The Front Porch Newsletter
A newsletter about college sports
09/15/2023
Georgia is going for the first three-peat in FBS football since Minnesota did so from 1934-36
Today's newsletter looks at Minnesota's reign, back when the Golden Gophers were the most dominant program in the sport
In its quest for a three-peat, Georgia is chasing the ghost of Minnesota The Golden Gophers of the mid-1930s are the last FBS team to win three consecutive titles. So how did they succeed where everyone else since has failed?
09/13/2023
Today's newsletter looks at the University of Houston and its long, arduous road back to major college football
Houston's long road back to the big time Thirty years after it was left for dead, the Cougars are back in a major conference. Let's take a look at their rise, fall and rebirth
06/30/2023
Nemanja Jokic has become famous in recent years for his menacing-yet-endearing courtside behavior while watching his brother, two-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic. Before that, though, he was a four-year college basketball player
His coaches at Detroit Mercy and C.W. Post remember him as a promising player with a unique journey in the sport
“If he was 6-9, it’s over – he’s in the league. He’s that skilled.”
A Jokic brother's college basketball journey Nemanja Jokic has become famous in recent years for his courtside behavior while watching his brother, two-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic. Before that, though, he was a four-year college basketball player
05/23/2023
Jim Brown, who died last week at age 87, is widely considered one of the best college football players ever, if not the greatest. But in 1956, he lost his final chance at a Heisman Trophy to a quarterback from a 2-8 team who threw three touchdowns and 13 interceptions.
A look back at one of the most bizarre and regrettable Heisman votes ever
Jim Brown and the puzzling 1956 Heisman Trophy vote Brown, who died last week, is regarded as one of the best college football players ever, if not the greatest. So how did he lose out on the sport's biggest prize to a quarterback from a 2-8 team?
05/17/2023
Bob Huggins' homophobic comments have tarnished a reputation he worked years to repair
While his circumstances are unique, the general narrative arc isn't. Very few college coaching legends have seen their careers end on a high note
Today's newsletter. It's free for all to read
For legends like Bob Huggins, it rarely ends well Homophobic remarks from the West Virginia men's basketball coach have tarnished a reputation he worked years to repair. But his career doesn't have to end in embarrassment.
05/10/2023
Over the past week, the intersection of legal sports betting and college athletics has been as busy as ever.
It's not anything particularly new, though. The history of NCAA sports is littered with point-shaving incidents. Perhaps none are quite as interesting as the saga that unfolded with Tulane men's basketball in the mid-1980s, an episode involving a projected first-round NBA Draft pick, co***ne, Harry Connick Jr's father and the ultimate disbanding of a program
The wild saga and lasting legacy of the Tulane point-shaving scandal With gambling on college sports back in the news, let's take a look back at one of the more interesting intersections between sports betting and college athletics.
05/06/2023
Over the past several years, college athletes have picked up several hard-earned rights: being able to transfer without penalty and earning money off their name, image and likeness, among other things
But with roster purges like what's taking place under Deion Sanders at Colorado, we're seeing the counterweight to athlete empowerment
We're witnessing the counterweight to college athlete empowerment With college athletes now capable of earning NIL money and transferring without penalty, some coaches and administrators feel entitled to treat them differently -- and sometimes harshly.
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