TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida State University scheduled an emergency meeting of its Board of Trustees for Friday morning as rumors continue to swirl about the school’s place in the Atlantic Coast Conference, according to a report from The Athletic.
FSU is currently locked into the ACC through 2036 through the conference’s media rights deal. If FSU ever wanted to leave the ACC, it could cost the school possibly hundreds of millions of dollars.
That’s where the possibility of a court interceding comes in.
According to Yahoo Sports, “details around the specific legal step in which FSU leaders plan to take is unclear, but legal experts say that the school could seek what’s called a ‘declaratory judgment action’ in an effort to get a judge to rule that the school is not bound to its contract with the ACC.”
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FSU’s possible interest in leaving the conference comes less than a month after the school was left out of the College Football Playoff, despite winning the ACC championship and finishing the season undefeated.
The Seminoles were skipped over for a SEC school (Alabama) and a future SEC school (Texas) by the College Football Playoff committee, despite both those football teams having one loss.
FSU expressed skepticism of the ACC in the past, and according to the Athletic, the school will need approval from the Board of Trustees “before filing a complaint against its own conference, with trustees taking part in that major decision as key constituents.”
If the Seminoles successfully leave the Atlantic Coast Conference, the question then becomes, where will FSU go for a new conference?
The two most powerful conferences in the nation are the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and the Big Ten Conference.
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The Big Ten is at 18 teams, and it was a battle to get to 18. Earlier this year, several schools in the conference pushed back against the plan to admit Oregon and Washington.
The SEC is adding Texas and Oklahoma next season to get to 16 teams. So it will have two fewer teams than the Big Ten. Complicating the fact of possibly adding the Seminoles to the SEC would be the Florida Gators, who would have a major say in whether the Seminoles could be admitted into the conference.
FSU could look at joining the Big 12 Conference, but with it losing the flagship schools of Oklahoma and Texas, it might not be a big step up from the ACC. Plus, there is already one Florida school (UCF) in the Big 12 and Orlando is a much larger television market than Tallahassee.
Still, before any talk of joining a new conference can start, the FSU’s Board of Trustees has to meet and approve any potential move or legal action against the ACC.
That meeting is now scheduled for Friday at 10 a.m. and can be viewed here.
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Sam Reinhart snapped a three-game goal drought and the Florida Panthers beat the Anaheim Ducks 5-2 on Tuesday night.
Carter Verhaeghe had a goal and assist for the Panthers, who picked up a point in their 10th straight game against the Ducks.
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Evan Rodrigues, Sam Bennett and Uvis Balinskis added goals. Mackie Samoskevich and Tomas Nosek each had two assists, and Sergei Bobrovsky made 28 saves.
Frank Vatrano and Mason McTavish scored for Anaheim. Lukas Dostal stopped 24 shots.
Reinhart got his 28th goal of the season at 8:58 of the first period, when he got the pass from Matthew Tkachuk and put a backhand past Dostal to tie it at 1-1. The goal tied Reinhart with Toronto’s William Nylander for second in the league.
Takeaways
Panthers: Bobrovsky is 5-0 record with a 2.36 goals-against average and .922 save percentage against the Ducks since joining Florida prior to the 2019-20 season.
Ducks: Trevor Zegras returned to the lineup after missing 22 games due to following surgery to repair a torn meniscus in his right knee. Zegras was injured late in the first period against Vegas on Dec. 4. Zegras was the left wing and paired on the second line with Leo Carlsson and Alex Killorn.
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Key moment
Verhaeghe stole the puck from Anaheim defenseman Jacob Trouba behind the Ducks’ goal before putting it into the upper right corner of the net to extend the Panthers’ lead to 3-1 with 1:11 remaining in the first period. Florida has scored three times in the first period four times this season which trails only Tampa Bay and Ottawa (both five).
Key stat
Troy Terry assisted on Vatrano’s goal in the first period. It was Terry’s 265th career point and surpassed Adam Henrique and Scott Niedermayer for 10th on the franchise scoring list.
Up next
The Panthers face Los Angeles Wednesday. The Ducks host Pittsburgh Thursday.
APOPKA, Fla. – Nathan Tuck told News 6 he got a call from his attorney around 11 p.m. on Monday that President Donald Trump pardoned him and others for charges stemming from the attack on the US Capitol.
