College football Power Rankings: Close wins, areas for concern and biggest surprises
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Two full weeks of games aren’t enough to make firm conclusions about teams, but the limited sample size highlighted some possible concerns for contenders.
LSU, Penn State and Georgia had a hard time pulling away from inferior competition in Week 2. Clemson trailed Troy 16-3 at halftime before finding its way in the second half to avoid an 0-2 start. After limited cowbell prep, Arizona State‘s ears will be ringing for a while as a last-minute defensive breakdown doomed the defending Big 12 champs against Mississippi State in Starkville. Michigan quarterback Bryce Underwood‘s plan to shock the world has been put on hold as Brent Venables’ Oklahoma defense humbled the nation’s No. 1 recruit in Norman.
Illinois overcame early offensive line struggles to pounce on mistake-ridden Duke. Iowa State finally broke the spell Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz had cast on its home stadium, but still only mustered 16 points in victory. This was a get-right week for Alabama and Arch Manning, and further proof that South Florida is a team to watch after its shocker in The Swamp.
But most teams have plenty to fix and improve. Here’s our view of the Top 25 coming out of Week 2. — Adam Rittenberg

Previous ranking: 1![]()
All the defending national champions have done through two weeks is defeat the No. 1 team in the country before hammering Grambling, 70-0. So, it’s not easy to nitpick the Buckeyes thus far. But the biggest question mark going forward is whether Ohio State can run the ball when it needs to against the best in college football. Last year, the Buckeyes had a dynamic running back tandem in TreVeyon Henderson and Quinshon Judkins, who both rushed for 1,000 yards and became second-round draft picks. But in Week 1 this year, the Buckeyes managed just 77 yards on 34 carries in the 14-7 victory over Texas. The trio of CJ Donaldson, James Peoples and freshman Bo Jackson is capable of also producing a prolific rushing attack. So is the offensive line. The Buckeyes just have to prove it. — Jake Trotter
Previous ranking: 3
LSU’s offense began with an interception and missed field goal and never really shifted all the way into gear, but the Tigers still scored a comfortable 23-7 win over Louisiana Tech thanks to a defense that has now allowed just 17 points in two games. They held the Bulldogs to 154 yards and a 3-for-13 performance on third downs, and that was all that ended up mattering. Still, quarterback Garrett Nussmeier was anything but sharp: Including three sacks, his 44 pass attempts netted just 210 yards despite a good game from Barion Brown (94 receiving yards, plus a 15-yard run). Running back Caden Durham gained just 29 yards in 13 carries, too. The Tigers got away with it, but with a frustrated Florida team visiting next week, the offense will need to dial back in next Saturday. — Bill Connelly
Previous ranking: 2
The Nittany Lions couldn’t finish off drives early playing in poor weather during a 34-0 victory over Florida International. After scoring just one touchdown in the first half, Penn State finally got going. Still, the Nittany Lions went just 3-of-12 on third down, a continuation of the previous season, when they ranked 14th in the Big Ten with a third-down conversion rate of 36%. Penn State went 3-of-11 in a home loss to Ohio State and in the CFP semifinals loss to Notre Dame. The Nittany Lions have the goods to win a national championship. But they need to improve on third down, especially ahead of a big Sept. 27 clash against Oregon. — Trotter
Previous ranking: 6
There’s not much to nitpick when a team outgains its opponent by over 400 yards, scores 69 points in three quarters and only allows a field goal on defense. But if there is anyone out there who will still find things to improve, it’s Oregon coach Dan Lanning. Despite the fact that the Ducks trounced Oklahoma State 69-3 after the two coaches traded comments on their program’s financial resources earlier in the week, Lanning was all business and called out the team’s five penalties in the first half as something Oregon can improve on. It was that kind of day for Oregon, which looked every bit the part of a dominant playoff team. Lanning said there was no extra motivation for the Ducks heading into this game, but they welcomed the gasoline that Cowboys coach Mike Gundy poured onto their fire with his comments. Safe to say other teams have been warned: Before talking about the Ducks, try to keep up with them first. — Paolo Uggetti
Previous ranking: 5![]()
Carson Beck opened the Hurricanes’ 45-3 win over Bethune-Cookman with 15 straight completions, a single-game school record as they had a much easier time against the Wildcats compared to their season-opening win against Notre Dame. Beck threw two touchdown passes to CJ Daniels and Mark Fletcher Jr. had a few touchdown runs. There isn’t much to take away from a game like that, so let’s go back to the Notre Dame game. Miami had a double-digit lead in the third quarter, but its offense stalled on four straight drives, and the Hurricanes had a hard time getting consistent yards out of their run game. The next time the Hurricanes are in a close game, that will be a key area to monitor for improvement. — Andrea Adelson
Previous ranking: 4
The Bulldogs’ 28-6 win against FCS program Austin Peay was hardly the kind of performance coach Kirby Smart wanted going into next week’s SEC opener at high-flying Tennessee. Georgia’s offense struggled to get the ball down the field and couldn’t score on four straight plays from the 1-yard line against the Governors’ undersized defensive front at the end of the first half. Injuries have hampered Georgia’s offensive line (starting right guard Juan Gaston and right tackle Earnest Greene III didn’t play against Austin Peay), and new starting quarterback Gunner Stockton is still building his confidence. He completed 26 of 34 passes for 227 yards, but didn’t see a couple of open receivers running down the field. The good news: Georgia’s defense continued its hot start, limiting the Governors to only 10 first downs and 196 yards of offense. It will need a similar performance if the Bulldogs are going to beat the Vols for a ninth straight time. — Mark Schlabach
