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USA TODAY has all the results and highlights from the 2025 World Series Game 7.

The Los Angeles Dodgers have won the 2025 World Series in Toronto.

With a champion crowned and the season coming to a close, it’s never too early to look at the potential champion for the 2026 season.

The Los Angeles Dodgers and the New York Yankees are not only two of the more notable franchises in the league, but they are also considered early favorites to compete for the next title.

If the two were to meet in the World Series next season, it would be a rematch of the 2024 World Series, with Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge expected to serve as the featured players in the series.

A lot can happen to shake up the league in the coming months, but here’s how things stand currently.

Celebrate Dodgers’ World Series championship with our commemorative book!

Odds for World Series 2026 winner

(As of Saturday, Nov. 1, on Fanduel)

Los Angeles Dodgers: +350
New York Yankees: +700
Philadelphia Phillies: +1000
New York Mets: +1100
Seattle Mariners: +1200
Houston Astros: +1300
Boston Red Sox: +1700
Atlanta Braves: +2000
San Diego Padres: +2000
Toronto Blue Jays: +2000
Chicago Cubs: +2200
Milwaukee Brewers: +2200
Baltimore Orioles: +2700
Cleveland Guardians: +2700
Detroit Tigers: +2700
Kansas City Royals: +3500
San Francisco Giants: +3500
Cincinnati Reds: +4000
Texas Rangers: +4000
Tampa Bay Rays: +5000
Arizona Diamondbacks: +6500
Minnesota Twins: +8000
Athletics: +10000
St. Louis Cardinals: +12500
Miami Marlins: +15000
Pittsburgh Pirates: +22500
Los Angeles Angels: +30000
Colorado Rockies: +50000
Chicago White Sox: +50000
Washington Nationals: +50000

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AUSTIN – Arch Manning’s got jokes, man.

The unrelenting pressure of this season didn’t strip him of his personality or sense of humor. If anything, his quips are his antidote.

To what did he attribute his career-best performance in a 34-31 win against Vanderbilt?

“Maybe the concussion helped,” Manning said with a smile.

OK, so it probably wasn’t the head injury Manning suffered last weekend. Instead, start with Texas’ offensive line that protected Manning, sack-free, against Vanderbilt.

“They played really well today,” he said.

It’s also nice when a swing pass can turn into a 75-yard touchdown. That’s what happened when Manning flipped a pass to Ryan Wingo on the first play from scrimmage. Two Vanderbilt missed tackles and a sprint by Wingo later, and the Longhorns had seven points.

“Receivers made plays,” Manning said. “That makes it a little easier.”

Credit all around, sure, but Manning looked sublime.

He completed 10 straight passes before his final first-half toss — a Hail Mary heave — sailed out of the back of the end zone. Manning’s got a one-liner about that, too.

“I’m probably still going to get chewed out. Did you see that Hail Mary?” Manning said. “I (almost) threw it into the freaking” stands.

Texas schedule stays tough, with Georgia next

No joking about this: If Manning and his supporting cast play like this a few more times, the Longhorns can rally their way into the College Football Playoff.

Not that Manning’s ready to toast that thought yet, not with Georgia up next.

“Dawgs at their place is going to be no joke,” Manning said.

As Texas defensive end Ethan Burke put it, the playoff’s already begun for Texas. That’s the mentality any team saddled with two losses must have.

The playoff committee’s never selected a three-loss team. Could Texas become the first? Maybe. Its strength of schedule will help. But, that’s playing with fire. The only sure path for the Longhorns is to keep winning.

“It’s playoff football, before the playoffs. Everyone’s fighting for those 12 spots,” Burke said. “You’ve got to keep winning, no matter what.”

How Arch Manning impressed his coach

Coach Steve Sarkisian particularly loved Manning’s completions when he worked his way to secondary or tertiary reads. Those throws told Sark two things: Manning’s learning how to move through his progressions, and his offensive line gave him time to do it.

“I don’t know if we were doing that even three weeks ago,” Sarkisian said. “He’s really growing up before our eyes, and he’s making great decisions, and he’s throwing the ball accurately, and that’s why we were 7-for-11 on third down.”

Well, there’s one decision Manning probably wishes he could have back.

Did you see that viral photo that surfaced showing Manning in his GMC Denali talking to a police officer during a traffic stop?

Yep, it’s true. He got pulled over this week. Here’s what went down.

“It was a crosswalk, and it was a solid red, and no one was around, and I went,” Manning said.

Wait, if no one was around …

“I guess someone was around,” Manning said, with another hint of humor.

