Jordan Babineaux in 2008. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)
THIS IS THE SPORTS SPECTRUM PODCAST WITH MATT FORTE, FEATURING JORDAN BABINEAUX
Jordan Babineaux played nine seasons in the NFL with the Seattle Seahawks and Tennessee Titans. He was undrafted after playing college football at Division-II Southern Arkansas.
Nicknamed “Big Play Babs,” Jordan played in Super Bowl XL with the Seahawks and made the famous tackle on Tony Romo after a botched field-goal attempt in the 2006 NFC Wild-Card Game between Seattle and Dallas.
Matt Forte welcomes Jordan Babineaux to the podcast to discuss his miraculous journey to the NFL and how he was able to overcome the loss of his dad to achieve success. Jordan also discusses his retirement and transition away from the game, and the importance of pivoting well.
#27 Jordan Babineaux was signed as a UDFA by the #Seahawks in 2004, making 10 interceptions, 7 forced fumbles, 32 PBUs, 4 sacks & a safety in 7 seasons pic.twitter.com/18dak4460x
Oregon quarterback Dante Moore passes during the Orange Bowl, Jan. 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
For more than three decades, Oregon has been one of college football’s model programs. With flashy uniforms, rosters full of future NFL stars, and an imposing home atmosphere, the Ducks have become one of the country’s premier teams.
In its 108-year history, Oregon has won 14 conference championships and 17 bowl games. The program has been particularly successful during the 2000s, including two national runner-up finishes in 2010 and 2014, and the program’s only Heisman Trophy winner in quarterback Marcus Mariota.
Yet one thing has always eluded the Ducks: a national championship. That’s the drought No. 5 Oregon is trying to end this season as it faces conference-foe and No. 1 Indiana in the Peach Bowl on Friday night.
And if the Ducks are finally going to break through, quarterback Dante Moore will be a central reason why. After transferring from UCLA to Oregon in 2024, Moore sat behind future NFL quarterback Dillon Gabriel last season before taking over the starting job this season. Heading into Friday, he’s amassed 3,280 passing yards with 28 touchdowns (10th in the nation) and nine interceptions in 2025-26.
His breakout season has skyrocketed his NFL stock, with ESPN projecting him as the No. 2 pick in the 2026 draft in its latest mock draft — though he could return to Oregon for another season.
He felt comfortable immediately upon arriving in Eugene, both on and off the field. Shortly after he enrolled, he connected with the team chaplain, where a conversation led to Moore getting baptized.
“Coach (Dan) Lanning asked me ‘what’s my why’ recently, and it’s to glorify God,” Moore said last March on the “Ducks of a Feather” podcast, hosted by former Oregon and NFL players Jonathan Stewart and Kenjon Barner. “God has blessed me with the body I have just to compete and play the game of football that I love, be around people that I’m building connections with for the rest of my life. I’m just doing everything to glorify Him.
“That can be being an athlete, it can be being a student. That’s why recently my Instagram for the past year-and-a-half now has been a lot of verses, a lot of me reading the Bible.”
Indeed, Moore’s social media presence reflects his faith. His Instagram bio says he’s a “Follower of Christ,” and those who follow Moore will often see pictures of what he’s reading in the Scriptures that day. He was also seen praying with his teammates ahead of Oregon’s Orange Bowl win over Texas Tech.
“I just want to do everything He’s blessed me to do,” Moore said on the podcast. “He gave His Son Jesus Christ to die for our sins, so just understand that every day that’s what drives me to be thankful for that situation and the opportunity to be where I’m at.”
His spiritual journey started with a rollercoaster freshman year at UCLA, where he said he quickly learned from some difficult stretches.
“My freshman year, my first three games were amazing. Then everything goes downhill from there and I feel like, I’ve been at the lowest of lows and the highest of highs,” Moore told 247Sports’ Duck Territory blog in October. “Coach (Chip) Kelly did a great job of making sure that I stayed positive as a mindset, but it’s just hard when you’re a freshman and you’re a young guy and you’re 17 years old in L.A. and far away from home, to stay positive and smile through it all.”
For some athletes, a change of scenery can make all the difference. That seems to be the case for Moore. At Oregon, he found not only a fresh start, but a culture that emphasized trust, joy and purpose.
“Being here with Coach Lanning, a great coach who I love to death and who I’m blessed to have him — the way he talks, communicates and calls me, just having a head coach who I trust,” Moore told 247Sports. “He’s just always telling me like code words on the field to remember my childhood self playing football in little league smiling. At the end of the day, I play the game to glorify God and if it’s a loss or a win, it doesn’t matter as long as I play my 100% hardest — that’s where my smile comes from.”
