U.S. Senate race heats up with Paul Finebaum’s interest
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ESPN’s Paul Finebaum has had his fair share of eye-rolling scripts when it comes to Florida State football. Alabama toppled Georgia but fell to FSU in Week 1, and yet Finebaum’s narrative has already shifted to fit his SEC-first playbook.
After Charlie Kirk’s assassination, SEC Network host Paul Finebaum says he’s weighing a move from ESPN to politics as he eyes a senate run.
After opening 3-0, the Tigers have now dropped back-to-back road games to top-10 teams, losing 24-17 to the No. 5 Oklahoma Sooners and 16-10 to the No. 6 Texas A&M Aggies. The bigger concern isn’t the losses; it’s how Auburn lost them.
For a while, the SEC reigned supreme and was at another level, whether it was Nick Saban's six titles with Alabama, Kirby Smart's back-to-back triumphs with Georgia (2021-22) or LSU 's breakthrough in 2019. Although the conference has taken a backseat in the last two years, don't count it out.
Football analyst Todd McShay is coming after Paul Finebaum for his criticism of Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer, and it sounds very personal. Alabama pulled out
The Mike Elko era at Texas A&M is starting to deliver results. For the first time since 2016, the Aggies are 4-0, capped off by a gritty 16-10 win over the Auburn Tigers in Week 5.
ESPN star Paul Finebaum opened up how his feelings in the wake of Charlie Kirk's assassination in an interview with OutKick founder Clay Travis.