Indeed. At least two someones. The officer who pulled over Manning, and the person who snapped the viral photo.

“My first time getting pulled over in Austin,” Manning said. “Didn’t help that I didn’t have my wallet on me, so I didn’t have my license,”

Hello, viral photo.

“That was definitely weird,” Manning said of the photo making the rounds online.

Manning received a warning and was not ticketed, a Texas athletics official confirmed to USA TODAY.

Vanderbilt couldn’t stop Texas pass game

On Thursday, Manning got medical clearance to play after he spent the week in concussion protocol. He exited in overtime of Texas’ win against Mississippi State last weekend. By the next day, Manning felt confident he’d be OK to play against the Commodores.

He played up to all of his five-star hype, finally. Up to this point in the season, Manning’s legs had been his most reliable asset. He let his arm do the work in this one, and his receivers piled up yards after the catch against a flimsy Vanderbilt defense that suffered amnesia on how to tackle. Eight Texas receivers caught at least two passes.

And although Vanderbilt rallied to make the end of the game tenser than necessary, Manning could smile and joke afterward.

This is exactly the quarterback Texas needs in this critical November stretch run.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – It was eventually going to break bad. Only a matter of time and circumstance. 

Just like all things associated with former coach Billy Napier’s tenure at Florida. The inevitable unraveling was right on cue. 

So it should come as no surprise Georgia flexed, and Florida wilted and all that has defined nearly four years of incomprehensible incompetence in Gainesville — on and off the field — unfolded this time with an interim coach running a lost program. 

Same scene, different Saturday.

Georgia beat Florida again in this storied rivalry, but the story isn’t Georgia’s come-from-behind 24-20 victory and march to the College Football Playoff. It’s the death spiral of the Florida program. 

“Hats off to our players for not giving in,” said Florida interim coach Billy Gonzales. 

And he may as well have been DJ Durkin, or Randy Shannon or Greg Knox — former interim coaches at Florida over the previous 15 years who said the exact same thing while picking up the pieces from the guy fired before them. 

Only this time, this mistake, is the biggest of all. 

Once the elite of the sport, Florida has tumbled all the way to irrelevancy on the tail end of a brutal run of three and half seasons with Napier. The undoing — on and off the field — is as shocking as it is surreal.  

There’s a reason ESPN’s College Game Day show planted stakes in Salt Lake City for that riveting Utah-Cincinnati game instead of the World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party.

I mean, Utah and Cincinnati, for the love of Yormark.

The harsh truth is Florida doesn’t move the needle anymore, and has taken one of the sport’s greatest rivalries down with it. Empty seats, dysfunctional teams and for the first time since the 1980s, an interim coach in the marquee game on the schedule.

But the latest Florida stumble and ensuing reboot — the search for a fifth coach since 2011 — is more damaging than any other for a program that not long ago won three national titles in 13 seasons. Because in an ever-changing college football world, those who hesitate lose. 

This, everyone, is why what should be done eventually must be done immediately.

Why Napier should’ve been fired during the first half of last year’s disastrous start, and not last week. That could’ve been Lane Kiffin coaching a talented Florida team in the biggest game of the season.

Or Eli Drinkwitz. Or Jeff Brohm. Or, what the heck, at this point, Jon Gruden.

Instead of another interim coach in another difficult spot of trying to hold together a team, all because those in charge make poor decisions. And then double down.

Understand this: Florida will have a much more difficult time hiring Kiffin ― the one coach deep-pocket boosters and a rabid fan base badly want ― to rebuild the program, than it would’ve had last season.

A year ago, Kiffin failed to make the CFP after a late loss at Florida, a game that went a long way in Florida athletic director Scott Stricklin hiring Napier a second time. Because that’s what last year’s decision to keep Napier was. 

Instead of firing Napier, whose teams had an indelible track record of operational dysfunction despite being given every possible advantage, Stricklin essentially hired him again for a one-shot season. When Stricklin should’ve taken advantage of Kiffin’s position in 2024.

Kiffin was primed to move after a disappointing finish with a stacked roster, and would’ve been more likely to leave. Now Stricklin must deal with a surging Ole Miss team, and the uncertainty Kiffin will leave what he has built in Oxford for the mess in Gainesville. 

What’s worse, that uncertainty in the transfer portal world of free player movement could gut a talented roster. A roster that, despite the 22-24 record since 2022, can compete with most in the country. 

There was scant difference in talent between Georgia and Florida this time around, the first time Florida could claim that in more than a decade. Florida has better skill players on offense, and — I can’t believe I’m writing this — a better defensive line.

