Chicago Sun-Times

OH, WHAT A RUSH

Unbeaten Notre Dame faces another major challenge in Blacksburg

- STEVE GREENBERG sgreenberg@suntimes.com | @SLGreenber­g

Imight as well have hung them on a banner outside my front door, or worn them on a sandwich board up and down Michigan Ave. Or at least posted them in my social-media bios.

“Notre Dame will be in the playoff at season’s end.”

The words have been impossible to get away from since I wrote them after last weekend’s lopsided Irish victory over Stanford. Readers have lined up to call me dimwitted, confirming my long-held suspicion. More than that, though, I’ve spent the ensuing days becoming increasing­ly concerned about the Irish’s next game.

So, please allow the following edit: The unbeaten Irish will be in the playoff at season’s end unless

No. 6 Notre Dame (-6) at No.

24 Virginia Tech (7 p.m., Ch. 7) turns into the sort of Blacksburg bum rush that, well, certainly could unfold.

When the one-loss Hokies are right, their home turf — with Metallica’s “Enter Sandman” blasting through the publicaddr­ess system — can be a scary place. That’s especially the case at night.

“Our job is to handle the environmen­t and go in and play really good football,” coach Brian Kelly said. “If we do that and handle the environmen­t, handle ourselves and our preparatio­n, we’ll be in pretty good shape. If we can’t handle the environmen­t — and we can’t prepare the right way [and] we’re distracted because everybody’s telling us how great we are — then we’ll be in big trouble.”

The Hokies were impressive,

especially on the defensive side of the ball, in a season-opening 24-3 victory at Florida State. Buoyed by quarterbac­k Ryan Willis in his first career start, they looked like an even more complete team last weekend in a 31-14 romp at Duke. Of course, this is the same team — the same defense — that got run over in a shocking Week 4 upset at Old Dominion.

The Irish would like to think it’s all about themselves. The balanced, formidable offense that did whatever it wanted to do against Stanford is capable of achieving success anywhere. The fast, furious defense that manhandled the Cardinal ought to travel well, too. At least in theory.

College football is a funny game. Upsets happen all the time, part of a relentless winnowing of the list of true title contenders. Many a high-end squad has fallen victim to the Blacksburg bum rush before, but this time? Get me that sandwich board, dang it — Irish by 10.

Three other Saturday games of major intrigue:

No. 7 Oklahoma (-7½) vs. No. 19 Texas

(11 a.m., Fox-32): Baker who? Sooners quarterbac­k Kyler Murray has stepped into Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield’s shoes and been spectacula­r. That’s why the question everyone’s asking heading into this neutral-field game at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas is if the resurgent Longhorns can light up the scoreboard enough to even keep it close.

It’s the wrong question. The right one is: Can the Longhorns’ defense, which has been lights-out three games in a row, carry the day? Hook ’Em in a Red River upset. Florida State (+13½) at No. 17 Miami (2:30 p.m., Ch. 7). The Hurricanes haven’t won at home against the Seminoles since 2004. If they fail to do so this time, it’ll be colossally disappoint­ing given FSU’s struggles getting off the ground this season. But don’t discount the significan­ce of FSU’s comeback victory last weekend at Louisville. It was just the shot in the arm new coach Willie Taggart’s program needed. Miami, 31-24.

No. 5 LSU (-2½) at No. 22 Florida (2:30 p.m., Ch. 2): It isn’t the second coming of Alabama vs. Georgia, but these teams are set up to make all kinds of noise in the SEC this season. Speaking of Alabama and Georgia, the upstart Tigers (2018 schedule strength: obscene) face both powerhouse­s in the next few weeks. They’d better not let their collective guard down against the Gators. LSU walks it off with a field goal.

MY FAVORITE FAVORITE: No. 8 Auburn (-3½) at Mississipp­i State (6:30 p.m., ESPN2). Are the Bulldogs going to be as consistent­ly dangerous, particular­ly in Starkville, under first-year coach Joe Moorhead, as they were under Dan Mullen? Both defenses are good, but Auburn’s is better.

MY FAVORITE UNDERDOG: Minnesota (+7) vs. Iowa (2:30 p.m., BTN). The Gophers are one-dimensiona­l on offense — it’s run the ball or bust — and the Hawkeyes are terrific against the run. At some point, though, the Gophers are going to turn a meaningful corner under P.J. Fleck. Why not now? Last week: 7-0 straight up; 6-1 against the spread.

Season to date: 25-9 straight-up; 19-14-1 against the spread.

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES (ABOVE), AP ?? The Irish will have their hands full against quarterbac­k Ryan Willis and Virginia Tech in a hostile environmen­t Saturday.
GETTY IMAGES (ABOVE), AP The Irish will have their hands full against quarterbac­k Ryan Willis and Virginia Tech in a hostile environmen­t Saturday.
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 ?? BRETT DEERING/GETTY IMAGES ?? Oklahoma quarterbac­k Kyler Murray, who has been spectacula­r since stepping into Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield’s shoes, goes up against a tough Texas defense.
BRETT DEERING/GETTY IMAGES Oklahoma quarterbac­k Kyler Murray, who has been spectacula­r since stepping into Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield’s shoes, goes up against a tough Texas defense.

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