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The Democratic National Committee is launching what it says is the organization’s first NFL advertising campaign that starts on Sunday at games located in battleground states, USA TODAY Sports has learned.

The ad campaign is scheduled to happen during Week 6 games and will feature plane banners and skywriting, according to details obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

In Las Vegas for the Raiders-Pittsburgh Steelers game, fans will see skywriting urging them to vote against U.S. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and for Vice President Kamala Harris, the DNC says. Planes with banners will be flying over the Arizona Cardinals and Green Bay Packers game in Wisconsin.

Similar banners will fly over the Atlanta Falcons and Carolina Panthers game in Charlotte and the Browns-Eagles game in Philadelphia.

The DNC says the skywriting in Las Vegas will read: ‘Vote Kamala.’ In Green Bay, a plane banner will read: ‘Sack Trump’s Project 2025! Vote Kamala!’ In Charlotte, a plane banner will read: ‘Sack Trump’s Project 2025! Vote Kamala!’

In Philadelphia, the banner will read: ‘Go Birds! Sack Project 2025! Vote Kamala!’

Project 2025 is conservative blueprint composed by the Heritage Foundation for a potential Trump second term.

“It’s NFL Sunday and fans across the battlegrounds are ready to sack Donald Trump’s Project 2025 playbook once and for all,’ said DNC Deputy Communications Director Abhi Rahman in a statement. ‘Trump’s Project 2025 agenda is a dangerous plan to give him unprecedented power over our daily lives, to ban abortion nationwide, allow the government to monitor pregnancies, and give tax giveaways to his billionaire friends.

‘That’s why the DNC is meeting voters where they are, with innovative skywriting and plane banners that have a simple message: the most important contest is still to come in November, and America is ready to sack Trump’s Project 2025 agenda, win the game, and cast their vote for Kamala Harris.’

The DNC did something similar at a handful of college campuses in early September including the Michigan-Texas game in Ann Arbor, according to CBS News. The banner read: ‘JD Vance Ohio State + Project 2025.’

Other banners flew over games at Penn State and Wisconsin.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LSU kept its College Football Playoff hopes afloat with a dramatic win over Ole Miss. What’s it mean for Brian Kelly? That’s tough to say.
LSU leapfrogs Ole Miss in playoff pecking order.
LSU defense grows a spine, Garrett Nussmeier comes up clutch, and Lane Kiffin’s Rebels wilt again.

BATON ROUGE, La. – Remember Saturday night.

If LSU scratches and claws and muddies and escapes and fights its way into the College Football Playoff, remember the night the No. 10 Tigers won a game they never led until the final play.

If this 29-26 overtime win over No. 8 Ole Miss galvanizes Brian Kelly’s tenure, and he proves himself worth that $95 million investment LSU made three years ago, remember the night his defense grew a spine and his quarterback fought through the tough times.

And when it was finished, LSU fired off enough fireworks that it could’ve been Independence Day, while fans stormed the field. Never mind that the Tigers were just a slight underdog.

This improbable escape warranted celebration.

“These moments don’t come often in life, for sure,” LSU linebacker Whit Weeks said. “It was fun.”

It became a turning-point victory in Kelly’s turning-point third season.

Or, it provided LSU a gulp of excitement before the bottom falls out in the second half of the schedule.

I’m not sure which it’ll prove to be. I could believe either.

LSU’s six remaining games are against SEC competition. There’s not a game remaining LSU (5-1) can’t win – or a game it couldn’t lose.

And the Tigers could be the SEC’s second-best team or its seventh-best team. I’m unconvinced there’s much difference.

“This league is wide open,” LSU quarterback Garrett Nussmeier said. “I think we took a huge step tonight.”

It’s wide open behind Texas, anyway.

LSU football leapfrogs Ole Miss in playoff pecking order

As for LSU’s cardiac cats, they’re still a little rough around the edges, but so are most SEC teams. They’re improving, they battle, they’ve got a quarterback, and a few good receivers, and their defense found a pulse against a top-10 opponent, and so, what the heck, why can’t the Tigers make the playoff? They’ve got about as good of a chance as a number of other teams that sit on one loss.

They’ve got a better chance of making the playoff than Ole Miss (5-2). I know that much.

“We’re real,” Nussmeier said afterward. “The Tigers are real. I think we proved that tonight. There were struggles, and there were mistakes, but we found a way to win the game.”

Kelly raved about LSU’s performance – not because it was perfect, but because it wasn’t, and the Tigers nonetheless hung within striking distance until they finally broke through while Ole Miss caved. He raved about a defense that supplied six sacks. He raved about his quarterback who shrugged off two interceptions, plus a slew of incompletions, and threw touchdown passes on his final two tosses.

“This team is getting better,” Kelly said.

That’s a fair assessment, and the same could be said of Kelly’s 2022 Tigers, who lost their season opener before upsetting Alabama and reaching the SEC Championship Game.

LSU beat Alabama that season on a 2-point conversion. Given another chance Saturday to win a rivalry game with a 2-point try, Kelly changed course. He didn’t want a single play to decide this outcome.

“I just felt like our guys worked too hard to get back in that game’ Kelly said, ‘that I didn’t want to go for two in an all-or-nothing situation.”

