The new AP Top 25 college football poll is out. Week 7 featured two classic rivalries in Oklahoma-Texas and Florida-Tennessee and three matchups of ranked teams.
The No. 1 Texas Longhorns started slow before pulling away for a 34-3 win. Then, the No. 2 Ohio State Buckeyes went to Eugene to take on the No. 3 Oregon Ducks. The game lived up to the hype with the two teams trading big plays and Oregon winning on a field goal late in the fourth quarter.
What does it all mean for the new AP Top 25? Let’s break down the rankings.
Stats courtesy of ESPN Research.
All times Eastern
Previous ranking: 1
2024 record: 6-0
Week 7 result: Defeated Oklahoma 34-3
Stat to know: With a 49-point win in 2022 and a 31-point win in 2024, Quinn Ewers has been Texas’ quarterback for two of its four biggest wins over Oklahoma.
What’s next: Saturday vs. Georgia, 7:30 p.m., ABC/ESPN+
Previous ranking: 3
2024 record: 6-0
Week 7 result: Defeated Ohio State 32-31
Stat to know: In the win, Dillon Gabriel became the first player with 125 career passing touchdowns and career 30 rushing scores in FBS history.
What’s next: Friday at Purdue, 8 p.m., Fox
Previous ranking: 4
2024 record: 6-0
Week 7 result: Defeated USC 33-30 (OT)
Stat to know: Ty Warren‘s 17 receptions are the most in a game in Penn State history and also ties Emilio Vallez (New Mexico, 1967) and Jon Harvey (Northwestern, 1982) for the most by a tight end in FBS history.
What’s next: Oct. 26 at Wisconsin
Previous ranking: 2
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Lost to Oregon 32-31
Stat to know: Ryan Day has two losses as a head coach before Thanksgiving. Oregon is responsible for both.
What’s next: Oct. 26 vs. Nebraska
Previous ranking: 5
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Defeated Mississippi State 41-31
Stat to know: Carson Beck threw for 459 yards in the win. That’s third most in school history.
What’s next: Saturday at Texas, 7:30 p.m., ABC/ESPN+
Previous ranking: 6
2024 record: 6-0
Week 7 result: Idle
What’s next: Saturday at Louisville, noon, ABC/ESPN+
Previous ranking: 7
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Defeated South Carolina 27-25
Stat to know: Alabama has not lost consecutive conference games since 2007 and has won 80 consecutive home games against unranked opponents.
What’s next: Saturday at Tennessee, 3:30 p.m., ABC/ESPN+
Previous ranking: 13
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Defeated Ole Miss 29-26 (OT)
Stat to know: Garrett Nussmeier finished with 51 passes, tied for the third most in a game in LSU history.
What’s next: Saturday at Arkansas, 7 p.m., ESPN
Previous ranking: 11
2024 record: 6-0
Week 7 result: Defeated West Virginia 28-16
Stat to know: Iowa State is 6-0 for the second time in program history. The Cyclones won their first seven games in 1938.
What’s next: Saturday vs. UCF, 7:30 p.m.
Previous ranking: 10
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Defeated Wake Forest 49-14
Stat to know: Phil Mafah had 118 yards rushing. It was his fourth 100-yard game this season. That ties him with Travis Etienne in 2018 for the most 100-yard rushing games through the team’s first six games in the past 20 years.
What’s next: Saturday vs. Virginia, noon, ACC Network
Previous ranking: 8
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Defeated Florida 23-17
Stat to know: Dylan Sampson is the first FBS player with three rushing scores in each of his team’s first three home games of season in the past 20 years.
What’s next: Saturday vs. Alabama, 3:30 p.m., ABC/ESPN+
Previous ranking: 11
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Defeated Stanford 49-7
Stat to know: With 229 yards passing, Riley Leonard ended a streak of five straight starts with fewer than 200 passing yards.
What’s next: Saturday at Georgia Tech, 3:30 p.m., ESPN
Previous ranking: 14
2024 record: 6-0
Week 7 result: Defeated Arizona 41-19
Stat to know: BYU has forced multiple interceptions in three straight games. The Cougars are the only FBS team with an active interception streak this season.
