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There are 16 teams in the SEC, and nearly every one is either aiming for the playoff or considering a coaching change, with only Kentucky contractually obligated to move on to basketball season by the end of October. The point, however, is that the stakes were high Saturday.

The SEC has a saying: “It just means more,” which is only slightly more famous than its bowl-season motto, “if we lost then it wasn’t really important anyway.” And this Saturday, as SEC communications guru Chuck Dunlap pointed out, there were more SEC games than ever. So, logic suggests that no Saturday has had as much meaning as this one.

At stake: Georgia‘s status as a superpower, Alabama‘s dominance over rival Tennessee in Tuscaloosa, Billy Napier’s job, Texas A&M title hopes, Lane Kiffin’s Twitter mentions, Diego Pavia‘s AARP membership, about a thousand Arch Manning jokes and the stitching on the pillow Brian Kelly screams into after another LSU loss.

So yeah, it was a big week in the country’s deepest conference, and if Saturday didn’t deliver many emphatic statements, it did offer a revival in Athens, history in Nashville, and vengeance in Tuscaloosa.

Georgia spent most of Saturday playing catch-up, just as it had in past showdowns with Tennessee, Alabama and Auburn. If this isn’t a Bulldogs team on par with the talent of the back-to-back national champions of 2021 and 2022, it has at least proven to be Dawgs with every bit as much fight. They’ve approached every game like last call at Flanagan’s, refusing to call it quits until they’re ushered out the door, shouting they just want to hear the end of “Knuck If You Buck.”

On Saturday, Ole Miss led from 2:10 in the second quarter until midway through the fourth, but Georgia had answers at every turn.

Gunner Stockton was superb, answering any questions about his ability to win a shootout, throwing four touchdown passes and running for a fifth. Stockton, a QB so quintessentially Georgia that the SEC ought to let him wear a helmet shaped like a John Deere hat just to complete the look, delivered one dagger after another, igniting the offense with the type of downfield explosiveness so often lacking a year ago.

But if Stockton was the star, the blood and guts of Georgia’s win came on the ground, where Nate Frazier and Co. ran for 221 yards — mostly hard, physical pushes through a crowded line of scrimmage — that felt like a statement that this team wasn’t just capable of taking a punch, but would respond with a flurry of body blows worthy of the greatest heavyweights.

Alabama could light up some stogies after upending Tennessee 37-20. Ty Simpson continued to shine, throwing for 254 yards and two scores, and Ryan Williams emerged from a monthlong hibernation we assume was the result of too much BBQ at Dreamland, reestablishing himself as an elite offensive weapon with 103 total yards.

It was hardly flawless — more worthy, perhaps, of a Swisher Sweet than a fine Cuban. The Alabama ground game continued to struggle. A pick-six just before half as Tennessee was nearing the end zone proved an important 14-point swing. But perhaps that’s the beauty of this year’s Alabama. In a season in which no one seems to be elite, the Tide win — and win emphatically — despite their flaws.

Speaking of flaws, the Texas A&M defense spent Saturday like a bachelor party at a craps table, caught up in all the excitement and incapable of tamping down the chaos. Arkansas scored 15 points in the fourth quarter, and despite never being in serious trouble, A&M escaped with a 45-42 win. It’s the Aggies’ second win of the season when allowing more than 40. Still, Marcel Reed set the pace with four touchdowns, outdueling Taylen Green, who threw for 256, ran for 85 and accounted for all five of the Razorbacks’ touchdowns.

That Georgia, Alabama and A&M are scuffling for space atop the SEC standings at least makes sense. That Vanderbilt is here, too, has all the feel of an ’90s teen movie plot, where the cool kids made a bet they could turn the wallflower into prom queen.

And yet, here we are. Vandy knocked off LSU 31-24 to move to 6-1 for the first time in half a century. Pavia continues to make the most of his college career before moving on to star in the next season of “The Golden Bachelor,” and on Saturday, he frustrated the Tigers’ defense repeatedly, accounting for three scores.

LSU has still not topped 24 points against an FBS team this year, and Kelly is perhaps one loss from wandering into the woods to live a life of solitude rather than deal with this frustration any longer.

Fresh off a win over Oklahoma, there was reasonable hope Texas had shifted the narrative after a listless start to the year. Instead, against Kentucky on Saturday, Manning and the Horns’ offense penned a narrative befitting the bleakest Cormac McCarthy novel. Manning completed just 12 of 27 passes, Texas managed just 179 yards of total offense, and if not for two stellar punt returns and the utter ineptitude of Kentucky’s offense, this might’ve been one of the biggest clunkers of the season. Instead, the Longhorns escaped 16-13 in overtime, and Manning could rest easy knowing that no more than seven members of his own family could’ve done better.

Florida somehow snatched a win from the jaws of defeat, picking off Blake Shapen‘s pass on a second-and-10 at the Gators’ 29 to win 23-21, much to the chagrin of the Gators fans who thought blowing a lead at home to the Mississippi State would’ve been just the right note on which to end Napier’s tenure.

Hugh Freeze at least had the good sense not to upend his fans’ expectations, as Auburn blew a late lead, flubbed overtime, and lost another close one 23-17 to Missouri. We’re getting closer to a time when a Houston Nutt discovery motion reveals that Freeze had actually just taken the Auburn job because he couldn’t get a good tee time elsewhere.

It’s a shame this is the lone Saturday with eight SEC games because all of Week 8’s action in the conference was a delight.

For so long, there was an obvious hierarchy in the SEC. The names might change, but inevitably, there were a pair of titans and a few challengers to the throne, and by year’s end, the battles yielded enough clarity to showcase the league’s overwhelming strength.

In 2025, the story is different.

Vanderbilt is a playoff contender. Georgia is the defiant upstart. Alabama is the wobbly giant. Texas A&M boosters are making back some of Jimbo Fisher’s buyout by betting the over.

It doesn’t make much sense, but that’s a sign of the times. This season was never intended to fit a script, and for all its boisterous aggrandizements, the SEC isn’t immune to the chaos of 2025.

But, perhaps that’s a good thing. SEC games might always mean more, but for too long, they’ve delivered less surprise, less fun, less of what makes this sport so routinely weird.

Finally, the SEC’s catching up — or being dragged back down — with everyone else.

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Under the radar | Heisman five

Week 8 vibe shifts

Each week, the biggest games set the playoff narrative, but there are lots of other smaller shifts in the college football landscape, too. We track those here.