Previous ranking: 7![]()
It wasn’t a completely dominant performance by the Longhorns against San José State, though the outcome was never in doubt. There were 12 penalties, a few dropped passes, and plenty to work on. But when it was clean, Texas put on a show, with Arch Manning throwing four touchdown passes in a five-minute span, including on three consecutive pass attempts, to put fans at ease. The Texas running game was spotty, with CJ Baxter leading the way with 64 yards, but still averaged 4.8 yards per carry. With two more home games against UTEP and Sam Houston awaiting, the Longhorns are hoping to keep fine-tuning their offense to suit Manning, with coach Steve Sarkisian saying this week was more to his style. The defense is championship-caliber. If the offense catches up, Sarkisian will feel good about the SEC stretch coming up. — Dave Wilson
Previous ranking: 8![]()
After an opening-week loss to Miami, Notre Dame had a breather in Week 2, which was probably good timing. CJ Carr was solid in his debut, but getting an opportunity to use the off week to study his early miscues against the Hurricanes could prove invaluable as the Irish prep for a Week 3 showdown with Texas A&M. If Notre Dame can topple the Aggies, the rest of the schedule sets up nicely for a playoff run. If it doesn’t, an 0-2 start could have the Irish playing to an inside straight the rest of the way. — David Hale
Previous ranking: 13
It is hard to find too many early areas of concern for the Seminoles, who are riding high after following up their upset win over Alabama with a 77-3 win over East Texas A&M. Florida State scored touchdowns on its first 10 drives and had 729 total yards of offense. Thirteen different players had a carry. Tommy Castellanos connected on long plays to receiver Duce Robinson multiple times as well. But if there is one question mark still, it is what happens when an opponent stops the run and Florida State has to rely more heavily on its passing game. The Seminoles have rushed for nearly 600 yards in two games, while Castellanos has only attempted 25 total passes. While we saw explosive plays against East Texas A&M, there will be tougher challenges ahead. — Adelson
Previous ranking: 12
The Cyclones out-Iowa’d Iowa to snap their six-game home losing streak to their in-state rivals in a 16-13 win. There wasn’t much offense to recap as neither team reached the 250-yard mark or scored a touchdown in the second half. What Iowa State did have, however, is one of the most dangerous weapons in college football: kicker Kyle Konrardy. After booming a 63-yard field goal last week, he kicked three more field goals on Saturday, including the game winner from 54 yards with 6:29 left in the game. His range effectively shortens the field for Iowa State and in a game like this one, that proved to be the difference. — Kyle Bonagura
Previous ranking: 23
The Sooners rode a smothering defensive performance and the playmaking of quarterback John Mateer to one of the most important wins of the Brent Venables era in a 24-13 victory over Michigan Saturday night. But self-inflicted wounds nearly cost Oklahoma in Week 2. While the Wolverines’ offense largely languished, the Sooners gifted Michigan three of its four first downs before halftime via defensive penalties. Isaiah Sategna III‘s muffed punt and Tate Sandell‘s 42-yard field goal miss marked a pair of special teams blunders. And Mateer wasn’t immune, either, overthrowing a receiver for a first-quarter interception before sprinkling in a handful of other miscues into an otherwise exhilarating performance. Altogether, the series of errors left the door open for a Wolverines comeback. And while Michigan couldn’t make the Sooners pay for their mistakes Saturday night, others surely will when Oklahoma dives into SEC play later this fall. — Eli Lederman
Previous ranking: 11
A week after giving up 203 rushing yards to UTSA, the Aggies emphasized consistency on defense, and held Utah State to 2.2 yards per carry on 38 attempts. The big story was that the Aggies are developing their big-play passing offense, something that was a must this offseason. Marcel Reed threw for 220 yards and four TDs, including a 34-yarder to Terry Bussey, a five-star signee a year ago, for his first TD reception, and Mario Craver caught a 72-yarder from backup Miles O’Neill. Cashius Howell had himself a day, sacking Utah State QB Bryson Barnes three times on three consecutive plays. Elko was pleased with the progress, but with a trip to South Bend looming to face Notre Dame, the real test begins. Last year, coach Marcus Freeman and the Irish held the Aggies to 246 yards — just 100 of those passing, with two interceptions — and 13 points in a season-opening loss. Now, it’s time to see if the offseason makeover can provide new results. — Wilson
Previous ranking: 15
The Illini passed their first road test of the season, pulling away from Duke for a 26-point win. But a strong second half shouldn’t completely mask some potential problems, namely a run game that stalled for a while before opening up. Illinois had minus-5 rushing yards in the first half and allowed four sacks. Normally, that equals a deficit on the road. To Illinois’ credit, it limited major mistakes of its own and repeatedly capitalized on the Blue Devils’ five turnovers and converted them into 21 points. Quarterback Luke Altmyer was excellent and Illinois is showing greater explosiveness in the passing game with Hank Beatty and others. But the Illini can’t count on being plus-5 in turnover margin in every key game, and at some point, will need their running game to show up from start to finish. Probably on Sept. 20 in the Big Ten opener at Indiana. — Rittenberg
