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The next Brock Purdy: Which 2023 NFL Draft prospect could repeat the rise of the 49ers QB?

Who is to blame for Brock Purdy being so ready to jump from Mr. Irrelevant on draft weekend to the undefeated starting quarterback of the 49ers heading into the NFC Championship Game against the Eagles?

Eagles coach Nick Sirianni — at least partially.

OK, let’s back up.

Sirianni played receiver at Division III powerhouse Mount Union. Tom Manning played left tackle. They became friends, and both went into coaching. In 2018, then-Colts offensive coordinator Sirianni hired Manning — then Iowa State’s offensive coordinator — to be the Colts’ tight ends coach. Manning spent a year in Indianapolis before going back to Ames, where Purdy had spent his freshman season in 2018 making the Cyclones’ offense his own. When Manning returned to Iowa State, he brought a revamped offense that operated much like the one Frank Reich and Sirianni used in Indianapolis.

That’s why Purdy could go into NFL team interviews this time last year and rattle off a play call like this with no difficulty whatsoever:

Sync right flex, F near, Flash 61 Y Vista left X post with F cards.

Purdy explained that call — and the Manning coaching history that generated it — last year during an interview before the NFL combine. Some college offenses require that level of memorization by the quarterback, but not many. At Iowa State, Purdy had to manage a ton of pre-snap motion. Guess who else has to manage an abundance of pre-snap motion? The quarterback in 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan’s offense.

We’ve spent a lot of time the past few months trying to discern how a QB who clearly has the skill to play for a long time in the NFL fell to the final pick in the draft. The truth? There are multiple reasons. The Athletic’s Bruce Feldman obtained a scouting report on Purdy from a team and then interviewed the author to perform an autopsy of sorts on what was missed. One takeaway? Purdy, who started 46 games in college, may have had too much tape. This allows the evaluator to see the warts again and again, and it may obscure some of the overwhelmingly positive takeaways from a celebrated college career.

GO DEEPER

How 49ers’ ‘Mr. Irrelevant’ was described on one team’s NFL Draft scouting report

So let’s examine other factors NFL evaluators might have missed. Then let’s use those to see if there are any quarterbacks in the 2023 draft who might be able to follow Purdy’s path from under-drafted to immediate production.

One key factor NFL personnel people appear to have overlooked with Purdy is how much he had to do to simply make Iowa State competitive. In college, Purdy usually was a member of the less talented team on the field. That’s unusual for a QB in a Power 5 program who led his team to a .630 win percentage as a starter. According to the 247Sports team talent composite, which combines the recruiting rankings for every player on a team’s roster in a given year, Purdy started 27 games in which the Cyclones had inferior talent. Iowa State’s record in those games: 15-12. That’s just above .500, but it also means Purdy went 14-5 when his team had equal or better talent than the opponent.

To put those numbers in perspective, Ohio State quarterback C.J. Stroud — a likely top-10 pick in April — played one game (the 2022 Peach Bowl against Georgia) in two full seasons as the Buckeyes’ starter in which the opponent had a higher team talent composite rating than Ohio State.

Compare that to Purdy’s situation now. He had some quality skill players at Iowa State. David Montgomery was Purdy’s starting tailback in 2018, and Hakeem Butler was the leading receiver. Purdy enjoyed three seasons with Breece Hall as his primary back. But that doesn’t compare with having dual Swiss Army knives in Christian McCaffrey and Deebo Samuel, a field-stretching receiver in Brandon Aiyuk and a magician at tight end in George Kittle. Oh, by the way, the 49ers also have left tackle Trent Williams. Iowa State didn’t have an offensive lineman drafted while Purdy was there. Now he plays with one of the best on the planet.

Many of the flaws in Purdy’s tape involved him trying to extend plays that had broken down and then making an ill-advised throw. In the NFL, most teams have about equal talent to their opponents. Perhaps more weight should have been given to Purdy’s performances when his teammates were facing opponents of generally equal talent.

Meanwhile, Purdy’s familiarity with a popular NFL offense also should have been taken into account by teams looking for a rookie who could jump in and play. Though NFL coaches have adjusted to help players coming from college offenses that don’t require as much from the QB pre-snap, there still is a learning curve. That gives players such as Purdy or Josh Allen, who was required at Wyoming to perform many of the same pre-snap tasks an NFL quarterback performs, an advantage when asked to play early.

So what does that mean for the QBs entering the NFL in 2023? Is there a player who could follow Purdy’s path from low draft pick to critical player on a good team?

There are a few intriguing candidates.

We’ll leave out the players who appear likely to be selected in the first three rounds. Whether they’re ready or not, Stroud and Alabama’s Bryce Young probably will be selected with the idea that they’ll start as rookies. The same could go for Kentucky’s Will Levis. Florida’s Anthony Richardson will need time to develop, but his combination of arm and athleticism could make an executive or coach fall in love and draft Richardson ahead of where he probably should go. At 6-foot-6 and 228 pounds, Stanford’s Tanner McKee has the body type NFL scouts dream about — even if his college numbers pale in comparison to the ones produced by most of the QBs who will be drafted below him.

Tennessee’s Hendon Hooker is coming off an ACL tear suffered in November, but his combination of college production, prototypical size and intangibles should intrigue a team in the upper half of the draft.

GO DEEPER

Dane Brugler’s 2023 NFL Draft rankings: Who are the top 15 players at each position?

That leaves a host of QBs who don’t appear to be obvious fits in the NFL — including the two who started in the national title game. Meanwhile, there’s a tough-as-nails competitor who finished his career playing for the same coach who helped bring along Aaron Rodgers, the son of a pro arm-wrestler who lit up Division II and a QB who kept throwing touchdown passes in 2022 despite horrific injury luck for his receivers.

Let’s start with the players who just faced off for the national title.

Who could be the next Mr. Irrelevant?

Max Duggan, TCU, 6-1, 211

Duggan’s listed height and weight are almost exactly the same as Purdy’s combine height and weight (6-0 5/8, 212), and Duggan played a similar damn-the-torpedoes style in the same conference. Like Purdy, Duggan emerged as his team’s best QB option as a freshman. But Duggan had to have heart surgery before the 2020 season and played most of the 2021 season with a broken bone and a torn tendon in one of his feet.

Longtime TCU coach Gary Patterson, who was fired midway through the 2021 season, tweeted in November 2021 that Duggan declined surgery so he could keep playing and help the team. While Purdy’s junior season was his team’s best, Duggan’s was a nightmare. And when Sonny Dykes was hired to replace Patterson, he initially chose Chandler Morris as the Horned Frogs’ QB1.

Duggan took over as the starter in TCU’s second game and led the Frogs to a 13-2 record while completing 63.7 percent of his passes and averaging 8.8 yards per attempt with 32 touchdowns and eight interceptions. Unlike Purdy for most of his Iowa State career, 2022 Duggan had the luxury of a likely first-round receiver in Quentin Johnston, who caught 60 passes for 1,069 yards and six TDs.

Also unlike Purdy, Duggan played in the Air Raid offense for all of his college career. Patrick Mahomes has shown that an Air Raid QB can succeed in the NFL, but there is a steeper learning curve.


Max Duggan finished second in 2022 Heisman Trophy voting. (Mark J. Rebilas / USA Today)

Stetson Bennett, Georgia, 5-11, 190

It will be interesting to see what Bennett weighs during the pre-draft process. While the NFL has absolutely welcomed smaller QBs in recent years, 190 is very light. Purdy and some of the other recently drafted smaller QBs are thick through their lower bodies, which should theoretically offer more durability.

Bennett couldn’t be more unlike Purdy in terms of the type of talent he played with in college. Georgia almost always had the superior talent. The Bulldogs ranked No. 1 in the nation in team talent in 2020 when Bennett first began starting games. The only two games he played when the Bulldogs had inferior talent were against Alabama in the 2021 SEC title game and against the Crimson Tide in the national title game a month later.

Still, it’s interesting to compare Bennett and Purdy. Their arms seem similar. Both were effective scramblers and runners, but Bennett probably is a tad faster. Like Purdy, Bennett played in an offense more similar to an NFL scheme than a college one. Bulldogs offensive coordinator Todd Monken was Jameis Winston’s offensive coordinator in Tampa and had been on the Cleveland Browns staff the season before he joined Georgia. Bennett, who played in three different offenses in college, should be capable of quickly assimilating any NFL team’s playbook.

GO DEEPER

Stetson Bennett didn’t just overcome public opinion. He ‘overcame us,’ the UGA coaches

Monken also pointed out something that could make Bennett potentially valuable to NFL teams. “You create value by being able to play and not take reps,” Monken said before the Peach Bowl. “Everyone will say ‘Well, they played the backup this week because in practice they saw something.’ Backups don’t get any reps. I don’t know what they’d see in practice besides running a card. They just make a decision.”

This seems especially important days after watching Chad Henne come off the bench and lead the Chiefs on a 98-yard touchdown drive following an ankle injury to Mahomes.

Here’s another way to compare Bennett to Purdy. What would Bennett have looked like had he played on a team more like Iowa State? The guess? Probably a lot like Purdy. Bennett, his teammates and coaches pointed out that a recognition of the talent around him probably tamped down some of Bennett’s gunslinger instincts. Had he been forced to elevate the level of a team that didn’t always have a talent advantage, his college playing style might have looked very similar to Purdy’s.

Tyson Bagent, Shepherd, 6-3, 210

The Athletic’s Dane Brugler recently profiled Bagent, who smashed records at his Division II school and whose father is the real-life equivalent of the people Sylvester Stallone’s character competed against in the 1980s classic “Over The Top.”

It’s tough to compare Bagent to QBs who played against FBS competition. But we’ll get a much better look at him playing with and against NFL-bound talent next week at the Senior Bowl.


Clayton Tune tied for third in the nation with 40 passing TDs in 2022. (Maria Lysaker / USA Today)

Clayton Tune, Houston, 6-3, 220

Tune has more of a prototypical QB body than most of the players discussed in this story, but his lack of consistent winning during a college career that only feels as if it took 27 years likely will raise questions in the pre-draft process. He may have a satisfactory answer, though.

Tune filled in for injured starter D’Eriq King as a freshman in 2018 and then did the same in 2019. He then spent three full seasons as the primary starter for Dana Holgorsen’s Cougars offense.

The 2020 season was a mess as the Cougars kept having games postponed or canceled because of COVID-19 protocols. The following season, Tune raised his completion percentage from 59.6 to 68.3 and averaged 8.4 yards per attempt while throwing for 30 TDs with 10 interceptions. He led Houston to a 12-2 record. Houston went 8-5 in 2022, but Tune’s numbers were fairly similar. He completed 67.4 percent of his throws while averaging 8.2 yards per attempt and throwing 40 TDs with 10 picks. Tune attempted 76 more passes despite playing one fewer game because the Cougars had little choice but to keep chucking. The biggest statistical difference between 2021 and 2022 came on defense. In 2021, Houston allowed 20.4 points a game. In 2022, the Cougars allowed 32.2 points a game.

Jaren Hall, BYU, 6-1, 205

Hall started two seasons at BYU, and it’s impressive that his completion percentage and touchdown-to-interception ratio went up (with only a slight dip in yards per attempt) when you consider that his No. 2 receiver from the previous year (Gunner Romney) played only two games because of injury and the player who was leading the Cougars in receiving in October (freshman Kody Epps) was lost for the remainder of the season to injury in game eight.

Hall still averaged 8.4 yards per attempt and threw 31 TD passes with six interceptions despite never having the kind of weapons around him that he’d expected going into the season. He spread the ball around to good receivers, but more talent around Hall could produce bigger numbers.

Dorian Thompson-Robinson, UCLA, 6-1, 205

Thompson-Robinson was one of the toughest QBs in the country. He kept taking hits, and he kept playing. Another example of his resilience? Even though it was obvious UCLA coaches were trying to replace him with UCF transfer Dillon Gabriel last offseason, Thompson-Robinson hung in and bided his time. When Gabriel instead wound up transferring to Oklahoma after Caleb Williams’ transfer to USC, Thompson-Robinson reassumed his role at the head of the UCLA offense and raised his completion percentage from 62.2 percent in 2021 to 69.6 in 2022.

Thompson-Robinson’s numbers were fairly similar in each of his final three seasons. We’ve never seen him outside of Chip Kelly’s offense, so it’s unclear whether his talents were maximized by that scheme or if he might thrive playing a different style.

With all that said, here is the QB who Brugler and I agree has the best chance to follow in Purdy’s cleat marks …

Jake Haener, Fresno State, 6-1, 200

Just watch this final sequence from the 2021 Fresno State-UCLA game and try not to love Jake Haener. (You’ll also get a good look at Thompson-Robinson.)

UCLA coach Kelly called what Haener did to his team one of the best QB performances he’d ever seen. Just watch this final play, and remember that Haener made it shortly after taking a shot that would have knocked a lot of QBs out of action for weeks.

But Haener’s career was a lot more than that one game. He was remarkably consistent — and remarkably tough. We might be talking more about Haener now had he followed former Fresno State coach Kalen DeBoer to Washington last offseason. It would have made sense. Haener started his career at Washington before transferring to Fresno State. He could have returned as a conquering hero. Instead, Haener elected to stay at Fresno State and play for Jeff Tedford. Michael Penix Jr. transferred to Washington from Indiana and wound up leading the nation in passing yards per game while playing in DeBoer’s offense.

Playing for Tedford allowed Haener to learn from the same coach who mentored Aaron Rodgers at Cal. But it didn’t seem like that connection would last long when Haener broke his ankle in Week 3 at USC. Instead of shutting it down and preparing for the draft, Haener sought a second medical opinion and found that he could play despite the injury.

He returned to the lineup in October and led Fresno State, which was 3-4 at the time, to seven consecutive wins. On the season, Haener completed 72 percent of his passes and averaged 8.3 yards per attempt with 20 TDs and only three interceptions.

Purdy has been successful so far in San Francisco for reasons that we outlined above, but part of his success has to do with the same intangible qualities that made Iowa State coach Matt Campbell willing to turn over the team to Purdy as a true freshman in 2018. Those qualities — intelligence, toughness, the ability to inspire teammates to be more than their talent suggests — are the same ones Haener showed over and over again at Fresno State.

So no matter where Haener gets chosen in April, there is a great chance he might wind up being just as relevant as Purdy at some point down the line.

(Top photo of Brock Purdy: Thearon W. Henderson / Getty Images)



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Mandel’s Final Thoughts: Could Tide be vulnerable vs. Vols? Plus Sooner madness, L.A. greatness

And now, 23 Final Thoughts from a Saturday that began at 11 a.m. Dallas time in front of 90,000 at the Cotton Bowl and ended at 11:30 p.m. Palo Alto time in front of a few thousand half-awake fans at Stanford Stadium who unwittingly (and unfortunately for them) saw the most incredible ending of the whole darn day.

1. CBS has apparently hired a psychic to run its programming department. Two years in a row, they’ve used their one prime-time pick of the season to air an Alabama-Texas A&M matchup. Both years, the Tide were massive favorites. Both years, it came down to the final play. The Aggies won on a walk-off field goal in 2021. The Tide survived on an A&M incompletion in 2022.

And now, those CBS suits are about to be big winners again. Next week, they get the biggest Alabama-Tennessee game since Nick Saban was still coaching the Dolphins.

2. Fans under the age of around 25 might not even realize that the Tide and Vols are traditional rivals, mainly because Saban’s program has won the past 15 meetings and generally fought in a different weight class than the long-dormant Vols. But lo and behold, these two will meet in Knoxville next week both with undefeated records and top-8 rankings, and for once, Alabama may be the more vulnerable team.

Especially if Heisman winner Bryce Young can’t play.

3. Alabama’s 24-20 escape against ostensibly overmatched A&M (3-3, 1-2 SEC) was a weird, weird game.



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Replacing Karl Dorrell at Colorado: Candidates range from a current SEC coach to an NFL OC

Paul Chryst’s ouster from Wisconsin Sunday was a surprise. But Karl Dorrell? Not at all.