So, after Nussmeier brought LSU to within a point with a fourth-down touchdown dart to Aaron Anderson, Kelly elected for an extra point to tie the game and force overtime.

Count Weeks among those happiest that Kelly didn’t order up a 2-point conversion.

“I was glad to get to play some more ball,” Weeks said. “Shoot, we don’t get to play again ‘til next Saturday. I like playing more football.”

LSU’s defense, which played well throughout the second half, vindicated Kelly’s decision.

As the crowd reached decibels it hadn’t hit all night, the Rebels moved in reverse during their overtime possession and needed a 57-yard field goal to salvage points.

Mission accomplished for LSU’s defense. And then …

‘It’s go time,’ LSU wide receiver Kyren Lacy said.

Winning time, too.

Nussmeier tossed to Lacy on the first play of LSU’s overtime possession.

Comeback complete.

Garrett Nussmeier delivers for LSU in clutch

The more the Tigers played, the better they looked.

The game remained scoreless after the first quarter, but LSU could consider itself fortunate to not be trailing 17-0. Ole Miss’ Tre Harris dropped what should have been an 81-yard touchdown pass, and that costly drop was aside from two first-quarter red-zone trips that produced no points.

“We commanded the majority of the game,” Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin said. “… They are a good team, and we are a good team, but we should’ve won that game.”

Which must make it all the more maddening for Kiffin that the Rebels lost.

Ole Miss spent a pretty penny – bundles of pennies, in fact – to improve its defense via a transfer haul, and although the unit undeniably improved, this marks twice that it’s failed to deliver game-winning stops in critical moments.

Just two weeks ago, Kentucky used a fourth-and-7 completion to keep alive a drive that ended with a game-winning touchdown.

Nussmeier needed two fourth-down completions just to tie this game, then one 25-yard strike to Lacy to win it.

“We’re a gritty bunch. We’re going to keep fighting to the very end,” Weeks said. “We knew the whole game, we’re not losing this ballgame.”

If Weeks knew that while Ole Miss controlled much of the game, then credit his faith. And credit the Tigers’ resilience.

This is the night Kelly’s tenure took off. Or, not.

But, it’s certainly the night LSU pulled off a most improbable comeback, preserved its playoff hopes, and put Ole Miss’ own aspirations on life support.

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.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The injury bug continues to hit teams across the NFL as the season reaches the one-third mark. Week 6 features bye weeks for the Kansas City Chiefs, Minnesota Vikings, Los Angeles Rams, and Miami Dolphins, but there are multiple important games on the Sunday slate. Key players could be game-time decisions in divisional matchups.

USA TODAY Sports will provide live updates on the latest actives and inactive players heading into NFL’s Week 6 1 p.m. ET slate of games on Sunday:

NFL Week 6 inactives

Players’ names which are italicized indicate they are listed as questionable entering today’s games or did not practice on Friday.

Arizona Cardinals

TE Travis Vokolek
LB Xavier Thomas
CB Darren Hall
K Matt Prater (left knee)
LB Victor Dimukeje

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Atlanta Falcons

LB Troy Anderson (knee)
LB Nate Landman (calf, quadricep)

Baltimore Ravens

LB Malik Harrison (groin)
DE Broderick Washington (knee)
G Malaesala Aumavae-Laulu (back)
WR Devontez Walker
OLB Adisa Isaac
G Nick Samac

Carolina Panthers

C Austin Corbett (biceps)
LB Josey Jewell (hamstring, groin)
T Taylor Moton (elbow)
C Andrew Raym (concussion)
TE Tommy Tremble (concussion)
LB Jadeveon Clowney (shoulder)
CB Dane Jackson (hamstring)
WR Diontae Johnson (ankle)
DE A’Shawn Robinson (ankle)
TE Ian Thomas (calf)

Chicago Bears

S Jaquan Brisker (concussion)
DT Zacch Pickens (groin)
CB Terell Smith (hip)
T Teven Jenkins (ankle)
DE Jacob Martin (toe)
CB Tyrique Stevenson (calf)

Cincinnati Bengals

RB Chase Brown (quadricep)
CB Mike Hilton (knee)
CB D.J. Ivey (knee)

Cleveland Browns

RB Nick Chubb (knee)
S Grant Delpit (concussion)
S Ronnie Hickman Jr. (nakle)
C Ethan Pocic (knee)
LB Jordan Hicks (elbow, triceps)
DT Quinton Jefferson
WR Jamari Thrash

Dallas Cowboys

LB Eric Kendricks (calf, shoulder)
DE Micah Parsons (ankle)
CB DaRon Bland (foot)
CB Caelan Carson (shoulder)
LB Nick Vigil (foot)

Denver Broncos

T Alex Palczewski (ankle)
WR Josh Reynolds (hand)
C Luke Wattenberg (ankle)
RB Audric Estime (ankle)
CB Damarri Mathis (ankle)

Detroit Lions

G Christian Mahogany (illness(

Green Bay Packers

DT Devonte Wyatt (ankle)
DL Brenton Cox Jr.
T Andre Dillard
T Travis Glover
S Kitan Oladapo
TE John FitzPatrick
TE Luke Musgrave

Houston Texans

CB Kamari Lassiter (shoulder)
S Jimmie Ward (groin)
WR Robert Woods (foot)
DE Rashad Weaver
G Nick Broker

Indianapolis Colts

RB Jonathan Taylor (ankle)
DE Genard Avery
WR Anthony Gould
C Danny Pinter
QB Anthony Richardson (oblique) – Emergency No. 3 QB

Joe Flacco is expected to start at quarterback.

