I love the table formatting and I think it’s a really clean way to present information. But the new update is too inefficient with space, and so you kind of have to limit how much you info you can have. I did use the center tag and br tag, some font and size changes as well as images. I would love a tag that would allow me to get it back to single line per row.James wrote: ↑06 Feb 2026, 16:34I changed the th, ths, and td tags to add a little padding so it's not all collapsed in when you use the centerTable tag. Are you using any of those? I'm willing to work with you to get what you want, even if that means making a new tag for you.toysoldier00 wrote: ↑05 Feb 2026, 18:09just gonna complain once, and only once, but the new table formatting which makes any line with an image extra an large row unnecessarily is going to drive me crazy.
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toysoldier00
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James
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Link me one of the posts that you are referencing and I'll look at it and see what I can do.toysoldier00 wrote: ↑08 Feb 2026, 21:26I love the table formatting and I think it’s a really clean way to present information. But the new update is too inefficient with space, and so you kind of have to limit how much you info you can have. I did use the center tag and br tag, some font and size changes as well as images. I would love a tag that would allow me to get it back to single line per row.James wrote: ↑06 Feb 2026, 16:34I changed the th, ths, and td tags to add a little padding so it's not all collapsed in when you use the centerTable tag. Are you using any of those? I'm willing to work with you to get what you want, even if that means making a new tag for you.toysoldier00 wrote: ↑05 Feb 2026, 18:09just gonna complain once, and only once, but the new table formatting which makes any line with an image extra an large row unnecessarily is going to drive me crazy.
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toysoldier00
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toysoldier00
Topic author - Posts: 297
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Week 11 Recap: The Season Still Has Teeth

Marissa BledayNovember 9, 2025

College football is supposed to tighten in November, fewer pretenders, more pressure, and almost no room for a bad half. Week 11 didn’t just tighten. It yanked.
In Iowa City, Oregon delivered the kind of performance that makes the rest of the sport look small. In Lubbock, Texas Tech turned BYU’s dream season into a hard lesson in horsepower. In Tuscaloosa, Alabama and LSU staged a seven-overtime stress test that was equal parts defense, chaos and survival. And in the background, Texas A&M made its own statement: this isn’t just a nice story anymore.
By the end of Saturday night, the sport felt different than it did on Friday afternoon. That’s November.
#8 Oregon Ducks 42 at
#20 Iowa Hawkeyes 0Oregon’s message: We’re still here, and we’re angry.
Oregon didn’t beat Iowa. Oregon erased Iowa.
The Ducks walked into Kinnick Stadium and left with a 42–0 demolition that never flirted with being competitive: 468–119 in yards, 28–8 in first downs, 37 minutes of possession, seven sacks, and even a safety for good measure. Iowa tried Mark Gronowski, then tried Hank Brown, and ended up with the same result: a suffocating afternoon that never allowed an escape hatch.
Dante Moore was clinical, completing 35 of 39 passes for 365 yards and two touchdowns, making the game feel like a passing clinic rather than a road test. Tight end Kenyon Sadiq (nine catches, 132 yards) became Moore’s security blanket and explosive weapon all at once, while Evan Stewart turned limited targets into maximum impact with two touchdown grabs.
“We came here to play our brand of football for 60 minutes,” Moore said. “Not a drive, not a quarter, all day. And once our defense started stacking stops, it felt like we could just keep leaning on them.”
Oregon didn’t win the line of scrimmage. It owned it. Linebacker Teitum Tuioti posted three sacks, Matayo Uiagalelei added another, and the Ducks never let Iowa breathe long enough to even attempt a rhythm. The Hawkeyes didn’t just lose, they were prevented from ever becoming themselves.
#7 BYU Cougars 20 at
#11 Texas Tech Red Raiders 38In Lubbock, the Big 12’s biggest game turned into a Texas Tech showcase.
The Red Raiders ended BYU’s unbeaten run with a 38–20 win that felt closer to a separation than an upset. After taking a 17–13 lead into halftime, Tech put its foot down: 21 unanswered points, a 38–14 advantage, and a stadium that spent the fourth quarter sounding like it already knew the ending.
Behren Morton was the headliner, throwing for 359 yards and four touchdowns on 37-of-49 passing, adding a rushing touchdown for good measure. Tight end Terrance Carter Jr. caught everything in sight (12 receptions, 127 yards, TD), and freshman Quinten Joyner ran with the kind of decisiveness that keeps a defense honest (125 yards on 16 carries).
“We’re built for November,” Morton said. “When the moment gets bigger, we don’t shrink. We speed up.”
BYU didn’t play terribly, Bear Bachmeier threw for 227 yards and a touchdown, and LJ Martin ran for 105 and a score, but the Cougars couldn’t live on third down (3-of-13) and couldn’t manufacture explosives against the best defense they’ve seen all season.
Alabama survives LSU in seven overtimes of pure tension
#23 LSU Tigers 19 at
#6 Alabama Crimson Tide 21If Oregon was a statement, Alabama-LSU was a stress fracture.
Alabama survived 21–19 in seven overtimes, the kind of game that stops being about beauty and becomes about stamina, nerve, and one play. That play came in the seventh overtime when defensive tackle Jeremiah Beamen tracked down LSU’s Caden Durham to deny the conversion and finally end the night.
“This was about refusing to break,” Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer said. “We bent, we took punches, and we kept showing up for the next snap.”
The game changed when LSU senior quarterback Garrett Nussmeier, unexpectedly unable to go due to injury, left the Tigers leaning on Michael Van Buren Jr. and a game plan that couldn’t consistently protect him. Alabama’s pass rush turned brutal: LT Overton posted 5.5 sacks, a performance that will live in Tide lore, as Alabama finished with 10 sacks total. LSU’s defense fought back with five sacks of its own, and the game became a trench war.
Ty Simpson threw for 309 of Alabama’s 333 total yards, but he also tossed two interceptions, and Alabama’s run game never found a clean lane. Still, Ryan Williams erupted for 144 yards and a touchdown, and Josh Cuevas piled up 12 catches for 102 yards as Simpson kept swinging.
The overtimes were, frankly, a mess of missed conversions, until Alabama finally connected to Isaiah Horton and LSU couldn’t answer. Ugly? Sure. Surviving is rarely pretty.
#4 Texas A&M 31 at
#15 Missouri Tigers 7Texas A&M responded to being dropped in the poll like a contender does: with violence.
The Aggies throttled Missouri 31–7 in Columbia, holding a typically dangerous Mizzou offense to 125 total yards. Texas A&M ran 79 plays to Missouri’s 51 and sacked Beau Pribula five times, with Tyler Onyedim and Albert Regis each collecting two sacks and Cashius Howell adding another.
“We heard all the talk,” A&M coach Mike Elko said. “But if you’re trying to be the team you say you are, you can’t play mad, you’ve got to play disciplined. I thought we did that.”
Marcel Reed threw 56 times and completed 39 passes for 278 yards and two touchdowns, while Le’Veon Moss delivered two rushing scores. Missouri never found its rhythm, Ahmad Hardy was swallowed whole (10 carries, net zero yards, TD), and Pribula’s day unraveled under constant pressure.
The rest of the day: shutouts, stunners, and one fearless two-point call
Navy Midshipmen 0 at
#13 Notre Dame Fighting Irish 37In a downpour in South Bend, Notre Dame ran Navy off the field, 37–0, behind Jeremiyah Love’s masterpiece: 201 rushing yards and three touchdowns on 20 carries. Navy never sniffed the red zone, and the Irish pounded out 244 rushing yards like it was a weather-proof mission statement.

