College football Week 11 highlights: Top plays, games, takeaways

ByDavid Hale ESPN logo
Sunday, November 10, 2024

There was a time, not all that long ago, when watching your favorite show meant planting yourself on your couch at some predetermined time; when hitching a ride with a complete stranger driving a 1993 Honda Civic with an industrial-strength air freshener hanging where the rearview mirror used to be would've seemed dangerous; when paying $36 for a guy to bring you a beef-and-cheese burrito and a 48-ounce Mountain Dew Baja Blast was little more than some madman's fever dream.



But thankfully, times have changed. Brave geniuses have disrupted the marketplace, leveled institutions and upended our expectations of what our lives can be.



And so it is that the age of the disruptors has come for college football, too.



There's Lane Kiffin, who has been thumbing his nose at the powers-that-be, ruffling feathers and breaking the system since a time when we didn't call people like him "disruptors." Kiffin has forced his way into college football's most sacred corridors of power over the years, but he has done it as much through trolling coaches on social media as he has by actually beating them. But Saturday, Kiffin's Ole Missteam killed one of the last true giants of the old guard, delivering a withering defensive performance that bruised, battered and confounded Georgiain a 28-10 Rebels win.



There's Deion Sanders, so often viewed as a sideshow to the staid old guard who believed, like fools, that you had to leave your office to recruit and needed five functional offensive linemen to run an offense. Coach Prime has taken the hollowed-out husk of a program and, in less than two seasons, built Coloradointo a legitimate playoff contender, one that held off Texas Tech41-27 on Saturday to assume a commanding position in the crowded Big 12.



There's Curt Cignetti, overlooked for years as little more than an FCS coach who has won a few games, a cute story hardly worthy of manning the Big Ten sidelines traversed by legends like Tim Beckman, Chris Ash or Darrell Hazell. In Week 11, Cignetti's Indianamoved to 10-0, thwarting defending champion Michigan20-15.



Kiffin, Prime, Cignetti -- they're not supposed to be here. For two decades, from Urban Meyer to Nick Saban to Kirby Smart, the blueprint for success at this level was clear. Coaches who won did it the old-fashioned way, ruling with an iron fist, refusing to give an inch in the quest for greatness, tormenting Jimbo Fisher for laughs. Even the few divergences from that blueprint at least had the roots of their DNA in a classical approach to team-building, be it Dabo Swinney's rah-rah optimism or Jim Harbaugh's investment in a squirrelly underling wearing a fake mustache to steal signals.



But these guys are showing us a new path forward.



Kiffin has invested in the transfer portal like a tech bro buying crypto, stocking a once talent-bereft roster of upstarts with enough stars that Saturday's win over Georgia barely registers as an upset. Ole Miss has been as explosive as anyone in college football this year, save a loss to Kentucky that we're now fairly certain was just something we dreamed after eating some expired ham. Should we be surprised that Jaxson Dart outdueled a flailing Carson Beck, who has been handing out interceptions like Oprah giving away cars? Is it a shock that the Ole Miss defense contained Georgia's top skill players like Cash Jones, Dillon Bell and Lawson Luckie? Georgia's depth chart reads like the cast of a teen drama. Meanwhile, Kiffin's running Wildcat with his 325-pound defensive lineman just because he can.



Kiffin's disruptive impact on Ole Miss has been so profound that the Rebels' students have even changed the game for goalpost removal.



If Kiffin is the OG of disruptors, however, Coach Prime is running the game today.



When he arrived in Boulder, the premise looked simple: Sanders would coach his two boys, be the center of attention at all turns, and if he won a few games, all the better. When Oregon's Dan Lanning lambasted Colorado as a team playing for clicks rather than wins last year, it felt like an appropriate measure of Prime's priorities. And yet, here are the Buffs at 7-2, a mercenary group of transfers who other coaches dismissed as chasing NIL but who've emerged as arguably the hottest team in the country.



