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Britain’s head of state King Charles III sent a personal message of congratulations to President Trump on his inauguration, Buckingham Palace has confirmed.

The message reflected the ‘enduring special relationship between the U.K. and the U.S.,’ a spokesperson for Buckingham Palace told Fox News Digital.

The letter was delivered as Trump was sworn in for a second term as commander-in-chief at the Capitol Rotunda on Monday, capping a remarkable return to office.

Further details about the contents of the message have yet to be revealed. 

It’s not the first time the monarch has written to Trump. King Charles also wrote to the president in July in the aftermath of the failed assassination attempt on his life in Butler, Pennsylvania.

Trump has often spoke about his strong admiration for the monarchy and previously referred to King Charles as ‘a wonderful guy.’

During his state visit to the U.K. in 2019, President Trump said he had an ‘automatic chemistry’ with Queen Elizabeth II and described her as a ‘spectacular woman.’

Trump and Charles are no strangers – the two leaders have met several times over the years.

They first crossed paths in 2005, when Charles and Queen Camilla visited the U.S. They met again at President George H.W. Bush’s funeral in 2018.

In 2019, the two met to discuss climate change, and a meeting that was scheduled to last 15 minutes lasted an hour and a half, according to comments Trump made at the time. He added then that Charles, a longtime environmentalist, ‘did most of the talking.’

Following the visit, Clarence House said Trump and Charles have a ‘good working relationship.’

It is unclear if President Trump will be invited back to the U.K. for a state visit during his second term. The Telegraph reported last month that any such visit would be unlikely to happen until at least 2026, given the schedule of King Charles.

King Charles and Queen Camilla may receive an invitation to Washington, D.C., next year to attend the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

King Charles has made the acquaintance of 10 of the 14 U.S. presidents who have held office since he was born in 1948, according to the Associated Press.

He was just 10 when he checked off his first president in 1959. That was when Dwight Eisenhower visited Queen Elizabeth II and her family at Balmoral Castle in Scotland, where she died on Sept. 8, 2022, after a 70-year reign. Charles then ascended the throne after the queen’s passing.

Charles never met Harry Truman, Gerald Ford, Lyndon Johnson and John F. Kennedy.

Last month, President Trump and Prince William shook hands at the re-opening ceremony of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris and afterward held a sit-down meeting at the British Embassy. 

Trump and William also separately met with world leaders at Notre Dame, including French President Emmanuel Macron and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. 

Meanwhile, U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer posted a video message of congratulations to President Trump on Monday. He spoke about the deep ties both nations share and said he looked forward to taking ‘our partnership to the next level.’

‘For centuries, the relationship between our two nations has been one of collaboration, cooperation and enduring partnership. It is a uniquely close bond,’ Starmer, who met President Trump in September, said. 

‘Together we have defended the world from tyranny and worked towards our mutual security and prosperity.’ 

Fox News’ Emily Trainham and Brie Stimson, as well as The Associated Press, contributed to this report. 

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The White House has brought back the famous Diet Coke button so that President Trump can order his drink of choice easily from the Oval Office. 

The red button, which is hidden in a wooden box and was used by Trump during his first term, was again spotted on the Resolute Desk after he was sworn in as the 47th president Monday, the Wall Street Journal reported. 

The Oval Office, where presidents meet with foreign heads of state, congressional leaders and deliver the presidential address, is an area of the White House often personalized to reflect the values and goals of the incoming commander in chief. 

‘We’re going to be going over to the beautiful Oval Office, one of the great offices in history, even if it wasn’t beautiful, it’s the Oval Office, but it is beautiful, and we love the Oval Office,’ Trump said at the Capitol One Arena on Monday following the inauguration ceremony at the Capitol. ‘Wars start and then there. Everything starts and ends at the Oval Office.’ 

Trump has a well-known affinity for Diet Coke and has repeatedly shared that he does not drink alcohol given his brother, Fred Trump Jr., died from complications of alcoholism in the early 1980s. 

On Monday, the Journal noted that a portrait of George Washington was now hanging over the fireplace in the Oval Office, and portraits of Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson were on each side. 

