Updated projected win totals for the Vols after Alabama

Tennessee got thumped good by Alabama this weekend, but how did the other teams look, and how does it all affect our expectations for the back half of the season?

My new expected win total:

  • This week: 6.0
  • Last week: 6.3
  • After Week 6: 5.0
  • After Week 5: 4.9
  • After Week 4: 4.55
  • After Week 3: 5.5

I have Kentucky steady at 45%, Missouri and South Carolina steady at 50%, Vanderbilt up to 60% (from 75% last week), and Charlotte steady at 95%. Not much change, really. I think we’re basically looking at four essential tossups, with the order being Kentucky, Missouri, South Carolina, and Vanderbilt, with there being a bit of space between the Commodores and the other three.

Use the form below to calculate yours and post it in the comments below the post.

Explanations are below, but here’s the updated chart for this week:

Tennessee Volunteers currently

Current record: 3-4 (1-3), 5th in the SEC East

  • Lost to #17 WVU*, 40-14
  • Beat ETSU, 59-3
  • Beat UTEP, 24-0
  • Lost to Florida, 47-21
  • Lost to #2 Georgia, 38-12
  • Beat #21 Auburn, 30-24
  • Lost to #1 Alabama, 58-21
  • S Carolina, TBD
  • Charlotte, TBD
  • Kentucky, TBD
  • Missouri, TBD
  • Vanderbilt, TBD

The Vols’ past opponents

West Virginia Mountaineers

Current record: 5-1 (3-1), 2nd in Big 12, #13

  • Beat Tennessee*, 40-14
  • Beat YSU, 52-17
  • NC State, Canceled
  • Beat Kansas St, 35-6
  • Beat #25 Texas Tech, 42-34
  • Beat Kansas, 38-22
  • Lost to Iowa State, 30-14
  • Bye
  • Baylor, 7:00 PM ET FOX Sports 1
  • Texas, TBD
  • #17 TCU, TBD
  • #15 Oklahoma St, TBD
  • #5 Oklahoma, 8:00 PM ET

East Tennessee State Buccaneers

Current record: 6-2 (4-1), 1st in Southern

  • Beat Mars Hill, 28-7
  • Lost to Tennessee, 59-3
  • Beat VMI, 27-24
  • Beat Furman, 29-27
  • Beat Chattanooga, 17-14
  • Beat Gardner-Webb, 45-0
  • Beat The Citadel, 26-23
  • Lost to Wofford, 31-17
  • W Carolina, 3:30 PM ET ESPN+
  • Mercer, 3:00 PM ET ESPN+
  • Samford, 1:00 PM ET

UTEP Miners

Current record: 0-7 (0-3), 6th in C-USA – West

  • Lost to N Arizona, 30-10
  • Lost to UNLV, 52-24
  • Lost to Tennessee, 24-0
  • Lost to New Mexico St, 27-20
  • Lost to UTSA, 30-21
  • Lost North Texas, 27-24
  • Bye
  • Lost to LA Tech, 31-24
  • UAB, 7:30 PM ET ESPN+
  • Rice, 3:30 PM ET
  • MTSU, 3:00 PM ET ESPN+
  • W Kentucky, 7:30 PM ET
  • Southern Miss, 3:00 PM ET ESPN+

Florida Gators

Current record: 6-1 (4-1), 1st in SEC – East, #9

  • Beat Charleston So, 53-6
  • Lost to Kentucky, 27-16
  • Beat Colorado St, 48-10
  • Beat Tennessee, 47-21
  • Beat #14 Miss St, 13-6
  • Beat #5 LSU, 27-19
  • Beat Vanderbilt, 37-27
  • Bye
  • #2 Georgia*, 3:30 PM ET CBS
  • Missouri, TBD
  • S Carolina, TBD
  • Idaho, TBD
  • Florida State, TBD