Previous ranking: 10
Shane Beamer knows the Gamecocks’ offense has plenty to clean up after a sluggish start against South Carolina State on Saturday night. The Gamecocks struggled to sustain drives in the first half and didn’t score their first offensive touchdown until the third quarter of their 38-10 win. A lengthy weather delay and tough field position played a factor, and Vicari Swain stepped up with two more punt return touchdowns in the second quarter. But this LaNorris Sellers-led offense is too talented to put up just 128 passing yards and 125 rushing yards against an FCS defense. Better execution and efficiency are a must with Vanderbilt and Missouri, two teams that put up big points on Power 4 foes Saturday, up next on the schedule. — Max Olson
Previous ranking: 18
You’re not going to find much to nitpick about Tennessee’s 72-17 blowout of East Tennessee State. Transfer QB Joey Aguilar continued his impressive start with 288 passing yards, two TDs, no sacks and no turnovers. The Vols’ offense racked up 717 yards, fourth-most in the Josh Heupel era, and has a 100% red zone conversion rate this season. One key question as the showdown with Georgia looms is the health of Tennessee’s defensive line. Starting defensive tackle Jaxson Moi missed the ETSU game along with Daevin Hobbs and Tyree Weathersby. Getting Moi back in the lineup this week would be a big deal as the Vols get ready to face the Bulldogs’ rushing attack. — Olson
Previous ranking: 9
The Tigers’ offense continued to look lost in Week 2 against Troy, falling behind 16-3 in the first half before engineering a strong second-half comeback. If the Tigers are looking for a silver lining, the second half at least offered a few. Cade Klubnik completed 8 of 9 passes for 99 yards and two touchdowns. Adam Randall carried 15 times for 91 yards. The defense didn’t surrender a point. Still, if things look this disjointed against Troy, a road trip to Georgia Tech in Week 3 could be incredibly dangerous. — Hale
Previous ranking: 21
The Utes welcomed their entry into the Top 25 with a thorough dispatch of Cal Poly by a score of 63-9. It was a dominant affair that left little to worry about for the Utes, who looked like a far more explosive and efficient team on offense through two games than they did all last year. Zooming out and looking ahead, it will be interesting to see if quarterback Devon Dampier can maintain the kind of load and production he has had, especially with his legs. Through two games, the New Mexico transfer is tied with Wayshawn Parker as the Utes’ leading rusher and already has carried the ball 20 times. So far, Dampier seems up to the task, but his importance to the Utah offense may require a bit more management of his reps, especially if it means avoiding injury. — Uggetti
Previous ranking: 19
The past five Ole Miss-Kentucky games have been decided by one score, but unlike last year, Ole Miss made big plays when it counted and survived, 30-23. Austin Simmons threw two first-quarter interceptions but led six scoring drives afterward and finished with 235 passing yards and a rushing touchdown. Kewan Lacy, meanwhile, rushed for 138 yards and a score. The Rebels’ defense held UK’s Zach Calzada to 149 passing yards and made a pair of fourth-down stops in the fourth quarter. That allowed their lead to hold up. Ole Miss is 2-0 and has now exorcised one of the demons of 2024; the Rebels had a playoff-caliber team but dropped heartbreakers to Kentucky, LSU and Florida. They’ll get their next revenge attempt in three weeks when LSU comes to town. — Connelly
Previous ranking: NR
If we’re judging teams purely on who they’ve beat, who has had a better start to the season than the South Florida Bulls? Alex Golesh’s squad was dominant in a 34-7 win over No. 25 Boise State and showed its resilience in a 18-16 upset of No. 13 Florida in The Swamp on Saturday night. The Gators’ many mistakes will get all the attention, but Byrum Brown leading USF on an 87-yard winning drive in the final two minutes was nonetheless impressive. The Bulls are No. 3 in ESPN’s Strength of Record metric, and now they’ll try to regroup and go pull off another road stunner at No. 5 Miami. Win or lose, this team clearly has the goods to chase a College Football Playoff bid. — Olson
Previous ranking: 22
It won’t erase a season-opening loss at Florida State, but Alabama’s 73-0 rout of UL Monroe was exactly what it needed in rebuilding its confidence. The Crimson Tide scored on each of their first 11 possessions (10 touchdowns and one field goal), and quarterback Ty Simpson completed a school-record 17 straight passes for 226 yards with three touchdowns. Alabama ran for 212 yards and didn’t commit a turnover. The Tide defense played much better, limiting the Warhawks to 148 yards of offense and forcing three turnovers. The pressure on second-year coach Kalen DeBoer should subside, for at least a few days, and the Tide will be heavy favorites in Saturday’s home game against Wisconsin. They’ll get a week off before their first SEC road game at Georgia on Sept. 27. — Schlabach
Previous ranking: NR
The Red Raiders led Kent State 48-0 at halftime, a week after leading the Arkansas-Pine Bluff Golden Lions 47-0 at the half. They have not found much of a fight yet, including scoring on their first 14 possessions of the season. Punter Jack Burgess finally got some work in this week with two kicks. Most importantly, quarterback Behren Morton, who has struggled with a right leg injury, was able to play the entire first half before resting. The Red Raiders step up competition this weekend against Oregon State in Lubbock, although the Beavers just fell to 0-2. But with a big test awaiting against a resurgent Utah team in Salt Lake City at the beginning of Big 12 play next week, Tech will look to stay sharp and injury-free. — Wilson
Previous ranking: 25
