Jarmo Kekalainen makes his first Sabres change, firing associate GM Jason Karmanos

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Jarmo Kekalainen made his first change sincetaking over controlof the Buffalo Sabres' hockey operations department, firing associate general manager Jason Karmanos on Saturday.

Karmanos was in his fifth season with the organization, with one of his primary responsibilities being running the top minor league affiliate, the Rochester Americans of the AHL. The son of Hartford Whalers/Carolina Hurricanes owner Peter Karmanos, Jason got his start with that organization in 1998 and won the Stanley Cup twice during a stint in Pittsburgh.

"We thank Jason for his contributions to the Buffalo Sabres and Rochester Americans and wish him the best in his future endeavors," Kekalainen said in a statement.

Owner Terry Pegula promoted Kekalainen to GM uponfiring Kevyn Adamson Monday. The 59-year-old Finn spent just over a decade in that role with the Columbus Blue Jackets from 2013-24.

The Sabres have the NHL's longest playoff drought at 14 seasons dating to their last appearance in 2011. They're in last place in the Atlantic Division and on track to make it 15 years in a row.

AP NHL:https://www.apnews.com/hub/NHL

Jarmo Kekalainen makes his first Sabres change, firing associate GM Jason Karmanos

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Jarmo Kekalainen made his first change sincetaking over controlof the Buffalo Sabres' hockey ope...
Is there a secret to playing college sports? This boys coach says yes

I am brave.

Linda Martindale wasn't brave, at least she didn't think she was after she had been hired as a varsity boys basketball coach.

"Once the game started, I was fine," says Martindale, now in her sixth season leading Lincoln-Sudbury (MA), "but walking into the gym and people thinking I'm the scorekeeper or whatever, I had to sort of overcome this feeling of, 'Do I belong in the gym?' "

She made the three words her mantra, and she convinced herself shewasbrave. You need to be as an athlete, or a coach, in today's world of youth sports.

"I have fond memories of my athletic career, but I also know there was a lot of heartache and it was very difficult," says Martindale, who played Division II basketball at Alaska-Anchorage and in the old Pac-10 at Arizona in the late 1980s and early 1990s. "But nowadays, it's totally different. Your whole career is splashed all over social media."

Martindale's father devoted his life to coaching baseball and football, driving her and her three siblings to be punctual and polite. He was hard on them, she says, but led with love.

"If I had a bad game, the people in the stands knew and my parents knew, and that was it," Martindale tells USA TODAY Sports. "You'd come home and your parents would say, 'How did the game go?' You could self-report that. Easy to deal with.

"My oldest son would literally get DMs from strangers that say horrible things if he missed a free throw in the clutch. The landscape is very different. And it obviously trickles down to youth."

Martindale gotcertified as a mental fitness coachto help ease the pressure on her three sons and one daughter (all of them have played college sports) but also other young athletes.

She works with sports teams at Division I Holy Cross and D-III Curry College, as well as individual athletes. She says there's a secret beyond the physical component to playing sports in college.

<p style=Magic Johnson
college dominance: Led Michigan State to the 1979 NCAA Championship, defeating Larry Bird's Indiana State.
NBA: 5× NBA champion in 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987 and 1988 with the Los Angeles Lakers. 3× NBA Finals MVP in 1980, 1982 and 1987. 3× NBA Most Valuable Player in 1987, 1989 and 1990. 12× NBA All-Star: 1980, 1982-1992. 2× NBA All-Star Game MVP in 1990 and 1992. Inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Carmelo Anthony college dominance: In his lone season (2003), led Syracuse to a national championship and earned Final Four Most Outstanding Player honors. Averaged 22.2 points and 10 rebounds per game as a freshman.
NBA: 10× NBA All-Star. 2012–13 NBA scoring champion, averaging 28.7 points per game.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

Before NBA glory: How Jordan, Bird, Magic and Curry ruled in college

Magic Johnsoncollege dominance:Led Michigan State to the 1979 NCAA Championship, defeating Larry Bird's Indiana State.NBA:5× NBA champion in 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987 and 1988 with the Los Angeles Lakers. 3× NBA Finals MVP in 1980, 1982 and 1987. 3× NBA Most Valuable Player in 1987, 1989 and 1990. 12× NBA All-Star: 1980, 1982-1992. 2× NBA All-Star Game MVP in 1990 and 1992. Inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002.

