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Florida State football and head coach Mike Norvell fired offensive coordinator Alex Atkins, defensive coordinator Adam Fuller and wide receivers coach Ron Dugans on Sunday, a day after the Seminoles lost 52-3 to No. 8 Notre Dame.

Linebackers coach Randy Shannon will take over the defensive coordinator role and Norvell will continue to call plays on offense. The dismissal of the three coaches will cost roughly $8.5 million, factoring in what they were owed for the remainder of this season and the contract buyouts, subject to mitigation.

All three coaches are required to make good-faith efforts to find new jobs and FSU is entitled to an offset, according to the coaches’ contracts.

A year after going 13-1, including an undefeated regular season and ACC title, the Seminoles are 1-9.

“I appreciate the work these three men have provided over the last five years with me at Florida State,” Norvell said in a press release. “They are all great men with families … We had many great moments together here, and I have never doubted their passion for our players and for Florida State.

‘Unfortunately, we have not upheld the Florida State standard with our results on the field this season. I did not make any of these decisions lightly, but I felt changes needed to be made to elevate our program back to where we all desire it to be.”

Fuller and Dugans have been with the program since Norvell became head coach in 2019. Atkins was in his third season, and his first as offensive coordinator. Dugans is a former FSU and NFL receiver.

On Jan. 11, the NCAA announced Level II sanctions against FSU, making the Seminoles the first college football program to receive punishment for using NIL payments to induce recruits.

The NCAA placed sanctions on FSU, Atkins and an unnamed booster for impermissible recruiting activity and facilitating impermissible contact with an NIL-related booster.

As part of the penalties, Atkins was suspended for the first three games of the 2024 regular season and was given a two-year show-cause, which requires future schools who hire Atkins to explain the decision to NCAA officials.

FSU has the worst scoring offenses in the country, averaging just 13 points per game. Saturday’s three points vs. Notre Dame were the lowest of the season, and the 49-point margin of victory is tied for the second-worst defeat in program history, only trailing the 63-3 loss to Georgia last year.

FSU averages 4.6 yards per play, including 2.7 yards per rush and 5.9 yards per completion, all in the bottom 10 of Division I programs. The Seminoles’ 80 yards per game rushing ranks 130th.

Defensively, the Seminoles rank in the bottom half of all Division I programs in most of the major statistical categories, with 29.8 points per game ranked 101st out of 134. FSU has allowed teams to convert on nearly 46% of third downs and has allowed opponents to score 35 touchdowns this season.

FSU has been outscored 146-44 in its last four games.

Liam Rooney covers Florida State athletics for the Tallahassee Democrat. Contact him via email at LRooney@gannett.com or on Twitter @__liamrooney

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This article has been updated to include comments from the Big 12.

After Utah’s last-minute 22-21 loss to archrival BYU late Saturday night, Utes athletic director Mark Harlan took to the microphone to criticize not only the game’s officials, but the Big 12 Conference itself.

They were words he’ll have to pay for — literally.

Harlan has been fined $40,000 by the Big 12 and will be the subject of a public reprimand for his actions, the league announced Sunday. The conference added that Harlan has been warned that ‘a repeat of such behavior will result in a more serious penalty.’

“Mark’s comments irresponsibly challenged the professionalism of our officials and the integrity of the Big 12 Conference,” Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark said in a statement. “There is a right way and a wrong way to voice concerns. Unfortunately, Mark chose the wrong way. Accordingly, this violation warrants a public reprimand and financial penalty. The Big 12 Conference prioritizes professionalism, integrity, and fairness, and will continue to do so.”

Harlan addressed the assembled media before coach Kyle Whittingham or players following Utah’s loss, which dropped it to 4-5 overall and 1-5 in the Big 12 in its first season in the conference. He said the game was “absolutely stolen from us” and added that while he was excited to join the Big 12, “tonight I am not.”

“We won this game,” Harlan said. “Someone else stole it from us. Very disappointed. I will talk to the commissioner. This was not fair to our team. I’m disgusted by the professionalism of the officiating crew tonight.”

The Utes led BYU 21-10 at halftime in their annual “Holy War” matchup, but gave up 12 unanswered points in the second half, capped off by a game-winning 44-yard field goal with three seconds remaining.

On that final drive, and holding on to a 21-19 lead, Utah twice appeared to stop the Cougars on fourth down, only for the play to be negated. BYU quarterback Jake Retzlaff threw an incomplete pass deep in his team’s own territory, but the play was blown dead a few seconds after the snap, with officials noting BYU had called a timeout before the play began. On the replayed fourth down, Retzlaff was sacked by a pair of Utah defenders, but BYU received a fresh set of downs after a Utes cornerback was whistled for holding. From there, the Cougars marched 57 yards down the field to set up the winning kick.

With the win, BYU remained undefeated and moved up to No. 8 in the US LBM Coaches Poll. The Cougars are the only Big 12 team with fewer than two losses this season.

Harlan’s fine is quite large. The biggest fines the Big 12 had handed out over the past decade did not surpass $25,000.

In wake of the fine, Harlan acknowledged his lack of tact in addressing his frustrations.

‘I recognize that there are more appropriate times and avenues to express those concerns, and I accept the consequences of my decision,’ Harlan said in a statement. ‘My comments came after having just left our team locker room where our student-athletes were hurting and upset. The University of Utah is proud to be a member of the Big 12 Conference and we look forward to working with our peers to continue to enhance the league.’

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Brian Kelly asked the question we all had on our brains: What, exactly, did LSU do to prepare for Alabama, and why didn’t it work?
Until LSU elevates its personnel, expect Tigers to fall short of greatness.
LSU didn’t have the horses to run with Alabama. That’s why the Tide are in position for CFP bid, and LSU isn’t.

BATON ROUGE, La. – Brian Kelly asked the question we all had on our brains.

The way the No. 13 Tigers played Saturday in a 42-13 tail-kicking by No. 11 Alabama, you might’ve thought LSU learned of its opponent 90 seconds before kickoff.

In fact, LSU had two weeks to prepare for Alabama.

Could’ve fooled me.

‘If you’re watching the game, you’re like, ‘What did these guys do for two weeks?’’ Kelly said after a loss that kneecapped LSU’s playoff chances.

‘We have a scheme to stop the quarterback. We did not get it done. I take responsibility for it.’