Curt Cignetti challenged his team after a Week 1 win that was never in doubt but also quite sloppy, especially inside the red zone, where the offense failed to score on three opportunities against Old Dominion. The Hoosiers responded nicely by bulldozing Kennesaw State, scoring touchdowns on eight of their first 10 complete drives, including a stretch of five straight in the second half. Quarterback Fernando Mendoza was much sharper, passing for 245 yards with four touchdowns and no interceptions. Three players added rushing touchdowns, led by Lee Beebe Jr., as IU’s increased depth at running back has shown up early. Safety Louis Moore has been very good so far for the Hoosiers’ defense. Anything less than dominance will not satisfy Cignetti, especially with the Big Ten opener against Illinois looming Sept. 20. — Rittenberg
Previous ranking: 24
TCU coach Sonny Dykes’ biggest takeaway from the Horned Frogs’ 48-14 humiliation of North Carolina in Bill Belichick’s debut was his team’s maturity. Two years ago, the Frogs fell to Colorado in Deion Sanders’ first game and the focus this year was blocking out the noise and making it about themselves. Now, looking forward, TCU found a running game it lacked last year, piling up 258 yards on the ground, and Josh Hoover, one of the best returning QBs in the country, continued to shine, throwing for 284 yards and two touchdown passes. After a Monday Labor Day game, the Frogs had a bye week. So they’ll try to regroup with Abilene Christian this week, the only non-Power 4 team on their schedule this season, before a home game against old rival SMU, who humbled the Frogs 66-42 last year, at home. That one will go a long way in determining if TCU is back on its 2022 trajectory. — Wilson
Previous ranking: 14
Among the issues in the Wolverines’ Week 2 loss at Oklahoma: an inability to create chunk plays. Michigan’s lone touchdown came on Justice Haynes‘ 75-yard rushing score on the first offensive snap of the second half. However, the touchdown marked the Wolverines’ only run over 10 yards and one of only five total plays of 15 or more yards produced by first-year offensive coordinator Chip Lindsey’s attack against the Sooners. That came after Michigan logged only three carries over 10 yards against New Mexico in Week 1, as well. There are plenty of reasons to believe the Wolverines can get better — the development of quarterback Bryce Underwood, consistent production from the receivers, more consistency throughout time in Lindsey’s offense, etc. — but for now, Michigan’s offense is still sorely lacking explosiveness. — Lederman
Previous ranking: NR
Down 21-6 early because of a fumble return score and a couple of big Jalon Daniels passes, Missouri settled down, began dominating the ball, and eventually put down hated rival Kansas, 42-31. The Tigers had a 300-yard passer (Beau Pribula), two 100-yard rushers (Jamal Roberts and Ahmad Hardy) and a 100-yard receiver (Kevin Coleman Jr.) and outgained the Jayhawks, 595-254, with a huge time-of-possession edge. But they needed a pair of go-ahead touchdowns from tight end Brett Norfleet and, finally, a 63-yard TD run from Roberts to put the game away. Regardless, they won the first Border Showdown in 14 years and moved to 2-0. And in two games as a Tiger, Pribula has completed 53 of 67 passes (79%) for 617 yards and five TDs and no picks. Hard to top that. — Connelly
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Sports
Week 11 Anger Index: BYU’s long-standing beef with the CFP committee
Published
4 hours agoon
November 5, 2025By
admin

-

David HaleNov 4, 2025, 08:22 PM ET
Close- College football reporter.
- Joined ESPN in 2012.
- Graduate of the University of Delaware.
The College Football Playoff committee has released its first top 25 ranking of the season, which is the sport’s version of Walmart opening its doors at midnight on Black Friday. Things are about to get ugly, and someone’s going to end up bloodied while fighting Oklahoma for a spot in the top 12. In other words, it’s the best time of year.
This year, the committee has said it is considering a new “record strength” metric, designed to provide some math-based guidance in the process and to soon replace “game control” as the country’s most hated made-up statistic.
Ten weeks into a season filled with a lot of chaos and few seemingly great teams, however, the committee needs all the help it can get. For example, just eight teams in the country have already beaten more than one of the committee’s current top 25 — and one of those eight teams is NC State. Utah, Iowa, Oregon, Pitt, Washington, Missouri and Tennessee — all ranked this week — are a combined 0-12 against other teams in the committee’s top 25. The ACC doesn’t have a team ranked higher than 14th, and the Group of 5 doesn’t have a team ranked at all, making these rankings less about the coveted top 12 than a need to be in the top 10.
In other words, there’s a lot still in flux as we dive deeper into the final month of the season. But that means our anger toward the committee is just simmering for now, waiting for the rage to boil over in the weeks to come.
Still, a few schools have a pretty good case for outrage already.

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In all the hubbub over last year’s final playoff rankings that left a trio of SEC teams out, what went overlooked was that BYU might have had more to be angry about than Alabama, Ole Miss or South Carolina. Two of those teams, at least, had taken a bad loss. Each of those teams had three losses. BYU, on the other hand, checked in on the committee’s final ranking behind each of them despite a 10-2 record and two close losses to solid teams.
So, certainly the committee would feel some compassion for the Cougars this year and consider the Cougars with a bit more optimism, right?
Ah, no.
Let’s take a look at some blind résumés.
Team A: No. 3 strength of record, No. 33 strength of schedule, 4-0 vs. SP+ top-40 opponents, best win vs. No. 11 in the committee’s poll.
Team B: No. 4 strength of record, No. 45 strength of schedule, 3-0 vs. SP+ top-40 opponents, best win vs. No. 13 in the committee’s poll.
