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Miami Dolphins receiver Tyreek Hill was detained by police before Sunday’s game against the Jacksonville Jaguars just outside Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

Hill was seen laying face down on the street as he was placed in handcuffs as fans driving on the same street recorded video, which quickly went viral before the game.

‘This morning, WR Tyreek Hill was pulled over for a traffic incident about one block from the stadium and briefly detained by police. He has since been released. Several teammates saw the incident and stopped to offer support,’ the Dolphins said in a statement.

‘Tyreek and all other players involved have safely arrived to the stadium and will be available for today’s game.’

Hill scored his first touchdown of the season late in the third quarter on an 80-yard catch-and-run from Tua Tagovailoa. Hill caught the pass near midfield and sped past two Jaguars and down the sideline to the end zone, where he celebrated by throwing the ball into the end zone and then putting his hands behind his back.

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Hill’s agent Drew Rosenhaus said the player was ‘distraught’ by the incident.

‘It’s a heartbreaking situation,’ Rosenhaus said on air to ESPN’s Jeff Darlington. ‘Obviously, I love Tyreek, I hated to see him in the situation he was in with the police. He is gonna play today. Number one, he’s OK. Number two, he’s gonna play. Number three, apparently he got a ticket for a moving violation entering the stadium. How things escalated into the situation that they were in in handcuffs and being held on the ground with police is mind-boggling to me. I’m deeply concerned by that, very troubled. We will be looking into it, we will be investigating this, we will look out for Tyreek. But I’m not gonna make any allegations at this time. The most important thing is that Tyreek is OK – physically. Mentally, he was very distraught about what happened.

‘This is crazy, I’ve never seen anything like this.’

ESPN reports Hill got into a ‘verbal altercation’ with an officer and was cited for reckless driving.

Miami-Dade Police Department director Stephanie V. Daniels released a statement on social media regarding Hill’s detainment just after 1 p.m. Sunday:

“We are aware of the recent detainment of Miami Dolphins player Tyreek Hill by Miami-Dade Police Department officers. I have requested an immediate review of all details surrounding the incident, and we are also reviewing available body camera footage. We will provide updates as further information becomes available.’

Hill – a Super Bowl champion with the Kansas City Chiefs in 2020 – led the NFL with 1,799 yards and 13 touchdowns for the Dolphins last season.

Hill enters his third season with Miami after agreeing to a contract extension last month, worth $90 million for the next three seasons with $65 million in guaranteed money. Hill originally signed a four-year, $120 million deal with $72.2 million guaranteed with the Dolphins in 2022 after he was traded by the Chiefs.

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Texas Rep. Mike McCaul, the Republican chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, released a scathing report that took a fine-toothed comb to the military’s botched 2021 Afghanistan withdrawal and highlighted areas of serious mismanagement. 

The Republican-led report opens by harkening back to President Joe Biden’s urgency to withdraw from the Vietnam War as a senator in the 1970s. That, along with the Afghanistan withdrawal, demonstrates a ‘pattern of callous foreign policy positions and readiness to abandon strategic partners,’ according to the report.

The report also disputed Biden’s assertion that his hands were tied to the Doha agreement former President Trump had made with the Taliban establishing a deadline for U.S. withdrawal for the summer of 2021, and it revealed how state officials had no plan for getting Americans and allies out while there were still troops there to protect them. 

Here’s a roundup of the findings of the 600-page report, comprised of tens of thousands of pages of documents and interviews with high-level officials that spanned much of the last two years: 

Biden was not bound by deadlines in Trump’s Doha agreement with Taliban

The report found that Biden and Vice President Harris were advised by top leaders that the Taliban were already in violation of the conditions of the Doha agreement and, therefore, the U.S. was not obligated to leave. 

The committee also found NATO allies had expressed their vehement opposition to the U.S. decision to withdraw. The British Chief of the Defense staff warned that ‘withdrawal under these circumstances would be perceived as a strategic victory for the Taliban.’

Biden kept on Zalmay Khalilzad, a Trump appointee who negotiated the agreement, as special representative to Afghanistan – a signal that the new administration endorsed the deal. 

At the Taliban’s demand, Khalilzad had shut out the Afghan government from the talks – a major blow to President Ashraf Ghani’s government. 

When Trump left office, some 2,500 U.S. troops remained in Afghanistan. Biden himself was determined to draw that number to zero no matter what, according to Col. Seth Krummrich, chief of staff for Special Operations Command, who told the committee, ‘The president decided we’re going to leave, and he’s not listening to anybody.’

Then-State Dept. spokesperson Ned Price admitted in testimony the Doha agreement was ‘immaterial’ to Biden’s decision to withdraw. 

The withdrawal: State Department built up personnel, failed to hatch escape plan as it became clear Kabul would fall

The report also details numerous warning signs the State Department received to draw down its embassy footprint as it became clear Afghanistan would quickly fall to the Taliban. It refused to do so. At the time of the withdrawal, it was one of the largest embassies in the world. 

In the end, Americans and U.S. allies were left stranded as the military was ordered to withdraw before the embassy had shuttered.

In one meeting, Deputy Secretary of State for Management and Resources Brian McKeon rejected military officials’ warnings, saying ‘we at the State Department have a much higher risk tolerance than you guys.’

Gen. Austin Miler, the longest-serving commander in Afghanistan, confirmed McKeon’s comments and explained that the State Department did not have a higher risk tolerance but instead exhibited ‘a lack of understanding of the risk’ in Afghanistan.

Asked why McKeon would make such statements, the officer explained, ‘The State Department and the president were saying it. Consequently, [Wilson] and others start saying it, thinking that they will make it work.’ 

The report lays blame on former Afghanistan Ambassador Ross Wilson, who instead of shrinking, grew the embassy’s presence as the security situation deteriorated.

Revealing little sense of urgency, Wilson was on a two-week vacation on the last week of July and the first week of August 2021. 

An NEO, a noncombatant evacuation operation to get personnel out, was not ordered until Aug. 15 as the Taliban marched into Kabul. 

There weren’t enough troops present to begin the NEO until Aug. 19, and the first public message from the embassy in Kabul urging Americans to evacuate wasn’t sent until Aug. 7. 

And while there weren’t enough military planes to handle the evacuations, it took the Transportation Department until Aug. 20 to allow foreign planes to assist. 

Wilson fled the embassy ahead of his entire embassy staff, the report found. He reportedly had COVID-19 at the time but got a foreign service officer to take his test for him so that he could flee the country. 

Acting Under Secretary Carol Perez told the committee the embassy’s evacuation plan was ‘still in the works’ when the Taliban took over, despite months of warning.

Those left behind: Americans and allies turned away while unvetted Afghans got on flights

Wilson testified that he was ‘comfortable’ with holding off on the NEO until Aug. 15, while Gen. Frank McKenzie described it as the ‘fatal flaw that created what happened in August.’