Biden had removed military flags for each service branch from the Oval Office four years ago, and Trump’s team had them reinstated there on Monday. 

When he was sworn in as president in 2021, Biden had a bust of Winston Churchill removed from the Oval Office. Churchill’s bust was returned on Monday and spotted in the same place it was four years ago on a table near the fireplace. 

Trump and Biden both displayed a bust of Martin Luther King Jr. in the Oval Office, and it remained there Monday at the start of Trump’s second term, according to the Journal. 

The Oval Office also has new silver eagle figures on the fireplace mantel as of Monday. 

Like he had during his first term, Trump again has a portrait of Andrew Jackson in the Oval Office. The one from four years ago was on loan from the U.S. Naval Academy, while the one added on Monday is from the White House art collection, the Journal reported, citing a White House aide. Trump has resonated with Jackson, whose populist, anti-establishment movement landed him in the White House despite critics of the time. 

Trump kept Biden’s addition of a Benjamin Franklin portrait, which the Democrat initially chose to represent a focus on science. 

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Donald Trump supporters who attended the president’s inauguration parade at Capital One Arena in downtown D.C. on Monday shared their experiences braving the cold in the nation’s capital.

Trump supporters told Fox News Digital they arrived as early as 4:30 a.m. Monday and stood for hours in the cold weather to secure a seat at the arena for the inaugural parade, noting that the line to get in had already formed by the time they arrived bright and early. Reports indicated that supporters had begun lining up as early as the night before. The parade got moved indoors amid concerns about the cold weather, but one supporter noted that it wasn’t as cold as she had expected. 

‘This morning we got up at 4. We got on the train at 5 [in the morning] and got here, and already the line was forming,’ a supporter who traveled from Texas said. ‘We stayed in the cold weather for five hours.’

‘We got here [Sunday] night, but we stayed closer to the airport just to not fight traffic,’ added Kaitlin Rogers, who traveled from Delaware. ‘Ubered in, got here at what? 6:30 [in the morning]? Stood in line for four and a half hours.’

Gina Raper, a Trump fan from North Carolina, said she arrived as early as Friday to attend Trump’s Sunday rally ahead of the formal swearing-in ceremony and ‘stood out all day in the rain’ to secure a seat there as well.     

‘We were there 5 o’clock yesterday morning and stood out all day in the rain. We got in, it was awesome,’ said Raper. ‘Then we were there at, like, 4:30 or 5 this morning, all day.’

When asked if their experience was worth braving the cold, the answer was a resounding yes. 

‘We’re so thankful,’ Raper said after gaining entrance to Capital One Arena on Saturday. 

‘It wasn’t as cold as we thought it was going to be. It was definitely worth the wait,’ added Andrea Rogers, who was traveling with Kaitlin from Delaware. ‘We are so happy to be here.’

When asked what they hope to see out of the new Trump administration, the supporters who spoke to Fox News Digital highlighted Trump’s plans to secure the border and ‘rebuild’ the military. One supporter said he was hoping to see the new Trump administration challenge the pharmaceutical and food industries, which are priorities of Trump’s nominee for Health and Human Services secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 

‘Good leaders train good leaders, and he’s got the best team I have ever – well, everybody would agree, everybody in America – this is the best team,’ said Raper.

‘Trump will fix it!’ one supporter said.

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Newly-inaugurated President Donald Trump signed an executive order calling for the U.S. to withdraw from the World Health Organization (WHO).

In 2020, Trump started the ball rolling toward extricating the U.S. from the United Nations agency, but President Joe Biden reversed course after taking office in 2021.

‘The United States intends to withdraw from the WHO. The Presidential Letter to the Secretary-General of the United Nations signed on January 20, 2021, that retracted the United States’ July 6, 2020, notification of withdrawal is revoked,’ Trump’s order declares.

‘The Secretary of State shall immediately inform the Secretary-General of the United Nations, any other applicable depositary, and the leadership of the WHO of the withdrawal,’ the order instructs.

The U.S. Senate voted 99-0 on Monday to confirm Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., to serve as Secretary of State — Rubio voted for himself before resigning from the Senate.

