Sports
Best Big Ten 2026 College Football Win Total Future Betting Picks
After winning national titles over the last three seasons, many feel that the best college football in the country currently resides in the Big 10.
This season should be no different, with top teams reloading via the portal and bottom-tier teams investing even more in NIL just to keep up. Here are my three favorite Big Ten win total props for the upcoming season.
Ohio State o9.5: -150
I know that Ohio State probably has the hardest schedule in the country, but I just don’t see a world where that happens. Let’s take a look at their hardest matchups this year:
@ Texas
@ Iowa
@ Indiana
@ USC
Oregon
Michigan
That’s obviously a gauntlet; however, they’ll only need to go 4-2 in that stretch to hit the over. I just feel this offense is too talented to go 9-3. Julian Sayin, Bo Jackson, and the best player in the country, Jeremiah Smith, form the best skill-position group in the nation.
New offensive coordinator Arthur Smith might take some time to figure things out; I just don’t see a world where an offense this talented, with an experienced offensive line, doesn’t have double-digit wins after the Michigan game this year.
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Penn State u8.5: +125
2025 was a low point for Penn State. The Nittany Lions moved on from James Franklin for a coach that I don’t think is much better than him. Matt Campbell has his work cut out for him this season; luckily, he’s bringing over most of his former Iowa State squad to ease the transition.
Unfortunately for him, I’m not sure that Iowa State team was all that great last year. Penn State does have one of the easier schedules in the Big Ten this year, with an easy out-of-conference slate, and they miss the three best teams in the conference: Ohio State, Oregon, and Indiana.
Rocco Becht brings some veteran experience, but I don’t think he’s a top five quarterback in the conference. The schedule is easy enough for them to sneak out 9 wins; I just won’t be shocked if they finish closer to 6. They were a bad team and tried fixing that with the 34th-ranked combined transfer and recruiting class in the country. I am not high on Matt Campbell in year one at Happy Valley.
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Minnesota o6.5: +130
After his exciting tenure at Western Michigan, many thought PJ Fleck would take Minnesota to new heights. He seemed poised to meet those expectations after an 11-2 season in 2019, but things have slowed over the next few years.
Still, I think Minnesota has been the most underrated, consistently good team in the country during his tenure. Excluding the COVID-shortened 2020, Minnesota has eclipsed 7 wins in all but one year under Fleck, and this year should be no different.
Drake Lindsey is an awesome option at quarterback, and Minnesota invested in him this offseason by bringing in Auburn transfer Perry Thompson and Cincinnati transfer Noah Jennings. The offensive line is the best it’s been in years, and if the defense can hold up, don’t be shocked to see Minnesota sneak out a 9-win season. Mississippi State, @ Washington, Michigan, Iowa, @ Indiana, @ Penn State, and @ Wisconsin will decide what type of season they’ll have. If you think they can go 2-5 in that stretch, take the over for the Golden Gophers.
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Nick Faldo criticizes Bryson DeChambeau's links game
Sir Nick Faldo talks about the first time he played golf with Jack Nicklaus during his Memorial Honoree Ceremony at the driving range at Muirfield Village Golf Club before the 2015 Memorial Tournament on June 3, 2015. (Dispatch photo by Kyle Robertson) World Golf Hall of Fame member Nick Faldo teed off on Bryson DeChambeau, accusing the two-time major winner of having “zero clue of strategy” for links golf ahead of this week’s The Open Championship.
Faldo, 68, who counts three Claret Jugs among his six major titles, said DeChambeau’s power-hitting, attack-oriented approach won’t work at links courses like Royal Birkdale Golf Club.
“I’d say it to his face — DeChambeau has zero clue of strategy,” Faldo told Sky Sports.
“He said last year: ‘I’m going to go out and attack the links.’ Well, I’ve never attacked a links. You thread it, don’t you? You feed it down the fairway.
“You look at humps and bumps. If I send it over and feed it, it nudges back into play. You don’t think: ‘Oh, I’ll just blast it down there. Can’t see where I’m going.’ The fairway is 20 yards wide.
“You’ve got to think: ‘How do I get it on the short grass?’ It is so important.”
DeChambeau, 32, brings a dubious streak into the 154th Open in Southport, England. The LIV Golf member missed the cut at each of this season’s first three Grand Slam events.
Both of DeChambeau’s major wins came at the U.S. Open, in 2020 and 2024. His best finish at The Open is a tie for eighth in 2022 at St Andrews in Scotland, and he tied for 10th last year at Royal Portrush in Ireland.
DeChambeau does have two LIV Golf wins this season and sounded confident upon his arrival at Royal Birkdale.
“This is a tough golf course; I like it,” DeChambeau said. “It really tests every facet of your game.
“I’ve got new irons in the bag. They were 3D-printed. They take about an hour to print. From machining and printing and all the different processes we make.
“If I feel good, I know I can give myself a chance. I know I haven’t had the best results this year, but I’ve won twice, and top-three’d three times. Just a couple of weird things happening at the majors.”
