between Bills defensive linemen Jordan Phillips, Shaq Lawson, Ed Oliver and Greg Rousseau, and Eagles fans heckling them behind the team’s bench.

The video begins with Phillips strutting up to a fan who was in the front row pointing and yelling at the Bills. A Birds fan in the foreground is giving the players the bird.

SEASON OF SETBACKS: Bills left to ponder how, why things have unraveled

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Phillips gets in the fan’s face. It sounds like Phillips yells ‘What’s up? You called me a (expletive)? Say it to my face.’ Lawson, Oliver and Rousseau follow Phillips, but not to restrain him. All four players shout at the fans and Lawson appears to shove the fan in the chest with his right arm. The fan seemed unfazed and continued razzing the linemen.

A Bills staff member and linebacker Leonard Floyd walk over to direct the players out of the altercation and back to the bench.

The game was still being played in the background, with the Bills running an offensive play.

It was the Bills defense that got pushed around in the second half and overtime, allowing 23 points after halftime in the 37-34 loss. Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts had a 12-yard game-ending touchdown run in overtime.

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The college football coaching carousel is never quiet, even following seasons in which we think there might not be much movement. Inevitably, someone unexpected makes a move that starts other dominoes tumbling.

In this day and age, the spinning usually begins even before the regular season concludes, and the pace often picks up before bowl games. A  couple of changes in the Big Ten due more to off-field matters than wins and losses got things off to an even earlier start in 2023.

This list of current openings is likely to grow as vacancies are filled, but here are the schools looking for new leadership in order of, in somewhat arbitrary terms, the magnitude and attractiveness of the position.

Jobs open

San Diego State

Who’s out: Brady Hoke’s second tenure was highlighted by a 12-2 mark and Mountain West title game appearance in 2021, but the Aztecs were just 27-20 in four seasons.

MISERY INDEX: Why college football fans are Week 13’s biggest losers

UP AND DOWN: Winners and losers from college football’s Week 13

Houston

Who’s out:Dana Holgorsen’s first season in the Big 12 was a disappointment and he was let got after going 31-28 in five campaigns.

The transition to a Power Five conference wasn’t quite as smooth as school officials and supporters had hoped, leading to the rather quick and somewhat costly decision to part ways with Holgorsen. In theory the gig is attractive with a major market, easy access to fertile recruiting grounds and deep-pocketed donors. Of course that last point is what often leads to messy divorces in this profession, but it might also be easier to compete in the Big 12 as configured after this year.

Duke

Who’s out: After two successful seasons culminating in bowl berths, Mike Elko left the Blue Devils for the vacancy at Texas A&M.

The list of schools to which Duke might have lost Elko was short. Unfortunately for the Blue Devils, Texas A&M was one of them. The good news is the school’s positive strides might help attract a candidate who can keep the program from returning to its long-time status as a gridiron doormat in the ACC. That’s easier said than done given the school’s stringent academic standards, but at least Elko’s run showed it can be done.

Syracuse

Who’s out: Dino Babers won 10 games in 2018, but overall was 41-55 during his tenure.

The Orange have been hovering around .500 and fringe bowl eligibility for several seasons. Will things get better following the decision to move on from Babers? It’s hard to say. Even with its dome stadium, it’s a tough sell attracting talent from warmer climates to play in Central New York. The school does have a fair bit of football history, finding its place in the pecking order of the expanded ACC will continue to be a challenge.

Indiana

Who’s out:Tom Allen led the Hoosiers to bowls in 2019 and 2020 but was just 33-48 in seven seasons.

In some respects, the desire to keep Allen in Bloomington long-term was understandable on the heels of a couple successful seasons at a school unaccustomed to them. But once the unusual circumstances of the pandemic years passed, the conclusion that those years were aberrations became unavoidable. In truth, it’s still a tough place to win on the gridiron, and the Big Ten’s incoming members from the west coast won’t make life any easier for the next coach.

Oregon State

Who’s out: Jonathan Smith didn’t have a gaudy record (34-35) but in his six seasons with the Beavers, Smith did one of the best rebuilding jobs in the country.

It’s hard to blame Smith for leaving his alma mater given the uncertain future at one of the schools left behind by the fracturing of the Pac-12. As such, this job search is going to be extremely challenging given the program’s murky prospects.

Boise State

Who’s out:Andy Avalos didn’t make it to the end of his third season after a 22-14 that included an appearance in the Mountain West title game in 2022.

