San Antonio Express-News

Iowa-iowa St. not just for bragging rights

- By Eric Olson

The state of Iowa, of all places, is college football central this week.

The Iowa-iowa State game has been played 67 times since 1884, always for nothing more than bragging rights. That changes this year.

The national spotlight is on Ames on Saturday with the Big Ten’s Iowa coming in ranked No. 10 and the Big 12’s Iowa State No. 9. Never before have the teams met when both were ranked, let alone in the top 10.

The Big Ten and Pac-12 are matched up in two games.

The big one is in Columbus, where No. 3 Ohio State hosts No. 12 Oregon in the only other Top 25 matchup. The Buckeyes still have much to prove on defense, and Oregon will put stress on all three levels.

The other game between the venerable conference­s, Washington at Michigan, lost some of its luster after the Huskies dropped their opener to FCS member Montana.

Fans feeling nostalgic will want to tune in to see No. 5 Texas play Arkansas in a renewal of rivalry that was at its hottest in the 1960s and ‘70s when the Longhorns’ Darrell Royal and Razorbacks’ Frank Broyles ruled the old Southwest Conference.

This will be the teams’ first meeting since Arkansas won 31-7 in the 2014 Texas Bowl in Houston.

Best game

No. 10 Iowa at No. 9 Iowa State:

Iowa was a Week 1 revelation with its dominant win over Indiana. While Ohio State is the favorite to win a fifth straight Big Ten title, the Hawkeyes certainly are the team to beat in the West. A win in this nonconfere­nce showdown is a must if the Hawks dare to dream big (read: becoming part of the College Football Playoff conversati­on).

Iowa State struggled to beat FCS member Northern Iowa last week in what has become a habitually slow-starting Cyclones program. All the high expectatio­ns for ISU remain intact, but the Cyclones

must be much sharper to end the Hawks’ five-game win streak in the series.

Heisman watch

Cincinnati QB Desmond Ridder: Road games against Indiana next week and Notre Dame on Oct. 2 will determine Ridder’s viability as a Heisman candidate. For now, expect him to put up big numbers against Murray State on Saturday.

The third-year starter was 20 for 25 and matched his career high with four touchdown passes in last week’s 49-14 win over Miami (Ohio). It was the second time Ridder has completed at least 80 percent of his passes. An 81-yard TD pass to Tyler Scott on the Bearcats’ second play from scrimmage was the longest pass of Ridder’s career.

Numbers to know

5 — Houston’s number of fourth-down conversion­s in a loss to Texas Tech.

19-0 — Texas A&M’S record when leading at the end of the first quarter under Jimbo Fisher.

31 — Corrected tackle total for Fordham linebacker Ryan

Greenhagen against Nebraska last week. Greenhagen originally was credited with 30, but one was added to his total on Monday. He now owns the Division I record.

100 — Career wins for Dan Mullen if Florida beats South Florida. Mullen is in his 13th season as a head coach.

300 — Boise State’s streak of

games without being shut out. The Broncos are among nine teams all-time to go that many games in a row without being held scoreless.

Under the radar

Pittsburgh’s game at Tennessee is the teams’ first meeting in 38 years and billed as the Johnny

Majors Classic. The Panthers’ defense will have to adjust to the pace of Josh Heupel’s offense.

Kentucky unveiled some new weapons last week in Penn State transfer quarterbac­k Will Levis and Nebraska transfer receiver Wan’dale Robinson. The Wildcats should get a better gauge of their offense when they host Missouri, whose defense held them to 145 yards last year.

No. 21 Utah goes for its 10th straight win over BYU. The game in Provo marks the 101st all-time football meeting between the schools separated by 45 miles.

Hot seat

The temperatur­e gets turned up on Nebraska coach Scott Frost if Buffalo leaves Lincoln with a win. The Bulls are 13.5-point underdogs, according to Fanduel Sportsbook. Support for Frost took a big hit with the seasonopen­ing loss at Illinois, and the Huskers impressed no one while tussling with FCS Fordham deep into the second quarter last week.

 ?? Bryon Houlgrave / Associated Press ?? Iowa State defensive back Greg Eisworth (12) is one of the leaders of the Cyclones’ defense. Iowa State will try to beat Iowa for the first time since 2014 when the teams meet in Ames on Saturday.
Bryon Houlgrave / Associated Press Iowa State defensive back Greg Eisworth (12) is one of the leaders of the Cyclones’ defense. Iowa State will try to beat Iowa for the first time since 2014 when the teams meet in Ames on Saturday.
 ?? Matthew Putney / Associated Press ?? Iowa State running back Breece Hall led the nation in rushing last year and was a unanimous All-america selection. Hall was held in check in the victory over Northern Iowa last week.
Matthew Putney / Associated Press Iowa State running back Breece Hall led the nation in rushing last year and was a unanimous All-america selection. Hall was held in check in the victory over Northern Iowa last week.

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