Progress reports for playoff contenders and the best games of Week 5
David Pollack describes what he learned about Georgia following its win vs. Notre Dame. (1:03)
Back in June, I shared one of my favorite ways of framing any sort of title race (national, conference, division, Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy, etc.): by counting “ifs.” How many conditional clauses do you need to turn a team into a contender? The fewer the better.
As far as the national title race was concerned, Alabama and Clemson had the fewest ifs, while other teams with decent title odds (via Las Vegas) required far more. Let’s walk back through my summer ifs list, assess how each team has addressed its conditionals and see what it has to tell us about the national title race as a whole.
Alabama (4-0)
Current FPI title odds: 28.5% (preseason: 27.6%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … the secondary cuts down on the glitches
If … Steve Sarkisian can make a difference in the red zone
Alabama has ridden its proven passing game to four easy wins and 50 points per game. The questions we had for Nick Saban’s Crimson Tide were more peripheral, and so far the answers we’ve seen are favorable, if incomplete. New offensive coordinator Sarkisian’s red zone offense has been fine, but he won’t really have a chance to prove himself until Bama encounters a close game (which might not happen for a while). The secondary, too, has been mostly fine, if slightly conservative.
A new “if” has emerged, however: Due to injury, the front seven is one of the youngest in the country. Freshman linebackers Shane Lee and Christian Harris are each among Bama’s six leading tacklers, and four freshman linemen are also contributing. Granted, they’re all blue-chippers, but can they avoid the typical young-player glitches when the games really count?
Clemson (4-0)
Current FPI title odds: 24.1% (preseason: 37.1%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … there’s no hangover
If … young defensive linemen get up to speed quickly
Clemson put hangover concerns to rest by beating Texas A&M and Syracuse by a combined 65-16. The Tigers ranked third in defensive SP+ last season, lost a ton of ultra-talented contributors up front and currently rank … second. The rich get richer.
So why have the Tigers’ title odds fallen? First, the field has gotten deeper, with Ohio State looking like a major contender. Second, the offense hasn’t quite cleared the high bar we set. The run game is ultra-efficient, but the passing game has sputtered: 75th in passing success rate, 63rd in completion rate. Trevor Lawrence has already thrown more interceptions this season (five) than he did in 2018 (four).
So maybe there has been a bit of a hangover on one side of the ball. But the ACC might be even weaker than it was last season, and Lawrence has plenty of time to work out the kinks.
Ohio State (4-0)
Current FPI title odds: 14.9% (preseason: 0.4%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … Justin Fields lives up to blue-chip hype … and doesn’t get hurt
If … the Ohio State run game becomes the Ohio State run game again
If … the defense suffers fewer catastrophes
With a new head coach and quarterback, it was justifiable to wonder if Ohio State would be full-on Ohio State in 2019. It didn’t take us long to find our answer. Fields is very much living up to the hype, the run game is excellent and the defense, so strangely glitchy last season, ranks fifth in defensive SP+, up from 26th in 2018 (the horror!).
On top of all that, the three remaining regular-season opponents in the current SP+ top 25 all have to visit Columbus. All is well.
Really, the only “if” without a complete answer is the “Fields doesn’t get hurt” part. He’s been running the ball quite a bit — 28 non-sack carries in four games despite blowouts — and he’s taken six sacks, which isn’t a ton but is more than you’d hope from the level of competition.
Wisconsin (4-0)
Current FPI title odds: 7.2% (preseason: 0%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … there is at least steadiness at QB
If … a new offensive line is the same old Wisconsin offensive line
If … the run defense comes back, too, for that matter
If … third-and-medium is Wisconsin’s friend
If … the pass rush comes back
Wisconsin had a steep hill to climb to become a true contender. So far, so good. Of the five ifs above, the Badgers get three resounding A-plus grades. Quarterback Jack Coan is completing 77% of his passes and is seventh in Total QBR. The new offensive line has struggled a bit in pass-rush situations but has been good enough in the ground game to rarely face any. And on defense, Wisconsin ranks first in rushing success rate.
The other two ifs could still bite the Badgers in tighter games. They are still just 58th in third-and-medium success rate (better than last season’s 110th, at least), and the defense is 46th in sack rate and 106th in blitz-downs sack rate. The secondary has made sure that doesn’t matter in the least, but that could change against better passing teams.