Trump’s order calls for the Secretary of State and director of the Office of Management and Budget to ‘pause the future transfer of any United States Government funds, support, or resources to the WHO;’ ‘recall and reassign United States Government personnel or contractors working in any capacity with the WHO;’ as well as ‘identify credible and transparent United States and international partners to assume necessary activities previously undertaken by the WHO.’

The WHO issued a statement on Tuesday lamenting Trump’s decision, and expressing hope that the U.S. will rethink the move.

‘The World Health Organization regrets the announcement that the United States of America intends to withdraw from the Organization,’ the globalist body noted. ‘We hope the United States will reconsider and we look forward to engaging in constructive dialogue to maintain the partnership between the USA and WHO, for the benefit of the health and well-being of millions of people around the globe.’

Trump signed a flurry of orders after taking office on Monday.

One of them declares it U.S. policy ‘to recognize two sexes, male and female,’ which ‘are not changeable and are grounded in fundamental and incontrovertible reality.’

Trump is only the second president in U.S. history to win election to two non-consecutive terms — the first was Grover Cleveland in the 19th century.

Fox News’ Chad Pergram contributed to this report

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Two Americans have been freed in a prisoner swap between the U.S. and Afghanistan’s Taliban in exchange for a Taliban figure imprisoned for life in California, officials said Tuesday.

The family of Ryan Corbett, one American freed by the Taliban in the deal, told Fox News that he is finally on his way back home to the U.S. after being detained for more than two years ago while on a business trip.

‘Today, our hearts are filled with overwhelming gratitude and praise to God for sustaining Ryan’s life and bringing him back home after what has been the most challenging and uncertain 894 days of our lives,’ a statement from Corbett’s family said. 

Corbett’s family thanked both President Trump and former President Biden, along with National Security Advisor Mike Waltz and other current and former government officials.

Fox News is working to confirm the identity of the second American freed in the deal.

Corbett was abducted Aug. 10, 2022, after returning to Afghanistan, where he and his family lived during the collapse of the U.S.-backed government a year prior. He arrived in Afghanistan on a valid 12-month visa to pay and train staff, as part of a business venture he led aimed at promoting Afghanistan’s private sector through consulting services and lending.

Corbett’s family also praised the Middle Eastern nation of Qatar, which hosted negotiations between the U.S. and the Taliban over the years, ‘for their vital role in facilitating Ryan’s release, and for their visits to Ryan as the United States’ Protecting Power in Afghanistan.’

The Taliban’s Foreign Ministry in Kabul confirmed the swap, saying two unidentified U.S. citizens had been exchanged for Khan Mohammed, who was sentenced to two terms of life imprisonment in 2008 on drug trafficking and terrorism charges. He was being held in California.

Mohammed was detained on the battlefield in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province. The Justice Department at the time referred to Mohammed as ‘a violent jihadist and narcotics trafficker’ who ‘sought to kill U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan using rockets.’ He was the first person to be convicted on U.S. narco-terrorism laws.

The deal comes less than a day after President Trump was sworn in as commander in chief, succeeding former President Biden, who oversaw the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021.

The Taliban called the exchange the result of ‘long and fruitful negotiations’ with the U.S. and said it was a good example of solving problems through dialogue.

‘The Islamic Emirate looks positively at the actions of the United States of America that help the normalization and development of relations between the two countries,’ it said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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ESPN’s determination to “stick to sports” took an embarrassing blow Monday night when it allowed its broadcast to become a state propaganda tool. President Donald Trump was given free air time to wish Ohio State and Notre Dame luck and instead delivered a stump speech, spewing lies and painting a vision of this country that can only be described as delusional.

“In recent years, our people have suffered greatly. But starting now, we’re going to bring America back and make it safer, richer and prouder than ever before,” said the man who had just pardoned 1,500 Jan. 6 defendants, including those who violently attacked police officers. Trump also commuted the sentences of some convicted of seditious conspiracy, a crime only slightly less worse than treason.

“We will be respected again and we will be admired again. Admired like we haven’t been in many, many years,” Trump said. “… In less than three months since the election, you have already seen it happening. You can feel the excitement and you can see the confidence and spirit returning to our nation.”