Trending down: UNC controversies

Since North Carolin‘s blowout loss to Clemson two weeks ago, the program has endured a dizzying array of blunders, from a canceled Hulu documentary to the suspension of an assistant coach for violating, presumably, the only remaining recruiting rule, to rumors of Bill Belichick’s departure. Then came the report that GM Michael Lombardi had traveled to Saudi Arabia to discuss an influx of cash into the program from a foreign government. Lombardi assured his bosses, however, that it was all a simple misunderstanding. He had been hoping to turn a structured settlement into cash now, but had misremembered the J.G. Wentworth song and accidentally ended up in Riyadh. Could’ve happened to anyone.

On the field at least, UNC seemed to take a small step forward Friday, only losing to Cal by three points 21-18. Sure, it came because Cal continuously dropped easy catches, bailed out the Heels with numerous defensive penalties on third down and spent so much time during the week watching UNC film that everyone forgot how to tackle, but the point remains: For at least three hours this season, Belichick’s Tar Heels weren’t a complete embarrassment.

Trending up: Carson Beck‘s completion percentage

The good news: 29 of Carson Beck’s 35 passes Friday were caught. The bad news: Four of those catches were by Louisville.

Miami fell behind the Cardinals 14-0 early, battled back and had a chance to win after Keionte Scott forced a fumble, and for the first time all night, Chris Bell didn’t convert a third down on Louisville’s subsequent drive.

Miami then drove into field goal range with a pair of timeouts and 32 seconds to play, when Beck dodged a blitz, threw wide and was picked off for the fourth time to seal the loss.

Afterward, Miami was frustrated by its first defeat of the season but was buoyed by the fact that, for once, it wasn’t because Mario Cristobal mismanaged the clock. That’s progress!

Trending down: Fines in the Big 12

After the conference announced Texas Tech would face stiff fines if fans continued to throw tortillas on the field, the Red Raiders had little to celebrate, falling for the first time this season 26-22 to Arizona State.

Without starting QB Behren Morton, the Red Raiders struggled to score until a furious 95-second stretch in which they erased a 12-point deficit to take a 22-19 lead with just 2 minutes to play.

But Sam Leavitt and the Sun Devils weren’t about to roll over. Arizona State marched 75 yards on 10 plays, capped by a 1-yard run by Raleek Brown, then fended off the Red Raiders’ last-gasp drive for the win.

In keeping with conference directives, the fine citizens of Tempe didn’t shower the field with one of their most famous cultural foodstuffs, grapefruit High Noons.

In the aftermath of the loss, Texas Tech boosters vowed to get better by donating even more NIL money in 2026, then rode off into the sunset in a Cadillac with a cow skull on the hood, whooping and yelling, “That weasel Taft never should’ve let Arizona become a state!”

Trending up: Dogmatic disagreements

BYU staved off a late Utah comeback attempt to win this year’s in-state rivalry game 24-21. Bear Bachmeier had a passing and a rushing touchdown in the win, and the Cougars are the first team to start 7-0 with a QB named “Bear” since the 1919 Baylor team was forced to use a team of real brown bears during the 1918 Influenza epidemic.

BYU has won four straight in the series after ending a nine-game winning streak for Utah in 2021. More importantly, with Texas Tech’s loss, the Cougars and Cincinnati are the lone remaining unbeaten teams in the Big 12, and BYU has won nine straight and 18 of its past 20 games.

Trending down: Future USCNotre Dame games

Jadarian Price racked up 209 all-purpose yards and two scores, Jeremiyah Love ran for 228 and a touchdown, and Notre Dame delivered what might be the final blow in a rivalry with USC 34-24.

USC has suggested it might not continue the rivalry, which has been played 96 times dating back to 1926, and definitely not just because Lincoln Riley said it was making him look bad, and it’d be way more fun to play Portland State.

Instead, USC feels that, now that it’s in the Big Ten where it routinely gets to lose games to Illinois, Minnesota and Maryland, there’s really no need for higher-profile losses out of conference.

Now, Notre Dame faces a bleak future of having to play an extra game against the ACC, and frankly, there’s only so many 30-point wins over Boston College anyone wants to see.

Trending up: Drama in the American

The battle atop the American took some major twists in Week 8, with Tulane narrowly hanging on to beat Army, UAB shocking Memphis, and Charlotte — well, OK, Charlotte lost badly again.

Tulane and Army were tied at 17 with less than a minute to play when Shazz Preston — whose name sounds as if he’s part of a Vegas magic act, and his catch only bolstered that likelihood — hauled in the game winner in dramatic fashion.

Meanwhile, Memphis had four plays from inside the UAB red zone with a chance to win, but two replay reviews, three penalties and three incomplete passes by backup QB AJ Hill dealt the Tigers their first loss of the year.

UAB, wearing fluorescent uniforms found amid the leftover costumes from Joel Schumacher’s “Batman Forever,” pulled off the shocker for interim coach Alex Mortensen, who stepped in after Trent Dilfer was fired last week, and delivered the Blazers a victory in the famed “Battle for the Bones,” thus dealing Memphis the twin miseries of diminished playoff hopes and no postgame ribs.

Tulane, Navy and USF are all undefeated in conference play still, while Memphis, Temple, North Texas and East Carolina all have one loss.

Trending down: Ohio State‘s strength of schedule

The Buckeyes are the No. 1 team in the country, but it has been a bit since one of their games have been remotely interesting.

Add Week 8 to that story, as Julian Sayin threw for three touchdowns in a 34-0 win over woeful Wisconsin. Ohio State has now allowed just 41 total points this season, has won its past six by an average of 31 points and didn’t even bother to stop for ice cream at Culver’s on its way out of Madison.

If things have been far too easy for Ohio State, the opposite is true for the Badgers. Luke Fickell could be on his way out, as Wisconsin falls to 2-5 and 0-4 in the Big Ten, and he horrified fans afterward by finally admitting he has been lactose intolerant this whole time.


Under-the-radar play of the week

UTEP‘s Noah Botsford booted a punt in the first quarter of Wednesday’s 35-17 win over Sam Houston that would’ve been considered not-safe-for-work content in the state of Iowa. After the Miners’ opening drive stalled, Botsford punted from his own 33, which hit the turf at the Sam Houston 15 and took a perfect bounce before being downed at the 1 — a net 66-yard boot.

Citing “Highlander” mythology that there can be only one Punt King, the Des Moines town charter requires Botsford now serve at least two terms as mayor. But it wasn’t all roses for UTEP. Sam Houston followed the stellar special teams by marching 99 yards for a touchdown to take an early 7-0 lead.

Nevertheless, UTEP was inspired by Botsford’s heroics, stormed back and won the game, sending Sam Houston to its seventh straight loss to open the year. The Bearkats, Oregon State and UMass are the last remaining winless FBS schools.