Sure, Team A has a slight edge, but the résumés look pretty similar.
Well, Team A is the committee’s No. 1 team, Ohio State. Surely, if another team’s résumé looks more or less the same, that team would be staring down a bye in the first round of the playoff, right?
Nope. Team B is BYU, and the Cougars sit behind three SEC teams with a loss, all three of which are ranked lower in ESPN’s strength of record metric.
Given that BYU has a massive showdown with Texas Tech upcoming, perhaps the committee just punted on any tough decisions on the Cougars for this week. After all, given how much love the committee has shown the Big Ten in these rankings, punting would be a fitting play.
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We get it. As a conference, the ACC might, in fact, just be an episode of “Punk’d” that Ashton Kutcher started in 2008, then got distracted and forgot to let everyone know it was a prank. The conference’s train wreck in Week 10 certainly showed up in these rankings — more on that in a moment — but it’s almost as if the committee just threw Louisville into the mix, deciding the Cardinals were guilty by association.
Let’s take another look at some blind résumés, shall we?
Team A: No. 10 strength of record, No. 58 strength of schedule, one win vs. SP+ top 40, best win vs. committee’s No. 13 team, lone loss vs. an unranked team.
Team B: No. 13 strength of record, No. 56 strength of schedule, three wins vs. SP+ top 40, best win vs. committee’s No. 18 team, lone loss to committee’s No. 14 team.
This is basically a coin flip, though given the additional wins vs. high-level opponents and a better loss, it would be hard to argue against Team B, right? Add to that, Team B’s lone loss came in double overtime in a game when it outgained its opponent by 150 yards. Surely, you would be on Team B’s side now, right?
Well, not surprisingly, Team B is Louisville. Team A is Texas Tech, ranked seven spots higher at No. 8.
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There seems to be a desire to write Miami off because of two losses in the past three games and given the strife the team seems to be enduring on offense, perhaps that’s wise.
But two things are supposed to be true of the committee’s evaluation process. One, the committee is not supposed to care when wins and losses happen. Losing in September isn’t better than losing in November. A loss is a loss. Second, the committee is not supposed to make assumptions about the future. Sure, Miami’s offense is a mess at the moment, but assuming that will result in future losses isn’t part of the deal.
And yet, putting Miami at No. 18 — eight full spots behind another two-loss team the Canes beat head-to-head — can only be explained by the vibes. Notre Dame’s season is rolling right along now. Miami has hit some stumbling blocks. Never mind the Canes are two late Carson Beck interceptions away from still being undefeated. Never mind that Miami has four wins vs. FPI top-35 teams, twice as many as any other two-loss team except Oklahoma. Never mind that Miami has that head-to-head against the No. 10 team in the committee’s rankings or that it walloped a Florida team that took No. 5 Georgia to the wire and actually beat No. 11 Texas. Never mind that Miami beat a then-ranked USF by 37.
Instead, the committee has assigned Miami to the scrap heap now — which is a shame because Miami would probably have done this to itself anyway, and it’s so much funnier when it happens in the last game of the season.
4. The Group of 5
A year ago, Boise State found its way into a first-round bye ahead of the champion of a Power 4 league, which was probably pretty embarrassing for that Power 4 league except that the ACC embarrasses itself often enough to be pretty well immune to shame.
The rules have changed this year. The top four conference champs aren’t guaranteed a first-round bye now. But that doesn’t seem to have stopped the committee from stacking the deck anyway, just to be safe.
Not one team outside the Power 4 found its way into these initial rankings, though the committee notes that Memphis currently is in the lead for the long Group of 5 playoff bid.
So, surely the Group of 5 should be pretty upset, right?
Yes, but not about being snubbed from the top-25 party. None of the leaders in the Group of 5 have a great case — certainly none like Boise State had a year ago. But Memphis? Really? The same team that lost by a touchdown to a UAB team had just fired its coach?
In the committee’s new guidance to consider record strength, there is an assumption that really bad losses are weighted heavily, but that certainly hasn’t been the case this time around.
North Texas has one loss to SP+ No. 27.
James Madison has one loss to SP+ No. 16 (and the No. 15 team in the committee’s rankings).
San Diego State has one loss to SP+ No. 73 has one loss to SP+ No. 119.
Memphis has one loss to SP+ No. 119.
It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see the Tigers weren’t punished at all for a terrible loss.
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5. The SEC
The latter half of the committee’s top 25 is usually the equivalent of the phone lines for a Finebaum episode — just a place where a lot of mediocre SEC folks hang out, patiently waiting for their turn. But this time, the committee has stuffed the bottom of the rankings with Big Ten teams — No. 19 USC, No. 20 Iowa, No. 21 Michigan and No. 23 Washington — and that might actually matter in the long run.
One of the committee’s favored metrics is wins over ranked opponents. We’re dubious about how many Big Ten teams deserve a little number next to their name. The league still has four teams that have yet to win a conference game, and the bottom third is a complete dumpster fire. It’s easy to rack up some wins when half your conference schedule has already been embarrassed by UCLA’s interim coaching staff.
But the SEC — that’s where the real depth is. Nearly half the SEC’s conference games this season have been one-possession affairs. Mississippi State, a team that had gone nearly two years without an SEC win, already knocked off last year’s Big 12 champ. LSU, a team that fired its coach, has a win over last year’s ACC champ. Florida beat Texas. Putting a bunch of undeserving teams at the bottom of the rankings only serves to prop up the résumés of teams such as Oregon, which hasn’t beaten anyone of consequence. And frankly, the committee is supposed to do that for the SEC, not the Big Ten.
