Yahoo Sports 10 takeaways from a wild, norm-shattering Saturday of college football

Here are 10 takeaways from a wild weekend of college football:
1. The center of the college football universe, for the greater part of the past two decades, has been located in the Southeast. Datelines from Gainesville to Tuscaloosa, Clemson to Baton Rouge have dominated the sport. And as Alabama’s march to the 2018 national title appears as much of a coronation as a competition, there’s little argument that the sport’s heartbeat this season lies deep within SEC country.
That’s what makes the next two weeks such a compelling anomaly, as Boston and New York City project to become the epicenter of college football in consecutive weeks. Think of a hockey showcase in New Mexico, a soccer one in Saskatchewan or cricket in Reno. That’s college football in Northeast, the region where the sport resonates the least.
Next week, the marquee game in college football will feature No. 22 Boston College (7-2) hosting No. 2 Clemson (9-0) in the game that ESPN’s “GameDay” will feature. The following week, No. 4 Notre Dame (9-0) plays No. 19 Syracuse (7-2) in Yankee Stadium. Both games loom as Clemson and Notre Dame’s trickiest tests remaining, including whatever flotsam or jetsam washes up across from Clemson in the ACC championship.
This has been a funny year in college football. Miami, Florida and Florida State all lost on consecutive weekends for the first time ever. And so it’s fitting that the towns pro sports fans love to hate and college football fans view as Timbuktu – Boston and New York — will earn the eyeballs and ire from around the sport.
“College GameDay” hasn’t visited Boston College since 2009, and the Clemson game resonates as the most relevant game for the Eagles since Matt Ryan matriculated there.
“This is the biggest game we’ll host in 10 years,” said Boston College athletic director Martin Jarmond, who at 38 is the youngest athletic director in the Power Five. “Our campus will be electric. The energy with this team and our fans is real.”
And BC’s chances will hinge on the health of the star tailback A.J. Dillon, who didn’t play in the fourth quarter of BC’s win at Virginia Tech on Saturday and still ended up with 96 rushing yards and a touchdown. Dillon has been practicing sparingly since spraining his ankle on Sept. 29 against Temple and has missed two games. Dillon is the ACC’s Preseason Player of the Year, one of the few personnel advantages that the Eagles could have against Clemson.
Dillon de-committed from Michigan to attend BC and had envisioned a night like this. “If you have the city of Boston behind us, that’s something that I really want,” Dillon told Yahoo Sports this spring. “I don’t know what that’s going to take, whether that’s going to be winning the Heisman or winning the ACC, but I want to have the sense that everyone is included.”
Syracuse has been at the forefront of the college football conversation this season since blowing out Florida State in the Carrier Dome in September. They’ll have consecutive showcase games in the next two weeks, as they host the remaining remnants of the Louisville program in an ESPN game on Friday night. If the Orange win that game, they could well be deep into the Top 15 by the time the take on the Irish in Yankee Stadium.
Syracuse’s won’t flinch, as it led at Clemson for most of the game earlier this season and ranks No. 14 in the nation in total offense. Nearly every fan will be rooting for Syracuse, as a victory could knock Notre Dame out of the College Football Playoff and potentially open the door for a one-loss conference champion – think Oklahoma, Michigan, West Virginia or Washington State – or a team that loses in the conference title game.
With big stakes that reverberate through the whole country, the eyes of college football will be directed to an unusual place. Will chaos follow?
Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence drops back to pass during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Louisville, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2018, in Clemson, S.C. (AP Photo/Richard Shiro)
2. The great Kentucky football revival was fun while it lasted. The atmosphere matched the historical moment on Saturday, as Kentucky hadn’t had these types of stakes since Bear Bryant roamed the sideline in Lexington. But the reality of Kentucky’s place in the college football universe soon collided with Georgia’s, and the result was No. 6 Georgia rolling to a 34-17 victory over the No. 11 Wildcats.
That result, combined with Alabama’s thrashing of LSU in Baton Rouge, means that we’ll have a rematch of last year’s national title game on Dec. 1 in the SEC title game – Alabama vs. Georgia.
It’s hard to envision Alabama not being a double-digit favorite in that game, as Georgia got blown off the field at LSU, 36-16, on Oct. 13. The place where LSU exposed the Bulldogs was the interior, and that’s where Alabama seemed to have the most distinct advantage on Saturday night in winning 29-0.
The LSU loss, both in execution and tenor, significantly dims the chances of a second SEC team reaching the playoff this season. (Unless, of course, Georgia upsets Alabama in the title game. But judging by the Baton Rouge eye test, the possibility of that would appear to be remote at this juncture. As long as Tua Tagovailoa remains healthy, the teams capable of challenging Alabama remain few.
3. Lost a bit amid the big clashes today was the manner of which Michigan eviscerated Penn State in Ann Arbor, 42-7. Michigan entrenched themselves deeper as the Big Ten favorite, even with their annual rivalry game with Ohio State being played in Columbus this year.
What was so impressive about this game was that Penn State won this game 42-13 last year. So this essentially doubles as a complete role reversal, as Penn State didn’t score until the final two minutes and generally looked overmatched all day.
The momentum for Michigan is building by the week, as Shea Patterson is playing with more confidence at quarterback as he finished with two touchdown passes and one rushing. The best news for Michigan was the return of All-American defensive lineman Rashan Gary, as he finished the game with two tackles and a quarterback hurry after playing for the first time in a month. The other big news for Michigan came with the return of star receiver Tarik Black, who saw his first game action of the season. He had a 41-yard touchdown called back on a penalty, but he and Gary’s return gives Michigan two of its best players for the stretch run and makes the Wolverines look even more formidable.
As for Ohio State, their only potential regular season foil remaining in the Big Ten, the Buckeyes looked pedestrian in sputtering past Nebraska, 36-31. Ohio State beat Nebraska by 101 in the past two meetings, and this game showed the symptoms of the Buckeyes issues – offensive line play, linebacker productivity and tackling – still remain. “We had every chance in the world to win that football game,” Scott Frost told the media after the game. Nebraska was victimized by third down two drops by streaking players – JD Spielman and Devine Ozigbo – that could have changed the tenor of the game. The search for answers will continue in Columbus this week, especially in the defensive meeting rooms.
4. A hearty congratulation goes out to the UTEP Miners, which ended a 20-game losing streak and became the last FBS program to register a victory this season. The Miners downed Rice, 34-26, in a road game that led coach Dana Dimel to use three Miners pickaxe emoticons in his postgame celebratory tweet. Rice made a late push after trailing 34-10, but UTEP held on.
Rice has lost nine straight games after beating Prairie View A&M on a last-second field goal to open the season. The Owls are in the first year of a massive rebuild under new coach Mike Bloomgren. The bad news for Rice? They still have to play LSU on Nov. 17.
Yahoo Sports

10 takeaways from a wild, norm-shattering Saturday of college football

 Pete Thamel,Yahoo Sports Sun, Nov 4 7:18 AM GMT+1 

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