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Human knowledge is an ever-evolving thing. At points in history, the wisest among us believed, with some degree of certainty, that the earth was flat, that sea dragons consumed ships filled with gold, that Texas was back. In time, most of us who aren’t Kyrie Irving have come to understand the folly of such ideas, but it’s worth appreciating that those great thinkers of the past weren’t fools. They simply lacked information. They took the facts available to them and posited a theory that best explained their reality, but as we learn more, we refine our notions of how the world works, and a new truth becomes clear.

This is to say, it’s really not anyone’s fault Penn State, Clemson, Florida and South Carolina all stink. Two months ago, Drew Allar, Cade Klubnik, DJ Lagway and LaNorris Sellers offered us all the proof we needed to buy into the hype. We were so young, naive and dizzy from Alex Warren ballads.

Who could’ve guessed that, by Week 10, we’d be living in a reality in which Arch Manning toppling Vanderbilt would constitute a massive shake-up in the SEC power structure?

What genius, as recently as a month ago, might’ve predicted that by the first week in November, Miami‘s playoff hopes would be on life support?

Even at halftime in Raleigh, North Carolina, on Saturday we might’ve rightfully posited Georgia Tech was the one team who could afford the ACC some semblance of respectability, and who would’ve argued?

OK, fine, we all probably did see that Miami thing coming. Even the least aware of ancient humans saw the sun come up each day and began to expect it.

Still, if the world worked the way we were led to believe it should, Saturday might’ve looked much different.

Way back when, we assumed Ohio State-Penn State would be a season-defining showdown, believed the showdown between Georgia and Florida would’ve had major SEC implications, that Manning’s Heisman campaign would’ve reached its apex when he threw three TDs against a top-10 foe. And while we might’ve expected the ACC would be at risk of getting just a single team into the playoff, it would’ve seemed a safe bet that team was Miami.

Instead, SMU stunned the Hurricanes 26-20 as Kevin Jennings threw for 365 yards and Carson Beck threw another deadly interception in overtime that proved Miami’s death knell. Three weeks ago, the Canes were undefeated and had, arguably, the most compelling résumé of any team in the country. But, of course, ever since Mario Cristobal sold his soul to a mysterious stranger at a crossroads in West Palm Beach in exchange for a supernatural cellphone that allowed him to become the world’s greatest recruiter, he has been afflicted with inescapably bad luck late in the season. The Canes are now 4-11 after Nov. 1 under Cristobal, including a 1-3 mark when ranked in the AP top 10.

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SMU storms the field after upset OT win over No. 10 Miami

SMU defeats Miami in overtime to secure its first home win over an AP top-10 team since 1974.

Instead, Penn State was but a speed bump for Julian Sayin, Carnell Tate and Jeremiah Smith, as the Buckeyes breezed to a 38-14 win. The Nittany Lions lost for the fifth straight game, Penn State mustered just 200 yards of offense, and every coach whose name has been mentioned to fill James Franklin’s vacant office space is getting a hefty raise and extension. Sayin, who looks young enough to get carded when buying tickets to a PG movie, carved up Penn State’s veteran defense, throwing more touchdowns (four) than incompletions (three).

Instead, Florida’s season devolved quickly, Billy Napier was fired, and the World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party had all the cache of a book club meeting where your neighbor has too many glasses of rosé and spends a half an hour explaining the symbolism in Matthew McConaughey’s new book of poetry. Never mind that Georgia still staggered through much of the contest, running headlong into a wall again and again until Chauncey Bowens finally broke through with a 36-yard touchdown run to secure the win. These Dawgs enjoy playing with fire, like the kid your parents wouldn’t let you invite to your birthday party in third grade. This was Georgia’s fourth win of the season after trailing in the second half, a sign that either we don’t really know that much about the Dawgs’ excellence or that they simply enjoy toying with their prey like a bored house cat.