Under-the-radar game of the week

Utah State booted two fourth-quarter field goals to upend high-flying San José State 30-25 on Friday night, but it was QB Bryson Barnes who truly stole the show.

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Anthony Garcia brings down 74-yard TD for Utah State

Bryson Barnes airs one out to Anthony Garcia who waltzes into the end zone for a Utah State touchdown vs. San Jose State.

Barnes’ 74-yard TD pass to Anthony Garcia set the stage, the Aggies finished the job, and then Barnes — fresh off a 22-of-31 for 326 yards performance — added the coup de grâce by dashing off to the hospital to meet his wife.

A 74-yard touchdown, a win and attending the birth of a baby counts as the season’s second-most remarkable performance, only trailing the time Haynes King ran for two scores, removed his own appendix at halftime and helped negotiate a trade deal with Singapore during one fourth-quarter huddle against Wake Forest.


Heisman five

Amid Vanderbilt’s historic win over LSU, Diego Pavia struck the Heisman pose, which, by law, requires us to now admit him into the Heisman five. It’s a silly rule, but it’s also the same way Matthew McConaughey won the Oscar.

1. Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza

Mendoza threw for 332 yards and four touchdowns in a 38-13 win over Michigan State that he miraculously stayed awake for the entire time.

2. Alabama QB Ty Simpson

Simpson has been virtually flawless since the opening week loss to Florida State, adding to his sterling “résumé” with a pair of TD throws in a win over Tennessee on Saturday.

3. Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia

Pavia threw for 160 yards, ran for 86 and accounted for three total touchdowns in Vandy’s 31-24 win over LSU. After the game, Pavia was asked how many more seasons of this his lawyers could get him, to which he said, “I don’t know, maybe… 6, 7? See, I’m young. I know young people lingo. What time is ‘Matlock’ on?”

4. Georgia QB Gunner Stockton

Stockton had 348 yards and five touchdowns in a raucous win over Ole Miss, after which the Georgia QB hopped into his F-150, pressed play on his Simple Minds cassette, and reminisced about how he had learned he was so much more than a jock from those other weird kids in high school detention.

5. Georgia Tech QB Haynes King

There was a time when the ACC’s chaos was confined to the Coastal Division. But like Jurassic Park, the unquenchable hunger of Coastal Chaos couldn’t be contained forever, and the foolish conference administrators were more concerned about whether they could eliminate divisions that they never stopped to think about whether they should. Regardless, it has all played out perfectly for the ultimate chaos agent, Georgia Tech, which is now the last remaining undefeated team in the ACC, thanks in large part to King’s heroics. King led the Yellow Jackets to a 27-18 win over Duke on Saturday, throwing for 205 yards, rushing for 120, and scoring once. For the season, he has accounted for 14 touchdowns and one interception.

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Florida fires coach Napier after 3-4 start in ’25

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Florida fires coach Napier after 3-4 start in '25

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Florida fired coach Billy Napier on Sunday, a day after an error-filled win against Mississippi State that included more head-scratching calls and offensive lulls like those that marked much of his four-year run with the Gators.

Athletic director Scott Stricklin made the move following a 23-21 victory that improved the Gators’ record to 3-4 but looked as if it was going to be a gut-wrenching loss until defensive tackle Michai Boireau picked off a pass with 21 seconds left and the Bulldogs near field goal range.

The game-sealing takeaway energized The Swamp, but the home crowd quickly turned on Napier and booed him as he sprinted off the field. Stricklin had seen enough and pulled the plug on a run that most of the Florida faithful thought lasted longer than it should have.

Florida owes Napier roughly $21 million, with half of that buyout due within 30 days. The rest will be spread over three annual installments beginning next summer, meaning that, since the Gators are still paying former coach Dan Mullen, they will be paying three head coaches for the second time in seven years once they hire Napier’s replacement; they did the same with Will Muschamp, Jim McElwain and Mullen in 2018.

Napier went 22-23 in four seasons at Florida, including 12-16 in SEC play. He was 5-17 against ranked opponents, including 0-14 away from home, and declined to give up his playcalling role despite calls to do so.

Equally damning: His 3-12 mark against rivals Florida State, Georgia, LSU, Miami and Tennessee includes the fewest wins by a Florida coach in such games since the late 1930s.

Napier is the first full-time coach at Florida to finish his tenure with a losing record since Raymond Wolf (1946 to ’49).

“Making this decision during the open date provides our team valuable time to regroup, refocus, and prepare for the challenges ahead. The timing also allows us to conduct a thoughtful, thorough, and well-informed search for our next head coach. We remain fully committed to utilizing every resource available to identify the right leader to guide Gators Football into the future,” Stricklin said in a statement.

“I will conduct the search with a high degree of confidentiality to protect the privacy of those involved. The search will focus on the hiring of an elite football coach who will embody the standard we have at the University of Florida, and we will continue to provide all of the necessary resources for that coach, his staff and the players to be successful.”

Receivers coach Billy Gonzales was named interim for Florida’s remaining five games, beginning against rival Georgia (6-1, 4-1 Southeastern Conference) on Nov. 1 in Jacksonville. The Gators (3-4, 2-2) have an off week to regroup from the chaos that often comes with a coaching change.

Jettisoning Napier will temporarily quell a frustrated fanbase, but the group won’t truly be satisfied until the Gators hire someone with a proven track record at college football’s highest level.

Napier sealed his fate against the Bulldogs. He dialed up a QB rollout on a third-and-1 play in the waning minutes that led to a punt and gave Mississippi State a chance down the stretch. He also called a QB keeper on a third-and-7 play earlier in the game, botched the final possession before halftime and was flagged for having 12 men on the field during a 2-point try.

It was a fitting end for a coach who often looked in over his head in the powerhouse SEC. Between repeated penalties, game organization issues, clock management miscues and running an offensive scheme that was as predictable as it was pedestrian, Napier stuck around longer than many thought he deserved.

Stricklin gave the coach a public vote of confidence shortly before the Gators won their final four games of 2024. They hoped to carry that momentum into Napier’s fourth season, but quarterback DJ Lagway was out close to eight months recovering from injuries — and it showed.

Lagway looked mostly lost in the pocket as Florida struggled to move the ball. Suddenly, the two-time Sun Belt Conference coach of the year, who gained fame at his previous stop by saying “scared money don’t make money,” seemed afraid to get the ball down the field the way Lagway did with such ease as a freshman.

Most outsiders saw this ending coming. Although Napier accomplished plenty while helping the program navigate name, image and likeness compensation and revenue sharing, he churned through assistants while failing to find much consistency on either side of the ball.