Alabama’s star quarterback Jalen Milroe galloped through LSU’s defense.

He completed his first seven passes. He repeatedly sprinted into the end zone with comfort in the knowledge that the Tigers had nobody who would lay a hand on him.

Milroe picked the Tigers clean and left them for bones, and it’s the same sad story for LSU’s defense, a yearslong wart.

‘He’s got a superpower when it comes to running the football,’ Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer said of his quarterback.

Pair that superpower with an LSU defense that’s super pitiful at stopping running quarterbacks, and you get a blowout like this one.

How to improve LSU football defense? Start with personnel

Kelly fired his defensive coordinator after last season, when LSU fielded the SEC’s worst defense this side of Vanderbilt.

In marched Blake Baker to run the defense, a hire that generated fanfare. Baker previously galvanized Missouri’s defense.

And yet, this loss presented as a near repeat of Alabama’s romp over LSU last season, when the Crimson Tide also scored 42 points, and Milroe ran wild through the night.

I doubt Baker overdosed on stupid pills in the offseason, so, what gives?

Simply, LSU’s defense doesn’t have enough good personnel. LSU (6-3) lacks the horses to run with Alabama (7-2).

Remember the physical freaks from the Nick Saban and Les Miles eras of LSU football? This defense doesn’t possess many guys like that.

Which begs the question: Why not? And, can Kelly populate his roster with the necessary opponent-wreckers before next season?

As Kelly assembles a 2025 recruiting class that ranks No. 4 nationally, he’d also do well to shop for a few proven veteran defenders in the winter transfer sweepstakes. I’m not talking about warm bodies to round out the roster. LSU needs a few A-listers to spearhead a defensive rebirth.

LSU’s flop on offense Saturday can be explained by three turnovers and red-zone woes, but the defensive woes go deeper.

LSU’s deficiencies remind me of where Ole Miss stood last year.

Georgia exposed the Rebels’ personnel last November in a rout of Ole Miss, after which Lane Kiffin took stock of the program’s weaknesses, baited the hook, and fished in the transfer portal for solutions.

Backed by Ole Miss’ well-heeled NIL collective, Kiffin identified and secured an army of quality transfers to transform an Ole Miss defense that limited Georgia to 10 points in a victory Saturday.

Kelly shows no appetite to challenge for Kiffin’s ‘Portal King’ credentials, but he needs to acquire a few fellas with miles on the tires who know how to battle in the SEC.

How Alabama neutralized the one thing LSU defense does well

This defense does one thing well, and one thing only: It rushes the quarterback.

Alabama neutralized LSU’s pass rush with a run-oriented attack, keeping the ball on the ground more than 70% of the time.

Alabama knew better than to station Milroe in the pocket for long-developing pass plays. Texas A&M reminded us two weeks ago that LSU can’t tackle mobile quarterbacks in the open field. Turns out, LSU didn’t fix the problem.

When Milroe did require his arm, he made smart, efficient decisions, uncorked the ball quickly, and persistently found open targets, often over the middle of the field within the soft belly of LSU’s defense.

He became a third-down magician. LSU moved the chains 10 times on 13 third-down tries.

Add in LSU’s turnovers and a few untimely Tigers penalties, and a blowout is born.

LSU isn’t as bad as it looked – it beat playoff-contending Ole Miss in this very building less than a month ago – but the defensive deficiencies persist as a bugaboo that holds back LSU from the playoff.

‘We’re disappointed, (because) when you put on a jersey for LSU, there’s a standard of football that those three letters on your jersey (represent),’ Kelly said. ‘We didn’t live up to that.’

Although I can appreciate the sentiment of Kelly’s comment, LSU also lacks the roster required to consistently live up to that standard.

DBU gradually morphed into DB-P.U.

No linebacker puts fear in any opponent.

Not enough disruptors reside in LSU’s defensive front.

It falls squarely on Kelly and his staff to elevate the two-deep before a pivotal Year 4 for Kelly’s tenure.

Because, if LSU doesn’t make the necessary personnel improvements, we’ll ask this same question next year: What, exactly, did you spend your time doing?

(This story was updated to change a video.)

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on Twitter @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

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Czech Barbora Krejcikova on Sunday called for respect and professionalism in sports media as she hit out at ‘unprofessional’ remarks made about her appearance during a broadcast on the Tennis Channel.

During the Tennis Channel’s coverage of the event on Friday, journalist Jon Wertheim, seemingly unaware that he was on air, made a comment about Krejcikova’s forehead which was met with criticism on social media.

‘As an athlete who has dedicated herself to this sport, it was disappointing to see this type of unprofessional commentary,’ world number 13 Krejcikova wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

‘This isn’t the first time something like this is happening in (the) sports world. I’ve often chosen not to speak up, but I believe it’s time to address the need for respect and professionalism in sports media.

‘These moments distract from the true essence of sport and the dedication all athletes bring to the field. I love tennis deeply, and I want to see it represented in a way that honors the commitment we make to compete at this level.’

Wertheim apologized for the comments in a post on X, saying: ‘During a Tennis Channel studio show on Friday, I made some deeply regrettable comments off-air.

‘I acknowledge them. I apologise for them. I reached out immediately and apologised to the player… I realise: I am not the victim here. It was neither professional nor charitable nor reflective of the person I strive to be.

‘I am accountable. I own this. I am sorry.’

Reuters has contacted the Tennis Channel for comment.

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CINCINNATI − It wasn’t a baseball game that brought fans to Great American Ball Park on Sunday. Instead, it was saying goodbye to a Cincinnati Reds legend.

Hundreds clad in red clutched umbrellas and adjusted their hoods outside the Reds stadium. Surrounding the ballpark’s staple Pete Rose statue were an assortment of the items that remind everyone of Rose.

Dozens and dozens of red roses. A Barq’s red cream soda can. Baseballs autographed by his own fans and dedicated to him. A plastic-wrapped No. 14 jersey, and a Reds cap signed with a message to Rose, ‘You’re in our hall of fame and our hearts forever.’

The rainy, dreary weather didn’t keep those fans from paying respects at Rose’s public visitation Sunday. The all-time MLB hit king died on Sept. 30. He was 83.

All things Reds: Latest Cincinnati Reds news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

But for locals, Pete Rose wasn’t just an MLB great. He was their hometown hero.