Colorado is 0-5 and 4-13 in the past two seasons. The roster is dreadful by Power 5 standards. This is going to be a really tough job. It doesn’t have a great recruiting base, and it’s got a pretty shaky positioning regarding conference stability. Colorado also hasn’t had back-to-back winning seasons in almost 20 years, dating back to 2004-05. There’s been just one Top 25 season in the past 20 years, a No. 17 finish in 2016 under Mike MacIntyre.

How can Colorado fix this? Who wants to try? The latter is just as important a question.

We think Colorado will try and keep the search focused on candidates with head coaching experience, but there are a couple of men without that experience we think the Buffaloes may consider.

Candidates with head coaching experience

Bronco Mendenhall: Former BYU and Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall is available. He’s a defensive-minded coach who had a solid run at Virginia after going 99-43 at BYU. He knows this region well and would feel like a pretty safe hire. Would he fire up the fan base? Probably not, but could he develop the Buffaloes into a bowl team? Probably.

Kalani Sitake: The guy who followed Mendenhall at BYU, Sitake would also make some sense. His teams are always very physical and play hard.



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College football Week 3 preview

The games seem closer. The crowds seem louder. The energy is palpable. The ratings are evidently up.

The first two weeks of the 2022 college football season have been an absolute blast. We always grade chaotic periods on the “How does it compare to 2007?” scale, and while it would have felt a lot more 2007ish if Alabama had managed to lose to Texas last week, I’ll give it a 4 out of 5 rating on that scale thus far.

Can college football keep it up, or are we due a more stolid week? Nonconference games in SEC land and out west will tell the tale. Here’s everything you need to follow in Week 3, including in-depth breakdowns on five of the week’s biggest games, plus my favorite bets and 19 more games you should keep an eye on.

Tyler Van Dyke’s big moment and massive anxiety in College Station

No. 13 Miami at No. 24 Texas A&M (9 p.m. ET, ESPN/ESPN App)

Texas A&M’s loss to Appalachian State was one of the stories of Week 2, and justifiably so. The Mountaineers forced A&M’s Haynes King to beat them, knowing he probably couldn’t, and they seemingly won every big play in the game (while seemingly losing just about every first and second down). It wasn’t an incredibly sustainable recipe, but it did the job.

For a while, it looked like A&M’s opponent this week, Miami, was going to suffer the same fate against a different Sun Belt visitor. Southern Miss led Mario Cristobal’s Hurricanes 7-3 heading into the final minute of the first half. Quarterback Tyler Van Dyke began the game just 7-for-14 for 70 yards and an interception, and second-quarter sacks and a fourth-down interception stalled drives.

Miami assuaged fears by scoring five times in six possessions and ended up cruising 30-7. Van Dyke completed 13 of his last 15 passes, and Henry Parrish Jr. rushed for 102 yards, but the drought created some doubt. Southern Miss’ defense might turn out to be quite improved in 2022, but it’s safe to say that Texas A&M’s defense is better. Much better. “Second in defensive SP+ at the moment” better. App State converted just enough third downs to control the ball against A&M, but after the Mountaineers put up 61 points at 8.0 yards per play against North Carolina, the Aggies held them to just 17 and 3.8, respectively. Van Dyke will have to take on this defense without his most reliable receiver, too: Xavier Restrepo is out for a while with a foot injury. The return of blue-chip sophomore Jacolby George from suspension could turn out to be important.

Saturday night’s big contest, which will be played at an almost certainly semi-frantic Kyle Field, will likely come down to chunk plays and easy points. You can say that about a lot of big games, obviously, but while A&M’s attack has been bereft of consistency thus far, a lack of big plays has held Miami back as well. FBS teams averaged 4.8 gains of 20-plus yards in Week 2; Miami had only four such plays, and A&M had two. And again, both were playing against Group of 5 defenses. Miami’s offense is infinitely more efficient than A&M’s (the Canes rank second in overall success rate to A&M’s 89th), but it’s really hard to drive the length of the field on the Aggies.

From a pure narrative standpoint, this game is enormous. An A&M win would get Jimbo Fisher’s Aggies back on track and unleash the latest round of the ever-popular “See? I told you Miami is always overrated!” narrative. But a Miami win would be even more significant, likely pushing the Hurricanes back into (or near) the AP top 10 while introducing the prospect of a 1-5 start for A&M. (The Aggies’ next three games after Miami: vs. Arkansas at Jerry World, at Mississippi State, at Alabama. Yikes.)

Current line: A&M -5.5 (down from -6.5 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: A&M by 6.2 | FPI projection: Miami by 1.2


Did the light bulb just come on for Nicholas Singleton and Penn State?

No. 22 Penn State at Auburn (3:30 p.m. ET, CBS)

When I visited Penn State this past spring, I talked to offensive coordinator Mike Yurcich about his new five-star prospects, running back Nicholas Singleton and quarterback Drew Allar. Allar was expected to sit behind sixth-year senior Sean Clifford, but Singleton’s path to early playing time seemed wide open. PSU’s run game stunk last year, and it seemed Singleton could quickly seize the starting job if he was up for the challenge.

Naturally, I asked Yurcich questions that writers tend to ask: How do you manage expectations for a young player? How do you keep pressure off of him and keep his development on an appropriate keel?

He scoffed initially. “That’s interesting,” he said. “You’ll never hear us in a staff meeting, ‘Yeah, let’s talk about how we’re gonna meet a high expectation.’ That doesn’t exist. Let me go into a meeting — ‘Hey, guys, we’ve got this guy, next big thing, five-star guy. We’ve gotta run the ball and meet these expectations that all these journalists have.’ Ridiculous!”

He was having fun with this, but he knew what I was getting at. Guys develop at different speeds, and there was going to be major pressure on Singleton to thrive immediately. “We’ve seen guys develop differently over the years. If they have the right mentality, and there’s gotta be an athletic component within it … but I’d rather just get the five-star guy,” he said after trailing off for a moment. “As high a star as we can get. Out-recruit everybody and be as athletic and big and strong and fast as anybody.”

Singleton is big, strong and fast, and dealing with big expectations for great-looking prospects is a problem Penn State wants to have as frequently as possible.

After a middling debut performance as part of a heavy rotation of backs against Purdue, Singleton gained 11 yards on Penn State’s first rush of the game against Ohio, three on his second and burst down the right sideline for a 70-yard score on his third.

That’s a 219-pounder exploding past FBS-caliber defensive backs.

Late in the third quarter, with PSU up big, he scored again from 44 yards out. He finished the game with 179 yards on 10 carries; PSU’s other backs rushed 10 times for 37 yards.

Allar also looked great in garbage time, which means that the next time Sean Clifford goes through a Clifford-esque rough stretch — which strikes semi-frequently, but from which he always rebounds — the message-board vultures will circle. But Singleton’s moment is now. And now comes a much harder test.

Auburn head coach Bryan Harsin is dealing with his own vultures at the moment — he survived a booster coup attempt last winter with his job intact, but his Tigers struggled far more than expected in a 24-16 win over San Jose State in Week 2 (and his athletic director just left) — but he has still got sturdy line play to lean on. Auburn backs Tank Bigsby, Jarquez Hunter and Damari Alston combined to average 6.3 yards per carry against Mercer and SJSU, and Auburn has allowed just one 10-yard carry in two weeks.

If the Tigers can contain Singleton and put the game back on Clifford’s shoulders, that’s step one toward scoring a slight home upset. Steps two and three would be actually stopping Clifford and a diverse PSU receiving corps — when they struggled to stop Chevan Cordeiro and the SJSU passing attack last week — and then actually making plays with their own struggling QBs. We don’t know if that will come to pass. But if Singleton is running wild, the realistic paths toward an Auburn win vanish awfully quickly.

Current line: PSU -3 (up from -2.5 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: PSU by 1.5 | FPI projection: PSU by 4.0


Does Oregon rebound, or does BYU’s romp continue?

No. 12 BYU at No. 25 Oregon (3:30 p.m. ET, Fox)

Despite suffering quite a bit of turnover from its brilliant 2020 team, BYU enjoyed a lovely 2021 campaign, beating five Pac-12 opponents and going 6-1 overall against power conference teams. (It avenged its lone loss, to Baylor, last weekend.) After going just 27-25 over his first four seasons in charge, head coach Kalani Sitake has established a sturdy and sustainable program and has won 23 of 27 games since the start of 2020. This growth has come just in time to join the Big 12 in 2023, too.

Oregon’s Dan Lanning, meanwhile, is still trying to figure out what he’s got. His Ducks responded well to their Week 1 shellacking against Georgia by manhandling Eastern Washington 70-14. It was a nice performance against a good FCS opponent, but it didn’t ease the biggest concern I have: Where in the world are the big plays?

Auburn transfer Bo Nix has done a remarkable job of staying on script and getting the ball out of his hands quickly; he’s completing 70% of his passes, and combined with excellent work from a trio of Oregon backs (Sean Dollars, Mar’Keise Irving and Byron Cardwell), the Ducks rank fifth nationally in success rate — despite having played Georgia! Even against the Dawgs, they stayed on schedule well, but there were no chunk plays to be found; even while scoring 70 points against EWU, the Ducks enjoyed only four gains of 20-plus yards. That gave them five for the season, more than just four FBS opponents. (One of those four is Iowa, which doesn’t really count.)

BYU has allowed only three such plays, and all three came when it was already up by 30-plus against USF in Week 1. The Cougars are creating disruption with a bend-but-don’t-break approach — they rank 120th in blitzes per dropback but 15th in sack rate — and according to Sports Info Solutions data, they have missed only two tackles all season. Can Oregon dink and dunk its way to another rebound win? And will it matter if the Oregon defense can’t push back against the physical Cougars?

BYU quarterback Jaren Hall has been rock solid, completing 68% of his passes, albeit at only 10.9 yards per completion. Redshirt freshman Chase Roberts enjoyed a breakout game against Baylor (eight catches, 122 yards and a gorgeous touchdown) in the absence of star receivers Puka Nacua and Gunner Romney, and it appears either or both could return this week. Oregon has left two very conflicting impressions, and on Saturday we’ll learn which one was more accurate.

Current line: Oregon -3.5 (no movement) | SP+ projection: Ducks by 1.2 | FPI projection: Ducks by 1.5


The first big test for Kalen DeBoer’s Washington

No. 11 Michigan State at Washington (7:30 p.m. ET, ABC)

Twenty-five years ago, I was a freshman in college, just as likely to be playing EA’s NCAA Football as going to class; Kalen DeBoer was a student assistant at NAIA’s Sioux Falls, having just wrapped up a record-breaking receiver career there; Mel Tucker was a graduate assistant at Michigan State, having only recently turned to coaching after a failed pro career; and Jim Lambright’s Washington Huskies pummeled Nick Saban’s (and Tucker’s) Spartans 51-23 in the Aloha Bowl.

On Saturday, the two teams will play again, for just the fourth time ever. Saban’s done all right for himself elsewhere, Tucker’s in charge in East Lansing, and after winning three national titles as head coach at Sioux Falls and going 12-6 in charge at Fresno State, DeBoer is in his third game as UW’s head coach. (And I’m looking forward to the return of the video game next year. Not everything changes.)

Coming off of last year’s disastrous 4-8 campaign, Washington has beaten Kent State and Portland State by a combined 97-26. The offense, so moribund in 2021, has found life by reuniting DeBoer, a former Indiana offensive coordinator, with former Hoosier quarterback Michael Penix Jr.

Penix is 12th in Total QBR, Virginia transfer Wayne Taulapapa is averaging 6.6 yards per carry and sophomore blue-chipper Jalen McMillan has caught nine passes for 214 yards. Everything has worked according to plan, but now the competition level ratchets up considerably. Washington might rank third in the nation in points scored per drive, but Michigan State ranks fifth on defense against a similar caliber of competition.

This is a massive test for both teams, one the oddsmakers trust Washington to pass. The computers favor the Spartans (especially SP+), but the line has stuck at UW -3.5 for most of the week.

It wouldn’t be a surprise if DeBoer got things turned around quickly. He’s been great at almost every job he’s ever had, and UW was very good as recently as 2019. But I’m still quite surprised by the line. MSU has suffered some injury issues — linebacker Darius Snow is out for the season, safety Xavier Henderson could also be out, and star receiver Jayden Reed is still recovering from a hard fall into the sideline last week. But SP+ rarely disagrees this significantly with the line without quarterback injuries or a run of suspensions involved. Can the Huskies repay the faith?

Current line: UW -3.5 (up from -3 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: MSU by 7.4 | FPI projection: MSU by 1.2


And now, a word about turnovers luck

Fresno State at No. 7 USC (10:30 p.m. ET, Fox)

One thing advanced stats can do is bring clarity to some of the more general thoughts we have watching our team play football. “We blew too many chances!” can be pretty definitively measured by looking at stats like points per scoring opportunity or red zone touchdown rate, for example. “We fell behind schedule too much!” is a perfect use case for the wonders of success rate. And USC’s incredible current run of sticky fingers gives us good reason to have a quick conversation about turnovers luck.

Fumbles: While odds shift a bit based on where a fumble happens and how many of each team’s players are near, your team can generally expect to recover 50% of all fumbles over a longer period of time.

In two games, USC recovered both of its own fumbles and both of its opponents’ fumbles.

Interceptions: While odds can shift based on how much zone or man defense you play (and, therefore, how many defenders you have either facing the QB or close to the ball), you can generally expect to end up with a ratio of about one interception to every four pass breakups.

In two games, USC has intercepted six passes and broken up seven, while opponents have broken up one and intercepted zero.

Compare the average output to what USC has generated thus far, and you see that USC’s expected turnover margin should be about +2.5 — opponents should have committed about 3.7 turnovers on average to USC’s 1.2. That’s good! There’s randomness baked into the turnovers cake, but generating turnover opportunities isn’t totally random. Alex Grinch’s USC defense wants to be aggressive, and this is a good sign that it’s working to a degree.

On the other hand, USC’s actual turnover margin right now is +8, far better than expected.

Based on field position value, turnovers are generally worth around four to five points. The differences in last week’s 41-28 victory over Stanford alone (+1.6 expected turnover margin, +4 actual) were worth about 10 to 12 in a 13-point win.

This is a long way of saying that, while USC’s transfer-heavy offense has been every bit as good as advertised — Caleb Williams is second in Total QBR, Jordan Addison and Mario Williams have 18 catches for 343 yards, and Travis Dye and Austin Jones are averaging 6.8 yards per carry — the Trojans have also been absurdly lucky.

Despite playing two teams that ran the ball horribly in 2021, they rank 119th in rushing success rate allowed and are allowing 6.8 yards per carry (not including sacks). Turnovers and a surprisingly excellent pass rush have bailed them out through two weeks, but when the turnovers luck dries up, USC is going to find itself having to win quite a few 49-45 games without immediate improvement.

Fresno State ranks seventh in rushing success rate, by the way. Jordan Mims and Malik Sherrod are averaging 5.9 yards per carry. This would be a very good time for USC to find some push up front.

Current line: USC -12 (down from -14 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: USC by 7.3 | FPI projection: USC by 18.7


My favorite bets

After going 3-2 in week 2, we’re at 6-3-1 (65%) for the season. Here are this week’s picks.

Ole Miss (-16.5) at Georgia Tech (3:30 p.m. ET, ABC): The Rebels are dealing with some QB uncertainty — Jaxson Dart was uninspiring in a season-opening win over Troy, and Luke Altmyer looked good but got banged up last week against Central Arkansas. Despite this, the Rebels beat Troy by 18 and UCA by 56. They’ve allowed 13 total points, and I’m not sure Georgia Tech’s offense is that much better than either Troy’s or UCA’s. SP+ projects a 43-15 win, and even if Rebel QB play makes that more like 34-15, that’s still a cover.

Michigan State (+3.5) at Washington (7:30 p.m. ET, ABC): As I said above, Washington could turn out to be excellent this year; I just need to see a bit more before I believe the Huskies are better than Michigan State.

New Mexico State at Wisconsin: under 46 points (3:30 p.m. ET, BTN): Simply based on national averages and projected regression to the mean, SP+ tends to project most games with really low listed point totals to go over and most games with really high totals to go under. The exceptions can be profitable. In games that are (a) listed at 48 total points or fewer and (b) projected under by SP+, SP+ is 4-1 so far this year. With the tweaks I recently made to SP+, it would have been at 57.5% last year on those games, too. It’s not projecting this one FAR under 46 points (44.8), but that’s a pretty good trend.