Shedeur Sanders threw for 291 yards and three touchdowns in the win over the Texas Tech Red Raiders, while Travis Hunter caught nine balls for 99 yards and a touchdown, all with his pants loaded down by tortillas.



Never mind that Colorado has little interest in running the football. Put Coach Prime, his son and Hunter on a field, spread the ball around to a deep cast of receivers and offer to repost a clip of the officiating crew's side project as a barbershop quartet in exchange for a few soft calls, and the recipe comes out perfectly.And speaking of perfect recipes, try grilling a nice carne asada and pairing it with pickled onions and some fresh tortillas from Hunter's pants.



And perhaps no one has done the impossible better than Cignetti. From 2021 through 2023, Michigan was 26-1 in Big Ten play. In that same time frame, Indiana was 3-24 against Big Ten competition.



But because Cignetti cares not about precedent, the Hoosiers were a 14.5-point favorite Saturday, and while they didn't cover, they did walk away with a 10-0 record, the first 10-win season in school history. Kurtis Rourke threw for 206 yards and two touchdowns, the defense held Michigan to just 206 yards with eight pass breakups, and the Hoosiers made Michigan look utterly lost (which, to be fair, is not uncommon for Michigan this year).



Indiana is now in position to reach the Big Ten title game and, likely a playoff bid, despite finishing 3-9 last year, starting a QB who transferred from the MAC and a head coach who brought a handful of starters from a Sun Belt team, which begs the question of why Big Ten football looks so hard for Lincoln Riley.



It's true, of course, that delivery apps rarely turn a profit, and the biggest disruptors are also often megalomaniacs who are more style than substance, so perhaps it's still a bit early to laud the conquests of college football's new money.



But that's the real takeaway from these disruptors -- in Week 11, in 2024. Things we didn't dream of just a few months ago -- a 10-0 Indiana, a playoff-bound Colorado, an Ole Miss team capable of delivering a potentially fatal dagger to Georgia -- aren't just possible. They're reality.



Who knows what comes next? The fate of a college football season, which for so much of the past two decades felt entirely predictable, now has myriad loose threads, dozens of potential realities, countless options for us to see something genuinely new and innovative and different.



Jump to:



Down goes Miami|Who controls the SEC?



BYU beats Utah|Ewers hunts Gators



Oregon handles business|Gamecocks roll



Another FSU loss|Vibe shifts|Impressive turnarounds



Heisman five|Under the radar





Down goes Miami



In a rematch of last year's miserable loss to Georgia Tech, the clock finally ran out on Miami's undefeated season. The Canes fumbled their way through the first three quarters, and the ultimate 28-23 defeat must've felt like taking a knee to the gut.



It's the second year in a row Georgia Tech has delivered a dagger to Miami, and again, this year's game turned on a late fumble when the Canes were simply trying to do too much. In this case, Cam Ward engineered one of his patented scrambles, hoping for something to open downfield, only to be caught from behind by Jordan van den Berg, coughing up the football down five with just 1:32 to play. Haynes King then converted a late third down, allowing Georgia Tech to kneel out the clock. Miami's Mario Cristobal, certain that must be against the rules, challenged the play, but the officials assured him it is perfectly acceptable to take a knee to ensure a win.



Georgia Tech fans then stormed the field and tore down both goalposts, ultimately dumping them into the water, which is different from how this many engineers typically celebrate a big victory -- with nachos at Dave & Busters before getting back to the office to code for a while.



Miami had made a habit of falling behind big this season, but because Ward is a Jedi and the ACC review center is still using a 17-inch Zenith with a bunny ear antenna, the Canes were consistently able to escape trouble and emerge with a win. That luck ran out against the Yellow Jackets, who ran for 271 yards although their top three running backs were out with injuries and chewed up enough clock to keep Ward sidelined for long stretches. The maligned Miami D simply couldn't get off the field -- the Jackets were 9-of-14 on third down -- and Ward and the offense couldn't stay on the field (1-of-4 on fourth-down tries).