‘We all love Pete,’ visitation attendee Travis Neltner said. ‘Pete’s a part of Cincinnati just like every one of us.’

Fans remember big Pete Rose career moments

The crowd at Great American Ball Park on Sunday was mostly comprised of older folks, those who could remember when Rose was on the Reds from 1963 to 1978, and again when he returned from the Philadelphia Phillies to play for the Reds again from 1984 to 1986. Seven hours into the visitation, more than 1,500 people had showed up, according to a Reds spokesperson.

The visitation was 14 hours long, a homage to Pete Rose’s No. 14 retired jersey number. Though one other numeral also stuck in fans’ minds: 4,192. That refers to the MLB hit record Rose set on Sept. 11, 1985.

Despite the recent loss of the baseball legend, visitation attendees were still in good spirits as they gathered at the ballpark to celebrate Rose. Like many people who visited, Western Hills residents Molly and Robert Good remember exactly where they were at 4,192.

Robert Good was watching the game at Price Hill Chili when Rose made the historic hit. Molly Good was across town on the East Side attending a Sting concert when it happened. Riverbend briefly interrupted the show to announce the news to the audience.

A teacher at Rose’s alma mater Western Hills High School, Molly Good said it means a lot to her students to have shared the same building with the famed player.

‘As West Siders, we’re like a big family, and he’s one of our family,’ she said.

Steve Brill and his best friend Jeff Wiener were and witnessed the record-breaking feat from their right-field seats at Riverfront Stadium. Steve Brill’s wife, Linda Brill, have had a chance to meet Rose on numerous occasions: They have personal autographs, and Linda Brill met Rose several times when he came to look at Rolls Royce cars when she worked at Williams Ford in high school.

‘He would come in often and just talk to the guys and look at the cars, and he was always so, so nice,’ Linda Brill said. ‘He could talk baseball like nobody else.’

Saying goodbye to ‘Charlie Hustle’

A few hours after the visitation began at 7 a.m., more fans trickled into the stadium and entered the queue to pay respects to Rose’s daughters who spearheaded the public event. TVs broadcast some of his career’s vital moments as people waited in line amid pensive cello music.

Big moments in Rose’s career were celebrated, but fans acknowledged he wasn’t perfect. He was banned from the MLB for life after accusations he placed illegal bets on Reds games while managing the team. Two years later, the National Baseball Hall of Fame barred him from induction.

But the Reds Hall of Fame could make its own rules, and that’s what officials did. In 2016, he became the last member of the Big Red Machine to be inducted into the local Hall of Fame. However, some fans say he should be posthumously inducted into the leaguewide Hall of Fame.

Reds Hall of Fame executive director Rick Walls said that from a fan’s perspective, everybody would like to see him in the MLB Hall of Fame someday for his contributions to the game and on the field.

‘I know he said to us, being in the Reds Hall of Fame and having his statue at the ballpark and his number (retired) is exciting and good enough for him,’ Walls said. ‘I don’t know what’s going to happen down the road, but I know a lot of people would like to see him in the National Baseball Hall of Fame, and we’ll leave that up to them.’

Fans like Robert Good say Rose should be honored leaguewide but noted Rose had his ‘personal demons.’ Linda Brill also said it’s time he’s recognized at the national level.

‘They should have let him in. I think they will now if his family accepts,’ she said. ‘Nobody’s perfect.’

For most it was the good memories that stuck out.

Mike Wood made the two-hour from Westerville, Ohio, to say goodbye to his childhood hero. Now 63, he played baseball growing up and got to see the Big Red Machine play for the first time when he was 9. ‘Charlie Hustle,’ as the world knew Rose, taught him some valuable lessons about work ethic, he said.

‘My dad always said, play like Pete does – give it 110% every day,’ Wood said.

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The 18-team field is set for the 2024 edition of the MLS Cup Playoffs.

After setting a league record for the most points scored in a single season, Inter Miami CF was eliminated in the first round in one of the biggest playoff upsets in league history by Atlanta United. .

The 2022 MLS Cup winners, Los Angeles FC, bring a talented group into the postseason for what they hope is a third consecutive MLS Cup run. And it’s been a decade since the LA Galaxy last won MLS Cup, but the resurgent club seems determined to return to its prior glory.

The New York Red Bulls, meanwhile, extended the longest active playoff appearance streak among North America’s major men’s professional sports leagues. RBNY has made the MLS playoffs in 15 consecutive seasons, which is more than MLB’s Los Angeles Dodgers (12), NBA’s Boston Celtics (10) and NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs (nine).

Here’s a look at the MLS playoff teams, seeds, matchups and results:

Eastern Conference playoff seeds

Inter Miami CF
Columbus Crew
FC Cincinnati
Orlando City SC
Charlotte FC
New York City FC
New York Red Bulls
CF Montréal
Atlanta United

Western Conference playoff seeds

Los Angeles FC
LA Galaxy
Real Salt Lake
Seattle Sounders FC
Houston Dynamo FC
Minnesota United FC
Colorado Rapids
Vancouver Whitecaps FC
Portland Timbers

MLS Cup Playoffs 2024: Conference semifinal matchups and schedule

Saturday, Nov. 23

New York City FC vs. New York Red Bulls (at Citi Field), 5:30 p.m. ET
Los Angeles FC vs. Seattle Sounders FC, 10:30 p.m. ET

Sunday, Nov. 24

Orlando City SC vs. Atlanta United, 3:30 p.m. ET
LA Galaxy vs. Minnesota United FC, 6 p.m. ET (FS1)

MLS Cup Playoffs 2024: Wild card and Round 1 matchups and results

These are the MLS playoff matchups through the first round (all games available on MLS Season Pass on Apple TV) …

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Wild-card match:

Round 1 (best-of-three series):

Inter Miami CF vs. Atlanta United

Atlanta United win series

Game 1 (at Miami): Inter Miami 2, Atlanta United 1
Game 2 (at Atlanta United): Atlanta United 2, Inter Miami 1
Game 3 (at Miami): Atlanta United 3, Inter Miami 2

Columbus Crew vs. New York Red Bulls

New York Red Bulls win series

Game 1 (at Columbus): New York Red Bulls 1, Columbus Crew 0
Game 2 (at RBNY): New York Red Bulls 2, Columbus Crew 2 (New York Red Bulls won penalty shootout, 5-4)