One thing you can’t see is the price of those eggs coming down. But I digress …

Trump is going to do what Trump is going to do. What’s that old saying? How can you tell he’s lying? Because his lips are moving. His second term in office is already on its way to being one big grift, a means of enriching himself, his family and his oligarch buddies while making life harder for ordinary Americans, and there are plenty of us who tried to warn you.

But this isn’t about Trump. This is about ESPN and its parent company Disney licking the boots of a wannabe autocrat, and the people who howl that athletes should “stick to sports” cheering them for doing it.

It has always been impossible to separate sports from politics. Whether it was Jackie Robinson breaking the color barrier or Billie Jean King fighting for equal rights or Colin Kaepernick protesting biased policing of Black and brown people years before George Floyd’s murder, sports are the prism through which we view our society. They give us the vehicle to make sense of some of our most contentious issues and provide us with the common ground to resolve them.

There is a portion of our society, though, that claims it doesn’t like to see politics in sports. What they really mean, though, is they don’t like to see the politics they don’t like in sports. And they especially don’t like to see the politics they don’t like in sports from Black and brown or LGBTQ people.

It’s fine when it’s issues or politicians they support. Or coming from people who share their views. It’s why Kaepernick was blackballed and Nick Bosa gets a shoutout from Trump. When it’s not? That’s when you have people getting big mad about LeBron James addressing systemic racism or Megan Rapinoe calling out sexism and homophobia.

ESPN supposedly didn’t want to get caught in the middle of this. It supposedly just wanted to show games and have people talk about sports while avoiding the real-life issues that impact all of it.

But its actions show that’s a farce.

Remember when SportsCenter anchor Jemele Hill drew Trump’s ire in 2017 after calling him a “white supremacist”?

“Next thing you know, they didn’t want Mike and I on camera as much,” Hill, referring to her SportsCenter co-host Michael Smith, recalled during a 2022 appearance on Kenny Mayne’s podcast. She left the network in January 2018.

On Monday, ESPN gave up lucrative airtime — 30-second ad spots usually go for more than $1 million — so it could give Trump a platform.

“With Donald Trump’s Inauguration occurring on the day of the CFP National Championship, it makes sense to include a message from the President,” ESPN said in a statement to USA TODAY Sports, “a practice that occurs regularly during major sporting events – including earlier this month from President Biden before the Sugar Bowl.”

Biden’s remarks followed the terrorist attack in New Orleans that caused the Sugar Bowl to be delayed by a day, and they were both brief and non-political. That is not remotely the same as Trump’s self-serving spiel and everybody, ESPN included, knows it.

One of the more disappointing things that’s occurred since Trump was re-elected is the subservience shown by people who ought to know better. Disney, ESPN’s parent company, led the way, agreeing to pay Trump $16 million to settle a defamation suit it stood a good chance of winning. Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos and Tim Cook also have been eager to bend the knee.

What they don’t seem to realize is that Trump is not the all-powerful Oz. His 1.5-point margin of victory was one of the narrowest ever, and more people voted for one of his opponents or didn’t vote at all than voted for him. About half the country says it disapproves of him. He’s term-limited, too, meaning his grip on American politics is on (relatively) borrowed time.

Yet ESPN ceded its airwaves, and its credibility, the first chance it got. Stick to sports? You first.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

ATLANTA — Chip Kelly was talking last weekend about his friend of nearly 30 years, emphasizing the importance of family for Ohio State coach Ryan Day.

“Every decision he makes,” said Kelly, Ohio State’s offensive coordinator, “Revolves around his family.”

It is here where we introduce Nina Day, Ryan Day’s wife of 19 years — and why the coach with the highest active winning percentage should walk away from Ohio State after Monday night’s 34-23 victory over Notre Dame in the College Football Playoff national championship game. 

Get out, and get away from the toxic Ohio State fan base ― and everything that comes with it. When a job begins to suck the joy from life, it’s time to get out.

No matter how many tens of millions it pays, or how intoxicating the idea of winning it all at the biggest, baddest program in college football. No matter how important it seems.

Because nothing means more than the girl he met four decades ago in Manchester, New Hampshire, when they were both 6 ― and have since traveled life together, in one form or another, since those elementary school days.

