Longtime ESPN analyst Lee Corso seemed in high spirits ahead of the 2025 College Football Playoff National Championship - but he was struggling to keep up with his co-hosts
Corso, a longtime staple of the ESPN crew, made his final pick of the season for Monday's national championship between Ohio State and Notre Dame.
Lee Corso has been many things — a college football coach, Burt Reynolds' college roommate and America’s favorite college football lovin’ crazy grandfather on ESPN's College GameDay, where he makes his "headgear picks" each week on location during College Football Saturday.
Heading into Monday’s College Football Playoff National Championship Game, seemingly everyone is on the Ohio State Buckeyes’ bandwagon. While some college
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.
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..
It doesn’t get any bigger than the College Football Playoff National Championship game, and this year’s participants are the Ohio State Buckeyes and Notre Dame Fighting Irish. If
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 ...
ESPN's 88-year-old 'College Football GameDay' analyst Lee Corso looked happy ahead of the 2025 National Championship while some users on X compared him to Joe Biden
Now that Ohio State has won the College Football Playoff National Championship, eyes are on the 2026 season. But don't expect a repeat.
Boston College, Cal, Duke, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Louisville, Miami, NC State, UNC, Pitt, Stanford, Syracuse, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest, Arizona, Baylor, BYU, Colorado, Center Florida,