Cal Golden Bears 17 at
#10 Louisville Cardinals 14Cal upset No. 10 Louisville 17–14, leaning on freshman quarterback Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele and a timely ground game from Kendrick Raphael.
Wake Forest Demon Deacons 36 at
#18 Virginia Cavaliers 35Wake Forest stunned No. 18 Virginia 36–35, scoring with eight seconds left, and going for two to win it instead of settling for overtime. “We came to win, not to extend it,” Wake Forest’s Robby Ashford said after throwing for 275 yards and three touchdowns.
#24 Washington Huskies 20 at
Wisconsin Badgers 28And in Madison, Wisconsin knocked off No. 24 Washington 28–20, with Billy Edwards Jr. throwing for 317 yards and three touchdowns in a performance that felt like a jolt for a team that just fired their head coach.
Week 11 wasn’t subtle. Oregon and Texas Tech looked like teams capable of breaking the sport. Alabama and Texas A&M looked like teams built to survive it. And everywhere else, the message was the same: in November, the game collects its debts.
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toysoldier00
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Buckeyes Sweep Big Ten Player of the Week Honors; Styles, Klare Given Nod
By Zachary Anderson on November 9, 2025

Max Klare put up three touchdowns at his old stomping ground this past weekend in Ross-Ade Stadium.

Ohio State's 41-7 rout of Purdue didn’t just keep the Buckeyes undefeated, it earned them a clean sweep of the Big Ten’s weekly awards.
Tight end Max Klare was named the conference’s Offensive Player of the Week after torching his former team for nine receptions, 80 yards and three touchdowns at Ross-Ade Stadium.
Klare’s performance was the centerpiece of an Ohio State passing attack that leaned on him repeatedly, especially with starting receiver Carnell Tate sidelined by a nagging shoulder injury. With Tate out, the Buckeyes needed someone to become the reliable, chain-moving matchup problem in the middle of the field, and Klare filled that role from the opening quarter through the final rotation of backups.
Two of Klare’s touchdowns came in the first half as Ohio State raced to a 24-0 halftime lead, effectively ending any chance Purdue had of settling into its preferred script. His third score, another red-zone finish, helped push the game into full-blowout territory as the Buckeyes’ offense continued to cash in short fields created by the defense.
The award pushed Klare’s season totals to 38 catches for 334 yards and five touchdowns. Ohio State has used him in a variety of roles this year, as an underneath target on third down, a seam threat off play-action and a physical red-zone option, but Saturday was the most complete illustration of why the Buckeyes prioritized him in the transfer portal.

On the other side of the ball, linebacker Sonny Styles took home Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week after stuffing the stat sheet with five tackles, one sack, one interception, one pass breakup and a forced fumble.
Styles’ best moments came in the same theme Ohio State has authored all season: early defensive disruption that flips a game before it can breathe. His interception was one of two picked off by the Buckeyes in the first quarter, and his pressure repeatedly helped collapse the pocket on a Purdue offense that never recovered from its disastrous start.
Styles has been a Swiss Army knife in Matt Patricia’s defense, a linebacker with safety range, a blitz weapon who can win off the edge and a playmaker who closes space fast when quarterbacks make late decisions. Through the first nine games, Styles has 45 tackles, 10 tackles for loss, two sacks, one interception, five pass breakups and a forced fumble over 311 snaps.
Ohio State will take the dual recognition, but the bigger takeaway is what it says about the Buckeyes’ formula: even with key pieces missing, there’s enough depth, and enough playmaking on both sides, to overwhelm teams quickly.
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James
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Looks like you had a couple of extra spaces in there. I removed them. Does that look better?
