Monday, December 29, 2025

 CFW Week 18 Results/19 Forecast – Whittingham a Michigan man

Minnesota, BYU, North Texas and Houston

survive, while Army and UTSA thrive, and

the coaching carousel appears to be over  

 

Is the coaching carousel over and done with? It is unless an NFL team or two comes calling on a college coach in January.

 

The two remaining college head coaching jobs that were yet to be filled were both secured on Boxing Day – the day after Christmas. Ohio and Michigan now have coaches.

 

After last season, Ohio promoted its offensive coordinator Brian Smith to head coach when Tim Albin left to become the coach at Charlotte. A few weeks ago, Ohio fired Brian Smith for misconduct and inappropriate behavior. Again this year, Ohio stayed home and promoted its defensive coordinator John Hauser to head coach. Let’s hope Hauser avoids inappropriate behavior. Hauser has been Ohio’s interim coach since Smith was fired. He coached the Bobcats to their 17-10 Frisco Bowl win over UNLV.

 

First thing on Boxing Day, sources said Utah coach Kyle Whittingham had become the leading candidate for the Michigan head coach job. Whittingham was the preferred candidate over Missouri’s Eli Drinkwitz and Washington’s Jedd Fisch.

 

By mid-day on December 26, reports were saying that Whittingham and Michigan were in talks, working on a deal.

 

That afternoon, sources were reporting that Whittingham was the new head coach at Michigan. Whittingham and the Wolverines had agreed to a five-year deal. Michigan will pay Whittingham $8.2 a year over the five-year contract.

 

Whittingham informed his team that he will not be coaching them against Nebraska in the Las Vegas Bowl on December 31. As it was, Whittingham had already announced that he was stepping down at Utah after the bowl game. The Utes had already named their defensive coordinator Morgan Scalley to replace Whittingham.

 

So again, unless an NFL team comes after a college coach in January, that should be it for the coaching carousel in college football. Thirty-three schools will have a new head coach in 2026.

 

Friday – Boxing Day – was a pleasant and beautiful day in Julington Creek Plantation. The temperature was in the mid-70s and the humidity was low. Swamp Mama was getting antsy, so Princess Gator and I took her to a quilt shop so she could get her fix – fabric.

 

In the Sports Bowl in Detroit, Northwestern beat Central Michigan, 34-7. The Chippewas had four turnovers, and Northwestern turned all four of them into touchdowns.

 

Next up, Minnesota and New Mexico met in the Rate Bowl in Phoenix. The Gophers beat the Lobos, 20-17 (OT). Minnesota won its ninth-straight bowl game.

 

In the night cap on December 26, UTSA obliterated FIU, 57-20, in the First Responder Bowl in Dallas. FIU definitely needed some first responders after that game.

 

Saturday morning Swamp Mama and I bid farewell to the kids. We made our way east to I-95 and headed south. It turned out to be a good day for travel. The skies were mostly sunny and the traffic was moderate.

 

We arrived home in time for me to catch the first of eight bowl games. Saturday was the busiest day of the bowl season. No other day had as many as eight games being played. The first game – the Military Bowl – began at 11:00 a.m. ET. The final game of the day – the Texas Bowl – commenced at 9:15 p.m. ET.

 

They saved the best until the last. The best of the eight bowls on Saturday was the last of the eight bowls – the Texas Bowl between LSU and Houston. The Tigers beat the Cougars, 38-35, in a wild and entertaining game. It was a game of swings in the first half. LSU swung first, then Houston. It was a toss up in the second half.

 

The worst game of the day was the Arizona Bowl – Fresno State outkicked Miami (Ohio), 18-3. If you like field goals, then it was your kind of game. At the end, there were five field goals and only one touchdown.

 

Aside from the Houston-LSU game, the best of the bunch was the Pop-Tarts Bowl, featuring Georgia Tech and BYU. The Cougars survived a closing-seconds drive by the Yellow Jackets. BYU edged Georgia Tech, 25-21.

 

A close third, behind BYU and Georgia Tech was the New Mexico Bowl. North Texas outlasted and outscored San Diego State, 49-47. The two teams combined for 1,150 total yards. North Texas had 618 of those total yards – 368 from rushing.