If ever there were a doubt that Day could execute the ultimate walk-off and leave Ohio State after winning it all, consider Nina’s recent interview last week with WBNS-TV in Columbus — where she reflected on life since late November, after another loss to bitter rival Michigan.

Since they had to put an armed guard outside the family home for protection.

“The weeks between the Michigan and (CFP) Tennessee game were brutal,” Nina told WBNS. “I was very upset by what was happening to some of our players, my children. It just wasn’t right.”

It was then that Nina explained a family ritual during the season, one that – more than anything – underscores the severity of what the family has dealt with since Ryan was named head coach in December 2018.

“Before he leaves (for games),” Nina said, “He says, ‘No matter what, we always have each other.’”

As he walked off the field at Mercedes Benz Stadium, pushing through the crowd and protected by security, Day passed from the field to the tunnel and shook a triumphant fist to cheering Ohio State fans.

The same Ohio State fans who, two months ago, were chanting, ‘F– you, Ryan Day’ to the uber-successful Buckeyes coach as he walked off the field at Ohio Stadium, another brutal loss to Michigan in tow.

‘This game can bring you to the highest of highs and the lowest of lows,’ Day said after the confetti fell Monday night and the remarkable turnaround was complete.

Rarely have the tables turned so quickly, with so much at stake.

‘It can bring you to your knees,’ he added.

It can bring a family to a breaking point.

Never, under any circumstance, should the coach at any university leave his home, his safe solitude from high-level stress, and reassure his family that – no matter what – they always have each other because some lunatic fan base isn’t happy that Michigan has the upper hand in a rivalry. 

Forget about what Day said in November about the rivalry, how he compared the game to war. How there are casualties and consequences for the loser. 

That’s a desperate man tossing chum to a rabid fan base, a group of unreasonable and unapologetic fans doling out the unthinkable to young men playing a game.

A game, everyone. 

The Day family has three children under the age of 16, three kids who clearly have been impacted by the 24/7, 365 nonsense of ‘Ohio Against The World.’ Or whatever strange soliloquy the scarlet and gray mob spout these days. 

This is the same fan base that once protected former coach Urban Meyer, and his history of poor personal decisions, at all cost. All because he was 7-0 vs. That Team Up North. 

Meanwhile, the wife of the coach who just lost for the fourth consecutive time to Xichigan (they refuse to use the “M” in Columbus), told WBNS that she had to see a therapist because of the absolute insanity surrounding the program. 

And when Nina Day was done pouring her heart out on local television – what coach’s wife in their right mind would publicly pour their heart out unless it had truly hit a breaking point? – the bobblehead anchors on local Columbus television applauded her for perseverance through “tough times.”

Tough times? Tough times?! What world are we living in?

I have some advice for Ryan Day, 45, who earns $10 million annually to be the caretaker of this zoo: leave.

Now.

Walk away with your pride, your dignity and your wife’s and family’s safety and security. Drop the mic after reaching the mountaintop of college football, and leave with no regrets.

He has an athletic director (Ross Bjork) who will fight for and with him, and he can name his salary. But is it really worth it? 

What looked strange and bizarre at the end of the Michigan game is now coming into focus. Day looked dazed and confused that day, standing and watching his players fight Michigan players at midfield in the aftermath ― and doing nothing about it. 

He must have been imagining just how bad it would get with the wacko fan base. The same fan base that nearly 15 years ago, forced Kirk Herbstreit – ESPN’s college football analyst and a former Ohio State quarterback – to move his family from Columbus to Nashville to escape the madness. 

A beloved alum, the definition of ambassador for the university and all it holds sacred, Herbstreit walked away because he feared for his family’s safety. Now Day, after winning the school’s first national title since 2014, should do the same. 

Walk away and coach somewhere else, or don’t coach at all. 

Take a job in the NFL, where he spent time with the Eagles (2015) and 49ers (2016) as quarterbacks coach, before arriving at Ohio State as Meyer’s offensive coordinator. Leave for the (mostly) sane professional process of the NFL, where the Saints, Cowboys, Jaguars, Raiders and Jets are looking for new direction. 