Georgia Tech, on the other hand, has made a habit of spoiling seasons for good teams. Since Brent Key became head coach before Week 5 in 2022, he's 6-5 against AP-ranked foes, the most such wins by any ACC coach in that span (and more than all but nine coaches nationally), all while Georgia Tech was unranked.



Alabama, Tennessee take command



By Saturday's end, the SEC had 11 teams bowl-eligible and eight with two or fewer conference losses, making for a massive jumble in the standings and a tight race -- both for a trip to the title game and a path to the playoff.



Alabama stated its case in emphatic form, marching past LSU 42-13 behind four touchdown runs (and 185 rushing yards) from Jalen Milroe.



Seeing Brian Kelly, stoic and scowling, staring off into the middle distance amid the driving rain, it looked like a scene from a music video for some overly earnest '90s emo band. Kelly has always been the Morrissey of college football, but things are looking particularly bleak for the Bayou Bengals after back-to-back losses.



In fairness, this should've been expected once LSU opted to bring in an imposter tiger for Saturday's game.



Frankly, this is a slap in the face to Mike the Tiger. It's like when they changed Aunt Viv midway through "Fresh Prince" as if we'd just not notice it's a completely different actor.



Meanwhile, Tennessee remains in control of its SEC destiny after cruising past Mississippi State. The Bulldogs threw for just 92 yards and tossed a pick in the loss, while Dylan Sampson continued his dominance for the Vols, rushing for 149 yards and a score.



The wild card in the SEC might be Missouri, which erased a late deficit then corralled a scoop-and-score in the final seconds Saturday to upend Oklahoma30-23. At halftime, the game's leading passer was Sooners punter Luke Elzinga, but the two teams found their stride after the break, with Drew Pyne throwing three touchdowns in the win.



Missouri is now 4-0 in one-possession games, including an overtime win against Vanderbilt, a four-point win against Auburnon a touchdown with 46 seconds to play and Saturday's fumble recovery with 22 seconds to go.



Cougars win rivalry game



BYU was left for dead. Jake Retzlaff appeared to take a game-sealing sack just outside his own end zone, down two with less than two minutes to play.



Then came the flag.



Utah was called for defensive holding, Retzlaff hit Chase Roberts for a 30-yard gain and BYU connected on a 44-yard field goal to win it.



It was an electric atmosphere at Rice-Eccles with a packed house that included at least one guy who is definitely in a Pantera cover band.



It was a celebration of the first BYU-Utah game in three years, and the rivalry lived up to expectations.



For the first time in weeks, Utah showed signs of life offensively behind QB Brandon Rose, who had rarely seen the field prior to last week and also looks like an actor in a self-serious '90s movie who monologues about the beauty he sees in a wayward plastic bag. Rose tossed two touchdown passes and ran for 55 yards, all while BYU struggled to find its footing offensively.



A 96-yard kickoff return by Keelan Marion kept BYU in it long enough for Retzlaff to get hot, and the BYU QB threw for 42 of his 219 yards on the game's final drive.



It's BYU's third win of the year in the game's final two minutes after narrowly escaping SMU and Oklahoma State, and the Cougars are now one of just four remaining unbeaten.



Ewers hunts Gators



TexasQB Quinn Ewers put on a clinic in a 49-17 win over Floridaon Saturday, throwing for 333 yards and five touchdowns and giving the crowd what it really wanted -- a fourth quarter featuring Arch Manning.



Ewers had his best game of the season, averaging better than 12 yards per throw, while the Horns' ground game rumbled for 210 yards and nearly 7 per touch.



For the Gators, it was a dismal performance that comes just days after head coach Billy Napier was given assurances he'd return in 2025, forcing AD Scott Stricklin to amend his previous support by adding, "Wait, no, you didn't let us finish. What we were trying to say was Billy will be returning ... his office keys, company car and that copy of Tom Petty's 'Greatest Hits' I loaned him," and indeed the job search begins shortly.



Ducks continue march to Big Ten title game



Since slumbering through the first two weeks of the season, Oregonhas become an unrelenting machine tasked only with delivering misery.



