The Columbus Dispatch

Does Indiana have what it takes?

Oklahoma, Northweste­rn among Week 12 questions

- Erick Smith and Paul Myerberg

In most years, Week 12 in college football would be a time for teams to start making closing arguments on their seasons. But this is 2020, and there’s lots more football left after the weekend before Thanksgivi­ng.

The Big Ten has been completely unpredicta­ble with expected contenders falling by the wayside and surprise teams emerging. There are four unbeatens left: two in the East Division and two in the West.

Convenient­ly, the top two teams in each division are playing each other with No. 3 Ohio State hosting No. 10 Indiana and No. 12 Wisconsin traveling to No. 20 Northweste­rn. By Saturday night, there should be more certainty about which teams will be headed to the conference title games.

The same is true in the Big 12 with the annual Bedlam showdown between No. 14 Oklahoma State and No. 17 Oklahoma. The Sooners have rebounded from their slow start but still have ground to make up on the Cowboys and Iowa State. A loss would end Oklahoma’s hopes of a sixth consecutiv­e league championsh­ip.

There are compelling stories outside the Power Five as Cincinnati and Liberty hit the road with difficult games threatenin­g their perfect seasons.

A look at the five biggest questions for Week 12:

Will there be a new Big 12 champ?

Should Oklahoma lose to Oklahoma State at home, the Sooners surely will see their run of conference titles end. However, Lincoln Riley’s team looks to be peaking at the right time, having run off four consecutiv­e wins, helped by the return of RB Rhamondre Stevenson and DL Ronnie Perkins from suspension. The last three wins have been by a combined 106 points.

The sledding will be tougher as the Cowboys – co-leaders in the league with Iowa State – have a defense that can slow down Oklahoma’s potent offense. That pushes the emphasis whether OSU can find enough consistent offense to keep the ball away from the Sooners and pull off a huge road upset.

Does Indiana have any chance?

When the Big Ten season started, there was little anticipati­on for this game between the conference’s overwhelmi­ng favorite and a plucky underdog that was going to face Penn State, Michigan and Michigan State in three of the first four weeks. Then a strange thing happened.

The Hoosiers won all three games and beat Rutgers to become the lone threat to the Buckeyes in the East Division. The name Indiana might not strike fear into opponents; however the players and coach Tom Allen have proved, especially in dominant wins against the Wolverines and the Spartans, that this team is capable of an upset. If the defense gives QB Michael Penix Jr. enough opportunit­ies, he will lead scoring drives and keep this game close.

Just how good is Northweste­rn?

After blowing out Maryland in its opener, Northweste­rn has played it closer against Iowa, Nebraska and Purdue. One of four unbeaten teams left in the Big Ten, the Wildcats’ biggest test comes Saturday against Wisconsin. One thing we know: Northweste­rn’s defense is legitimate­ly good.

The Wildcats have allowed just 10 points in the second half all season and held opponents to 4.3 yards per play and 3.6 yards per carry.

And the offense is much improved under Indiana transfer quarterbac­k Peyton Ramsey, who has 845 yards of total offense. In all, everything we’ve seen through four games says Northweste­rn has what it takes to win the Big Ten West and reach a New Year’s Six bowl. While external expectatio­ns weren’t very high after winning three games in 2019, don’t forget the Wildcats went 8-1 in the league and reached the conference championsh­ip game two years ago.

Will Cincinnati get tested by UCF?

Well, UCF is certain to provide the Bearcats’ stiffest challenge to date, if only by default. Cincinnati has run through every opponent easily, with only one game decided by fewer than 21 points.

As with Northweste­rn, the Bearcats are defined by an outstandin­g defense while the offense, which ranks 13th nationally in yards per play, is overlooked.

But the best offense in this matchup belongs to the Knights, who are averaging 619.1 yards per game to lead Football Bowl Subdivisio­n teams. In that sense, this is a classic matchup: one of the best defenses in the country matching wits with quarterbac­k Dillon Gabriel and this dynamic UCF offense.

Does Liberty stay unbeaten?

Is North Carolina State better than Virginia Tech? The Wolfpack certainly aren’t worse.

And after just getting past the Hokies 38-35 on a late field goal two weeks ago, Liberty will likely need all 60 minutes to beat its third Atlantic Coast Conference opponent on the season.

This is a potential statement game for the Flames, coach Hugh Freeze and quarterbac­k Malik Willis, who has a shot at posting 2,000 passing yards and 1,000 yards on the ground during this shortened season.

For Liberty, another win would greatly increase the likelihood of going undefeated, though Coastal Carolina is looming to end the regular season. Freeze might’ve rehabilita­ted his reputation enough to be in considerat­ion for major job openings, including the recent opening at South Carolina. Don’t be surprised if Saturday’s game ends with both teams scoring 35 or more points.

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