Western Kentucky (+6.5) at Indiana (noon ET, BTN): Indiana has left mixed impressions this year. Scoring 23 points on Illinois: more impressive than it sounds. Trailing Idaho 10-0 at halftime before winning by 13: not great. WKU, meanwhile, has performed about as SP+ projected in wins over Austin Peay and Hawai’i, and SP+ projects a 3.4-point advantage over the Hilltoppers. Good enough for me.

Notre Dame (-10.5) vs. California (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC): I feel like I’ve had a decent read on Notre Dame this year. It covering against Ohio State was one of my best bets, and I felt like Marshall could severely test its offense last week (even though I by no means had the Thundering Herd winning). So I’m following both my gut and SP+ projections this week — SP+ says the Irish have a nearly 20-point advantage, and I think Cal’s offense is much worse than Marshall’s. So go Irish.


Week 3 playlist

In addition to everything above, here are some more games you should pay attention to if you want to get the absolute most out of the weekend, from both information and entertainment perspectives.

Friday night

Florida State at Louisville (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN). Louisville’s season-opening two-game road trip featured a valley (loss to Syracuse by 24) and a peak (six-point rebound win over UCF). Now comes the home opener against an FSU team that hasn’t finished in the SP+ top 50 since 2017 but currently ranks 35th. Betting trends very much favor the Noles.
Current line: FSU -2.5 (a big movement from UL -1 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: FSU by 3.3 | FPI projection: FSU by 1.7

Air Force at Wyoming (8 p.m. ET, CBSSN). Air Force nearly tripled Colorado from a yardage perspective (443-162) in a 41-10 in-state romp last Saturday. The Falcons have won 12 of their past 15 and might not be an underdog for the rest of the regular season. Can they bring their A-game on a Friday night in Laramie, though?
Current line: Air Force -16 (no movement) | SP+ projection: Air Force by 18.8 | FPI projection: Air Force by 14.3

Early Saturday

No. 6 Oklahoma at Nebraska (noon ET, Fox). Nebraska had to pony up an extra $7.5 million to fire Scott Frost immediately instead of waiting until Oct. 1. If the Huskers play a solid, free-wheeling, game against Oklahoma, I’m guessing it’ll be deemed worth it. But after allowing 500-plus yards to Northwestern and 600-plus to Georgia Southern, it’s hard to imagine Nebraska making enough stops to pull off an upset, isn’t it?
Current line: OU -11 (way down from OU -17 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: OU by 13.9 | FPI projection: OU by 9.5.

No. 1 Georgia at South Carolina (noon ET, ESPN). South Carolina seemed to find a desperately needed offensive rhythm in the second half of last week’s loss against Arkansas. That’s pretty faint praise, but on the bright side, if it scores even six points, it’ll have more than doubled what UGA’s first two opponents produced. Current line: UGA -24.5 (down from -27 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: UGA by 24.7 | FPI projection: UGA by 19.9.

Purdue at Syracuse (noon ET, ESPN2). With home games against Virginia and Wagner on deck, 2-0 Syracuse could have an intriguing path to 5-0 if the Orange pull off a slight upset here. Purdue’s offense remains anti-Big Ten, passing nonstop, but Aidan O’Connell has been solid, and Iowa transfer Charlie Jones has more receiving yards (286) than the entire receiving corps he left behind in Iowa City (201).
Current line: Syracuse -1 (flipped from Purdue -1 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: Purdue by 5.2 | FPI projection: ‘Cuse by 2.8

Saturday afternoon

California at Notre Dame (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC). As bad as Notre Dame has looked offensively, the computers still think the Fighting Irish are far superior to a 2-0 Cal team that has looked far from spectacular. With quarterback Drew Pyne taking over for the injured Tyler Buchner, there could be even more offensive woes on the way, but that’s not guaranteed … and it might not take too many points to win this one comfortably anyway.
Current line: ND -11 (down from -12.5 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: Irish by 19.9 | FPI projection: Irish by 19.8

Kansas at Houston (4 p.m. ET, ESPNU). This game is so much more intriguing than it probably seemed at the start of the season. Houston has disappointed slightly, playing overtime games against both UTSA (win) and Texas Tech (loss). Kansas, meanwhile, can’t defend just yet but has found its quarterback (Jalon Daniels) and its offense. The numbers still favor the Coogs, but Kansas is legitimately dangerous for the first time in years.
Current line: UH -9 (up from -9 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: UH by 15.8 | FPI projection: UH by 11.1.

Saturday evening

It’s hard to tell you which game will be the most exciting on Saturday evening, but there are tons to choose from. This is the perfect evening to have one of those four- or six-screen setups.

Texas Tech at No. 16 NC State (7 p.m. ET, ESPN2). Man, oh, man, what a perfect test for NC State. The Wolfpack nearly fell to East Carolina in Week 1, and Texas Tech is basically a more extreme and more talented ECU. Both quarterback Donovan Smith and the Red Raiders’ all-or-nothing defense did countless great and terrible things in Tech’s overtime win over Houston last week. Quarterback Devin Leary and a stellar State defense will need to dodge some haymakers.
Current line: NC State -10 (up from -8 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: NC State by 8.7 | FPI projection: NC State by 6.3

Mississippi State at LSU (6 p.m. ET, ESPN). This one’s dead even on paper, but we’ll find out if LSU is more ready for a nip-and-tuck battle than it was two weeks ago against Florida State. Mike Leach and MSU have a defense that is every bit as antisocial and hard to prepare for as the famous air raid offense; LSU still has LSU talent. Which ends up mattering more?
Current line: MSU -2.5 (up from -1 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: LSU by 0.6 | FPI projection: LSU by 2.3

SMU at Maryland (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1). From a pure aesthetics standpoint, this is my favorite game of the week. Rhett Lashlee’s SMU outscored North Texas and Lamar by a combined 93-26, producing both high-level efficiency and nonstop big plays (and, as you would expect from Lashlee, lots of tempo). Maryland hasn’t been quite as sharp defensively but has put up similar offensive numbers. You could do a lot worse than spending your evening watching quarterbacks Taulia Tagovailoa (UM) and Tanner Mordecai (SMU) trading blows.
Current line: Maryland -2.5 (up from -2 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: SMU by 1.3 | FPI projection: Maryland by 6.2

UTSA at No. 21 Texas (8 p.m. ET, LHN). Apparently UTSA, like Houston, has decided to play only nail-biters this year. It wouldn’t be a shock if the Roadrunners threw a scare into a Texas team hung over from last week’s thriller against Alabama, but if UT quarterback Hudson Card is healthy enough to run around a bit, I don’t think a miserable UTSA defense can make enough stops to keep it close.
Current line: Texas -12.5 (down from -13 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: Horns by 15.1 | FPI projection: Horns by 21.3

No. 23 Pitt at Western Michigan (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPNU). Last year, WMU earned honorary ACC champion status by taking down the eventual champion Panthers 44-41. Now Pitt has to go to Kalamazoo, and it’s possible that quarterback Kedon Slovis might miss the game because of injury. Can backup Nick Patti do enough for Pat Narduzzi’s squad to avoid an upset?
Current line: Pitt -10 (no movement) | SP+ projection: Pitt by 18.9 | FPI projection: Pitt by 13.6

Toledo at No. 3 Ohio State (7 p.m. ET, Fox). Ohio State’s going to win this one, but you should keep up with it for two major reasons. First, OSU star receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba is expected to return to action after getting hurt early against Notre Dame in Week 1. We get only so many more college games with him, and you should watch him while you can. Second, Toledo’s defense was excellent last year (35th in defensive SP+) and gave up only 10 points in two cupcake games. The Rockets have a genuinely nasty pass defense that could trouble C.J. Stroud and the Buckeyes for a bit.
Current line: OSU -32 (up from -31.5 on Sunday) | SP+ projection: Buckeyes by 26.9 | FPI projection: Buckeyes by 30.9

Missouri State at No. 10 Arkansas (7 p.m. ET, ESPN+). Arkansas is obviously a big favorite over Bobby Petrino’s Bears, but MSU’s offense is sharp and could do a little damage, and … PETRINO BOWL.
SP+ projection: Hogs by 29.1 | FPI projection: Hogs by 41.1

Jacksonville State at Tulsa (7 p.m. ET, ESPN+). Petrino’s not the only former marquee coach thriving at the FCS level. Rich Rodriguez took over a JSU team that had fallen off pace last season, going 5-6 and forcing John Grass’ resignation. He has instantly made the Gamecocks awesome again. They’ve outscored three FCS opponents by a combined 111-37, and they’ve rocketed up to fifth in SP+. Do they have a shot at an FBS upset?
SP+ projection: Tulsa by 0.4 | FPI projection: Tulsa by 16.2

Late Saturday

North Dakota State at Arizona (11 p.m. ET, FS1). For the first time in six years, NDSU, the preeminent FCS program — and a better producer of NFL quarterback talent than most programs at any level — takes on an FBS team. Arizona has left confusing impressions thus far, walloping San Diego State but fading against a high-quality Mississippi State; NDSU is probably closer to MSU than SDSU in quality, and the Bison are as physical as ever. An Arizona win would probably be an upset. SP+ projection: NDSU by 5.2 | FPI projection: Arizona by 2.5.


Smaller-school showcase

As always, let’s save a shout-out for football at levels below FBS. Here are three huge games you should crack open the laptop for this weekend. (I hope you were watching one of last week’s big games — Wisconsin-Whitewater knocked off defending Division III national champion Mary Hardin-Baylor with a 99-yard touchdown drive in the final minutes and scored the game-winning TD with 19 seconds left.)

Including JSU-Tulsa, MSU-Arkansas and NDSU-Arizona above, Week 3 has a distinct FCS flavor to it.

FCS: Grambling at No. 11 Jackson State (2 p.m. ET, ESPN3). Hue Jackson’s G-Men began their FCS season by pummeling Northwestern State, but does that make them ready for a Jackson State team that is still inconsistent on offense but has allowed six points in two games?

FCS: Yale at No. 12 Holy Cross (2 p.m. ET, ESPN+). The Ivy League season begins this weekend, and a game between a potentially dynamite Yale offense and a stout Holy Cross defense is quite the headliner, especially after Holy Cross’ Hail Mary win over Buffalo last weekend.

FCS: No. 10 Delaware at No. 14 Rhode Island (2 p.m. ET, FloFootball). Delaware has enjoyed a delightful start to 2022, knocking off Navy, blowing out in-state rival Delaware State and allowing a total of 16 points in the process. But URI has scored 35 in each of its first two games behind the big arm of former Maryland and Tennessee QB Kasim Hill. This is a huge early game in the Colonial Athletic Association.



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BYU receivers Puka Nacua, Gunner Romney to miss Saturday’s game vs. Baylor due to injuries, sources say

BYU will be without the team’s two best wide receivers when the No. 21 Cougars host No. 9 Baylor on Saturday night, sources told ESPN.

Junior Puka Nacua and senior Gunner Romney are expected to miss the game. BYU coach Kalani Sitake had said earlier in the week that they would be game-time decisions. Romney and Nacua accounted for 60% of BYU’s returning receiving yards, according to ESPN Stats & Info data.

Nacua, who is considered a dynamic NFL prospect, sprained his right ankle and wore a boot during BYU’s blowout win at South Florida last week. Romney, who is also on NFL radars, missed that game with an undisclosed injury, which will also keep from playing Saturday.

The two were BYU’s leading returning receivers from last season and projected as star quarterback Jaren Hall’s top targets in 2022. Before Nacua got injured against USF, he scored two touchdowns, including a 75-yard run on the game’s first play. Last season, Nacua finished with 805 receiving yards and tied for second on the team with six touchdowns.

Romney is in his fifth season at BYU, and he has accumulated 1,900 career receiving yards and 10 total touchdowns. In former BYU quarterback Zach Wilson’s breakout season in 2020, Romney had 767 yards and six touchdowns. For his career, he has averaged 16.2 yards per catch.

Their absence will leave BYU leaning on its run game, as the Cougars’ offensive line is the strength of the team. That unit struggled mightily against the Bears in a 38-24 loss in Waco last year, however, gaining just 67 yards on 24 carries. BYU tailback Christopher Brooks, who transferred from Cal, had a breakout first game against USF with 135 yards and a touchdown on 13 carries.

The Cougars will look to freshman Chase Roberts, redshirt freshman Kody Epps and sophomore Keanu Hill to fill the void at receiver. The absence of Romney and Nacua could also potentially highlight BYU’s stout tight end tandem of junior Isaac Rex and junior Dallin Holker, both of whom are considered strong NFL prospects.

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What’s going on with Big 12, Pac-12 realignment rumors? We answer your questions

The reverberations from USC and UCLA exiting the Pac-12 for the Big Ten continue. The Big 12 intends to position itself to scoop up the most desirable remaining Pac-12 members, turning the tables on how things stood a year ago. The Pac-12 will enact its own plan, but, perhaps most importantly, can it hold on to Oregon and Washington? Meanwhile, questions loom at the national level. While all eyes are on what Notre Dame will do, what’s there to make of North Carolina? The Athletic staff dives into the latest realignment developments.

The Big 12 on the offensive?

The Big 12 has been given an unexpected opportunity to strengthen its position among the Power 5 conferences. Its new commissioner doesn’t want to waste it.

The league is having “serious” talks with six Pac-12 schools — Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado, Oregon, Utah and Washington — and is determined to move quickly, sources told The Athletic. Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark, hired just last week, has been described as “super aggressive” by one source and has the backing of the Big 12 presidents and chancellors to pursue the addition of Pac-12 members.

It’s unclear just how quickly the Big 12 could get a deal done on its expansion efforts, but those sources expressed optimism that Yormark can pull it off. CBS Sports first reported the Big 12 was in discussions about adding multiple Pac-12 schools.

Arizona and Arizona State have long been considered logical fits for the Big 12 if those schools ever had interest in exiting the Pac-12. But USC and UCLA bolting to the Big Ten has the Big 12 dreaming bigger. It’s also eyeing Utah, the Pac-12’s football champion in 2021, and Colorado, a Big Eight and Big 12 member until 2011.

The aspirations of Oregon and Washington are more difficult to predict right now. For both, it likely makes sense to keep their options open and hold out for the possibility of joining the Big Ten or SEC. The Big 12 would take those first four, but an effort to bring in all six is certainly worth attempting.

“(Yormark has) talked about making sure we’re going to be aggressive, we’re not going to sit on our hands,” one Big 12 athletic director told The Athletic. “I’ve talked to some ADs, and we think we’re in a position of strength.”

Yormark first met his ADs last Friday in a Zoom meeting, and several said he was impressive in his debut. He was strong in his conviction that the Big 12 can thrive in this changing climate and appears to have the right connections to help it happen. He wasn’t supposed to officially get to work until Aug. 1, but Yormark is embracing this opportunity to disrupt and knows the Big 12 can’t afford to sit back and watch this latest realignment saga unfold. — Max Olson and Chris Vannini

What the Big 12 could gain from adding these particular Pac-12 programs

When any league has a chance to be an aggressor in a round of conference realignment, it usually takes it. Beyond the obvious draw of Oregon and Washington, the Arizona schools would bring the Phoenix media market, the 11th-largest in the country. Colorado would bring Denver (No. 16), and Utah would solidify Salt Lake City (No. 30) alongside incoming Big 12 member BYU.

It also makes sense from a scheduling and travel perspective, especially with BYU already in the fold starting in 2023. It would preserve the Holy War, and while keeping or reigniting rivalries isn’t typically a major driving factor in any move like this, it would be a great byproduct.

A source at one of the target schools noted that many Pac-12 fans don’t travel well, and the strong fan bases in the Big 12 are another factor that make the conference intriguing. The idea of having Iowa State, BYU or Kansas State fans visit more regularly than several current Pac-12 schools could be appealing.