As the Taliban surrounded Kabul on Aug. 14, notes obtained by the committee from a National Security Counsel (NSC) meeting reveal the U.S. government still had not determined who would be eligible for evacuation nor had they identified third countries to serve as transit points for an evacuation.

Fewer cases for special immigrant visas (SIVs) to evacuate Afghan U.S. military allies like interpreters were processed in June, July and August – the lead-up to the takeover – than the four months prior. 

When the last U.S. military flight departed Kabul, around 1,000 Americans were left on the ground, as were more than 90% of SIV-eligible Afghans.

The report found that local embassy employees had been de-prioritized for evacuation, with many turned away from the embassy and airport in tears. On the day of the Taliban takeover, the U.S.’ only guidance for those who might be eligible for evacuation was to ‘not travel to the airport until you have been informed by email that departure options exist.’

And since the NSC did not send over guidelines for who was eligible for evacuation and who to prioritize because they were ‘at risk,’ the State Department processed thousands of evacuees with no documentation. 

The U.S. government had ‘no idea if people being evacuated were threats,’ one State Department employee told the committee.

After the final troops left Afghanistan, volunteer groups helped at least 314 American citizens and 266 lawful permanent residents evacuate the country.

Scenes at Abbey Gate: Terror threat warnings unheeded before bombing

And as the Taliban whipped groups of desperate Afghans at the airport, burned young women and executed civilians, U.S. troops were forbidden from intervening. 

Consul General Jim DeHart described the scene as ‘apocalyptic.’ 

U.S. intelligence, meanwhile, was tracking multiple threat streams, including ‘a potential VBIED or suicide vest IED as part of a complex attack,’ by Aug. 23.  By Aug. 26, the threat was specifically narrowed down to Abbey Gate. It was so serious that diplomatic security pulled back state employees from the gate.

Brig. Gen. Farrell Sullivan ultimately decided to keep the gate open in the face of the threats due to requests made by the Brits.

And on Aug. 26, two bombs planted by terror group ISIS-K exploded at the airport, killing 13 U.S. service members and more than 150 Afghans. CENTCOM records revealed the same ISIS-K terror cell that conducted the Abbey Gate attack ‘established a base of operations located six kilometers to the west’ of the airport in a neighborhood previously used by them as a staging area for an attack on the airport in December 2020. But the U.S. did not strike this cell before the bombing. 

Two weeks later, an airstrike intending to kill those behind the ISIS-K instead killed 10 civilians. The administration initially touted the strike as a success of over-the-horizon capabilities before acknowledging a family of civilians had been killed. 

The U.S. has not struck ISIS-K in Afghanistan since – in stark contrast to the 313 operations carried out by CENTCOM against ISIS in Iraq and Syria in 2022.

The long-term consequences 

In addition to the $7 billion in abandoned U.S. weapons, the Taliban likely gained access to up to $57 million in U.S. funds that were initially given to the Afghan government. 

The Taliban’s interior minister, Sirajuddin Haqqani, proclaimed in February 2024 that relations with the rest of the world, especially the U.S., are ‘irrelevant’ to its policymaking.

A NATO report written by the Defence Education Enhancement Programme found the Taliban was using U.S. military biometric devices and databases to hunt down U.S. Afghan allies.

And in the first six months of Taliban power, ‘nearly 500 former government officials and members of the Afghan security forces were killed or forcibly disappeared,’ according to the report. 

Some 118 girls have been sold as child brides since the takeover and 116 families are waiting for a buyer. Women are now banned from speaking or showing their faces in public. 

In June 2024, the Department of Homeland Security identified more than 400 persons of interest from Central Asia who had illegally crossed the U.S. southern border with the help of an ISIS-related smuggling network. The U.S. has since arrested more than 150 of these individuals. On June 11, 2024, the FBI arrested eight people with ties to ISIS-K who had crossed through the southern border.

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Jerry Jones and the Dallas Cowboys finally went all in this offseason by paying up for their quarterback in historic – and atypical – fashion.

Dak Prescott and the Cowboys on Sunday agreed to a record four-year, $240 million deal, making the passer the highest-paid player in NFL history. As the league’s first $60 million per year player, Prescott leapfrogged the Cincinnati Bengals’ Joe Burrow, Jacksonville Jaguars’ Trevor Lawrence and Green Bay Packers’ Jordan Love, who all agreed to extensions with an average annual value of $55 million.

Prescott’s new deal includes $231 million guaranteed, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported.

“What it means is a big commitment to our next five years and our future as well,’ Jones told reporters in Cleveland, confirming terms of the deal. ‘I hope Dak is our quarterback for the rest of my time. I have a lot of confidence in him.”

The agreement comes on the day Dallas begins its season against the Cleveland Browns. Though Prescott said Thursday that he did not see the Week 1 kickoff as the deadline for getting a deal done, he said on Aug. 29 that whether a contract was reached would indicate ‘a lot.’

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The three-time Pro Bowl passer had been set to enter his final season of his four-year, $160 million contract while counting for an NFL-high $55 million cap hit.

Though Jones has widely resisted resetting the market in contract negotiations, Prescott held unique leverage thanks to his contract, which included no-trade and no-franchise-tag clauses that would clear his way to reaching free agency in 2025 if not extended.

Jones maintained that the negotiations were not a reflection of any concern or doubt regarding Prescott.

‘When you look at a situation, you’ve also got to weigh, ‘OK, what are the consequences of the other side of the coin?’ ‘ Jones told reporters on Wednesday. ‘And so Dak’s situation right now for me, from my mirror, has more to do with our situation than it does with the merits of Dak Prescott being the quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys.’

The contract is the second major pact the Cowboys have reached with a star player in the last two weeks. All-Pro wide receiver CeeDee Lamb agreed to terms on a four-year, $136 million deal on Aug. 26.

The next bit of business for Prescott and the Cowboys: trying to push the franchise to its first Super Bowl title – or at least NFC championship game appearance – since the 1995 season.

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LINCOLN, Neb. – Searching for positive things to say after his team suffered a 28-10 loss here at Nebraska, Colorado football coach Deion Sanders came up with this:

His team won the second half, 10-0.

‘I’m just excited,’ Sanders said after the game. ‘I mean, you gotta understand when you’re in a situation like this, you gotta find something to hold onto that you can encourage your team. And I’m truly excited about the second half of football that we played.’

That’s one way of looking at it. Another way of looking at is that Sanders and the Buffaloes still have many of the same problems as last year despite overhauling the roster for the second consecutive year.

∎ Last year, they gave up the second-most quarterback sacks in the nation (56). On Saturday, they gave up six more.

∎ Last year, the Buffaloes finished last in the nation in rushing yards per game with 68.9. On Saturday, they gained just 16 rushing yards on 22 carries.