On Saturday, the Ducks demolished Maryland39-18, as Dillon Gabriel threw three touchdowns and the D scored three takeaways in the win. Oregon is now 7-0 in Big Ten play, putting the Ducks one-quarter of the way to Maryland's total Big Ten wins since joining the conference in 2014.



Oregon's remaining schedule includes a trip to Wisconsin and a home game with former Pac-12 rival Washington. Neither figure to be much of an obstacle between the Ducks and their long, angry march toward a conference title. The bigger question may be whether it will be Indiana as the last team standing in their way or if Ohio State will get a rematch after losing by a point last month in Eugene.



Gamecocks roll again



Every guy has that one buddy who exists simply as an agent of chaos. He probably stole a police car in college, brought fireworks to your kid's baptism and once referred to a hand grenade as "fishing gear." He is the initiating force between five of your funniest stories and a dozen of your saddest.



In college football, this role is now being played by Shane Beamer.



South Carolinahas no certifiable identity in 2024 beyond simply wrecking things. Each week, Beamer's team is like letting a group of beavers loose in a Hobby Lobby. You have no idea what will happen, but it's bound to be interesting. One week the Gamecocks are getting trounced by Ole Miss. The next, they're taking Alabama to the wire. The next, they're upending a top-10 Texas A&M. And on Saturday, they went to Nashville, became the first program in college football to make Diego Pavia sad and walked away with a 28-7 win over Vanderbilt.



Is LaNorris Sellers a good quarterback? Who cares? Pass rushers bounce off him like he's wearing one of those inflatable sumo wrestler suits. So what if the Gamecocks have only one real playmaker at the skill positions."Rocket" Sandersracked up 178 yards and three touchdowns against Vandy, and if you said he also recorded a country version of "Sandstorm" afterward to celebrate the win, that'd be entirely believable. And the Gamecocks' defense is so ridiculously frustrating, Hugh Freeze sent it a "thank you" note for trying to convince Pavia not to come back to college football for another year.



South Carolina is bowl-eligible now, which surely means some poor team is going to lose the ReliaQuest Bowl after coughing up four safeties and a 98-yard touchdown run by Sellers in which he steamrolls all 11 defenders and two hot dog vendors en route to the end zone.



South Carolina makes no sense, is palpably dangerous and is willing to buy Jager shots for everyone who shows up to its Week 14 showdown with Clemson. It's a thing of beauty.



Irish dominateFlorida State



Notre Damewalloped Florida State 52-3 on Saturday in a game in which the broadcast crew repeatedly used the phrase, "Stop, stop, they're already dead."



The Irish threw for 252 yards, ran for 201 yards and sacked FSU quarterbacks eight times. Unfortunately for FSU, those quarterbacks continued to get up and play.



The Seminoles have now gone 12 straight games without topping 21 points, the longest streak by a Power 5 or BCS-conference team in at least 20 years.



Notre Dame is 4-0 against the ACC this year, with a home game against Virginiaremaining on the docket. The Irish are now 40-5 against the ACC since the 2017 season. Notre Dame is also well-positioned with three games left to make the College Football Playoff, while Florida State remains well-positioned to be relegated to whatever conference Bishop Sycamore is in now.



Week 11 vibe check



Each week, big upsets and shocking results reshuffle the Top 25, but there are more subtle changes in the college football landscape that we track here.



Trending down: Cyclones' Big 12 title hopes



Two weeks ago, Iowa Statewas undefeated and lingering around the top 10. Now, the Cyclones' Big 12 hopes are on life support, their spot in the top 25 is likely doomed and they've slipped into Texas' old role as the Big 12 favorite who just lost to a bad Kansasteam. Somewhere, Charlie Strong is nodding approvingly.



Kansas earned win No. 3 on the season with a 45-36 victory over the Cyclones in Week 11 behind 116 yards and two touchdowns by Devin Neal. Kansas led 38-13 late in the third quarter, but Rocco Becht led a furious comeback attempt, finishing with 383 passing yards and three touchdowns, although it was too little, too late.