FC Cincinnati vs. New York City FC

New York City FC win series

Game 1 (at Cincinnati): FC Cincinnati 1, New York City FC 0
Game 2 (at NYCFC): New York City FC 3, FC Cincinnati 1
Game 3 (at Cincinnati): New York City FC 0, FC Cincinnati 0 (NYCFC won penalty shootout, 6-5)

Orlando City SC vs. Charlotte FC

Orlando City SC win series

Game 1 (at Orlando): Orlando City SC 2, Charlotte FC 0
Game 2 (at Charlotte): Charlotte FC 0, Orlando City SC 0 (Charlotte FC won penalty shootout, 3-1)
Game 3 (at Orlando): Orlando City SC 1, Charlotte FC 1 (Orlando City SC won penalty shootout, 4-1)

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Wild-card match:

Vancouver Whitecaps FC 5, Portland Timbers 0

Round 1 (best-of-three series):

Los Angeles FC win series

Los Angeles FC vs. Vancouver Whitecaps FC

Game 1 (at LAFC): Los Angeles FC 2, Vancouver Whitecaps FC 1
Game 2 (at Vancouver Whitecaps FC): Vancouver Whitecaps FC 3, Los Angeles FC 0
Game 3 (at LAFC): Los Angeles FC 1, Vancouver Whitecaps FC 0

LA Galaxy vs. Colorado Rapids

LA Galaxy win series

Game 1 (at Los Angeles): LA Galaxy 5, Colorado Rapids 0
Game 2 (at Colorado): LA Galaxy 4, Colorado Rapids 1

Real Salt Lake vs. Minnesota United FC

Minnesota United FC win series

Game 1 (at Salt Lake): Minnesota United FC 0, Real Salt Lake 0 (Minnesota United FC won penalty shootout, 5-4)
Game 2 (at Minnesota): Minnesota United FC 1, Real Salt Lake 1 (Minnesota United FC won penalty shootout, 3-1)

Seattle Sounders FC vs. Houston Dynamo FC

Seattle Sounders FC win series

Game 1 (at Seattle): Seattle Sounders FC 0, Houston Dynamo FC 0 (Seattle Sounders won penalty shootout, 5-4)
Game 2 (at Houston): Seattle Sounders FC 1, Houston Dynamo FC 1 (Seattle Sounders won penalty shootout, 7-6)

2024 MLS playoff schedule

Oct. 22-23: Wild-card matches (single-elimination matches)
Oct. 25-Nov. 10: Round 1 (best-of-three series)
Nov. 23-24: Conference semifinals (single-elimination matches)
Nov. 30-Dec. 1: Conference finals (single-elimination matches)
Dec. 7: MLS Cup (single winner-take-all match)

MLS CUP: Ranking every Major League Soccer championship game

MLS Cup Playoffs bracket

Here is the full playoff schedule in bracket form from MLSsoccer.com.

(This story was updated to add new information.)

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Lane Kiffin and his Ole Miss Rebels changed the narrative and caused anxiety for the CFP selection committee by beating Georgia.
In crowded bubble, ACC and Big 12 become more in danger of being one-bid leagues, especially after Miami loss.
Does Georgia need a quarterback change? Carson Beck remains in a slump

Lane Kiffin and his quarterback, Jaxson Dart, grabbed that big, hairy can’t-win-the-big-one monkey off their shoulders and punted him to the moon on Saturday.

The Rebels didn’t just beat Georgia. They dominated the Bulldogs.

Consider Saturday’s 28-10 victory a narrative-altering turnabout that occurred 12 months after Georgia crushed Ole Miss by 35 points in Athens.

That loss last November spurred Kiffin to closely evaluate soft spots in his roster, and with Ole Miss’ well-funded NIL collective behind him, he addressed those deficiencies in the offseason with a surgeon’s precision. Kiffin used proven transfers to bolster Ole Miss’ offensive line and its defensive front.

That investment paid off in this rematch. Ole Miss (8-2) owned Georgia (7-2) at the lines of scrimmage.

‘Just really happy,’ Kiffin said afterward.

Dart’s first-quarter interception gifted Georgia golden field position to score its only touchdown. You could be forgiven for thinking, ‘Here we go again,’ in that moment.

Like his coach, Dart previously withered against the toughest opponents. No more. He shrugged off the early mistake, and despite playing on a gimpy ankle, Dart vastly outperformed Georgia’s Carson Beck, who remained ensnarled in a weekslong rut.

‘Jaxson made really good throws,’ Kiffin said.

And Kiffin made all the right moves, persistently opting for field goals on fourth downs that Ole Miss stacked into valuable points, while the remade defense handled the rest.

Kiffin went 0-5 all-time against Nick Saban, with the first loss coming while he coached Tennessee. Those results contributed to the narrative that Kiffin fizzles in big games. That narrative is outdated and no longer accurate.

Kiffin now owns a victory against Kirby Smart, James Franklin, Brian Kelly and Josh Heupel. He went 3-0 against Jimbo Fisher, contributing to Texas A&M firing Fisher last season.

Until Saturday, no team other than Alabama had beaten Georgia since the 2020 season.

Beating Georgia resurrected Ole Miss’ season and causes anxiety for the College Football Playoff selection committee.

The Rebels, ranked No. 16 in the initial CFP rankings, surely must move to the right side of the playoff bubble, but at whose expense?

As many as seven SEC teams could finish with records of 10-2 or better.

Georgia, ranked No. 3 by the CFP committee last week, will host No. 7 Tennessee next week.

If the Bulldogs suffer a third loss, would the committee show enough backbone to boot Georgia?

The Bulldogs own one of the season’s most impressive victories – they went into Austin and whipped Texas – but I don’t envision room for a three-loss at-large qualifier within this crowded bubble.

What of Tennessee (8-1)? Would losing at Georgia, the week after Ole Miss hammered the Bulldogs, put the Vols in jeopardy? It’s possible, depending on how many teams logjam the bubble come selection day.

Meanwhile, Ole Miss will close with Florida and Mississippi State, offering a chance for two blowout victories to polish the résumé.

By December, the Rebels should put to rest the question of whether they’ll make the playoff and replace it with the question of whether they should be seeded high enough to host a first-round game.

Unburdened by the monkey, Kiffin’s Rebels could make noise in the CFP bracket.