∎ Last year, they also had the third-most penalties in the nation with 107. On Saturday, they had nine more for 104 yards.

Isn’t he concerned about all these repeat problems?

‘Yeah,’ Sanders said, before reemphasizing his team’s success after halftime. ‘And I wish I could have struggled with no one really scoring on us in the second half for I think two weeks straight. I wish I could have had those struggles a year ago. Those are good situations to be in. Now we’ve just got to put it together in the first half. There’s always progress my man.’

In this case, Colorado has other problems, too

For example, Colorado’s offense this year was supposed to be explosive. It showed flashes of it in Colorado’s first game, a 31-26 win against North Dakota State.

Why did it have so much trouble against Nebraska’s defense?

‘I have no idea,’ Sanders said. ‘If we would have known that answer, I think we would have responded quicker. Like we just never got it going until it was too late.’

After dominating the first half, Nebraska led 28-0 at halftime. The Cornhuskers (2-0) then tried to kill time after that, especially in the third quarter when they gobbled up 9:30 of the 15-minute period.

Quarterback Shedeur Sanders, Deion’s son, finished with 23-of-38 passing for 244 yards and one touchdown. He also was sacked two times in his first four plays and threw an interception that was returned 7 yards for a touchdown in the first quarter. By the end of the game, his team had converted only four of 14 third downs.

Like his father, Shedeur didn’t want to say too much when asked about his team having the same blocking issues as last year.

‘I’m not sure,’ he said. ‘I ain’t watched the film yet.’

Shedeur said his team had come to the game prepared, but then came the reality of a live game in front of a sold-out crowd of 86,906 at Memorial Stadium.

‘Maybe everybody on the team, maybe we just wasn’t ready,’ Shedeur Sanders said.

Deion Sanders makes comment about Matt Rhule

Last year, Deion and Shedeur Sanders had ‘personal’ issues with the Cornhuskers and their coach Matt Rhule before the game.

One year later, Deion Sanders called Rhule a ‘great guy’ and said something about him after the game that might be tough to stomach for Colorado fans who hate everything about rival Nebraska.

‘I’m happy if we’re gonna get our butts kicked, it might as well be him, a God-fearing man,’ Deion Sanders said.

Last year, the Buffs finished 4-8 in Coach Prime’s first season after starting 3-0, including a 36-14 win at home against Nebraska. Now they’re 1-1 heading into next Saturday’s game at rival Colorado State.

‘Sometimes you have those games,’ Deion Sanders said. ‘Sometimes you have those days. And that was just one of those games and days simultaneously. No excuses, though.’

What Matt Rhule said about Deion Sanders’ team

Freshman quarterback Dylan Raiola completed 23 of 30 passes for 185 yards and a touchdown for Nebraska, which also got two rushing touchdowns from running back Dante Dowdell.

Nebraska is now 2-0 for the first time since 2016, when the Huskers finished 9-4.

‘That’s a really good football team,’ Rhule said of Colorado. ‘They’ll make a ton of noise in the Big 12. Guarding number five (receiver Jimmy Horn Jr.) and guarding number 12 (two-way star Travis Hunter) and guarding number two (Shedeur Sanders), those are as good of players as you’ll play against. On the defensive side, they’re as active and violent of a defense as we’ll see.’

Hunter appeared frustrated much of the night. He had 10 catches for 110 yards and three tackles on defense. Horn only had three catches for 26 yards after catching seven balls for 198 yards in the season opener.

Deion Sanders’ postgame theme

How Colorado responds to this loss will be telling. Do the Buffs make a nosedive like last year when they lost eight of their final nine games? Or do they snap back and beat their in-state rival next Saturday on the road?

‘We gotta be able to handle pressure,’ Deion Sanders said. Not just pressure from the opposing defense but ‘pressure of the game, pressure of the moment.’

‘I want to see how we all respond to adversity,’ Deion Sanders said.

That’s especially true of the offensive line, which Colorado reconstructed after last year with transfer players and freshman tackle Jordan Seaton, the top offensive line recruit in the nation. Sanders was careful about how he chose his words when describing their performance Saturday.

‘Protections were a problem,’ Sanders said. ‘I’m trying to be polite and say it, because I could say the same thing you’re thinking, but if I say it, then you say I’m throwing my guys up under the bus,’ Sanders said. ‘I’m not doing that whatsoever. Protections were a problem. We gotta find a way to prevent that and do a better job of that.’

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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Year 4 of the college football report card got off to a rousing start last week with promises of shenanigans and tomfoolery throughout the year.

The same goes for grading from last season: High marks will only be given to the spectacular, and failing grades have no chance of being reversed.

Last week’s top marks went to the return of college football, and failing grades went to whoever was running Minnesota’s fireworks display, which went off at the end of the game against North Carolina after a missed field goal.

Here is the Week 2 analysis of how fans, teams, players, and coaches fared: 

Trolling of the defending national champions

But it starts with Michigan head coach Sherrone Moore, who, for some reason, wanted to reassure people about his job status after nine months at the helm.

Glad to hear that the checks are clearing in Ann Arbor, considering fans are already calling for his job.

The internet, which remains undefeated, couldn’t wait to pounce on the Wolverines’ misfortune after they got run off their own field against Texas.

For most of the afternoon, a combination of hashtags were trending on social media which didn’t paint a flattering picture of Michigan; When #cheaters, #orji, #daviswarren, #sharronemoore are mixed in with jokes about ‘alleged’ sign stealer Connor Stalions, chances are your day hasn’t gone too well.

Victors day of ‘hail’: F

Christmas in September, part IV

This space has been used for the past four years to call out some egregious spending by athletic departments, which are waiting to give away millions just to prove they have it.

Since Notre Dame seemingly wants to ensure itself a chance at a playoff spot every year, the football program refuses to join a conference, which means they have to pony up the dough to please the home crowd and schedule some less-than-desirable opponents.

Let’s go back to 2022, when the Irish paid Marshall $1.25 million to travel to South Bend, only to get beat 26-21. This time around, Northern Illinois will be looking for that seven-figure direct deposit in the next 60 days after the 28-point underdog Huskies beat Notre Dame 16-14 to earn its first top-10 win in school history.

Miami (Ohio) has to be licking its chops and looking forward to a $1.25 million payday when the team comes to town on Sept. 21.

Must be the money: A+

They said it

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney with what he thinks is a description for the media.

‘Y’all gonna write crap, y’all gonna write terrible stuff. And when we do great, y’all gonna write great stuff. That’s OK.’