Georgia (4-0)
Current FPI title odds: 10.7% (preseason: 8.2%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … James Coley can make a difference in the red zone
If … Dan Lanning can dial up pressure
If … the defensive front is a little less flexible
Georgia handled three lesser opponents by huge margins, then survived a nice home test from Notre Dame 23-17. The Bulldogs’ title odds have improved a bit; it would be silly to nitpick too much.
We’re going to anyway! We’ve gotten only resounding, positive answers to one of three ifs: Georgia has been excellent near the goal line.
The defense still has questions to answer. The Dawgs are preventing big plays as well as anyone and are good in the red zone (eighth in points allowed per scoring opportunity) and 10th in overall defensive SP+. But they’re still only 52nd in sack rate and 34th in overall havoc rate (total tackles for loss, passes defensed and forced fumbles divided by total plays). Within just the front seven, they are 86th. This is an excellent reactive defense, but can the Dawgs make disruptive plays when they need to?
LSU (4-0)
Current FPI title odds: 7.0% (preseason: 6.4%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … Joe Burrow‘s late-season growth was real
If … the LSU run game becomes the LSU run game again
If … Kristian Fulton and Kary Vincent Jr. can get greedy
LSU nearly made the “acing the test” list, but defensive concerns are holding the Tigers back a smidge.
From the original Ifs list: “Linebacker Devin White‘s production can probably be mostly accounted for by simply keeping sophomores Micah Baskerville and K’Lavon Chaisson healthy.” Baskerville and Chaisson have missed two games each, and that appears to be making a difference. LSU is just 38th in defensive SP+ and has allowed seven gains of 30-plus yards (70th in FBS). There are more glitches than expected, even as the cornerbacks (namely Fulton and freshman Derek Stingley Jr.) have combined for 13 passes defensed.
Chris Klieman’s No. 24 Kansas State Wildcats take on Mike Gundy, Tylan Wallace and Oklahoma State in a Big 12 showdown (7 p.m. ET Saturday), only on ESPN+. Watch here
That said, the offense has wiped away most of these concerns. LSU is second in offensive SP+, and it’s safe to say that Burrow’s late-season growth was very real. Plus, the success of the passing game has created opportunities for LSU runners to thrive.
Oklahoma (3-0)
Current FPI title odds: 5.4% (preseason: 4.2%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … the secondary gets more aggressive
If … the defensive front gets more disruptive
If … Jalen Hurts shows he can go off script occasionally
Two outta three ain’t bad.
OU is creating explosive plays as well as ever. Hurts is averaging 18 yards per completion and 10.8 yards per carry (!), and a trio of running backs is averaging 8.6 yards per carry. Ridiculous.
It’s still a mixed bag for the defense, though. Despite a current SP+ strength of schedule ranking of 117th, OU ranks just 48th in success rate allowed and 49th in defensive SP+. That’s an improvement over last season, but there are much better offenses to come on the schedule.
The defensive front has indeed been more disruptive — OU ranks 18th in defensive line havoc rate and 28th in sack rate — but the secondary is still passive. OU is allowing a 64% completion rate (95th in FBS) and ranks 101st in defensive-back havoc rate. There are probably plenty of high-scoring games on the horizon for the Sooners.
Notre Dame (2-1)
Current FPI title odds: 2.4% (preseason: 3.6%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … the red zone offense improves, run game or no run game
If … the front seven finds a new playmaker
If … losing WR Miles Boykin doesn’t mean losing big pass plays
If … the run game improves, perhaps dramatically
The Irish offense is outstanding in the red zone (currently 13th in points per scoring opportunity), and the defensive front seven has the playmakers it needs. Check and check.
Sophomore linebackers Drew White and Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah combined for just 5.0 tackles last season; this season, they have already combined for 9.5 tackles for loss. And we saw just how well this unit tackles in last week’s game at Georgia.
The two other ifs, however, remain unknown. Notre Dame ran the ball well for a while against Louisville but hasn’t since, and while Ian Book is averaging a vastly improved 14.3 yards per completion so far, I can’t give the Irish full credit here because against a fellow contender in Georgia, Book averaged just 9.5 yards per completion. So these four ifs have produced two resoundingly positive check marks but two areas for lingering concern.