Instead, NC State ran through Georgia Tech’s defense like Sherman marching through Atlanta. That the Wolfpack had lost their past four games against FBS opponents, were without their two best skill position weapons in Justin Joly and Hollywood Smothers, and that QB CJ Bailey was playing with a bum ankle throughout the second half was utterly meaningless information. What mattered was only that an ACC team had flown too close to the sun, and the football gods were determined to smite poor Georgia Tech. If Haynes King, a man who once won a game of Connect 4 in two moves, cannot subdue the forces of ACC chaos, it is fair to assume the league’s collective mediocrity might one day consume us all.

Instead, it wasn’t Sellers chasing a Heisman Trophy in Oxford, Mississippi, on Saturday, but rather Trinidad Chambliss, a guy who opened the year as the Rebels’ backup after transferring from Ferris State, a school that could barely be considered one of the 10 best programs in Michigan and so irrelevant to the national conversation that you’re just now learning Ferris State is in Michigan. Chambliss accounted for a pair of touchdowns, while Kewan Lacy ran for 167 yards and Ole Miss rolled to a 30-14 win. South Carolina, on the brink of a playoff berth a year ago, is now 1-6 in SEC play.

Instead, Clemson is reeling, Miami is a mess, and despite a win Saturday that salvaged Mike Norvell’s job for another week, Florida State is a lost cause. Meanwhile, Pitt, Duke and Virginia are a combined 14-1 in ACC play. The ACC, as is its destiny, has devolved into a “Three Stooges” film, all slapstick and vaudevillian violence, and also Brent Key looks a little like Curly.

Saturday wasn’t anything we should’ve realistically expected two months ago, but that’s the beauty of college football. It is never the season we deserve, but it is always the season we need.

So now, 10 weeks into this unlikely reality, what do we really know? Ohio State and Indiana look like sure things. Texas A&M, Alabama, Georgia and Ole Miss appear playoff bound. The ACC, as a group, requires parental supervision when using scissors. These are our truths today.

And yet, there is a month of football still to be played, a month of data waiting to alter our concept of truth and rewrite the scripts we had convinced ourselves were canon.

To paraphrase the great philosopher Roddy Piper, just when you think you have the answers, college football changes the questions.

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Heisman five

Week 10 vibe check

Each week, the biggest games push us further toward clarity for the College Football Playoff, but dig a little deeper and you’ll find smaller shifts in the sport’s ecosystem that often have just as much impact. We try to capture those here.

Trending up: Fatalism in Death Valley

Dabo Swinney took over as interim coach at Clemson on Oct. 13, 2008, and proceeded to lose his first home game 21-17 to Georgia Tech. After that Swinney won 74 of his next 83 games vs. power-conference competition in Death Valley and established Clemson as one of the country’s best programs, and Memorial Stadium as one of the most intimidating places for an opponent to take the field.

Now, Death Valley is more like a Motel 6, with Dabo leaving the light on for anyone interested in stopping by for a visit.

Duke jumped out to a 21-7 lead, converted all five fourth-down tries, used a controversial pass interference call to score with 40 seconds remaining and then completed a 2-point conversion to topple Clemson 46-45. It was Duke’s first win at Clemson since 1980, and it was the Tigers’ sixth straight defeat at home against a Power 4 foe, dating back to last year.

The good news for Clemson is Swinney can now stop by his home stadium and pick up one of those giant skeletons for, like, 75% off.

Trending down: The haters

Week 10 was a rough time for all those folks who like to laugh at the struggles of Bill Belichick or Arch Manning.

First, Belichick’s North Carolina team picked up its first ACC win of the season on Friday 27-10 over a Syracuse team that started a lacrosse player at QB and, we think, a herd of mildly aggressive alpacas on defense. Belichick began his UNC tenure by promoting the notion the Heels would be “the 33rd NFL team” but, much like “fun-size” candy bars, the promise of the wording and the reality of what’s inside the wrapper were dramatically different. But on Friday, Demon June accounted for 182 yards and two touchdowns, as Freddie Kitchens looked on like a guy playing Madden for the first time who just hit a bunch of buttons on the controller that somehow resulted in a 72-yard TD pass.