The worst and best of the rest

Mr. Worldwide pin

Give me everything: A+

Hope the mascot has a NIL deal

Splish, splash: 2.0 from the American judge

Oscar nominees early in the season

More like Golden Raspberry: F

Smoochies on a Saturday

Love is a battlefield: A-

Rabbit season

Willie for the win: straight to graduation

This week’s OBJ tribute

Look, Ma. One hand: A

Oklahoma state flag, not OK

Flag day follies: F

Stats for you

24 – Consecutive passes completed by Ole Miss quarterback Jaxson Dart against Middle Tennessee, setting an SEC record

459  rushing yards by Boise State running Ashton Jeanty through two games

648 – Offensive yards by Arkansas vs. Oklahoma State. The Razorbacks still lost in two overtimes, 39-31.

$1.3 million – Amount paid to Northern Illinois by Notre Dame

The Dog of the Week

Western Illinois at Indiana

This beauty needs no words (to submit your pup, shoot me a pic on social media).

Now to the game:

What will $450,000 buy you these days?

In New York City, it can get you a 500-square-foot apartment with just enough money left over to buy a pack of Skittles at your local bodega.

In the case of Western Illinois, who was paid that amount to join the pups in Bloomington, Indiana, to play the Hoosiers, it came with a 77-3 beatdown and a five-hour bus ride home to contemplate what the hell happening during those three hours on Friday night.

To answer that question…well, not much for Western Illinois.

The Leathernecks have now lost 26 straight games, which is by far the longest losing streak in Division I. Indiana set school records for the most points in a game and total offense with 703 yards.

While the pups were napping by halftime, let’s hope the Leathernecks can score a victory when they play Illinois State next week. The Redbirds have the unfortunate distinction of being the last team to lose to Western Illinois, a 38-31 loss on Oct. 30, 2021.

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The race to be the NFL’s highest-paid players welcomed some new entrants this offseason.

Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys came to an agreement on a four-year, $240 million deal on the morning of the NFL’s first Sunday of the regular season. The deal makes him the league’s first $60 million per year player and put him at the top of the list of highest-paid players.

Prescott’s deal comes after an offseason that included the Jacksonville Jaguars’ Trevor Lawrence (five-year, $275 million extension) and Green Bay Packers’ Jordan Love (four-year, $220 million extension) matching the broad terms of Cincinnati Bengals’ Joe Burrow’s five-year, $275 deal last year.

According to OverTheCap.com, the NFL’s top 18 players in terms of average annual salary are all quarterbacks. Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson is the first non-quarterback on the highest-paid list after striking a four-year, $140 million contract extension this offseason. That deal vaulted Jefferson past San Francisco 49ers defensive end Nick Bosa as the NFL’s highest-paid non-quarterback.

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Who is the highest-paid NFL player in 2024?

Here is the full list of the top 20 earners in the league by annual average salary, according to Over The Cap:

1. Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys: $60 million

2. (tie). Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals: $55 million

2 (tie). Trevor Lawrence, Jacksonville Jaguars: $55 million

2 (tie). Jordan Love, Green Bay Packers: $55 million

5. Tua Tagovailoa, Miami Dolphins: $53.1 million

6. Jared Goff, Detroit Lions: $53 million

7. Justin Herbert, Los Angeles Chargers: $52.5 million

8. Lamar Jackson, Baltimore Ravens: $52 million

9. Jalen Hurts, Philadelphia Eagles: $51 million

10. Kyler Murray, Arizona Cardinals: $46.1 million

11. Deshaun Watson, Cleveland Browns: $46 million

12 (tie). Kirk Cousins, Atlanta Falcons: $45 million

12 (tie). Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City Chiefs: $45 million

14. Josh Allen, Buffalo Bills: $43 million

15 (tie). Daniel Jones, New York Giants: $40 million

15 (tie). Matthew Stafford, Los Angeles Rams: $40 million

17 (tie). Derek Carr, New Orleans Saints: $37.5 million

17 (tie). Aaron Rodgers, New York Jets: $37.5 million

19. Justin Jefferson, Minnesota Vikings: $35 million

20. Nick Bosa, San Francisco 49ers: $34 million

Here’s the highest-paid list for all the positions

Quarterbacks
Running backs
Wide receivers
Tight ends
Offensive tackles
Offensive guards
Centers
Edge rushers
Interior defensive linemen
Linebackers
Cornerbacks
Safeties
Kickers
Punters

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ATLANTA — Russell Wilson’s debut as Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback will have to wait. Justin Fields is in.

The Steelers officially deactivated Wilson for the opener against the Atlanta Falcons, declaring him as the No. 3 emergency quarterback due to a calf injury that was aggravated during Thursday’s practice.

Fields, who pushed Wilson during a training camp competition, steps into the lineup to get the nod for a return home while Wilson continues to mend. Wilson participated in pregame warmups and undoubtedly hoped to progress enough in his rehab, but apparently the decision wasn’t left to the veteran quarterback as Steelers doctors and coach Mike Tomlin made the final call.

Here’s what to know about Wilson, Fields and the Steelers on Sunday:

Russell Wilson injury updates: QB out vs. Falcons

Wilson threw passes on the field approximately two hours before kickoff.

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“I’ll go if I can go and do everything I can to try and help us win. That’s how I think about it,” Wilson told reporters on Friday. “And if not, I’m going to do everything I can to help us win that way, too.”

Justin Fields’ time to shine?

Fields, a Georgia native, should provide a fascinating pivot for the Steelers offense.

The fourth-year passer was acquired in a March trade with the Chicago Bears, for whom he started 38 games from 2021 to 2023. Although he lost the battle for the starting role, Fields was still expected to have a potentially significant role in the offense as a backup – even in Week 1.

‘My friend (Falcons coach) Raheem Morris better be ready for a Justin Fields package,’ Tomlin said on the ‘The Rich Eisen Show’ in August after making the announcement. ‘There’s too much talent to be sitting around watching.’

Fields, 25, would no doubt provide a more dynamic presence behind center than his 35-year-old counterpart after in 2022 becoming just the third quarterback to rush for more than 1,000 yards in a season. Turnovers, however, continue to plague the passer, as Tomlin said preseason fumbles ‘negated a lot of good things’ the signal-caller had done in August.

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The race to be the NFL’s highest-paid players welcomed some new entrants this offseason.

Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys came to an agreement on a four-year, $240 million deal on the morning of the NFL’s first Sunday of the regular season. The deal makes him the league’s first $60 million per year player and put him at the top of the list of highest-paid players.

Prescott’s deal comes after an offseason that included the Jacksonville Jaguars’ Trevor Lawrence (five-year, $275 million extension) and Green Bay Packers’ Jordan Love (four-year, $220 million extension) matching the broad terms of Cincinnati Bengals’ Joe Burrow’s five-year, $275 deal last year.

According to OverTheCap.com, the NFL’s top 18 players in terms of average annual salary are all quarterbacks. Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson is the first non-quarterback on the highest-paid list after striking a four-year, $140 million contract extension this offseason. That deal vaulted Jefferson past San Francisco 49ers defensive end Nick Bosa as the NFL’s highest-paid non-quarterback.