Where the league that values the vertical passing game – Day has developed some of the best quarterbacks and receivers for the NFL draft – would embrace his elite track record. 

A record that, prior to the 2023 season at Ohio State with first-year starting quarterback Kyle McCord, had produced quarterbacks who averaged 41 touchdown passes per season.

A record that saw quarterbacks Dwayne Haskins, Justin Fields and C.J. Stroud selected in the first round, and wide receivers Terry McLaurin, Garrett Wilson, Chris Olave, Jaxon Smith-Njigba and Marvin Harrison Jr. join the elite of the league.    

More than anything, Day should walk away from the nonstop circus inside the Ohio State bubble. It’s not worth it mentally, physically and emotionally.

“When you go through difficult times,’ Nina Day told the Ohio State cheer squad at WBNS, “you hold on tight to the ones you love.”

And you do what’s right for them, and protect them.

No matter what. 

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Ohio State played like a juggernaut in College Football Playoff en route to national championship.
Notre Dame rally turns blowout into tight finish.
Once widely ridiculed, Ryan Day earns crowning achievement.

ATLANTA — College football’s regular season told us no super team existed. The regular season lied. The College Football Playoff unmasked the truth.

Nobody could keep up with the Buckeyes when they performed at their best, and that includes Notre Dame.

Ohio State completed their march to national championship glory by turning back the Irish, 34-23, on Monday.

The Irish used a second-half rally to turn what had become a blowout in the third quarter into a tight finish. That Notre Dame refused to go without a fight should come as no surprise. These Irish dripped with resilience, but no opponent could match Ohio State’s personnel.

Buckeyes fans like to say their quest is one of Ohio against the World. Well, the World got humbled in these playoffs. Ohio State smashed Tennessee, blitzed Oregon, survived Texas and worked Notre Dame.

Coronate these Buckeyes as the worthy kings of this first 12-team playoff.

The way Ohio State played on this night, nobody in this playoff bracket would have stopped it, and 2019 LSU or 2020 Alabama or one of Kirby Smart’s national championship squads would have needed to appear up at Mercedes-Benz Stadium to topple the Buckeyes. The Irish used toughness and grit and timely big plays to advance this far, but they were outclassed against this opponent.

Will Howard masterful for Ohio State against Notre Dame

Ohio State’s offensive line controlled the line of scrimmage, Quinshon Judkins and TreVeyon Henderson ripped off big runs and Notre Dame’s man coverage became no match for the Buckeyes inimitable cast of wide receivers.

In the middle of it all, maestro Will Howard just kept moving the chains. One completion, two completions, three completions, more. Thirteen completions, Howard fired, before one of his passes finally hit the turf.

By halftime, Howard had twice as many touchdown passes (two) as incompletions.

With Howard’s offensive line protecting him like royalty, he comfortably scanned the field and carved up the defense with the ease of a captain guiding a ship through still waters. He sprinkled in a handful key runs, while proving the Buckeyes made a wise choice plucking Howard out of the transfer portal to complete this puzzle.

The Buckeyes converted seven consecutive third downs before their placekicker finally had to shake loose the dust in the third quarter.

Needing one big play to finish this victory, Howard cemented his Buckeyes legacy with a 57-yard dime to Jeremiah Smith. Simply put, an iconic performance from the Buckeyes quarterback.

Ryan Day silences critics as Buckeyes roll through playoff

The Buckeyes outmanned, outschemed and outwitted the Irish.

This Ohio State team became the juggernaut we expected from a roster full of blue-chippers, bankrolled by $20 million in NIL booster bucks.

Even superheroes, though, buckle from kryptonite, and the Buckeyes shrank against Michigan in a stunning November upset that the CFP selection committee overreacted to when they seeded Ohio State eighth, a joke of a seed when considering OSU’s résumé and talent.

The Buckeyes define their worth based on results against Michigan, and arrows fired at embattled coach Ryan Day from every quiver and from every corner after his fourth consecutive loss to the Wolverines. Ohio State fans turned on him, and tens of thousands of Tennessee fans gobbled up tickets for OSU’s first-round home playoff game, tinting the Horseshoe orange.