Also angry: Virginia Cavaliers (8-1, No. 14, behind four two-loss teams), USF Bulls (6-2, unranked), Arizona State Sun Devils (6-3, unranked), Cincinnati Bearcats (7-2, unranked), Brian Kelly (just angry for other reasons).
Sports
Ohio St., IU, Texas A&M, Alabama top CFP ranking
Published
4 hours agoon
November 5, 2025By
admin

-

Andrea AdelsonNov 4, 2025, 08:16 PM ET
Close- ACC reporter.
- Joined ESPN.com in 2010.
- Graduate of the University of Florida.
Ohio State is the No. 1 team in the first rankings released Tuesday by the College Football Playoff selection committee, topping fellow unbeatens Indiana at No. 2 and Texas A&M at No. 3.
Three SEC teams followed the Aggies, with Alabama at No. 4, Georgia at No. 5 and Ole Miss at No. 6.
BYU, Texas Tech, Oregon and Notre Dame round out the top 10. The top ACC team is Virginia at No. 14. Every team in the top 25 came from a Power 4 conference, so the committee designated Memphis as the top team from the Group of 5.
The five highest-ranked conference champions will make the 12-team field, but there is a tweak to the format this year as the committee is using a straight seeding model. The top four teams in the final ranking, regardless of conference championship, will receive a first-round bye.
If the playoff were today, the first-round games would be: Memphis at Georgia; Virginia at Ole Miss; Notre Dame at BYU; and Oregon at Texas Tech.
“We had robust discussion about the three of them,” CFP committee chair Mack Rhoades, the athletic director at Baylor, said on ESPN’s rankings release show Tuesday night regarding the Buckeyes, Hoosiers and Aggies at the top of the board. “Obviously, all three are undefeated. … We really felt like that Ohio State and Indiana were close. When you look at the statistical data, both offensively and defensively, these are two teams that are both in the top five offensively and in the top five defensively, both with really good wins.
“But again, when we looked at tape, and we looked at metrics, we felt that Ohio State was a little bit better up front, on the offensive line. And we thought they were better defensively.”
The SEC led the way with nine teams ranked in the top 25, while the Big Ten had seven, including the Ducks, who elicited discussion about their top-10 ranking. The ACC had five on the list, and the Big 12 had three.
“It came up when we talked about Oregon,” Rhoades said in reference to the new straight-seeding model. “When you look at them in the top 10, our lowest ranked in terms of record strength. And so the committee had a lot of conversations — rigorous debate and conversations — about Oregon as a team.
THE FIRST 12-TEAM CFP BRACKET PROJECTION OF THE SEASON‼️
The committee selected Memphis as the best team from the remaining conferences. pic.twitter.com/EU6NCc33Ds
— ESPN (@espn) November 5, 2025
“We’re blessed to have three coaches in the room and looking at the tape. And when you looked at Oregon, they have great players at the skill positions. We felt that they were really good up front, both sides of the ball. Their one loss is to our No. 2-ranked team, in Indiana, and so, again, when we looked and evaluated Oregon, we really looked in terms of quality of team and how they looked on film.”
Despite having two losses, Notre Dame finds itself in position to make the CFP as an at-large team for the second straight season. Though the only notable win the Fighting Irish have is over No. 19 USC, both of their losses came in the closing minute, to No. 3 Texas A&M and No. 18 Miami, during the first two weeks of the season.
Despite having the same number of losses and the head-to-head win over the Irish, Miami is ranked No. 18 — eight spots lower than Notre Dame after losing 26-20 in overtime to SMU this past weekend. Though the Hurricanes have more notable victories, their losses have put them on the outside of the 12-team field, in what could be a repeat of last year.
“We’re sitting here looking at head to head, we’re looking at common opponents, we’re looking at schedule strength, we’re looking at record strength, we’re looking at all of the analytics,” Rhoades said of the evaluation process. “So, we truly try to look at each team on its own, and its body of work.”
Though Texas and quarterback Arch Manning have looked shaky at times over the course of the season, the Longhorns are ranked No. 11 after a big win over No. 16 Vanderbilt. They also beat Oklahoma 23-6 last month. Unlike Miami and Notre Dame, that head-to-head win is what is separating Texas and the No. 12 Sooners, both with the same 7-2 record.
Utah is ranked No. 13, with Virginia at No. 14 and Louisville at No. 15. The Cardinals have a win over Miami but lost to Virginia earlier this season.
Vanderbilt, Georgia Tech, Miami, USC, Iowa, Michigan, Missouri, Washington, Pittsburgh and Tennessee round out the top 25. The Volunteers are the only three-loss team in the rankings.
The final CFP rankings will be announced Dec. 7, the day after conference championship games are played.
The four first-round games will be played at the home campus of the higher-seeded teams on Dec. 19 and 20. The four quarterfinal games will be played at the Goodyear Cotton Bowl (Dec. 31), Capital One Orange Bowl (Jan. 1), Rose Bowl Game Presented by Prudential (Jan. 1) and Allstate Sugar Bowl (Jan. 1).
The two semifinal games will take place at the Vrbo Fiesta Bowl and Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl on Jan. 8 and 9, respectively.
The CFP National Championship is scheduled for Jan. 19 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.