“The standards and expectations for Gators football are to win championships — not simply to compete. We exist to win, and will not settle for less. UF has never been more invested in the success of this football program — elite facilities, robust NIL opportunities and comprehensive support for our student athletes and staff — than we are today,” Strickland said.

“The University of Florida is a destination — a place where people come to achieve excellence. With our resources, passionate fan base, and unwavering commitment, we are determined to return Gators football to championship form. I understand and accept the responsibility to deliver a football program that reflects the greatness of this university and I thank Gator Nation for their continued support as we begin this next chapter together.”

Florida hired Napier in 2021 after he went 40-12 in four seasons as Louisiana’s coach.

The Associated Press and ESPN Research contributed to this report.

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Tide, Dawgs into AP top 5; Vandy soars to No. 10

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Tide, Dawgs into AP top 5; Vandy soars to No. 10

Vanderbilt is a top-10 team in college football for the first time since 1947 in an Associated Press Top 25 poll that got a nearly complete makeover Sunday after a weekend during which nine ranked teams lost.

Ohio State was the only team to hold its spot, remaining No. 1 for an eighth straight week after shutting out Wisconsin 34-0 on the road.

Beyond the Buckeyes, significant revision was required with four top-10 teams losing in the same week for a third time this season. Nine Top 25 losing teams were the most since Week 5 in 2022, when 10 went down, according to Sportradar. Four of the losses this week were to unranked opponents.

The Buckeyes received 60 first-place votes, 10 more than a week ago. No. 2 Indiana pulled away from Michigan State, improved its program-record ranking by one spot and received the other six first-place votes.

Ohio State’s 10 straight appearances in the top five is the longest active streak.

Texas A&M‘s one-rung promotion to No. 3 gives the Aggies their highest ranking since 1995. No. 4 Alabama has its highest ranking of the season and No. 5 Georgia returned to the top five after a three-week absence.

Georgia’s 140th consecutive week in the poll is the second-longest active streak to Alabama’s 287.

Oregon, Georgia Tech, Ole Miss, Miami and Vanderbilt round out the top 10.

The Ducks bounced back from their home loss to Indiana with a lopsided road win over Rutgers.

Georgia Tech, which won at Duke, hadn’t been in the top 10 since 2014 or ranked as high since 2009. Mississippi’s loss to Georgia caused it to slip three spots, and Miami fell seven after losing to unranked Louisville.

Louisville makes its season debut in the Top 25. The No. 19 Cardinals, whose only loss was by three points to Virginia on Oct. 4, were 0-18 all time against top-10 teams in true road games before knocking off the Hurricanes.

At No. 16, Virginia’s ranking is its highest since 2007.

Vanderbilt rallied from its loss at Alabama two weeks ago with a 31-24 win over then-No. 10 LSU. The Commodores earned a seven-spot promotion for their first win over the Tigers since 1990. At 6-1, Vandy is off to its best start since 1950, with two wins over ranked opponents.

Vanderbilt’s top-10 ranking is its fifth in program history. The others were in 1937 (once), 1941 (once) and 1947 (twice).

Texas Tech‘s first loss came at Arizona State and dropped the Red Raiders seven spots to No. 14.

LSU took the biggest fall, plunging 10 spots to No. 20 for its lowest ranking of the season.

No. 23 Illinois returned despite being idle. The Illini had dropped out for the first time this season after a home loss to Ohio State.

No. 24 Arizona State, which fell out of the poll after a 32-point loss at Utah, returned following its first win over a top-10 opponent since 2019.

No. 25 Michigan‘s 17-point home win over Washington returned the Wolverines to the rankings after a one-week absence.

USC (No. 20 entering this week), Memphis (22), Utah (23) and Nebraska (25) dropped out.

CONFERENCE CALL

SEC (10): Nos. 3, 4, 5, 8, 10, 13, 15, 17, 20, 22.

Big Ten (5): Nos. 1, 2, 6, 23, 25.

Big 12 (4): Nos. 11, 14, 21, 24.

ACC (4): Nos. 7, 9, 16, 19.

American (1): No. 18.

Independent (1): No. 12.

RANKED VS. RANKED

No. 3 Texas A&M (7-0) at No. 20 LSU (5-2): The home team has won the past eight meetings. LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier threw three second-half interceptions and Marcel Reed came off the bench to run for three TDs in the Aggies’ 38-23 win last season.

No. 8 Mississippi (6-1) at No. 13 Oklahoma (6-1): This will be only their third all-time meeting. The Rebels recorded nine sacks in a 26-14 win last season.

No. 15 Missouri (6-1) at No. 10 Vanderbilt (6-1): Vandy kicker Brock Taylor has made 17 consecutive field goal attempts since missing a 31-yarder that gave the Tigers a 30-27 double-overtime win last season.

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Ohio State? Bama? Indiana? Anyone in the ACC? Who we can — and can’t — trust

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Ohio State? Bama? Indiana? Anyone in the ACC? Who we can -- and can't -- trust

With four ranked-versus-ranked games on the Week 8 docket, we were guaranteed to see some good teams fall this weekend. We got more than we bargained for. No. 2 Miami lost as a 10.5-point home favorite to an unranked team. No. 7 Texas Tech (10.5-point favorite), No. 22 Memphis (21.5-point favorite) and No. 25 Nebraska (5.5-point favorite) all fell to unranked squads as well.

And in the SEC, No. 4 Texas A&M barely survived 2-4 Arkansas, while No. 16 Missouri (against 3-3 Auburn) and No. 21 Texas (against 2-3 Kentucky) needed overtime to secure road wins.

Parity has been the watchword in college football this year — the elite teams don’t seem quite as elite, and the sport’s middle class seems closer to the top of the pack than usual. It rules, frankly. Week 8 certainly reinforced that notion. It was a breathless mess from start to finish.

In times like these, it’s hard to know what teams and players you can trust. I’m here to help. After eight topsy-turvy weeks, we have at least a decent idea of teams’ ceilings and floors, so let’s talk about college football’s most — and least — trustworthy entities.

I went on an Ohio State podcast last week and revealed an ugly truth: Ohio State is annoying the hell out of me this season. Amid all the parity talk, I’m pretty sure Ryan Day’s Buckeyes are comfortably the best team in the country at the moment, but they choose to drop hints only in periodic doses. I prefer my elite teams to win games 63-0 and basically wear a giant “WE’RE ELITE” sign, but after last season’s experience — in which the Buckeyes lost late in the year to Michigan but shifted into fifth gear in four comfortable College Football Playoff wins — no one better understands that the goal is to peak in December, not October.

