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College Football Highlights From Week 13 and the New AP Top 25 – RedState

In what could have been deemed Setup Week, the schedule did not feature many compelling matchups. Most of the top schools had warm-up contests ahead of the upcoming Rivalry Week. As a result, there was not too much drama, nor much poll movement as a result, while next week promises to have significant impacts on the final playoff structure.





This allows for all sorts of speculation instead of drama, with much of the talk this week revolving around two topics: Does Notre Dame deserve to be chosen over Miami, and where/when will Lane Kiffin decide to coach next season? That said, there was still fun to be had. The Hurricanes continue to be a question mark as they earn a spot in the playoff bracket from the playoff committee, as the highest-ranked ACC team, but may not make the conference final.

  • UNC-Charlotte received a record buyout from Georgia to travel to Athens and play the Bulldogs, worth $1.9 million. They showed grace as hosts towards the visiting 49ers, allowing them to kick a field goal. 

  • North Texas continues its bid for the Group of Five playoff bid, with its seventh game scoring at least 50 points. Receiver Wyatt Young was this week’s stats gobbler, as he put up 295 yards and a pair of touchdowns.

  • Kicking off the Division 2 playoffs saw Benedict steal a first-round win with a last-second 85-yard passing play that worked with a cross-field lateral for the shocking win.





  • In one head-scratching stat, the list of 10 teams with the highest average yards gained advantage over opponents features all squads in the top-25…and the 5-6 FSU Seminoles.
  • Syracuse did everything possible to secure a win for Notre Dame. The Irish benefitted from three touchdowns off two interceptions returned, and a blocked punt also for a score. That is enough to feed the fortunes of any team, but the Irish took the 21-point lead off of those plays before their offense had even been on the field.
  • In a play reflective of the FSU season, NC State benefitted when punter Caden Noonkester made a short kick from their 40-yard line. It hit the helmet of a Seminole blocker and careened back to the 40, where Noonkester recovered it for a new Wildcats possession.

Utah 51 – Kansas State 47

In the thriller of the weekend, the Utes and Wildcats had a defense-be-damned shootout. While nearly putting up 100 points together, both teams gained over 550 yards of offense each and combined for 53 first downs. In the losing effort, Joe Jackson ran for 293 yards and three touchdowns, but the Utes scored three times in the final seven minutes, getting the winning touchdown with under a minute to play.





Oregon 42 – USC 27

One other chance at impacting the playoff rankings was avoided as the Ducks handled USC in mostly easy fashion after building a two-touchdown lead at the half. Jayden Maiava led the Ducks with 306 yards and three touchdowns.

Pitt 42 – Georgia Tech 28

In a season when the ACC has been tossed in the blender, why not make things more confounding? A Tech win would have probably locked them into the conference final, so of course, they had to lose and further muddle things. The Panthers built up a 28-point lead that the Yellowjackets could never recover from, the killer being a 100-yard pick-6 thrown by Haynes King at the goal line.

Texas 52 – Arkansas 37

The Razorbacks have possibly the most brutal schedule this year, and they ran into Arch Manning having the type of game many expected from him since this summer. The generational QB was good for six touchdowns, throwing for four, and becoming the first one in Longhorn history to score on the pass, run, and receiving in the same game. 

Oklahoma 17 – Missouri 6

In another game that sealed a fate, Mizzou sees itself out of the postseason mix as Oklahoma relied on a swarming defense. One thing bolstering the Sooners’ playoff bid is that this marks the fifth victory over a ranked team on their resume.





Vanderbilt 45 – Kentucky 17

The Commodores stay in contention on the playoff bubble as Diego Pavia buried the Wildcates early and often. The quarterback continues to be in the Heisman conversation as he was good for a total of six TDs and 484 yards, and did not even play the complete game. Vandy remains at the mercy of the playoff committee until next week shakes out the positions.

Here is the new AP Top-25 (first place votes). Missouri and Houston fall off the poll, as SMU and Pitt take their spots.

  1. Ohio State (58)

  2. Indiana (7)

  3. Texas A&M (1)

  4. Georgia

  5. Oregon

  6. Ole Miss 

  7. Texas Tech

  8. Oklahoma 

  9. Notre Dame

  10. Alabama

  11. BYU

  12. Vanderbilt

  13. Miami

  14. Utah

  15. Michigan 

  16. Texas 

  17. Virginia

  18. Tennessee

  19. USC

  20. James Madison

  21. North Texas

  22. Tulane

  23. Georgia Tech

  24. Pitt

  25. SMU


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