Penn State Gets Another Preseason Boost From ESPN.
In today’s Penn State reading room, the expectation clock keeps ticking for the Nittany Lions, who continue to get more and more preseason love from ESPN. Elsewhere, the College Football Playoff format that favored the Nittany Lions last year is gone, and Abdul Carter signed his very big contract with the New York Giants. Here’s what to know about Penn State football today.
ESPN’s SP+ is all-in on the Nittany Lions
Penn State has been a spring star across multiple predictive platforms, particularly regarding its exceptional offseason retention program and its hiring of defensive coordinator Jim Knowles. FOX Sports’ Joel Klatt placed Penn State atop his post-spring rankings, counting the Nittany Lions as real national-championship contenders.The data is behind Penn State as well. ESPN’s Bill Connolly, author of the SP+ predictive model, has the Nittany Lions at No. 3 in his latest set of rankings. Penn State is behind only Ohio State and Alabama and ranks fifth in each of the offensive and defensive categories.
Some key takeaways from Connolly’s latest release:
Penn State’s average win total in the model is 10.4, lower than only Notre Dame (10.5) in the SP+ rankings. That bodes well for a high playoff seed.
Penn State has the lowest strength-of-schedule rank (29th) among the top 5 teams. The Nittany Lions start the season with a very favorable month of three non-conference games and a bye week before hosting Oregon for what likely will be the White Out.
Penn State has the highest odds (82 percent) among Big Ten teams of finishing 10-2 or better in the regular season. Strength of schedule matters here.
The 2025 Nittany Lions are going to make everyone’s preseason playoff bracket. But where, considering that bracket will be different.
The College Football Playoff changes its seeding process
The 2025-26 College Football Playoff bracket will be filled through a straight seeding process based on the final CFP rankings. That means, the four conference champions will not receive the top four seeds. They will be guaranteed playoff berths but not first-round byes.In some ways, Penn State benefitted from the seeding process last year. The Nittany Lions were seeded sixth, earning a path to the semifinals through SMU and Boise State. Had the adjusted format been in place last year, the bracket would have looked much different. As you can see, Penn State would not have hosted a first-round game and might have played Notre Dame a round earlier