It was Jan. 6, 2021, when some of the supporters of President Trump stormed the Capitol building – some of them trying to stop the certification of President Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 election.
“I’m so proud of it. I am so proud of January 6th. I have no remorse for it, I am very proud of it,” Nathan Tuck said.
Tuck also proudly tells News 6 he is a member of the Proud Boys and a former police officer of almost 9 years in Apopka and Longwood.
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He was facing about 14 months behind bars for his role after pleading guilty to felony and misdemeanor charges.
“So I went into the Capitol. I participated in a protest that was very peaceful, and the cops are the ones that instigated the entire thing… I just protested and entered the Capitol building that I paid for my entire life through my taxes. So I’m not sorry,” Tuck said.
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According to the United States Attorney’s Office, Nathaniel Tuck was the sole member of his co-defendants who successfully pushed his way past a line of multiple Capitol Police officers, making physical contact with at least one officer as he did so…and he “…spent most of the next hour inside the Capitol building, where he berated officers, shouting at them and calling them “communists.”
Later he sent a text to his father saying, “Politics won’t save us. Violence is the only way we will win.”
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His father Kevin Tuck was with him that day and also charged.
He was an officer with the Windermere Police Department and also pleaded guilty for his role in the 2021 insurrection at the U.S.Capitol.
He was sentenced to six months is prison and had yet to start his sentence.
Last night Nathan celebrated with fellow Proud Boys members. He told News 6,
“We just drank and had a good time last night. Picked up a lot of guys from prison last night,” Nathan Tuck said.
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There were about 45 local arrests made in connection with Jan. 6. Three Central Floridians were charged with some of the most serious crimes.
Joseph Biggs, a Proud Boy from Ormond Beach, and Kelly Meggs – an Oath Keeper from Dunnellon – were both convicted of seditious conspiracy.
And Kenneth Harrelson, and Oath Keeper from Titusville was convicted of lesser charges, and was sentecned to four years in prison.
All three have now been released.
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We know, we know. College football’s national title game ended only a few hours ago. The celebration in Columbus, Ohio, is just now cranking up. Heck, Kirk Herbstreit’s pooch is still prancing somewhere in Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
So why are we already making projections for the 2025 season? Because it’s a tradition like no other. Way-too-early forecasts have become embedded in the sport’s fabric, much like portal season, the Pop-Tarts Bowl and profanities by Nick Saban on live TV.
Who cares if they should be taken with a grain of salt? Our guess is, they’ll still make more than a few fans feel salty. All part of the fun.
Here then, is our way-too-early 2025 ranking of Florida’s seven Football Bowl Subdivision teams.
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7. Florida International
2024 record: 4-8
3 key returners: DB Brian Blades II (six pass breakups), QB Keyone Jenkins (2,557 passing yards, 22 TDs), RB Kejon Owens (team-best 392 rushing yards, five TDs)
3 key departures: LB Travion Barnes (Baylor), S JoJo Evans (Louisville), WR Eric Rivers (Georgia Tech)
Impact newcomer: RB Ajay Allen (Miami)
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Outlook: New Panthers coach Willie Simmons did arguably his best recruiting job of the winter by convincing both Jenkins and Owens to withdraw their names from the portal and remain at FIU. On the flip side, Simmons lost a procession of talented defensive players to the portal and must do some significant replenishing. Simmons, a Tallahassee native who posted four consecutive seasons of at least nine wins at Florida A&M, has the coaching and recruiting chops to succeed down south, but this will take time.
6. Florida Atlantic
2024 record: 3-9
3 key returners: DB Wendel Philord (42 tackles, four pass breakups), WR Jabari Smith (17 receptions), DB Jayden Williams (two interceptions)
3 key departures: RB C.J. Campbell (Rutgers), QB Cam Fancher (UCF), S CJ Heard (Vanderbilt)
Outlook: New Owls coach Zach Kittley practically had to pilfer the transfer portal to replenish FAU’s decimated roster, but he pulled off a bonanza by signing Veltkamp, a 3,000-yard passer at Western Kentucky last season. As a bonus, he also landed one of Veltkamp’s top targets last year, Hilltoppers slot receiver Easton Messer (55 catches, 793 yards). Widely regarded as one of college football’s brightest young offensive minds, Kittley, 33, has the energy and ingenuity to turn around FAU. But his overhauled roster will need time to jell.
