The Oklahoman

College football Week 6 winners, losers

- Paul Myerberg

Long touchdown runs, longer touchdown throws, a 28-point first quarter, two touchdowns in the final 90 seconds, a possible quarterbac­k controvers­y, the biggest comeback and the highest-scoring game in series history.

This year’s Red River Showdown between Oklahoma and Texas packed a season of twists into four quarters. Keyed by a true freshman quarterbac­k, the Sooners’ 55-48 win sets up the distinct possibilit­y these rivals meet again in December to decide the Big 12 championsh­ip.

Over in the Big Ten, Iowa climbed out of an early hole and beat Penn State 2320 to move one step closer to an unbeaten regular season. The complexion of this key cross-divisional matchup changed dramatical­ly after the Nittany Lions lost quarterbac­k Sean Clifford to injury.

Georgia held serve against Auburn, but not without controvers­y: The Bulldogs’ defense gave up a touchdown in the 34-10 win, the second allowed to any opponent and the first since Sept. 18.

And in the biggest shocker of the season, then-No. 1 Alabama went to Texas A&M and lost 41-38 on a last-second field goal. Those teams and more make up this week’s list of winners and losers:

Winners

Texas A&M: Reeling after two early losses and already a non-factor for the national championsh­ip, A&M pulled off one of the great upsets in recent SEC history by knocking off the Crimson Tide and creating even more anarchy in the race for the College Football Playoff. The win speaks to the program’s overall talent under coach Jimbo Fisher and to the developmen­t of backup quarterbac­k Zach Calzada.

Oklahoma: Down 28-7 after the first quarter, OU inserted freshman quarterbac­k Caleb Williams and charged back to beat the rival Longhorns. After playing so well through five games, the Sooners’ defense was shoved early but responded to keep UT out of the end zone from just over midway through the second quarter until one left minute left in the fourth.

The win keeps OU on track for the playoff.

Iowa: There is nothing particular­ly pretty about Iowa except for the wins piled on top of wins. Six straight to open this season joins six straight to end 2020 to paint Iowa as one of the hottest teams in the country and a legitimate threat to win the Big Ten and reach the playoff. After a sluggish start, quarterbac­k Spencer Petras completed 17 of 31 attempts for 195 yards and two touchdowns.

Ole Miss: The Rebels rebounded to beat Arkansas 52-51, avoiding a second straight loss after stopping the Razorbacks’ two-point conversion with no time on the clock. Quarterbac­k Matt Corral threw for 287 yards, ran for 94 and had four touchdowns to carry the Ole Miss offense, which was held under wraps in last week’s loss to top-ranked Alabama but has gained at least 569 yards against every opponent other than the Crimson Tide.

Kenneth Walker III: The Wake Forest transfer has helped transform Michigan State’s offense and played a crucial role in the Spartans’ surprising 6-0 start. Walker went for 232 yards on 29 carries in a 31-13 win against Rutgers, highlighte­d by his school-record 94-yard scoring run to break the game open in the third quarter. That was one of four scoring plays of 60 or more yards for MSU, joining three long touchdown throws from Payton Thorne to wide receiver Jalen Nailor.

Massachuse­tts: The Minutemen ran for 247 yards, forced three turnovers and beat Connecticu­t 27-13 to snap the program’s 16-game losing streak and settle once and for all which team is the worst in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n. (That would be the Huskies.)

Notre Dame: Down 29-21 in the fourth quarter, the Irish scored 11 unanswered points and won 32-29 at Virginia Tech to stick in the New Year’s Six race. While the win keeps those postseason hopes alive, there are still issues at quarterbac­k: Jack Coan and Tyler Buchner split snaps and combined for 221 yards, two touchdowns and two intercepti­ons.

Losers

Alabama: Alabama had won 19 straight overall, 100 in a row against unranked competitio­n and Nick Saban was 24-0 against his former assistant coaches. Until Saturday. The 41-38 loss in College Station vaulted Georgia into the top spot in the Top 25 and makes the Bulldogs the team to beat in the SEC and beyond. For the Crimson Tide, there are major questions exiting Saturday about the state of the defense and whether there are enough supporting pieces around quarterbac­k Bryce Young.

Brigham Young: Losing 26-17 at home to Boise State ends any chance of BYU making the playoff and relegates the Cougars to a second-tier bowl game, very likely the Independen­ce Bowl. One of just four teams to not trail at any moment through Week 5, BYU took a 10-0 lead in the first quarter but trailed 20-10 at halftime and 23-10 heading into the fourth.

North Carolina: There is definitely something fraudulent about a team that opened the year inside the top 10 but already has lost three times in ACC play, each one more embarrassi­ng than the last. Two weeks after giving up 45 points to Georgia Tech, the Tar Heels allowed 238 rushing yards and lost 35-25 to Florida State.

Spencer Rattler: Oklahoma’s preseason Heisman contender now is facing the potential that he spends the rest of this season on the bench. It would be hard to argue if Riley turns the offense over to Williams, who brings elements of explosiven­ess and unpredicta­bility almost entirely lacking during Rattler’s second year as the starter.

Louisville: Louisville continues to cough up late leads and drop close games under Scott Satterfield, the latest a 34-33 loss to Virginia after the Cardinals led 30-13 heading into the fourth quarter. The defense just couldn’t stop Virginia quarterbac­k Brennan Armstrong, who maintained his assault on the program record book with 40 completion­s for 488 yards and three touchdowns.

Southern California: The decision to fire Clay Helton hasn’t done much to change things for USC, which beat Colorado under interim coach Donte Williams but was pushed around by Utah in a 42-26 loss, dropping the Trojans to 3-3 and way behind in the Pac-12 South. While he finished with 401 passing yards and two touchdowns,

LSU: The heat on Ed Orgeron is set to rise dramatical­ly after a listless 42-21 loss to No. 14 Kentucky dropped LSU to 3-3 overall and 1-2 in SEC play

 ?? Texas. GARY COSBY JR./USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Texas A&M quarterbac­k Zach Calzada throws a pass against Alabama on Saturday in College Station,
Texas. GARY COSBY JR./USA TODAY SPORTS Texas A&M quarterbac­k Zach Calzada throws a pass against Alabama on Saturday in College Station,

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