We offer 10 ways, through consultation with Martindale, for parents to help athletes get there.

YOUTH SPORTS SURVIVAL GUIDE:Pre-order Coach Steve's upcoming book for young athletes and their parents

1. Develop the coach in your head: It's the best one you'll ever have

When Martindale walked into the gym feeling the male eyes on her, she felt she needed an inner coach.

Your coach on the court or field will tell you what to do but, Martindale says, the one in your head will kick you in the butt to help get you where you need to go.

Jenny Levy, who has won four national titles as North Carolina's women's lacrosse coach,believes so strongly in an inner coachshe likes when her players form their own mantras.

"Confidence looks good on you," she heard her players say to each other in 2013, the year they broke through.

"A lot of coaches will say, 'This is our saying,' " Levy told Martindale on Martindale's 'Game Changers'podcast. "And I think that's fine – to each his own – but I actually let our team organically come up with their own little things. This is the team having a good time together."

The inner voice tells you it doesn't matter what anyone else thinks, only what you do.

This is my time.

This is where I belong.

To come up with your own mantra, Martindale says, ask yourself why you play a sport? Look for performance cues to grind that thought into you.

"It's not fun to lose, but it's still really fun to compete and to play," Martindale says. "OK, good, let's start with that. So at least you can say it's not fun to lose, but it's really fun to prepare for the game. We've now established that the majority of the time is fun. Now we can get through the parts that aren't fun."

Was that 'fun'?How Coco Gauff's tough US Open embodies what the word means

2. We can learn how to handle the hard

Kids respond to the truth. We don't need to always sugarcoat it.

Instead of saying, "It's not so hard," acknowledge that something is.

Maybe you're afraid that you might lose or you're going to make a fool of yourself in front of everybody.

"I'm happy that you can articulate a fear," Martindale might tell an athlete. "Now, let's squash it. What are you really afraid of? Is it really embarrassing to lose, or is it embarrassing not to play at all?

"It would be embarrassing if you threw yourself on the floor and screamed and cried in the middle of the game. But nobody thinks it's embarrassing that you sat on the bench, cheered on your team, and then fought another day to try to get some minutes."

Linda Martindale instructs her team.

3. Teach your kid how to build resilience to meet challenges head on

A current role doesn't mean an ultimate role. Martindale goes back to Tom Brady.

He was once buried deep on Michigan's depth chart. But he focused on nailing reps he got in practice. He was at game speed when he found himself starting.

"As parents, we say, 'I don't think you should have to be the backup quarterback,' " Martindale says. " 'I think you should bethequarterback.' This is not helping. What you need to do is crush being the backup. And then your time comes and you're ready instead of spending so much time worrying that you don't have the role that you want (and) you're not ready for it."

Another of her podcast guests,Luke Avdalovic, a former walk-on basketball player at Northern Arizona University, told her: "I had a teammate named JoJo Anderson and he told me, 'If you want to find a role into this team, find one thing that you're really good at. Make sure you're head and shoulders better than every single other person on the team. Then they can't take you off the floor.' "

Avdalovic became a top sharpshooter who rose to the NBA G-League.

4. 'You can't be a shooter if you can't miss'

Avdalovic has shot so much over the years he feels he's never really in a slump. Some days he shoots better than others, but that is just the law of averages.

"You can't be a pitcher if you can't pitch poorly," Martindale says. "You can't be a shooter if you can't miss. It's just not possible (to) be perfect. So what do you do when you're imperfect?"

The next time your son or daughter has a bad game, ask them, "Did you compete hard?"