The Jayhawks, who opened the season in the Top 25, started the season 1-5, with four losses by six points or less, but they've now won two of three -- a two-point loss to Kansas Statein between -- and get a crack at the top two teams in the conference (BYU in Week 12, Colorado in Week 13) with a chance to be the ultimate spoiler.



Trending down: Multiple drives in a quarter



Armygot QB Bryson Daily back from injury for Week 11, and the offense responded by delivering the most undeniably perfect drive of the season.



Up 7-3 midway through the third quarter over North Texas, Army drove 94 yards on 21 plays -- 12 of which went for 4 yards or less -- that lasted an astonishing 13 minutes, 54 seconds. Including a timeout and a penalty, enough time passed before the Knights cashed in the drive for a touchdown that the players on the field for the entirety of the drive actually fulfilled their active duty requirements, and Daily was promoted to master sergeant after converting a third-and-3 early in the fourth quarter.



Daily finished with 36 carries for 153 yards and two touchdowns in the win. For the game, Army held the ball for 41:45, and most of North Texas' offense left early to grab some BBQ.



Trending down: Gundy apologies



Last week, Oklahoma Statecoach Mike Gundy apologized for calling fans "weak"amid criticism of a winless season in Big 12 play.



This follows a rich history of Gundy apologies that followed lambasting a reporter when he was 40, wearing an OAN T-shirt that angered his star tailback and, of course, that time he tried to hunt wild boar inside a Bed, Bath & Beyond.



Unfortunately, scuttling that controversy with a sincerely worded apology inspired by a fortune cookie he had once read wasn't enough to turn the Pokes' fortunes on the field. TCUstormed Oklahoma State 38-13, dropping the Cowboys to 0-7 in Big 12 play.



Trending up: Penn Stateplaying mediocre teams



In a game no Penn State fans cared about after last week's loss to Ohio State, the Nittany Lions ran for 266 yards and four touchdowns in a 35-6 stomping of Washington.



Drew Allar threw for 220 yards and a score, and the Penn State D held the Huskies to just 193 total yards -- none of which does anything to change what happened against Ohio State.



Afterward, James Franklin perfected teleportation, saved several kittens stuck in a tree and convinced the surviving members of Nirvana to go on tour with Taylor Swift on lead vocals, to which Penn State fans eagerly pointed out that he'd lost to Ohio State again this year.



Trending up: Touchdown records



Jeremiah Smith caught six balls for 87 yards in Ohio State's 45-0 win over Purdue,including a 17-yard touchdown that set the Buckeyes' TD record for freshmen, topping Cris Carter (and all he did, according to Buddy Ryan, was catch touchdowns).



The Buckeyes were dominant, throwing for 260 yards, rushing for 173, holding Purdue to 206 total yards and nabbing two takeaways. Will Howard threw for 260 yards and three touchdowns and ran for a fourth in the win.



The Boilermakers fall to 1-8 and 0-6 in Big Ten play, and it's the fourth time this season they've lost by at least 35 points. In the playoff era, the only other teams with four 35-point losses in their first nine games of the year are 2019 Rutgers and three different Kansas teams (2015, 2016, 2020). The last time a team lost five games in a season by at least 35 points was 2022 Colorado, so the lesson here is clear. All Purdue needs to do is hire Deion Sanders, turn over two-thirds of its roster, sign Travis Hunter and -- boom -- the Boilers will be above average by 2026.



Trending down: Running the ball



CalQB Fernando Mendoza completed 30 passes in Saturday's win against Wake Forest-- in the first half! That's more than 95 different teams have completed in a full game this year. Mendoza finished 40-of-56 for 385 yards and two touchdowns in the 46-36 Bears win, taking advantage of the fact that Wake Forest's pass defense is actually just two scarecrows in the end zone and a sternly worded email insisting the other team stop throwing so much.



Trending up: Wazzu's Cinderella hopes



Washington State torched Utah State on Saturday 49-28 to move to 8-1 on the season.