DO YOU LIKE FOOTBALL? Then you’ll enjoy getting our NFL newsletter delivered to your inbox

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Who is the highest-paid NFL player in 2024?

Here is the full list of the top 20 earners in the league by annual average salary, according to Over The Cap:

1. Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys: $60 million

2. (tie). Joe Burrow, Cincinnati Bengals: $55 million

2 (tie). Trevor Lawrence, Jacksonville Jaguars: $55 million

2 (tie). Jordan Love, Green Bay Packers: $55 million

5. Tua Tagovailoa, Miami Dolphins: $53.1 million

6. Jared Goff, Detroit Lions: $53 million

7. Justin Herbert, Los Angeles Chargers: $52.5 million

8. Lamar Jackson, Baltimore Ravens: $52 million

9. Jalen Hurts, Philadelphia Eagles: $51 million

10. Kyler Murray, Arizona Cardinals: $46.1 million

11. Deshaun Watson, Cleveland Browns: $46 million

12 (tie). Kirk Cousins, Atlanta Falcons: $45 million

12 (tie). Patrick Mahomes, Kansas City Chiefs: $45 million

14. Josh Allen, Buffalo Bills: $43 million

15 (tie). Daniel Jones, New York Giants: $40 million

15 (tie). Matthew Stafford, Los Angeles Rams: $40 million

17 (tie). Derek Carr, New Orleans Saints: $37.5 million

17 (tie). Aaron Rodgers, New York Jets: $37.5 million

19. Justin Jefferson, Minnesota Vikings: $35 million

20. Nick Bosa, San Francisco 49ers: $34 million

Here’s the highest-paid list for all the positions

Quarterbacks
Running backs
Wide receivers
Tight ends
Offensive tackles
Offensive guards
Centers
Edge rushers
Interior defensive linemen
Linebackers
Cornerbacks
Safeties
Kickers
Punters

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PHOENIX — There were no blockbuster deals and only a couple of All-Star players were even moved at the 2024 Major League Baseball trade deadline.

Yet despite the lack of star power, there are seven contenders who have greatly benefited from their reinforcements, and fear just where they’d be without them.

‘I don’t want to even think about where we’d be,’ Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. ‘These guys have been huge for us. They’ve already made a big impact for us.’

The best under-the-radar gem found at the trade deadline was the discarded middle reliever from the Chicago White Sox, Michael Kopech. He was 2-8 with a 4.74 ERA for baseball’s worst team, and suddenly is 3-0 with a 0.59 ERA for the Dodgers, striking out 20 of the 57 batters he has faced.

‘It’s like they have a magic formula over there,’ Arizona Diamondbacks reliever Paul Sewald says. “Look at what he’s doing.’

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The Dodgers, trying to wrap up their 12th NL West title in the last 13 years, struck gold at the deadline without touching any of their prized prospects, landing starter Jack Flaherty, super utilityman Tommy Edman and Kopech.

Flaherty, who was with the Detroit Tigers, was on the verge of being traded to the New York Yankees until they balked after seeing his medicals, and tried to lower the price. The Dodgers snared him for the discount price of prospects Thayron Liranzo and Trey Sweeney. Flaherty is now the top starter on an injury-riddled staff, going 4-1 with a 3.18 ERA, and likely will pitch a Game 1 of the postseason. They also swung a three-way trade with the St. Louis Cardinals and White Sox, acquiring Edman and Kopech for nothing more than struggling outfielder Miguel Vargas, who’s hitting .116 with a .416 OPS since joining the White Sox.

They grabbed Gold Glove winner Kevin Kiermaier from Toronto, too.

‘I think,’ Kopech tells USA TODAY Sports, ‘it’s worked out pretty good for all of us. Really good.’

The Dodgers, just 11-13 in July, have gone 21-11 since July 31, and even with having no idea who will comprise their starting rotation in October, may be the finest team in the NL.

Here are the other teams who benefited the most with their under-the-radar moves at the trade and waiver deadlines:

San Diego Padres

Padres GM A.J. Preller, who traded away 12 of his top 15 prospects during the season, went all-in at the trade deadline.

He assembled the best bullpen in baseball by acquiring relievers Tanner Scott and Bryan Hoeing from the Miami Marlins and Jason Adam from the Tampa Bay Rays.

Just like that, they have turned their games into six-inning affairs.

The Padres entered Saturday 23-11 since the trade deadline, and a major-league best 31-13 since the All-Star break. They are an MLB-best 60-7 when scoring at least five runs this season.

Simply, with their late-inning bullpen reinforcements, they have as good a shot to win the World Series as any team in baseball.

Kansas City Royals

The Royals, in one of the greatest turnarounds in baseball history after losing 106 games last year, weren’t satisfied with just a winning record.

They made the most moves at the trade and waiver deadlines, coming up with infielder Paul DeJong, outfielders Tommy Pham and Robbie Grossman, starter Michael Lorenzen and reliever Hunter Harvey.

The Royals, in a stretch of playing 20 consecutive games against teams currently in a playoff spot, are hanging on for dear life but would be on the outside looking in without the moves.

DeJong has been fabulous since leaving the White Sox, hitting six home runs and driving in 15 runs while the waiver claims of Pham and Grossman and minor-league acquisition of Yuli Gurriel have combined to hit .324 with a .500 slugging percentage.

The Royals have plenty of depth now, and although it may be too late to catch Cleveland, they will finally be back in the postseason after an aggressive winter and trade deadline.

Arizona Diamondbacks

The Diamondbacks certainly didn’t plan to be aggressive at the deadline, but with a sudden rash of injuries, they jumped into the market and came out big winners.

They pounced on left-handed reliever A.J. Puk from the Miami Marlins, grabbed first baseman Josh Bell within 12 hours after losing Gold Glove first baseman Christian Walker, and signed Luis Guillorme in August after All-Star second baseman Ketel Marte went down.

Even with injuries that could have ruined their season, the trio made sure that the D-backs didn’t skip a beat, going 21-12. Puk is yielding a 0.56 ERA in his 19 games since his arrival, striking out 26 of 59 batters. Bell hit four homers in his first six games with the D-backs. And Guillorme has played sensational defense.

They have Walker and Marte back in the lineup now, will return to the postseason again, and will be threatening to wreak utter havoc just like a year ago.

‘It means a lot to us having an aggressive front office,’ D-backs third baseman Eugenio Suarez said. ‘I mean, one day after Walker gets hurt, there’s Bell walking through the door.

‘We know in our mind that we can play with the Dodgers. We know can play with anyone.’

Baltimore Orioles

The Orioles knew they needed help, particularly starting rotation depth, if they wanted to play deep in October.