Here’s what else I’m eyeing in this view from the “Topp Rope”:

Familiar story for Georgia’s Carson Beck

I raised the question last weekend about whether Smart ought to consider changing quarterbacks and give backup Gunner Stockton a look, to change the offense’s direction in the face of Beck’s mounting woes.

I now raise that question with renewed vigor.

Beck just doesn’t have it this season. His offensive line did him no favors against Ole Miss, but the fact remains that Georgia’s quarterback isn’t sparking enough offensive life.

Stockton’s mobility would provide a different wrinkle, but Smart abhors changing quarterbacks. Three years ago, it took multiple injuries to JT Daniels before Smart finally trusted Stetson Bennett IV to be QB1.

Beck had two turnovers in this loss, giving him 14 turnovers in the past six games.

How little Smart must think of Stockton that he’s sticking with Beck. Or, Smart simply refuses to see the big picture that Beck’s performance pushes Georgia to the brink of playoff elimination.

‘I thought Carson played good, guys,’ Smart said after Beck threw for 186 yards. ‘I thought he played good.’

Smart watched a different game than the rest of us.

Miami in a spot of trouble

Miami played with fire one too many times. The Hurricanes finally got burned in a 28-23 loss to Georgia Tech.

Miami previously delivered three second-half comebacks on Cam Ward’s shoulders en route to the No. 4 spot in the initial CFP rankings. The problem with that strategy is, it requires your quarterback to be Superman each week.

Georgia Tech’s ball-control offense and persistent pass rush on defense prevented any Miami theatrics.

The ACC joins the Big 12 in profiling as a one-bid conference. The ACC championship matchup, projected as SMU vs. Miami, sets up as an CFP elimination game.

Best line I heard this week

After Missouri scored two touchdowns in the final two minutes to beat Oklahoma 30-23, Tigers coach Eliah Drinkwitz made this proclamation:

‘This keeps us in the playoff hunt,’ Drinkwitz said on the SEC Network. ‘That’s right. I said it. Playoff hunt.’

There’s a chance Drinkwitz was just trolling us with that doozy.

Missouri ranked No. 24 in the initial CFP rankings, and, with blowout losses to Texas A&M and Alabama, the Tigers would be last in line of the SEC’s two-loss teams for an at-large bid.

But wait! If things get really wacky, Missouri could finish in an eight-way tie for first place in the SEC standings, which would enact a meticulous tiebreaker procedure to determine the two teams destined for the SEC championship game. And the SEC’s champion will be playoff bound.

So, you’re telling me there’s a chance?!

Not really, but makes for a good postgame quote.

Three and out

1. If Colorado closes with wins against Utah, Kansas and Oklahoma State, all of which are unranked, it will qualify for the Big 12 championship game. And if it wins the Big 12 championship, it’s in the playoff. Oh, mama. Deion Sanders sits four wins away from the CFP.

2. Predicting the top 12 of Tuesday’s CFP rankings: 1. Oregon, 2. Ohio State, 3. Texas, 4. Penn State, 5. Tennessee, 6. Indiana, 7. Alabama, 8. BYU, 9. Notre Dame, 10. Ole Miss, 11. Georgia, 12. Miami.

3. My latest ‘Topp Rope’ playoff projection: Oregon (Big Ten), Alabama (SEC), Miami (ACC), BYU (Big 12), Boise State (Group of Five), plus at-large selections Ole Miss, Texas, Georgia, Tennessee, Ohio State, Penn State, Notre Dame. Next up: Indiana, SMU, Colorado, Texas A&M, Army, Tulane.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on Twitter @btoppmeyer. The ‘Topp Rope’ is his football column published throughout the USA TODAY Network. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

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LSU’s athletics director, Scott Woodward, has a reputation in college sports as a big game hunter.

Whenever he has a chance to hire a coach in pretty much any sport, Woodward is going to unleash the money whip and land an established star. The agents love him. The coaches have been enriched by him. But the fans? Well, at LSU these days, they might say he has utterly failed in his No. 1 job of putting Tiger football in position to win national championships. 

Kelly, at the time, had completed his 12th season at Notre Dame and seemed like he’d maxed out what he could do there. The theory was that LSU, with greater resources and recruiting reach, would give a well-established, successful coach the opportunity ascend to even greater heights and potentially win a national championship.

Instead, the reality for Kelly is that he’s a fairly pedestrian 26-10 at LSU and will likely finish outside the top-10 for a third consecutive year. Aside from an overtime upset over Alabama in 2022, LSU under Kelly generally wins the games it’s supposed to win and loses a couple more games than it’s supposed to lose. The end result is that LSU is nothing more than a solid top-half-of-the-SEC program under Kelly, but that’s not what Woodward paid him $95 million over 10 years to achieve.

LSU is supposed to compete for titles. It hasn’t come close yet under Kelly, an erudite northerner who raises the floor through sheer competence but looks like an awkward cultural fit in Baton Rouge. In the end, Kelly has the same problem at LSU that he had at Notre Dame. He just doesn’t win very often against teams with equal or better talent. 

No matter how good of a coach you think Kelly is, Woodward made a mistake. And it’s not his first misfire in a really high-profile, high-stakes situation. 

To be fair, Woodward’s track record at Washington, Texas A&M and now LSU has yielded some impressive results. At LSU, for instance, hiring Kim Mulkey in women’s basketball and Jay Johnson in baseball resulted in quick turnarounds and national championships.

But everyone knows an AD’s career is judged mostly by their football hires, which is where things have gotten sideways lately for Woodward. At A&M, he was responsible for the unprecedented 10-year, $75 million contract that lured Jimbo Fisher from Florida State. That didn’t work out very well. And now at LSU, Kelly is struggling to justify why Woodward was so determined to convince him to leave Notre Dame. 

Here’s the fundamental problem with Woodward. Does he really have a set of values that guide his decision-making, or does his leadership style revolve around making a big splash and proving to fans and his fellow ADs that he has the juice to be a mover and shaker? 

Right now, it’s looking like the latter. And the more the Tigers struggle to win big games, the more alarming it gets gets. That’s why LSU is No. 1 in the Misery Index, a weekly measurement of which fan bases are feeling the most angst. 