Day silenced the naysayers with his postseason run through four opponents ranked within the top seven of the final CFP rankings. Now, he’s one of three active coaches with a national championship, and he’s won as many national titles as Urban Meyer produced in seven seasons coaching the Buckeyes.

How about that, huh? Fire him? No, give that man a raise!

And raise the banner for a team that played hide and seek during the regular season before roaring in this playoff like the beast it is.

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

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

But where do the Buckeyes rank among the national champions of the playoff era?

Regular-season losses to Oregon and rival Michigan dent theirds case for coming in atop the list of 11 teams, though the Buckeyes did achieve something no one in Bowl Subdivision history had never done: win four postseason games. That gives them a unique argument for being compared to the best of the best since the playoff debuted in 2014.

The résumé still doesn’t stack up with teams such as 2020 Alabama and 2019 LSU, which lead the way in our rankings of playoff champs:

1. 2020 Alabama (13-0)

Led by an unstoppable offense starring Heisman Trophy winner DeVonta Smith, the 2020 Crimson Tide have an argument for being counted among the top teams in modern FBS history. Against the backdrop of the COVID pandemic, Alabama went unbeaten in games against 11 SEC teams, Notre Dame and Ohio State, scoring at least 31 points in every game, at least 41 points in every game but two and winning every game by at least 15 points. This was a dominant group and the most impressive team of the Nick Saban era.

2. 2019 LSU (15-0)

This offense will live in FBS history. Joe Burrow, Ja’Marr Chase, Justin Jefferson and others formed one of the most intimidating and explosive groups to ever grace the Power Four. Burrow threw for 5,671 yards and 60 touchdowns and won the Heisman. LSU beat seven ranked teams, including Alabama and Georgia, but the Tigers didn’t really take off until getting past Auburn on Oct. 26. From there, though, this team was an all-timer.

3. 2022 Georgia (15-0)

Very close behind this top two are the 2022 Bulldogs, the second of back-to-back championships and the program’s first team since 1980 to run the table. Another dominant defense was joined by an improved offense that ranked fourth nationally in yards per play. Georgia beat five teams ranked in the top 15 and put a ribbon an unforgettable year with a 58-point destruction of TCU to become the first repeat champs of the playoff era.

4. 2018 Clemson (15-0)

Until LSU matched or even exceeded the feat a year later, the 2018 Tigers put together the most dominant two-game run of the four-team playoff era, beating Notre Dame 30-3 and Alabama 44-16. Freshman quarterback Trevor Lawrence put himself on the map with an epic game against the Crimson Tide, throwing for 347 yards and three touchdowns. The Christian Wilkins-led defensive line is one of the most memorable in history. Overall, Clemson beat 12 bowl teams but didn’t have to deal with the same strength of schedule as the other undefeated teams on this list.

5. 2024 Ohio State (14-2)

Beating Tennessee, Oregon, Texas and Notre Dame should be recognized as the ultimate postseason achievement. Before this season, teams had to win two games for the national title; Ohio State won two, and then two more. When on their game, the Buckeyes were the best team in the Bowl Subdivision and an unstoppable offensive force. But the loss to Michigan is a big part of OSU’s story and impossible to ignore. To be the first playoff champ with more than one loss is also something to keep in mind. But the overall road through the playoff puts OSU in elite company.

6. 2021 Georgia (14-1)

The Bulldogs did have the one blemish against Alabama in the SEC championship game but avenged that loss by topping the Tide 33-18 in the playoff title game. More so than the 2022 squad, which had a bit more balance, the Bulldogs were defined by a suffocating defense. Georgia allowed 10.2 points per game to lead the FBS and gave up just 16 touchdowns all season. The offense, however, didn’t have the explosiveness it did with former quarterback Stetson Bennett’s improvement the following season.

7. 2023 Michigan (15-0)

A relatively weak regular-season schedule that featured just two legitimate contenders (Penn State and Ohio State) and many of the worst offenses in college football docks Michigan a bit, though there’s no doubt the Wolverines were a deserving national champion and one of the best teams in program’s proud history. The offense never received much credit but married physicality with extremely strong play from quarterback J.J. McCarthy. Defensively, Michigan took care of business in Big Ten play and proved itself by rallying past Alabama and shutting down Washington in the title game.

