Pat McAfee sees Will Howard’s success at Ohio State as an indicator that he might thrive at the highest level in football.
Add alt-casts to the list of sports media formats that Pat McAfee has solved. As twin turnovers from Drew Allar and Quinn Ewers capped off a pair of College Football Playoff classics this weekend in the semifinals,
Friday night’s Cotton Bowl was a tough watch for most Texas Longhorns fans. Texas had the misfortune of running into the buzzsaw that was Ohio State, arguably
"WWE Raw" commentator Pat McAfee is set to miss Monday's show, as he'll be busy offering live coverage for the College Football Championship.
Tim Tebow joined McAfee’s broadcast, and during the fourth quarter with the game tied at 14-14, the former Florida quarterback perfectly predicted what Ohio State and quarterback Will Howard — who was playing with a gnarly knot on his hand — would do on fourth-and-short.
It appears that McAfee will not be joining Michael Cole for Raw commentary on Monday, January 20, as he will be hosting Field Pass with his Pat McAfee Show crew during the CFB Playoff National Championship Game between Notre Dame and Ohio State on the same night.
Pat McAfee extols the Ohio State football offense on College GameDay, hours before a CFP semis clash with Texas
Pat McAfee is expected to miss Monday’s WWE RAW on Netflix as he is set to call the CFP National Championship game.
Jeremiah Smith has dominated in his first two games of the playoff. Against the Tennessee Volunteers and Oregon Ducks, he had 13 receptions for 290 yards and four touchdowns. Texas coach Steve Sarkisian will need to focus on what Smith can do in the passing game if they want to be competitive here.
The Ohio State University secured a spot in the national championship with a dramatic 28-14 victory over Texas in the College Football Playoff semifinal. Senior defensive end Jack Sawyer delivered ...
He received harassment and threats of physical harm from unhinged fans — also some death threats, his players said — and his wife and children endured weeks of verbal abuse. Even Lou Holtz, the 88-year-old former Notre Dame coach, has continued to be a proverbial thorn in his side.
In a critical moment during the AFC divisional round matchup between the Baltimore Ravens and Buffalo Bills, quarterback Lamar Jackson was hit near the sideline by defensive end Ed Oliver.