One Big 12 source noted that Colorado was “very skittish” back in 2010 when it fled the Big 12 for the Pac-12, seeking stability as well as the potential exposure/enrollment of the West Coast. Perhaps that calculation looks a little different in the current college athletic landscape — and a Pac-12 that doesn’t include the L.A. schools.

“I think a lot of things are possible,” the Big 12 source said. — Nicole Auerbach and Vannini

How is the Pac-12 responding?

Less than a week after the league lost its flagship schools, a Pac-12 source said that the conference is operating with a sense of urgency but is “not panicked.” If one of the remaining Pac-12 schools suddenly got a call from the Big Ten or the SEC, the source said it would be reason enough for the rest to press a panic button. But the Big 12? The source said that the current iteration of the Big 12 isn’t an obvious yes. It might make more sense for the Arizonas/Colorado/Utah contingent to wait a bit and consider all options, including whatever the Pac-12 is able to cobble together as a counteroffer.

One option that is worth exploring, the source said, is some sort of partnership between the Pac-12 and the ACC. (Just don’t call it an “alliance,” please.) Both leagues need a boost, because they’re both about to fall way behind the SEC and Big Ten in terms of annual revenue. The ACC is stuck in a media rights deal that essentially depreciates in value and doesn’t expire until 2036 — would a deal with the Pac-12 allow the ACC to renegotiate such a (bad) deal? It’s a question that administrators across the country are asking. — Auerbach

Could the Pac-12 end up regretting its 2021 inaction?

Less than a year ago, the Pac-12 could’ve made a move. New commissioner George Kliavkoff received plenty of interest from leaders at Big 12 schools who were looking to jump ship. It would’ve been way too easy to poach its most attractive members, plant a flag in the state of Texas and potentially bring an end to the Big 12.

But to the Pac-12, those schools just weren’t attractive enough.

Kliavkoff instead pursued the option that his conference believed added more value at the time, partnering with the ACC and Big Ten for their ill-fated Alliance. ACC commissioner Jim Phillips said at the time that they hoped the pact would “allow a conference like the Big 12 to figure out their path forward.” Calling that merciful seems a bit generous, but inaction on expansion by the Pac-12 did aid the Big 12 in coming together and agreeing to bring in four new members.

The Big 12 survived because no Power 5 league wanted its eight remaining schools. The Pac-12 might not be so fortunate.

“Shame on the Big 12 if they don’t do what the Pac-12 was unwilling to do last year,” one Group of 5 AD told The Athletic.

That’s not to say the Pac-12 would’ve avoided its present-day problems by raiding the Big 12. Even if USC and UCLA had been supportive of expansion (and sources believe they were not), such a move wouldn’t have prevented them from bolting for a better deal in the Big Ten.

But it was a moment in time in which the Pac-12 could’ve knocked a competitor out of the market and established a Power 4.

The Big 12 can do the same right now, though it won’t be quite as easy to pull off. Nobody is questioning whether Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado and Utah add enough value to the Big 12 to be worthwhile. Its leaders want to be aggressive. They’ve lived through this exact cycle of panic, fear and uncertainty, so they know how vulnerable the Pac-12 presidents are right now and how amenable they should be to the offer of a good solution.

The wild card, of course, is Yormark. He has plenty to learn about this landscape, and he’s having to do so as fast as possible. Yormark brings 30-plus years of experience in pro sports, not college. He doesn’t have longtime relationships with these commissioners. Maybe that helps. He doesn’t owe it to them to be collegial. The Big 12 has been through enough to know doing nothing can prove costly. — Olson

Why is the Pac-12 opening its media rights negotiations now?

The Pac-12 announced on Tuesday that its Board of Directors had “authorized the conference to immediately begin negotiations for its next media rights agreements.” The timing grabbed attention, but sources inside and out of the Pac-12 seemed to think it made sense. The Pac-12, with its current agreement up in 2024, needs to do anything and everything it can to preserve its existence, and it believes that going to media partners and getting their valuation will help.

Or maybe you can game out a merger or partnership.

If you’re Arizona or Colorado, wouldn’t you want all the facts and figures before deciding to jump to some other league? It’s useful info that perhaps will lead to the current Pac-12 members recommitting to one another. At least, that’s the optimistic view of the situation.

A more pessimistic view: Getting the numbers does not change the numbers. The Pac-12’s value to potential media partners has taken a significant hit, whether it can put a specific dollar figure on that or not. — Auerbach

So, what about the best of the rest?

A former Pac-12 administrator put it in simple terms Tuesday: Oregon and Washington trump anything that the Big 12 can offer.

That’s worth remembering in all of this, as the Big 12 and its new, uninhibited commissioner look to punch first and annex a portion of what’s left of the Pac-12. While it’s unclear what the Ducks and Huskies may do — and what real options they have at the moment — it is safe to say that those two programs, more than anyone else, have control over the fate of the Pac-12 right now.

The Pac-12 is no doubt trying to get ahead of matters itself — why else would it put out a statement saying it will immediately begin its media rights negotiations? — but that statement likely does little to actually affect the current situation.

It also distracts from the bigger questions at play on a national level.

What will Notre Dame do?

And, perhaps as importantly, what will North Carolina do?

Don’t underestimate the power of the Tar Heels in all of this. While things have been relatively quiet in ACC country since the UCLA and USC news last week, UNC remains the biggest prize not named Notre Dame. It is a national brand — what other school has a shade of blue named after it? — with a sterling academic reputation. And it is the flagship school of the nation’s 10th-biggest state in terms of population — one that happens to be the biggest remaining state that is not currently in the Big Ten or SEC footprint.

Either of the “Power Two” conferences can make legitimate cases for why it should add UNC. Its former chancellor (Carol Folt) is now the president of USC, the newest member of the Big Ten, which used to be run by a former Tar Heels point guard named Jim Delany. The SEC, meanwhile, could view the potential addition of the school as the perfect response to the Big Ten’s move last week, while also doing little to upset the current league membership.

The assumption has long been that if schools were able to leave the ACC — that conference’s grant of rights remains a thorny issue — and the SEC was interested in further expansion, the obvious candidates would be Clemson and Florida State, which have combined to win six football national titles since 1981 and three since 2013. But North Carolina is held in high regard in certain quarters of the SEC. So is Virginia, which on its face would seem a better fit for the Big Ten. UVA is the flagship university in the next-largest state that contains neither a Big Ten nor SEC school. And that could make it valuable to both leagues.

If a package deal were required to convince North Carolina to spurn the Big Ten (where it would fit quite well), then perhaps the SEC could try to add a mix of brand power, football success and academic prestige while also filling in its region’s map. Adding all four would bring the SEC’s future membership to 20, which would have sounded absurd a year ago. But nothing seems absurd now. — Matt Fortuna and Andy Staples

(Photo: Matthew Pearce / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)



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The 2022 Way-Too-Early college football top 25

The 2021 college football season has just ended, with Georgia beating Alabama 33-18 in Monday night’s national title game, but it’s already time to look ahead to the 2022 season.

Not surprisingly, Nick Saban’s Alabama squad will start our 2022 Way-Too-Early college football top 25 as No. 1, leading three SEC teams in the top four.

Thanks to some industry-shaking coaching moves and an overflowing transfer portal, this has been a wild offseason that shows no signs of slowing down. As a result, these rankings will be updated several times throughout the offseason.

2021 record: 13-2 (7-1 SEC)
Starters expected to return: 6 offense, 7 defense, 2 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: OT Evan Neal, WR Jameson Williams, DE Phidarian Mathis, S Jordan Battle, CB Josh Jobe, RB Brian Robinson Jr., WR John Metchie III
Key additions: CB Eli Ricks, OT Tyler Booker, DE Jeremiah Alexander, WR Shazz Preston, RB Emmanuel Henderson, RB Jahmyr Gibbs

Outlook: It probably wasn’t the strongest team of the Nick Saban era, given the Crimson Tide’s struggles on the offensive line and on defense at times this past season. Nonetheless, the Tide will be favored to win it all in 2022, with Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Bryce Young and much of the defense coming back. The Tide might dip into the transfer portal to help replace Williams’ and Metchie’s massive production. Ricks, an All-American at LSU in 2020, will help shore up the Tide’s secondary.

2021 record: 11-2 (8-1 Big Ten)
Starters expected to return: 6 offense, 7 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: WR Garrett Wilson, WR Chris Olave, G Thayer Munford, OT Nicholas Petit-Frere, DT Haskell Garrett, DE Tyreke Smith, CB Marcus Williamson, PK Noah Ruggles
Key additions: ATH Alex Styles, OLB C.J. Hicks, DE Kenyatta Jackson Jr., OLB Gabe Powers, ATH Kaleb Brown, DT Caden Curry

Outlook: The Buckeyes just missed making the College Football Playoff for a third straight time under coach Ryan Day, with a humbling 42-27 loss at rival Michigan knocking them out of contention. Much of Ohio State’s problems in 2021 can be attributed to the defense. Day hired Jim Knowles, who revamped Oklahoma State’s defense the past two seasons, and Knowles will have his work cut out for him. With quarterback C.J. Stroud and running back TreVeyon Henderson coming back, the offense should again be explosive, even with Wilson and Olave turning pro. The receiver corps is in good hands with Jaxon Smith-Njigba. The 2022 season will be demanding, with a home opener against Notre Dame, Big Ten road games against Michigan State and Penn State and divisional crossover games versus Iowa and Wisconsin at home.

2021 record: 14-1 (8-0 SEC)
Starters expected to return: 9 offense, 5 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: DE Travon Walker, NT Jordan Davis, DT Devonte Wyatt, LB Nakobe Dean, LB Channing Tindall, CB Derion Kendrick, OT Jamaree Salyer, RB James Cook
Key additions: S Tykee Smith, DB Malaki Starks, CB Jaheim Singletary, RB Branson Robinson, OLB Jalon Walker, CB Daylen Everette, QB Gunner Stockton

Outlook: The Bulldogs finally ended a 41-year national championship drought with a win over the Tide, and will enter the 2022 season as the SEC East favorites. Georgia will undergo a massive facelift on defense, starting at the top with coordinator Dan Lanning leaving to become Oregon’s new coach. Former Florida and South Carolina coach Will Muschamp and inside linebackers coach Glenn Schumann will work as co-coordinators in 2022. Georgia’s losses on defense will be extensive, and younger players such as Tramel Walthour, Jalen Carter and Nazir Stackhouse will have big shoes to fill on the D-line. Quarterback Stetson Bennett is eligible to return for another season; he will probably battle JT Daniels and Brock Vandagriff for the starting job next season. Georgia’s offense might have to do more heavy lifting in 2022.

2021 record: 8-4 (4-4 SEC)
Starters expected to return: 5 offense, 5 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: OT Kenyon Green, DT DeMarvin Leal, RB Isaiah Spiller, TE Jalen Wydermyer, DL Jayden Peevy, DB Leon O’Neal Jr., DE Tyree Johnson, LB Aaron Hansford, DE Micheal Clemons
Key additions: QB Max Johnson, QB Conner Weigman, DT Walter Nolen, DT Gabe Brownlow-Dindy, WR Evan Stewart

Outlook: The Aggies took a step back in 2021, which wasn’t much of a surprise after they lost four starting offensive linemen and quarterback Haynes King broke his leg in the second game. Now, Texas A&M’s defense, its strength this past season, will have to be rebuilt. Defensive coordinator Mike Elko left to become Duke’s new coach; Aggies coach Jimbo Fisher hired Mississippi’s D.J. Durkin to replace Elko. The entire front four on defense — tackles Leal and Peevy and top pass-rushers Johnson and Clemons — are expected to leave. Leading tackler Hansford will have to be replaced, as well. If King is healthy, he’ll battle LSU transfer Max Johnson and incoming freshman Weigman, the No. 1 pocket passer in the ESPN 300, for the starting job next season.

2021 record: 12-2 (8-1 Big Ten)
Starters expected to return: 6 offense, 5 defense, 0 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: DE Aidan Hutchinson, OLB David Ojabo, RB Hassan Haskins, LB Josh Ross, SS Brad Hawkins, CB Vincent Gray, S Daxton Hill, C Andrew Vastardis, OT Andrew Stueber, DT Christopher Hinton
Key additions: CB William Johnson, DE Derrick Moore, OT Tyler Morris, S Keon Sabb, WR Darrius Clemons

Outlook: It might have taken seven seasons, but Jim Harbaugh finally broke through what looked like a ceiling at his alma mater. The season ended with a flop, a 34-11 loss to Georgia in the Capital One Orange Bowl, but that won’t take away from a breakout campaign. The Wolverines defeated Ohio State for the first time in a decade, won the Big Ten for the first time since 2004 and reached the playoff for the first time. After there was mounting pressure to fire Harbaugh following the 2020 season, he shook up his coaching staff, and the changes paid off. First-year defensive coordinator Mike Macdonald did fantastic work, and he might have to do even more next season with Hutchinson and Ojabo turning pro. Identifying Haskins’ replacement and settling a quarterback battle between Cade McNamara and J.J. McCarthy will be priorities this spring.

2021 record: 11-2
Starters expected to return: 7 offense, 7 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: S Kyle Hamilton, RB Kyren Williams, G Cain Madden, QB Jack Coan, NG Kurt Hinish, DE Myron Tagovailoa-Amosa, LB Drew White
Key additions: LB Jaylen Sneed, WR Tobias Merriweather, CB Jaden Mickey, DE Tyson Ford, ILB Niuafe Tuihalamaka, OT Aamil Wagner, S Brandon Joseph

Outlook: The start of the Marcus Freeman era didn’t go off as planned, as Notre Dame blew a 21-point lead in a 37-35 loss to Oklahoma State in the PlayStation Fiesta Bowl. The former defensive coordinator will grow into the position, but it’s hard to ignore his energy and desire to upgrade recruiting. The defense got a boost with junior end Isaiah Foskey deciding to return, along with fifth-year seniors Jayson Ademilola and Justin Ademilola. Joseph, an All-American at Northwestern in 2020, has had nine interceptions the past two seasons. Center Jarrett Patterson also hasn’t announced his future plans. With Coan departing, Drew Pyne and Tyler Buchner will battle for the quarterback job this spring. The offensive line should be better, especially after freshmen Joe Alt and Blake Fisher emerged as the starting tackles. The Irish will play road games against Ohio State, North Carolina, Syracuse and Southern California in 2022.

2021 record: 10-4 (8-1 Pac-12)
Starters expected to return: 7 offense, 6 defense, 2 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: LB Devin Lloyd, LB Nephi Sewell, DE Mika Tafua, WR Britain Covey, RB TJ Pledger, C Nick Ford, OT Bamidele Olaseni, S Vonte Davis
Key additions: LB Mohamoud Diabate, QB Nathan Johnson, ATH Justius Lowe, LB Lander Barton, S Elijah Davis, LB Justin Medlock, WR Landon Morris, TE Logan Kendall

Outlook: The Utes’ inspiring season ended with a disappointing 48-45 loss to Ohio State in the Rose Bowl. Still, Kyle Whittingham and his team did amazing work following the tragic deaths of two players. The Utes should again be favored to win the Pac-12, even with star players such as Lloyd, Sewell and Covey departing for the NFL. Last week, the Utes added transfer Diabate, who was Florida’s second-leading tackler last season. Quarterback Cameron Rising will enter the offseason as the undisputed starter. The Utes open the 2022 season at Florida and also play San Diego State in a nonconference game.

2021 record: 9-3 (6-2 ACC)
Starters expected to return: 8 offense, 10 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: OT Ikem Ekwonu, RB Zonovan Knight, RB Ricky Person Jr., WR Emeka Emezie, DE Daniel Joseph
Key additions: ATH Michael Allen, DT Brandon Cleveland, OLB Torren Wright, G Jacarrius Peak, QB M.J. Morris, P Shane McDonough

Outlook: The Wolfpack were disappointed about not having the chance to complete just their second 10-win season in 116 years when the Holiday Bowl was canceled because of COVID-19 issues for UCLA. But NC State will be in prime position to reach that milestone in 2022, and possibly win even more. Quarterback Devin Leary, who threw for 3,433 yards with 35 touchdowns, is returning. Ekwonu, a potential top-10 pick, will be difficult to replace, but the other four starting offensive linemen should return. With linebacker Payton Wilson, cornerback Derrek Pitts Jr. and safety Tanner Ingle already declaring their intentions to stay, the Wolfpack might bring back 14 of their top 15 tacklers. NC State’s nonconference schedule in 2022 (East Carolina, Charleston Southern, Texas Tech and UConn) is more than manageable.