Jacksonville Jaguars

CB Tyson Campbell (hamstring)
LB Yasir Abdullah (neck)
S Daniel Thomas (hamstring)

Expected to play: WR Gabe Davis, TE Evan Engram

Los Angeles Chargers

RB Gus Edwards (ankle)
CB Asante Samuel Jr. (shoulder)
CB Ja’Sir Taylor (fibula)
DE Joey Bosa (hip)
CB Kristian Fulton (knee)
CB Deane Leonard (hamstring)
LB Nick Niemann (hamstring)
T Rashawn Slater (pectoral)

Las Vegas Raiders

WR Davante Adams (hamstring)
TE Michael Mayer (not injury related – personal matter)
DE Maxx Crosby
LB Tommy Eichenberg (hmastring)
WR Jakobi Meyers (ankle)
T Thayer Munford Jr. (knee, ankle)
G Jackson Powers-Johnson (knee)
S Trey Taylor (knee)
RB Zamir White (groin)

New England Patriots

RB Rhamondre Stevenson (foot)
WR Tyquan Thorton
WR Javon Baker
LS Joe Cardona (calf)
G Layden Robinson (ankle, wrist)
DT Erick Johnson
QB Joe Milton

New Orleans Saints

QB Derek Carr (oblique)
TE Taysom Hill (rib)
G Cesar Ruiz (knee)
LB Pete Werner (hamstring)
RB Kendre Miller (hamstring)
G Lucas Patrick (chest)
DT Khristian Boyd

New York Giants

WR Malik Nabers (concussion)
LB Kayvon Thibodeaux (wrist)
WR Bryce Ford-Wheaton (shoulder)
P Jamie Gillan (left hamstring)
RB Devin Singletary (groin)

Philadelphia Eagles

QB Tanner McKee
CB Eli Ricks
OL Nick Gates
G/T Darian Kinnard
G Trevor Keegan
DT Byron Young

Pittsburgh Steelers

LB Nick Herbig (hamstring)
LB Alex Highsmith (groin)
S Damontae Kazee (ankle)
DE DeMarvin Leal (neck)
RB Cordarrelle Patterson (ankle)
TE MyCole Pruitt (knee)
RB Jaylen Warren (knee)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

C Graham Barton (hamstring)
S Christian Izien (elbow, groin)
WR Kameron Johnson (ankle)
WR Trey Palmer (concussion)
RB Rachaad White (foot)
TE Devin Culp

Tennessee Titans

LB Caleb Murphy
DT Keondre Coburn (knee)
LB James Williams
OL Jaelyn Duncan
TE David Martin-Robinson
TE Thomas Odukoya

Washington Commanders

S Tyler Owens (shin)
CB Emmanuel Forbes
QB Jeff Driskel
LB Dominique Hampton
DE Jamin Davis
RB Brian Robinson (knee)
G Chris Paul

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Former President Trump ripped President Biden for going weeks without speaking with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as war continues raging in the nation, offering that he last spoke to Netanyahu ‘two days ago.’

‘I thought it was odd that today President Biden said that he spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the first time in seven weeks or something,’ ‘Sunday Morning Futures’ host Maria Bartiromo asked Trump in an interview that aired Sunday. 

‘It’s pathetic, it’s pathetic,’ Trump responded.

‘They’ve been at war for over a year. So he hasn’t spoken with him in seven weeks. When was the last time you’ve spoken with Netanyahu?’ Bartrimo asked in a follow-up question.

‘Like two days ago. And he came to my house in Florida – Mar-a-Lago, with his wife, who is lovely. But he came to my Mar-a-Lago,’ Trump responded. 

Biden and Netanyahu held their first call in seven weeks on Wednesday, The Associated Press reported last week. Harris also joined the phone call. War has raged in Israel since Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas launched attacks on the nation. 

‘It was direct, it was productive,’ White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said of the phone call, the AP reported. 

Biden’s call with Netanyahu followed Iran launching ballistic missile attacks on Israel, escalating the war. Trump has called on Israel to ‘hit’ Iran’s nuclear facilities to curb the attacks. 

Tensions between Biden and Netanyahu have apparently flared since the war broke out, which was detailed in journalist Bob Woordward’s upcoming book, ‘War.’

‘That son of a b—-, Bibi Netanyahu, he’s a bad guy. He’s a bad f—ing guy!’ Biden reportedly said in spring of this year of Netanyahu, according to the book. Reports also surfaced earlier this year that Biden had privately called Netanyahu an ‘a–hole’ while continuing to pledge support to the nation. 

Trump joined Bartiromo for the exclusive interview just 22 days before Election Day, and spoke about a swath of issues affecting voters, including the economy, the border crisis, his son Barron Trump’s assistance with the campaign, and the White House’s response to the hurricanes that have devastated towns in North Carolina, Georgia and Florida. 