Give the Florida roster to Georgia coach Kirby Smart and his staff, and there’s a greater chance the Dawgs win their third national title since 2021. 

How many of those Florida players will wait to see if Stricklin can land Kiffin, or any other elite coach, before jumping into the transfer portal for more money and/or a chance to get away from a sinking ship?

Florida was playing on guts and guile Saturday, a group of talented players who have been coached poorly for the past three seasons but were finally unshackled for two weeks since the firing. They played loose and fast, and had Georgia on its heels for 50-plus minutes. 

They had the ball inside the Georgia 25 with six minutes to play and leading 20-17, and couldn’t close it out. Two poor play calls on 3rd- and 4th-and-short led to a turnover on downs. 

Then Georgia did what good teams — smartly-coached good teams — do, responding with a go-ahead touchdown drive and suffocating any hope of one of the biggest upsets in series history. And leaving Florida players stunned and in disbelief while walking off the turf at Everbank Field. 

“Whatever the situation, nothing stops,” said Florida defensive end Tyreak Sapp. “No matter if this helicopter crashes, we’re going to be there for each other.”

Because what else is there? It’s the same thing players said after the three previous failed hires (Will Muschamp, Jim McElwain, Dan Mullen), the same thing the previous three interim coaches said, too. 

Stay strong. Overcome challenges. Believe in the program. 

Want the lasting takeaway from a fifth straight Florida loss in the series? The Gators not only wasted a season with a loaded roster, it wasted an opportunity to have this team coached by Kiffin.

That may be the greatest unraveling of all. 

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

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The United States and China plan to establish military-to-military communications channels ‘to deconflict and deescalate’ potential problems, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said Saturday after talking with his Chinese counterpart.

In a post on X, Hegseth said he had a ‘positive meeting’ with Admiral Dong Jun, China’s Minister of National Defense, in the wake of President Donald Trump’s meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

During their talk, the two defense leaders agreed that the best path forward for the U.S. and China involves ‘peace, stability, and good relations.’

‘Admiral Dong and I also agreed that we should set up military-to-military channels to deconflict and deescalate any problems that arise. We have more meetings on that coming soon. God bless both China and the USA!’ Hegseth wrote, in part.

Earlier Saturday, Hegseth attended a separate meeting in Malaysia with defense leaders from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), where he urged them to push back against Beijing’s aggressive actions in the South China Sea.

‘China’s sweeping territorial and maritime claims in the South China Sea fly in the face of their commitments to resolve disputes peacefully,’ Hegseth said at the meeting, according to The Associated Press. 

‘We seek peace. We do not seek conflict. But we must ensure that China is not seeking to dominate you or anybody else,’ he added.

The South China Sea remains volatile with Beijing, the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei all claiming overlapping territories. 

China’s maritime fleet has frequently clashed with the Philippines in the disputed waters, with Chinese officials recently describing the country as a ‘troublemaker’ for staging naval and air drills with the U.S., Australia and New Zealand.

Hegseth defended the U.S. ally during the Saturday meeting by saying Beijing’s designation of the Scarborough Shoal – a territory seized from the Philippines in 2012 – as a ‘nature reserve’ ‘yet another attempt to coerce new and expanded territorial and maritime claims at your expense.’

The War Secretary then urged ASEAN to finalize the Code of Conduct with China and proposed creating a ‘shared maritime domain awareness’ network and rapid-response systems to deter provocations – measures he said would ensure that any member facing ‘aggression and provocation is not alone.’

Hegseth also welcomed plans for an ASEAN-U.S. maritime exercise in December aimed at strengthening coordination and safeguarding freedom of navigation.

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Colorado coach Deion Sanders benched starting quarterback Kaidon Salter during a game against Arizona.
Salter was benched after completing 11 of 15 passes for 49 yards, fumbling, and throwing an interception in the first half.
Backup quarterback Ryan Staub also threw an interception shortly after entering the game.

The Colorado football team hasn’t been nearly as good since starting quarterback Shedeur Sanders moved on to the NFL in April.

Sanders, now with the Cleveland Browns, got to see just how badly his former team has fallen without him Saturday night in Boulder. He watched from the sideline as his father, Colorado coach Deion Sanders, benched Shedeur’s replacement again in a 52-17 loss at home against Arizona.

Deion Sanders benched Kaidon Salter, Colorado’s regular starter at quarterback, near the end of the first half, when the Buffs trailed 38-7. Salter had completed 11-of-15 passes for 49 yards and one touchdown before halftime. But he also fumbled the ball and threw an interception, leading Sanders to put backup quarterback Ryan Staub in the game with 21 second left in the half.