John Mateer continues to be college football's most intriguing character. Did he throw for three touchdowns? Did he ping-pong off defenders to run for another one? Does he have his picture on the wall of a BBQ spot in Texas after finishing 64 ounces of brisket in one sitting? Anything is possible with Mateer and, because Washington State plays in a two-team conference and most of his snaps have come after anyone who isn't listening to house music and playing with glow sticks has gone to bed on the East Coast, there's no way to separate the legend from the reality.



Trending up: Service academies



On Veterans Day weekend, all three service academies won Saturday.



Army escaped North Texas, Navy torpedoed USF and Air Force picked up just its second win of the year, 36-28 over Fresno State.



Meanwhile, Space Force's plans to host home games on the moon remains a work in progress.



Trending up: Maalik Magic



Dukeis now 7-3 after knocking off NC State29-19 on Saturday behind 245 passing yards and three total touchdowns from QB Maalik Murphy.



The Blue Devils won despite mustering just 31 yards on the ground, thanks in large part to another dominant defensive performance by Manny Diaz's crew. Duke held the Wolfpack to just 268 yards of offense, forced two turnovers, recorded a safety and stifled NC State in the red zone, where six drives inside Duke's 20 resulted in a touchdown, four field goals and a missed kick.



After the game, Duke students celebrated by learning for the first time that football season was still happening even thoughCooper Flagghad already started playing.



Don't look now, but ...



Just because a team ends September riding an ugly losing streak with a highlight tape scored to "Yakety Sax" doesn't mean it's incapable of finishing on a high note (unless that team is Florida State). Indeed, a number of schools we wrote off after a rough start have engineered impressive turnarounds as we head into the season's final stretch.



UCLA Bruins



After a 1-5 start to the season in which the Bruins failed to crack 17 points in any game, DeShaun Foster's crew embraced its new Big Ten identity and learned how to win without an actual offense. On Friday, UCLA pulled out Brian Ferentz's old playbook to upend Iowa20-17 in a game that included six turnovers, a 57-yard field goal and a season-low rushing tally from Kaleb Johnson (49 yards on 18 carries). After winning 19 games while scoring 20 or less in the four-team playoff era, Iowa is now 0-4 when failing to crack 20 this year. The Hawkeyes are like when Eddie Murphy decided in the mid-'80s he was going to be a singer, too, and started doing videos with Rick James and hasn't been nearly as funny since. Never forget what got you to the top, Iowa.



UCLA, meanwhile, has now won three straight, all against Big Ten teams that entered their matchup with a winning record. It's the first time in at least 20 years that a team with a losing record before each contest beat three straight Power 5 opponents with a winning record.



New Mexico Lobos



Perhaps no coaching job has been less appreciated than what Bronco Mendenhall has managed with the Lobos. Mendenhall had to completely rebuild a roster that added 43 new scholarship players -- including 17 after spring ball -- and lost its first four games of the year, including the opener to FCS Montana State. But New Mexico has turned a corner and has now won four of six after upending San Diego State21-16 on Friday night behind 173 yards and two touchdowns from Eli Sanders. The Lobos are still likely a long shot for a bowl bid, but for a program that hasn't won more than four games in a year since 2016, anything that doesn't involve the quarterback playing with his hand stuck in a Pringles can feels like a massive step forward.



Jacksonville State Gamecocks



Rich Rodriguez's crew opened the season 0-3 but has reeled off six straight victories, including a rollicking 44-37 overtime win against Louisiana Tech on Saturday.



Tre Stewart ran for 166 yards and two touchdowns, Cam Vaughn caught seven passes for 130 yards and two scores and the Gamecocks moved to 5-0 in Conference USA.



Rodriguez is now 15-6 since JSU moved up to FBS, including an 11-2 mark in conference play. Meanwhile, Michigan just texted him with a "Hey, U Up?" note and is willing to suggest maybe it was as much to blame for their breakup as Rich Rod was.