What’s next: Friday vs. Oklahoma State, 10:15 p.m., ESPN
Previous ranking: 15
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Idle
What’s next: Saturday at Mississippi State
Previous ranking: 17
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Defeated Hawaii 28-7
Stat to know: Ashton Jeanty‘s 1,248 rushing yards and 1,287 scrimmage yards are the second most in both categories over the past 20 seasons.
What’s next: Oct. 25 at UNLV, 10:30 p.m., CBSSN
Previous ranking: 18
2024 record: 6-0
Week 7 result: Idle
What’s next: Saturday vs. Nebraska
Previous ranking: 18
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Defeated Colorado 31-28
Stat to know: Against Colorado, Avery Johnson had his third career game with multiple passing touchdowns and a rushing score.
What’s next: Saturday at West Virginia, 7:30 p.m.
Previous ranking: 9
2024 record: 5-2
Week 7 result: Lost to LSU 29-26 (OT)
Stat to know: Ole Miss is now 7-10 in overtime games since 1996. The Rebels’ last overtime win came in 2022.
What’s next: Oct. 26 vs. Oklahoma
Previous ranking: 21
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Defeated UMass 45-3
Stat to know: Mizzou had multiple scoring plays of 60 or more yards for the first time since 2017.
What’s next: Saturday vs. Auburn
Previous ranking: 22
2024 record: 6-0
Week 7 result: Defeated Cal 17-15
Stat to know: Eli Holstein is the first Pitt QB to win each of his first six starts since Dan Marino in 1979-80 (first nine).
What’s next: Oct. 24 vs. Syracuse, 7:30 p.m., ESPN
Previous ranking: 25
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Idle
What’s next: Saturday at Stanford, 8 p.m., ACC Network
Previous ranking: 23
2024 record: 5-1
Week 7 result: Defeated Purdue 50-49 (OT)
Stat to know: Illinois has scored 40 or more points for the third time in its past six conference games. The 50 points are the most against Purdue since scoring 48 in 2015.
What’s next: Saturday vs. Michigan, 3:30 p.m., CBS
Previous ranking: NR
2024 record: 6-0
Week 7 result: Defeated UAB 44-10
Stat to know: Army is 6-0 to start the season for the first time since 1996 when the Black Knights started 9-0.
What’s next: Saturday vs. East Carolina, noon, ESPN2
Previous ranking: 24
2024 record: 4-2
Week 7 result: Idle
What’s next: Saturday at Illinois, 3:30 p.m., CBS
Previous ranking: NR
2024 record: 5-0
Week 7 result: Idle
What’s next: Saturday vs. Charlotte, 3:30 p.m., CBSSN
It’s a new era for the College Football Playoff, with the field growing from four to 12 this season. That means three times as many programs will gain entry, but, beginning with Tuesday’s initial playoff rankings, there’s three times as much room for outrage, too.
Under the old rules, there was a simple line of demarcation that separated the elated from the angry: Who’s in?
Now, there are so many more reasons for nitpicking the committee’s decisions, from first-round byes to hosting a home game to whether your supposedly meaningful conference has been eclipsed by teams from the Group of 5.
And if the first rankings are any indication, it’s going to be a fun year for fury. There’s little logic to be taken from the initial top 25 beyond the committee’s clear love for the Big Ten. Penn State and Indiana make the top eight despite having only one win combined over an ESPN FPI top-40 team (Penn State over Iowa). That Ohio State checks in at No. 2 ahead of Georgia is the most inexplicable decision involving Georgia since Charlie Daniels suggested the devil lost that fiddle contest. Oregon is a reasonable No. 1, but the Ducks still came within a breath of losing to Boise State. Indeed, the Big Ten’s nonconference record against the Power 4 this season is 6-8, just a tick better than the ACC and well behind the SEC’s mark of 10-6.
But this is the fun of early November rankings. The committee is still finding its footing, figuring out what to prioritize and what to ignore, what’s signal and what’s noise. And that’s where the outrage really helps. It’s certainly not signal, but it can be a really loud noise.
This week’s Anger Index:
There are only two possible explanations for BYU’s treatment in this initial ranking. The first is that the committee members are too sleepy to watch games beyond the Central time zone. The second, and frankly, less rational one, is they simply didn’t do much homework.