The plucky program that plays on blue turf got used to punching above its weight in the aught decades, so the slippage under Avalos despite an overall winning record in his two-plus seasons heading the Broncos was deemed unacceptable. Now set to play for the MWC title anyway, interim coach Spencer Danielson might have moved to the front of the line. The players on the current roster have clearly responded to his leadership, but whether he is the long-term answer remains to be seen.

New Mexico

Who’s out: Danny Gonzales lasted four seasons and managed just an 11-32 record.

Albuquerque is another of those football destinations that can fairly be described as a tough place to win. Gonzales, a Lobo alum, had four wins this season, which was the best total of his tenure. UNM could try to go the route of bringing in an experienced hand, but that might not be possible with the school’s limited budget.

Texas-El Paso

Who’s out: Dana Dimel posted a 20-49 record in six seasons with one bowl appearance.

UTEP is a geographic outlier in its own state, so tapping into the wealth of football talent in the more populated regions can be laborious. On the plus side, there might be opportunities for the Miners to move up the standings in recently reconfigured Conference USA if a high-energy coach can be found.

Louisiana-Monroe

Who’s out: Terry Bowden lasted three years, showing improvement through the first two campaigns before slipping to 2-10 and 0-8 in the conference this year.

Of the FBS jobs that have opened thus far in this cycle, the ULM gig is unquestionably the toughest. Keeping up in the increasingly competitive Sun Belt is hard enough, and the program is constantly fighting second-fiddle status with the system’s Lafayette campus. About the only selling point is that it might be a stepping-stone position with just a modicum of success.

Job filled

Northwestern

Who’s out: The Wildcats fired Pat Fitzgerald before the season after details of hazing allegations were made public by former players. Fitzgerald, the school’s winningest coach, had a 110-101 record.

Who’s hired: After Fitzgerald’s departure, David Braun was made interim coach. Braun was give the job permanently as the team finished 7-5.

Michigan State

Who’s out: The vacancy at Michigan State was created by the firing of Mel Tucker, who departed in the middle of his fourth season amid sexual misconduct allegations.

Who’s hired: Jonathan Smith was lured from Oregon State to take over rebuilding the Spartans. Smith was successful in doing a similar job in his six seasons with the Beavers.

Mississippi State

Who’s out:Zach Arnett didn’t last one season as Mike Leach’s replacement. He was fired with the team 5-6.

Who’s hired: The Bulldogs selected Oklahoma offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby, who previously served in the same role at Mississippi under Lane Kiffin.

Texas A&M

Who’s out:Jimbo Fisher arrived to much fanfare but he went 45-25 and was owed $77 million when the school cut ties with him.

Who’s hired: The Aggies turned to a familiar face with the hiring of Duke coach Mike Elko, who was previously the school’s defensive coordinator before a successful, two-year stint with the Blue Devils.

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The Carolina Panthers’ rebuild is heading in a new direction.

The Panthers fired coach Frank Reich on Monday, following Carolina’s 1-10 start – the worst in the NFL – with six games remaining in the 2023 season.

“I met with Coach Reich [Monday] morning and informed him that he will not continue as head coach of the Carolina Panthers,” team owner David Tepper said in a statement announcing the firing. “I want to thank Frank for his dedication and service, and we wish him well.”

The Panthers announced special teams coach Chris Tabor will serve as interim head coach. Senior assistant Jim Caldwell will be a special advisor to offensive coordinator Thomas Brown, who will take over play-calling duties. Brown briefly handled the responsibility earlier this season, but Reich later took back the role.

Carolina also fired assistant head coach and running backs coach Duce Staley and quarterbacks coach Josh McCown.

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The Panthers’ rebuild centered on Reich and quarterback Bryce Young has not taken off how Tepper envisioned.

Tepper was heard by multiple reporters yelling an expletive as he left the Panthers’ locker room after the team’s 17-10 loss to the Tennessee Titans on Sunday.

Bryce Young trade leaves Panthers in precarious position

To make matters worse for Carolina, the Panthers do not own their first-round pick in the 2024 NFL draft.

The pick, currently slated to be No. 1, is owned by the Chicago Bears after last year’s trade that sent the 2023 No. 1 pick to the Panthers.

Amid rampant offensive issues, Carolina has failed to score more than 13 points in its last five games and in seven games overall.

Young has completed 61.7% of his passes for 1,877 yards with nine touchdowns and eight interceptions this season. He has also been sacked 40 times, which is second-most in the NFL behind Washington’s Sam Howell (55).

The Panthers have the fourth-worst scoring average in the NFL, mustering just 15.7 points per game.

C.J. Stroud’s success increases heat on Bryce Young, Panthers

While Young and the Panthers have had a rocky first season together, No. 2 pick C.J. Stroud’s rookie campaign has been far smoother.

