The Commercial Appeal

4 questions for college football

- Erick Smith and Paul Myerberg

The final weekend of the college football season always has drama surroundin­g the playoff race. This year is no exception, even if the there seems to be less likelihood for upsets.

While Alabama and Ohio State are overwhelmi­ng favorites to confirm their places in the field, there are possible avenues for respective opponents Florida and Northweste­rn to find a way to pull off a surprise.

Three conference championsh­ip games are rematches from the regular season. Notre Dame, Iowa State and Coastal Carolina all were underdogs when they won the regular season matchups. Clemson, Oklahoma and Louisiana-lafayette will be looking to turn the tables in the second meetings.

A look at the five biggest questions for Week 16 of the season:

Does Florida have a chance against Alabama?

The oddsmakers say no: Alabama is favored by more than two touchdowns in Saturday night’s SEC championsh­ip game. But any team with Florida’s quarterbac­k, skill talent and offensive explosiven­ess has a shot against Alabama, even if the Crimson Tide’s defense has played inspired football since a shootout win against Mississipp­i early this season.

While last week’s loss to LSU dealt a blow to the Gators’ overall credibilit­y, this offense still ranks fifth nationally in yards per play (7.4), eighth in yards per game (513.5) and 12th in scoring (41.2 points per game).

The problem? Alabama ranks second, fifth and third in those same categories. In other words, Florida has a shot. But it would qualify as a major upset if the Gators knock off the Tide.

What is different about the Clemson-notre Dame rematch?

One thing that immediatel­y stands out is the return of Trevor Lawrence, who missed Notre Dame’s 47-40 overtime win in November due to COVID-19.

Could Lawrence make the difference? Certainly. But don’t forget that freshman phenom D.J. Uiagalelei replaced Lawrence in that loss and threw for 439 yards, the most ever allowed by the Irish in a single game.

The biggest developmen­ts in the weeks since have been Notre Dame’s increased production on both sides and the continued struggles of Clemson’s offensive line, which has not made any noticeable gains during the regular season and could again be a major issue against Notre Dame’s attacking defense.

If the line is unable to move the line of scrimmage and open lanes for star running back Travis Etienne, Clemson’s offensive may remain too one-dimensiona­l to take down the Irish.

Can Northweste­rn pose problems for Ohio State?

Sure. This defense is one of the best in recent program history: Northweste­rn ranks fifth in the country in yards allowed per play (4.5) and has held all but one of its seven opponents to under 370 yards.

The Wildcats have also forced 16 turnovers, exceeding last year’s total (14) across a 12-game season. The most obvious key to victory is to muddy the waters against Ohio State’s fantastic offense, force the Buckeyes to make long conversion­s and win the turnover battle by two or more.

All this is doable.

But you have to wonder if Northweste­rn’s offense can carry its end of the bargain after an uneven season that had high spots (the opener against Maryland and last week against Illinois) but plenty of low notes (pretty much everything in between).

Is Iowa State able beat Oklahoma again?

The Cyclones caught the Sooners at the right time earlier this season. Oklahoma was playing its first road game with freshman quarterbac­k Spencer Rattler and missing two key players – RB Rhamondre Stevenson and DE Ronnie Perkins.

Rattler’s maturity and the impact of Stevenson and Perkins have been critical to the Sooners running off six consecutiv­e wins since the loss in Ames.

However, Iowa State is also a very different team. On a five-game win streak, the Cyclones, who are No. 6 in the playoff ranking, pose some key issues for Oklahoma.

Iowa State quarterbac­k Brock Purdy can take advantage of the Sooners’ secondary, which is the weak link of the defense. Don’t be surprised if the Cyclones pull another upset and put themselves in position to maybe make the final four.

 ?? BRIAN POWERS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Iowa State wide receiver Xavier Hutchinson runs for a touchdown against Oklahoma on Oct. 3. The Cyclones won the game 37-30.
BRIAN POWERS/USA TODAY SPORTS Iowa State wide receiver Xavier Hutchinson runs for a touchdown against Oklahoma on Oct. 3. The Cyclones won the game 37-30.

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