You don't want them to lose or fail but they need to know how to do both. As parents, and as coaches, our best support can come out of struggles.

5. We can only get the 'yips' if we vocalize them

You know the term if you're a baseball fan. Suddenly, Steve Sax or Chuck Knoblauch can't make a routine throw from second to first base, or Rick Ankiel can't throw a strike.

"Yips is not a real thing," Martindale says.

Struggles come alive, she says, when we say them out loud. Instead, if you're a parent or a coach, tell your athlete: "I really believe in you. Just keep throwing, you'll get it back, you'll find a rhythm."

When kids feel deep-rooted support, they have more confidence in themselves.

6. We don't have to be good at everything

Martindale says today's world for young athletes is like taking the SATs while your score is being put on a scoreboard.

Sometimes, it seems, we expect our kids to be good at everything. Martindale asks the ones with whom she works, "What class are you good at?"

She doesn't necessarily mean classes in which they have an "A," but the ones they enjoy most.

Sometimes it takes looking at things through a less critical lens. We have an "A" in science, but we enjoy the challenge of English Lit, in which we have a B-, which energizes us to try and bring up the grade.

7. 'It's not your family': Parents are the ultimate artery of support

Eugene Glisky, Martindale's father, had his ashes buried on the field where he coached near Toronto. She suspects he changed the lives of many young men.

But she stops short of calling a team a family.

"When a coach says to a parent, 'I'm gonna treat your son or daughter like my own,' I want to say, 'No, thank you. I don't need you to treat my son like he's your own,' " Martindale says. "He has a great father. What I really want you to do is treat him like a player and a human being.

"It's a team, which is amazing and Ilovemy kid being part of a team. But it's not a family. Why? Because what happens when your family cuts you?"

There are times when we need to be Coach, and times when we need to be Mom or Dad. Martindale had to be Coach when Judson, her oldest who now plays basketball for Manchester Basketball Club in the United Kingdom, came out of a game when he was younger and looked at her like, "Why are you pulling me?

He threw his water bottle, and she turned and said: "You can take your sneakers off. You're done."

The same coach, though, drove him home from a different game, criticizing him for what he didn't do while failing to realize he was sick.

"So many examples of total failure by me," she says. "What kind of mother would be talking to their kid about some offensive set when clearly they needed a mother?"

8. 'Your influence is not neutral, parents'; don't disrupt a happy kid

Levy, North Carolina's women's lacrosse coach, does parent Zoom calls. Before the first one, she asked her players what they wanted her to tell them.

"They said, 'We don't want to talk about the game at the tailgate after,' " Levy told Martindale. " 'We don't want any parent to have this sad conversation after the wins because their kid didn't play. We want the parents to sit together. We want them to be positive on the sideline.' "

Levy says the players gave her a Letterman top 10 of parent no-no's, which she shared on the Zoom.

"I think they were pretty shocked," says Levy, who coaches her daughter, Kate, on the team. "Our kids were like, 'Last year was not OK. This is what we want and this is what we need this year.'

"And then if we saw it, I had permission from our players to call the parent and say, 'Hey, you're at the tailgate and your behavior was below the line for our program.'

"What if I acted like that as a parent? What if I did that in the middle of a tailgate?"

Levy's point: A kid could be completely happy but if the parent is unhappy with their role, then the kid's unhappy. And if the parent isn't feeling like their kid is getting a fair shake, or they're being really negative toward coaches or teammates, the kid internalizes the feeling.

"Your influence is not neutral, parents," Levy says.

9. We can use even a little bit of winning to fuel us

During a clip Martindale shared of her speaking to athletes, she says, "There has to be wins in there. Otherwise, you can't go an entire season and be like, 'If we don't win a game, this whole season is a waste.' "

She is not necessarily talking about checks in the "W" column as much as what we perceive as personal wins. Maybe you tell a teammate you loved the way he blocked a punt or moved into position on defense. If we don't have wins, even within losses, you don't learn how to win.

Youth sports 'crisis':Congress addresses big business in youth sports. Can we fix it?

