College football's winners and losers from Week 13 led by Ohio State and Michigan
Better late than never for Ohio State,
which waited until the Saturday after Thanksgiving to put together by
far most impressive win of its season — and one of the most lopsided and
unforgettable wins by either team in the history of the Buckeyes'
rivalry with Michigan.
Ohio State's
62 points marked the most Michigan had allowed in regulation since 1891,
which feels only slightly farther in the past than the last time the
Wolverines notched a win in this series. Across the country, fans of
Ohio State and schadenfreude uncapped their pens to tally up the latest
score: Jim Harbaugh is now 0-4 against the Buckeyes.
Yet
Ohio State is a conundrum for the College Football Playoff selection
committee. The Buckeyes were last among one-loss teams in the Power Five
in the most recent rankings, essentially dismissed as a top playoff
contender after a loss to Purdue and close calls against Nebraska and
Maryland. Saturday's win alters that equation.
Now
the Buckeyes are neck-and-neck with Oklahoma for the fourth spot in the
field behind Alabama, Clemson and Notre Dame. Sixth in the latest
rankings, the Sooners would seemingly be the next Power Five champion to
step into the four-team field with a win against Texas in next
weekend's Big 12 championship game. It's difficult to gauge exactly how
the committee will view now Ohio State, but there's no doubt a win
against what was the No. 4 team in the rankings will drastically improve
the Buckeyes' chances of leapfrogging past Oklahoma and to the doorstep
of another playoff berth.
But
the math isn't that simple. It's worth asking how the committee will
now consider Michigan, just revealed as a title pretender, and also West
Virginia, which now has three losses after Friday's narrow defeat
against Oklahoma. What's more impressive: Beating Michigan at home by 23
points — behind the sort of performance most had expected from Ohio
State all season — or winning 59-56 at West Virginia?
The
question is pure college football. And that it's being asked in late
November means that controversy is coming to the playoff chase. Here are
the rest of Saturday's winners and losers:
Winners
Notre Dame
It
won't be official until next Sunday, but you can bank on this: Notre
Dame is getting into the Playoff after capping its unbeaten regular
season with a 24-17 win at Southern California. It's been a dramatic,
imperfect yet spotless year for the Irish, who hit a crescendo in last
Saturday's blowout of Syracuse and seemed to handle the Trojans a bit
differently — carefully and cautiously, as if aware that beauty points
were of secondary importance this close to the finish line. If Alabama
and Clemson win out, Notre Dame is probably destined for a matchup with
the Tigers on Dec. 29.
Alabama
The
Crimson Tide wobbled slightly in the second quarter after an
Auburn blocked punt and ensuing touchdown cut the score in the Iron Bowl
to 17-14 at halftime. Tua Tagovailoa's play in the third quarter put
the game out of reach, and might have given the sophomore an
insurmountable lead in this year's Heisman Trophy race: Tagovailoa
tossed three touchdowns in the third quarter and accounted for a school
record-tying six scores altogether in pacing Alabama's 52-21 win. The
Tide's smallest margin of victory on the year is 24 points heading into
next Saturday's SEC title game matchup with Georgia.
Minnesota
Here's
a good day: beat your rival for the first time since 2003 and secure a
sixth win in one fell swoop. Saturday's 37-15 victory at Wisconsin was a
long time coming for the Golden Gophers, who had found countless ways
to lose this series during the 15-year losing streak, and a stunning end
to the regular season for the Badgers, a team crippled by injuries
after being pegged as a playoff contender in the preseason. It's also a
nice moment for Minnesota coach P.J. Fleck, who can now point to bowl
eligibility as progress after winning five games in his debut season.
Connecticut
You'd
think the Huskies would fall in the losers' bracket after a 57-7 loss
the Temple, the latest embarrassment — and last, mercifully — in one of
the most horrific seasons in recent Football Bowl Subdivision history.
But there was a sort of silver lining: In allowing 57 points, UConn
became just the second team in the past century to allow an average of
50 points per game on defense.
Georgia
Whether
Georgia can actually beat Alabama is open to debate. What's certain,
however, is that the Bulldogs are ready to take on college football's
best team. Saturday's 45-21 win against Georgia Tech was the Bulldogs'
fifth in a row by at least 17 points after October's stunning loss to
LSU. It also might've been the most impressive of the bunch: Georgia
went into halftime up 38-7 and allowed a pair of meaningless Tech
touchdowns in the fourth quarter.
Baylor
Credit
Matt Rhule for calling his shot: Baylor's second-year head coach
predicted at the tail end of last season, after a one-win debut, that
the Bears would make a bowl game in 2018. Topping Texas Tech 35-24
evened Baylor's record at 6-6 and ensured a top-half finish in the Big
12 standings, two huge signs of progress as Rhule attempts to lead this
program back into national contention.
Louisville
Because
the Cardinals' season is over. That should be cause for a parade. And
what a season it was: Louisville fired its coach, Bobby Petrino, and
went 1-11 and winless in ACC play. The final loss, 56-10 to Kentucky,
punctuates a year the Cardinals' fan base will never want to think about
again.
Losers
Arizona
Consider
this the flip side to Minnesota's good day: Arizona, needing a win to
get into a bowl game, coughed up a 19-point lead and lost 41-40 to rival
Arizona State, missing a potential game-winning field goal in the
waning seconds. That's absolutely brutal. But it fits into what was a
brutal first year for former Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin, who led
one of college football's biggest underachievers. Meanwhile, ASU coach
Herm Edwards has made believers out of those who questioned the Sun
Devils' offseason coaching move.
Lane Kiffin
This
time a year ago, Lane Kiffin's name was being bandied about for a
handful of major job openings on the Power Five level — his first year
at Florida Atlantic was so successful that a subset of the Tennessee fan
base thought he'd be a good fit for the Volunteers' opening. A year
later, Kiffin and the Owls will miss the postseason after losing at home
to Charlotte, 27-24, to finish 5-7 overall.
Florida State
FSU
will stay home for bowl play for the first time in decades after a
41-14 loss to Florida that encapsulated a disappointing start to the
Willie Taggart era. The Seminoles' seven loss are the program's most in a
year since 1975 — the year before Bobby Bowden's arrival. It'll be a
long December and an even longer offseason for FSU, which can only be
hopeful that Taggart's successful track record yields a turnaround in
2019.
Tennessee
There
should've been no preconceived notion that Jeremy Pruitt was going to
take over from Butch Jones and immediately vault Tennessee into the top
third of the SEC East. The calls just two weeks ago to name Pruitt the
league's coach of the year were equally moronic. Basically, to go 5-7 in
his first year doesn't give a large enough sample size to make some
grand statement about the program's future under Pruitt. Having said
that: Tennessee lost to Vanderbilt, again, and will stay home from bowl
play.
Oklahoma State
The
most unpredictable team in college football ended its regular season
with a 31-24 loss to shorthanded TCU. To recap the second half of the
regular season: Oklahoma State lost to Kansas State, beat Texas, lost to
Baylor, lost by one point to Oklahoma, beat West Virginia and lost to
TCU. Don't try to figure it out — some things defy explanation.
South Carolina
The
intrigue is gone from the the Palmetto Bowl. The state belongs to
Clemson, a fact hammered home in a 56-35 win against the Gamecocks that
was never in doubt once the Tigers kicked into gear. Not that is new,
necessarily: Clemson's owned this series for five years now, and as a
whole occupies an entirely different stratosphere than its in-state
rival. This year's game simply felt preordained long before kickoff — no
one thought the Gamecocks had an iota of a chance to knock off Clemson,
and so it was.
Keine Kommentare