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Demon June takes it to the house for 72-yard UNC TD

Gio Lopez connects with Demon June, who takes off for a 72-yard Tar Heels touchdown against Syracuse.

Meanwhile, after receiving official notice last week that he was being considered for demotion to the McCown family of QBs, Manning finally seemed to find his mojo, throwing for 328 yards and three touchdowns as Texas took down No. 9 Vanderbilt 34-31. Manning had been in concussion protocol earlier in the week, burnishing the possibility that his performance against Kentucky had actually just been a really vivid dream after eating too much Taco Bell, and he joked after the game that perhaps “the concussion helped.”

Instead, head coach Steve Sarkisian said the improved protection from the Texas O-line was the difference in Manning’s strong outing, then kindly returned left tackle Trevor Goosby‘s beloved pet cat he took, safe and sound, as promised only if the unit improved.

And as if that wasn’t enough Hate-or-ade delivered to all the critics in Week 10, Arizona State QB Jeff Sims might have provided the week’s ultimate comeuppance. Sims won his first college start (with Georgia Tech) in thrilling fashion over Florida State back in 2020, but his biggest highlight in the years that followed was getting to use Geoff Collins’ 10% discount at Waffle House one time. On Saturday, he started for the injured Sam Leavitt and turned in a gem — throwing for 177 yards and a touchdown and running for 228 and two more scores in a 24-19 win over Iowa State.

Afterward, Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham, who has already resurrected the stalled careers of Leavitt, Bo Nix and Jordan Travis, stood atop the tallest building in all of Iowa (a Tractor Supply in Des Moines) and exclaimed, “I could have made DJ Uiagalelei a Heisman winner! I am invincible! Kneel before your QB king!”

Trending up: Moral victories

A 43-yard run by Xavier Robinson helped Oklahoma stave off a late rally by Tennessee and escape Knoxville with a 33-27 win.

Tennessee racked up 105 more yards and nine more first downs than Oklahoma. The Sooners had 11 penalties for 104 yards. John Mateer threw for just 159 yards and a pick. The Volunteers were 7-of-13 on third down, and they had the ball deep in Oklahoma territory three times in the fourth quarter, and yet it’s the Vols who likely saw their playoff hopes come to an end.

We can now look forward to Josh Heupel explaining that Tennessee was clearly the better team overall in this game, and Lane Kiffin retweeting the clip while tagging Brent Venables.

Trending down: Joy in Cincy

For the past two weeks, Utah has seemed less interested in winning than in crushing the souls of its opposition, which on Saturday, meant dealing another blow to the fragile emotions of Cincinnati sports fans considering Joe Burrow got hurt and the Reds flamed out early.

But at least they had Brendan Sorsby and his underdog Heisman candidacy and a Bearcats team with a puncher’s chance at the Big 12 title. This was something the city could rally around. It was hope.

Of course, it’s the hope that kills you. Well, hope and Mana Carvalho anyway.

Utah utterly demolished Cincinnati on Saturday, 45-14, with Carvalho’s 75-yard punt return touchdown serving as the icing on the cake. Devon Dampier accounted for 291 yards of offense, the Utes’ D forced a pair of turnovers, and a raucous crowd, decked out in all black, provided a fitting backdrop for Cincinnati’s funeral.

So, it’s back to making the best of an unpleasant situation for the folks in Cincinnati, who, no matter how bad their sports teams perform, will always have the Ickey Shuffle and Graeter’s above average ice cream.

Trending up: ACC field storming budgets

After SMU kicked off Miami in overtime Saturday, the sell-out crowd in Dallas cascaded over the wall and onto the field.

After NC State pulled off the shocker in dominant fashion against Georgia Tech, the Wolfpack fans, too, stormed the field.

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NC State storms the field after upsetting No. 8 Georgia Tech

Haynes King is intercepted in the end zone, and the Wolfpack fans storm the field as NC State knocks off No. 8 Georgia Tech.