The Ohio State product and Houston Texans quarterback has become the runaway favorite for Offensive Rookie of the Year, throwing for 3,266 yards with 19 touchdowns and just five interceptions while leading the team to a 6-5 mark.

Before the Panthers scored their lone win of the season to date against the Texans, Reich backed the team’s selection of Young when asked about his level of interest in Stroud.

“I’ve never said that to one person anytime, anywhere,” Reich said last month. “Always said—I like C.J. Stroud a lot. I’ve said this many times—I like that whole quarterback draft. I think they were all really good prospects. I think they’re all gonna have really good NFL careers.

“My eyes and our eyes were on Bryce Young, from start to finish. You look at the film, you talk to the man, you get a sense for the leader, the player and what he is and what he can be and how he fits to what we wanna do in the vision we have as an offense, as a team and as an organization. We got the guy for us.

“And I’m sure Houston feels they got the guy for them. That’s great. I mean, I think it’s great for the NFL, it’s great for our two guys. I think we’re both very happy with where we’re at and the direction we’re goin’.”

Frank Reich gets fired for second straight season

Reich was hired by the Panthers earlier this year, just months after being fired from his old gig as the Indianapolis Colts coach.

Reich dealt with Andrew Luck’s abrupt retirement in August 2019, and a revolving door at quarterback with Jacoby Brissett, Philip Rivers, Carson Wentz, Matt Ryan and Sam Ehlinger in the seasons after. He was fired after a 3-5-1 start on Nov. 7, 2022.

Reich’s 11-game tenure as Panthers coach is the shortest stint for any coach for anyone who made it to regular-season games since 1978, when the San Francisco 49ers fired Pete McCulley after nine games.

How far have the Panthers come at the QB position?

Reich was hired to replace Matt Rhule, who could not stabilize the Panthers’ quarterback play when he was hired in 2020. He is now the coach at Nebraska.

The Panthers released former No. 1 pick Cam Newton and started Teddy Bridgewater and P.J. Walker in 2020. They signed former No. 3 pick Sam Darnold, re-signed Newton, and kept Walker in 2021. And former No. 1 pick Baker Mayfield joined Darnold and Walker in 2022.

The Panthers, who last drafted Newton with the No. 1 pick in 2011, last reached the Super Bowl in 2015.

David Tepper has had little patience with coaches

Tepper, who also owns Charlotte FC in Major League Soccer, has fired four coaches between both teams he owns in the last 18 months.

Along with firing Reich and Rhule, Tepper has fired MLS coaches Miguel Ángel Ramírez in May 2022 and Christian Lattanzio earlier this month. 

Charlotte FC began play in 2022, and Lattanzio led the team to the MLS playoffs this season before his departure. But Charlotte FC fell 5-2 in the wild card round to the New York Red Bulls on Oct. 25.

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Texas A&M’s coaching search after the firing of Jimbo Fisher landed on a familiar face. The school announced Monday the hiring of Duke’s Mike Elko, who was previous the Aggies defensive coordinator.

‘Coach Mike Elko is one of the best leaders and coaches in college football and has had high-level success at each stop of his career,’ Texas A&M athletics director Ross Bjork said. ‘He is known amongst coaching circles as one of the best defensive minds in the country and has shown his ability to lead and turn around a program as a Power 5 head coach.’

Elko spent four seasons at Kyle Field with the Aggies from 2018-21 under Fisher as the Aggies’ defensive coordinator, going 34-14 while helming the defense. His most successful season with Texas A&M came in 2020, as his unit ranked ninth in the country in total defense amid a 9-1 record and Orange Bowl victory.

Elko has been among the top candidates to replace Fisher since the latter’s firing in early November, not only for his familiarity with the program but also the success he has enjoyed at Duke, which is not a traditional football power. News of the Aggies honing in on him come after Kentucky’s Mark Stoops was briefly reported Saturday to be their next hire.

After his time at Texas A&M, Elko moved on to his first head coaching gig with Duke, where he has orchestrated a turnaround in the program.

Elko stepped in and led the Blue Devils to a 9-4 record and a Military Bowl victory in the 2022 college football season. The year prior was a disappointing 3-9 campaign that saw the Blue Devils go 0-8 in ACC play under long-time coach David Cutcliffe.

Duke in 2023 finished the regular season at 7-5, which includes wins against Clemson and North Carolina State. Overall, Elko’s record with the Blue Devils was 16-9.

‘Coach Elko has a vision for Aggie football, and a specific plan for innovation and greatness which is exactly what our program needs right now to compete in the modern era of college athletics,’ Bjork said.

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