2021 record: 12-2 (8-1 Big 12)
Starters expected to return: 7 offense, 6 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: RB Jaylen Warren, WR Tay Martin, G Josh Sills, LB Malcolm Rodriguez, LB Devin Harper, S Kolby Harvell-Peel
Key additions: WR Talyn Shettron, QB Garrett Rangel, RB Braylin Presley, OT Tyrone Webber, LB Xavier Benson, RB C.J. Brown

Outlook: The Cowboys came within a few inches of winning the Big 12 title and possibly reaching the CFP, but instead settled for a 21-point comeback in their win over Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl, which coach Mike Gundy called the biggest in the program’s history. With quarterback Spencer Sanders and most of the offense returning, the Pokes should be potent again in 2022. The defense will need a facelift — Knowles left for Ohio State and leading tacklers Rodriguez and Harper departed. Gundy isn’t sure whether he’ll promote from within or hire an outside candidate as defensive coordinator. The Pokes will play Big 12 road games at Baylor, TCU, Kansas State, Kansas and Oklahoma next season.

2021 record: 11-2 (7-2 Big Ten)
Starters expected to return: 5 offense, 9 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: RB Kenneth Walker III, WR Jalen Nailor, C Matt Allen, OT Kevin Jarvis, DE Jacub Panasiuk, DE Drew Beesley, K Matt Coghlin
Key additions: LB Aaron Brule, DE Khris Bogle, LB Jacoby Windmon, RB Jalen Berger, CB Caleb Coley, DT Alex VanSumeren, RB Dillon Tatum, WR Antonio Gates Jr.

Outlook: Mel Tucker is convinced he can build a national championship caliber program at Michigan State, and he took a big step toward credibility in his second season. The nine-win improvement from 2020 is the biggest in school history. The Spartans started 8-0 and were No. 3 in the initial CFP rankings before cooling off. They’ll undoubtedly miss Walker, who was the second-leading rusher in the FBS with 1,636 yards in 12 games. The Spartans added Berger, a transfer from Wisconsin, and might be looking for another running back to help. Three starting offensive linemen are expected to exit, along with Nailor, the team’s second-leading receiver. Much of the defense will return, but the Spartans need better pass-rushers, which is why they added Brule from Mississippi State and Windmon from UNLV.

2021 record: 10-3 (6-2 ACC)
Starters expected to return: 11 offense, 6 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: DE Xavier Thomas, LB James Skalski, CB Andrew Booth Jr., FS Nolan Turner, CB Mario Goodrich
Key additions: QB Cade Klubnik, CB Jeadyn Lukus, WR Antonio Williams, OT Collin Sadler, WR Adam Randall, CB Toriano Pride

Outlook: Change is finally coming to Dabo Swinney’s dynasty, and the Tigers are undergoing a major overhaul on their coaching staff, after Brent Venables left for Oklahoma and offensive coordinator Tony Elliott was named Virginia’s new coach. Swinney stayed in house to replace them, promoting Wes Goodwin to defensive coordinator and Brandon Streeter to offensive playcaller. Quarterback D.J. Uiagalelei threw more interceptions (10) than touchdowns (nine) in his first full season as a starter, and he might be pushed by Klubnik, who is enrolling this month. The Tigers have to play better on the offensive line and need playmakers to emerge at receiver. Streeter might look to get running backs Will Shipley and Kobe Pace and tight ends more involved in the passing game. The defense will get a boost from the return of tackle Bryan Bresee, who missed much of 2021 with a torn ACL.

2021 record: 10-4 (7-2 Pac-12)
Starters expected to return: 8 offense, 7 defense, 2 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: DE Kayvon Thibodeaux, CB Mykael Wright, CB DJ James, QB Anthony Brown, WR Devon Williams, G George Moore, S Verone McKinley III
Key additions: QB Bo Nix, LB Devon Jackson, ATH Jalil Tucker, DE Gracen Halton, S Trejon Williams, LB Harrison Taggart, DB Christian Gonzalez, DT Sam Taimani

Outlook: After former coach Mario Cristobal bolted to return to Miami, his alma mater, the Ducks are gambling on Lanning, a first-time head coach. Lanning inherits a defense that loses Thibodeaux, potentially the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft, but brings back a lot of talent, including LB Noah Sewell, CB Dontae Manning and NT Popo Aumavae. Only three starters on offense are expected to leave, and Lanning is bringing in former Auburn starter Nix to compete for the starting quarterback job. Even with Lanning’s inexperience, there’s enough in place for the Ducks to win the Pac-12 North again. The Ducks open the season against Georgia in Atlanta and play BYU at home.

2021 record: 12-2 (8-0 AAC)
Starters expected to return: 7 offense, 6 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: G Keenan Murphy, C Kody Russey, OT Dennis Bardwell, CB/KR Marcus Jones, DT Logan Hall, DE David Anenih, LB Deontay Anderson, CB Damarion Williams, WR Jake Herslow
Key additions: WR Matthew Golden, WR Brice Johnson, OL Demetrius Hunter, CB Moses Alexander, DE Nadame Tucker, DT Amipeleasi Lange

Outlook: After winning 12 games for only the third time in school history, the Cougars will again be among the AAC favorites in 2022, if not the favorite. There are plenty of pieces coming back on offense, including quarterback Clayton Tune, RB Alton McCaskill and receiver Nathaniel Dell. The offensive line needs to play better and Dell needs help on the perimeter. Houston’s “Third Ward” defense is what has fueled its resurgence under Dana Holgorsen, and the Cougars are fortunate coordinator Doug Belk is sticking around after drawing interest from a handful of Power 5 programs. Jones’ big-play capabilities on kick returns and in the secondary will be sorely missed.

2021 record: 11-3 (7-1 ACC)
Starters expected to return: 8 offense, 7 defense, 2 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: WR Jaquarii Roberson, RB Christian Beal-Smith, TE Brandon Chapman, DT Miles Fox, LB Luke Masterson, LB Traveon Redd, CB Ja’sir Taylor
Key additions: DT Kobie Turner, WR Jaydn Girard, CB Zamari Stevenson, DE Eli Hall, WR Wesley Grimes, LB Tommy Bebie

Outlook: Dave Clawson continues to do amazing work at Wake Forest, leading the Demon Deacons to at least 10 wins for only the second time in the 114-year history of the program. Wake Forest won the Atlantic Division and played in its sixth consecutive bowl game. With quarterback Sam Hartman coming back, the Demon Deacons should be right back in the mix for an ACC title in 2022. Hartman will miss Roberson, who had 71 catches for 1,078 yards with eight touchdowns, but A.T. Perry is just as good. Beal-Smith, the team’s leading rusher, entered the transfer portal. As potent as Wake Forest has been on offense, its defense could be better. Clawson hired Purdue defensive coordinator Brad Lambert to replace Lyle Hemphill, who left for Duke.

2021 record: 10-4 (7-2 Big Ten)
Starters expected to return: 8 offense, 7 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: C Tyler Linderbaum, RB Tyler Goodson, G Kyler Schott, DE Zach VanValkenburg, FS Jack Koerner, CB Matt Hankins, S/LB Dane Belton
Key additions: DE Aaron Graves, S Xavier Nwankpa, DE Caden Crawford, RB Kaleb Johnson, RB Jaziun Patterson, OT Jack Dotzler

Outlook: Kirk Ferentz’s football machine keeps chugging along, inch by inch, at a very Iowa-like speed. The Hawkeyes won 10 games for the second time in three seasons, but it’s impossible not to imagine what they might have done with a more-than-pedestrian offense. Iowa ranked 121st in the FBS in total offense (303.7 yards), 109th in passing (180.1 yards) and 99th in scoring (23.4 points). Quarterbacks Spencer Petras and Alex Padilla combined to complete 55% of their attempts with 12 touchdowns and 11 interceptions. Goodson turned pro after running for 1,151 yards with six scores. The Hawkeyes need much more out of their passing game. Even with Hankins and VanValkenburg moving on, Iowa’s defense will again be stingy in 2022. Will its offense be better?

2021 record: 12-2 (7-2 Big 12)
Starters expected to return: 3 offense, 4 defense, 2 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: RB Abram Smith, CB Kalon Barnes, S Jalen Pitre, WR Tyquan Thornton, LB Terrel Bernard, S JT Woods, WR R.J. Sneed, CB Raleigh Texada, RB Trestan Ebner
Key additions: WR Armani Winfield, TE Kaian Roberts-Day, G George Maile, S Devyn Bobby, OLB Jeremy Patton, RB Richard Reese

Outlook: The Bears completed a remarkable turnaround after going 2-7 in coach Dave Aranda’s first season. They set a school record with 12 victories, won a Big 12 title and defeated five ranked foes. With a 21-7 victory against Ole Miss in the Allstate Sugar Bowl, they won a New Year’s Day bowl game for the first time since 1957. Now, Aranda and his staff will carry a lot of momentum into 2022, with four starting offensive linemen electing to come back. Ebner and Smith will be big losses in the running game, and Gerry Bohanon and Blake Sharpen will duke it out for the starting quarterback job this spring. Help will also be needed on the perimeter, with Thornton and Sneed moving on. Aranda might once again look for replacements through the transfer portal.

2021 record: 11-2 (7-2 Big 12)
Starters expected to return: 4 offense, 4 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: DE Nik Bonitto, LB Brian Asamoah, DE Isaiah Thomas, DL Perrion Winfrey, S Delarrin Turner-Yell, S Pat Fields, WR Jadon Haselwood, RB Kennedy Brooks, G Marquis Hayes, OT Tyrese Robinson
Key additions: QB Dillon Gabriel, G McKade Mettauer, TE Daniel Parker Jr., RB Gavin Sawchuk, ATH Gentry Williams, LB Kobie McKenzie, WR Nicholas Anderson, DL Jonah La’ulu

Outlook: The Sooners’ transition from former coach Lincoln Riley to Brent Venables might be a lot smoother if quarterback Caleb Williams sticks around. He has entered the transfer portal, although Williams said returning to OU remains an option. The Sooners weren’t taking a chance, however, and grabbed Gabriel, who threw for more than 8,000 yards with 70 touchdowns in three seasons at UCF. Freshman receiver Mario Williams also might transfer. Venables, who has never been a head coach, will have to address heavy losses on the line of scrimmage. Perhaps the team’s six best defenders are departing, along with the leading rusher and three of the top four receivers. The addition of Mettauer, who started 28 games at California, will help ease the losses in the interior offensive line.

2021 record: 10-3
Starters expected to return: 8 offense, 11 defense, 2 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: RB Tyler Allgeier, WR Neil Pau’u, C James Empey
Key additions: OT Kingsley Suamataia, WR Cody Hagen, WR Dominique McKenzie, DE Aisea Moa, DE Logan Fano, RB Christopher Brooks, FB Houston Heimuli

Outlook: The Cougars went 21-4 the past two seasons, which earned coach Kalani Sitake a new contract and hefty raise. This past season, BYU went 6-1 against Power 5 foes and 5-0 against the Pac-12. With BYU moving to the Big 12 in 2023, it has to get bigger, stronger and deeper on defense, which was a shortcoming in losses to Boise State, Baylor and UAB in the Independence Bowl. The good news is that every starter is expected back on defense in 2022, when injured players like linebacker Keenan Pili and cornerbacks Micah Harper and Keenan Ellis should be available. Replacing Allgeier, who ran for 1,606 yards and led FBS players with 23 rushing touchdowns, won’t be easy. The Cougars added Brooks, who led Cal in rushing last season, and Heimuli, a transfer from Stanford to help. Quarterback Jaren Hall and four starting offensive linemen are returning. BYU’s schedule next season includes home games against Baylor and Arkansas, road games at Oregon, Boise State and Stanford and a contest against Notre Dame in Las Vegas.

2021 record: 13-1 (8-0 AAC)
Starters expected to return: 7 offense, 2 defense, 2 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: QB Desmond Ridder, CB Ahmad Gardner, CB Coby Bryant, DE Myjai Sanders, WR Alec Pierce, RB Jerome Ford, LB Joel Dublanko, LB Darrian Beavers, DT Curtis Brooks
Key additions: DE Mario Eugenio, CB Oliver Bridges, DT Derrick Shepard, QB J.Q. Hardaway, QB Luther Richesson

Outlook: The Bearcats became the first team from a Group of 5 conference to reach the CFP, and now they’ll have to reload their roster and replace much of the firepower that got them there. The good news: Coach Luke Fickell stuck around to help them do it. There are expected to be especially heavy losses on defense, including star cornerbacks Gardner and Bryant, leading tackler Dublanko and top pass-rusher Brooks. Ridder, a two-time ACC Offensive Player of the Year, had a 44-6 record as a starter and won’t be easily replaced. Redshirt freshman Evan Prater, who was named Ohio’s Mr. Football in 2019, will be the favorite to take over in 2022. Cincinnati might take a step back next season, but it’ll still be a contender for an AAC title. The Bearcats play at Arkansas and host Indiana next season.

2021 record: 9-4 (4-4 SEC)
Starters expected to return: 6 offense, 3 defense, 2 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: WR Treylon Burks, OT Myron Cunningham, WR Tyson Morris, LB Grant Morgan, LB Hayden Henry, DE Tre Williams, CB Montaric Brown, DT John Ridgeway, S Joe Foucha, DB Greg Brooks Jr.
Key additions: WR Jadon Haselwood, DE Landon Jackson, OT Andrew Chamblee, S Myles Rowser, OT E’Marion Harris, WR Isaiah Sategna

Outlook: It might have taken Sam Pittman decades to finally get a chance to be a head coach, but he’s making the most of it now. The Hogs went 9-4 in his second season, winning two more games than they had in the previous three years combined. They beat three ranked foes and nearly took down two more. There will be much work to do in the spring in rebuilding the front seven on defense. Star safety Jalen Catalon will be back from shoulder surgery, although three starting defensive backs are leaving, including Foucha and Brooks Jr., who unexpectedly entered the transfer portal. Three top receivers are departing, but the addition of Haselwood should give the passing game a boost. As if playing in the rugged SEC West wasn’t enough, the Hogs will play nonconference games against Cincinnati, BYU and Liberty in 2022.

2021 record: 10-3 (5-3 SEC)
Key starters expected to return: 7 offense, 7 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: OT Darian Kinnard, C Luke Fortner, WR Wan’Dale Robinson, DE Joshua Paschal, NG Marquan McCall, CB Cedric Dort Jr., FS Yusuf Corker
Key additions: WR Tayvion Robinson, OT Kiyaunta Goodwin, DE Tyreese Fearbry, LB Keaten Wade, WR Dane Key, WR Barion Brown, G Tashawan Manning, DT Darrion Henry-Young, CB Zahquan Frazier

Outlook: The Wildcats narrowly missed out on possibly playing in a New Year’s Six bowl game, but they still won 10 games in a season for only the second time since 1977. (The first was 2018, also under coach Mark Stoops.) With tailback Chris Rodriguez Jr. opting to come back, the Wildcats could be very explosive on offense next season. Quarterback Will Levis, a Penn State transfer, should be even better with a full offseason. Both offensive tackles might turn pro. Defensively, there are a lot of questions about who is coming back with 10 senior starters on that side of the ball. If at least a handful decide to return, the Wildcats might push for 10 victories again.

