The Oklahoman

Michigan on rise; ACC disappoint­s

- Paul Myerberg USA TODAY

Alabama surged in front 21-3 against Florida but needed almost every second of four quarters to beat the Gators, raising some questions about whether the Crimson Tide are quite as invincible as they looked through two games.

Oklahoma met old rival Nebraska and struggled putting the Cornhusker­s away in the Sooners' second mediocre performanc­e of the young season against FBS competitio­n.

Cincinnati remained unbeaten against Indiana and can start planning ahead to the trip to Notre Dame on Oct. 2. Virginia Tech was the latest casualty in the hugely disappoint­ing ACC. Several Big Ten teams looked the part of true contenders. Those teams and others top the winners and losers from Week 3 of the season.

Winners

Alabama: Winning in Gainesvill­e against the No. 9 Gators should be celebrated, even if the Tide have a few concerns coming out of the 3-0 start. There's no bigger issue than the state of the running game, which was simply dominant a year ago but has struggled under the direction of new offensive coordinato­r Bill O'Brien. After running for 91 yards on 28 carries against the Gators, the Tide are averaging only 3.9 yards per carry.

Cincinnati: The Bearcats topped Indiana 38-24 and will have an extra week to get ready for the biggest game in program history. On Oct. 2, Cincinnati will travel to Notre Dame and attempt to notch a second win against Power Five competitio­n and become the first Group of Five team to truly factor into the playoff debate. To get there unblemishe­d, the Bearcats had to climb out of a 14-0 hole in the second quarter and weather a rowdy, back-and-forth third quarter before pulling away from the Hoosiers in the fourth.

Michigan: Michigan's first three games have painted the Wolverines as a legitimate contender for the Big Ten championsh­ip and the New Year's Six. UM wrapped up non-conference play with a 63-10 win against Northern Illinois keyed by another powerful performanc­e on the ground. Four players gained at least 40 yards, three scored at least twice and the offense at large went for 373 yards and eight touchdowns on 48 carries.

Michigan State: Pegged to finish near the bottom of the East division, the Spartans are now 3-0 with two Power Five wins after knocking off Miami (Fla.) 3817 on the road.

Kansas State: The Wildcats beat Carson Strong and Nevada 38-17 without starting quarterbac­k Skylar Thompson. With Thompson sidelined, Kansas State used its running game to loosen up the Nevada defense and churn out five scoring drives lasting eight or more plays

Southern California: For one day, the focus was on the Trojans' on-field performanc­e and not the job opening that may be one of the dominant themes of the 2021 season. And USC looked pretty good under interim coach Donte Williams, who replaced Clay Helton earlier this week. Down 14-0 until under a minute left in the first half and with quarterbac­k Kedon Slovis injured, the Trojans got 391 passing yards and four touchdowns from backup Jaxson Dart and beat Washington State 45-14.

Wake Forest: It may be too soon to call this the best team of Dave Clawson's tenure, which has seen the Demon Deacons reach six straight bowl games and post a pair of eight-win seasons. But the potential is there for a breakthrou­gh finish and a push for the Top 25 after Wake barely broke a sweat in a 35-14 win against overmatche­d Florida State.

Texas-San Antonio: UTSA is 3-0 under second-year coach Jeff Traylor after beating Middle Tennessee State 27-13 behind another 100-yard game from running back Sincere McCormick, an AllAmerica contender.

San Diego State: The Aztecs continue to chew up teams from the Pac-12. San Diego State is 2-0 against teams from the Power Five league this season and 7-2 since 2016 after beating Utah 33-31 in a wacky, three-overtime game that seemed well in the Aztecs' corner before Utah stormed from 14 points down in the final minutes of the fourth quarter.

Losers

The ACC: Miami's 21-point loss to Michigan State was the low point in another low week for the ACC, which already has suffered a series of devastatin­g setbacks before the end of September.

Even before Saturday, the ACC had to deal with losses by Clemson, North Carolina and the Hurricanes, the league's top three preseason contenders. That was joined Saturday by Miami's horrible loss, Pittsburgh falling 44-41 to Western Michigan and Virginia Tech's 27-21 loss at West Virginia.

Clemson: What's wrong with Clemson? The Tigers scuffled for the second time in as many games against Power Five competitio­n, this time in a 14-8 escape against Georgia Tech that featured the program's worst offensive performanc­e in ACC play in years: 284 yards, the fewest in league play since gaining 190 yards against the Yellow Jackets in 2014, on just 4.3 yards per play. The last time Clemson was held under 300 yards in back-to-back games against the Power Five was in the final two games of the 2010 season.

Florida State: How bad will it get for FSU and coach Mike Norvell? One week after losing in heartbreak­ing fashion to Jacksonvil­le State, the Seminoles dropped to 0-3 for the first time since 1976 after giving up 484 yards of offense and 27 first downs in the ugly loss to the Demon Deacons.

Connecticu­t: The Huskies scored 21 points in the second half against Army after failing to score one point in eight quarters of play against Fresno State and Purdue. (Not to mention losing 38-28 to Holy Cross.)

Colorado: One of the surprise Power Five teams of 2020, the Buffaloes will head into Pac-12 play at 1-2 after being destroyed by Minnesota in a 30-0 loss.

A far cry from last week's competitiv­e 10-7 loss to Texas A&M, the Buffaloes allowed 441 yards of offense, 277 on the ground, and gained just 63 yards on 45 plays.

Colorado hadn't been shut out since losing 28-0 to Washington State in 2017 or been held under 100 yards of offense since gaining 76 yards in a 48-0 loss to Stanford in 2012.

Marshall: It's not just that Marshall lost to East Carolina 42-38 but that it did so despite gaining 647 yards of offense and holding a significant lead late in the second half. The last Conference USA team to gain that many yards and lose was Rice, which went for 647 yards in a loss to Marshall on Sept. 9, 2012.

 ?? RICK OSENTOSKI/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Michigan quarterbac­k J.J. McCarthy throws a pass against Northern Illinois on Saturday in Ann Arbor, Mich.
RICK OSENTOSKI/USA TODAY SPORTS Michigan quarterbac­k J.J. McCarthy throws a pass against Northern Illinois on Saturday in Ann Arbor, Mich.

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