Four more in misery

Georgia: The CFP committee is going to give the Bulldogs more latitude than any other team in the country, which is probably appropriate because they’ve played the toughest schedule in college football. Assuming Georgia wins its last three games, all at home against Tennessee, Massachusetts and Georgia Tech, they’re going to cruise into the playoff at 10-2 — as they should.

However, if you apply the eye test to Georgia, it might cause bouts of blindness. The Bulldogs just aren’t a very good watch. 

Georgia fans know what a championship team looks like, and this isn’t a championship team. Georgia’s 28-10 loss at Ole Miss brought all the Bulldogs’ problems to the surface from quarterback play to turnovers to a defense that is prone to getting pushed around. Georgia gained just 245 offensive yards against the Rebels while losing the turnover battle 3-1 and struggling to the run ball. It wasn’t an anomaly – aside from Georgia’s great performance against Texas on Oct. 19, those issues have been par for the course. Are Georgia fans spoiled? Yes. But it doesn’t take a sense of entitlement to see that this is Kirby Smart’s worst team in several years. 

Florida: This has been a season of bloodlust in Gainesville. Not only do Gators fans want head coach Billy Napier gone, they’re equally done with the athletics director who hired him. But Scott Stricklin’s statement Thursday that Napier would be returning for 2025 presumably ends that debate. Napier will be back, and apparently Stricklin’s job is safe too. On Friday, however, Florida’s student newspaper The Alligator reported on disturbing allegations against men’s basketball coach Todd Golden that led to a Title IX investigation. Suddenly, the entire athletic department looks like it’s going up in flames. 

It’s impossible to say what this is all going to mean for Florida’s athletic leadership, especially when the university is looking for a new president who would presumably make some of these decisions. Meanwhile, asking fans to have faith in another year of Napier gets awfully difficult after a 49-17 loss to Texas. Yes, the Longhorns are a much better program right now, but Florida failing to be competitive after Napier’s vote of confidence will only inflame a large number of Gators fans who believe wholesale changes are necessary to compete in the SEC anytime soon. 

Michigan: We haven’t talked much this season about the fact that last year’s national champions have become also-rans in the Big Ten who will be fortunate to end up 6-6. Why not? Is it because Jim Harbaugh left for the NFL? Because so much talent walked out the door? Because Sherrone Moore is a first-year head coach who deserves some latitude as he learns on the job?

Come on! This is Michigan for goodness sakes. And when a 20-15 loss to Indiana counts as one of the Wolverines’ better performances of the season, there might be a bigger underlying issue that deserves some attention. 

At 5-5, Michigan can secure bowl eligibility in a couple weeks if it beats Northwestern. But even that doesn’t seem like a guarantee, as Michigan’s quarterback situation has sunk so far that August 31 against Fresno State is the last time the Wolverines have scored 30 or more points.  

Alabama-Birmingham: The only question here is whether the Blazers’ administration and fan base can round up the $4.1 million in buyout money necessary to end the Trent Dilfer experiment. Already viewed as a lost cause who is desperately in over his head as a college coach, Dilfer’s 31-23 loss to UConn is on a different level of absurdity. Leading 23-10 heading into the fourth quarter, UAB gave up three touchdowns in four possessions while its offense accounted for 42 yards on 21 plays and turned the ball over twice. UAB is now 2-7, and Dilfer’s record is 6-15 overall in two seasons. And it’s worth remembering that this wasn’t a dumpster fire program when Dilfer took it over. In fact, the Blazers were 7-6 in 2022 under interim coach Bryant Vincent, who is now 5-4 at Louisiana-Monroe. But UAB athletics director Mark Ingram couldn’t resist the lure of a big name former NFL quarterback, even though Dilfer had no college coaching experience. UAB will be paying the price for years. 

Miserable but not miserable enough

North Carolina State: The only thing that has distinguished NC State in this decade is its ability to win eight or nine games every year under Dave Doeren. In fact, from 2017 through 2023, the Wolfpack failed to hit that benchmark just once. Doeren has been a model of consistency at a program that gets a little lost in the shuffle against college basketball and the NHL in North Carolina’s Triangle region. NC State fans enjoy being the football overachievers, especially when the rival Tar Heels seem to perennially disappoint. But what happens when Duke is the best team in the state? That seems to be the case after a 29-19 Blue Devils victory in Raleigh, which leaves NC State at 5-5 and needing to beat either Georgia Tech or North Carolina to make the postseason. ACC expansion has masked how far below par this NC State team is as their only conference wins so far are California and Stanford. But losing to Duke and Wake Forest this year, both at home, has exposed that this is Doreen’s weakest team in quite some time. 

Florida Atlantic: Tom Herman kept a very low profile for a couple years after he was fired by Texas, but re-emerged in Boca Raton hoping to resuscitate a coaching career that once seemed destined for stardom. Instead, it has gone the opposite direction. The Owls are the worst team in the American Athletic Conference, punctuated by a 49-14 loss to an East Carolina program that fired coach Mike Houston a couple weeks ago. FAU’s defense has been catastrophic all season, and at 2-7 this season with wins over Florida International and Wagner. Hiring a coach on the rebound after power conference failure worked once at FAU with Lane Kiffin, but Willie Taggart (15-18) and Herman (6-14) have shown it doesn’t guarantee success. 

Oklahoma State: Last week as he tried to explain his mindset during the worst season of his career, Mike Gundy found another way to anger the Cowboys’ fan base by saying that those who criticized his program were “the same ones that can’t pay their own bills.” Gundy released an apology on X on Tuesday night while the world was paying attention to election results. Then after a few days, he proceeded to lose to TCU 38-13 in another embarrassing, uncompetitive result that suggests he’s lost his locker room. Oklahoma State is now 3-7 this season and winless in the Big 12. It’s a disaster, especially for a team that was picked to contend for the conference title. Gundy has wiggled his way out of controversy and impolitic remarks in the past, but this one feels different. Insulting fans in the midst of a season like this will never play well and may be unforgivable. 

Iowa State: It was always a bit far-fetched for the Cyclones to make the CFP. Picked sixth in the Big 12 preseason poll, Iowa State is on track to overachieve regardless of what happens over the season’s final three games. However, things are regressing to the mean rather dramatically in Ames. After starting 7-0, Iowa State has now lost two in a row including Saturday’s 45-36 loss to a pretty poor Kansas team. Barring some good fortune down the stretch of the regular season that gives a chance to win the Big 12 championship, Iowa State won’t make the 12-team playoff. And this comprehensive loss to Kansas, in which the Cyclones fell behind 38-13 early in the second half, is a real dream-killer. Had Iowa State won this game, its fans could have legitimately thought about a spot in the Big 12 championship game. Now, they know the reality that Iowa State just isn’t good enough. 