2021 record: 4-8 (3-6 Pac-12)
Starters expected to return: 6 offense, 6 defense, 2 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: WR Drake London, LB Drake Jackson, LB Kana’i Mauga, CB Chris Steele, CB Isaac Taylor-Stuart, G Liam Jimmons, T Jalen McKenzie
Key additions: WR Terrell Bynum, DT Tashawn Manning, CB Domani Jackson, RB Raleek Brown, S Zion Branch, CB Fabian Ross, DE Earl Barquet, OT Bobby Haskins

Outlook: Lincoln Riley inherited a top-five program from Bob Stoops at Oklahoma, but he’s taking on a mess at USC. The Trojans are coming off their worst season in 30 years and haven’t won more than eight games since 2017. On Monday, QB Jaxson Dart entered the transfer portal (former starter Kedon Slovis has already transferred to Pittsburgh), potentially opening the door for former Oklahoma quarterback Caleb Williams to rejoin Riley at USC. London caught 88 passes in just eight games and will be sorely missed. The right side of the offensive line will have to be replaced; Haskins started at left tackle at Virginia last season. New defensive coordinator Alex Grinch will have to rebuild the linebacker corps and secondary. Riley won’t work miracles in his first season, but there’s enough talent to make noise in the mediocre Pac-12.

2021 record: 10-3 (6-2 SEC)
Starters expected to return: 4 offense, 6 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: QB Matt Corral, RB Jerrion Ealy, WR Braylon Sanders, WR Dontario Drummond, C Orlando Umana, DE Sam Williams, LB Mark Robinson, SS Jake Springer, LB Chance Campbell
Key additions: WR Jordan Watkins, S Ladarius Tennison, LB Jaron Willis, DT Zxavian Harris, CB Nick Cull, OT Bryson Hurst, LB Reginald Hughes, RB Zach Evans

Outlook: The Rebels took a gamble on Lane Kiffin, but it paid off when he guided them to their first 10-win regular season in school history. The season ended with a thud, after they lost Corral to an injury and lost to Baylor in the Sugar Bowl. Now, Kiffin will have to replace many of the difference-makers on offense, including Corral, leading rusher Ealy and top receivers Drummond and Sanders. Backup quarterback Luke Altmyer was shaky in the Sugar Bowl, but it was the first extensive action of his career. It wouldn’t be a surprise, however, if Kiffin adds a more experienced passer through the transfer portal. Robinson and top pass-rusher Williams are big losses on defense, but as many as six starters might be returning on that side of the ball.

2021 record: 9-4 (6-3 Big Ten)
Starters expected to return: 6 offense, 4 defense, 2 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: WR Kendric Pryor, WR Danny Davis III, TE Jake Ferguson, G Josh Seltzner, OT Logan Bruss, LB Leo Chenal, LB Jack Sanborn, S Scott Nelson, LB Noah Burks, CB Caesar Williams

Outlook: The Badgers recovered from a 1-3 start to produce a nine-win campaign, which ended with a 20-13 victory against Arizona State in the Las Vegas Bowl. To compete in the Big Ten West in 2022, they’re going to have to rebuild a defense that led the FBS in total defense (239.1 yards) and run defense (64.8 yards). Leading tacklers Chenal and Sanborn are moving on, along with four starters in the secondary. Quarterback Graham Mertz needs to play better, and he’ll have to do without his three top pass-catchers from 2021: Davis, Ferguson and Pryor. Two starters will have to be replaced up front on offense, along with offensive line coach Joe Rudolph, who left for Virginia Tech. The Badgers will play Michigan State, Purdue, Ohio State and Iowa on the road in 2022.

2021 record: 7-6 (3-5 SEC)
Starters expected to return: 8 offense, 6 defense, 1 special teams
Key starters expected to leave: RB ZaQuandre White, RB Kevin Harris, FS Jaylan Foster, LB Damani Staley, DE Kingsley Enagbare, DT Jabari Ellis, PK Parker White
Key additions: QB Spencer Rattler, TE Austin Stogner, QB Tanner Bailey, CB Keenan Nelson Jr., QB Braden Davis, S Peyton Williams, LB Stone Blanton, S Kajuan Banks

Outlook: Shane Beamer’s first season as a head coach couldn’t have gone much better, given the Gamecocks’ lack of depth and problems at quarterback. Still, they scratched out seven victories, including wins over Florida, Auburn and a 38-21 rout of North Carolina in the Duke’s Mayo Bowl. Beamer addressed his quarterback issues by bringing in former Oklahoma starter Rattler and signing three high school passers. Bailey was the No. 6 pocket passer and Davis was the No. 7 dual-threat quarterback, according to ESPN recruiting. Some key players will have to be replaced on defense, but linebacker Brad Johnson and safety R.J. Roderick will be returning for another season.

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College football Power Rankings after Week 10

The first round of the College Football Playoff rankings dropped on Tuesday and the annual poll appeared to motivate teams across the country — just not the ones you think.

College Football’s Week 10 was filled with upsets, close calls and previously undefeated records crumbling as underdogs took over the sport Saturday.

Purdue shocked the college football landscape for the second time this season with a 40-29 victory against No. 3 Michigan State while No. 9 Wake Forest’s unbeaten run to start the season ended at 8-0 following a 58-55 loss at North Carolina.

Other top-10 teams were lucky to survive upset bids from rivals as Alabama escaped a LSU with nothing to lose, 20-14, and Cincinnati mustered two separate goal-line stands late in the game to hold on against Tulsa, 28-20, and remain undefeated.

Oregon also overcame a lackluster first half to beat rival Washington and keep its spot in the CFP rankings safe for now. Other rated teams weren’t so lucky. Mississippi State, Kentucky and Minnesota all lost to unranked opponents and the Power Rankings got arguably the biggest shuffle of the season this week.

With the results behind us and the next round of CFP rankings just a few days away, it’s the perfect time to check out this week’s Power Rankings.


Georgia quarterback JT Daniels finally returned to action, but not as the No. 1 Bulldogs’ starter. Former walk-on Stetson Bennett started for the fifth straight game, leading Georgia to a 43-6 rout of Missouri at home. Bennett completed 13 of 19 passes for 255 yards with two touchdowns. He improved to 9-2 as a starter, including a 6-0 mark this season. Daniels, who injured his lat muscle more than a month ago, saw action for the first time in five games. He threw for 82 yards with one touchdown and one interception on 7-for-11 passing. The Bulldogs piled up 505 yards of offense, including 377 passing. Sophomore receiver Jermaine Burton, who has been slowed by injuries this season, had a big day with three catches for 76 yards with one score.

“I think Missouri came into this game, and their game plan was to not let us run the ball,” Bennett said. “They were popping backers and had low safeties and were trying to stop our run game. When they do that, we have to be explosive to make them back up. If they do not, that is how we score points.” — Mark Schlabach

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The Bulldogs post 34 unanswered points in the 43-6 rout of Missouri to remain unbeaten.


Nothing about Alabama’s 20-14 win over LSU on Saturday night was pretty. The offensive line was a mess of penalties and missed blocks. Quarterback Bryce Young was sacked four times, and the running game couldn’t get going as Brian Robinson Jr. rushed for only 18 yards on 12 carries. The defense gave up too many big plays early in the game, breathing life into a depleted rival. Rather than make quick work of a team it was favored to beat by four touchdowns, the Crimson Tide let the Tigers hang around until the very end, the win secured only after a Hail Mary came up short with no time remaining. — Alex Scarborough


The Bearcats aren’t racking up the style points, but they keep winning. They needed a pair of goal-line stands in the final minutes Saturday to hold off Tulsa for a 28-20 victory at home and remain unbeaten. Cincinnati jumped out to a 14-0 lead early and built what seemed to be a comfortable lead in the third quarter. But the Bearcats had trouble stopping the run (allowing 297 yards) and had to come up with huge stops at the end with their back to the goal line to win the game. — Chris Low


The No. 4 team in the country has had its fair share of close calls this season. But could they escape another close game and do it on a rainy night in Stok–ehh, Seattle? Washington clearly arrived on their home turf motivated to back up the strange verbal jousting that had gone on between head coach Jimmy Lake and Oregon over the last week. But whatever fuel Lake’s words provided was gone about halfway through Saturday’s game. After being held to three points for most of the first half, Oregon realized its winning recipe was to just run the ball over and over (329 total rushing yards) and away from any Pac-12 after dark shenanigans that could have derailed their season. The 26-16 final is nothing to write to the committee about, but being one of the first four teams in from the first week of the rankings, means all the Ducks have to do is keep winning. — Paolo Uggetti


Quarterback C.J. Stroud threw for 405 yards and two touchdowns in a 26-17 win over Nebraska, but it is safe to say the Buckeyes had a disjointed performance on offense — a continuing concern as the season moves down the stretch. Ohio State could not get its running game going until late in the game. TreVeyon Henderson was held to 92 yards on the day, and the Buckeyes settled for far too many field goals — four, in fact, which ended up being the difference in the game. Perhaps the brightest spot is the continued improvement on defense, which has made significant strides since the loss to Oregon. Nebraska had only 361 yards of total offense, and went 2-of-13 on third down. — Andrea Adelson


The Sooners had a bye week after coming in at No. 8 in the initial College Football Playoff rankings. It’s a tough pill to swallow for a team that’s won 17 straight games, but the Sooners know this season is all that counts. OU was able to spend part of its week off watching its next opponent, Baylor, give up 461 passing yards and 70 rushing yards to first-time starter Chandler Morris and TCU. — Dave Wilson


The Spartans were 8-0 coming into the game against Purdue with hopes of making the College Football Playoff at the end of the season. After an emotional, hard-fought game against Michigan, the Spartans lost 40-29 to the Boilermakers. Purdue quarterback Aidan O’Connell threw for 536 yards, which was the fifth-most passing yards in a game in Big Ten History. Michigan State tried to come back late in the game, but O’Connell and Purdue’s offense could not be stopped. Running back Kenneth Walker III was held to 136 yards and one touchdown in the loss and Michigan State now has to pick up the pieces from this loss with a shot at still winning the conference. — Tom VanHaaren


The Irish were able to hold Navy to just 184 total yards in the 34-6 win. Navy had only 166 yards rushing while Notre Dame had 430 total yards, 269 coming from Jack Coan through the air. Kyren Williams was able to run two touchdowns in and help Notre Dame improve to 8-1 on the season with the lone loss coming to Cincinnati. Receiver Kevin Austin Jr. had 139 receiving yards and a touchdown in what ended up being a rout for the Irish. — Tom VanHaaren


Michigan bounced back after its loss to Michigan State with a 29-7 win over Indiana at home to get back on track before a tough finish to its schedule. Michigan’s defense was able to hold Indiana to just 195 total yards of offense and only one touchdown. Michigan running back Blake Corum was knocked out of the game with an apparent leg injury, but Hassan Haskins took the load and had 162 rushing yards on 25 carries (a career high) and one touchdown. Indiana was dealing with injuries across the board, but this was a needed win for Michigan as Penn State and Ohio State are both lurking in the next three weeks. — Tom VanHaaren


There were no offensive touchdowns, and the starting quarterbacks combined to complete only 50% of their passes. There were certainly elements of an all-defense battle in Texas A&M’s win over Auburn, but the superior team was never in question. The Aggies averaged 6.4 yards per play to Auburn’s 3.2, and Isaiah Spiller and Devon Achane combined to rush 31 times for 210 yards. A&M outscored the Tigers 17-0 after halftime to cruise to a 20-3 win, and the only reason it was that close was that the Aggies had to settle for five field goal attempts. Quarterback Zach Calzada appeared to suffer a pretty bad shoulder injury in the third quarter but returned to finish the game. — Bill Connelly


Oklahoma State has been winning with defense all year, but the Cowboys painted a defensive masterpiece in Morgantown on Saturday. They sacked West Virginia quarterbacks eight times and allowed just 2.3 yards per play in a 24-3 victory. WVU didn’t top 100 total yards until midway through the fourth quarter, and when they did, OSU quickly picked off a pass. Cowboy quarterback Spencer Sanders threw two touchdowns to Tay Martin and completed 21 of 31 overall, and that was all the offense the Pokes needed. This team has embraced winning ugly, and it was all sorts of ugly in West Virginia. — Bill Connelly

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The Cowboys beat the Mountaineers to improve to 8-1, their best record through nine games since 2015.

Wake Forest was hoping to crack the top-four in the College Football Playoff rankings after debuting at No. 9 at 8-0. A loss this week to North Carolina derailed those efforts, though, as the Demon Deacons fell 58-55 to the Tar Heels. It was a back-and-forth game that had Wake up 31-24 at the half and saw multiple lead changes. Quarterback Sam Hartman had 398 yards and five touchdowns through the air and 78 yards and two touchdowns on the ground. The 55 points wasn’t enough to overcome the North Carolina ground game that had 336 yards and six touchdowns, led by Ty Chandler, who had four of the six. Despite the one loss, Wake Forest still has N.C. State, Clemson and Boston College to finish out the season. — Tom VanHaaren


It wasn’t as easy as it looked like it would be as they were rolling to a 24-0 halftime lead, but Lane Kiffin’s Rebels held Liberty at bay and cruised, 27-14. Quarterback Matt Corral played with an injured ankle and without regulars on the offensive line and receiving corps, but he completed 20 of 27 passes for 324 yards and a touchdown. Two early Jerrion Ealy touchdown runs — one from 70 yards out — gave the Rebels an early edge. While Malik Willis and the Liberty offense were eventually able to find some traction, three interceptions kept the game from getting too close. The Rebels prevailed over former head coach Hugh Freeze and his Flames. — Bill Connelly


By the end of the season, it’s very much within the realm of possibility that the highest-ranked team in Texas will reside in San Antonio. UTSA turned in another dominant showing with a 44-23 rout of UTEP to further its case for a top-25 spot after getting snubbed by the College Football Playoff selection committee in the initial rankings on Tuesday. Sincere McCormick ran for 169 yards on 21 carries, including a 75-yard touchdown on the second play from scrimmage. — Kyle Bonagura


A week after entering the rankings, Houston flirted with disaster, giving up two 100-yard kickoff returns for a touchdown to upset-minded USF. But the Cougars’ offense is humming along. They dispatched the Bulls behind Clayton Tune (21-of-26 for 385 yards and three TDs), two 100-yard rushers (Ta’Zhawn Henry had a 97-yard TD run and ended with 130 yards on 10 carries and Alton McCaskill added 125 on 22) and Nathaniel Dell caught eight passes for 164 yards and a TD. Sure, the defense is a concern, but 647 total yards will do the trick most days. — Dave Wilson


The Cougars got a nice bump from the playoff committee on Tuesday that put them in the top-15, and on Saturday they responded accordingly. Against 1-6 Idaho State, they didn’t hesitate to put the game away early. In just a quarter and a half, they scored touchdowns on their first five possessions and took a 35-0 lead. By the time the game wrapped with a 59-14 final score, BYU had amassed nearly 1,000 total yards on offense while the defense forced 10 punts, two turnovers and only allowed Idaho State to pick up one of 12 third-down opportunities. With a handful of teams losing ahead of them, a dominant win like this one is sure to keep bumping the Cougars up the rankings. — Paolo Uggetti


After doing some very Pitt things early on at Duke, the Panthers righted themselves and pulled away behind quarterback Kenny Pickett. The senior passed for 413 yards and three touchdowns, becoming the first Pitt quarterback ever to record consecutive 3,000-yard passing seasons. Pickett also tied Alex Van Pelt’s team record with his 14th game of 300 pass yards or more. Pitt used a 23-point second quarter to take control and had 220 rush yards and three touchdowns against a hapless Duke defense. The Panthers have scored 50 points or more four times in the same season for the first time since 1905. They remain atop the ACC’s Coastal Division heading into their most important stretch of the season. — Adam Rittenberg


The Bears were hit hard by an emotional TCU team that was playing its first game in 21 years without Gary Patterson on the sideline. Baylor’s defense was shredded by first-time starter Chandler Morris, who had 531 yards of total offense despite his offense being down to just one scholarship running back. Another area of concern was the two interceptions thrown by Gerry Bohanon, meaning he’s thrown five picks in the past three games after none in the first six. Baylor has now lost six of its last seven to TCU. — Dave Wilson


Quarterback Devin Leary has been a difference maker in the Wolfpack’s 7-2 start. Against Florida State, Leary threw for 314 yards and four touchdown passes — the first NC State quarterback with 300 passing yards, and four passing touchdowns in consecutive games since Russell Wilson in 2009. The NC State defense, sound for the majority of the season, held the ACC’s No. 2 rushing offense to just 38 yards on the ground. This is the first time since 2002 that NC State has beaten Clemson and Florida State in the same season. That also happens to be the Wolfpack’s last 11-win season. — Andrea Adelson


It wasn’t pretty, but it was a conference win for Iowa. It featured all the standards of a Hawkeyes victory this season but with the caveat of backup quarterback Alex Padilla coming in and leading three scoring drives. Iowa led Northwestern 14-3 at the half and survived being outscored 9-3 over the final two quarters to leave Evansville with a 17-12 win behind a dominant defense and just enough points early on. Despite the victory, Iowa is still on the outside looking in in the Big Ten’s West Division after a couple crucial conference losses. — Shea Carlson


Even without star quarterback Grayson McCall, the Chanticleers won comfortably, 28-8, against struggling Georgia Southern. McCall was ruled out indefinitely prior to the game with what the school described as an “upper body injury.” His replacement, Bryce Carpenter, threw for just 85 yards, but they didn’t need much from the passing game as Carpenter (44 yards), Shermari Jones (96 yards) and Braydon Bennett (78 yards) were effective rushing the ball. The Chanticleers limited Georgia Southern to 233 yards of total offense and forced four turnovers. — Kyle Bonagura


The Badgers’ 1-3 start continues to fade farther into the distance as the Big Ten West Division title comes further into view. Wisconsin employed an increasingly familiar formula — suffocating defense and a run-driven offense — to easily put Rutgers away by halftime on the road. The Badgers continue to flip their turnover margin, recording three first-half takeaways, including a Caesar Williams interception return for a touchdown. Freshman Braelon Allen recorded another 100-yard rushing performance, and quarterback Graham Mertz had his best game of the season with 240 pass yards and three touchdowns. Other than a leg injury to running back Chez Mellusi, Wisconsin had a very good day in extending its win streak to five. — Adam Rittenberg

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Graham Mertz tosses three touchdown passes leading Wisconsin to the dominant win over Rutgers.