‘I could tell you that Bibi has been very strong.… He is not listening to Biden,’ Trump continued while speaking about the war in the Middle East. 

‘Biden is the one that came up with the Afghanistan plan. Take the soldiers out first and leave all that weakness. Leave Bagram behind. Bagram is one of the biggest air bases in the world. We built it for billions and billions of dollars many years ago. It’s one hour away from where China makes its nuclear weapons. And he gave it up. He’s a fool. And we can’t have another fool as a president. Biden is smarter than she is. We can’t have this for another four years. We’re not going to have a country left,’ Trump continued. 

Trump has repeatedly said while on the campaign trail that wars in both the Middle East and Ukraine would not have unfolded if he were in office, vowing to end the wars if re-elected. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

A mysterious fleet of drones entered restricted airspace and swarmed a U.S. military base along the Virginia coast for 17 days late last year, stumping the Pentagon, according to a new report. 

For several nights last December, U.S. military personnel reported witnessing a fleet of unknown unmanned aircraft breach restricted airspace over a stretch of land at Langley Air Force Base along Virginia’s shore, the Wall Street Journal first reported. 

The drones would start to arrive about 45 minutes to an hour after sunset each night, one official reportedly told U.S. Air Force Gen. Mark Kelly, who joined several other officers responsible for the country’s most advanced jet fighters, including F-22 Raptors, on a squadron rooftop. 

Kelly described the first drone he saw as roughly 20 feet long and flying at more than 100 miles an hour, at an altitude of roughly 3,000 to 4,000 feet. As many as a dozen or more drones followed, flying across Chesapeake Bay, and then traveling toward Norfolk, Virginia, and through a space overlooking the base for the Navy’s SEAL Team Six and Naval Station Norfolk, the world’s largest naval port, according to the Journal. 

The report said officials could not determine if hobbyists or adversaries – such as China or Russia – were responsible for the drone fleet. Reports of the matter reached President Biden and resulted in two weeks of meetings at the White House in December 2023, the Journal reported. Those meetings included the Defense Department, the FBI and the Pentagon’s UFO office, as well as outside experts. 

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House and Department of Defense for comment. The DoD referred Fox News Digital to Langley Air Force Base for more information, but they did not immediately respond to an inquiry. Neither did the White House.

Two months before the drone fleet emerged in Virginia, five mysterious drones reportedly breached restricted airspace over a government nuclear weapons experiment site in Nevada. 

Four of the drones were detected by the Energy Department’s Nevada National Security Site outside Las Vegas, while the fifth was spotted by employees, according to the Journal. The facility has reportedly since upgraded its detection system, but officials have not determined who was behind the breach. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

In a sport in which the highest-profile names are increasingly quarterbacks — a fact reflected by the Heisman Trophy, which quarterbacks have won 12 of the past 14 years — the Boise State junior is something of a throwback, a workhorse running back helping carry a top-25 team.

As he continues to rack up cartoonish stats on the ground, Jeanty has become appointment viewing for college football fans nationally — even if, like last night, his team isn’t kicking off until many back in the Eastern time zone are preparing to go to bed.

Jeanty continued his stellar 2024 season late Saturday night for the Broncos in their 28-7 victory at Hawai’i, a game that kicked off at 11 p.m. ET.

Here’s a look at just how well Jeanty did in helping Boise State improve to 5-1 and take another step closer to the 12-team College Football Playoff:

Ashton Jeanty stats vs Hawai’i

Rushing: 31 carries for 217 yards (7.0 yards per carry), one touchdown
Receiving: Three catches for 20 yards (6.7 yards per catch), one touchdown

Jeanty rushed for 217 yards and a touchdown on 31 carries in his team’s win at Hawai’i.

He added a season-high three catches for 20 yards and his first receiving touchdown of the season. The catch extended Boise State’s lead to 14, 21-7, early in the fourth quarter, a much-needed cushion in a game in which it was favored to win by three touchdowns.

With his rushing and receiving totals combined, Jeanty had 237 yards and two touchdowns.

It was Jeanty’s third game (of a possible six) this season with at least 200 rushing yards. His seven yards per carry were his fewest of the season but, if anything, that speaks to the remarkable run the Jacksonville, Florida native has put together.

Ashton Jeanty highlights vs Hawai’i

Jeanty wasted little time logging his biggest play of the day.

With Boise State nursing a 3-0 lead and approaching midfield with about six minutes remaining in the first quarter, Jeanty took a handoff from quarterback Maddux Madsen, bounced to the outside and took it to the house for a 54-yard touchdown, also his longest run of the day.

Late in the third quarter, he barreled over a Hawai’i defender on his way to a 28-yard pickup.

Seven plays later, he capped off the drive with a 5-yard touchdown reception from Madsen.

Ashton Jeanty season stats

Following his output against Hawai’i, Jeanty has rushed 126 times for 1,248 rushing yards and 17 touchdowns this season, averaging 9.9 yards per carry.

His rushing yardage and rushing touchdown marks lead all FBS players. The next-closest rusher to Jeanty, Iowa’s Kaleb Johnson, is 311 yards behind him, making him the only FBS player who has eclipsed 1,000 yards on the ground this season.

