WEEK 3 HEADLINED BY BIG TEN FAILURES
Somewhat lost among Saturday’s early starts was this score:
Temple 35, Maryland 14.
`Temple had opened with a loss to Villanova. The Owls then
doubled down with a loss to Buffalo. On the other hand, Maryland opened with a
win against Texas and then topped Bowling Green. That Maryland had done so
without its head coach, the suspended D.J. Durkin, made the Terrapins one of
the early success stories of the 2018 season.
Maryland’s stumble was just the first blow in a rough
afternoon for the Big Ten. Starting with the Terrapins’ loss, a range of scores
on Saturday put an official end to the idea that the Big Ten is the strongest
league in the country.
Just as Maryland was flailing, Nebraska lost at home to Troy
to mark its worst start since 1957. Two games don’t indicate anything about
Scott Frost’s tenure at his alma mater, though the Cornhuskers’ number of
errors must be fixed before his debut season runs off the rails. Illinois
led South Florida 19-7 in the third quarter but allowed the game’s final 18
points in a 25-19 loss.
Wisconsin might have painted itself into a corner with a
24-21 loss at home to Brigham Young, a team the Badgers handled with ease a
year ago. The Badgers are still a factor in the Big Ten hunt, especially it
what seems like a very weak West Division, but the loss tot BYU feeds into the
theory that Wisconsin was overrated heading into the regular season as a result
of last year’s 13-1 finish, which was in turn built on the back of a soft
schedule. It’s a pretty complicated theory.
STUNNER: BYU knocks
off No. 6 Wisconsin after missed field goal
Purdue allowed 40 points and lost to Missouri, dropping the
Boilermakers to 0-3 after last year's surprising success under Jeff Brohm.
Northwestern lost at home to Akron, of all teams, which hadn't defeated a team
from the Big Ten since '94. That's 1894.
And lastly, the most damning score of all: Kansas 55,
Rutgers 14. Rutgers is the punchline of the Big Ten, but the Scarlet Knights
are college football royalty in comparison to the Jayhawks. Or so we thought.
The worst team in the Big Ten is 41 points worse than the worst team in the Big
12 Conference, and in the world of college football that’s some important math.
At least there's Ohio State. After a day of pratfalls, a
40-28 win against TCU provided the lone bright spot for the Big Ten. The
Buckeyes look the part, even if the rest of the conference doesn't.
HERE ARE THE REST OF SATURDAY’S WINNERS AND LOSERS:
WINNERS
ED ORGERON
It’s fair to call Orgeron the day’s big winner after a 22-21
win at Auburn gave LSU two impactful victories during the season’s first three
weeks, joining a dominant performance against Miami (Fla.) in the opener. After
a summer spent under the radar in the Southeastern Conference, the Tigers are
destined for the top 10 in this week’s Amway Coaches Poll.
TIGERS STUNNER: No. 13 LSU
knocks off No. 7 Auburn with final-play field goal
OKLAHOMA STATE
Another team that passed the offseason far out of the
spotlight: Oklahoma State was viewed as a borderline Big 12 contender, far
behind rival Oklahoma, and as not likely to make much noise outside of
conference play. Saturday’s 44-21 win against previously unbeaten Boise State
showcased a defense that might be good enough to make the Cowboys a factor for
a New Year’s Six bowl. Few coaches in the country do a better job milking the
most of their roster than Mike Gundy.
COWBOYS ROLL: Cornelius
leads No. 19 Oklahoma State past No. 17 Boise State
ALABAMA
It's only been three games, a quarter of a season, but let's
just ask the question: How good is this Alabama team? We've seen a number of
good ones during the Nick Saban era, including last year's national champions,
but the Crimson Tide of 2018 are operating on a different level. The Tide have
outscored their first three opponents 117-7 in the first half of games, and led
overmatched Mississippi 49-7 at halftime Saturday night. The Rebels aren't a
terrible team; Alabama just made them look that way.
DUKE
The Blue Devils continue to impress. Through three weeks,
Duke owns wins against Army, Northwestern and now Baylor, the last on the road.
And the 40-20 doubling of the Bears came without starting quarterback Daniel
Jones, injured in last week’s win against the Wildcats. In a pretty unsettled
Atlantic Coast Conference, could Duke make a case for being the best team in
the Coastal Division?
BRIGHAM YOUNG
This was a win coach Kalani Sitake needed after a dreadful
2017, and a win the Cougars needed as they continue to work through a very
tough September schedule. But now 2-1 with wins against Arizona and Wisconsin,
BYU gets McNeese State next Saturday, Washington on Sept. 29 and then a pretty
smooth October and November. That Saturday’s win came a year after losing 40-6
at home to the Badgers shows the Cougars’ offseason growth.
TROY
These wins are becoming fairly commonplace for the Trojans,
who can add a win at Nebraska to last year’s win at LSU. Coach Neal Brown
and the Trojans have righted the ship after opening the year with a lopsided
loss to Boise State.
LOSERS
WILLIE TAGGART
You wouldn’t think it could get worse for Florida State’s
first-year coach than his rain-soaked opening loss to Virginia Tech. But
Samford was worse. And Syracuse was the worst yet. The Seminoles’ 30-7 loss was
marked by sluggishness and a handful of shaky coaching decisions, leaving
Taggart under a strange amount of pressure for a coach just three games into
his tenure.
RUTGERS
Because it bears repeating: Rutgers lost to Kansas by 41
points, or about six touchdowns.
JAYHAWKS ROCK: Kansas gets
consecutive FBS wins for first time this decade
GEORGIA TECH
First, let’s throw some credit toward Pat Narduzzi and
Pittsburgh, which pulled off a nice win against the Yellow Jackets one week
after being blasted at home by rival Penn State. But the bigger story is the
play of Paul Johnson team which is now 1-2 with games still to come
against Clemson, Duke, Virginia Tech, Miami (Fla.) and Georgia.
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
In the same vein as above, a 37-14 win at home against USC
is an exhale moment for Tom Herman, who couldn't afford to be 1-2 heading into
conference play. Not that there's anything too impressive about topping the
Trojans, who have wilted in the past two weeks. The youth seen on offense, as
in true freshman quarterback JT Daniels, will ultimately benefit from this
year's experience. For now, though, the Trojans aren't balanced enough to be
more than average.
THE MID-AMERICAN
CONFERENCE
What could’ve been an eventful day for the MAC turned out to
be a dud, full of swings and misses in games pitting the league’s plucky
upstarts against big-name competition from the Power Five. Toledo thought it
was in line for an upset at home against Miami (Fla.) but come up well short in
a 49-24 loss. Ball State never sniffed Indiana in losing 38-10. The 63-10 loss
Kent State took at Penn State was very, very expected, so no harm there. But
Miami (Ohio) didn’t put up much of a fight against Minnesota and Ohio’s defense
was trounced by Virginia.
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