10. So what's the secret sauce?

Martindale believes there are five pillars of mental fitness: 1. Staying in the moment; 2. Controlling the controllables; 3. Seeing mistakes as opportunities; 4. Not judging yourself (or others) too harshly and 5. Comparison (positively).

She says she was once a failure at all of them. Has she since learned a special ingredient we need to have to play college sports?

Martindale thinks Angela Duckworth, director of the Penn-WhartonBehavior Change for Good Initiative, said it best.

"It's grit," Martindale has said. "I'm obsessed with grit, because we know it's a single defining characteristic of successful people.

"Can you get up after you get knocked down? The athletes who are successful at every level of college, I think, have this kind of dog mentality that is about grit. And of course, you have to be skilled and you have to be athletic but when we really look at who performs best when it counts,it's people who have failed. Over and over and over. And then now they succeed."

We can't beat our kids up over mistakes. Let them hear the voice in their head that gives them the grace to move forward from them.

Then, as Martindale says: "Watch them fail and then watch what they do after they fail."

Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons' baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His Coach Steve column is posted weekly.For his past columns, click here.

Got a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a column? Email him atsborelli@usatoday.com

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Boys coach Linda Martindale has secret to being a college player

Is there a secret to playing college sports? This boys coach says yes

I am brave. Linda Martindale wasn't brave, at least she didn't think she was after she had been hired as...
Amid Michigan rumors, Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham signs contract extension with Sun Devils

Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham will be staying with the Sun Devils.

Dillingham has agreed to a contract extension after his third season in charge,the school announced on Saturday.Dillingham, 35, had been mentioned as a top candidate for the vacant head-coaching position atMichiganfollowingthe firing of Sherrone Moore.

Arizona State went 8-4 in 2025 despite not having QB Sam Leavitt for five games. Leavitt, who could enter the transfer portal in January, played in just seven games after he was one of the Big 12's breakout stars in 2024.

The Sun Devils made theCollege Football Playoffafter winning the Big 12 a year ago. ASU went 11-3 and lost the Peach Bowl toTexasafter Leavitt threw for over 2,800 yards and Cam Skattebo — the fifth-place finisher in the 2024 Heisman Trophy voting — rushed for over 1,700 yards.

HE ISN'T GOING ANYWHERE, so it's time to IGNITE 🔱The power of Sun Devil Nation is unmatched. Every decision to engage, show up, invest, and give back adds up. Join us now:https://t.co/RGvrWGPJWZpic.twitter.com/y5YL6WJTTe

— Arizona State Sun Devils (@TheSunDevils)December 20, 2025

An ASU alum, Dillingham improved ASU by eight wins in his second season. Arizona State hadn't won 11 games in a season since 1996 when Jake Plummer led the Sun Devils to the Rose Bowl.

Before going to Arizona State, Dillingham was an offensive coordinator at Auburn, Florida State andOregon. His offensive pedigree made him an appealing candidate for many Michigan fans given the presence of five-star quarterback Bryce Underwood. The Michigan native started as a freshman in 2025 after choosing the Wolverines over LSU.

With Dillingham's extension, it appears Michigan will need to broaden its search for a head coach. Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer had also been mentioned as a potential target, but DeBoer has publicly stated he isn't going anywhere, andAlabama won 34-24 over Oklahoma on Friday nightin the College Football Playoff to advance to the Rose Bowl.

Michigan is looking for a coach after firing Moore with cause last week. Moore was fired following evidence he had an inappropriate relationship with a staffer and was arrested hours later after allegedly going to the staffer's house after his firing. Moore has been charged with felony home invasion and two misdemeanors and has a January court date.

Moore was Michigan's offensive coordinator before succeeding Jim Harbaugh ahead of the 2024 season. After Michigan won the national championship in 2023, the Wolverines won 17 games in Moore's tenure.