DeChambeau is playing the first two rounds Thursday and Friday in a threesome with World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and England’s Tyrrell Hatton, also from LIV Golf.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Storm and Sky looking to clean up late-game messes
Jul 12, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Chicago Sky guard Courtney Vandersloot (22) reacts during the second half against the Dallas Wings at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images Poor execution late in games has plagued the Chicago Sky and Seattle Storm during the first two months of the WNBA season.
Host Chicago and Seattle will try to regroup when the teams meet in a Wednesday matinee.
The Sky (7-16) return to Wintrust Arena on the heels of a 1-3 road trip whose record might have been flipped.
After a 12-0 fourth-quarter run helped force overtime at Las Vegas on July 3, the Sky managed just four points in the extra session and lost by eight. On Sunday, Chicago led by eight points in the fourth quarter at Dallas before falling 96-91.
Sydney Taylor paced Chicago with 20 points against the Wings while Azura Stevens (18 points, 13 rebounds) and Kamilla Cardoso (12 points, 13 rebounds) notched double-doubles.
“It’s just not making the plays when we need to,” said Sky guard Courtney Vandersloot. “That’s what great teams do. You saw it in Vegas. You saw it in Dallas. Great players, great teams, make great plays in that moment, and we just haven’t done it yet.
“It’s nobody’s fault. At some point, all of us have made a mistake that we wish we could have taken back. It’s little things like that that seem to slip away.”
The Storm (6-19) can attest. Coach Sonia Raman sounded remarkably like Vandersloot when sizing up Seattle’s 84-79 loss on Sunday at Washington.
“I thought we were right there and just couldn’t get over the hump,” Raman said.
Seattle, which led by six early in the fourth quarter, committed eight of its 19 turnovers in the final period and scored just 11 fourth-quarter points on 4-of-14 shooting.
Still, there were things to be encouraged about, including a career-best 31 points from eight-year veteran Natisha Hiedeman. She has contributed at least 15 points in four straight games.
Dominique Malonga added 10 points and 15 rebounds for her first double-double since June 27 and fifth this season. Malonga chastised herself for fouling out, however, and pledged to improve her discipline going forward.
“I need to be able to stay on the floor,” she said. “I need to be able to just be clean with my game overall, especially when it comes down to crunch time.”
–Field Level Media
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No longer 'so bad at golf,' Rory McIlroy eagerly awaits The Open
Jul 14, 2026; Southport, England; Rory McIlroy (R) and Shane Lowry (L) walk up hole 7 during a practice round for The Open Championship golf tournament at Royal Birkdale. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Two short days ago, Rory McIlroy was admonishing himself in the short rough at The Renaissance Club in Scotland.
After hooking a 6-iron into thick rough at the Scottish Open when his target was the 16th green directly in front of him, the Northern Ireland native blurted out: “Oh, my god. I’m so bad at golf!”
Fortunately for fans counting on McIlroy, the six-time major winner, to make a run at his second Open Championship this week at Royal Birkdale Golf Club, he did not feel quite the same way about his game as of Tuesday afternoon.
“It’s funny,” McIlroy told reporters in Southport, England. “I felt really good the first two days in Scotland and then felt like my game just sort of deteriorated as the week went on. Even though I shot a good score on Sunday, it didn’t feel very good.”
Because McIlroy needed to play nearly two full rounds Sunday to complete his T7 finish — the result of a weather delay on Saturday — he didn’t expend energy touring Royal Birkdale on Monday.
That might have been the best thing for him.
“Yeah, I’ve done a good bit of work the past couple days,” he said. “Again, getting the TrackMan out, seeing what my numbers are, and just trying to match up the feels of my swing with what I’m seeing.
“Also, like I played 30 holes on Sunday. I felt a little bit tired yesterday, so I didn’t make it on the course, but that allowed me a bit more time to hit some balls and dig into the swing a little bit. Felt good on the range. Felt good out on the course today. Definitely trending in the right direction.”
McIlroy tends to be heading in the right direction when the Open comes around. This is the 17th Open for the 37-year-old, who won at Royal Liverpool in 2014 and owns six top-five and eight top-10 finishes, including a T4 in 2017 at Royal Birkdale.
Royal Birkdale has changed extensively since then — there are three new holes and changes to the other 15 holes thanks to a massive renovation — and McIlroy likes the adjustments.
But the World No. 2 is also curious to see how golfers attack a course that has changed dramatically over the last few weeks due to the heat wave engulfing much of Europe.
“When I was here a couple weeks ago, the rough was a lot more penal than it’s going to be this week,” McIlroy said. “It’s definitely burnt out a lot.
“There may be certain instances where — you know, the big thing, especially off the tee here, is the fairway bunkers and avoiding those. You might see some guys being more aggressive off the tee, taking driver, trying to take the fairway bunkers out of play. OK, it might be in the rough, but it’s not that penal, so you get a wedge in your hand and you can figure it out from there.”
Isn’t figuring it out half the fun of links golf? McIlroy says yes … and no.
“I think what we all know, even going back to (the U.S. Open at) Shinnecock a few weeks ago: When you give professional golfers options and you can create a little bit of doubt in their minds in terms of should I play this shot or that shot, that’s when things start to get fun, especially for the viewer,” McIlroy said. “Not so much for us but …
“That, to me, is the sign of a good championship test.”
–Field Level Media