It would help if they had some elite opponents to look toward, but the Big Ten opponent on their schedule that was supposed to be elite (Penn State) is anything but, and the Buckeyes aren’t scheduled to play Indiana. Instead, they’ve been left to alternate between second-gear blowouts of iffy to bad teams and comfortable 18-point road wins over solid-but-unspectacular opponents such as Illinois and Washington.

Day at least let Julian Sayin throw some pitches Saturday. In front of a less-than-robust Wisconsin crowd (perhaps just hours before the inevitable firing of head coach Luke Fickell), Sayin, who averaged just 26.8 dropbacks per game in his first six starts, went 36-for-42 for 393 yards and four touchdowns. He distributed the ball to 10 receivers, though the dynamite duo of Jeremiah Smith and Carnell Tate combined for 15 catches and 208 yards.

Wisconsin’s offense was never going to threaten the best defense in the country — the Badgers gained just 144 total yards and took just nine snaps in Ohio State territory (yards gained in those snaps: 6) — so there was no downside to stretching Sayin out a bit. He averaged only 10.9 yards per completion, and Smith is still averaging just 9.4 yards per catch and 6.9 yards per target against power-conference opponents. For that matter, the Buckeyes’ run game is producing almost no explosive plays, but one assumes the passing game will provide more than enough explosiveness if it’s ever asked to, especially as Sayin, the redshirt freshman, grows in confidence.

Of course, we might have to wait a while to confirm that. Ohio State gets a bye week, then four straight games against teams with losing records (Penn State, Purdue, UCLA, Rutgers). Three of those games are at home, and three of those opponents rank worse than 65th in SP+. Anyone craving a glimpse at fifth-gear Ohio State is probably going to have to wait at least another month.


In part because of how quickly SP+ was saying Indiana was really good in 2024, I feel like I’ve been in the front car of the Hoosiers bandwagon for a while now. And even I have found myself wondering if or when they might begin to look a bit more mortal, to drop a hint that they might be dealing with extra pressure and expectations. It would be normal and forgivable if it happened, and when Aidan Chiles and Nick Marsh connected to give Michigan State a 10-7 lead early in the second quarter in front of 55,165 in Bloomington, I thought we might be encountering such a moment.

Nope. The Hoosiers ripped off a 75-yard touchdown drive, forced a punt, drove 80 yards for another touchdown and, after a halftime weather delay, drove 75 and 68 yards for two more touchdowns to put away a 38-13 win. Fernando Mendoza was nearly perfect once again, engineering five TD drives in five tries before a turnover on downs ended the streak early in the fourth quarter. He went 24-for-28 for 332 yards and four touchdowns, and stars Omar Cooper Jr. and Elijah Sarratt caught 12 passes for 185 yards and three of the scores. The Indiana defense had a poor game by its standards, allowing six Michigan State drives to finish in IU territory, but the Hoosiers still haven’t allowed more than 20 points in a game this season.

Even if your brain has been slow to completely grasp this — mine evidently has, despite my best efforts — there’s absolutely no reason to think of Indiana as anything but an elite team that will play like an elite team most of the time. And if that remains true, then go ahead and pencil the Hoosiers into the Big Ten championship game: Their five remaining games are against three teams ranked 65th or worse in SP+ and two (Maryland and Penn State) who are a combined 0-7 since Week 4.

We entered Week 8 with five teams looking at odds of 25% or higher to finish 12-0: Ohio State, Texas Tech, Indiana, Memphis and Miami. Three of them lost; the other two — Ohio State (now 49%) and Indiana (45%) — are on a collision course to meet in Indianapolis.


Don’t trust: The ACC

All of it. The entire conference is untrustworthy at this point. There were eight games involving ACC teams in Week 8; four produced upsets, three on the favorite’s home field, and two others nearly did. Stanford beat Florida State as a 17.5-point underdog, Louisville (+10.5) won at Miami, SMU (+5.5) won at Clemson in a game altered by multiple quarterback injuries and Georgia Tech (+3.5) won at Duke 27-18 in a game impacted heavily by a 95-yard Omar Daniels fumble return score.

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Omar Daniels takes Duke fumble 95 yards to the house

Georgia Tech strikes first as Omar Daniels recovers a Duke fumble and returns it 95 yards for the touchdown.

Oh yeah, and Cal nearly lost as an 8.5-point home favorite against previously hapless North Carolina, and Virginia (-16.5) needed a late Washington State implosion to beat the Cougars 22-20 at home. In all, only Pitt’s 30-13 win over Syracuse — the Panthers have genuinely gone to a new level since installing freshman Mason Heintschel at quarterback (though he admittedly didn’t do much Saturday) — and collapsing Boston College’s 38-23 loss to UConn produced what you might call expected outcomes, though UConn’s winning margin was larger than anticipated.

As one would expect, such a wacky week shuffled the conference title odds a good amount.

ACC title odds, per SP+:
Georgia Tech (7-0, 4-0 ACC): 26.9% (up 9.2%)
Louisville (5-1, 2-1): 16.8% (up 6.5%)
Miami (5-1, 1-1): 13.4% (down 17.3%)
Virginia (6-1, 3-0): 12.9% (up 1.9%)
SMU (5-2, 3-0): 12.9% (up 5.8%)
Pitt (5-2, 3-1): 8.3% (up 2.5%)
Duke (4-3, 3-1): 7.3% (down 7.7%)
Cal (5-2, 2-1): 1.0% (up 0.4%)

SP+ pinpointed Miami as more of a top-15 team than an elite one weeks ago, and as such, the Hurricanes could struggle in road trips against SMU (which has won three in a row) and the aforementioned Pitt in a series that has produced upsets in five of the past nine meetings. Louisville’s offense isn’t quite trustworthy yet, but the Cardinals have only one more SP+ top-40 opponent on the schedule (No. 37 SMU).

Virginia and SMU still have mulligans to spend — both are unbeaten in conference play — as does Georgia Tech, which remains unbeaten overall and has moved into the ACC driver’s seat. But as fun as the Tech story is, it’s hard to trust the Yellow Jackets, who, despite having not yet faced an SP+ top-40 team, have needed three one-score victories to remain unbeaten and rank only 29th in points per drive on offense and 53rd on defense. They’re 28th in SP+, behind Miami and Louisville and only narrowly ahead of Pitt, SMU and a quickly deteriorating Florida State.

Translation: This race probably has a few more plot twists to go. The spirit of the ACC Coastal division lives. Trust no one.


For what I believe was the first time since it expanded to 16 teams last year, the SEC had eight conference games going on the same Saturday. Two went to overtime, and others were decided by two, three, seven and eight points.