By the time the game was over in Boulder, Colorado had used four quarterbacks and lost freshman quarterback Julian ‘JuJu’ Lewis to a hand injury with 1:03 left in the game. It’s not known how serious the injury is as the Buffs next play at West Virginia on Nov. 8. The loss dropped Colorado to 3-6 in Deion Sanders’ third season in Boulder.

After the game, Deion Sanders blamed himself.

‘We’re not getting it done,’ Deion Sanders said. ‘And that’s from lack of preparation, I suppose. That’s on me.’

Why was Shedeur Sanders at the Colorado game?

Shedeur Sanders surprised his father by visiting him in Boulder Saturday during an off week for the Browns. He renewed his former pregame ritual with his father by walking with him on the field before kickoff.

‘These shenanigans put a damper on it,’ Deion Sanders said. ‘I haven’t seen my son in a long time. Forget the game. Forget this. Forget that. I haven’t seen my son in a long time, so that was quite emotional for me, him surprising me today in the office.’

His presence at the homecoming game also served as a reminder of one of Colorado’s biggest problems this season: lackluster play at quarterback.

Deion Sanders finally puts in freshman QB Julian Lewis

Salter has been disappointing for Colorado except for a couple of games after transferring from Liberty in December.

Deion Sanders previously benched Salter in favor of Staub for a game at Houston in September. Colorado lost that game, 36-20. But since beating Iowa State on Oct. 11, the Buffs have hit new lows with Salter behind center. They’ve been outscored 81-7 in the first half of their past two games, including Saturday night at Folsom Field.

But things didn’t immediately get better with Staub behind center, either. In fact, they got worse. Staub threw an interception on the second play of the second half, his first pass of the game. Then after Staub threw another interception on his next pass, Sanders benched Staub in favor of freshman Lewis, who entered the game in the third quarter with Colorado losing, 45-7. Lewis responded by throwing a 59-yard touchdown pass to receiver Omarion Miller, helping cut Arizona’s lead to 45-14 with 10:13 left in the third quarter.

Will Colorado quarterback Julian Lewis redshirt this season?

Asked what led him to put Lewis into the game, Sanders said, ‘Common sense.’

It’s still possible Lewis could redshirt this season. He’s played in two games this season. He can play in up to four games and still redshirt, which would allow him to have four more seasons of college eligibility after this season instead of three. Sanders said that decision would be up to Lewis.

‘You got to understand, I’m for the kids,’ Sanders said. ‘If that’s what they want, that’s what they’ll get. I’m not gonna mandate.’

Fourth-string quarterback enters game for Colorado

Staub attempted just two passes before getting benched himself. Both of those passes were intercepted by Arizona. His replacement, 18-year-old Lewis, completed 9 of 17 passes for 121 yards and a touchdown but left the game with injury to his right throwing hand with 1:03 left. He was replaced by fourth-string quarterback Dominiq Ponder, a transfer from Bethune Cookman. Ponder attempted only one pass, which fell incomplete. He also was sacked for a loss of 8 yards.

The loss was Deion Sanders’ worst loss at home at Colorado and comes a week after Sanders suffered a 53-7 loss at Utah, the worst loss of his coaching career in college.

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

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Auburn football fans didn’t hold back their frustration after watching the latest setback of the Hugh Freeze era.

The loss for the Tigers is their fifth loss in their last six games and comes against a Kentucky squad that entered the night alongside them at the bottom of the SEC standings with a 1-5 record in conference play.

Freeze made a change at quarterback going into the Nov. 1 game by giving the start to Stanford transfer Ashton Daniels over Jackson Arnold. Daniels completed 13 of 28 passes for 108 yards and an interception in the first half while Auburn had just 117 total yards of offense.

Auburn didn’t improve much on offense in the second half, as Kentucky’s defense held the Tigers to zero points and just 124 total yards of offense — seven more yards than it had in the first half alone — in the final 30 minutes.

The loss for the Tigers drops them to 1-5 in SEC play this season and 6-16 in SEC play all-time under Freeze.

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The Los Angeles Dodgers are back-to-back World Series champions … and ready to celebrate.

The Dodgers won the title with a 5-4, 11-inning victory over the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 7 on Saturday.

It’s the first time the league has had a back-to-back champion since 2000.

While the celebration has already begun in Rogers Centre, the parade will officially take place back in Los Angeles on Monday and conclude at Dodger Stadium.

