Las Vegas Review-Journal

Texas A&M can stifle Auburn

Tigers’ offense has tough task against Aggies’ defense

- By Christophe­r Smith Special to the Review-journal

Auburn quarterbac­k Bo Nix has always struggled against top defenses, a trend that has continued this season.

COLLEGE PICKS

Against Louisiana State, Arkansas and Mississipp­i — teams with an average defensive SP+ ranking of No. 55 — Nix completed 66 percent of his passes for 8.2 yards per attempt and rushed for 5.8 yards per carry.

Against Georgia (SP+ No. 1) and Penn State (No. 5), those numbers sagged to 56 percent, 5.4 yards per attempt and 0.8 yards per carry. Now Auburn faces Texas A&M (No. 7) on the road after the Aggies’ bye week.

Off its own bye last week, Auburn outgained a tired, injured Ole Miss team by just 19 yards. The Rebels got six points out of five red zone trips and turned the ball over on downs three times in the second half.

Prior to that, Arkansas outgained Auburn and earned nine more first downs. But Auburn scored a defensive touchdown, held the Razorbacks to 0-for-3 on fourth down and got touchdown passes of 39 and 71 yards.

According to Pro Football Focus, Texas A&M’S offensive grade improved in each of its past four games. Quarterbac­k Zach Calzada has shaken off the rust after not throwing double-digit passes since 2018. A rebuilt offensive line has started to get comfortabl­e.

Take the Aggies -4½.

Four more plays (home team in CAPS): ■ GEORGIA (-39) over Missouri: The Tigers’ rush defense is 130th in Expected

Points Added per snap. Missouri has allowed Vanderbilt, North Texas, Southeast Missouri State and Central Michigan to run for 229 yards per game on 5.8 yards per carry. Georgia runs the ball 62.7 percent of the time. Even with the outcome decided, the Bulldogs will keep moving the ball and getting into the end zone. Missouri QB Connor Bazelak isn’t healthy, and the team forcefed Tyler Badie 39 touches last week. That’s not going to cut it against Georgia’s stout defense. ■ Louisiana-monroe (+3½) over TEXAS STATE:

The Warhawks have made money line bettors big money this season, winning outright +23½ vs. Troy, +32 vs. Liberty and +13½ vs. South Alabama. A fumble, intercepti­on, turnover on downs and pick-six saw

Louisiana-monroe trailing Appalachia­n State 49-7 last week. But the Warhawks clawed within 59-28 before fumbling at the goal line in the final minute on a play that would’ve covered the spread. Texas State is 121st in EPA per snap, hasn’t won a game in regulation all season and is coming off backto-back road losses straight up and ATS. ■ Tennessee (-1) over

KENTUCKY: The Wildcats are dealing with injuries on their offensive and defensive lines. Kentucky scored between 13 and 20 offensive points against South Carolina, Florida, Georgia and Mississipp­i State. Tennessee is healthy coming off a bye week and perhaps not getting enough credit after losing a total toss-up to Ole Miss and playing Alabama within a touchdown in the

fourth quarter. ■ NORTH CAROLINA (-2½) over Wake Forest:

The Tar Heels are the best team the Demon Deacons have faced. This is Wake Forest’s third road game in its past four outings. North Carolina is fourth in offensive SP+ and 15th in rushing EPA per snap. Quarterbac­k Sam Howell is playing his best football of the season, completing 77.4 percent of his passes for 341 yards against Notre Dame and rushing for more than 90 yards in each of his past three games.

Last week: 2-3

Season: 25-20

Christophe­r Smith of Al.com is providing college football analysis for the

Las Vegas Review-journal. Follow @Cfblocksmi­th on Twitter.

 ?? Butch Dill The Associated Press ?? Auburn quarterbac­k Bo Nix throws a pass against Mississipp­i last Saturday in Auburn, Ala.
Butch Dill The Associated Press Auburn quarterbac­k Bo Nix throws a pass against Mississipp­i last Saturday in Auburn, Ala.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States