Sports
CFP Bubble Watch: Who’s in? Who’s out? Who’s close ahead of first committee ranking?
Published
15 hours agoon
November 4, 2025By
admin

The College Football Playoff selection committee will reveal its first ranking at 8 p.m. ET on Tuesday on ESPN, giving us our first look at what the 12-member group thinks about the playoff pecking order after 10 weeks.
It’s far from over, as teams still have ample opportunities to build — or bust — their résumés.
Separation, though, is starting to occur, and the Bubble Watch is tracking it for you. Teams with Would be in status below are featured in this week’s top 12 projection, a snapshot of what the selection committee’s ranking will look like when it’s released later Tuesday. For each Power 4 conference, we’ve listed teams as Last team in and First team out. These are the true bubble teams hovering around inclusion. Teams labeled Still in the mix haven’t been eliminated, but have work to do. A team that is Out will have to wait until next year.
The 12-member selection committee doesn’t always agree with the Allstate Playoff Predictor, so the following categories are based on historical knowledge of the group’s tendencies, plus what each team has done to date.
The conferences below are listed in order of the number of bids they’re expected to receive, ranked from the most to least. Check back Tuesday night after the rankings reveal show for an updated bubble watch that will reflect the selection committee’s latest ranking.
Jump to a conference:
ACC | Big 12 | Big Ten
SEC | Independent | Group of 5
Bracket

SEC
Would be in: Alabama, Georgia, Ole Miss, Texas A&M
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Last team in: Ole Miss. The Rebels are in a safe spot, but they’re not a lock if they don’t run the table. With remaining games against The Citadel, Florida and at rival Mississippi State, there’s no possibility of a “good loss” remaining, and historically, losing in November has been far more damaging to playoff hopes than losing earlier in the season. Ole Miss shouldn’t lose; it has at least a 72% chance of winning each of its remaining games and has the seventh-best chance in the country (43%) to win out. If an upset occurred, though, the Rebels would join the two-loss club and might not win a debate with other two-loss teams that had more statement wins — and didn’t lose to an unranked opponent. The Rebels’ remaining schedule strength is No. 56 in the country. With a second loss, Ole Miss would be banking on wins against Oklahoma, Tulane and LSU to impress the committee enough for an at-large bid.
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First team out: Texas. The Longhorns got a significant boost this week in part because three teams above them fell out — Vanderbilt, Georgia Tech and Miami — but also because they earned another CFP top 25 win against the Commodores. The head-to-head win against Oklahoma also could help them with the committee. If Texas is ranked No. 11 or No. 12 by the committee, though — and the ACC and Group of 5 champions are outside of the committee’s top 12 — the Longhorns would be elbowed out during the seeding process to make room for the fourth- and fifth-highest ranked conference champions, which are guaranteed spots in the playoff.
Still in the mix: Missouri, Oklahoma, Vanderbilt. The Sooners earned a huge résumé boost with their win at Tennessee and have what should be a CFP top 25 win against Michigan. For two-loss Vandy, a close road loss to Texas isn’t an eliminator. Where the committee ranks Tennessee after its third loss will impact both of their résumés as a common opponent. Missouri’s lone losses were to Alabama and Vanderbilt, but the Tigers don’t have anything yet to compensate for those. That could change Saturday with a win against Texas A&M.
Out: Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi State, South Carolina, Tennessee
Big Ten
Would be in: Indiana, Ohio State, Oregon
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Last team in: Oregon. The one-loss Ducks have a more challenging second half of the season, and the committee is about to learn how good this team truly is. So far, Oregon’s best win was Sept. 13 at Northwestern. The Ducks have been passing the eye test, but their opponents have a winning percentage of 47.2% — ranked No. 116 in the country. The committee will still respect the double-overtime win at Penn State, but also recognize that the Nittany Lions weren’t playing at an elite level even with James Franklin on the sideline. With road trips to Iowa and Washington — both respectable two-loss teams — and a Nov. 22 home game against USC, Oregon has a chance to further entrench itself in the top 12 or tumble out.
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First team out: USC. The Trojans’ two losses were on the road to respectable teams (Illinois and Notre Dame) by a combined 12 points. Their best win was Oct. 11 against Michigan, but the Trojans could really boost their résumé this month and completely flip the script with Oregon if they can win in Eugene on Nov. 22. According to ESPN Analytics, USC has the fourth-best chance in the Big Ten to reach the playoff (17.3%), just ahead of Michigan. The only game they’re not favored to win is Nov. 22 at Oregon. If they can pull off that upset for a 10-2 finish, the committee would definitely consider the Trojans for an at-large spot.
Still in the mix: Iowa, Michigan, Washington. These teams could be ranked by the committee Tuesday night, but Michigan will probably have the shortest climb into the conversation. The head-to-head loss to USC will be a problem in both the Big Ten standings and the CFP ranking, but if USC loses again and their records are no longer comparable, it can be overcome. Then, there’s a head-to-head loss to Oklahoma. Still, Michigan has a 13.2% chance to reach the playoff, according to the Allstate Playoff Predictor. The Wolverines still have a chance to beat Ohio State and earn one of the best wins in the country en route to a 10-2 finish.