Amid Michigan rumors, Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham signs contract extension with Sun Devils

Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham will be staying with the Sun Devils. Dillingham has agreed to a contract ex...
Timberwolves' Chris Finch ejected after berating official less than 6 minutes into win over Thunder

Four Minnesota Timberwolves staffers needed to hold Chris Finch back as the sixth-year head coach went in for more.

Finch was still giving an official an earful after being ejected less than six minutes into Friday night's 112-107 win over the Oklahoma City Thunder. He erupted after a no-call against Julius Randle, who was stripped following an offensive rebound at the 6:23 mark of the first quarter.

Minnesota didn't get a whistle on a layup attempt from fellow Wolves star Anthony Edwards earlier in the possession.

chris finch ejected; thunder vs timberwolvespic.twitter.com/E0aeJa72YU

— ◇ (@F0RGIAT0)December 20, 2025

After the ball was stolen from Randle, Finch threw up his hands in frustration. Then he drifted onto the court. As the Thunder brought the ball up the floor, play was whistled dead because Finch continued on to get up close and let the official know about his discontent.

As the broadcast showed Edwards arguing with another official, Finch could be seen in the background still irate about the situation.

After he was tossed, Finch reversed course from a route toward the bench back toward the official. He ran his mouth and pointed his finger while four Wolves staffers held him back.

Eventually, Finch made his way to the locker room to the tune of cheers from the Minnesota crowd that was equally upset with the officiating.

The reigning NBA champion Thunder, who fell to 25-3 on the season, defeated the Timberwolves in last season's Western Conference finals.

Oklahoma City has drawn criticism for receiving favorable whistles during its recent run of enormous success. There's no denying the Thunder's dominance, however.

OKC entered Friday night with an average margin of victory of 16.9 points, by far the best in the NBA this seasonand a mark that would be the best of all time if the Thunder maintain it.

Timberwolves' Chris Finch ejected after berating official less than 6 minutes into win over Thunder

Four Minnesota Timberwolves staffers needed to hold Chris Finch back as the sixth-year head coach went in for more. ...
Courtesy Chase Brown Sydney and Chase Brown on Oct. 27, 2024

Courtesy Chase Brown

NEED TO KNOW

  • Twins Chase and Sydney Brown grew up in poverty with their young mother in Canada, sometimes living between their grandmother's home, and briefly in shelters

  • Now NFL players, the brothers share with PEOPLE how those challenges taught them to appreciate their success even more

  • "Their ability to endure everything that is uncomfortable makes me proud," their mother tells PEOPLE

Before twins Chase and Sydney Brown were in the NFL — Chase for the Cincinnati Bengals and Sydney for the Philadelphia Eagles — the competitive brothers dreamed of playing in the league.

The 25-year-old athletes experienced a tumultuous childhood, living with their grandmother in London, Ontario, and briefly, in a homeless shelter. Born to a single teenage mom — who, along with her gifted sons, realized that football was the brothers' best path out of poverty — the twins left home at 16 to play at a private school in Florida, later becoming standout college players before being drafted into the NFL in 2023.

"They've pushed each other every day of their lives," their mother Raechel Brown, 43, tells PEOPLE in this week's issue. "Their ability to endure everything that is uncomfortable makes me proud."

Courtesy Chase Brown Chase and Sydney Brown with their mom Raechel

Courtesy Chase Brown

From the start, life was a struggle for the identical twins. Their father, Darren Isaac — who had a short career in the Canadian Football League — wasn't a presence in their lives.

And a chronic illness made steady work difficult for their mom, forcing the struggling family, which included younger sister Mya, now 13, to constantly move from one dwelling to the next, or stay with Raechel's mother.

But the one thing the boys had going for them — aside from formidable athletic skills — was their tight relationship. "We were always together and had each other to count on when we were having hard times at home," says Sydney, who started playing flag football, along with Chase, at 7.

J. Kim/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty  Chase and Sydney Brown

J. Kim/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty

Now, the brothers — who purchased a home for their mom and grandmother in London, Ontario — say their difficult upbringing helped them appreciate their success that much more. "I think it was a hidden blessing. It just makes us appreciate things in a deeper way," says Sydney.