 

A few teams were missing their quarterbacks – all opt-outs – and it showed. One of the teams barely survived, while the other two lost. Playing without starting quarterback Beau Pribula, Missouri fell to Virginia in the Gator Bowl, 13-7. The lack of a passing attack all but shut down Missouri running back Ahmad Hardy.

 

UConn was severely missing quarterback Joe Fagnano. In the Fenway Bowl, the Huskies had no offense, losing to Army, 41-16. Army more than made up for its loss to Navy. Plows had to remove snow from the field at Fenway Park before the game.

 

In the Military Bowl, East Carolina, playing without quarterback Katin Houser, managed to slip by Pitt, 23-17. The Pirates got a boost from Pitt’s five turnovers.

 

Playing in his seventh start since Drew Allar was lost to an injury, Penn State quarterback Ethan Grunkenmeyer, made a big impression in the Pinstripe Bowl. Grunkenmeyer passed for 262 yards and two touchdowns, as the Nittany Lions subdued Clemson, 22-10. The Pinstripe Bowl was played in frigid conditions. The temperature at kickoff was 28°. Before the game, plows had to remove the snow from the field. After the game, Clemson fans took to social media to torch Dabo Swinney.

 

Saturday was a long day, but the excitement of the Houston-LSU game at the end of the day made it all worthwhile. Needless to say, I slept good – very good – Saturday night.

 

Sunday was truly a day of rest – a lull between games.

 

French actress, singer, model and activist Brigitte Bardot died yesterday. She was famous for portraying characters with hedonistic lives. Bardot was one of the best-known symbols of the sexual revolution. She acted in 47 films and recorded more than 60 songs. A native of Paris, France, Brigitte Anne-Marie Bardot was 91.

 

Happy New Year!

 

Touchdown Tom

December 29, 2025

https://collegefootballweek.blogspot.com

 

 

Review of the Last 11 Bowl Games

 

Wooly Wildcats – (in the Sports Bowl) – Northwestern 34, Central Michigan 7 (Touchdown Tom said: Northwestern 24, Central Michigan 22). This game started off slow. It was 0-0 at the end of the first quarter. Then Northwestern got hot, mostly taking advantage of Central Michigan miscues. Northwestern led 21-0 at halftime. The Wildcats continued their run in the third quarter, adding 13 more points. With the score 34-7, CMU finally scored a touchdown with 6:11 remaining in the game. Northwestern quarterback Preston Stone passed for 226 yards and three touchdowns. Wildcats receiver Griffin Wilde had 10 catches for 97 yards. Neither team had a running game. CMU actually had a 5-minute edge in time of possession. Attendance in Detroit: 27,857

 

Holey Gophers – (in the Rate Bowl) – Minnesota 20, New Mexico 17 (OT) (Touchdown Tom said: Minnesota 23, New Mexico 20). A low-scoring game. Minnesota led 7-6 at halftime. No one scored in the third quarter. Each team got a touchdown in the fourth quarter. The score was 14-14 at the end of regulation. In the overtime, the Lobos got a field goal; the Gophers got a touchdown. Combined, the two teams only had 454 total yards. New Mexico couldn’t pass – only 88 passing yards. There were 15 penalties in the game. Attendance in Phoenix: 27,439

 

The Panther couldn’t catch the Roadrunner – (in the First Responder Bowl) – UTSA 57, FIU 20 (Touchdown Tom said: UTSA 31, FIU 30). Would you believe UTSA spotted FIU 14 points? Five and a half minutes into the first quarter, FIU led 14-0. Then UTSA scored 38 unanswered points. The rout was on. It was an embarrassing game for FIU. UTSA quarterback Owen McKown passed for 295 yards and three touchdowns. FIU quarterback Joe Pesansky only completed 35% of his passes. He was 11-for-31, with one interception. UTSA had 481 total yards. FIU only had 79 yards rushing. There were 15 penalties in the game – 11 on UTSA. Attendance in Dallas: 8,671

 

Pirates prevail – (in the Military Bowl) – East Carolina 23, Pitt 17 (Touchdown Tom said: East Carolina 30, Pitt 27). The lead in this game changed hands four times. However, when East Carolina retook the lead at 17-14 with 3:58 to go in the third quarter, the Pirates never relinquished it for the remainder of the game. The Pirates increased their lead to 23-14 and held on to beat the Panthers. East Carolina receiver Anthoiny Smith had four catches for 156 yards and two touchdowns. Pitt receiver Justin Holmes had six receptions for 100 yards. Pitt dominated all the stats. The Panthers had more first downs (24 to 11), more total yards (376 to 249), more passing yards (256 to 177), more rushing yards (120 to 72), fewer penalties (3 to 5) and a 7-minute edge in time of possession. But the Panthers had more turnovers (5 to 1). Attendance in Annapolis: 17,016

