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Today, we review last night’s FCS national championship and look ahead with our predictions for college football in 2025. Plus, get ready to vote for your favorite mascot of the College Football Playoff’s semifinals.
North Dakota State won its 10th FCS title on Monday night with a 35-32 decision against Montana State. It’s the Bison’s 10th championship in the past 15 years and fifth in the past eight seasons. It ended on a game-winning punt as Montana State didn’t have any returners downfield, since they were assuming their best shot to get in field goal position was to block the punt instead.
NDSU coach Tim Polasek won the title in his first year in charge, 19 years removed from the call that pulled him to Fargo while he was working as a lumberjack.
One quirky stat: The game was a rematch of the 2021 FCS title game, which North Dakota State won 38-10. That game featured the same starting quarterbacks as yesterday: NDSU’s Cam Miller and Montana State’s Tommy Mellott.
By contrast, none of the four quarterbacks remaining in the CFP were with their current programs during the 2021 season. Penn State’s Drew Allar and Texas’ Quinn Ewers were getting ready for their freshman seasons, Ohio State’s Will Howard was playing his second season at Kansas State, where he started three games in place of the injured Skylar Thompson, and Notre Dame’s Riley Leonard was in his first season at Duke, where he played in seven games with one start behind Gunnar Holmberg.
I polled coworkers around The Athletic for their boldest predictions for college football in 2025. Here’s what they told me (and one from me too):
Another Belichick prediction trends in the opposite direction.
A Belichick Playoff appearance in Year 1? Who else might make the field?
Newsletter writer brains think alike as Pulse writer Chris Branch had a similar prediction.
And how can we talk about 2025 without focusing on Smith?
But can Smith stay in the spotlight behind the QB with a famous last name in Austin?
The “Until Saturday” podcast discussed 2025 confidence levels in the eight teams that have lost CFP games this season. Is Arizona State here to stay? Is Clemson on the come-up? Listen here.
After having to skip the Peach Bowl due to the lack of sideline space at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Texas’ live steer mascot, Bevo, will attend the College Football Playoff Cotton Bowl semifinal on Friday. Of course, that trip is a little easier for Bevo, given Dallas’ AT&T Stadium is just 200 miles from Texas’ campus (yes, the Longhorns got the luckiest travel break of the postseason, as long as they survive the forecasted 4-6 inches of snow).
Bevo’s return (along with my attendance at the Michigan State-Wisconsin Frozen Confines hockey game this past weekend where I was reunited with my beloved mascot, Sparty) had me thinking about a friendly mascot voting poll here in Until Saturday. So let’s get into it.
Texas: Bevo
Having a live longhorn as a mascot dates back to 1916 when alumnus Stephen Pinckney gathered $124 from other alumni to purchase a steer in the Texas Panhandle. But the original mascot of UT was actually an American Pit Bull Terrier named Pig. The Silver Spurs student organization has been entrusted to care for Bevo since 1945.
Penn State: Nittany Lion
The oldest mascot of the bunch, the Penn State Nittany Lion started as a chirp back from former Penn State third baseman Harrison “Joe” Mason to Princeton in 1904. Mason fabricated the Nittany Lion that day as Princeton team members showed off their Bengal tiger as a symbol of their strength. The Nittany Lions went on to defeat Princeton that day, and Mason was forever etched in Penn State lore.
Ohio State: Brutus Buckeye
Brutus Buckeye, unnamed at the time, made its debut at Ohio Stadium on Oct. 30, 1965, at the homecoming football game against Minnesota. Students took the creation of the mascot into their own hands when they built the original papier-mache version at the Pi Beta Phi sorority house. The mascot has received a series of updates, including adding his baseball cap and signature scarlet and gray striped shirt to the wardrobe in the 1980s and, in the 1990s, his upper body beefed up.
Notre Dame: The Leprechaun
Before the Leprechaun was named Notre Dame’s official mascot in 1965, the team was represented by a series of Irish terrier dogs, most of whom went by the name of Clashmore Mike. Since then, Notre Dame students have served as the Fighting Irish mascot. Four students were selected as Leprechauns for the 2024-2025 school year, per the mascot’s Instagram page. And alert your friends, submissions to try out for the 2025-26 year are due in April.
Vote for your favorite mascot here. As for how these schools got their nicknames in the first place, Matt Baker dove into that topic earlier this Playoff season.
James Franklin largely has been defined by his shortcomings in the big moments at Penn State. And as a semifinal against Notre Dame approaches, his answer to getting over the pesky storyline might be sticking to his familiar mantra.
Also for the Nittany Lions, DE Abdul Carter’s status for the Orange Bowl remains unclear after he exited the last game with an apparent left shoulder injury. Carter was the Big Ten defensive player of the year.
Georgia QB Jaden Rashada — who was at the center of a major NIL dispute during his recruitment — has entered the transfer portal for the second time.
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(Top photo of Cam Miller: Justin Tafoya / NCAA Photos via Getty Images)
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