They also have some hard-won advice for anyone trying to pursue their passion. "Just keep pushing," says Chase, who became a father in January (with girlfriend Jazmyn Brock) to a son named Oceanz. "And don't buy into other people telling you it's not possible."

Sydney adds, "When times got tough and people said we couldn't, we always believed we could. We always kept faith in the process and faith in each other."

Read the original article onPeople

Twin Brothers Chase & Sydney Brown Grew Up in Poverty. Now NFL Stars, They Reveal Their 'Hidden Blessing' (Exclusive)

Courtesy Chase Brown NEED TO KNOW Twins Chase and Sydney Brown grew up in poverty with their young mother in Canada, sometimes living bet...
NORMAN, OKLAHOMA - DECEMBER 19: Lotzeir Brooks #17 of the Alabama Crimson Tide runs the ball after a catch during the second quarter against the Oklahoma Sooners during 2025 College Football Playoff First Round Game at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium on December 19, 2025 in Norman, Oklahoma.  (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images)

No. 9Alabamaripped off 27 straight points after a horrific start to beat No. 8 Oklahoma 34-24 in the first round of theCollege Football Playoffon Friday night.

The Sooners led 17-0 with 10:51 to go in the second quarter after John Mateer hit Isaiah Sategna III for a 7-yard score. Less than 10 minutes later, Alabama had the game tied at 17-17 in the midst of a flurry that stretched through the third quarter.

After Oklahoma cut Alabama's lead to three at the start of the fourth quarter, the Tide pushed the lead back to 10 on a 6-yard TD run by Daniel Hill with less than 7:30 to go. His touchdown was set up by Germie Bernard's incredible catch as Bernard reached over an Oklahoma defender's helmet to set up first-and-goal.

GERMIE BERNARD WITH WHAT MAY BE THE CATCH OF THE YEAR 🤯pic.twitter.com/wtnW47NkF5

— College Football Report (@CFBReport)December 20, 2025

Oklahoma (10-3) promptly went three-and-out after Hill's TD. The Sooners had the faintest of hopes with just under three minutes left but kicker Tate Sandell — the Lou Groza Award winner for best kicker — missed just his second field goal of the season as OU tried to cut Alabama's lead to one possession.

Given the way the game started, it was once impossible to envision how Oklahoma was going to need a comeback. But the Sooners' disastrous second quarter let Alabama back into the game.

The Crimson Tide (11-3) will face No. 1Indianain the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1.

How Oklahoma unraveled

The Tide had 12 yards on their first three possessions and didn't get their first first down of the game until they trailed by 17 points. But that first down came on a nine-play, 75-yard drive that ended in a 10-yard TD pass from Ty Simpson to Lotzeir Brooks.

Oklahoma had a great chance to push the lead back to 17 points as Mateer escaped the pocket on third down and had a wide-open Xavier Robinson downfield. But Mateer's pass went through Robinson's hands. Robinson might have scored a TD had he caught the pass. At worst, Oklahoma would have been in the red zone.

Gotta catch thatpic.twitter.com/TWK8xeMZ9K

— NFL Paint (@NFLPaint)December 20, 2025

Things immediately got worse after the drop. As Oklahoma punted the ball to the Tide on the next play, reliable punter Grayson Miller simply dropped the ball as he went to kick it. The drop resulted in a blocked punt and an Alabama field goal to cut the lead to seven points.

BLOCKED ❌📺ABC/ESPNpic.twitter.com/T2CJTkyTyg

— College Football Playoff (@CFBPlayoff)December 20, 2025

Four plays after the field goal, Alabama had the game tied. Mateer clearly got confused by Alabama's coverage and threw a pass straight into the arms of a wide-open Zabien Brown. The problem, of course, was that Brown is an Alabama defensive back and not an Oklahoma receiver, and he ran 50 yards the other way for a pick-6.