When we talk about parity in college football, we’re directing a lot of that at the SEC. It currently doesn’t have a team within six points of Ohio State in the SP+ ratings, but its top 10 teams are within five points of each other. All are ranked between fifth and 19th nationally, and even with Alabama bolting out ahead of the pack, we’re still looking at eight teams with at least a 5% chance at the conference title.

SEC title odds, per SP+:
Alabama (6-1, 4-0 SEC): 25.8% (up 7.0%)
Texas A&M (7-0, 4-0): 17.6% (up 3.1%)
Georgia (6-1, 4-1): 13.9% (up 3.4%)
Oklahoma (6-1, 2-1): 10.4% (up 2.7%)
Texas (5-2, 2-1): 7.7% (up 1.2%)
Missouri (6-1, 2-1): 7.4% (up 1.5%)
Ole Miss (6-1, 3-1): 7.1% (down 9.1%)
Vanderbilt (6-1, 2-1): 5.5% (up 1.8%)

Alabama indeed eased out in front thanks to Saturday’s 37-20 win over Tennessee. Who knows how the game might have played out if Zabien Brown hadn’t picked off a Joey Aguilar pass at the goal line and taken it 99 yards for a touchdown as the first half expired — instead of a 16-14 or 16-10 halftime lead for Bama, it was 23-7. But the Tide once again got the two things they have come to rely on: red zone stops from the defense and just the right plays from Ty Simpson.

In Bama’s current run of four straight wins over ranked foes, opposing teams have scored touchdowns on just seven of 14 red zone trips, with three turnovers, a turnover on downs and only one field goal among the seven failures. The Tide are just 58th in yards allowed per play and 66th in success rate allowed, but they’re 22nd in scoring defense. That’s a tenuous balance, and we’ll see what happens against Oklahoma or anyone they might face in the SEC championship game or CFP, but it’s working well for now.

It works even better since they know they’ll get what they need from Simpson. That Week 1 defeat at Florida State grows more baffling by the week, but since then Simpson ranks seventh in Total QBR with a 74% completion rate, a 16-to-1 TD-to-INT ratio and a 52% success rate on third and fourth down (national average on those downs: 40%). He’s also the only guy this season who has outdueled Vanderbilt’s Diego Pavia. Simpson has earned our trust, although I’m still willing to cast a suspicious glance toward the defense.


Trust: Georgia’s toughness

I’m also struggling to trust quite a few aspects of Kirby Smart’s Georgia Bulldogs. They struggled to run efficiently against either of the two good defenses they’ve faced, they continue to lack in the big-play department, and while they’ve played against three top-15 offenses, per SP+, we still expect a Smart defense to rank higher than 49th in points allowed per drive or 48th in success rate allowed.

Still, you have to admire the Dawgs’ flair for the moment. They spotted Tennessee a 14-point lead in the first quarter, Auburn a 10-point lead in the first, Alabama a 14-point lead in the second and Ole Miss a nine-point lead in the third, and yet, the only team they lost to was Bama. (And it looked like they were going to win that one, too, until Bama’s defensive red zone magic struck.) Against Auburn’s awesome defense in Week 7, they eventually figured out a way to eke out 20 points and a road win; against Ole Miss’ awesome offense in Week 8, they allowed five straight touchdowns to start the game but stayed within pecking distance and then suddenly locked the Rebels all the way down. Ole Miss’ Trinidad Chambliss went 1-for-10 passing during a fourth quarter in which Georgia outgained the Rebels 143-13 and outscored them 17-0. The result: yet another comeback win 43-35.

When the Bulldogs need to score 40-plus, they do it. When they need to hold an opponent to 10, they do it. It would be awfully boring if, in this year of epic SEC parity — when Texas A&M, Missouri, Ole Miss and Vanderbilt all have at least a puncher’s chance at the crown — we got another Georgia-Bama conference title game. But it’s pretty damn hard to think we won’t at this point, isn’t it?


Don’t trust: Arch Manning and Texas’ offense

I called Ohio State’s defense the best in the country above, and I certainly believe it is. SP+, however, still leans toward Texas, which held the Buckeyes to 14 points in the season opener and has allowed only one opponent to score more than that. The Longhorns rank fourth in points allowed per drive and 10th in yards allowed per play — quite possibly the second-best defense in the sport to my eyes.

Despite the defense, however, and despite a potentially key tiebreaker win over Oklahoma last week, Texas is only fifth on the SEC title odds list above, just ahead of Missouri and behind those Sooners. You already know the reason, of course: an offense that ranks 74th in yards per play, 88th in points per drive, 101st in success rate (80th rushing, 110th passing) and 116th in percentage of plays gaining zero or negative yards. On 46.5% of their pass attempts this season, they’d have been as well or better off just spiking the ball into the ground; that “spike factor” ranks 120th.

I don’t bring this up to heap further scorn on Arch Manning, or at least not to specifically do that. The preseason Heisman favorite hasn’t gotten any of the help he needed this season, and he certainly didn’t in Saturday night’s 16-13 win over Kentucky. His running backs averaged 3.3 yards per carry in Lexington, and his first 25 pass attempts produced just eight completions and three sacks. He did complete four straight short passes late, but Texas gained just 179 yards against a Wildcats defense that allowed 461 yards to Eastern Michigan in mid-September.

The Longhorns survived when Kentucky foolishly called two straight halfback dives into the teeth of Texas’ enormous defensive line and turned the ball over on downs in overtime, setting up Mason Shipley’s game-winning field goal. But this offense is still failing to clear an increasingly low bar. It has underachieved against SP+ projections in five of seven games and needed a special teams touchdown to overachieve its projection against Oklahoma last week.

No matter how good the defense may be, it’s going to face four of the nation’s top 15 offenses (per SP+) in its last five games, and the offense is going to face three defenses that grade out better than Kentucky’s. If it can’t help Manning, and Manning can’t help himself and start to improve — a hard thing to do midstream, especially when your issues seem to be pretty fundamental things such as footwork, pocket timing and accuracy — then how exactly does Texas end up with a playoff résumé? Things could be worse; the Horns could have easily lost to UK. But it’s hard to see things getting much better.


I’m not sure my trust is going to be enough. At 5-2 with no serious résumé-building win opportunities left, it sure seems like Notre Dame will be at or near the bottom of a pile of hypothetical two-loss teams even if it gets to 10-2 at the end of the regular season. There’s no shame in losing to Miami and Texas A&M — teams that are a combined 12-1 — by four combined points, as the Irish did, and their list of quality wins just isn’t going to end up being all that impressive even if USC, Saturday night’s victim, keeps playing well.