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5. UCF
2024 record: 4-8
3 key returners: Edge Nyjalik Kelly (team-high 5.5 sacks), RT Paul Rubelt (lone returning OL starter) DT John Walker (injured in 2024)
3 key departures: LB Xe’Ree Alexander (Washington), DL Lee Hunter (Texas Tech), RG Marcellus Marshall (Minnesota)
Impact newcomer: QB Tayven Jackson (Indiana)
Outlook: Count us among those who remain convinced Scott Frost didn’t forget how to coach. Also count us among those who believe he never really was crazy about leaving UCF for his alma mater (Nebraska), where he went 16-31 in four-plus seasons. Frost has some significant rebuilding ahead of him in his second stint in Orlando, and he has been forced to tap heavily into the transfer portal (more than two-dozen transfers) since his return in early December. But don’t be shocked if the Knights make some rumblings in the Big 12 in 2025. And if his second season (2026) remotely resembles the Year 2 of his initial go-round at UCF (see Colley Matrix), watch out.
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4. USF
2024 record: 7-6 (topped San Jose State, 41-39, in Hawaii Bowl)
3 key returners: QB Byrum Brown (12 school records), WR Keshaun Singleton (428 receiving yards, three TDs), S Tavin Ward (team-high three interceptions)
3 key departures: S Tawfiq Byard (Colorado), RB Kelley Joiner (NFL draft), LB Jamie Pettway (NFL draft)
Impact newcomer: RB Cartevious Norton (Charlotte)
Outlook: Presuming Brown is healthy and still here, the Bulls should eclipse the seven-win plateau in Year 3 of the Alex Golesh era. The backfield must be replenished, but there’s proven talent on the perimeter and up front. The big question involves the defense and whether USF can develop more consistency on that side. After two .500 regular seasons, Bulls fans want to see Golesh’s “process” produce titles, or at least title-game berths.
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3. FSU
2024 record: 2-10
3 key returners: S Shyheim Brown (team-high 70 tackles), DT Darrell Jackson (32 tackles, 3.5 sacks), S KJ Kirkland (46 tackles, two pass breakups)
3 key departures: QB Luke Kromenhoek (Mississippi State), edge Patrick Payton (LSU), RB Lawrance Toafili (NFL draft)
Impact newcomer: QB Thomas Castellanos (Boston College)
Outlook: As promised, coach Mike Norvell has orchestrated a brisk overhaul in the wake of a disastrous autumn, bringing in two new coordinators (Gus Malzahn, Tony White) and an infusion of veterans from the transfer portal. The returners and replenishments on defense, along with White’s 3-3-5 scheme, should foster optimism, but the big question is whether the Seminoles will regain an offensive pulse. Castellanos, a 5-foot-9 dual threat, played briefly for Malzahn at UCF and possesses the skill set that meshes with Malzahn’s no-huddle scheme.
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2. Miami
2024 record: 10-3 (lost to Iowa State, 42-41, in Pop-Tarts Bowl)
Outlook: The Hurricanes got a coup of sorts by luring Beck — 24-3 as a starter at Georgia — from the portal. Beck, who likely will miss spring practice while recovering from elbow surgery, doesn’t have Ward’s hair-trigger release, but he possesses far more big-game experience than Ward had upon his arrival to Coral Gables. He’ll also be complemented by what projects as a solid offensive line and sturdy run game (see Fletcher, Jordan Lyle). The prevailing question is how the beleaguered defense will progress under new coordinator Corey Hetherman.
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1. Florida
2024 record: 8-5 (topped Tulane, 33-8, in Gasparilla Bowl)
3 key returners: QB DJ Lagway (6-1 as starter), edge Tyreak Sapp (team-high seven sacks), C Jake Slaughter (first-team All-American)
3 key departures: WR Chimere Deke (NFL draft), LB Shemar James (NFL draft), edge Jack Pyburn (LSU)
Impact newcomer: WR Dallas Wilson (Tampa Bay Tech)
Outlook: Few SEC teams ended 2024 with more momentum than the Gators, whose season-ending four-game win streak included home upsets of ranked foes LSU and Ole Miss. Moreover, coach Billy Napier replenished his roster with a top-11 prep signing class in December. This is Lagway’s team now, and he’ll be flanked by talent both proven (Slaughter) and promising (Wilson). The most formidable challenge: a schedule every bit as ruthless as last year’s.
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