8. 2016 Clemson (14-1)

Clemson faced a run of solid-to-very-good teams, with 13 of 15 opponents advancing to the postseason. The Tigers played single-possession games against Auburn, Troy, Louisville, North Carolina State, Florida State and Virginia Tech while losing to Pittsburgh, so it wasn’t always pretty. But the Tigers are boosted by winning a classic championship game against Alabama with a memorable last-second touchdown.

9. 2015 Alabama (14-1)

The 2015 Tide finished by beating teams then-ranked No. 1 (Clemson), No. 2 (LSU) and No. 3 (Michigan State), and there’s something to be said for that. But Alabama also lost to Mississippi in September and weren’t always consistent on offense, ending the year 49th nationally in yards per play and 46th in yards per carry. But this group stepped up when it mattered to beat Clemson 45-40 in the title game.

10. 2014 Ohio State (14-1)

The Buckeyes rocketed into the top four of the final playoff rankings by demolishing Wisconsin in the Big Ten championship and then beat Alabama and Oregon. Ohio State gets credit for winning it all despite losing two starting quarterbacks (Braxton Miller and J.T. Barrett) and prevailing in the final three games behind third-stringer Cardale Jones. But the Buckeyes lost to Virginia Tech in non-conference play, needed double overtime to top Penn State and weren’t always reliable on defense.

11. 2017 Alabama (13-1)

The 2017 team comes in last as the only champion of the four-team playoff era to not even win its own division. Despite dropping the Iron Bowl and the SEC West to rival Auburn, the Tide reached the playoff as the No. 4 seed, beat Clemson in the semifinals and then topped Georgia 26-23 in overtime after making a halftime quarterback change from Jalen Hurts to Tua Tagovailoa that ended with a walk-off touchdown pass in overtime.

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The 2024 college football season came to a close Monday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, with Ohio State defeating Notre Dame for its first national championship in a decade.

So: Who is going to win it all this time next January?

In the seconds following their ninth national championship victory, Ryan Day and the Buckeyes were picked by oddsmakers, including BetMGM, to repeat as national champions.

As was the case this season, the Buckeyes are expected to have one of the top rosters in the country next year, highlighted by star wide receiver Jeremiah Smith. The 6-foot-3 wideout, who is not eligible for the NFL draft for two more years, finished with five catches for 88 yards and a touchdown in Ohio State’s win Monday.

Behind the Buckeyes are two SEC powerhouses Texas and Georgia. The Longhorns finished 13-3 overall in 2024 and made it to the Cotton Bowl, where they lost to Ohio State. After earning one of the four first-round byes, the Bulldogs saw an early exit from the CFP after losing to Notre Dame in the CFP Sugar Bowl quarterfinal.

Texas and Georgia will also enter the 2025 season with new quarterbacks in Arch Manning and Gunner Stockton.

Here’s what you need to know on who is favored to win the national championship in the 2025 college football season:

College football 2025 national championship odds

Behind Ohio State is Texas and Georgia, who are tied for the second-best odds on BetMGM, at +650.

Rounding out the top five is Oregon in fourth place and Penn State in fifth at +700 and +800 odds, respectively. Penn State has already received announcements from several members of its roster that they will be returning for next season, including running backs Nick Singleton and Kaytron Allen and quarterback Drew Allar.

After finishing as runner-up this season, Notre Dame has the seventh best odds on BetMGM, at +2500, to win it all next year.

Here’s who has the top-15 best odds, including ties, to win the national championship heading into the 2025 college football season:

Odds courtesy of BetMGM as of Tuesday, Jan. 21

1. Ohio State (+450)
T-2. Texas (+650)
T-2. Georgia (+650)
4. Oregon (+700)
5. Penn State (+850)
6. Alabama (+1600)
7. Notre Dame (+2500)
T-8. Tennessee (+2000)
T-8. Clemson (+2000)
T-8. LSU (+2000)
11.Ole Miss (+2500)
12. Texas A&M (+3000)
T-13. Miami (+4000)
T-13. South Carolina (+4000)
T-13. Michigan (+4000)

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