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Rapper and media personality Snoop Dogg is putting his name on the Arizona Bowl for what will be the first partnership between an alcohol brand and a college bowl game. The “Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl Presented by Gin & Juice By Dre and Snoop” is scheduled for Dec. 28 at Arizona Stadium and will match teams from the Mountain West Conference and Mid-American Conference. The digital media company Barstool previously sponsored the bowl. Gin & Juice, named after Snoop’s 1994 hit, is the first product from Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre’s new premium spirits company.

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Ohio State wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. poses with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell after being chosen by the Arizona Cardinals with the fo…

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FILE - Heisman Trophy winner Reggie Bush of the University of Southern California smiles while posing for photos after a news conference in Ne…

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FILE - The Heisman Trophy, awarded to Reggie Bush in 2005, is seen in Heritage Hall during a meeting of University of Southern California foot…

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Former Texas Longhorns running back Ricky Williams stands on the sideline before a game against the California Golden Bears on Sept. 17, 2016,…

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Pac-12 Conference commissioner George Kliavkoff speaks at football media day in 2023. Kliavkoff is out effective at the end of February, with …

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Nick Saban won six national titles in 17 seasons at Alabama. His decision to retire set off a chain reaction that was felt from Tuscaloosa to …

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The preseason Associated Press college football poll held up pretty well in 2023. The final AP Top 25 was released early after Michigan defeated Washington in the College Football Playoff national title game to finish No. 1. Seventeen teams that began the season ranked in the Top 25 finished in the rankings and only eight did not. Typically, about 10 or 11 teams that start the season ranked end the season unranked. How will the Top 25 teams look heading into next season?

AP spotlight
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The four-team playoff changed college football. Not just the postseason and crowning of a national champion that finally could be called undisputed. College Football Playoff 1.0 wraps up a 10-year run on Monday when No. 1 Michigan faces No. 2 Washington in the national championship game. The four-team CFP created a new standard for success — and failure — for conferences and schools. It helped the rich and powerful become more rich and powerful and further nationalized a sport with regional roots. It was an imperfect but necessary step in the evolution of the postseason that had unintended consequences.