Texas (3-1)
Current FPI title odds: less than 0.1% (preseason: same)
Preseason Ifs …
If … Texas can figure out how to run the ball without getting Sam Ehlinger hit so much
If … big-play blue-chippers can actually make big plays
If … a super-young secondary is ready to not only hold the fort, but improve
If … a Tom Herman team can play every game as an underdog
Early developments have been mostly positive for a Texas team that voters liked a lot more than analytics. Longhorns running backs are generating efficiency, and they’re benefitting even further from the emergence of a ridiculously efficient receiver in Devin Duvernay (87% catch rate, 67% success rate). UT is also getting a massive big-play boost from sophomore wideout Brennan Eagles (10 catches, 276 yards, four TDs). This has created a far greater level of offensive consistency, and it has helped Texas to play well as a favorite as well as an underdog.
The bad news: That young secondary is getting obliterated by injury. Safeties Caden Sterns and B.J. Foster are both out indefinitely, as are three other defensive backs. The Longhorns are on a bye this week, thankfully, and take on a less-than-amazing West Virginia passing game in Week 6, but Oklahoma looms on the schedule.
Auburn (4-0)
Current FPI title odds: 2.0% (preseason: 0.7%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … a reconstructed receiving corps holds up
If … a freshman quarterback doesn’t play like a freshman
If … the offensive line takes a mulligan
If … the pass rush gets home
The Tigers have survived two strong tests away from home, beating Oregon by six and Texas A&M by eight. The defense is as unforgiving as ever, and the offense has moved the ball when it absolutely needs to. The receiving corps has produced as hoped.
Unfortunately, the other ifs above don’t have particularly positive answers. Freshman Bo Nix has shown an ability to raise his game in key moments, but Auburn still ranks 114th in completion rate and 85th in passing success rate. The offensive line is clearly better but has lots of room for growth. And on defense, the pass rush still lacks: The Tigers are 95th in blitz downs sack rate, and, consequently, 111th in third-and-long success rate allowed.
The Tigers still rank 10th in SP+, but the remaining schedule features four games against teams ranked even higher than that.
Oregon (3-1)
Current FPI title odds: 0.7% (preseason: 1.2%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … a young pass rush becomes a good pass rush
If … Oregon learns to handle success
If … Justin Herbert turns flashes of brilliance into an actually brilliant season
If … Oregon starts making an Oregon level of big plays again
What a hire defensive coordinator Andy Avalos has been for Mario Cristobal and the Ducks. Oregon currently ranks fourth in defensive SP+, playing solidly against the run and mostly dominating the pass. Oregon ranks 21st in overall sack rate — 10th on blitz downs — despite leaning mostly on young pass-rushers.
The other ifs remain unanswered at best. Oregon responded to a great start against Auburn (up 21-6 after 36 minutes) with a collapse. Herbert has been great against lesser Nevada, Montana and Stanford teams but couldn’t make plays late against the Tigers. (He’s currently 19th in Total QBR, up only slightly from last season’s No. 24 ranking.) The run game isn’t producing, and the big-play total is average. The defense is better than anyone could have hoped, but the offense lacks. Can the Ducks find a better rhythm before big games against Cal (Week 6) and Washington (Week 8)?
Florida (4-0)
Current FPI title odds: 0.7% (preseason: 1.2%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … late-2018 Feleipe Franks is the permanent Feleipe Franks
If … Franks has a go-to weapon
If … the offensive line doesn’t regress too much
If … Todd Grantham’s defense tamps down the recklessness a hair
Florida became the only presumed contender to lose its starting quarterback to injury. The Gators have since rallied around Kyle Trask (who’s almost perfectly replicating Franks’ numbers), but this could still catch up to them. And the offensive line indeed appears to have regressed: Florida ranks 106th in stuff rate, 127th in opportunity rate and 50th in sack rate.
The Gators are still 4-0, though. Van Jefferson has emerged as a nice go-to weapon (16 catches, 232 yards, one touchdown), and a deep, experienced receiving corps is producing. Grantham’s ultra-aggressive defensive approach is working, too: UF is eighth in defensive SP+ and sixth in blitz-downs sack rate. There’s a lot to like here but also a lot to be wary of. Florida’s right where it was at the start of the season, in other words.