Jeanty is on pace to finish the regular season with 2,496 rushing yards, which would put him 132 yards shy of Barry Sanders’ single-season FBS record.

However, Boise State is well-positioned to make the Mountain West championship game and will have a bowl game after that. If the Broncos win out, it’s possible they’ll earn the spot in the College Football Playoff reserved for the highest-rated conference champion from outside the Power Four leagues, giving Jeanty several more chances to break Sanders’ record if he maintains his current pace.

As of the completion of Week 7, Boise State’s only loss was a 37-34 defeat to No. 3 Oregon, against whom Jeanty rushed 25 times for 192 yards and three touchdowns.

Sanders finished his Heisman Trophy-winning 1988 season with 2,850 yards. At the time, the NCAA record book did not count bowl games as part of a player’s statistical profile, meaning Sanders’ 222 rushing yards in Oklahoma State’s Holiday Bowl victory against Wyoming were not included as part of his total for that season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

During the continuation of its historic 50th season Saturday, NBC sketch comedy show “Saturday Night Live” took aim at the UFC.

Harnessing the absurd vocal talent of guest host Ariana Grande, a master impressionist, a pre-taped commercial spoof had the singer playing another legendary musician, Canadian singer Celine Dion – of whom Grande does a spot-on impression.

In the bit, Grande plays Dion doing a promo for UFC 308, which takes place Oct. 26 in Abu Dhabi. She sings parts from Dion’s 1996 cover of “It’s All Coming Back to Me Now,” but changes the words to make them appropriate for the octagon.

While swapping out original verse for things like “There was breaking of bones, and there were knees to the balls,” Grande sings over vintage UFC highlights. “A woman with the tightest French braids – and the flattest face” is former women’s strawweight champion Joanna Jedrzejczyk in the highlights. “An angry man with a cauliflower ear and a sideways nose” is Mike Perry. The hush of the crowd as a 300-pound Bosnian vomits up his own teeth. This is the UFC.”

The spoof even gives a playful nudge at the UFC’s revoloving-door broadcast booth and its “dozens of commentators, all bald and in the shiniest of shirts.”

Check out the video from Season 50 of “Saturday Night Live” above with host Grande. The episode also featured musical guest Stevie Nicks.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The injury bug continues to hit teams across the NFL as the season reaches the one-third mark. Week 6 features bye weeks for the Kansas City Chiefs, Minnesota Vikings, Los Angeles Rams, and Miami Dolphins, but there are multiple important games on the Sunday slate. Key players could be game-time decisions in divisional matchups.

USA TODAY Sports will provide live updates are the latest actives and inactive players heading into NFL’s Week 6 1 p.m. ET slate of games on Sunday:

NFL Week 6 inactives

Arizona Cardinals

WR Zay Jones (hamstring, non-injury related-other)
DT Darius Robinson (calf)
T Kelvin Beachum (hamstring)
T Christian Jones (ankle)
K Matt Prater (left knee)
CB Garrett Williams (groin)

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Atlanta Falcons

LB Troy Anderson (knee)
LB Nate Landman (calf, quadricep)

Baltimore Ravens

LB Malik Harrison (groin)
CB Arthur Maulet (knee, hamstring)
DE Broderick Washington (knee)
RB Rasheen Ali (neck)
G Malaesala Aumavae-Laulu (back)
WR Deonte Harty (knee)
CB Marlon Humphrey (ankle)
T Ronnie Stanley (toe)

Carolina Panthers

C Austin Corbett (biceps)
LB Josey Jewell (hamstring, groin)
T Taylor Moton (elbow)
C Andrew Raym (concussion)
TE Tommy Tremble (concussion)
LB Jadeveon Clowney (shoulder)
CB Dane Jackson (hamstring)
WR Diontae Johnson (ankle)
DE A’Shawn Robinson (ankle)
TE Ian Thomas (calf)

Chicago Bears

S Jaquan Brisker (concussion)
DT Zacch Pickens (groin)
CB Terell Smith (hip)
T Teven Jenkins (ankle)
DE Jacob Martin (toe)
CB Tyrique Stevenson (calf)

Cincinnati Bengals

RB Chase Brown (quadricep)
CB Mike Hilton (knee)
CB D.J. Ivey (knee)

Cleveland Browns

RB Nick Chubb (knee)
S Grant Delpit (concussion)
S Ronnie Hickman Jr. (nakle)
RB Nyheim Hines (knee)
T James Hudson (shoulder)
C Ethan Pocic (knee)
LB Mohamoud Diabate (hip)
LB Jordan Hicks (elbow, triceps)
DT Maurice Hurst (ankle)
DE Za’Darius Smith
CB Denzel Ward (hamstring)

Dallas Cowboys

LB Eric Kendricks (calf, shoulder)
DE Micah Parsons (ankle)
CB DaRon Bland (foot)
CB Caelan Carson (shoulder)
LB Nick Vigil (foot)

Denver Broncos

T Alex Palczewski (ankle)
WR Josh Reynolds (hand)
C Luke Wattenberg (ankle)
RB Audric Estime (ankle)
CB Damarri Mathis (ankle)