For this conversation, however, that doesn’t really matter. All that matters is that this is one of the five best teams in the country right now, and I’m growing to trust the Irish considerably. (Well, everything but their place-kicking anyway.) They’ve overachieved against SP+ projections over the last five games by an average of 14.9 points. And even though quarterback CJ Carr had a poor game Saturday — 16-for-26 for 136 yards, a TD, an interception, a sack and a 32.8 Total QBR — they still overachieved against their offensive projections thanks to a 228-yard rushing performance from Jeremiyah Love, his first genuine breakout game of the year, and an 87-yard performance with a kick return score from backup Jadarian Price.

Combine a high-end offense with a defense that seems to have completely solved itself over the last month, and you’ve got a hell of a team. After allowing 32.7 points per game in Chris Ash’s first three games as coordinator, the Irish have since allowed just 12.8 per game despite playing USC (first in offensive SP+), Arkansas (fifth) and Boise State (25th), and despite dealing with injuries to stars such as corner Leonard Moore and tackle Gabriel Rubio. USC had scored at least 31 points in every game before Saturday and came to South Bend averaging 8.3 yards per play; the Trojans managed just 24 points and 5.6 yards per play against the Irish.

Thanks primarily to the early defensive struggles, the Irish were 21st in SP+ after three games. They’re now sixth after seven games. Only one remaining game is projected within 17 points, per SP+, and if they make the CFP they could do some serious damage. We’ll have to see what fate has in store in that regard.


This week in SP+

The SP+ rankings have been updated for the week. Let’s take a look at the teams that saw the biggest change in their overall ratings. (Note: We’re looking at ratings, not rankings.)

Moving up

Here are the five teams that saw their ratings rise the most this week:

Temple: up 4.5 adjusted points per game (ranking rose from 88th to 72nd)

Florida International: up 4.3 points (from 130th to 124th)

James Madison: up 3.6 points (from 59th to 47th)

Central Michigan: up 3.5 points (from 125th to 114th)

Oregon State: up 3.5 points (from 114th to 106th)

After losing to Delaware and UConn by a combined 89-26, FIU unleashed a nearly perfect performance out of nowhere Tuesday, heading up to Western Kentucky and winning 25-6. James Madison, meanwhile, knocked Old Dominion out in a delightful Saturday slugfest, scoring 42 straight points to turn a 27-21 deficit into a 63-27 rout.

But we need to talk about Temple for a second: The Owls hadn’t topped three wins since 2019, watching their meticulously rebuilt program crumble to the ground in the 2020s. But then they hired KC Keeler. It might have been the best hire of last offseason. The 66-year-old has them at 4-3 following Saturday’s 49-14 blowout of Charlotte.

Temple hasn’t had the athleticism to keep up with high-level power-conference opponents — Oklahoma and Georgia Tech beat the Owls by a combined 87-27 — but against teams in their weight class, they’re 4-1, having overachieved against SP+ projections by an average of 19.4 points and having lost only to unbeaten Navy in the last minute. What a turnaround.

Here are the five power-conference teams that rose the most:

Minnesota: up 3.1 points (from 57th to 49th)

UCF: up 3.0 points (from 58th to 51st)

Cincinnati: up 1.8 points (from 30th to 25th)

Stanford: up 1.7 points (from 108th to 101st)

North Carolina: up 1.6 points (from 103rd to 98th)

Minnesota sure does love playing Nebraska. The Gophers pummeled the Huskers on Friday night 24-6 to move to 5-2 on the season. Without that ghastly egg-laying loss at Cal in Week 3, they’d be ranked and looking at a potential 9-3 finish or so.

Moving down

Here are the 10 teams whose ratings fell the most:

UTSA: down 5.0 adjusted points per game (ranking fell from 61st to 71st)

Tennessee: down 4.0 points (from 11th to 18th)

Rutgers: down 3.8 points (from 50th to 67th)

Nebraska: down 3.7 points (from 20th to 26th)

West Virginia: down 3.6 points (from 80th to 97th)

Memphis: down 3.5 points (from 24th to 30th)

Northern Illinois: down 3.3 points (from 118th to 127th)

South Carolina: down 3.3 points (from 40th to 52nd)

USC: down 2.9 points (from 14th to 16th)

Clemson: down 2.8 points (from 39th to 46th)

There’s no great shame in losing at Alabama, but Tennessee’s slippage here has been a long time coming: The Vols have now underachieved against projections for five straight games, and they’ve done so by double digits in each of the past two. The defense, which finished sixth in defensive SP+ last season, has underachieved in every game and is down to 44th, and while the offense propped the Vols up for a while, it has also underachieved the past two weeks. Continued underachievement at that level would put them in danger of losing at Kentucky this coming week.


Who won the Heisman this week?

I am once again awarding the Heisman every single week of the season and doling out weekly points, F1-style (in this case, 10 points for first place, nine for second, and so on). How will this Heisman race play out, and how different will the result be from the actual Heisman voting?

Here is this week’s Heisman top 10:

1. Gunner Stockton, Georgia (26-for-31 passing for 289 yards and 4 touchdowns, plus 59 non-sack rushing yards and a touchdown against Ole Miss).

2. Fernando Mendoza, Indiana (24-for-28 passing for 332 yards and 4 touchdowns, plus 18 non-sack rushing yards against Michigan State).

3. Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame (24 carries for 228 yards and a touchdown, plus 37 receiving yards against USC).

4. Julian Sayin, Ohio State (36-for-42 passing for 393 yards and 4 touchdowns against Wisconsin).

5. Alonza Barnett III, James Madison (17-for-25 passing for 295 yards and 2 touchdowns, plus 165 non-sack rushing yards and 4 TDs against Old Dominion).

6. Taylen Green, Arkansas (19-for-32 passing for 256 yards and 3 touchdowns, plus 131 non-sack rushing yards and 2 TDs against Texas A&M).

7. Diego Pavia, Vanderbilt (14-for-22 passing for 160 yards and a touchdown, plus 94 non-sack rushing yards and 2 TDs against LSU).

8. Colin Simmons, Texas (4 tackles, 3 sacks and 1 forced fumble against Kentucky).

9. Dylan Riley, Boise State (15 carries for 201 yards and a touchdown against UNLV).

10. Haynes King, Georgia Tech (14-for-21 passing for 205 yards, plus 120 non-sack rushing yards and a touchdown against Duke).

It was tempting to just give each of the top three names a share of No. 1 for the week. Love’s domination of USC was vital to Notre Dame’s playoff hopes (and really fun to watch), and Mendoza was ridiculous yet again — his Total QBR has now topped 90.0 in four of the past five games, and he’s completing 74% of his passes with a 21-to-2 TD-to-INT ratio. Kurtis Rourke was so good for the Hoosiers last season, and Mendoza is raising the bar.

