Calhoun Times

Rivals collide in ACC-SEC games

- By Steve Megargee and Hank Kurz Jr.

Associated Press

The Southeaste­rn Conference and Atlantic Coast Conference have something to prove as they enter a rivalry-themed week featuring four matchups between the two leagues.

This week’s SEC vs. ACC showdowns are particular­ly important for No. 3 Clemson (No. 3 College Football Playoff) and No. 4 Georgia (No. 4).

Clemson (11-0) is favored by 27 points over South Carolina (4-7) and Georgia (101) is a 28-point favorite at Georgia Tech (3-8). Both the Tigers and Bulldogs must keep winning to maintain their playoff hopes — and they understand rivalries sometimes produce unexpected results.

“The challenge is about the rivalry,” Georgia coach Kirby Smart said. “So when you think about this game, records are thrown out. None of that matters.’’

This week’s other interconfe­rence matchups include Florida State (6-5) at No. 8 Florida (9-2, No. 11 CFP) and Louisville (7-4) at Kentucky (6-5).

Neither league has distinguis­hed itself in nonconfere­nce play this year.

The ACC is 3-11 against teams from other Power Five leagues and Notre Dame, while the SEC is 6-5 in those types of matchups.

The SEC has an overall nonconfere­nce record of 39-13 and has its highest number of regular-season nonconfere­nce losses since 2003 and its lowest regular-season nonconfere­nce winning percentage since 2005. The ACC owns a 3416 nonconfere­nce record that doesn’t include Wake Forest’s victory over North Carolina, a game between ACC rivals that didn’t count in the league standings.

The SEC and ACC have split their four matchups thus far. North Carolina beat South Carolina and Clemson defeated Texas A&M for the ACC’s two wins. Alabama trounced Duke and Florida edged Miami for the SEC’s two victories.

ACC teams have held their own against the SEC, going 25-25 in the matchups since 2015.

“I think it’s big for the ACC when you go out and out of conference and go get you a big win,” Louisville coach Scott Satterfiel­d said. “There is no question about it. I think as you look back on the body of work, that’s huge for our conference and in our league. We’ve got to be able to do that, in particular when you’re going against an SEC school.’’

Clemson remains on pace to give the ACC a playoff berth as it continues its national title defense. The SEC has a shot at two playoff spots with No. 1 LSU (No. 2 CFP), Georgia and No. 5 Alabama (No. 5 CFP) in contention.

Here’s a rundown of the ACC vs. SEC matchups this week:

Clemson at South Carolina

The Tigers have won 26 games in a row and will represent the ACC’s Atlantic Division for a record fifth consecutiv­e season in the championsh­ip game. Clemson has beaten South Carolina five straight times. South Carolina won’t be going to a bowl, but bouncing Clemson out of the playoff picture would provide some solace heading into the offseason.

Florida State at Florida

Florida ended a five-game skid in this rivalry by winning 41-14 at Florida State in 2018. The Gators are favored by 18 this time and have a great shot at earning a New Year’s Six bowl invitation if they win. The remote possibilit­y that Florida State interim coach Odell Haggins could earn the full-time gig would get a bit more realistic if the Seminoles pull off the upset.

Louisville at Kentucky

Kentucky won 56-10 at Louisville last season in the most lopsided game between these two teams since a 73-0 Kentucky victory in 1922 (Kentucky and Louisville didn’t face each other from 1925-93). A much closer

 ?? AP-Mark Humphrey ?? Kentucky’s Lynn Bowden Jr. carries the ball against Vanderbilt in the first half Nov. 16 in Nashville, Tenn.
AP-Mark Humphrey Kentucky’s Lynn Bowden Jr. carries the ball against Vanderbilt in the first half Nov. 16 in Nashville, Tenn.
 ?? AP-David J. Phillip ?? South Carolina quarterbac­k Ryan Hilinski (3) throws a pass against Texas A&M on Nov. 16 in College Station, Texas.
AP-David J. Phillip South Carolina quarterbac­k Ryan Hilinski (3) throws a pass against Texas A&M on Nov. 16 in College Station, Texas.

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