Washington (3-1)
Current FPI title odds: 0.1% (preseason: 0.3%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … Jacob Eason has developed behind the scenes
If … UW is no longer atrocious at finishing drives
If … a new secondary clears a high bar
If … Chris Petersen finds where he misplaced his close-game karma
The Huskies have won three games by an average score of 48-18 and just trounced a BYU team that was coming off a victory over USC. They are ninth in SP+, and they remain a favorite in the Pac-12 race.
They also managed to lose their only close game, a second consecutive defeat to Cal. In that game, they showed an alarming lack of efficiency. They destroy you if you fall behind schedule, but they can’t force you off schedule nearly as well (98th in standard-downs success rate).
Eason also sputtered in the loss. He’s completing 73% of his passes and ranks 15th in Total QBR (ahead of Oregon’s Herbert), but he took three sacks and threw a bad pick against Cal. If he and Washington play well in the coming games against USC, Oregon and Utah, the Cal loss probably won’t matter. But it means everything for now.
Michigan (2-1)
Current FPI title odds: less than 0.1% (preseason: 6.8%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … Josh Gattis brings some pep and unpredictability to Ann Arbor
If … Shea Patterson finds a No. 1 receiver
If … blitz downs are a bit less all-or-nothing
If … the Big House does its part
The offense has not been pretty. The Josh Gattis Experiment has failed to work so far, while Patterson has leaned primarily on three players: Ronnie Bell, Tarik Black and tight end Nick Eubanks. They’ve responded with a 50% catch rate and a ghastly 41% success rate.
Don Brown’s defense ranks first in blitz-downs success rate allowed and big-play rate allowed and third in blitz-downs sack rate. The problem has come on all other downs. Michigan is just 72nd in overall success rate allowed. The Wolverines got absolutely carved up by Wisconsin and, to say the least, the offense hasn’t picked up the slack.
Texas A&M (2-2)
Current FPI title odds: less than 0.1% (preseason: 0.4%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … the newbies provide immediate, quality depth
If … the passing game produces more easy points
If … the Crew stops getting Wrecked
If … a new front seven doesn’t mean a loss of havoc
Freshman running back Isaiah Spiller is averaging 7.5 yards per carry but averaged only 2.5 against Clemson and Auburn. There are some freshman receivers and defenders in the rotation, but this freshman class probably isn’t contributing quite enough. QB Kellen Mond, meanwhile, has gone from averaging 13.1 yards per completion last season to 11.5 this season.
On defense, despite having already played two top-10 teams, A&M has allowed just eight gains of 20-plus yards, eighth in FBS. The Aggies rank just 96th in front-seven havoc rate. Consequently, they are struggling to finish drives when they have the chance; they’re 72nd in passing-downs success rate and 85th in points allowed per scoring opportunity.
Nebraska (3-1)
Current FPI title ods: 0.0% (preseason less than 0.1%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … the Scott Frost Second-Year Miracle Leap happens twice
If … Adrian Martinez pulls a McKenzie Milton-style sophomore leap
If … new go-tos emerge in the skill corps
If … the run defense goes from outright atrocious to good
If … a pass rush emerges
If … the secondary improves dramatically despite losing last season’s top three tacklers
Nebraska had top-15 title odds, per Caesars, for the entire offseason, and that was ridiculous and detrimental to any attempt to set more rational expectations.
Martinez is on his way to a good, but not Milton-esque, season. The skill corps is improving, and the defense is better, if still not where it needs to be. Nebraska is up from 39th to 35th in SP+ and is on pace for about seven wins. In a rational universe, that is a solid second season for Frost. But the Huskers should never, for a single second, have been treated like a national title contender.
Miami (2-2)
Current FPI title odds: 0.0% (preseason: less than 0.1%)
Preseason Ifs …
If … there’s explosive growth at the QB position
If … the offensive line plays its part this time
If … the defensive line unearths a new playmaker or two
If … the punting improves
Miami’s defensive line definitely has the playmakers it needs, and the punting has indeed improved. The Hurricanes have clear potential at the quarterback position, too, where Jarren Williams is completing 73% of his passes. But he’s been responsible for a lot of negative plays, too, and Miami’s rebuilt offensive line has been a train wreck. Miami ranks 128th in sack rate allowed and 127th in stuff rate allowed.
Once behind schedule, the Canes are toast. They are 124th in passing-downs success rate. The negative plays have cost them a game they should have won against North Carolina (and nearly cost them a second against lowly Central Michigan). The future appears pretty bright, but the present is scattered and frustrating.