That perspective will be tested again Friday night. Indiana handed Oregon its lone defeat earlier this season, 30-20 in Oregon on Oct. 11. Their rematch comes on the big stage of the College Football Playoff semifinals. The quarterback on the other sideline is Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza, whom many experts believe will be the No. 1 overall pick in the upcoming NFL Draft.
But Moore isn’t approaching the moment with bitterness or pressure — rather, with gratitude and high praise for his counterpart, who is also not shy about sharing his faith in Jesus.
“He’s somebody that works his tail off, a very smart quarterback,” Moore said about Mendoza to reporters this week. “But I think the biggest thing that I take away from him is he gives glory to God through his success, through his accolades, through his wins, he always gives time to glorify God, and that’s something I appreciate. Respect towards him.”
Oregon and Indiana will kick off at 7:30 p.m. ET Friday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. The winner moves on to the national championship game.
Ravens kicker Tyler Loop reacts after missing the potential game-winning field goal, Jan. 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Matt Durisko)
Baltimore Ravens rookie kicker Tyler Loop lined up his field-goal attempt against his team’s arch-rival as an AFC North title and a spot in the playoffs hung in the balance on Sunday. Make the kick, and you’re in. Miss it, and your season is over.
The Steelers’ home crowd buzzed with uneasy anticipation in the bitter cold of an early-January night in Pittsburgh. The Ravens had just converted an improbable 4th-and-7 into a 26-yard gain and a chance to win the game. Forty-four yards. Not a “gimme,” but Loop should make it.
A distraught Loop covered his face in the moments after his miss as he was consoled by his holder (and the team’s punter), Jordan Stout. But in the locker room after the game, with Ravens longsnapper Nick Moore and Stout standing behind him in an act of support, Loop bravely faced the media and pointed to the One who sustains him.
“I had written down a little prayer before the game and [I was] just re-reading it,” he said. “Faith is a big part of my life, and right now I’m reading the Book of Romans. In Romans 8, it says, ‘God works for the good of those who love Him, who are called according to His purpose.’
“… Just reminding myself that, ‘Hey, you know, God’s got my back even when stuff sucks.'”
“God’s got my back, even when stuff sucks.”
This is awesome to see from Ravens kicker Tyler Loop answering questions and pointing to the Lord after a tough loss Sunday night against Pittsburgh. pic.twitter.com/nQAPhLelky
“I just want to say I’m super grateful to Baltimore — the organization, the city — just how they’ve embraced me this year has been incredible,” Loop also told the media. “Just for it to end like that sucks, and I want to do better. Unfortunately the nature of the job is you have makes, and then unfortunately you have misses. And for that to happen tonight sucks.”
Loop expressed how much his teammates and coaches had supported him throughout his first NFL season, and that continued in the wake of his season-ending miss. In addition to the support from Moore and Stout, star running back and fellow Christ-follower Derrick Henry also spoke about Loop to the media.
“I feel for Tyler,” Henry said. “I talked to him. I told him just keep his spirits up. Deal with it tonight, and tomorrow the sun rises again. I just told him that the story after this is gonna be great for him, because God put him in this position to use him as an example to something that is adversity. And then I can’t wait to see him overcome it on the other side.
“But I just told [Loop] to trust God’s plan. He wouldn’t put him in this position if he wasn’t strong enough to handle it. I know it’s tough right now, but I think when it’s all said and done, he’ll look back on it and appreciate the moment.”
Loop was drafted out of Arizona by the Ravens in the sixth round in last April’s NFL Draft, the second kicker selected, four spots behind Andres Borregales of the New England Patriots. Loop made an instant impact in Baltimore’s locker room by winning the starting job in the preseason. He then made 30 of 34 field goals (88.2%) and 44 of 46 extra-point attempts (95.7%) in the regular season, and he did not miss a field-goal attempt from less than 50 yards until Sunday night.
Before beginning his professional career, the Lucas, Texas, native spent five successful collegiate seasons with the Wildcats, earning second-team All-Pac 12 honors in 2023 and being named a semifinalist for the Lou Groza Award in 2024. He converted on 67 of 80 field-goal attempts (83.8%) and 126 of 128 extra-point attempts (98.4%) during his time in Tucson.
Loop — who describes himself as a “Jesus super fan” in his X bio and a “Follower of Christ” on Instagram — isn’t afraid to post about his faith in Jesus on social media. He even shared his testimony of faith on Instagram for the world to see.