 

Dabo doesn’t do it – (in the Pinstripe Bowl) – Penn State 22, Clemson 10 (Touchdown Tom said: Penn State 26, Clemson 24). Penn State never trailed throughout the game. It was briefly tied at 3-3 in the second quarter. The Nittany Lions built their lead to 15-3 and held off Clemson. Penn State quarterback Ethan Grunkenmeyer passed for 262 yards and two touchdowns. Penn State had more first downs (20-16), more total yards (397 to 236), more passing yards (262 to 193), more rushing yards (135 to 43), more penalties (3 to 1) and a 7-minute edge in time of possession. You gotta love Penn State interim coach Terry Smith. Attendance in The Bronx: 41,101

 

The Cassons were rolling – (in the Fenway Bowl) – Army 41, Connecticut 16 (Touchdown Tom said: Connecticut 30, Army 24). UConn scored first and led 7-0 at the 9:17 mark in the first quarter. But it was all Army after that. At one point in the second quarter, Army scored 20 consecutive points. Army running back Godspower Nwawuihe almost single-handedly beat the Huskies. Nwawuihe rushed for 171 yards and two touchdowns. Army quarterback Cale Hellums was 7-8-0, passing for 108 yards and one touchdown. Hellums also rushed for 45 yards and scored two more touchdowns. Army slotback Noah Short caught all seven of Hellum’s completions, scoring one touchdown. Army had more first downs (23 to 14), more total yards (476 to 267), more passing yards (108 to 84), more rushing yards (368 to 183) and a 13-minute edge in time of possession. UConn had more penalties (5 to 0). Attendance in Boston: 22,461

 

Down to the closing seconds – (in the Pop-Tarts Bowl) – BYU 25, Georgia Tech 21 (Touchdown Tom said: BYU 28, Georgia Tech 25). This game went back-and-forth, with BYU leading 10-7 at the 9:49 mark in the second quarter. Then Georgia Tech scored 14 unanswered points before halftime. The Jackets led at the break, 21-10. There was no scoring in the third quarter. BYU countered Tech, plus one. The Cougars scored 15 unanswered points in the fourth quarter to go up, 25-21. BYU’s winning touchdown came with 2 minutes remaining in the game. The game remained tense. Tech mounted a drive deep into BYU territory. But on a fourth down play in the waning seconds, the Cougars intercepted a Georgia Tech pass in the end zone. Georgia Tech quarterback Haynes King passed for 270 yards and two touchdowns. BYU quarterback Bear Bachmeier passed for 325 yards and one touchdown. Both quarterbacks threw an interception. Georgia Tech receiver Malik Rutherford had 8 catches for 105 yards. BYU receiver Carsen Ryan had 8 catches for 120 yards. Both teams suffered two turnovers. Attendance in Orlando: 34,126

 

The Bulldogs can kick – (in the Arizona Bowl) – Fresno State 18, Miami (Ohio) 3 (Touchdown Tom said: Fresno State 23, Miami 21). Miami’s best and only effort came early in the first quarter when the RedHawks led 3-0. It was all Fresno State after that. But in small doses. The first half was all field goals. Fresno State led at the break, 9-3. Fresno Stat got the game’s only touchdown at the 11:12 mark in the fourth quarter. The Bulldogs led, 15-3. Late in the game, Fresno State added yet another field goal. Fresno State quarterback E.J. Warner was 16-23-0, passing for 214 yards and one touchdown. Fresno State receiver Josiah Freeman had 7 catches for 143 yards. Fresno State had more first downs (18 to 12), more total yards (391 to 192), more passing yards (214 to 72), more rushing yards (177 to 120), more penalties (8-4) and a 17-minute edge in time of possession. Attendance in Tucson: 37,232

 