Detroit Lions

G Christian Mahogany (illness(

Green Bay Packers

DT Devonte Wyatt (ankle)
CB Jaire Alexander (groin)
DT Kenny Clark
TE Tucker Kraft
T Jordan Morgan (shoulder)
DE Arron Mosby (shoulder)
TE Luke Musgrave
CB Carrington Valentine
T Rasheed Walker (knee)
WR Christian Watson (ankle)

Houston Texans

CB Kamari Lassiter (shoulder)
S Jimmie Ward (groin)
WR Robert Woods (foot)
DE Derek Barnett (shoulder)
WR Stefon Diggs
DT Mario Edwards
DT Kurt Hinish (calf)
RB Joe Mixon (ankle)

Indianapolis Colts

RB Jonathan Taylor (ankle)
WR Josh Downs (toe)
CB Kenny Moore II (hip,shoulder)
WR Michael Pittman Jr. (back)
QB Anthony Richardson (oblique)
T Braden Smith (knee, ankle)

Jacksonville Jaguars

CB Tyson Campbell (hamstring)
LB Yasir Abdullah (neck)
S Daniel Thomas (hamstring)

Expected to play: WR Gabe Davis, TE Evan Engram

Los Angeles Chargers

RB Gus Edwards (ankle)
CB Asante Samuel Jr. (shoulder)
CB Ja’Sir Taylor (fibula)
DE Joey Bosa (hip)
CB Kristian Fulton (knee)
CB Deane Leonard (hamstring)
LB Nick Niemann (hamstring)
T Rashawn Slater (pectoral)

Las Vegas Raiders

WR Davante Adams (hamstring)
TE Michael Mayer (not injury related – personal matter)
DE Maxx Crosby
LB Tommy Eichenberg (hmastring)
WR Jakobi Meyers (ankle)
T Thayer Munford Jr. (knee, ankle)
G Jackson Powers-Johnson (knee)
S Trey Taylor (knee)
RB Zamir White (groin)

New England Patriots

RB Rhamondre Stevenson (foot)
CB Isaiah Bolden (hamstring)
WR Kendrick Bourne (knee)
LS Joe Cardona (calf)
S Kyle Dugger (ankle)
LB Anfernee Jennings (shoulder)
CB Marcus Jones (groin)
C Nick Leverett (ankle)
WR K.J. Osborn (shoulder)
G Layden Robinson (ankle, wrist)
LB SIone Takitaki (knee)
CB Marco Wilson (groin)

New Orleans Saints

QB Derek Carr (oblique)
S Will Harris (hamstring)
TE Taysom Hill (rib)
G Cesar Ruiz (knee)
LB Pete Werner (hamstring)
RB Kendre Miller (hamstring)
G Lucas Patrick (chest)
DE Payton Turner (knee)

New York Giants

WR Malik Nabers (concussion)
LB Kayvon Thibodeaux (wrist)
WR Bryce Ford-Wheaton (shoulder)
P Jamie Gillan (left hamstring)
RB Devin Singletary (groin)

Pittsburgh Steelers

LB Nick Herbig (hamstring)
LB Alex Highsmith (groin)
S Damontae Kazee (ankle)
DE DeMarvin Leal (neck)
RB Cordarrelle Patterson (ankle)
TE MyCole Pruitt (knee)
RB Jaylen Warren (knee)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

C Graham Barton (hamstring)
DE Earnest Brown IV (ribs)
S Christian Izien (elbow, groin)
WR Kameron Johnson (ankle)
WR Trey Palmer (concussion)
T Luke Goedeke (concussion)
DT Calijah Kancey (calf)
WR Jalen McMillan (hamstring)
RB Rachaad White (foot)
S Jordan Whitehead (groin)
S Antoine Winfield Jr. (foot)

Tennessee Titans

S Jamal Adams (reserve/NFI list)
DT Keondre Coburn (knee)
LB Cedric Gray (shoulder)

Washington Commanders

S Tyler Owens (shin)
G Nick Allegretti
WR Noah Brown
TE Zach Ertz
DE Clelin Ferrell
LB Jordan Magee (knee)
DE Efe Obada (tibia, fibula)
RB Brian Robinson (knee)

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Colorado and Kansas State played one of the more exciting games of the 2024 college football season late Saturday night, with the teams combining for three touchdowns in the final seven minutes in a back-and-forth 31-28 victory for the No. 19 Wildcats at Folsom Field in Boulder, Colorado.

The matchup was just as notable for who wasn’t on the field than who was.

Though they mounted a 10-point fourth-quarter comeback and very nearly won without him, coach Deion Sanders and the Buffaloes played much of the night without Travis Hunter.

The Colorado two-way sensation, one of the front-runners for the Heisman Trophy entering Week 7, left the game in the second quarter with an apparent shoulder injury.

The junior wide receiver and defensive back was one of several key contributors the Buffaloes lost at one point in their loss to Kansas State. The team’s top two remaining receivers, Jimmy Horn Jr. and Omarion Miller, also left the game with injuries in the second and fourth quarter, respectively.

Despite the lack of healthy, available targets, Colorado star quarterback Shedeur Sanders still managed to complete 34 of his 40 passes for 388 yards, three touchdowns and an interception. After the game, thrilling as it was, much of the attention remained on Hunter, one of the most captivating players in the country whose stellar 2024 season encountered a bump in the road.