(This story was updated to change a video.)

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In what’s setting up to be a relatively quiet college football coaching carousel, an FBS school now has a coaching vacancy.

Kennesaw State coach Brian Bohannon has stepped down after 10 seasons, the university announced Sunday.

The decision comes a day after the Owls fell to UTEP 43-35 in double overtime, a setback that dropped them to 1-8 in their first season as an FBS program.

Bohannon was the first and only coach in the history of the Kennesaw State program, which was launched in 2015 and spent its first nine seasons at the FCS level.

In his 10 seasons with the Owls, Bohannon went 72-38, including a 49-10 mark from 2017-21, when he helped build the nascent Kennesaw State program into an FCS contender. During that five-season stretch, the Owls made the FCS playoffs four times and advanced to the quarterfinals twice.

Over the past three seasons, though, Kennesaw State has gone just 9-20. This season included a surprising 27-24 victory against previously undefeated Liberty on October 23, but the Owls have been largely uncompetitive, with only one of their eight losses this season coming by a single score.

‘I want to express my sincere appreciation to Coach Bohannon and his family for their dedication to Kennesaw State University and our football program over the past 11 years,” Kennesaw State athletic director Milton Overton said in a statement. “Coach Bohannon led Kennesaw State into the football era, poured his heart and soul into this program, and represented our university with the highest standards of professionalism and character.’

Co-offensive coordinator Chandler Burks will serve as the interim coach for the remainder of the season. Burks is a former star quarterback at Kennesaw State who was twice named the Big South offensive player of the year.

The Owls become the sixth FBS program with a head-coaching opening, joining Utah State, Fresno State, East Carolina, Southern Miss and Rice.

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The Democratic blame game is at a fever pitch after Vice President Kamala Harris was swiftly defeated by President-elect Donald Trump at the ballot box in an election that had been anticipated to drag out for days as polling indicated the match-up was razor-thin. 

Trump sailed to victory in the early morning hours last Wednesday, after locking down key battlegrounds such as Pennsylvania and Georgia and clearing 270 electoral votes. He concluded the race with 312 electoral votes to Harris’ 226, and won the popular vote. 

In the final days of the campaigning cycle, polling indicated that the results for the election would likely be very close, which could have resulted in state recounts and lawsuits before the winner was announced. 

Following Trump’s clear victory, Democrats across the nation issued statements accepting the results and congratulating the president. Fallout from the devastating loss, however, has reverberated across the party as members point fingers at each other for the Trump win. 

Bernie Sanders and Nancy Pelosi spar over claims Dems ‘abandoned working class’

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders pinned blame for the loss on the Democratic Party for ‘abandoning’ the working class, sparking rebuke from former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi. 

‘It should come as no great surprise that a Democratic Party which has abandoned working class people would find that the working class has abandoned them. While the Democratic leadership defends the status quo, the American people are angry and want change,’ Sanders posted to X last week, accompanied by a press release on the election results. ‘And they’re right.’

Pelosi responded that the party has not left the working class behind in favor of kowtowing to ‘big money interests and well-paid consultants who control the Democratic Party,’ as Sanders had argued in his press release. 

‘With all due respect, and I have a great deal of respect for him [Sanders], for what he stands for, but I don’t respect him saying that the Democratic Party has abandoned the working class families. That’s where we are,’ Pelosi told The New York Times’ ‘The Interview’ podcast on Saturday.

‘Under President Biden, you see the rescue package, money in the pockets of people, the shots in the arm, children in school safely, working people back to work. What did Trump do when he was president? One bill that gave a tax cut to the richest people in America,’ she continued. 

Sanders doubled down on his remarks Sunday, telling NBC’s Kristen Welker that ‘the working people of this country are extremely angry.’ 

‘Nancy is a friend of mine,’ Sanders said. ‘But here is the reality. In the Senate in the last two years, we have not even brought forth legislation to raise the minimum wage to a living wage despite the fact that some 20 million people in this country are working for less than $15 an hour.’ 

‘Bottom line, if you’re a working person out there, do you really think that the Democratic Party is going to the max, taking on powerful special interests and fighting for you? I think the overwhelming answer is no,’ Sanders said.

Harris, Biden campaigns pin blame on each other 

The Harris campaign and Biden campaign have reportedly pinned blame for the loss on each other, Axios reported last week. 

‘The 107-day Harris campaign was nearly flawless. The Biden campaign that preceded it was the opposite,’ one Harris campaign member told the outlet. 

‘We did what we could. I think the odds against us were insurmountable,’ another individual involved with the Harris campaign said, referring to President Biden’s exit from the presidential race in July and his low approval ratings. 

Biden dropped out of the race over the summer following his disastrous debate performance against Trump, where he frequently lost his train of thought and stumbled over his words. The debate opened the floodgates to both conservatives and traditional Democrat allies calling on the president to pass the torch to a younger generation as concerns mounted surrounding his mental acuity and his age. 

Many of those who worked on the Biden campaign also joined the Harris campaign following the president’s endorsement of his VP to take up the mantle as Democratic presidential candidate. 

A person who worked on the Biden campaign shot back in comment to Axios that the Harris team was to blame: ‘How did you spend $1 billion and not win? What the f—?’

‘The Harris team benched [Biden], and then they lost, so now the people who represent Biden are saying, ‘Maybe you shouldn’t have benched him,” another person familiar with the dynamics between the teams said. 

White House spokesman Andrew Bates told the outlet, ‘Anyone criticizing the vice president’s campaign is at odds with President Biden.’

Pelosi points to Biden for loss 

Pelosi appeared to pin blame for the loss on the president, claiming that Biden had dropped out of the race too late in the game and that that hadn’t provided an opportunity for an open primary. 

‘Had the president gotten out sooner, there may have been other candidates in the race,’ she told the New York Times podcast. 

‘The anticipation was that, if the president were to step aside, that there would be an open primary,’ Pelosi continued. ‘. . . Because the president endorsed Kamala Harris immediately, that really made it almost impossible to have a primary at that time. If it had been much earlier, it would have been different.’ 