The Mean Green were enchanted – (in the New Mexico Bowl) – North Texas 49, San Diego State 47 (Touchdown Tom said: North Texas 28, San Diego State 27). The game wasn’t quite as close as it looks. Trailing North Texas 49-40, San Diego State scored its final touchdown with 0:01 remaining in the game. Still it was an exciting game with lots of touchdowns. North Texas never trailed in the game. Leading 42-20 as the fourth quarter began, it looked like North Texas was going to blow San Diego State out of the stadium. But the Aztecs scored two back-to-back touchdowns. Just like that, the Aztecs trailed the Mean Green 42-34. Four minutes later, North Texas added to its lead, 49-34. It was that type of game. The teams scored in spurts. North Texas running back Caleb Hawkins rushed for 198 yards and two touchdowns. North Texas running back Ashton Gray ran for 152 yards and two touchdowns. San Diego State running back Bert Emanuel rushed for 170 yards and two touchdowns. There were five turnovers in the game – three by the Aztecs. Attendance in Albuquerque: 18,867

 

The Tigers weren’t great – (in the Gator Bowl) – Virginia 13, Missouri 7 (Touchdown Tom said: Missouri 26, Virginia 25). Missouri didn’t have its starting quarterback Beau Pribula. Pribula opted out of the game. That made a big difference for Mizzou’s offense. Without Pribula, the Tigers were hurting on offense. Missouri running back Ahmad Hardy started out strong. Then it looked like he was being held out. Don’t know what that was about. Missouri scored three minutes into the game and took a 7-0 lead. The Tigers never scored again for the rest of the game. Virginia didn’t score much more than that. Just enough to win. In the closing seconds, Mizzou drove deep into Virginia territory. But the Tigers couldn’t get the job done. Virginia’s best effort in the game was controlling the clock. The Cavaliers did an excellent job at that. They had a 17-minute edge in time of possession over Mizzou. Attendance in Jacksonville: 31,802

 

Cat fight – (in the Texas Bowl) – Houston 38, LSU 35 (Touchdown Tom said: LSU 24, Houston 20). Playing without Garrett Nussmeier, LSU seemed to have a better offense. But the Tigers’ defense was a no show. Actually, just four minutes into the game, LSU had a 14-0 lead. This one looked like it could be a rout for the Tigers. Then Houston scored the next 21 points. The game was on. There were two more ties at 21-21 and 28-28. With 2:23 remaining on the clock, Houston went up 38-28 and the game was all but over. But it had a frenetic second half. LSU quarterback Michael Van Buren passed for 267 yards and three touchdowns. Houston quarterback Conner Weighman passed for 236 yards and four touchdowns. Houston had 32 first downs to 17 for LSU. The Cougars also had a 17-minute edge in time of possession. Attendance in Houston: 63,867

 

Last 11 Bowl Game Picks:         8 winners, 3 fumbles (72.7 percent)

Total Bowl Game Picks To Date:  14 winners, 9 fumbles (60.9 percent)

 

 

Superlatives

 

Impressive Passers

 

BYU’s Bear Bachmeier – 27-38-1-325 (1TD).

 

Impressive Rushers

 

North Texas’ Caleb Hawkins – 198 yards (2TDs); Army’s Godspower Nwawuihe – 171 yards (2TDs); San Diego State’s Bert Emanuel – 170 yards (2TDs), and North Texas’ Ashton Gray – 152 yards (2TDs).

 

 

Touchdown Tom’s Predictions for the Next Eight Bowl Games

and One College Football Playoff Game

 

Georgia Southern (6-6) vs. Appalachian State (5-7) – (Sun Belt vs. Sun Belt) – Birmingham Bowl (Protective Stadium – Birmingham, Alabama) – 2 pm ET, Monday, ESPN – This is a rematch. The teams met during the season, with Georgia Southern winning, 25-23. When the Eagles are good, they are a pretty good football team. But when they are bad, they are really bad. The Eagles are led by quarterback J.C. French. He passed for 2,758 yards. He has a good receiver in Camden Brown. Brown caught 63 passes for 1,049 yards. Defensively, Georgia Southern is one of the worst teams in the country. Appalachian State finished the season poorly. They lost five of their last six games. The time off before the bowl may do them some good. The Eagles by a feather – Georgia Southern 28, Appalachian State 27.