Here’s a closer look at Hunter’s injury and what his playing status is moving forward:

Travis Hunter injury update

The play that ultimately knocked Hunter out of the rest of the game occurred with about eight minutes remaining in the second quarter, when he hauled in a 14-yard pass from Shedeur Sanders and absorbed a hit from Kansas State safety Daniel Cobbs.

Shortly after that, Hunter left the game. He was looked at by a team trainer and taken back to the locker room to be evaluated. He returned to the sideline early in the third quarter in his full uniform, but did not re-enter the contest.

Prior to his injury, Hunter had three catches for 26 yards on offense and a tackle on defense. When asked after the game about the status of Hunter, Horn and Miller, Deion Sanders did not have any new information.

“I haven’t gotten an update on those particular young men,” he said. “Hopefully, they can get back at it. But we’re not going to rush them. Their safety and their health is much more important than this game.”

The player who replaced Hunter at cornerback, Auburn transfer Colton Hood, intercepted a tipped pass from Kansas State’s Avery Johnson and took it back 59 yards to the Wildcats’ 17. Two plays later, the Buffaloes scored a go-ahead touchdown with 3:12 remaining in regulation.  

Hunter has shouldered an immense load for Colorado and was one of the primary reasons the Buffaloes got off to a 4-1 start this season, Sanders’ second at the helm.

At the halfway point in Colorado’s regular season, Hunter has 49 catches for 587 yards and six touchdowns, the first two of which are team highs, as well as 16 tackles, three pass break-ups, two interceptions and a forced fumble.

Given his importance to the team offensively and defensively, Hunter has played the overwhelming majority of the Buffaloes’ total snaps this season. Prior to his injury Saturday, he had been on the field for 44 of the game’s 45 offensive and defensive snaps.

‘Certainly losing Jimmy (Horn Jr.), Travis (Hunter) and others was tremendous because they’re a vital part of our team, a vital part of our identity, a vital part of who we are,’ Deion Sanders said after the game Saturday night. ‘That took a lot of us but other guys had the opportunity to step up and they did. I’m proud of them.’

That extraordinary output has raised questions about his durability and whether he can withstand such an enormous workload.

Colorado returns next Saturday with a game at Arizona before heading back home for an Oct. 26 matchup with Cincinnati. With two more victories, the Buffaloes will be eligible for just their third bowl since 2008.

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This Big Ten heavyweight bout went the distance.

In one of the marquee games of the regular season, Oregon hit a 19-yard field goal with just under two minutes remaining and held on to beat Ohio State to make a case for No. 1 in next week’s US LBM Coaches Poll.

On the game’s final drive, OSU drove into the Oregon red zone before a key offensive pass interference call doomed any chance of a potential game-winning field goal attempt. Lined up at the Ducks’ 38-yard line with six seconds left, the Buckeyes’ final snap ended with quarterback Will Howard scrambling up the middle and sliding to a stop as time expired.

It was a battle of quarterbacks, elite offenses, often incredible receiver play and just enough defense for the Ducks to earn maybe the most meaningful regular-season win in program history.

Howard was 28 of 35 for 326 yards and three touchdowns, one on the ground. Dillon Gabriel had one of the best starts of his well-traveled career, hitting on 23 of 34 throws for 341 yards and three scores of his own. The two teams combined for 963 yards of total offense.

The new-look Big Ten has a new leader. After spending most of the past few decades at or near the top of the Pac-12, the No. 3 Ducks are clearly built for life in this conference and for a run at the national championship.

The two teams could meet again in the Big Ten championship game, if not a third time in the College Football Playoff. But the immediate takeaway from Saturday night’s thriller is simple: These are two extremely elite teams worthy of being counted among the very, very best in the Bowl Subdivision.

Beating OSU gives Oregon enormous wiggle room when it comes to the playoff. Even with a collapse down the stretch, a two-loss team with this sort of win would have a very strong case for an at-large bid. That sort of stumble seems very unlikely.

While extremely survivable, the loss is humbling for the Buckeyes. Oregon was the newcomer; the Buckeyes were the established Big Ten powerhouse. The result tells us something about the Big Ten pecking order and how the league has been strengthened by this offseason’s expansion additions. The loss was Ohio State’s first in conference play against a team other than Michigan since losing to Purdue in 2018.

OSU and the Ducks lead the way for Saturday’s biggest winners and losers:

Winners

Texas

It wasn’t the prettiest performance, especially in a rocky first quarter, but No. 1 Texas took care of business with a 34-3 win in the rivalry against No. 16 Oklahoma to remain the only unbeaten team in the SEC. After missing two games due to injury, quarterback Quinn Ewers had 199 yards passing and ran and threw for a touchdown while the running game earned 177 yards on 30 carries. The Red River win saw another very good performance on defense from a unit that entered the weekend ranked second nationally in yards given up per play: Texas held the Sooners to 237 yards on 3.4 yards per play, with a good chunk of that yardage coming with the game already well in hand.

