Sunday, December 21, 2025

College Football Playoffs Round 1 Recap


If any of you have questioned why I have authority to write a blog, I would like to point out that I went 3/4 on my first round picks this year and am currently ranked right around 200,000 in the ESPN bracket pool. Not too shabby if you ask me. 


Alabama at Oklahoma 

The 2025 College Football Playoff started off with a bang with the Friday night showdown between the Crimson Tide and the Sooners. A rematch of the mid-November game in Tuscaloosa, Alabama looked to get revenge for their only home loss of the year. Meanwhile, Oklahoma looked to keep it rolling as they came into the game winners of four straight. Alabama hadn’t lost to the same team twice in one season since the 19th century, and Oklahoma looked to spoil that streak.

The game started slowly as an early Sooner drive stalled, and Alabama’s offense picked up right where it left off two weeks ago—stuck in the mud. Alabama’s first three possessions resulted in just nine plays, 12 yards, and a whopping four minutes and four seconds off the clock. Meanwhile, John Mateer was putting on a show for the home crowd, one the likes of which hadn’t been seen since before his hand surgery. Two medium-length darts, capped off by an eight-yard designed run, saw Mateer strut into the end zone to give Oklahoma a 7–0 lead. A bad punt soon after led to good field position and resulted in a field goal, making it 10–0. Mateer then orchestrated another 63-yard drive that was capped off by a seven-yard touchdown pass to Isaiah Sategna to put the Sooners up 17–0.

The Palace on the Prairie could not have been more rocking. Alabama still looked stuck offensively, while Oklahoma seemed to have turned a corner in finding ways to move the ball and score. Lotzier Brooks decided to come alive and announce his presence to the Oklahoma defense—and the Alabama offense, for that matter. Brooks had three catches for 44 yards, capped off a nine-play, 75-yard touchdown drive. His final catch came on a crucial fourth-and-two from the Oklahoma 10-yard line. Catching the ball right at the sticks, Brooks unleashed a series of jukes and jabs to wind his way into the end zone and put the Tide on the board.

Oklahoma’s offense then stalled after an early first down, and a dropped snap on the punt out of nowhere set Alabama up with prime field position. Oklahoma’s stout defense held strong and forced a 35-yard field goal, keeping a touchdown between them and the Tide. With the ball and the lead and just over two minutes until halftime, Oklahoma looked poised to close the half with control and head to the locker room firmly in charge.

Except that didn’t happen. In fact, the worst possible thing happened for the Sooners.

On second-and-13, Mateer dropped back and fired to the short side of the field looking for Keontez Lewis. The problem was that Mateer threw a hitch while Lewis ran a go route. Alabama defensive back Zabien Brown read it perfectly and capitalized on the communication miscue. Brown took it 50 yards to the house, swinging all the momentum to the Crimson Tide.

Lotzier Brooks stayed hot in the second half, hauling in a 30-yard dime from Ty Simpson on Alabama’s second possession of the third quarter to give the Tide a 24–17 lead. At that point, Alabama had scored 24 unanswered points and showed no signs of slowing down. A field goal on their next possession made it 27–17, and thanks to two Oklahoma three-and-outs, Alabama had rattled off 27 straight points and taken a chokehold on the game.

With 15 minutes left, it was do-or-die time for Oklahoma. They needed a score, or time would become their biggest enemy. Mateer picked himself up and rose to the occasion, leading a 75-yard, eight-play drive capped off by a 37-yard touchdown pass. The energy returned to the stadium, and the crowd had reason to believe again. A stop could put Oklahoma right back in position to take the lead.

After giving up a long pass to start the drive, a huge sack on third down was exactly what the Sooners needed. The defense had done its job and handed the ball back to the offense.

The offense didn’t want it.

They gained one yard on three plays and punted it right back to Alabama.

That punt didn’t make it out of Oklahoma territory, giving Alabama a short field that they turned into six just four plays later. Now down 34–24 with under 10 minutes to play, Oklahoma needed to move quickly. Unfortunately, the problem that plagued them all season returned at the worst possible time. Their offense couldn’t find any rhythm. A three-and-out featured a massive sack on Mateer, forcing another punt. A promising drive on the next possession stalled inside the red zone. Still, down 10, a field goal would help.

Tate Sandell had been reliable all year, entering the game 23-for-24, with his lone miss coming back in September.

He missed.

With no timeouts remaining, that miss felt like the nail in the coffin. It didn’t matter that Alabama failed to gain more yards and punted again. It didn’t even matter when Sandell missed another kick. Alabama could simply run out the clock and shift its focus to Indiana and the Rose Bowl.

While I’m not surprised by the outcome, I am surprised by the road that got us there. The drastically different starts from each team weren’t on my bingo card. I expected Alabama to start slowly, but Oklahoma hadn’t shown anything to suggest they would start fast. Offensive coordinator Ben Arbuckle threw the kitchen sink in the first quarter, and it worked. Whether he got conservative afterward or Alabama’s defense adjusted is hard to say. Alabama struggled to generate pressure early while rushing four, but those same four were getting home consistently in the second half. It almost felt like Oklahoma ran out of gas midway through the second quarter.

Alabama, meanwhile, started exactly as expected. They had -3 rushing yards in the first half and were only tied thanks to a blocked punt and a defensive touchdown. Without those, they’re likely down double digits. Something clicked in the second half as the Tide ripped off their longest run since playing ULM—though it was still only 30 yards. Ty Simpson never looked fully comfortable, missing wide-open receivers, and Alabama’s pass catchers must have coated their gloves in baby oil. Open, covered—it didn’t matter. Balls were hitting their hands and bouncing off all night.

