Pitt fans chant ‘sell the team’ after Pittsburgh Pirates ‘College GameDay’ tribute

You never quite know what you’re going to get from Pat McAfee on College GameDay, and on Saturday that included a lengthy discussion about the Pittsburgh Pirates.

GameDay was in the Steel City for Saturday’s game between the Pitt Panthers and Notre Dame Fighting Irish. It was also an opportunity for McAfee to celebrate being back in his hometown and adored by his people—even though he actually attended college at their hated rivals, the West Virginia Mountaineers.

For his show-opening monologue that typically pays tribute to the host location, Pat McAfee began talking about what a great sports city Pittsburgh is, even including the moribund Pittsburgh Pirates. These days, at least the Pirates have reigning NL Cy Young winner Paul Skenes to be thankful for, even though fans are just counting down the days and years until he signs for the New York Yankees.

The reference to the Pirates led the Pitt fans in attendance to immediately voice their frustration with the team’s thrifty ownership, as a “sell the team” chant broke out. It may be the first time the Pirates have been mentioned on ESPN airwaves in November in decades, especially with the additional history lesson from Reds fan Kirk Herbstreit.

The Pirates’ lack of spending, led by owner Bob Nutting, like other MLB teams, has become a huge source of consternation within the sport. McAfee’s ESPN colleague Jeff Passan has continually talked about their refusal to spend any money to build a roster around Skenes and actually try to win.

Their $84 million payroll sits 27th in Major League Baseball and is multiple times behind the World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers. They also have had only one winning season in the last 10 years and haven’t made it to the NLCS since Sid Bream broke their hearts in 1992.

But at least the Pittsburgh Pirates finally got some much-needed attention in the fall—it just took an episode of College GameDay in the city to do it.
https://awfulannouncing.com/mlb/sell-the-team-pittsburgh-pirates-college-gameday.html

Gupta ’25 MD’29: More than ‘just friends’

College friendships are supposed to be easy, but they don’t always stay that way. There’s no situation as awkward and nerve-racking as when you start to wonder if you like your friend as more than just a friend.

There’s not necessarily one moment when you realize it. It’s often a slow shift. You start crafting texts more carefully, mentally replaying small moments and feeling flutters that shouldn’t be there. “I just love hanging out with you” starts feeling more like a confession than a compliment.

College makes this kind of confusion practically inevitable. We live, study, and eat in the same 10-block radius, surrounded by people who feel closer to us than family. We share dorm rooms, toothpaste, therapy updates, playlists, and secrets. We casually say “love you” to our friends and even flirt without realizing it.

The same intimacy that makes college friendships so meaningful can also make them messy. The line between platonic and romantic feels incredibly blurry. And so, naturally, it nags at you. You want to know if you should say something, if this is one of those “life’s too short” moments that people online always encourage strangers to act on.

But choosing the bold move can feel like detonating a bomb, jeopardizing your entire friendship and risking the organic dynamic that you love—even if the feelings are reciprocated. Most of all, you risk rejection and possible humiliation.

And yet, saying nothing doesn’t feel safe either. You end up performing friendship: casual smiles, careful hugs, yet your heart pounds at every accidental brush of the knee. You’re fine with “just friends,” but your stomach drops every time they mention someone new in their life.

So, what should you do?

### Dismantling the Myth: Friendship is Not Lesser Love

The first myth to dismantle is that friendship is the lesser form of love. Romantic relationships are often treated as the pinnacle of intimacy, but think about it: your closest friendships have probably lasted longer than most romantic relationships.

Your friends have seen you at your lowest, ugliest, and most unflattering moments. They’ve witnessed you cry on the kitchen floor, stood in line with you at the dining hall for the fifth time in the same week, and still answered your FaceTime at midnight. That’s not second-best love; that’s the foundation of what it means to love and be loved back.

Sometimes when we crush on a friend, what we’re really developing is a deeper appreciation for someone’s closeness—mistaking that warmth for romantic potential. That’s the complexity of human connection: how affection, gratitude, and desire can overlap until it’s hard to tell them apart.

### Pause and Reflect Before Acting

It’s worth pausing to untangle what kind of love you’re actually feeling before you act on it. Before you confess, ask yourself:

– Do I actually want to date them?
– Or do I just want to be loved by someone who already knows me so well?