Iowa

Iowa scored 40 points in a very nice win against Washington, and if you don’t think that’s a big deal you might be unfamiliar with the Hawkeyes’ recent history. Iowa hadn’t scored 40 points against a Big Ten opponent since dropping 51 points on Maryland on Oct. 1, 2021. Last year’s team scored a grand total of 131 points in 10 league games, counting a shutout loss to Michigan for the Big Ten championship. While helped by a couple short fields in the fourth quarter, the Hawkeyes are clearly better on this side of the ball; that makes them a threat against just about every opponent the rest of the way.

Buffalo

Buffalo is making some major noise under new coach Pete Lembo. A few weeks after upsetting Northern Illinois, the Bulls took down the MAC favorite with a 30-15 win against Toledo. Two factors keyed the upset: one, a plus-two edge in turnover margin, and two, a dominant performance on both sides of the line. Buffalo ran for 230 yards on 52 carries while holding the Rockets to just 46 yards on 1.8 yards per rush. Lembo once worked wonders at Ball State and is doing the same with the Bulls.

Louisiana-Monroe

ULM has been to just one bowl game in program history, losing the 2012 Independence Bowl, but might be able to start planning a postseason trip after moving to 5-1 with a 38-21 win against Southern Mississippi. New coach Bryant Vincent has done extremely impressive work taking over a program with no recognizable track record of success and an even spottier recent past. ULM went 8-36 in the four years before his arrival, including a winless 2020 season that ranks among the worst season by a team in FBS history. Vincent was previously the interim coach at Alabama-Birmingham and was a contender for the permanent position that went to Trent Dilfer. How’d that decision turn out for the Blazers?

Vanderbilt

OK, so the Commodores are for real. If there was any thought that last week’s shocking upset of Alabama was a one-off, a 20-13 win at Kentucky solidifies Vanderbilt as a legitimate threat for six or more wins during the regular season. Diego Pavia was a little less flashy than against the Crimson Tide but was still terrific, hitting on 15 of 18 throws for 143 yards and two scores with another 53 yards on the ground. Defensively, the Commodores forced two turnovers, made two fourth-down stops and held the Wildcats’ passing game under wraps to win back-to-back SEC games for the first time since November 2022.

Losers

Alabama

Sirens, alarms, flares, cuckoo clocks – they are all going off simultaneously amid another eyebrow-raising result for Kalen DeBoer and the No. 7 Crimson Tide. Hey, at least they won this time: Alabama made a late defensive stand and held off South Carolina to win 27-25. That’s an improvement, of course, over last week’s loss to Vanderbilt. But there are so many signs of concern, including an offensive scheme that worked so well for DeBoer at Washington but has not translated well to the physicality and style in the SEC. Beating the Gamecocks keeps the Tide alive for the SEC championship and a playoff berth, but it’s becoming harder to see how they manage to steer through the regular season without another two or more losses.

Mississippi

Ahead 23-16 with just minutes left, No. 8 Mississippi gave up the game-tying touchdown to No. 10 LSU with under 30 seconds to go and then lost 29-26 in overtime. That’s a brutal result for two reasons: one, the Rebels had outplayed the Tigers and had chances to take a bigger lead into halftime than just 17-13, and two, a second loss at the midway point of the regular season basically serves as an eliminator for any realistic playoff hopes. This self-inflicted loss is embodied in a dismal possession in overtime that saw the Rebels commit multiple penalties before nailing a 57-yard field goal. LSU would answer with a touchdown pass on the first play of its possession to take the win. For all the hype and bluster around his program, Lane Kiffin has yet to get Ole Miss over the hump and into a permanent spot in the upper crust of the SEC.

Southern California

USC had No. 5 Penn State trailing 20-6 and on the ropes after a very effective first half but crumbled in the second, allowing the Nittany Lions to force overtime and eventually pull out a 33-30 win. Ahead 30-23 with six minutes left, USC gave up a pair of fourth-down conversions to help PSU draw even with about three minutes remaining. On the final drive of regulation, USC played for overtime instead of pushing the ball downfield for a chance at the possible game-winning field goal. After USC missed a field goal on the first possession of overtime, the Nittany Lions converted a 36-yard field goal to escape. For Penn State, the comeback win maintains some very strong playoff hopes and avoids the sort of loss that would’ve raised the stakes around November’s matchup with No. 2 Ohio State.

North Carolina

These aren’t normal losses. These are bad, bad, bad losses, each seemingly worse than the last. And that’s saying something given how North Carolina’s current four-game losing streak began with a 70-50 embarrassment at home against James Madison. And yes, the latest was worse. After tying Georgia Tech at 34-34 on a 26-yard field goal with 44 seconds to go, the Tar Heels allowed Tech running back Jamal Haynes to scamper 68 yards for a touchdown on the second play of the ensuing drive to lose 41-34. UNC is now 3-4 and winless in ACC play.

Oklahoma

There are too many flaws for this team to stay in the Top 25. The biggest issue with OU is an offense that has no quarterback and no surrounding skill talent — the receiver corps has been decimated by injuries — and looks like a yearlong problem. At quarterback, Brent Venables and his staff seem to have whiffed on former starter Jackson Arnold and don’t seem to know how to manufacture anything positive behind Michael Hawkins Jr., a more limited passer. The Sooners still have to face the Rebels, No. 18 Missouri, the Crimson Tide and LSU, so getting to six wins might be easier said than done.

(This story was updated with new information.)

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