So they decided to take a shot with Zach Eflin of the Tampa Bay Rays and Trevor Rogers of the Marlins, picked up Seranthony Dominguez and Gregory Soto for their shaky bullpen, and took a flier on struggling White Sox DH Eloy Jimenez.

Eflin has easily been the best starter moved at the deadline, going 5-1 with a 2.37 ERA, and slots in perfectly as the No. 2 starter in the postseason behind Corbin Burnes.

If not for Eflin, they wouldn’t be going toe-to-toe with the Yankees for the AL East title.

Houston Astros

Everyone was giggling at the trade deadline that the Astros gave up far too much for Yusei Kikuchi, sending prospects Jake Bloss, Joey Loperfido and Will Wagner to the Toronto Blue Jays.

Well, who’s laughing now?

Kikuchi is 4-0 with a 3.07 ERA, striking out 53 batters in 41 innings, while the Astros have won all seven of his starts.

He hardly looks like the same guy who was 4-9 with a 4.75 ERA with the Blue Jays, throwing fewer curveballs and more sliders while elevating his fastball.

The Astros rotation yielded a 2.51 ERA and the lowest batting average (.185) in a month by any team since 1968 after Kikuchi’s arrival. They have plenty of depth in a rotation featuring Framber Valdez, Justin Verlander, Hunter Brown, Ronel Blanco and Spencer Arrighetti.

Just like that, the Astros could be headed to their eighth consecutive ALCS and perhaps another World Series to go with it.

Cleveland Guardians

The Guardians’ starting rotation has been awful and they took a gamble signing Matthew Boyd, who was recovering from Tommy John surgery, to a major-league contract four weeks before the deadline. They took a flier on injured starter Alex Cobb of the Giants, who hadn’t thrown a pitch in the major leagues all season, too.

The total cost: $5 million.

Well, instead of providing a little stability, these two veterans have been instrumental in keeping the Guardians atop the AL Central.

Boyd is 2-1 with a 2.20 ERA in his five starts and Cobb, who had been recovering from hip surgery, is 2-1 with a 2.76 ERA in his three starts.

Not bad for two guys who hadn’t pitched a single inning in the big leagues until arriving in Cleveland.

You’ll see them on the national stage pitching in October for the Guardians.

Around the basepaths

– While there have been rumors swirling all season about front-office shakeups, there’s no evidence that any drastic changes will be made.

The Seattle Mariners are bringing back Jerry Dipoto, as the Seattle Times first reported, even though they likely will miss the playoffs for the 22nd time in 23 years.

A.J. Preller ended any speculation about his future with the San Diego Padres after slashing the payroll by $90 million, and having a dramatically improved team.

The Toronto Blue Jays could possibly shift GM Ross Atkins to a different role after failing to make the playoffs, but there’s no indication he will be dismissed.

The Pittsburgh Pirates, who are enduring their sixth consecutive losing season, are much more likely to make changes with manager Derek Shelton or his coaching staff than with GM Ben Cherington.

There is internal friction in the Chicago Cubs’ front office, high-ranking officials say, but despite their disappointing season, Jed Hoyer, president of baseball operations, will return in 2025.

The San Francisco Giants climbed over the luxury tax, brought in manager Bob Melvin and still have a losing season, but if Farhan Zaidi is trusted to negotiate a long-term contract for third baseman Matt Chapman, he is expected to return for at least one more year.

The St. Louis Cardinals could have a losing record in back-to-back years for the first time since 1958-59, but John Mozeliak, president of baseball operations, already announced that he will step down after the 2025 season, perhaps paving the way for Chaim Bloom. Responsibilities could shift, but no change is expected.

The Cincinnati Reds have not won a playoff game since 2012, but Nick Krall, president of baseball operations, should be safe while coaches on David Bell’s staff could be paying the price.

The Texas Rangers were expected to at least contend after winning the World Series a year ago, but it’s quite odd that GM Chris Young has yet to sign a contract extension. Still, it’s hard to believe he won’t be back.

If these teams don’t make the playoffs a year from now, well, that unemployment line could be rather long.

– While the White Sox have performed worse with Grady Sizemore than Pedro Grifol, Marlins manager Skip Schumaker continues to be the White Sox’s first choice to manage their club in 2025, but Schumaker is expected to have several options.

– No one outside Matt Chapman and his family is happier about his six-year, $151 million contract extension with the San Francisco Giants than Alex Bregman of the Houston Astros.

With Chapman off the free-agent board, Bregman is by far the top third baseman on the market with no real alternative.

– The advertising on the Dodgers’ outfield wall is generating $6.5 million this year, thanks to Shohei Ohtani, compared to $500,000 in 2023.

– Atlanta veteran Whit Merrifield says that there will be penalties for pitchers next season that hit batters with fastballs towards the head after the MLB Competition Committee’s latest meeting.

“We’ll have something in place by the time the season starts next year,” Merrifield told Atlanta reporters. “I’d be shocked if we didn’t. … Everybody’s in agreement, it’s just about what is the punishment going to be, and how are we going to word it.”

The number of hit batters has skyrocketed with the increased velocity among pitchers. There were 657 batters hit by pitches in 1980. There were 2,112 hit batsmen last year, which could be eclipsed this year.

– The San Diego Padres traded All-Star outfielder Juan Soto, lost Blake Snell, Josh Hader, Michael Wacha and Seth Lugo in free agency, but they’re a much better team than a year ago with players raving about manager Mike Shildt and the clubhouse culture.

Certainly, they are much more resilient than a year ago when they were the most underachieving team in baseball.

The Padres went 2-12 in extra innings in 2023, hitting .169 in extras.

This year, they are 8-1 in extra innings, batting .412.

They have had four comebacks of at least five runs this season, and 21 victories in games they trailed by two or more runs, 13 more than a year ago.

– The scouting industry took a massive hit this week, particularly in Chicago with the White Sox dismissing veteran pro scouts Billy Scherer, Joe Siers, Bruce Benedict and Duraka Shaheed, along with special assistant Marco Paddy, who was in charge of their international scouting. On the North Side, the Cubs fired four younger scouts while slashing their budget.

The Cubs also told their scouting department that they no longer will scout games at any level except the complex league and Dominican Summer League.

Brutal.

– The Houston Astros and New York Mets have gone from 11 games under .500 to 11 over .500, and if they remain 11 games over .500 it will mark only the third season where multiple teams accomplished the feat, joining the Houston Astros and Oakland A’s in 2005 and the St. Louis Browns and New York Giants in 1916.

– Chris Sale, who is a shoo-in for the NL Cy Young award, now has 11 career games in which he’s pitched at least seven shutout innings, striking out nine or more batters, and allowing six or fewer hits with no walks.

The only other man to accomplish the feat?

Sale’s idol, Hall of Famer Randy Johnson.

– Remember when the New York Yankees looked almost unbeatable and had an MLB-best 50-22 record on June 14?