That brings the ACC’s total field stormings in 2025 to six — with Florida State (after beating Alabama), Georgia Tech (after beating Clemson), Virginia and Stanford (both after beating FSU) already in the books.

All of this comes on the heels of the ACC announcing new fines for schools who allow a field storming.

The good news is, a few more shockers and that revenue gap with the SEC will be all but closed.

Trending down: Conference losing streaks

Florida State walloped Wake Forest 42-7, and Mississippi State charged back from a 35-21 fourth-quarter deficit to topple Arkansas 38-35 on Saturday, ending two of the longest conference losing streaks in the country.

FSU hadn’t won an ACC game since Sept. 21 of last year, but Tommy Castellanos had a rushing and passing TD, and Duce Robinson caught five balls for 148 yards and score, as the Seminoles demolished Wake Forest, leaving Seminoles fans to concede Mike Norvell can stay for one more week, but after that he needs to find his own place or they’re going to stay with their family in Fort Myers.

Meanwhile, the Bulldogs finally knocked down the door after falling just short of a conference win in each of the past two games against Florida and Texas. Blake Shapen‘s 18-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Evans III on fourth-and-5 with 48 seconds left proved the difference in the game. The win snapped a 16-game SEC losing streak for Mississippi State, which last won in 2023 against … Arkansas.

The Razorbacks are now the lone winless team in SEC play, and each week it’s looking more and more likely Bobby Petrino is going to have to find a new place in which to serve as the offensive coordinator for a head coach who’s about to get fired.

Trending up: Bowl excitement in suburban ATL

Kennesaw State moved up to FBS last year and proceeded to lose its first six games, all by double digits. It didn’t get its first FBS win until Oct. 23, 2024 — a little more than a year ago — and yet, after Tuesday’s 33-20 win over UTEP, the Owls are bowl-eligible.

To put that into perspective, if you had left Midtown when the Owls won for the first time last year, and drove north on I-75 toward Kennesaw in traffic, you would barely be past Marietta by now, and the Owls are already headed to a postseason game. Granted, heading to that game will require stocking up on canned goods and bottled water, and everyone can check their email when they hit the Panera off Exit 8 in Woodstock where there’s free Wi-Fi.

Trending down: Certainty in the American

Caleb Hawkins ran for 197 yards and four touchdowns as North Texas toppled Navy 31-17 on Saturday, delivering another shake-up atop the American and, in upending a second service academy this season, lending further credence to the theory that Texas could form its own country with a constitution written on the side of a 96-ounce rib eye and immediately become a global superpower.

As for the conference race, there are now six teams with one loss in league play — Navy, South Florida, Memphis, East Carolina, Tulane and North Texas — increasing the likelihood that the American will need to dig deep into its tiebreaker options. Perhaps setting up an epic rock, paper, scissors match between Jon Sumrall and Ryan Silverfield atop the Empire State Building, with the winner advancing to the conference championship game and the loser having to take the train back to Newark would work.

Trending down: Optimism in Boulder

A week ago, Colorado trailed Utah 43-0 at the half and was outgained by 416 yards. On Saturday, Colorado trailed Arizona 38-7 at the half, and was outgained by 154.

And, frankly, it’s unfair that’s all people will talk about rather than mentioning that Colorado was only outscored by seven combined points in the second halves of those two games. It’s like the hate for Coach Prime is so deep that everyone refuses to look at the positives he’s accomplishing every week.


Under-the-radar play of the week

Sometimes a great play is like watching ballet, precise and beautiful. A great play can feel electric, the entire crowd buzzing with so much palpable energy that it’s as if a power beyond X’s and O’s is at work. Sometimes a win can be so close you can taste it. Sometimes, the simple smell of the grass on a crisp fall day is enough to make a football game feel epic.

But let’s be honest, of all the ways a football game can appeal to the five senses, none is quite so enjoyable as the sound of a doinked kick, and Texas Tech delivered a banger on Saturday.