 

Coastal Carolina (6-6) vs. Louisiana Tech (7-5) – (Sun Belt vs. C-USA) – Independence Bowl (Independence Stadium – Shreveport, Louisiana) – 2 pm ET, Tuesday, ESPN – Coastal Carolina made it to a bowl game, but the Chanticleers fired their coach. Coastal enters the game riding a three-game losing streak. There is nothing impressive about the Chanticleers. They have one of the worst defenses in the country. The offense has no stars. Next season, Louisiana Tech will be in the same conference as Coastal Carolina. This is the Bulldogs last game as a member of C-USA. The best part of La Tech is its defense. They aren’t bad. The offense isn’t good. But they generally get the job done. The Bulldogs can bark and bite – Louisiana Tech 31, Coastal Carolina 24.

 

Tennessee (8-4) vs. Illinois (8-4) – (SEC vs. Big Ten) – Music City Bowl (Nissan Stadium – Nashville, Tennessee) – 5:30 pm ET, Tuesday, ESPN – Tennessee has one of the best offenses in the country – primarily from passing, but the Vols can run too. The team is led by quarterback Joey Aguilar. He passed for 3,444 yards and threw 24 touchdown passes. That’s impressive. The weakness is the Vols defense. They generally are not good. The offense always hopes to outscore the opponents. Aguilar’s favorite target is receiver Chris Brazzell. He caught 62 passes for 1,017 yards. Overall, Illinois is a generally good football team. Nothing splashy about the Banned Indians. But they play basically good offense and defense. They are led by quarterback Luke Altmyer. He passed for 2,811 yards and threw 21 touchdown passes. His favorite target is receiver Hank Beatty. Beatty had 64 catches for 826 yards. The Vols play the music – Tennessee 33, Illinois 29.

 

USC (9-3) vs. TCU (8-4) – (Big Ten vs. Big 12) – Alamo Bowl (Alamodome – San Antonio, Texas) – 9 pm ET, Tuesday, ESPN – Both teams are hurting from opt-outs. USC star receiver Makai Lemon won’t be playing. TCU starting quarterback Josh Hoover won’t be playing. USC has a strong offense. They can get the job done in a lot of ways. The defense is so-so, but not bad. TCU has a good offense. The Horned Frogs can score. The defense, like USC’s, is so-so. It can be pretty good. Then again, it can be pretty bad. This game will come down to attitude, and which coach has his team better prepared. The Frogs aren’t leaping – USC 33, TCU 26.

 

Iowa (8-4) vs. Vanderbilt (10-2) – (Big Ten vs. SEC) – ReliaQuest Bowl (Raymond James Stadium – Tampa, Florida) – 12 noon ET, Wednesday, ESPN – This will be Diego Pavia’s first public appearance since he mouthed off on social media after the Heisman Trophy ceremony. Iowa fans could come up with some cruel, but funny, signs at the game. Maybe they will. Maybe they won’t. Iowa’s defense will be challenged to stop Pavia. Iowa’s offense is not explosive. It’s just methodical. But the Hawkeyes defense is awesome. Vandy comes into the game riding a three-game winning streak. Pavia passed for 3,192 yards and 27 touchdowns. His favorite target is Eli Stowers. Stowers caught 62 passes for 769 yards. Pavia is also the leading rusher with 826 yards and nine touchdowns. Vandy’s offense is better than Iowa’s. But the Commodores defense is not as good as Iowa’s defense. Fair winds and following seas for the Commodores – Vanderbilt 27, Iowa 23.

 

Arizona State (8-4) vs. Duke (8-5) – (Big 12 vs. ACC) – Sun Bowl (Sun Bowl – El Paso, Texas) – 2 pm ET, Wednesday, CBS – The best thing about Arizona State is usually running back Raleek Brown. Brown rushed for 1,141 yards. The Sun Devils have a sound offense. The defense can be porous at times. Michigan tried to get ASU coach Kenny Dillingham. But he stayed put. Duke enters the game on a three-game winning streak. The Dookies are led by quarterback Darian Mensah. He passed for 3,646 yards and 30 touchdowns. His favorite target is receiver Cooper Barkate. Barkate had 68 catches for 1,069 yards. The Duke defense is poor. The Blue Devils don’t get enough sun – Arizona State 27, Duke 25.