It’s certainly possible the committee members are so enthralled with metrics such as the FPI (where BYU ranks 28th) or SP+ (22nd) that they’ve determined the Cougars’ actual record isn’t as important. This is incredibly foolish. The FPI and SP+ certainly have their value, but they’re probabilistic metrics, designed to gauge the likelihood of future success. They’re in no way a ranking of actual results. (That’s why USC is still No. 17 in the FPI, despite Lincoln Riley spending his days wistfully scrolling through old pictures of Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray and wondering if Oklahoma might want to get back together.)
To look at actual results paints a clear picture.
BYU (No. 4) has a better strength of record than Ohio State (No. 5), has played roughly the same quality schedule as Texas and has two wins against other teams ranked in the committee’s top 25 — as many as Ohio State, Texas, Penn State, Tennessee and Indiana (all ranked ahead of the Cougars) combined.
Indiana’s rags-to-riches story is wonderful, of course, but how can the committee compare what BYU has done (wins over SMU and Kansas State) against Indiana’s 103rd-ranked strength of schedule?
And this particular snub has significant effects. The difference between No. 8 and No. 9 is a home game in the first round, of course, though as a potential conference champion, that’s a moot point. But what if BYU loses a game — perhaps the Big 12 title game? That could not only doom the Cougars from getting a first-round bye, but it could quite likely set up a scenario in which the Big 12 is shuffled outside the top four conferences entirely, passed by upstart Boise State.
What’s clear from this first round of rankings is the committee absolutely loves the Big Ten — with four teams ranked ahead of a subjectively more accomplished BYU team — and the Big 12 is going to face some serious headwinds.
There’s a great, though little watched, TV show from the 2010s called “Rectify,” about a man who escapes death row after new evidence is found, only to be constantly harassed by the same system that fraudulently locked him away for 20 years. This is basically the story of SMU.
Let’s do a quick blind résumé here.
Team A: 8-1 record, No. 13 strength of record, two wins vs. ranked opponents, loss to SP+ No. 22, .578 opponent win percentage
Team B: 7-1 record, No. 15 strength of record, two wins vs. ranked opponents, loss to SP+ No. 91, .567 opponent win percentage
OK, you probably guessed Team A is SMU. The Mustangs have wins against Louisville and Pitt — both relatively emphatic — and their lone loss came to No. 9 BYU, which came before a quarterback change and included five red zone drives that amounted to only six total points.
Team B? That’s Notre Dame. The Irish have the worst loss by far (to Northern Illinois) of any team in the top 25, beat a common opponent by the same score (though, while SMU outgained Louisville by 20 yards, the Cardinals actually outgained Notre Dame by 115) and have played one fewer game.
The difference? SMU has the stigma — of the death penalty, of the upstart program new to the Power 4, of being unworthy. Notre Dame is the big brand, and that results in being ranked three spots higher and, if the playoff were held today, getting in, while the Mustangs are left out.
There are three two-loss SEC teams ranked ahead of Ole Miss, which seems to be a perfectly reasonable consensus if you look at the AP poll, too. But are we sure that’s so reasonable?
Two stats we like to look at to measure a team’s quality are success rate (how often does a team make a play that improves its odds of winning) and explosiveness. Measure the differentials in each between offense and defense, then plot those out, and you’ll get a pretty clear look of who’s truly dominant in college football this season.
Explosive Play differential vs. Successful Play differential
Auburn & Ark make no sense Iowa & Iowa St are twinsies! Is Ole Miss undervalued? pic.twitter.com/h87SKCdOtr
That outer band that features Penn State, Texas, Miami, Ohio State and Indiana (and notably, not Oregon, Alabama, LSU or Texas A&M)? That’s where Ole Miss lives.
The Rebels have two losses this season, each by three points, both in games they outgained the winning team. They lost to LSU on the road and, yes, somehow lost to a dismal Kentucky team. But hey, LSU lost to USC, too. It has been a weird season.
SP+ loves Ole Miss. The Rebels check in at No. 4 there, behind only Ohio State, Texas and Georgia.
The FPI agrees, ranking the Rebels fifth.
In ESPN’s game control metric, no team is better. Ole Miss has the third-best average in-game win percentage. That suggests a lot of strange twists, and bad luck was involved with its losses. These are things the committee should be evaluating when comparing like teams.
But how about this comparison?
Team A: 7-2, 23 points per game scoring margin vs. FBS, 1 loss to unranked, three wins vs. SP+ top 40
Team B: 7-2, 19 points per game scoring margin vs. FBS, 1 loss to unranked, three wins vs. SP+ top 40
Pretty similar, eh?