Our only complaint is that we have yet to figure out how to create a goalpost that, when drilled by a football, makes the loser horn sound effect as if you had just overbid on a Nissan Sentra and lost the Showcase Showdown.


Under-the-radar game of the week

Idaho State handed UC Davis its first Big Sky loss of the season in dramatic fashion. Trajan Sinatra, who unfortunately is not some sort of hybrid of Frank Sinatra and former Duke basketball guard Trajan Langdon, drilled a 50-yard field goal with 52 seconds to play to put the Bengals up 38-36, and Nathan Reynolds picked off a Caden Pinnick pass to secure the win.

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Idaho State Bengals vs. UC Davis Aggies: Full Highlights

Idaho State Bengals vs. UC Davis Aggies: Full Highlights

UC Davis’ only prior loss this season had been to Washington, while Idaho State had been riding a three-game losing streak. The win assures the Bengals will now be the most talked-about team from Idaho in Week 10 whose field isn’t painted a random color that isn’t green.


Heisman five

The Heisman race may finally be starting to come into focus, and honestly it’s possible the invitations to the ceremony are just all sent to Columbus, Ohio.

1. Ohio State QB Julian Sayin

Sayin threw for 316 yards and four touchdowns against former Ohio State DC Jim Knowles, which is a little like getting take out with your hot new paramour and finding your ex working the drive-thru. “Hey, Jim, great to see you again. You’re looking … well. We’re just out here celebrating my four touchdown passes and … oh, geez, sorry, but I actually ordered a Diet Coke, not Coke Zero.”

2. Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza

Indiana beat Maryland 55-10, but Mendoza posted only a mundane 201 yards and a score. It’s really unfair that, just because Maryland is so bad as to allow 367 yards rushing in the game, Mendoza’s Heisman campaign has to suffer.

3. Notre Dame QB C.J. Carr

Carr threw for 299 yards and a pair of scores as Notre Dame toppled Boston College Eagles 25-10. And, sure, only beating BC by 15 and only throwing two touchdowns against a defense as bad as the Eagles have isn’t exactly a earth-shattering news, but Notre Dame probably isn’t going to lose again, so we’re all stuck with the Irish being good, and we’re going to have to learn to live with it.

4. Duke QB Darian Mensah

The Blue Devils knocked off Clemson in dramatic fashion Saturday as Mensah delivered a strike for a two-point conversion that proved the difference in a 46-45 game. Mensah threw for 361 yards and four scores in the game and now has 2,572 passing yards, 21 touchdowns and just two picks for the year. In the playoff era, the only other QB to hit each of those marks through his team’s first eight games of the year was BYU’s Zach Wilson. In conclusion, we’re looking forward to 2028 when Mensah is 2-15 as the New York Jets starter.

5. Shirtless Bros

Oklahoma State may be a miserable 1-8 this year, and it may have now lost 18 straight games against Big 12 foes, and it may have fired Mike Gundy, and Pistol Pete may have Rickets, but never let it be said the Pokes haven’t made their mark on the 2025 season. What started with a bunch of bored Oklahoma State fans in the midst of another blowout loss to Houston less than a month ago has now taken over the sport like some sort of bare-chested AI bent on world domination, with shirtless sections becoming more common in college football stadiums than The Wave, “Mr. Brightside” and horrendous ACC officiating combined.

It’s certainly possible this trend is on the brink of becoming over-exposed — not unlike some of the guys who’ve chosen to remove their shirts — and will soon join the likes of The Dab, turnover accessories and Sam Pittman, quaint fads that came and went and now seem a little silly, if we’re being honest. But in the meantime, we just hope to get to a point where a few dozen frat guys stave off hypothermia during an extended replay review amid a 6-3 game between Minnesota a

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Smart, Bulldogs finally tame Tide, win SEC title

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Smart, Bulldogs finally tame Tide, win SEC title

ATLANTA — Georgia coach Kirby Smart doesn’t have an Alabama problem anymore.

