The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Things to watch for

- Eric Olson, The Associated Press

For the second straight year, Nick Saban and Jimbo Fisher will meet in a mentor-mentee matchup.

All signs point toward Saban teaching him another lesson when top-ranked Alabama hosts 22nd-ranked Texas A&M on Saturday in one of two games between Top 25 teams. The other has No. 7 Stanford at No. 20 Oregon. Fisher was Saban’s offensive coordinat orat LSU from 2000-06, and they met in the highly anticipate­d kickoff to the 2017 season in Atlanta. The Tide was in total control while winning 24-7 against Fisher’s third-ranked Florida State Seminoles. Fisher moved on to A&M, where his charge is to challenge Saban and the Tide’s supremacy in the SEC West. No small task. The Tide has outscored their first three opponents 170-28 and are 27-point favorites to beat the Aggies for as ixth straight time. Five things to know about college football’s Week 4:

BEST GAME

Stanford at Oregon: Washington came into the season all the rage in the Pac-12, but the winner of this game has gone on to win the North five times since 2011. Oreg onQBJustin­Herb ert has put up great numbers, and the defense has held the last two opponents under 100 yards rushing. The nonconfere­nce schedule was cushy, though, so this game will be a truer indicator of what first-year coach Mario Cristobal has in Eugene. Stanfor d’sBryceLove,the 2017 Heisman Trophy runner-up, returns after sitting out last week’s game against UC-Davis with an undisclose­d injury. The Cardinal defense has allowed a total of 23 points in three games.

HEISMAN WATCH

Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Alabama: Tagovailoa is a model of efficiency. In the first three games, 14 of the 20 drives he’s quarterbac­ked have resulted in touchdowns and a1 5th in a field goal. Alabama was 15 for 19 on third downs on those possession­s. Going back to the national championsh­ip game against Clemson, Tagovailoa’s 29 series have ended with 17 touchdowns and three field goals. The sophomore left-hander made a big move up in the Heisman polls after his performanc­e against Mississipp­i, and he’s in position to put up monster numbers against a Texas A&M defense struggling against the pass.

NUMBERS TO KNOW

10: Florida State’s point total in eight quarters against Football Bowl Subdivisio­n opponents (Virginia Tech, Syracuse).

25: Number of rushing yards Iowa has allowed in its last two games. Next up for the Hawkeyes is Wisconsin’s Jonathan Taylor, No. 2 in the nation at 171.7 yards per game.

40: Boston College has scored at least that many points in an ACC game five times. Four of those five are in BC’s past six conference games.

593: Consecutiv­e carries without a fumble by Arizona State running backs.

1945: The last time Nebraska started 0-3 if it loses at Michigan. The Cornhusker­s are 18-p ointunde rdogs. 1961: The last time Oklahoma played Army. The Sooners won 14-8 at Yankee Stadium.

OFF THE RADAR

Florida at Tennessee: Seems like a long time ago this was one of the most entertaini­ng rivalries in the nation, let alone the Southeaste­rn Conference. For the first time since 1970, both teams go into this game with first-year head coaches as they look to recapture their mojo. Florida’s Feleipe Franks got booed at home last week after opening 0 for 6 with an intercepti­on. He recovered to complete 8 of his next 9 in a win over Colorado State. Last year, Franks hooked up with Tyrie Cleveland on a 63-yard Hail Mary to beat the Volunteers 26-20 in Gainesvill­e, but he’s 1-3 as a starter away from home. Tennessee is holding a 20-year reunion for its 1998 national championsh­ip team, QB Jarrett Guarantano is completing 72 percent of his passes and the defense hasn’t allowed a touchdown in its last eight quarters. But the Volunteers have played overmatche­d competitio­n the last two weeks. Though the Vols are 4 1/2-point underdogs, this is their best chance for their first SEC win since 2016. The four-game gauntlet of Georgia, Auburn, Alabama and South Carolina awaits.

HOT SEAT WATCH

Clay Helton, Southern California: Helton won the Rose Bowl two years ago, the Pac-12 last year and had his contract extended to 2023. Thanks, Sam Darnold. The capital Helton built is being diminished by the Trojans’ 1-2 start with back-to-back road losses to Stanford and Texas. Now comes Washington State (3-0) and its “Air Raid” offense to the Los Angeles Coliseum on Friday night. The deficienci­es on this USC team are apparent. Poor offensive line play and lack of a running game are putting all kinds of pressure on true freshman quarterbac­k JT Daniels, and Helton is feeling it, too.

 ?? [ERIC GAY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? USC head coach Clay Helton speaks to an official during the first half against Texas on Saturday in Austin. The Trojans lost 37-16.
[ERIC GAY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] USC head coach Clay Helton speaks to an official during the first half against Texas on Saturday in Austin. The Trojans lost 37-16.

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