Out: Illinois, Maryland, Michigan State, Minnesota, Nebraska, Northwestern, Penn State, Purdue, Rutgers, UCLA, Wisconsin
Big 12
Would be in: BYU, Texas Tech
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Last team in: Texas Tech. If Texas Tech loses to BYU on Saturday but still wins the Big 12, it’s a CFP lock. The problem is that if the Red Raiders lose a second conference game, they will need some help to reach the Big 12 championship. So, a loss to BYU could be devastating to their conference and CFP hopes. If the Red Raiders beat BYU on Saturday, but lose to the Cougars in the Big 12 championship game, Texas Tech would still have a chance at an at-large bid as the Big 12 runner-up. The Red Raiders would be able to claim a win over the eventual Big 12 champs, which would be a much-needed boost to their résumé. It would depend in part on how the game unfolded. The Cougars are the Red Raiders’ only remaining opponent with a winning record, as Texas Tech ends the season against UCF (4-4) and at West Virginia (3-6).
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First team out: Utah. The Utes are in a tricky spot because their two losses are to the Big 12’s best teams — BYU and Texas Tech. Utah still has the third-best chance to reach the Big 12 title game (22.8%), but will need some help to get there. Utah’s best wins are against Arizona State and Cincinnati, but the Utes have a hard time earning an at-large bid without beating at least one of the best teams in their league.
Still in the mix: Cincinnati. The Bearcats are included here because they still have an 18% chance to reach the Big 12 title game, according to ESPN Analytics. They have only one league loss, which gives them some slim hope. Their other loss was in the season opener to Nebraska.
Out: Arizona, Arizona State, Baylor, Colorado, Houston, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, TCU, UCF, West Virginia
ACC
Would be in: Virginia
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Last team in: Virginia. Like Georgia Tech, Virginia also has a road loss to NC State as its lone blemish, but it was an early four-point loss, while the Yellow Jackets lost to the Wolfpack by double digits. Virginia also has a head-to-head win against Louisville. That’s the Hoos’ best win of the season, and likely their only one against a CFP top 25 opponent. That’s why it’s unlikely Virginia is ranked in the top 12 in the initial CFP top 25. Virginia would still be in, though, if it wins the ACC even if it’s ranked outside the committee’s top 12 — just like three-loss Clemson was last year.
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First team out: Louisville. The Cardinals lost at home in overtime to Virginia on Oct. 4, but earned a statement win Oct. 17 at Miami. Louisville will probably have only one win this season against a CFP top 25 team, which will make earning an at-large bid difficult. Louisville’s best shot would be to run the table, have teams above the Cardinals lose, and win the ACC. Louisville has a 10.6% chance of winning the ACC, fourth best behind Georgia Tech, Miami and Virginia.
Still in the mix: Georgia Tech, Miami. The odds of earning an at-large bid dropped significantly, but any team that has a chance to win its league will have a chance to lock up a playoff spot, and they’re both in contention to play for the ACC title. Georgia Tech has the best chance to reach the ACC championship game (72.3%), followed by Virginia (51.1%) and Miami (28.5%), according to ESPN Analytics. Georgia Tech still has the highest chance to win out (40.5%) and win the league (41.2%).
Out: Boston College, Cal, Clemson, Duke, Florida State, North Carolina, NC State, Pitt, SMU, Stanford, Syracuse, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest
Independent
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Would be in: Notre Dame. The playoff stars aligned for Notre Dame in Week 10, when Vanderbilt, Georgia Tech and Miami all lost, opening the door for the 6-2 Irish to move back into the top 10 after beating Boston College. The question is whether the selection committee will honor Miami’s season-opening 27-24 win against Notre Dame because they have the same record. It’s one of several tiebreakers, but not weighted, and if the committee deems the Irish the better team and not comparable now, Notre Dame can be ranked higher. Notre Dame has the best chance of any team in the country to run the table (68.3%), but the Nov. 15 trip to Pitt will be difficult. The Panthers, winners of five straight, are playing well and have a bye week to prepare for the Irish. The Irish’s playoff position will remain tenuous until the clock runs out at Stanford and they’re 10-2.
Group of 5
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Would be in: Memphis. As the projected winner of the American this week, Memphis would earn a playoff spot as the committee’s fifth-highest-ranked conference champion. The Tigers’ Oct. 25 win against South Florida was critical in the league race, but the loss to 3-5 UAB is an ink stain on their résumé that can be overcome with a conference title. Memphis has at least a 57% chance to win each of its remaining games, according to ESPN Analytics.
Still in the mix: South Florida, North Texas, James Madison, San Diego State. The committee would consider South Florida’s head-to-head wins against Boise State and North Texas.

Bracket
Based on our weekly projection, the seeding would be:
First-round byes
No. 1 Ohio State (Big Ten champ)
No. 2 Indiana
No. 3 Alabama (SEC champ)
No. 4 Texas A&M
First-round games
On campus, Dec. 19 and 20
No. 12 Memphis (American champ) at No. 5 Georgia
No. 11 Virginia (ACC champ) at No. 6 Ole Miss
No. 10 Notre Dame at No. 7 BYU (Big 12 champ)
No. 9 Texas Tech at No. 8 Oregon
Quarterfinal games
At the Goodyear Cotton Bowl, Capital One Orange Bowl, Rose Bowl Presented by Prudential and Allstate Sugar Bowl on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1.
No. 12 Memphis/No. 5 Georgia winner vs. No. 4 Texas A&M
No. 11 Virginia/No. 6 Ole Miss winner vs. No. 3 Alabama
No. 10 Notre Dame/No. 7 BYU winner vs. No. 2 Indiana
No. 9 Texas Tech/No. 8 Oregon winner vs. No. 1 Ohio State
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