Speaking of Alabama receivers, Ryan Williams needs to be studied. Williams had three targets, one catch, and five yards, along with at least one drop. His disappearance is mind-boggling. From one of the most explosive players in the country to a complete non-factor in a playoff game is stunning. Germie Bernard also finished with just three catches. If not for Horton and Brooks, Alabama’s season would already be over.

Credit where it’s due—Alabama was the better team. But they have some serious soul-searching to do before their next matchup. It’s wild to see a Kalen DeBoer–led team struggle this much offensively. As DeBoer prepares to face the program that gave him his first Power Five coordinator job, he needs to iron out the issues quickly—or risk getting exposed once again on the biggest stage.

Monday, December 15, 2025

College Football Playoff Preview

Photo courtesy of Todd Van Emst/Heisman Trust/Pool image

This post will dive deeper into all of the first-round playoff games and lay out my full bracket prediction. Think you have better ball knowledge than me? Join my group and put your knowledge to the test.


Heisman Trophy 

Fernando Mendoza is the 2025 Heisman Trophy winner, becoming the first player from Indiana to win the award. Mendoza finished with 643 first-place votes, the largest margin of victory since Joe Burrow won in 2019. Diego Pavia finished second with 189 first-place votes, while Jeremiyah Love came in third with 46.

While Mendoza didn’t put up the gaudy numbers that past winners have, something I pointed out as a trend two weeks ago, he did lead Indiana to a perfect 13-0 record and a Big Ten championship. The average viewer couldn’t name another player on Indiana’s offense, and that alone tells you who the leader of that team truly was.

This also creates a fun footnote in Heisman history: the last four Heisman winners have all played in the Pac-12 at some point in their careers. Long live the Pac-12—and shoutout to this year’s Pac-12 champions, Washington State.

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Conference Championship Week Recap

Photo courtesy of Michael Reaves / Getty Images

The playoff is set, the conferences have been won, and now we wait for the second year of the 12-team format to commence. Let’s take a look at how each team won its conference and talk about the 12 teams that made the cut — and, more importantly, those that didn’t.


The Big 12 Conference  

The Big 12 Championship game led off an action-packed Saturday of college football from AT&T Stadium in Texas. BYU looked to avenge its only loss of the year—a fairly ugly one against Texas Tech. This was a true win-or-go-home game for the Cougars, and they couldn’t afford another slow start like the one they had back in November in Lubbock.

After forcing a punt on their first defensive possession, the Cougars drove 90 yards in 14 plays, perfectly split 7–7 between run and pass, capped off by an LJ Martin touchdown run to open the scoring and give BYU a 7–0 lead—something they never had in Lubbock. Texas Tech answered with a long drive of its own, but two false start penalties inside the BYU 15 stalled the possession and forced the Red Raiders to settle for three.

BYU now had the opportunity to continue their early momentum. Instead, they went three-and-out after falling behind the sticks immediately. Texas Tech took that defensive boost and rode it into a 33-yard touchdown pass to Coy Eakin. Behren Morton threw a beautiful ball to the front corner of the end zone, where Eakin reeled it in. The confusing part was the officiating: the side judge threw his hat—signaling the receiver had gone out of bounds on his own—then appeared to miss potential contact downfield, and ultimately spotted the ball at the 1-yard line despite Eakin never coming close to stepping out. It looked like Eakin might have gone out of bounds ten yards into his route, but it was unclear whether he was forced out or simply ran out on his own. Regardless, it was a great throw and catch, wrapped in classic Big 12 officiating chaos.

BYU’s offense still couldn’t find traction, holding the ball two more times in the half and managing just one first down each possession. One of those drives featured probably the second-worst fake punt in BYU history: on 4th-and-7, punter Sam Vander Haar rolled out under pressure and attempted a pass into triple coverage. It fell incomplete, and even if it had been caught, it would have been five yards short. The play had no chance from the start.

It didn’t immediately cost BYU—Texas Tech missed a field goal—but the Cougars’ third straight unsuccessful drive allowed Tech to tack on a field goal before halftime, making it 13–7. BYU wasn’t out of it, and they were set to receive the second-half kickoff.

The Cougars seemed to regain their early energy, driving into Texas Tech territory before Will Ferrin hooked a 45-yard field goal. BYU’s defense responded, forcing an incompletion on 4th-and-2 inside the red zone, and handed the ball back still down just one score.

Then the wheels fell off.

Three plays into the next drive, linebacker Ben Roberts batted a pass into the air and intercepted it. Texas Tech scored on the next play. After two punts one, by both teams, the Cougars had the ball again. On their second play, a slow-developing play-action pass left Bear Bachmeier exposed, and he was hit from behind, losing the football. BYU held Tech to a field goal, but on the very next snap, Bachmeier threw another interception—again to Roberts, this time on a one-handed grab over the middle. Texas Tech touchdown. And on BYU’s next play from scrimmage, LJ Martin took a check-down pass, found a crease, and then fumbled the ball right back. Another Tech field goal followed.

In the blink of an eye, BYU went from trailing by six to trailing by 27. Ball game.

Texas Tech caps off arguably the best season in program history and secures a first-round bye in the College Football Playoff by winning its first Big 12 title.