They since have gone 32-38, even after winning the first two games of their series this weekend against the Cubs.

– It’s hard enough for pitchers to throw no-hitters these days when they’re rarely facing a lineup three times in a game before their manager is ready to yank them.

Pitchers have been taken out of a game 45 times the last three years with a no-hitter though at least five innings, including 12 times this year.

– The Yankees have just three weeks to figure out their closer situation before the playoffs start.

Clay Holmes, who had a 0.00 ERA in his first 20 games, has a 5.14 ERA dating back to May 20, blowing a major-league leading 11 saves.

– How strong has the Padres bullpen been this season?

When Robert Suarez gave up a game-winning, grand slam in the ninth inning Thursday to Parker Meadows of the Detroit Tigers, it was the first time the Padres lost a game when their starting pitcher handed their bullpen a lead since June 2.

– You think Manny Machado plays a huge impact in the Padres’ success?

The Padres were 37-40 on June 18 with Machado getting off to the worst start of his career with a .661 OPS.

Since then, he has a .919 OPS, and the Padres are 43-21. They are 24-0 this season when he drives in two or more runs in a game.

“It has to be always me,” Machado told the San Diego Union-Tribune. “If we’re going to win, I have to perform. That’s just what it is.’

– Why was it so special for Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr. to travel to the Oakland Coliseum one last time to say good-bye?

“It’s where I got my first hit,” Griffey said.

Griffey, the Mariners starting center fielder at the age of 19, hit a double off 20-game winner Dave Stewart for his first major-league hit.

– Pretty cool company for Texas Rangers rookie Wyatt Langford.

He became only the second player in MLB history to hit a walk-off grand slam, an inside-the-park homer and hit for the cycle in the same season.

The other?

Jackie Robinson.

– Texas Rangers veteran Nathan Eovaldi has been a godsend for Texas, going 23-12 (.657) in 50 starts in his two seasons with the club. It’s the third-highest winning percentage by a Rangers pitcher in his first 50 starts behind Cole Hamels and Kenny Rogers.

– While Detroit Tigers ace Tarik Skubal is a lock to be the AL Cy Young award winner, he has a chance to join an exclusive group: Leading the major leagues in victories, ERA and strikeouts.

The only two pitchers to win the pitching triple crown: Mets starter Dwight Gooden in 1985 and Mets starter Johan Santana in 2006.

– Marcell Ozuna’s chances of winning the NL Triple Crown have evaporated, but he has been a model of consistency with on-base streaks of 27, 24 and 23 games.

– If the Babe Ruth trade was the worst in Boston Red Sox history, the Sale trade to Atlanta may be the second-worst.

Sale will be the unanimous winner of the NL Cy Young award, leading every pitching triple crown category.  He has yielded two or fewer runs in 15 consecutive games.

The Red Sox not only received just infielder Vaughn Grissom in return, but they included $17 million in the deal, paying Sale’s entire 2024 salary.

– You know it’s ugly in Pittsburgh when first baseman Rowdy Tellez pitches three times in 12 days during the Pirates’ blowout losses while the team has now been limited to one run or less 30 times.

– The White Sox might be a playoff team if only the games lasted six innings.

They are 27-22 when leading after six innings this year, and 5-88 when tied or trailing after six innings.

They have won one game since May 5 when tied or trailing after six innings.

– Luis Arraez hasn’t struck out in 105 plate appearances, is hitting .368 with runners in scoring position and even has a .280 batting average with two strikes.

– The Mariners may be spending all winter lamenting their failures in one-run games this season, going 6-17 in one-run games since June 19.

– You knew there was something more than just a bruised shin that caused Astros outfielder Kyle Tucker to be out for three months until returning Friday.

It turns out that his shin was fractured.

– The Dodgers have no idea who will comprise their starting rotation outside Jack Flaherty when the playoffs start now that Gavin Stone went on the injured list with an inflamed shoulder.

The Dodgers have used 17 starters this year, and 11 have gone on the injured list.

– The Phillies have won 31 consecutive games in which the starting pitcher completes at least seven innings, the second-longest streak in baseball history behind only the 1942 St. Louis Cardinals’ (42).

– Garrett Crochet, the only bright spot in the White Sox’s dismal season, will pitch the rest of the season without being shut down.

– While Shohei Ohtani will be the first full-time DH to win the MVP award this season, let’s not forget, Don Baylor won the AL MVP with the Angels in 1979 when he started 65 games as the DH.

– Congratulations to Darren Baker, son of Dusty Baker, who was the eighth son of a former big-leaguer to make his major league debut this year:

He joins Griffin Conine, Grant McCray, Will Wagner, Jacob Wilson, Angel Martinez, Jack Leiter and Jackson Holliday.

– RIP Tony Attanasio, the longtime agent for stars ranging from Dave Stewart to Ichiro Suzuki, who passed away at the age of 84 in San Diego.

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As long as Notre Dame coach Marcus Freeman works in college football, he’s going to be fighting one of the most insidious stereotypes in sports. 

No, not because he’s one of the few Black head coaches at the Bowl Subdivision level. Not because he’s leading one of the game’s blue bloods at just 38 years old. And not because he’s widely considered the most handsome coach in a profession of people who perpetually look like they need more sleep and more salads. 

No, the thing that will always be held against Freeman at Notre Dame is that he’s really, really nice. 

Football fans are naturally suspicious of nice coaches. It doesn’t comport with the image of Bear Bryant stalking the sidelines with a scowl or Nick Saban blowing up into a rage whenever somebody around him screws up. 

For a college football coach, being a relatively pleasant person who has normal human interactions, treats people with respect and doesn’t show anger publicly can be dangerous. Because whenever something goes wrong, the personality traits we value highly in real life get twisted into the reason why a team isn’t performing well. Is he not demanding enough? Is he trying to be too buddy-buddy with the players? Do they play poorly because they don’t fear him? 

These are, of course, completely unfair critiques. We don’t really see what goes on in any program outside of 12 Saturdays a year. We don’t know how Freeman or any coach interacts with his team behind closed doors. 

But what we have are the results, and fans will always evaluate them through the prism of their assumptions. 

That’s really problematic for Freeman because of what happened Saturday when Notre Dame lost to Northern Illinois, 16-14.

“We’ve been here before,” Freeman told reporters.

Yeah, and that’s exactly the issue.

Freeman’s tenure is just 29 games old, but there’s been a concerning and unmistakeable trend: The Irish quite simply don’t show up to play every week. 

Sure, Notre Dame has had some really great moments under Freeman, including last Saturday when the Irish gutted out a 23-13 win at Texas A&M. But there have been far too many head-scratching, out-of-nowhere losses than should be acceptable at Notre Dame.