Biden dropped out of the presidential race on a Sunday afternoon in July via a social media post. He endorsed Harris minutes later in a follow-up X post, sparking other Democrats to rally around the VP. 

Pelosi did defend Biden in June, when the Wall Street Journal ran an article doubting Biden’s mental fitness as president.

​​’Many of us spent time with @WSJ to share on the record our first-hand experiences with @POTUS, where we see his wisdom, experience, strength and strategic thinking,’ Pelosi wrote on X at the time. ‘Instead, the Journal ignored testimony by Democrats, focused on attacks by Republicans and printed a hit piece.’

Pelosi, as well as other high-profile Democrats such as Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, also notably called on Biden to run for a second term ahead of the 2024 cycle kicking off in earnest. 

Obama to blame?

Other Democrats and insiders pointed to former President Barack Obama for the loss, after Obama reportedly worked in the background over the summer to encourage Biden’s ouster from the race. 

A handful of Obama’s allies and former advisers helped lead the charge in calling on Biden to drop out of the 2024 race earlier this summer, including former Obama adviser David Axelrodsaying that Biden was ‘not winning this race;’ longtime Obama friend George Clooney calling on the president to drop out of the race in a bombshell op-ed; and Jon Favreau, who served as former director of speech writing for Obama, also calling on Biden to drop out of the race ahead of his eventual departure. 

‘There is no singular reason why we lost, but a big reason is because the Obama advisers publicly encouraged Democratic infighting to push Joe Biden out, didn’t even want Kamala Harris as the nominee, and then signed up as the saviors of the campaign, only to run outdated Obama-era playbooks for a candidate that wasn’t Obama,’ one former Biden staffer told Politico.

DNC National Finance Committee member and Harris campaign fundraiser Lindy Li told Fox News this weekend that Obama’s seemingly delayed endorsement of Harris after Biden dropped out added to Harris’ defeat. 

​​’I want to point out they waited three days – Michelle and Barack Obama waited three days to endorse Kamala Harris,’ Li said on ‘Fox & Friends Weekend’ on Saturday. ‘It was the silence heard round the world.’

‘The truth is, this is just an epic disaster – this is a $1 billion disaster,’ Li added during the interview. 

Biden dropped out of the race on July 21, with the Obamas endorsing Harris in a video message posted to social media on July 26, five days after Biden’s announcement. The silence was not lost on the media, as headlines spread across the nation on Obama’s ‘silence.’ 

David Axelrod says Dem Party morphing into ‘smarty-pants, suburban, college-educated party’

Similar to Sanders, longtime Democratic strategist David Axelrod appeared to pin blame for the loss on the Democratic Party’s shift away from blue-collar, middle class voters. 

‘You can’t approach working people like missionaries and say, ‘We’re here to help you become more like us.’ There’s a kind of unspoken disdain, unintended disdain in that,’ the CNN contributor said last week. 

‘The only group … Democrats won among were people who make more than $100,000 a year,’ Axelrod said. ‘You can’t win national elections that way, and it certainly shouldn’t be that way for a party that fashions itself as the party of working people.’

‘I think Biden has done programmatically some good things for working people. But the party itself has increasingly become a smarty-pants, suburban, college-educated party, and it lends itself to the kind of backlash that we’ve seen,’ he continued.

Claims of underwhelming VP choice 

After Biden’s exit from the race, Harris simultaneously launched her campaign as well as her search for a running mate, combing through a list of high-profile Democrats and lesser-known allies before choosing Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.

Democrats ultimately rallied behind Walz, but another choice, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, was viewed by many as the better candidate to get the Democratic Party across the finish line victoriously.

‘As a founding member of She Shoulda Picked Shapiro, I think it’s relatively clear now that she made a mistake,’ statistician Nate Silver told the New York Times ahead of Election Day. 

‘Pennsylvania seems to be lagging a little behind the other blue-wall states. Meanwhile, Walz was mediocre in the debate, and he’s been mediocre and nervous in his public appearances.’

Li told Fox News senior White House correspondent Jacqui Heinrich from Howard University, where Harris held her election night party, that Shapiro would likely have aided the Harris campaign’s efforts to notch a massive victory. 

‘One of the things that are top of mind is the choice of Tim Walz as vice presidential candidate,’ Li said. ‘A lot of people are saying tonight that it should have been Josh Shapiro. Frankly, people have been saying that for months.’

Considering Pennsylvania’s battleground-state status, the popular first-term governor was viewed as a potential key for the Harris campaign to reach the coveted 270 electoral votes to lock up the election. Shapiro, who is Jewish, was also touted as a potential bridge for the Harris campaign to court Jewish voters amid backlash over her previous comments defending anti-Israel protesters who rocked college campuses last year during the war in Israel.

James Carville says Harris campaign fail could boil down to one interview 

Longtime Democratic political consultant James Carville said the Harris campaign’s loss could boil down to her interview on ‘The View,’ when co-host Sunny Hostin asked Harris to identify an example of anything she would have done differently from Biden. 

‘I think if this campaign is reducible to one moment, we are in a 65% wrong-track country. The country wants something different. And she’s asked, as is so often the case, in a friendly audience, on ‘The View,’ ‘How would you be different than Biden?’ That’s the one question that you exist to answer, alright? That is it. That’s the money question. That’s the one you want,’ Carville said on ‘The Bulwark Podcast’ on Saturday. 

‘That’s the one that everybody wants to know the answer to. And you freeze. You literally freeze and say, ‘Well, I can’t think of anything,’’ Carville continued. 

Hostin had asked Harris in the October interview, ‘If anything, would you have done something differently than President Biden during the past four years?’ 

‘There is not a thing that comes to mind,’ Harris answered.

Harris’ comment stands in stark contrast to how voters were feeling: They were unhappy with the current administration’s leadership.  

Preliminary data from the Fox News Voter Analysis, a survey of more than 110,000 voters nationwide, found that the majority of voters headed into the polls believing that the country was headed in the wrong direction. 

Voters, ahead of casting their ballots, reported that the country was on the wrong track (70%, up from 60% who felt that way four years ago) and that they were seeking something different. Most wanted a change in how the country is run, with roughly a quarter seeking complete and total upheaval.

Fox News Digital’s Taylor Penley and Hanna Panreck contributed to this report. 

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