After two straight awesome performances, Auburn’s Bo Nix suffered through an awful afternoon in a 20-3 loss at Texas A&M. Against a stout Aggie secondary, Nix completed 20 of 41 passes for 153 yards, was intercepted, sacked four times, and had a fumble that was returned for the game’s only touchdown. Tank Bigsby managed only 69 yards on 15 carries, and after an early field goal drive, the Tigers finished just one more drive inside the Aggie 40. They were outscored 17-0 after halftime. The forgettable performance all but eliminates Auburn from SEC West contention. — Bill Connelly


The 52-7 final score accurately depicts the fact that Utah dominated Stanford, but it could have been much worse. Utah led 38-0 at halftime in one of the most dominant halves of football between any teams in college football this season. The Utes ran for 336 yards and outgained the Cardinal 440-28 in the first half. It was just the third time since 2004 a Power 5 team had been outgained by 400-plus yards in a half and the first time since 2013. Three Utes (Tavion Thomas, Micah Bernard and TJ Pledger) finished with over 100 yards rushing. — Kyle Bonagura


The Nittany Lions ended their three-game losing streak at Maryland, overcoming a slow start on offense to pull away in the second half. Penn State used a familiar formula of Sean Clifford’s passing, Jahan Dotson’s receiving and incredible red-zone defense. Clifford had 363 passing yards and three touchdowns, finding Dotson 11 times for 242 yards and three touchdowns. Neither team rushed the ball well, but Penn State converted 10 of 18 opportunities on third down. The Lions defense also stepped up, as cornerback Ji’Ayir Brown sealed the win with an 87-yard interception return for a touchdown with less than three minutes to play. — Adam Rittenberg

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College football Power Rankings after Week 5

Just when it looked like Georgia could finally surpass Alabama at the top of the college football Power Rankings, the Crimson Tide made another statement this season.

The Bulldogs kicked off the day with another top-10 victory, this time a 37-0 rout against No. 8 Arkansas in Athens, and looked like the best team in the country on their way to a 5-0 record. The shutout was the second straight for the Georgia defense, and the unit has allowed only one team to score double digits this season.

After seeing what the Bulldogs did in the early window, the Crimson Tide flexed their muscle over Lane Kiffin’s Ole Miss squad. Alabama jumped out to a 28-point lead at halftime and rolled to a 42-21 victory to maintain its top position in the rankings.

Losses from last week’s No. 3 (Oregon), No. 7 (Arkansas), No. 9 (Florida), No. 10 (Notre Dame) and No. 11 (Ole Miss) shook up the Power Rankings this week, and we’re just in the first week of October. With only two dominant teams at this point, the rankings should be chock full of chaos moving forward.

The action of Week 5 is in the books. It’s time to take a look at college football’s Power Rankings.


Don’t look now but Alabama’s defense might be back. Ole Miss entered Tuscaloosa with arguably the best offense and the best quarterback in college football, and came away with next to nothing. Lane Kiffin’s Rebels didn’t find the end zone until the third quarter, and by then the game was well in hand. Phil Mathis, Will Anderson and the Bama front seven shut down the Ole Miss running game and made quarterback Matt Corral work for everything he got, which wasn’t much. Throw in the hard-nosed running of Brian Robinson and it looked like an old-school victory for Alabama. — Alex Scarborough


Whether it’s Stetson Bennett at quarterback or JT Daniels at quarterback, Georgia just keeps rolling. And why not with a defense that has been an absolute brick wall this season? Bennett started in place of the injured Daniels, and Georgia built a 24-0 halftime lead Saturday and cruised to a 37-0 shutout of Arkansas. The running game did most of the damage for Georgia, which finished with 273 rushing yards. With a little more than two minutes left in the first quarter, Georgia had 21 points to Arkansas’ 1 yard of total offense. Through five games, the Dawgs have yet to allow a touchdown in the first three quarters, and the only two fourth-quarter touchdowns they’ve given up came long after the outcome had been decided. — Chris Low

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The Bulldogs go up by three touchdowns in the first quarter and cruise to a 37-0 victory over the Razorbacks in the showdown of unbeatens.


In a 51-14 victory, the Hawkeyes cruised to their first conference road win of the season, avoiding any threat of an upset from unranked Maryland on Friday night before a nationally televised audience. Maryland played a mistake-laden game, littered with seven turnovers and 10 penalties, and the opportunistic Hawkeyes capitalized on all of it. Iowa outscored Maryland 31-0 in the second quarter, and recorded four interceptions in the first half. Iowa continued to lean on its running game, led by Tyler Goodson, who was also valuable as a pass-catcher out of the backfield, but the Hawkeyes were able to mix it up offensively against a one-dimensional Maryland team that couldn’t get out of its own way. — Heather Dinich


The Nittany Lions are the first team to start a season 5-0 after starting the previous season 0-5 since Tennessee did it in 1989. Penn State shut out Indiana for the first time in its 24-0 win Saturday. There was a little bit of everything for Penn State with three passing touchdowns, an interception and a blocked field goal. Jahan Dotson added two more receiving touchdowns to his season total and now has a touchdown catch in six straight games. The offense had six players with at least one carry for a total of 199 yards on the ground, as well. — VanHaaren


Luke Fickell’s team highlighted early-season road trips to Indiana and Notre Dame and passed both tests. Cincinnati’s signature defense led the way against the Fighting Irish, forcing three first-half turnovers and flashing outstanding technique in the secondary. The defense bought enough time for quarterback Desmond Ridder and the downfield passing attack to get going. Ridder led a clutch 75-yard touchdown drive and finished with 297 pass yards and three total touchdowns (two passing, one rushing). The Bearcats became the first Group of 5 team in the College Football Playoff era to record a road win against an AP top-10 team from the Power 5. Let the playoff buzz grow. — Adam Rittenberg


The Sooners got a 37-31 road win against a K-State team that beat them the past two seasons, and Spencer Rattler was ultra-efficient, completing 22 of 25 passes and leading the Sooners to scores on seven of their nine possessions in the game (and one of those ended in a victory formation). Overshadowed in concerns about OU’s struggles — four of the Sooners’ first five wins by were seven points or fewer for the first time in school history — is that the Sooners have now won 13 straight. And their coach knows how to win: It was Lincoln Riley’s 50th win in 58 games with only Barry Switzer (56) and Bud Wilkinson (57) reaching 50 victories faster at OU. — Dave Wilson


The last time the Wolverines were in Madison, in 2019, it was for a 35-14 blowout by Wisconsin in which the Badgers had 359 rushing yards. This time, it was Michigan’s defense that did the dominating, holding Wisconsin to only 43 rushing yards and 167 passing yards in the 38-17 win. Michigan has taken some criticism for relying on the run this season, and while the passing game was not perfect against the Badgers, quarterbacks Cade McNamara and J.J. McCarthy threw for 253 yards and three touchdowns with three completions going for over 30 yards. This was supposed to be Michigan’s first big test, and it passed with flying colors. — VanHaaren


The Ducks aren’t completely out of playoff contention after losing 31-24 to Stanford in overtime, but that’s no longer a scenario worth discussing. Since its impressive win at Ohio State, Oregon — over a span of three games — has gotten progressively worse. The Ducks were outgained last week against lowly Arizona and came out completely flat against Stanford, falling behind 17-7 at halftime. They showed some heart and played well in the second half, but it was ultimately rendered meaningless. — Kyle Bonagura


A week’s worth of rest did quarterback C.J. Stroud well. He threw for 330 yards and five touchdowns in a 52-13 win over Rutgers after taking a week off to nurse a shoulder injury. The offense had help on the ground, as well, with 210 yards rushing and one touchdown in the game. It wasn’t just the offense that was able to put points on the scoreboard, either, as freshman corner Denzel Burke had a pick-six in the victory. The Ohio State defense was able to force three interceptions in total and allowed only two touchdowns. Nearly everything went right for the Buckeyes in this game, and Rutgers was never able to make it close. — VanHaaren

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C.J. Stroud lights up Rutgers with five touchdowns to help Ohio State cruise to a win.


Michigan State remained unbeaten with a mostly easy 48-31 win over the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers. The major difference: The Spartans had Jayden Reed, and WKU didn’t. The junior playmaker scored on an 88-yard punt return and a 46-yard pass in the first quarter and finished with 134 yards from scrimmage in just five touches. Throw in Kenneth Walker III (126 rushing yards) and Jalen Nailor (128 receiving yards), and MSU just had too many playmakers for the WKU defense. The Hilltoppers made the Spartan defense work for 60 minutes, scoring two late touchdowns to briefly cut the lead to 14, but the outcome was never in doubt. MSU is 5-0 for the first time since 2015. — Bill Connelly


Despite the absence of starting quarterback Jaren Hall and other significant injury concerns, the Battle for the Old Wagon Wheel wasn’t much of a battle. BYU controlled the game from start to finish to beat Utah State 34-20. That was largely thanks to running back Tyler Allgeier, who rushed for 218 yards and three touchdowns on 22 carries. He alleviated the pressure on Baylor Romney, who started in place of Hall for the second straight week, and then third-stringer Jacob Conover came in after Romney exited due to injury. — Bonagura


During the month of September, Arkansas was the most physical team when it stepped onto the field, particularly in wins over Texas and Texas A&M. But on Saturday at Sanford Stadium, the Hogs were no match for a Georgia team playing as well as anybody in the country in a 37-0 loss. The Hogs were rattled early by the crowd noise — committing back-to-back false-start penalties after Georgia had scored on its first possession — and for the rest of the first half, Arkansas was saddled with terrible field position. Georgia led 21-0 before the end of the first quarter, the third touchdown coming on a blocked punt. But to the Hogs’ credit, they kept fighting, made some adjustments and hung in there on defense. Offensively, they simply couldn’t get anything going and managed just five first downs through the first three quarters. — Low


Another week and another close Kentucky Wildcats game that could’ve gone either way. But, for the Wildcats, they’ve gone only one way this season, and that way is wins. The Wildcats outscored Florida 13-3 in the second half to rally for a 20-13 win and hand their division rival another loss this season. Kentucky has LSU next week before a big matchup against Georgia in Athens on Oct. 16 for control of the SEC East. — Shea Carlson


After last season’s barn burner in Oxford, Lane Kiffin told Nick Saban he’d kept a notebook of every play that gave Alabama trouble during his three seasons as offensive coordinator, using them to help Ole Miss rack up the most yards ever against a Tide defense. Well, it appears that Saban is good at taking notes, too. Saban’s Alabama defense had an answer for almost everything Kiffin, quarterback Matt Corral and Ole Miss threw at it on Saturday in Tuscaloosa, not allowing the Rebs to find the end zone until the third quarter when the game was already well in hand. — Scarborough


Jamey Chadwell’s Chanticleers kept on cruising with a 59-6 destruction of Louisiana Monroe. Grayson McCall was a perfect 13-for-13 for 212 yards and two touchdowns; Coastal outgained the Warhawks 351-99 in the first half and cruised to a 38-3 halftime lead. The backups took it from there — McCall didn’t take a single snap in the second half. The Chants moved to 5-0 with four wins by at least 27 points, and they could get another big win against Arkansas State next week. But everything’s steaming toward what could be an incredible midweek Sun Belt clash when Coastal visits 4-1 Appalachian State on Oct. 20. — Connelly


The obvious flaws finally caught up to Notre Dame, which fought hard but couldn’t overcome three first-half turnovers and some big plays allowed on defense against Cincinnati. Drew Pyne might be the team’s best option at quarterback behind a shaky offensive line, as he sparked the team in the second half against Cincinnati despite completing only 9 of 22 pass attempts. Notre Dame’s defense kept the game close for a while but ultimately couldn’t make enough stops against Cincinnati’s Alec Pierce and others. The loss almost guarantees Notre Dame won’t be headed back to the playoff, and a tough stretch continues next week at Virginia Tech. — Rittenberg


The Cowboys held Baylor to 10 first downs, 107 rushing yards (it was averaging 272) and 280 total yards but led just 17-14 in the fourth quarter because quarterback Spencer Sanders threw three interceptions. Doesn’t matter, because the Cowboys are 5-0 and the defense continues to impress, holding a Baylor offense that was averaging 43 points per game to 14. OSU has allowed more than 20 points just once this season, in a 28-23 win over Tulsa. — Wilson


Louisville provided the biggest test of the season for Wake Forest, but Nick Sciba made a field goal with 22 seconds left to lift the Demon Deacons to a 37-34 win and a 5-0 start. Despite a defense that looked shaky at times, Wake Forest made the key stops and plays with the game on the line late. Sam Hartman threw for 324 yards, while two receivers went over 100 yards — Jaquarii Roberson (135) and Taylor Morin (122). Wake Forest has scored 192 total points this season, the most in school history through its first five games. — Adelson

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Louisville Cardinals vs. Wake Forest Demon Deacons: Full Highlights


With his job security under threat as Auburn’s starting quarterback, Bo Nix played one of his most memorable games, throwing for 255 yards and rushing for another 74 as the Tigers came from behind to beat LSU 24-19. His scrambling, gambling 24-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Fromm late in the first half gave the team life after an early 13-0 deficit, and his two third-down completions, plus a 44-yard run by Jarquez Hunter, set up the winning score, a 1-yard plunge by Hunter. Auburn stared down an aggressive opponent and a chaotic Death Valley environment to move to 4-1. Its reward: a visit from Georgia next week. — Connelly


Coach Dave Doeren knew this week would provide a huge challenge for his team, hoping to avoid a letdown after a big win over Clemson. Indeed, Louisiana Tech gave NC State everything it could handle, but the Wolfpack found a way in a 34-27 victory. The Wolfpack gave up 341 yards passing but also forced two turnovers, and that made a huge difference in the game. It was not the sharpest performance, but in the past this was the type of game NC State would lose. — Adelson


After the Gators nearly upset Alabama, it appeared they were poised for a breakthrough. Instead, they put together a dismal performance in a 20-13 road loss to Kentucky in which they were completely outplayed and outcoached. Most surprising, Florida had 15 penalties for 115 yards — including eight false starts — and that tells the story of the game in a nutshell. With two SEC losses, Florida faces a steep climb back to the conference championship game — especially with Georgia looming later in the month. — Adelson


The Sun Devils started the day as an unranked underdog, but after their 42-23 win against UCLA, they look more like the team to beat in the Pac-12. Jayden Daniels threw for 286 yards with a pair of touchdown passes to Ricky Pearsall (4 catches, 132 yards) as the Sun Devils capitalized on a number of explosive plays. ASU limited UCLA to just three second-half points to take control in the Pac-12 South. — Bonagura


The Mustangs kept rolling, beating South Florida 41-17 behind quarterback Tanner Mordecai’s four touchdown passes and 301 passing yards. When South Florida made it a tight game in the third quarter, SMU outscored it 24-7 to finish the game. Ten different receivers caught passes for SMU, and the Mustangs ran up 463 yards and moved to 5-0 for the third straight season under coach Sonny Dykes. — Wilson


The Longhorns exorcised a few demons on Saturday, winning their first game at TCU since 2013 as Horned Frogs coach Gary Patterson has had Texas’ number, including with wins in the past two seasons. But this year, Texas put the ball in Bijan Robinson’s hands, and he set career highs with 35 carries for 216 yards and two touchdowns, and added two catches for 22 yards. Texas QB Casey Thompson didn’t light it up but was 12-of-22 for 142 yards and added a 41-yard run to win his third straight start. The Longhorns continue to make drives count, going 24-of-26 with 20 touchdowns in the red zone for the season. — Wilson


The Tigers were able to move the ball on Boston College but once again failed to put together sustained drives and score with any frequency. Still, they did enough to win 19-13 after recovering a fumbled snap deep in their own territory. If there was a bright spot, it was the way Clemson was finally able to run the ball — with 231 yards on the ground — its highest rushing total of the season. Though D.J. Uiagalelei threw for over 200 yards for the first time this season, he completed less than 50% of his passes and did not throw a touchdown. — Adelson

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College Football Power Rankings after Week 3

Week 3’s biggest games lived up to the hype, and yet no team in the top 10 lost.

