The Oklahoman

Can UCF crash the playoff party at last?

- By Paul Myerberg

Central Florida's 49-21 win at Georgia Tech cements the Knights' status as the team to beat in the Group of Five and maintains the program's underdog hopes of crashing the College Football Playoff, which took a hit this week with the Big Ten's decision to return to play in October.

First, the good news: UCF's convincing win comes one week after Georgia Tech's upset of Florida State put the Yellow Jackets right on the verge of making the Top 25.

While the Jackets are not viewed as a major ACC contender, meaning the win might look weaker in November than on Saturday, the Knights can lean on a 28-point road victory to rise in the polls while turning to games against American competitio­n.

Sophomore quarter back Dillon Gabriel is quickly becoming a player to watch from a national perspectiv­e. After tossing 29 touchdowns and averaging 9.2 yards per attempt as a rookie, Gabriel began his second season with 417 yards passing and f our scores against a Georgia Tech defense that held FSU to 4.4 yards per throw and had three sacks in the opener.

Will it be enough for UCF? The current playoff format doesn't save room for the Group of Five, making it hard to envision a realistic scenario where the Knights finish in the top four — it's possible, just not probable. But t he only way the Knights could've even factored into that conversati­on was by cruising against Georgia Tech. Saturday was a definite success.

Here are there st of Saturday's winners and losers:

Winners

Miami (Fla.): Miami has a case for being seen as the thirdbest team in the ACC (behind Clemson and Notre Dame) after a 47-34 win at Louisville. This is the Hurricanes' second notable win in a row to start the season, following Alabama-Birmingham, and will help erase any of the concerns that came out of a 6-7 finish in 2019, the program's first season under coach Manny Diaz. During a normal offseason, Miami's addition of transfers D'Eriq King (quarterbac­k) and Quincy Roche (edge rusher) would've been one

of the biggest stories of the offseason in the ACC. As it is, the Hurricanes' positive moves since the end of last season were largely ignored heading into September.

Clemson: Clemson beat The Citadel, obviously. Don't look so surprised. But no one was injured. Trevor Lawrence tossed three touchdowns and was pulled long before the end of the second quarter. Travis Etienne had a few touches, broke some tackles and then took the rest of the night off. Ahead 49-0 at halftime, the Tigers were able to play backups and newcomers extensive minutes as Dabo Swinney looks to build depth on the second tier for a team that looks set for a title run.

Boston College: Notre Dame transfer Phil Jurkovec threw for 300 yards and two touchdowns as the Eagles beat Duke 26-6 in a very positive start for first-year coach Jeff Hafley. Whether Duke is any good is up for debate, though the Blue Devils were competitiv­e with the Notre Dame in losing 27-13 last Saturday. This is the sort of opponent Boston College needs to beat to win more than four games during the regular season.

Notre Dame: After that uneven performanc­e against Duke, the Irish rolled to a 52-0 win against South Florida that saw a much stronger game from quarterbac­k Ian Book, who ran for three touchdowns before backups entered with a few minutes left in the third quarter. While the shutout on defense and increased balance on offense comes against the Bulls, a program in a rebuild under new coach Jeff Scott, the Irish look prepared for an ACC slate that heats up in October.

SMU: The Mustangs' 65-35 win at North Texas included 710 yards of offense pretty evenly split between the run and the pass: 366 yards came on the ground and 344 in the air. It's this offense that makes SMU an underrated threat in the American.

Losers

Sun Belt: One week after winning three games against Big 12 competitio­n to be one of the big stories in college football, the Sun Belt's reputation tumbled after Louisiana-Lafayette needed overtime to beat Georgia State and Appalachia­n State lost 17-7 at Marshall. While the Thundering Herd should be a top-three team in Conference USA, the loss does significan­t damage to Appalachia­n State's quest to reach a New Year's Six bowl.

Oklahoma State: The Cowboys' 16-7 win against Tulsa was a sluggish debut for a team with preseason hype as a dark-horse playoff contender. The lack of effectiven­ess and efficiency on offense can be attributed to an injury to quarterbac­k Spencer Sanders and the belowavera­ge play of the offensive line, which gave up six sacks. Tulsa held star running back Chuba Hubbard to 93 yards on 27 carries, ending his run of 11 consecutiv­e 100-yard games.

Tulane: Now the Green Wave know how it feels. One week after reversing a 24-6 deficit to beat South Alabama 27-24, Tulane coughed up a 24-0 lead to Navy in losing by the same score. Obvious credit goes to Navy and coach Ken Niumatalol­o for crawling out of a major hole after losing 55-3 to Brigham Young in the opener. Blown opportunit­ies will haunt Tulane: Navy ran only two plays in Green Wave territory during the first half and Tulane tossed an intercepti­on near the goal line when looking to build on the 24-0 lead.

Middle Tennessee: This hasn't been good: Middle Tennessee has opened with losses to Army and Troy by a combined score of 89-14. Saturday's 47-14 loss to the Trojans came as the Blue Raiders' defense allowed 496 yards and 30 first downs while the offense committed another three turnovers, giving the team seven through two games.

 ?? ELGAZZAR/ THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER] ?? UCF quarterbac­k Dillon Gabriel started his 2020 season with 417 yards passing and four scores against a Georgia Tech defense that held FSU to 4.4 yards per throw and had three sacks in the opener. [KAREEM
ELGAZZAR/ THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER] UCF quarterbac­k Dillon Gabriel started his 2020 season with 417 yards passing and four scores against a Georgia Tech defense that held FSU to 4.4 yards per throw and had three sacks in the opener. [KAREEM

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