Here are 10 games — at least one from each weekend time slot — that you should pay attention to if you want to get the absolute most out of the weekend, from both an information and entertainment perspective.
All times Eastern
Friday
No. 12 Penn State at Maryland (8 p.m., Fox Sports 1)
Penn State has looked like both a top-10 and barely-top-40 team at times, and Maryland followed up on two out-of-this-world offensive performances against Howard and Syracuse by scoring 17 at Temple. What’s the real version of either of these teams?
Arizona State at No. 15 Cal (10:30 p.m., ESPN)
Look, if you enjoy things like “points” and “general offensive competence,” this isn’t the game for you. But Cal is unbeaten, and linebacker Evan Weaver (40 solo tackles in four games) is must-see-TV. I’m only slightly exaggerating when I say that Weaver makes every single tackle for Cal.
Early Saturday
Texas Tech at No. 6 Oklahoma (12 p.m., Fox)
You know all the OU storylines, but I’m ready to learn more about Tech, too. The Red Raiders are playing better defense than they have in years, but the offense let them down in a road loss to Arizona. What do they have to offer against the Big 12’s kingpin?
Saturday afternoon
Keep an eye on Clemson-North Carolina (3:30 p.m. ABC) just in case Mack Brown’s addiction to drama translates against top teams. Assuming it doesn’t, here are the three games to flip to instead:
No. 18 Virginia at No. 10 Notre Dame (3:30 p.m., NBC)
Virginia didn’t lose to Old Dominion last week, but the Cavaliers thought hard about it. They have the defense to bother Ian Book and Notre Dame, but do they have any sort of offensive hope beyond quarterback Bryce Perkins running 30 times?
No. 21 USC at No. 17 Washington (3:30 p.m., Fox)
At the rate the Trojans are going through quarterbacks, you, dear reader, might get a tryout soon. That said, after last week’s physical, exciting victory over Utah, the Trojans head up to Seattle to face a Washington team that just humiliated the BYU team that beat USC a week prior.
Coastal Carolina at Appalachian State (3:30 p.m., ESPN+)
Deep Cut No. 1. Under first-year coach Eliah Drinkwitz, App State is more explosive on offense and much worse on defense. Coastal Carolina, meanwhile, put up a combined 108 points on Norfolk State and UMass. App State’s defense is better than those, but this is an influential Sun Belt battle and could get pretty high-scoring.
And if that’s not enough to convince you, check out these amazing App State helmets:
#AppState debuting new helmets against Coastal Carolina this weekend, featuring their classic Victory Yosef logo; pic.twitter.com/Gw8sPmtibA
Saturday evening
Keep an eye on Ohio State-Nebraska (8:30 p.m., ABC) just in case it isn’t the blowout the numbers suggest. But it probably will be, so …
Mississippi State at No. 7 Auburn (7 p.m., ESPN)
MSU’s defense has regressed after losing NFL-caliber playmakers, and the offense has been up and down, first with QB Tommy Stevens, then with freshman Garrett Shrader. Last week’s team (which walloped Kentucky) can challenge Auburn; the team from two weeks ago (which lost to Kansas State) gets blown out.
No. 24 Kansas State at Oklahoma State (7 p.m., ESPN+)
Oklahoma State proved its top-30 bona fides in losing by only six points to Texas, and K-State is coming off the Mississippi State victory and a bye. The race for the non-OU spot in the Big 12 title game is going to be immensely exciting, and this game could play a role in it. (It also might eliminate the Pokes from the competition.)
Southern at Arkansas-Pine Bluff (7 p.m., ESPN3)
Deep Cut No. 2. Recently moribund, Arkansas-Pine Bluff frustrated TCU for two-plus quarters to start the season and has since averaged 47 points per game. Missouri transfer Harry Ballard III has looked fantastic. Southern’s always solid, though, and if the Southwestern Athletic Conference is going to have a first-time Celebration Bowl participant this season, it might be the winner of this one.
Late Saturday
Washington State at No. 19 Utah (10 p.m., Fox Sports 1)
Last week, Wazzu blew a giant lead to UCLA, and Utah blew scoring chances in a loss at USC. One team will get immediate redemption. It would be just like a Mike Leach team to collapse and then immediately wallop a much better team, but the Utes will probably respond well to last week’s missed opportunity.