It can happen to anyone once in a blue moon. But losing to Marshall, a 3-9 Stanford team and now Northern Illinois in fewer than 30 games reflects a level of inconsistency that is deeply concerning and needs to be corrected. Even last year, after Notre Dame played an incredible game in a 17-14 loss to Ohio State and then came back the next week to beat a good Duke team, the Irish went to Louisville and really got embarrassed in a 33-20 loss that wasn’t as close as the final score.

Great programs don’t have these wild swings in performance, and the question for Freeman and Notre Dame is why it’s still happening three years into his tenure.

There’s almost certainly an answer more complicated and nuanced than Freeman being too nice of a guy to lead a program with Notre Dame’s expectations. But it’s the critique that is going to resonate the most within a fan base that is growing impatient — and rightly so — with their team laying a couple eggs per season. 

That’s why the Fighting Irish rank No. 1 in this week’s Misery Index, a weekly measurement of which fan bases are feeling the most angst.

Four more in misery

Colorado: It’s not any better. In some ways, it’s worse because Year 2 is when the great coaches usually start to foreshadow their greatness. But all the problems that caused the Buffaloes to fizzle to 4-8 last year under Deion Sanders are still problems. The offensive line is pitiful, which means Colorado can’t run the ball and quarterback Shedeur Sanders is scrambling for his life most of the time. The defense, if we’re being generous, is mediocre. After watching Colorado’s 28-10 loss to Nebraska, there’s really no reason to believe Coach Prime is on the verge of anything this season other than ridicule and scrutiny over much of an underachiever he’s been in high school recruiting since arriving at Colorado.

Arkansas: The litany of mistakes and just outright bonehead decisions coming from the Razorbacks’ sideline Saturday in a 39-31 double overtime loss at Oklahoma State would take the rest of the month to explain. But it can all be summed up very succinctly in the fact that Arkansas out-gained Oklahoma State 648-385 and still lost the football game. Statistically, that’s almost impossible. But it happened thanks to a 3-1 turnover deficit (including a muffed punt that set up the game-tying score in the fourth quarter), some poorly timed penalties, clock management issues, a pair of missed field goals and a few other missed opportunities to put points on the board. But maybe there’s a reason Arkansas is 3-10 in one-score games over the last two years. This one may be tough for Sam Pittman (24-26 overall) to live down, especially with Bobby Petrino as offensive coordinator waiting in the wings if there’s a midseason coaching change. 

Auburn: It’s not like Auburn was shy about paying for good football, even when NCAA rules made it more complicated (take that however you like). And it’s not like Hugh Freeze, for all the controversy that has surrounded his career, has ever dealt with questions about his ability to put a good offense on the field. So what gives? How is it that as Freeze enters Year 2, he’s still wedded to a quarterback in Payton Thorne who just can’t get the ball down the field? After ranking 92nd nationally last year, Auburn’s offense is still stinky. That much is clear after a 21-14 loss at home to California in which Thorne threw for 165 yards and Auburn had just 286 total yards while committing five turnovers. If you’re not getting offensive production out of a Freeze-coached team, what are you really getting? His inability to get a quarterback upgrade out of the transfer portal this past offseason may land him on the hot seat pretty quickly.  

Florida State: Sorry Seminoles, but you don’t get to avoid the Index just because you didn’t play on Saturday. Your 0-2 start to this season is too glaring to ignore. It’s one thing to lose to Georgia Tech in kind of a funky game in Ireland to open the season, but when you come back home and get physically dominated by Boston College then it’s time for a serious conversation. Did FSU spend the entire offseason in a program-wide funk because it got left out of last year’s College Football Playoff? Did coach Mike Norvell just whiff in the transfer portal this time? Was last year’s quarterback Jordan Travis just way better than anyone gave him credit for? All of those theories are on the table to explain how bad Florida State has looked. But with a very good Memphis team coming to Tallahassee next week, the Seminoles better snap out of it or else the 2024 season will effectively be over. 

Miserable but not miserable enough

Michigan: The championship banner from 2023 will hang forever, but the bill has come due in 2024. The Wolverines are headed into the wilderness of being a juiceless, middling program under a first-year head coach in Sherrone Moore who has a long way to go to prove he’s got the gravitas to make this happen in the Big Ten. Bottom line, Michigan was not competitive at all in a 31-12 loss to Texas on Saturday. Though the Longhorns are very good, Michigan is in a full post-Jim Harbaugh rebuild under a coach who has zero track record of running a program. Good luck!

Cincinnati: With fewer than 20 minutes remaining Saturday, the Bearcats led Pittsburgh 27-6. Though hardly any leads are safe in college football these days, that’s a game you’re going to win nine out of 10 times. Unfortunately for the Bearcats, this was the one that got away. From the moment of Cincinnati’s final field goal with 4:50 remaining in the third quarter until the end of the game, the Bearcats had the ball four times. They ran 17 total plays, punted three times, used up fewer than eight minutes of the clock and allowed Pittsburgh to storm back with three consecutive touchdowns and a field goal with 17 seconds remaining for a 28-27 victory. It would be hard to script a more disappointing loss. 

Tulane: We typically avoid officiating controversies here at the Misery Index, but it’s hard to ignore the injustice that caused the Green Wave to suffer a 34-27 loss to Kansas State. With 17 seconds remaining, Tulane’s Dontae Fleming got called for an offensive pass interference, negating a touchdown for teammate Yulkeith Brown that could have either tied the game or put Tulane in position to go for two and the win. These calls are always difficult and subjective, but when you look at the replay there’s just not much there. Fleming did make contact with a defensive player, but it was the kind of mutual engagement that isn’t usually called as a pick play. Green Wave fans will be bitter about this one for a long time. 

Iowa: Losing to an in-state rival is always tough. Losing to an in-state rival after leading 19-7 late in the third quarter is even tougher. And blowing a two-score lead when you typically have one of the best defenses in the country is almost inconceivable. But the Hawkeyes somehow have to swallow a 20-19 defeat at the hands of Iowa State, which scored 13 points in the last 20 minutes to steal a huge victory in Iowa City. Give a game ball to Kyle Konrardy, who made 46- and 54-yard field goals in the fourth quarter for the Cyclones, but Iowa was only in that vulnerable position because its offense completely shut down. Its final six drives went for three, minus-2, zero, 14, eight and zero yards. 

Kentucky: The offensive statistics are horrifying. Kentucky had just 183 yards in a 31-6 home loss to South Carolina, and as has happened way too often in the Mark Stoops era, the Wildcats just can’t throw the ball. Highly touted Georgia transfer Brock Vandagriff went 3-for-10 passing for 30 yards, while Gavin Wimsatt was 3-for-7 for 14 yards. Kentucky has been really resourceful over the years, with Stoops managing to post seven out of 11 winning seasons despite often having offensive issues. But after watching this performance against the Gamecocks, Kentucky fans may truly have reason to fear that the bottom is going to fall out. 

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