GIMME THAT!!! 😤😤😤pic.twitter.com/zubvWHDdYt

— Alabama Football (@AlabamaFTBL)December 20, 2025

The Tide found themselves tied at halftime despite having minus-3 rushing yards and just 100 total yards in the first half.

And they took their first lead of the game with 11:21 to go in the third when Brooks caught his second touchdown of the game.

Oklahoma took down Alabama in November

Friday night's box score had a lot of similarities to the stats from Oklahoma's win in Tuscaloosa in November. But with the teams flipped.

The Sooners had just 212 yards of offense in their 23-21 win over Alabama — a game that essentially put Oklahoma in the playoff and gave the Sooners home-field advantage on Friday night. They forced three Alabama turnovers in that game and got a pick-6 themselves, as Alabama significantly outgained Oklahoma.

This time, Oklahoma had 98 more yards than Alabama. But it was Alabama that took advantage of special teams mistakes and got a defensive touchdown.

Alabama officially finished with just 28 rushing yards after sacks and kneel downs. Even taking out QB Ty Simpson's minus-22 rushing yards and the kneel downs, Hill and Jam Miller combined to have just 16 carries for 54 yards. And 30 of those yards came on one run by Hill.

Simpson finished the game 18-of-29 passing for 232 yards and the two TD passes to Brooks. The freshman receiver had five catches for 79 yards.

A bitter end for the Sooners

No one mistook Oklahoma for a national title favorite entering the College Football Playoff. But the Sooners closed as favorites on Friday night and, in the game's early stages, the offense looked the best it had since Mateer broke his hand late in the Week 4 win over Auburn.

Instead, Oklahoma found itself in a familiar position of being unable to run the ball as well. The Sooners had to rely a lot on Mateer to make plays with his feet. After the pass rush was nonexistent in the first half, Alabama cranked the pressure up in the second and finished with five sacks of Mateer as he ended up with 19 rushing attempts for 15 yards. Mateer was 26-of-41 passing for 307 yards and two touchdowns.

With Mateer's eligibility now up after his one season in Norman after transferring from Washington State, Oklahoma will be looking for a new quarterback ahead of the 2026 season. Will the Sooners dip into the transfer market for a QB for the second straight season? Will Michael Hawkins get the chance to be the Week 1 starter after starting games in each of his first two seasons at OU?

No matter who plays QB, Oklahoma has to be better on offense. Coach Brent Venables' defense was elite. But the ceiling of this Oklahoma team was ultimately limited by its offense.

See how it all played out below:

  • Featured
  • Final: Alabama 34, Oklahoma 24

    Oklahoma scored the first 17 points of the game and then it was almost all Alabama from there.

    What a win for Kalen DeBoer and the Tide.

  • OKLAHOMA MISSES ANOTHER FG!

    Yup, this one is over. OU's Tate Sandell just left a 51-yarder short and Alabama will be able to run the clock out from here.

  • Alabama punts it away

    The Tide were held on the ensuing possession and punted it back to Oklahoma with less than 2 minutes left in the game.

  • OKLAHOMA MISSES FIELD GOAL!

    This thing is all but over after Tate Sandell missed a 36-yard field goal with just under 3 minutes left.

  • OU into the red zone

    Facing a fourth-and-5, John Mateer found Isaiah Sategna III on a long pass and they're inside the 20 now.

    The Sooners need something out of this drive. There's just 3 minutes left in the game.

  • Alabama punts it right back

    Oklahoma's defense did its job and Brent Venables used two of the Sooners' timeouts, so they got the ball back with minimal time running off the clock.

  • Oklahoma forced to punt

    John Mateer ate a sack deep in OU territory on third down and the Sooners have to give it right back to Alabama.

    There's just 5:55 left in the game and it feels like it's over for Oklahoma.

  • Touchdown Alabama!

    Alabama is into the end zone after Daniel Hill fought his way through several tackles for a touchdown to make it a two-score game.