 

Michigan (9-3) vs. Texas (9-3) – (Big Ten vs. SEC) – Citrus Bowl (Camping World Stadium – Orlando, Florida) – 3 pm ET, Wednesday, ABC – Michigan will be playing under an interim coach. The Wolverines have a fair offense with a good defense. The offense is led by quarterback Bryce Underwood. He passed for 2,229 yards. Michigan’s running game is generally better than the passing game. Texas, being Texas, will get the Wolverines fired up. The Longhorns have a good offense and defense. The offense relies on passing more than running. The Horns offense is led by quarterback Arch Manning. He passed for 2,942 yards and 24 touchdowns. Texas came close to making the CFP. The Longhorns miff Biff – Texas 27, Michigan 24

 

Nebraska (7-5) vs. Utah (10-2) – (Big Ten vs. Big 12) – (Las Vegas Bowl (Allegiant Stadium – Las Vegas, Nevada) – 3:30 pm ET, Wednesday, ESPN – Nebraska won’t have the fire power that got them here – quarterback Dylan Raiola and running back Emmett Johnson are off to the portal. That leaves the Nebraska offense questionable – especially against a good Utah defense. Utah enters the game on a five-game winning streak. But the coach who got them here won’t be around. Kyle Whittingham is no longer a Ute. He is a Wolverine. The Utes have a darn good offense and a pretty decent defense. The offense is led by Devon Dampier. He can be tricky. Herbie swallows the corn – Utah 30, Nebraska 24.

 

 

Miami (10-2) vs. Ohio State (12-1) – (ACC vs. Big Ten) – College Football Playoff, Quarterfinal – Cotton Bowl Classic (AT&T Stadium – Arlington, Texas) – 7:30 pm ET, Wednesday, ESPN – Okay, the first of the four quarterfinal games is upon us. Urban Meyer says that Miami doesn’t have the speed to stay with Ohio State. The Canes enter the contest on a four-game winning streak. The Miami offense is led by Carson Beck. He’s seen it all. Beck passed for 3,175 yards and 26 touchdowns. His favorite target is receiver Malachi Toney. Toney is a good one. He had 89 receptions for 992 yards. Also good is running back Mark Fletcher. He ran for 857 yards. The Canes have a good offense and a better defense. The Buckeyes are loaded and going for their second-straight national championship. They only lost one game and that was just by 3 points. The Buckeyes offense is led by Julian Sayin. He passed for 3.323 yards and 31 touchdowns. His favorite target is none other than Jeremiah Smith. Smith had 80 catches for 1,086 yards. Running back Bo Jackson racked up 1,035 yards rushing. The Buckeyes look awesome compared to the Canes. But Miami is deceptively good. The Canes run out of wind – Ohio State 26, Miami 19.

 

 

Quotes of the Week

 

“This is the greatest moment of my life,” Penn State interim coach Terry Smith, after the win over Clemson in the Pinstripe Bowl.

 

“Michigan stumbles into the one coach who can eliminate years of shame,” USA Today sports writer Matt Hayes, on Kyle Whittingham.

 

Kyle Whittingham is an upgrade for Michigan, just not a home run,” USA Today sports writer Blake Toppmeyer.

 

Touchdown Tom

https://collegefootballweek.blogspot.com

 

P.S.

 

Not exactly college football related, but as the year was about to come to an end and college football fans, still in the midst of bowl games, were about to celebrate New Year’s Eve, the number one song in the country…

 

…85 years ago, this week in 1940, was “Frenesi” by Artie Shaw and His Orchestra

 

…80 years ago, this week in 1945, was “It’s Been A Long, Long Time” by Henry James and His Orchestra, and “White Christmas” by Bing Crosby

 

…75 years ago, this week in 1950, was “The Tennessee Waltz” by Patti Page, and “The Thing” by Phil Harris

 

…70 years ago, this week in 1955, was “Sixteen Tons” by Tennessee Ernie Ford

 

…65 years ago, this week in 1960, was “Are You Lonesome Tonight” by Elvis Presley

 

…60 years ago, this week in 1965, was “Over And Over” by The Dave Clark Five

 

…55 years ago, this week in 1970, was “My Sweet Lord” by George Harrison

 

…50 years ago, this week in 1975, was “Let’s Do It Again” by The Staple Singers

 

…45 years ago, this week in 1980, was “(Just Like) Starting Over” by John Lennon

 

…40 years ago, this week in 1985, was “Say You, Say Me” by Lionel Richie

 

…35 years ago, this week in 1990, was “Because I Love You” by Stevie B

 

The next CFW – Week 19 Results/Forecast – will be posted Thursday morning, New Year’s Day.

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