The stadium rally will also serve as a final goodbye for pitcher Clayton Kershaw, who is retiring after spending all 18 years of his (soon to be) Hall of Fame career with the Dodgers.

Tickets for the rally will go on sale Sunday at noon local time on the Dodgers’ website.

When is the Dodgers’ championship parade?

When: 11 a.m. local time (2 p.m. ET)
Where: Downtown Los Angeles

When is the Dodgers’ championship rally?

When: 12:15 p.m. local time (3:15 p.m. ET)
Where: Dodger Stadium (stadium gates open at 9 a.m. PT)

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TORONTO — Shohei Ohtani is not a mythical figure, but rather a real, live human being who simply does remarkable things on the baseball field. 

And the Toronto Blue Jays did not hesitate to ambush him in Game 7 of the World Series. 

Pitching on three days’ rest for the first time in his career, Ohtani looked wobbly from the start, and then Bo Bichette applied a lightning-fast knockout blow: A first-pitch, three-run homer that electrified Rogers Centre, gave the Blue Jays a 3-0 lead and a massive edge in a call-to-arms Game 7. 

It exited the bat at 110 mph, Rogers Centre reaching an ear-splitting noise level before Bichette’s first career postseason home run settled 442 feet away from home plate. The longtime Blue Jays cornerstone, hobbled by a knee injury that robbed him of the first two rounds of the playoffs, enjoyed the view, taking a few steps down the first base line before beginning his trot. 

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The Yellow Jackets were thrashed by the Wolfpack, who gained 583 total yards and were the first team to score more than 29 points against Georgia Tech this season. Quarterback CJ Bailey was prolific, passing for 340 yards with two touchdowns.

The loss muddies the ACC championship game race, as Virginia now leads the standings without a loss in conference play. Georgia Tech joins Pitt, Louisville, Duke and SMU as teams with one loss in conference play.

Georgia Tech has remaining conference games against Boston College and Pitt and will hope not to be dragged into tiebreaker scenarios for a spot in the conference title game. The Yellow Jackets end the season with a chance at a massive win against in-state rival Georgia, as well.

Georgia Tech shouldn’t drop too far in the US LBM Coaches Poll, despite the loss. Here’s a look at where the Yellow Jackets might fall in the updated top 25 on Nov. 2.

Georgia Tech football ranking: Where will Yellow Jackets fall in top 25?

Georgia Tech shouldn’t take too much of a tumble in the US LBM Coaches Poll ahead of Week 11, as NC State marked its first loss of the season. It’s hard to see the Yellow Jackets staying ahead of Ole Miss, who has faced a tough SEC schedule, or BYU, who is still undefeated and on a bye.

But with No. 9 Miami and No. 11 Vanderbilt both suffering losses in Week 10, Georgia Tech could still be as high as No. 12 in the polls, ahead of No. 12 Notre Dame, which has two losses.

There is a chance Georgia Tech is viewed below Notre Dame and one-loss Texas Tech, who came in at No. 13 in the latest poll. In that case, GT would be right next to No. 15 Virginia, another top contender in the ACC.

Prediction: No. 14

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Toronto Maple Leafs defenseman Chris Tanev was taken off the ice on a stretcher after a collision on Saturday.
The incident occurred during his first game back after recovering from a concussion.
Tanev was transported to a Philadelphia hospital for tests but was reported to be moving around.

He was playing his first game since recovering from a concussion. He was hit in the third period by the Philadelphia Flyers’ Matvei Michkov, who received a two-minute minor for interference.

Tanev was face down on the ice and medical personnel called for a stretcher. He gave a thumbs up as he was wheeled off the ice.

Maple Leafs coach Craig Berube told reporters that Tanev was undergoing tests at a Philadelphia hospital. He said the defenseman was moving around and it was uncertain if he would stay in Philadelphia or fly with the team.

Tanev had missed four games with his previous injury, which occurred during a collision against the New Jersey Devils on Oct. 21.

He told reporters on Friday that the injury was a concussion and that he has had concussions before.

‘When you’re stunned and sort of confused, it’s not ideal,’ he said. ‘I felt really quite normal soon after (the latest), which was nice. You go through the protocols and the steps and whatever’s necessary to get back to play.’

Tanev had an assist on Jake McCabe’s goal before he was injured. The Maple Leafs won 5-2.

Tanev was the second NHL defenseman to leave the game on Saturday after a scary incident.

The San Jose Sharks’ Timothy Liljegren was hit by a deflected puck while sitting on the bench and needed assistance getting to the dressing room.

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