    Alabama 34, Oklahoma 24

  • Germie Bernard makes miraculous catch

    Alabama's star receiver just pulled down one of the best catches you'll ever see to get the Tide to the OU 5-yard line.

  • OU punts it away

    The Tide will have the ball back with great field position at the OU 35 after a shank by Oklahoma's punter.

    There's just 9:20 left in the game.

  • Alabama forced to punt

    The Tide went backwards from there after a third-down sack and had to punt it away to the Sooners, who will have the ball back at their own 7.

  • Alabama hits on deep ball

    The Tide are over midfield in a blink after a long completion from Ty Simpson to Isaiah Horton for 37 yards. They're almost in scoring range already.

  • TOUCHDOWN OKLAHOMA!

    It's a 37-yard strike from John Mateer to Deion Burks over the middle and the Sooners are right back in this thing as the fourth quarter gets underway!

    Alabama 27, Oklahoma 24

  • End of Q3: Bama 27, OU 17

    The Sooners have the ball at midfield as we head to the final quarter.

  • Alabama adds field goal

    The Tide couldn't find the end zone but it's a double-digit lead nonetheless after another field goal by Conor Talty.

    Alabama 27, Oklahoma 17

  • Alabama on the march

    The Tide are over midfield and nearing the red zone again as we hit the midway point in the third quarter.

  • OU punts it back to Bama

    The Crimson Tide have it right back after a quick three-and-out by the Sooners.

    This game has turned on a dime since that first TD by Lotzeir Brooks. Oklahoma has fallen apart.

  • Touchdown Alabama!

    The Crimson Tide have taken the lead! It's Lotzeir Brooks again with a 30-yard touchdown catch from Ty Simpson.

    The freshman hadn't had a TD all season, but he now has two in Alabama's biggest game of the year.

    Alabama 24, Oklahoma 17

  • Alabama gets it back with good field position

    The Sooners had a quick possession of their own and punted it away, but an ill-timed late hit by OU on the ensuing punt return will give the ball back to the Crimson Tide near midfield.

  • Quick punt for Alabama

    Ty Simpson had Ryan Williams open along the sideline, but the wide receiver dropped another one and the Tide had to punt it away.

Alabama scores 27 straight points to stun Oklahoma 34-24 and advance to Rose Bowl vs. Indiana

No. 9Alabamaripped off 27 straight points after a horrific start to beat No. 8 Oklahoma 34-24 in the first round of theCollege Football Pla...
Reports: Pirates acquire 2B Brandon Lowe from Rays

The Pittsburgh Pirates are set to acquire a two-time All-Star, landing second baseman Brandon Lowe from the Tampa Bay Rays, according to multiple reports Friday.

The three-team trade, which includes the Houston Astros, will also bring left-hander Mason Montgomery and outfielder Jake Mangum from the Rays to the Pirates. Tampa Bay will get a pair of prospects from the Astros, who will receive right-hander Mike Burrows from the Pirates.

Lowe, 31, was named an American League All-Star for the second time in 2025 when he batted .256 with 31 home runs and 83 RBIs. Lowe, who was also an All-Star in 2019, is a career .247 hitter with 157 home runs and 446 RBIs in 745 games over eight seasons with the Rays.

Montgomery, 25, was 1-3 with a 5.67 ERA in 57 relief appearances for Tampa Bay in 2025, while Mangum, 29, batted .296 with 27 stolen bases as a rookie for the Rays last season.

Burrows, 26, was 2-4 with a 3.94 ERA in 23 appearances (19 starts) for the Pirates last season.

The Rays will receive outfielder Jacob Melton and right-hander Anderson Brito. Melton, 25, made his major league debut in 2025 and batted .157 with seven RBIs in 32 games. Brito, 21, was in the Astros' system for two seasons and had four appearances (three starts) in the just-completed Arizona Fall League.

--Field Level Media

Reports: Pirates acquire 2B Brandon Lowe from Rays

The Pittsburgh Pirates are set to acquire a two-time All-Star, landing second baseman Brandon Lowe from the Tampa Bay ...

 

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