If it’s the second one, maybe the answer isn’t a confession. Maybe it’s gratitude. Maybe it’s saying, “You mean a lot to me,” and letting that be enough.

### When You Know It’s Real

But let’s say you’ve decided: This is real. You’ve tried to ignore it, suppress it, joke it away, and it’s not working. In that case, honesty is kinder than emotional gymnastics.

You don’t have to write a love letter or perform a grand gesture. A simple, “I’ve been feeling something more than friendship, and I just wanted to tell you,” is more than enough.

The key is to speak without expectation. You’re offering information, not an ultimatum. “This is how I feel,” instead of “Please feel it back.”

### Respecting Uncertainty

College relationships—romantic or otherwise—work best when they’re built on mutual respect for uncertainty. People are still figuring out who they are, meaning feelings won’t always align. That has to be okay.

If they don’t feel the same way, it will sting. You’ll have to sit with that weird ache when you see them around. But the truth is, most friendships survive that awkwardness. It just takes time and honesty to adjust to new boundaries.

If the friendship is real, it will adapt.

### The Elasticity of Love

Liking a friend doesn’t need to ruin your friendship. Sometimes it changes the relationship, sometimes it deepens it, and sometimes it fades.

But it always teaches you something about the elasticity of love. Love can stretch and reshape itself to fit new boundaries without necessarily breaking. It bends to circumstance, to timing, to what two people can offer each other.

Sometimes it softens into friendship, sometimes it sharpens into longing, sometimes it simply settles into quiet admiration.

Try to focus on what it feels like to love someone—regardless of whether it is platonic or romantic—and to appreciate the courage it takes to name that love, even if it’s unreciprocated.

### Final Thoughts

So yes, liking your friend is messy. But so is growing up. So is love.

If you’re wondering whether to tell them, maybe you already know the answer. The hardest part isn’t saying it—it’s letting yourself recognize it.
https://www.browndailyherald.com/article/2025/11/gupta-25-md-29-more-than-just-friends

SMU hits historic new low in loss to Wake Forest

SMU Football Hits First ACC Loss in Winston-Salem Against Wake Forest

SMU football entered Winston-Salem with an unblemished Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) record, having never lost a conference game since joining the ACC. Still very much in the ACC title game picture, the Mustangs faced Wake Forest with high hopes. However, on Saturday, SMU experienced a new low.

The Demon Deacons snatched victory from the ACC runner-up and 2024 College Football Playoff contender with a walk-off field goal. This marked SMU’s first defeat in ACC play since joining the conference. College football reporter Matt Fortuna notes that this is also the Mustangs’ first conference loss since November 17, 2022, when Tulane—then an American Athletic Conference team—upended SMU. At that time, both teams were members of the American Athletic Conference.

SMU’s Offensive Struggles vs. Wake Forest

The Mustangs introduced a high-octane offense in their ACC debut last season under quarterback Kevin Jennings. Jennings had recently impressed fans with a dazzling behind-the-back pass, showcasing the potential of SMU’s 2024 attack. However, against Wake Forest, SMU and Jennings looked far from their usual dynamic form.

The Dallas-based university went punt, turnover on downs, punt, and another punt on their first four possessions, struggling to generate offense. They did not put points on the board until their fifth offensive possession, when kicker Sam Keltner converted a 36-yard field goal. But on the very next drive, Jennings took a sack and lost the ball, with Wake Forest’s Jayden Loving recovering the fumble caused by Gabe Kirschke.

SMU’s lone touchdown came late in the third quarter when Shaadie Clayton-Johnson scored on a six-yard run. Despite this, the Mustangs had trouble moving the ball on the ground, managing just 75 total rushing yards at 2.7 yards per carry. Jennings, a dual-threat quarterback, contributed only seven rushing yards and threw for 171 yards. He was also intercepted by Wake Forest’s Karon Prunty.

Wake Forest Becomes the First Team in 2025 to Shut Down Jennings

Wake Forest became the first team in the 2025 season to prevent Kevin Jennings from throwing a single touchdown pass. Moreover, their victory ended SMU’s impressive conference winning streak.

As SMU looks ahead, they will need to regroup and address the offensive issues that surfaced against the Demon Deacons to stay competitive in the ACC title race.
https://clutchpoints.com/ncaa-football/smu-hits-historic-new-low-in-loss-to-wake-forest