Of course, one of them is Ole Miss. That’s Team A this time around.
Team B is Alabama, ranked five spots higher.
Sure, this situation can be resolved quite easily this weekend with a win over Georgia, but Ole Miss starting at the back of the pack of SEC contenders seems like a miss by the committee, even if the math will change substantially before the next rankings are revealed.
Oh, thanks so much for the No. 25 nod, committee. All Army has done is win every game without trailing the entire season. Last season, when Liberty waltzed through its weakest-in-the-nation schedule, the committee had no objections to giving the Flames enough love to make a New Year’s Six bowl. But Army? At No. 25? Thirteen spots behind Boise State, the Knights’ competition for the Group of 5’s bid? Something tells us some spies from Air Force have infiltrated the committee’s room in some sort of Manchurian Candidate scenario.
Sure, the Seminoles are terrible now, and yes, the committee this season has plenty of new faces, but that doesn’t mean folks in Tallahassee have forgiven or forgotten what happened a year ago. Before the committee’s playoff snub, FSU had won 19 straight games and averaged 39 points. Since the snub, the Noles are 1-9 and haven’t scored 21 points in any game. Who’s to blame for this? Mike Norvell? The coaching staff? DJ Uiagalelei and the other struggling QBs? Well, sure. But it’s much easier to just blame the committee. Those folks killed Florida State’s playoff hopes and ended their run of success. The least they could do this year is rank them No. 25 just for fun.
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — Alabama A&M linebacker Medrick Burnett Jr. remains hospitalized after sustaining a head injury during a game.
Burnett was still in the hospital Tuesday, according to an Alabama A&M spokesperson. The school hasn’t disclosed details of the injury Burnett suffered during a collision against Alabama State on Oct. 26.
A fundraising request on gofundme.com had raised more than $17,000 of a $100,000 goal as of Tuesday, and the school also set up an emergency relief fund. The gofundme goal included money to help the family pay for housing so they could be with him.
“He had several brain bleeds and swelling of the brain,” Burnett’s sister, Dominece, wrote in a post on the page. “He had to have a tube to drain to relieve the pressure, and after 2 days of severe pressure, we had to opt for a craniotomy, which was the last resort to help try to save his life.”
An update on Saturday said Burnett had had complications, but didn’t elaborate.
Burnett is a second-year freshman from Lakewood, California. He transferred from Grambling State during the offseason.
College Football Senior Writer for ESPN. Insider for College Gameday.
Nebraska is adding former Houston and West Virginia head coach Dana Holgorsen to the staff as an offensive consultant, sources told ESPN.
Holgorsen will work with the offensive staff in a role that will evolve as the season goes on, per sources. Holgorsen joins the staff after spending this season with TCU as an offensive consultant.
He joins Nebraska at a time when the offense — and freshman quarterback Dylan Raiola — have been mired in a rut of uneven play and the team is on a three-game losing streak.
In Nebraska’s six conference games, the Cornhuskers rank No. 12 in the Big Ten in offense, No. 14 in rushing offense and No. 11 in passing offense. Offensive coordinator Marcus Satterfield has drawn criticism during Nebraska’s recent offensive slump, which has seen a dip in the passing game of Raiola, who was ESPN’s No. 11 recruit and the top pocket passer in the 2024 recruiting class.
Raiola has the third-most interceptions among Big Ten quarterbacks with eight, trailing Michigan State‘s Aidan Chiles (11) and USC‘s Miller Moss (9), who is being benched by the Trojans in favor of Jayden Maiava for next week’s matchup with the Cornhuskers.
In the past four games, Raiola has thrown just one touchdown and six interceptions. After starting 5-1, Nebraska is 5-4 and needs a win during a tough closing stretch to clinch the program’s first bowl game since 2016. That’s the longest drought of any team in power conference football.
Nebraska has a bye this week before next week’s visit to USC.
In adding Holgorsen, they are bringing in a coach who is a noted quarterback tutor and author of prolific offenses. Over the years he has worked with a slew of top college quarterbacks as an assistant and head coach — Graham Harrell, Case Keenum, Brandon Weeden, Geno Smith, Will Grier and Clayton Tune.
Holgorsen arrived in Lincoln on Monday, per sources.