After Smart’s teams dropped seven of their previous eight games against the Crimson Tide, the No. 3 Bulldogs flipped the script with a dominant 28-7 victory over No. 9 Alabama in Saturday’s SEC championship game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

By securing their second straight SEC title, the Bulldogs finished 12-1 and likely secured a top-four seed and first-round bye in the upcoming College Football Playoff.

It’s the first time Georgia has won back-to-back SEC championships since tailback Herschel Walker led them to three straight from 1980-82.

The fact the latest one came against Alabama, where Smart worked as an assistant under former coach Nick Saban from 2007 to 2015, made it all that much sweeter. It was Georgia’s most lopsided win against the Tide since a 21-0 victory on Oct. 2, 1976.

“It’s not about redemption; they’ve got a great program, great head coach,” Smart said. “It’s about our team tonight. These guys have been doubted and since that last game — our team was really physical tonight. Played an excellent game. Really proud of them and proud for these Georgia fans.”

In Alabama’s 24-21 victory on Sept. 27, which ended Georgia’s 33-game home winning streak, the Bulldogs trailed 14-0 early and never took the lead.

That wasn’t the case Saturday, as walk-on receiver Cole Speer delivered the first big play, blocking Alabama’s punt from its 21 with 6:31 left in the first quarter. That set up Gunner Stockton’s one-yard touchdown pass to running back Roderick Robinson II for an early 7-0 lead.

The Bulldogs were only getting started.

On the Tide’s next possession, safety KJ Bolden tipped Ty Simpson’s pass, which cornerback Daylen Everette intercepted. Georgia put together a 14-play drive that culminated with Stockton’s 5-yard scoring pass to Dillon Bell to make it 14-0.

Georgia’s defense, which couldn’t get off the field in the teams’ first meeting this season, held the Crimson Tide to minus-3 rushing on 16 attempts. Alabama’s longest run was five yards.

It was only the second time in school history that Alabama was held to negative rushing yards in a game (it had minus-45 in a 35-10 loss to Missouri in the 1968 Gator Bowl).

“I think that helped a lot,” Everette said. “We just tried to make it one-dimensional. That’s one thing we emphasized coming into this season: we’ve got to do better stopping the run on defense.”

Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson, who threw for 276 yards with three touchdowns in the earlier meeting, wasn’t nearly as good this time. He completed 19 of 39 passes for 212 yards with one touchdown and one interception. He was sacked three times.

Going back to the second half of the September game, Georgia’s defense shut out the Tide in seven straight quarters.

Alabama didn’t find the end zone Saturday until Simpson’s 23-yard touchdown to Germie Bernard with 12:33 left in the fourth quarter.

The Crimson Tide converted only 3 of 13 third downs, after going 13-for-19 in the earlier win at Georgia.

“We told them after that [September] game there wasn’t a lack of execution in that game at home,” Smart said. “They outplayed us. They out-executed us. They probably out-coached us. We weren’t going to let that happen again in terms of the way we played.”

Georgia has allowed 10 points or fewer in each of its past four games, the longest streak in a single season since the Bulldogs did it in eight straight games in 1971, according to ESPN Research.

“It was a huge difference,” Smart said. “It was the domination on that side of the ball. A lot of it came with a chip on their shoulder from the last one. It came with a chip on their shoulder from improving.”

Stockton was named the game’s MVP after completing 20 of 26 passes for 156 yards with three touchdowns. He was 8-for-10 for 61 yards with all three scores on third down.

“It’s a great feeling to see him get that,” Everette said of Stockton. “Proud of him for everything he’s done this year. Probably one of the toughest kids on the team. Toughest kid I know. Take all the hits, pop right back up.”

As the SEC’s highest-ranked team, Georgia won’t play again until a CFP quarterfinal at the Allstate Sugar Bowl on New Year’s Day (8 p.m. ET, ABC). The Bulldogs won’t learn their place in the 12-team bracket until it’s announced Sunday.

