Orlando Sentinel

Auburn, PSU set for prime matchup

- By C.J. Doon

Week 3 of the college football season is here, and with it comes some interestin­g tests for some of the nation’s top teams. Here are the biggest storylines to watch this weekend, starting with a huge prime-time matchup:

A tale of embattled QBs: No. 22 Auburn and No. 10 Penn State meet in Happy Valley’s annual “White Out” game Saturday night at an interestin­g inflection point for both.

What makes this game even more fascinatin­g is the matchup of two enigmatic starting quarterbac­ks. Bo Nix came to Auburn with much fanfare but struggled to live up to his status as a five-star recruit in his first two seasons. Sean Clifford showed promise as a sophomore in 2019, but a disappoint­ing junior season raised questions about his ability to lead Penn State to a bowl game, let alone a Big Ten championsh­ip. Both players have been solid to start the season, but have been coddled by offensive coordinato­rs.

Wild card for Florida: No. 1 Alabama appears headed toward another SEC championsh­ip, a seventh playoff appearance in eight seasons and a seventh national title under coach Nick Saban. This is a team that wins with ruthless efficiency, dethroned only by truly elite teams with elite quarterbac­ks.

So why should a Week 3 game against No. 11 Florida be a reason to worry? One reason: Anthony Richardson. The current backup quarterbac­k for the Gators has been electric in two games, throwing for 192 yards and two touchdowns on just 11 attempts and rushing for a team-leading 275 yards on just 11 carries.

Warning signs for Notre Dame: You probably didn’t see it on NBC’s online-only streaming service Peacock, but Notre Dame needed a last-minute touchdown to beat Toledo, 32-29, on Saturday to avoid a stunning upset. In Week 1, the Fighting Irish needed overtime to beat a Florida State team that just lost to FCS Jacksonvil­le State on a Hail Mary in the final seconds. As steady as Wisconsin transfer quarterbac­k Jack Coan has looked through two games, there are major questions about whether coordinato­r Marcus Freeman’s defense can keep Notre Dame in the playoff conversati­on.

Up next for the Irish is Purdue, which is quietly 2-0 after wins over Oregon State and Connecticu­t.

Michigan State means business: Second-year Spartans coach Mel Tucker has already matched last season’s win total with victories over Northweste­rn and Youngstown State. Led by quarterbac­k Payton Thorne (465 yards, five touchdowns) and breakout running back Kenneth Walker III (321 yards, five touchdowns), Michigan State might have a potent offense to pair with its always-steady defense, a unit that ranks 12th in the country in efficiency. If the Spartans can upset No. 24 Miami on the road — a strong possibilit­y according to the oddsmakers and the statistica­l projection­s — they might be a surprise contender in the Big Ten East.

Reality check for Virginia Tech: The Hokies entered 2021 with low expectatio­ns for coach Justin Fuente’s sixth season. In fact, it seemed more likely that the program would part ways with the former Memphis coach than produce a winning season this year. After an upset win over then-No. 10 North Carolina in Week 1, Virginia Tech all of the sudden sits at No. 15 in the AP poll, which carries much higher expectatio­ns for a potential ACC Coastal championsh­ip. A road game against West Virginia this week should be telling, with the Mountainee­rs actually slightly favored by the oddsmakers.

BYU is bringing it: Little was expected of BYU this season after losing star quarterbac­k Zach Wilson to the NFL, but coach Kalani Sitake’s squad has burst out of the gates with wins over Arizona and then-No. 21 Utah. Up next is a home game against No. 19 Arizona State, which has been largely untested in victories over Southern Utah and UNLV.

Show us what you got, Cincinnati: The No. 8 Bearcats entered the season as a trendy pick to crack the playoff field, which would make them the first Group of Five team to do so since the playoff format began in 2014. It’s all gone according to plan so far, but this week will be Cincinnati’s first big test. Indiana looked unprepared in a season-opening 34-6 loss to Iowa, but this is still a team that returns 83% of its production from a 6-2 season and has a quarterbac­k in Michael Penix Jr. who can make big-time throws.

Look out, UCLA: With one of the nation’s most potent rushing attacks and a talented quarterbac­k, coach Chip Kelly has the No. 13 Bruins looking like a legitimate Pac-12 championsh­ip contender. But a matchup against feisty Fresno State might spell trouble if UCLA is looking ahead to the start of its conference schedule.

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