The No. 1 Alabama Crimson Tide looked mortal in their trip to the Swamp as the Florida Gators pushed them all the way to the final seconds, but the defending champion — and reigning juggernaut — of college football once again proved why it has that status.

Auburn made the SEC’s first visit to a Big Ten campus in 90 years but couldn’t earn the conference a win as the Penn State Nittany Lions defended their turf in front of a stadium full of fans clad in white. The victory shot the Nittany Lions up the Power Rankings as the biggest mover of the week.

Both Clemson and Ohio State got all they wanted from unranked opponents but held on to win late while Georgia and Oregon rolled in expected wins.

The Power Rankings might not have shifted much near the top, but the second half of the rankings saw lots of change following a few upsets and close calls. Michigan State and Kansas State climb into the rankings following 3-0 starts to the season while Miami and Kentucky fall out of the ranks after poor performances on Saturday.

With the action of Week 3 rearview, it’s time to take a look at college football’s Power Rankings.


It wasn’t pretty near the end, but Alabama did what it had to in order to get out of the Swamp alive. The Crimson Tide beat Florida, 31-29, in a nail-biter of a game that exposed some of the Tide’s flaws, whether it was a porous defense, a lackluster offensive line or far too many penalties. Perhaps most troubling was the front seven, which wore down in the second half and struggled to stop the run. With Ole Miss’ high-tempo attack coming to Tuscaloosa in two weeks, coach Nick Saban and defensive coordinator Pete Golding have a lot of work to do. — Alex Scarborough

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Bryce Young tosses three first-quarter touchdowns, but Florida rallies only to be stopped in the fourth quarter on a failed two-point conversion.


A week ago, it was Stetson Bennett tying a school record with five touchdown passes in a 56-7 rout of UAB. On Saturday, it was JT Daniels’ time, as the Dawgs’ starting quarterback returned to the lineup and passed for 303 yards and three touchdowns to lead Georgia to a 40-13 romp over South Carolina. Bennett did make an appearance late in the first quarter (after Daniels had thrown a touchdown pass on the previous possession) and was intercepted. It was Daniels’ show from there, along with a menacing Georgia defense, as the Dawgs won their SEC opener with ease. — Chris Low


When Iowa’s offense shows up, the Hawkeyes are a playoff contender. They gained 440 yards and put up 30 points on Kent State, and that was more than enough for an Iowa defense that sacked Golden Flashes quarterback Dustin Crum seven times (Lukas Van Ness and Joe Evans led the way with two each). With Iowa up 16-7 in the third quarter, Riley Moss recovered a Bryan Bradford fumble in the Iowa end zone. That was the last time KSU threatened. Tyler Goodson rushed for 153 yards, and with one touchdown in each quarter, Iowa cruised. — Bill Connelly


It took some time for the Ducks to pull away from Stony Brook but they’ll happily take a 48-7 win to wrap up the nonconference schedule undefeated. Starting QB Anthony Brown completed 14-of-18 passes for 159 yards with a TD before coach Mario Cristobal was able to get important game reps for both Ty Thompson (6 for 9, 82 yards, 2 TD) and Jay Butterfield (2 for 3, 22 yards). After giving up a 75-yard touchdown drive in the first quarter, the Oregon defense settled down and allowed just 169 yards the rest of the way. — Kyle Bonagura


Few teams have been tested through the first three games more than the Nittany Lions, who own one-score wins over both Wisconsin (road) and Auburn (home). Quarterback Sean Clifford had only four incomplete passes on 32 attempts and repeatedly found electric wide receiver Jahan Dotson, the best player on the field against Auburn (78 receiving yards and a touchdown, 22-yard pass, 16-yard punt return). PSU’s defense struggled at times with Tank Bigsby and the Auburn run game, but Temple transfer Arnold Ebiketie continued to spark the defense with five tackles and three quarterback hurries. — Adam Rittenberg


Cincinnati couldn’t get anything going offensively in the first half against Indiana. The Hoosiers defense frustrated quarterback Desmond Ridder, who was only 10-of-19 for 94 yards and one interception. A late targeting penalty on Indiana gave the Bearcats a little momentum, and Cincinnati was able to cut the score to 14-7 going into the second half. That seemed to spark some momentum as Cincinnati scored 28 points in the second half to seal the victory. It wasn’t a pretty win for Cincinnati, but they stay 3-0 on the season and beat a good Big Ten team on the road, 38-24. — Tom VanHaaren

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Cincinnati Bearcats vs. Indiana Hoosiers: Full Highlights


The Aggies had a convincing 34-0 win over New Mexico and saw the defense keep the Lobos in check all game. New Mexico finished the game with 122 total yards on offense and no touchdowns. That included only 33 passing yards from New Mexico quarterback Terry Wilson in a frustrating day. Texas A&M quarterback Zach Calzada threw for over 270 yards and had three touchdowns. Running back Isaiah Spiller went over the 100-yard mark and had a rushing touchdown as well. This was a good bounce-back game for the Aggies after an underwhelming 10-7 win over Colorado the previous week. — VanHaaren


It wasn’t exactly the Game of the Century, but the Sooners showed a little defensive muscle when the offense wasn’t quite sharp, as Lincoln Riley put it. There was an incredible play-of-the-year-worthy interception by D.J. Graham of Adrian Martinez that stopped a Nebraska drive at the 3. The Sooners had 10 tackles for a loss, five sacks and held Martinez to 34 yards on 17 carries, about 50 yards below his 2021 rushing average. They held the Huskers to just 95 yards rushing overall. Spencer Rattler didn’t provide many explosive plays, but Riley said he was “learning to win” and was pleased with how he controlled the game in the 23-16 win. — Dave Wilson


When it came down to it, Florida was a missed extra point away from taking Alabama into overtime. While that might be oversimplifying what happened, it is also true that not many expected the Gators to give the Tide a fight — especially after trailing 21-3 early in the game. But Florida gashed Alabama on the ground, rushing for 258 yards and four touchdowns to slowly chip away at the lead and put itself in position to try and tie with a 2-point attempt. Though the Gators ultimately lost 31-29, coach Dan Mullen said afterward that this is a game they can build off, with the ultimate goal to see Alabama again in Atlanta in the SEC championship game. — Andrea Adelson


It took much longer than expected, both because of a nearly two-hour weather delay and the simple fact that this wasn’t supposed to be much of a game at all, but Clemson eventually survived a stiff, frustrating test from Georgia Tech. The Yellow Jackets actually outgained the Tigers, 309-285, and held an already spotty Clemson offense to just 4.3 yards per play. But the Clemson defense made a late goal line stand — James Skalski stuffed a shuffle pass to Dylan Deveney on fourth-and-goal — and made one final stop following a safety. This could have been a disaster in about 17 different ways, but Clemson held on in the least impressive possible fashion. — Connelly


Quarterback Matt Corral joined exclusive company at Ole Miss on Saturday night in the Rebels’ 61-21 demolition of Tulane, and that company, believe it or not, didn’t include any of the Mannings. Corral accounted for seven touchdowns by the midway point of the third quarter, matching Arnold “Showboat” Boykin’s school record for total touchdowns in a game, which was set in 1951. Corral had four touchdown runs in the game and also threw three touchdown passes. Four of those touchdowns came in the first half as Ole Miss built a 40-21 lead at the break. The start of the game was delayed by nearly two hours because of lightning. — Low


Fighting Irish coach Brian Kelly knew his team would have growing pains early this season, especially because of a rebuilt offensive line that already is dealing with injuries. So he doesn’t seem too concerned about his offense’s inconsistency during a 3-0 start. The Irish averaged only 3.5 yards per carry, and quarterback Jack Coan was sacked four times against the Purdue Boilermakers in a 27-14 win. The Irish were starting their third-team left tackle, Tosh Baker, after Blake Fisher (knee) and Michael Carmody (ankle) went down with injuries in the first two games. The Irish won’t have much time to get better with next week’s game against No. 18 Wisconsin at Soldier Field in Chicago coming fast. — Mark Schlabach


This game, surprisingly, went late into the fourth quarter before Ohio State was able to put the game away. The Buckeyes were only up seven against Tulsa at halftime and after trading scores, were only up seven in the fourth quarter until Garrett Wilson caught a touchdown pass to put the Buckeyes up 14. This game was too close for comfort and was full of mistakes for Ohio State. One bright spot was true freshman running back TreVeyon Henderson, who broke a school single game rushing record for a freshman running back, rushing for over 270 yards and three touchdowns in the 41-20 win. Ohio State came away with the win, 40-21, but there’s a lot to clean up. — VanHaaren


The Cyclones collected their winnings early and left Las Vegas with an easy 48-3 victory against overmatched UNLV. Iowa State allowed just 121 total yards in a game that served as a good bounce-back opportunity from last week’s deflating loss to Iowa. Quarterback Brock Purdy completed 21-of-24 passes for 388 yards and three touchdowns, while Breece Hall ran for 100 yards on 21 carries. — Bonagura


Ranked for the first time since 2016, the Razorbacks assured they would stay in the polls for another week, jumping out to an early 14-0 lead on Georgia Southern and cruising, 45-10. The Hogs nearly tripled the Eagles’ yardage (633-233), and KJ Jefferson made the most of his 23 passes, completing 13 for 366 yards and three scores, including third-quarter strikes of 60 yards to Warren Thompson and 91 to Treylon Burks. This one was as easy as it was supposed to be, and now the focus moves to a huge Week 4 battle with Texas A&M. — Connelly


The Chanticleers escaped what will be one of their most difficult road trips of the season, and earned the program’s first win against a school from the Mid-American Conference. Coastal Carolina, which entered the game averaging 50.5 points, still racked up 456 total yards, but had a difficult time distancing themselves from the Buffalo Bulls. They were tied at 14 at the half, and a 28-17 lead was fleeting. Buffalo used a 16-play, 92-yard scoring drive to close the gap to 28-25 with 2:41 remaining, but the Chanticleers’ strong running game was the difference. Shermari Jones averaged 9.3 yards per carry (16 carries, 149 yards) for Coastal. — Heather Dinich


The Wolverines defense was stifling against Northern Illinois, only allowing 18 pass yards and 90 rush yards in the first half. Michigan led 35-3 after the first two quarters, and the offense looked much more balanced with quarterback Cade McNamara throwing 191 yards on eight completions in the first half. The Wolverines finished with 373 yards on the ground and eight touchdowns in the 63-10 win. The ground game has been impressive through the first three games with 1,076 rush yards on the season. — VanHaaren

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Michigan dominates Northern Illinois behind eight rushing touchdowns for huge win.


Life is good in Provo. Coming off last year’s 11-1 season, the Cougars have secured membership in the Big 12 and started the year with three straight wins against Pac-12 teams. The Cougars never trailed in their 27-17 win against No. 19 Arizona State, as quarterback Jaren Hall completed 15 of 27 passes for 214 yards, with two touchdowns and two interceptions. BYU will have a chance to make it 5-0 against the Pac-12 with games against Washington State and USC later in the year. — Bonagura


The good vibes from UCLA’s win against LSU two weeks ago didn’t last long. After not playing last week, UCLA returned to the Rose Bowl with a 40-37 loss to Fresno State. UCLA went ahead 37-33 with 54 seconds left. It didn’t hold up. Fresno State QB Jake Haener, limping badly from a hit on the previous drive, led the Bulldogs on a 6-play, 75-yard drive and won the game on a 13-yard touchdown pass to Jalen Cropper with 14 seconds left. It’s a disappointing loss for UCLA, but the Bruins are still probably the favorite in the Pac-12 South. — Bonagura


There were times that North Carolina looked like a nationally ranked team on Saturday night and times the Tar Heels looked a tad lost. But in the end, they had Sam Howell, and his five touchdown passes were enough for North Carolina to hold off previously unbeaten Virginia in a wild 59-39 win at home. Howell connected with four different players on scoring tosses, as North Carolina raced out to a 24-7 lead early in the second quarter, then stumbled into halftime trailing 28-24 before pulling away in the second half for its second consecutive blowout victory after losing the season opener to Virginia Tech. — Low


The Spartans put on a show on the road against a ranked opponent in Miami to get its third win of the season. It’s the first time since 2015 that Michigan State has won its first three games of the season, and they did it in convincing fashion against the Hurricanes. Michigan State quarterback Payton Thorne threw for four touchdowns. He is the first Spartans quarterback to throw four touchdowns in consecutive games since 2015 when Connor Cook did it. The defense gave up over 300 passing yards to Miami quarterback D’Eriq King, but that number doesn’t tell the whole story of how well the defense played. Two interceptions helped the Spartans defense keep Miami to only 17 points in the win. — VanHaaren


The Badgers enjoyed an early open week before another measuring-stick game against Notre Dame in Chicago. Wisconsin’s passing game remains atop its priority list as the Badgers are averaging only 175.5 air yards per game without a passing touchdown in two contests. A defense that once again looks nationally elite won’t be enough if Wisconsin can’t become more efficient on third down (36.4% conversions) or in the red zone (four touchdowns on 10 chances). The Badgers defense is set to get a boost with the return of linebacker Leo Chenal, who missed the first two games after testing positive for COVID-19. — Rittenberg


Bryan Harsin’s team handled the White Out and a raucous atmosphere at Beaver Stadium reasonably well, but the step up in competition against Penn State proved to be too much. The Tigers defense struggled to apply pressure or stop Penn State’s wide receivers and tight ends. While quarterback Bo Nix executed some nice back-shoulder throws, he couldn’t rally his team in the end, as an odd fade pass call on fourth-and-goal sailed incomplete. Tank Bigsby (102 rushing yards, two touchdowns) will be a problem in SEC play, but Auburn still needs to commit to him more at times. — Rittenberg


Arizona State showed it’s still not ready to be a banner program in the Pac-12 in a 27-17 loss to BYU. Not that others in the conference are doing much better, of course. A win against BYU could have been a pivotal moment for ASU. Instead, the Sun Devils committed 16 penalties for 121 yards and turned the ball over four times. They fell behind early and couldn’t erase a 14-point halftime deficit. — Bonagura


Kansas State moved to 3-0 with a convincing 38-17 win over Nevada. The Wildcats and Wolfpack were tied at 17 after three quarters, but the Kansas State rushing attack started to roll in the fourth quarter. Three rushing touchdowns followed, and the Wildcats defense shutout Nevada for a comfortable victory. Not only is Kansas State out to an undefeated start, but the opening week win over Stanford is looking better and better. — Shea Carlson

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