Georgia will be looking for revenge in New Orleans, as well. The Bulldogs fell to Notre Dame 23-10 in a CFP quarterfinal following the 2024 season. That was Stockton’s first start for the Bulldogs after Carson Beck was injured in the SEC championship game.

“We never quit,” Stockton said. “I think we’ve shown that in every game. I think that’s one of the best parts about our team, is we never quit.”

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DeBoer lobbies for Bama: Tide deserve CFP berth

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DeBoer lobbies for Bama: Tide deserve CFP berth

ATLANTA, Ga. — Despite a 28-7 loss to No. 3 Georgia in the SEC championship game Saturday, Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer said the No. 9 Crimson Tide are deserving of a spot in the College Football Playoff, saying a conference title game loss shouldn’t be punishment.

“If this game applies to and takes away from our resume, I don’t think that’s right,” DeBoer said. “I really don’t. I think the precedent’s been set and I don’t know how you can go into a conference playoff game when you’re the No. 1 seed and did all these things throughout the year — and playing in this game against one of the top teams in the country as well — how that can hurt you and keep you out of the playoff when again, we’ve done what we’ve done all year.”

The Tide opened the season with a 31-17 loss on the road to Florida State, then won eight straight, including victories over Georgia, Vanderbilt, Missouri and Tennessee. Despite a 23-21 loss to then-No. 11 Oklahoma at home on Nov. 15, the Tide qualified for a rematch with Georgia in Atlanta.

The Bulldogs held Alabama to 16 carries for -3 yards rushing, just the second time in school history the Tide have been held to negative yards rushing, after the 1968 Gator Bowl. They became the first team not to rush for a first down in an SEC championship game, according to ESPN Research. Their longest carry of the night was 5 yards.

Still, Alabama remained in striking distance until 8:13 remained, when, trailing 21-7, DeBoer opted to go for it on fourth-and-2 from the Tide’s own 12. Quarterback Ty Simpson threw the ball toward the sideline for Germie Bernard, but it sailed high and wide and out of bounds. Three plays later, Georgia quarterback Gunner Stockton threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Zachariah Branch to stretch the lead to 28-7.

“If we’re really worried about the score, then you probably punt it on your own 11,” DeBoer said. “I’m here to win an SEC championship. If you lose by one or you lose by more, it’s still a loss. And that’s what I was caring about. We’re here to win an SEC championship. We can’t get worried about how much we lose by.”

DeBoer said Alabama was missing a few key pieces that would have helped against Georgia, all of whom would return before a playoff game, including running back Jam Miller.

“Two of our three losses are when Jam doesn’t play,” he said.

In the first quarter, Georgia’s Cole Speer blocked Blake Doud‘s punt and it was recovered and returned by Justin Williams to the Alabama 21. Four plays later, Stockton threw his first touchdown pass to Roderick Robinson II to give the Bulldogs a 7-0 lead. DeBoer said the block came from the spot usually manned by defensive lineman LT Overton, who was out for this game.

“There’s a check we’ve got to make we make all season long,” DeBoer said. “We missed it and they got an extra hat that we couldn’t block.”

DeBoer said that was the story of the game, that the Tide gave the Bulldogs four short fields and had to hold up against them. But he touted Alabama’s resilience, the same way he said the team bounced back all season.

“If you’re really looking at this game, I mean it was a 14-point game with 7½ minutes to go and we had the ball,” DeBoer said. “I don’t want to take anything away from what Georgia did.”

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey told ESPN that a loss to Georgia in this game should not be a negative in the eyes of the CFP selection committee.

“That may be the best team in the country right now,” Sankey said of Georgia. “And you’ve got to remember, Alabama went to Athens, won a game, won a number of other ranked games, played tough schedule. This is a reward tonight. It’s not a penalty for playing in that game.”

He said that if it does cost Alabama a CFP spot, he’s sure it will raise questions about the future of championship games in a significant way.

“But that question’s been there for decades and George and Alabama played here a couple of years ago, and Alabama beat an undefeated Georgia team in the four-team playoff [in 2018],” Sankey said. “We still kept the championship game.”

