After Wednesday’s decision by the Supreme Court, the collegiate sports model, as it were, is about to go on trial. It’s about time.
Author: Dan Wolken, USA TODAY
Opinion: Program-worst defensive performance vs. North Carolina exposes Miami as a fraud
The Miami Hurricanes entered Saturday at 8-1 but they were run off the field by North Carolina, surrendering a program-worst 778 yards in the process.
Opinion: 5 burning questions as college football coaching carousel speeds up
Despite the COVID-19 pandemic and budget crunches nearly everywhere, schools seem willing to pay big buyouts to make coaching changes this year.
Opinion: As college basketball tips amid a swirling pandemic, few believe it’s a good idea
Games are being canceled seemingly by the minute and there’s no end in sight as the COVID-19 pandemic spikes again and the CDC recommends no travel.
Michael Jordan’s auctioned sneakers from 1991 NBA Finals to give Sonny Vaccaro closure
A pair of Air Jordans that Michael Jordan gifted to Sonny Vaccaro in 1991 signified the end of Vaccaro’s relationship with Nike and MJ.
Atlanta Hawks and Falcons team up to open early voting site for key Georgia runoff
The Atlanta Hawks turned their arena into an early voting site for the Nov. 3 election and they’re doing it again for the Georgia runoff elections.
Opinion: Michigan loss to Michigan State is worst and most surprising of Jim Harbaugh era
Despite entering the game as a three-touchdown favorite over rival Michigan State, Michigan got out-played at home in a 27-24 loss.
Opinion: Michigan’s latest loss is more reason to believe Jim Harbaugh can’t win big there
Jim Harbaugh is in his sixth year at Michigan, and what once seemed inevitable may never happen as the Wolverines sustain another disappointing loss.
Opinion: While Tennessee Vols are stalled under Jeremy Pruitt, Rutgers has new life with Greg Schiano
Under Jeremy Pruitt, the Tennessee Vols aren’t making progress against college football’s elite. Meanwhile Greg Schiano has Rutgers on the upswing.
Opinion: Big Ten football set for return — and collision course with COVID-19 surge
Big Ten presidents opted to reverse course and allow football to go ahead in 2020. Now the conference will start play as COVID-19 surges in Midwest.