Miami RedHawks



Last year's MAC champions opened the season 1-4, with their lone win coming against lowly UMass by 3. But the RedHawks figured things out, and they've now won four straight, including a 27-21 victory over Ball State on Tuesday. Miami is again tied atop the MAC (4-1 in conference play), which is enough to warrant overlooking the slow start and the fact that its mascot is using an umbrella and a poncho to avoid getting wet.



In fairness, the strange old man who sold Miami the RedHawk costume did warn them not to get it wet or feed it after midnight. Western Kentuckyignored that advice, and now snipers with tranquilizer guns have to monitor Big Red at all times.



Heisman five



It's largely a four-man race, though Jaxson Dart, Jalen Milroe and Quinn Ewers may be making a late run at things. Still, not much changed in Week 11 in our rankings.



1. Boise StateRB Ashton Jeanty



In the past two weeks, Jeanty was held to just 91 yards on 30 carries without a touchdown in the first halves of games, thanks in large part to defenses putting 26 defenders in the box. This week, Jeanty found his groove again, rushing for 93 yards and a touchdown on Boise State's first two drives. Jeanty finished with 34 carries for 209 yards and three scores. It was his fourth 200-yard rushing performance of the season and his fifth three-touchdown game. Jeanty needs just 266 yards on the ground the rest of the season to crack 2,000 on the year. Assuming Boise State plays for a Mountain West championship and a bowl or playoff game, he would need to average 179 yards per game the rest of the way to top Barry Sanders' single-season record.



2. ColoradoWR/CB Travis Hunter



Hunter caught nine balls for 99 yards, including a nifty touchdown run on a wide receiver screen, while also helping stifle the Texas Tech pass game and running a small Mexican restaurant in his pants. Next week, he'll be aiming to top 100 receiving yards and while making a nice paella in his helmet.



3. MiamiQB Cam Ward



The Canes' defense finally cost Miami a game, as Georgia Tech dominated the clock and ran for 271 yards. Still, Miami had a chance to win, but for once, Ward's magic wore off, and he fumbled deep in his own territory, allowing the Yellow Jackets to secure the game. Still, Ward was solid, throwing for 348 yards and three touchdowns, but as many QBs before him have noted, there is no amount of magic that can overcome Miami doing Miami things.



4. OregonQB Dillon Gabriel



Gabriel averaged only 5.3 yards per pass and yet he still threw for three TDs in a blowout win. Gabriel is clearly positioned well to make a run at the Heisman, but the Big Ten doesn't seem to be offering him enough of a challenge to really pad out the stats. He should be able to go play a few series for Oklahoma again after he finishes his games, just to make it's a bit fairer.



5. IndianaQB Kurtis Rourke



Rourke threw two TD passes in Saturday's win over Michigan, and through 11 weeks, he's second in the country in Total QBR (88.6), fourth in completion percentage (71.8%) and he's one of just two QBs (along with Dart) averaging a first down per throw. He's also asserted himself as the most successful QB in Indiana program history, passing the previous title holder, a coat rack with a Hoosiers jersey hanging on it.



Under-the-radar play of the week



Prior to Saturday, Cade Klubnik's elusiveness had been limited to coming up with increasingly lame excuses for why he couldn't make it to Dabo Swinney's weekly "Grey's Anatomy" watch parties. But against Virginia Tech, Klubnik took it to the next level.



Klubnik finished the game with 241 total yards and three touchdowns as Clemsonupended Virginia Tech 24-14, but unless he can convince Swinney that he's the lead in his theater troupe's reimagining of "Cats" that night, he's on the hook to bring a casserole for this week's episode and should refer to his coach as "Swinney McDreamy" throughout the evening.



Under-the-radar game of the week



Marcus Yarns ran for 174 yards and a touchdown, and FCS Delaware upended Rhode Island 24-21.



Why does this game matter so much? Rhode Island is the country's smallest state. Delaware is the second smallest. It's basically like watching Spud Webb and Muggsy Bogues play a game of one-on-one.



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