After his college career ended with a 49-7 loss to rival Arizona State, Loop took to Instagram to thank the Tucson community for his college football experience.
“I am deeply grateful for all that God has provided me here — people, relationships, and opportunities,” he captioned his post. “I have been truly blessed and am excited to follow Christ into whatever chapter He has planned for my life. Forever and always, Bear Down.”
Another offseason now awaits Loop and his Ravens teammates, preparing to once again chase an AFC North championship in 2026-27. For Loop, the memory of how this season ended will surely be a painful one all summer, but by God’s grace, it will be one in which Loop knows his Heavenly Father was at work to increase his joy in Him.
Jaguars QB Trevor Lawrence throws a pass while wearing a wristband citing Galatians 6:9, Jan. 4, 2026. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
The NFL playoffs are set, and the Jacksonville Jaguars may be the hottest team few seem to be talking about.
Led by fifth-year quarterback Trevor Lawrence, the Jaguars are 13-4, AFC South champs, and finished the regular season by winning eight consecutive games, including Sunday’s 41-7 division-clinching demolition of the Tennessee Titans. Their 13 wins are the second-most in a season in franchise history (one win behind the 1999 squad).
In an AFC playoff bracket in which all seven teams won at least 10 games, the Jaguars’ 13-4 record was good enough for the conference’s No. 3 seed. They will host the No. 6-seeded Buffalo Bills (12-5) in the wild-card round.
Lawrence also contributed 359 yards rushing and nine touchdowns this season, both career highs.
“We know there’s more for us,” he said in Sunday’s postgame press conference while looking ahead to the playoffs. “It doesn’t stop here. We’ve put in all this work to get here. Let’s not let it go to waste.”
This year’s playoffs will not be Lawrence’s first postseason experience; the No. 1 overall pick by the Jaguars out of Clemson in 2021 also led Jacksonville to an AFC South crown after his second professional season in 2022. In that wild-card matchup, the Jaguars fell behind the L.A. Chargers 27-0 in the second quarter before mounting an incredible comeback on the back of Lawrence’s four TDs. They won the game, 31-30, on a field goal as time expired, before falling to the eventual Super Bowl champions, the Kansas City Chiefs, the next week.
Now, with his performance this season, Lawrence has quieted many of his doubters. The 2023-24 season saw the Jaguars collapse down the stretch (losing five of their last six), and the 2024-25 campaign was arguably his most frustrating as a pro. He went 2-8 in his 10 starts last season before a left shoulder injury and a concussion sidelined him. Prior to that season, in the summer of 2024, Lawrence signed a lucrative five-year contract extension that tied him for the highest-paid player in NFL history.
But through the ups and downs of life in the NFL, Lawrence has always been consistent about his ultimate purpose of glorifying God in all that he does.
“It’s something I really want to be known about me,” Lawrence told the Florida Times-Union in September 2024 about his faith in Christ. “I wouldn’t be who I am if it wasn’t for my faith or my relationship with Jesus. It’s the biggest thing in my life. I know the peace that it’s given me, especially in this crazy job that we have.”
Lawrence grew up in Cartersville, Georgia, with faithful parents who pointed him to Christ. Yet as he fell in love with football, won two state championships as a starting quarterback, and turned himself into one of the most sought-after high school football prospects in the nation, the outside adulation began to take a spiritual toll.
He arrived at Clemson early, in January 2018, sensitive to what others thought of him and troubled about what it meant to be famous. He found himself too often surrounded by the wrong crowds, crowds that puffed up his ego and led him away from Christ. Amid his crisis of faith, he sought — and found — spiritual mentorship to ground his identity in Christ. By that July, after experiencing anew the depths of God’s love for him, he recommitted his life to Christ and was baptized. By that September, he was making public declarations about his faith, and by the following January, he was the starting quarterback for the college football national champions.
“When God came into my life, that unsettled feeling about the way I lived and acted that came over me, that is really what has humbled me more than anything,” Lawrence told the Florida Times-Union. “And now, especially having success and making money, that really doesn’t make me happy, it really doesn’t.
“… My faith in Jesus and believing that there’s something bigger in this world is what matters.”
Lawrence wants another taste of postseason success as badly as anybody when the Jaguars and Bills kick off on Sunday at 1 p.m. ET. But as a father and a spiritual leader in the Jaguars locker room, his soul can be at rest, knowing that no game will ever put his identity as a son of God at stake.