Simpson finished 19-of-39 for 212 yards and one touchdown and one interception, his first start in which he completed less than 50% of his throws. He was pressured all night and said the Georgia defense had a good plan. He also said that, regardless of the loss, his team’s resume holds up to scrutiny.

“We went through a gauntlet of the schedule,” Simpson said. “The SEC is the best conference in the country. That’s a really good team, and it’s pretty much as simple as that.”

ESPN’s Mark Schlabach contributed to this report.

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Champ Week live: No. 1 vs. No. 2 for the Big Ten, is Bama out and more

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Champ Week live: No. 1 vs. No. 2 for the Big Ten, is Bama out and more

We’re just hours from the announcement of the College Football Playoff field. There’s plenty of drama left to play out on the field.

The committee is gathered at its headquarters in the Gaylord Texan Resort in Grapevine, Texas, to watch conference championship games that will impact their final ranking on Selection Day. It was only the beginning of conference championship weekend, but how these games unfolded with the committee watching will determine their five highest-ranked conference champions — and how that order will impact the contenders around them.

We’re tracking all the conference title games and the impact on the CFP field as well as the top plays and highlights from No. 1 Ohio State vs. No. 2 Indiana.

Jump to: CFP takeaways


Conference title takeaways

With the win against Alabama, Georgia should lock up a top-four seed and a first-round bye, but that position depends in part on how far the loser of the Big Ten championship game falls. It’s possible Ohio State and Indiana just flip — or stay status quo — but if it’s a lopsided defeat, Georgia can finish anywhere from No. 2 to No. 4.

The bigger question is how far Alabama drops following its decisive third loss. If Alabama sinks to No. 11, it will open the door for both Notre Dame and Miami to finish in the top 10 — regardless of order. Because of how Alabama lost — and the committee hasn’t forgotten their season-opening loss to Florida State — the Crimson Tide could fall out of the field. The committee also will consider that Alabama has a regular-season road win against the SEC champs, though. If Alabama drops only one spot, it could still be a buffer between Miami and Notre Dame — and it could be the last at-large team in at No. 10.


Texas Tech’s win against BYU secured a top-four finish and a first-round bye for the Red Raiders. It also helped Notre Dame’s playoff chances tremendously, as the Irish no longer have to be concerned about being leapfrogged by BYU.

This puzzle is far from complete, though.

It doesn’t matter for BYU if the committee keeps it at No. 11 or drops it to No. 12 (or beyond). Either way BYU would be bumped out during the seeding process to include a conference champion. Where BYU lands, though, will impact Miami.

The selection committee is most likely to do one of two things: drop No. 11 BYU to No. 12 behind Miami, or keep it exactly where it is. If BYU falls below the Canes, the committee could reconsider the tiebreaker between Miami and Notre Dame.


With Tulane’s win against North Texas on Friday, the American champs locked up a spot in the playoff, as they will be the committee’s fourth-highest-ranked conference champion. The Green Wave will earn the No. 11 or No. 12 seed, depending on who wins the ACC championship game. If Tulane gets the No. 11 seed and faces the committee’s No. 6 team on the road in the first round, as things stand now, Tulane will get a rematch against Ole Miss. The Rebels beat Tulane 45-10 on Sept. 20 in Oxford, and they will have home-field advantage again as the higher seed.


With Friday’s win against Troy, JMU‘s path to the playoff is straightforward: Duke needs to beat Virginia and win the ACC. If that happens, the committee will reward JMU with the No. 12 seed as its fifth and final conference champion — and it would come at the expense of the ACC champion, which would be excluded. The question is if the conference will be excluded entirely, though — or if No. 12 Miami will still sneak in, even without playing this weekend. That could happen if BYU loses to Texas Tech in the Big 12 title game and drops behind Miami — putting the Canes right below No. 10 Notre Dame. In that scenario, the committee could look at Miami’s season-opening win against the Irish as one of several tiebreakers it uses to separate comparable teams.

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