Doing his customary pregame pick on ESPN's College Gameday, Lee Corso donned the mascot head of Hook 'Em, officially taking the Longhorns to defeat the Buckeyes in the Cotton Bowl
After the Nittany Lions topped SMU and Boise State and the Fighting Irish beat Indiana and Georgia in the first two rounds of the 12-team College Football Playoff, the GameDay crew broke down the semifinal matchup. Penn State entered the game as a one-point favorite, according to BetMGM.
While previewing the game, the legendary head coach turned analyst Lee Corso took the spotlight. Many viewers found it difficult to follow his words as he appeared to struggle to form sentences. Corso, who first joined the show in 1987, has been an integral part of "College GameDay" for decades.
During the latest 'College GameDay' event, 89-year old Lee Corso, an iconic figure in college football analysis, faced challenges while dancing with the Notre Dame Leprechaun, nearly falling over. I love the guy, but it might be time for ESPN to ease him into retirement..
ESPN college football analyst Lee Corso nearly fell while doing a jig after making his pick for the Penn State-Notre Dame Orange Bowl game.
The Texas Longhorns are underdogs headed into Friday night's Cotton Bowl matchup against the Ohio State Buckeyes, but don't tell that to the legend
Lee Corso brought the energy and a little chaos to ESPN College GameDay during his headgear pick for Notre Dame versus Penn State. True to form, Corso wasn’t c
From 1987 to 2025, Lee Corso has remained a staple of ESPN's "College GameDay" crew. On Thursday, Corso and the rest of the show's members found themselves in Miami for a College Football Playoff ...
While making his long-standing helmet pick for the College Football Playoff semifinal matchup between the Nittany Lions and Fighting Irish, “GameDay” analyst Lee Corso nearly fell backwards to ...
In 10 seasons, top-seeded teams in both the AFC and NFC were 14-4 in the postseason, combining for a 28-8 overall record. Top seeds won by an average of 14.1 points per game, and their losses came by an average of 5.8 points per game.
Leave it be. Enjoy the show. Let a good thing be a good thing. This 12-team College Football Playoff format works beautifully.
One of the wackiest seasons in college football history will end with two schools whose traditions are as old as the game itself — Ohio State and Notre Dame — playing for a national championship.