I had to give No. 1 to Stockton, though. He had to be great for the Dawgs to keep up with Ole Miss, and when the Georgia defense finally showed up, Stockton raised his game even further. Awesome stuff.

Honorable mention:

Byrum Brown, USF (14-for-24 passing for 256 yards and 3 touchdowns, plus 123 non-sack rushing yards and a TD against Florida Atlantic).

Zabien Brown, Alabama (seven tackles and a 99-yard pick-six against Tennessee).

Anthony Hankerson, Oregon State (25 carries for 204 yards and 4 touchdowns against Lafayette).

Caleb Hawkins, North Texas (18 carries for 133 yards, plus 90 receiving yards against UTSA).

Brad Jackson, Texas State (26-for-38 passing for 444 yards, 2 TDs and 1 INT, plus 77 non-sack rushing yards and a TD against Marshall).

Nick Minicucci, Delaware (32-for-50 passing for 422 yards and a touchdown, plus 20 non-sack rushing yards against Jacksonville State).

Dante Moore, Oregon (15-for-20 passing for 290 yards, 4 TDs and 1 INT, plus 49 non-sack rushing yards against Rutgers).

Kejon Owens, Florida International (22 carries for 195 yards and a touchdown, plus seven receiving yards against Western Kentucky).

(By the way, a quick shoutout to Curry College’s Montie Quinn, who broke the Division III record with 522 rushing yards … on 20 carries! The Colonels beat Nichols 71-27, and his seven touchdowns alone gained 399 yards, including jaunts of 85, 84, 76, 64 and 58 yards.)

Through eight weeks, here are your points leaders:

1. Ty Simpson, Alabama (29 points)
2. Taylen Green, Arkansas (27)
3T. Fernando Mendoza, Indiana (19)
3T. Gunner Stockton, Georgia (19)
3T. Demond Williams Jr., Washington (19)
6T. Luke Altmyer, Illinois (16)
6T. Julian Sayin, Ohio State (16)
8. Trinidad Chambliss, Ole Miss (15)
9. Diego Pavia, Vanderbilt (14)
10. Jayden Maiava, USC (12)

For the first time all season, the points race and the current Heisman betting odds have begun to match up. Six of the above names are also in the top 10 per ESPN BET: Mendoza (No. 1 betting favorite), Simpson (No. 2), Sayin (No. 3), Stockton (No. 5), Pavia (No. 8) and Chambliss (No. 9T).


My 10 favorite games of the weekend

1 and 2. Stanford 20, Florida State 13 and California 21, North Carolina 18 (Friday). We had matching last-minute goal-line stands in the Bay Area, though Stanford-FSU gets the edge for adding in a mini-Hail Mary (to get to the Stanford 9 with two seconds left) and an untimed down following a pass interference call (which followed an errant snap). And are we sure Gavin Sawchuk didn’t make it to the end zone? One of the most unique finishes you’ll see.

Cal, meanwhile, merely forced a fumble millimeters before the end zone with four minutes left. Boring.

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Cal forces UNC fumble at the goal line for a touchback

Cal’s Brent Austin punches the ball out of Nathan Leacock’s hands at the goal line to force a fumble and subsequent touchback.

3. FCS: East Texas A&M 52, Incarnate Word 45. With 6:45 left, East Texas A&M took its first lead 45-42 after trailing by as many as 21 earlier in the game.

With 1:55 left, UIW’s Will Faris hit a 57-yard field goal to tie the game at 45-45.

With 0:27 left, ETAMU not only scored the winning points but did so with one of the most physical runs of the week.

Hot damn, EJ Oakmon.

4. Louisville 24, No. 2 Miami 21 (Friday). Louisville’s offense hasn’t carried its weight at times this year, but the Cardinals scripted out two early touchdowns and got a beautiful, 36-yard burst from Chris Bell. The defense took it from there. T.J. Capers‘ interception — the Cardinals’ fourth of Carson Beck — clinched the upset and sent the ACC race into chaos.

5. FCS: Lamar 23, UT Rio Grande Valley 21. UT Rio Grande Valley is 5-2 in its debut season; the Vaqueros have acquitted themselves well, and they almost took down a ranked Lamar team in Beaumont with two fourth-quarter touchdowns. But Ben Woodard nailed a 57-yard field goal with 1:03 left, and Mar Mar Evans picked off a desperate Eddie Lee Marburger pass with 14 seconds left. Lamar survived.

6. No. 9 Georgia 43, No. 5 Ole Miss 35. I almost just assumed that Ole Miss would score late and send this one to overtime. Alas. A heavyweight matchup in a heavyweight environment.

7. Tulane 24, Army 17. I reflexively made the Chris Berman “WHOOOP” sound when this happened.

8. Arizona State 26, No. 7 Texas Tech 22. Texas Tech backup quarterback Will Hammond finally looked like a backup, but the Red Raiders overcame a number of miscues to take the lead with two minutes left, only for ASU to respond with a 10-play, 75-yard drive capped by Raleek Brown‘s last-minute touchdown.

9. TCU 42, Baylor 36. One of many games with lengthy weather delays, this one almost saw a three-minute, 21-point comeback. TCU led 42-21, but Keaton Thomas returned a fumble for a touchdown, Sawyer Robertson completed a 35-yard touchdown to Kole Wilson, and Baylor recovered an onside kick with 30 seconds left. But Namdi Obiazor picked Robertson off near midfield, and the Horned Frogs survived.

10. UAB 31, No. 22 Memphis 24. You get points for creativity, Memphis. After Greg Desrosiers Jr. had his game-tying, 41-yard touchdown disallowed — replay determined he was down just short of the goal line — Memphis proceeded to commit two false starts and a delay of game, and backup quarterback AJ Hill‘s fourth-down pass to Cortez Braham Jr. was incomplete by inches. I’ve never seen a team lose a game like that.

11. Division II: Benedict 31, Edward Waters 27.

12. UCLA 20, Maryland 17.

13. Houston 31, Arizona 28.

14. FCS: Chattanooga 42, ETSU 38.

15. Marshall 40, Texas State 37 (2OT).

16. No. 16 Missouri 23, Auburn 17 (OT).

17. Iowa 25, Penn State 24.

18. Division III: No. 14 John Carroll 31, No. 11 DePauw 27.

19. NAIA: Faulkner 36, Cumberlands 35.

20. Florida 23, Mississippi State 21

It says a lot about the week that we had two SEC overtime games, and neither made the top 15.

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