Georgia Bulldogs

Current record: 6-1 (4-1), 1st in SEC – East, #7

  • Beat Austin Peay, 45-0
  • Beat #24 S Carolina, 41-17
  • Beat MTSU, 49-7
  • Beat Missouri, 43-29
  • Beat Tennessee, 38-12
  • Beat Vanderbilt, 41-13
  • Lost to #13 LSU, 36-16
  • Bye
  • Florida*, 3:30 PM ET CBS
  • Kentucky, TBD
  • #9 Auburn, TBD
  • UMass, TBD
  • Georgia Tech, TBD

Auburn Tigers

Current record: 5-3 (2-3), 4th in SEC – West

  • Beat #6 Washington*, 21-16
  • Beat Alabama St, 63-9
  • Lost to #12 LSU, 22-21
  • Beat Arkansas, 34-3
  • Beat Southern Miss, 24-13
  • Lost to Miss St, 23-9
  • Lost to Tennessee, 30-24
  • Beat Ole Miss, 31-16
  • Texas A&M, TBD
  • Georgia, TBD
  • Liberty, TBD
  • Alabama, TBD

Alabama Crimson Tide

Current record: 8-0 (5-0), 1st in SEC – West, #1

  • Beat Louisville*, 51-14
  • Beat Arkansas St, 57-7
  • Beat Ole Miss, 62-7
  • Beat #22 Texas A&M, 45-23
  • Beat Louisiana, 56-14
  • Beat Arkansas, 65-31
  • Beat Missouri, 39-10
  • Beat Tennessee, 58-21
  • LSU, TBD
  • Miss St, TBD
  • The Citadel, TBD
  • Auburn, TBD

The Vols’ future opponents

South Carolina Gamecocks

Current record: 3-3 (2-3), 4th in SEC – East

  • Beat C. Carolina, 49-15
  • Lost to #3 Georgia, 41-17
  • Marshall, Canceled
  • Beat Vanderbilt, 37-14
  • Lost to Kentucky, 24-10
  • Beat Missouri, 37-35
  • Lost Texas A&M, 26-23
  • Bye
  • Tennessee, TBD
  • Ole Miss, TBD
  • Florida, TBD
  • Chattanooga, TBD
  • Clemson, TBD

Charlotte 49ers

Current record: 3-4 (2-2), 4th in C-USA – East

  • Beat Fordham, 34-10
  • Lost to App St, 45-9
  • Beat Old Dominion, 28-25
  • Lost to UMass, 49-31
  • Lost to UAB, 28-7
  • Beat Western Kentucky, 40-14
  • Lost to MTSU, 21-13
  • Southern Miss, 2:00 PM ET
  • Tennessee, TBD
  • Marshall, 2:30 PM ET ESPN+
  • FIU, 2:00 PM ET
  • FAU, 6:00 PM ET

Kentucky Wildcats

Current record: 6-1 (4-1), 1st in SEC – East, #12

  • Beat Cent Michigan, 35-20
  • Beat #25 Florida, 27-16
  • Beat Murray State, 48-10
  • Beat #14 Miss St, 28-7
  • Beat S Carolina, 24-10
  • Lost to Texas A&M, 20-14
  • Bye
  • Beat Vanderbilt, 14-7
  • Missouri, TBD
  • Georgia, TBD
  • Tennessee, TBD
  • MTSU, TBD
  • Louisville, TBD

Missouri Tigers

Current record: 4-3 (0-3), 6th in SEC – East

  • Beat UT Martin, 51-14
  • Beat Wyoming, 40-13
  • Beat Purdue, 40-37
  • Lost to #2 Georgia, 43-29
  • Lost to South Carolina, 37-35
  • Lost to Alabama, 39-10
  • Beat Memphis, 65-33
  • Kentucky, TBD
  • Florida, TBD
  • Vanderbilt, TBD
  • Tennessee, TBD
  • Arkansas, 2:30 PM ET CBS

Vanderbilt Commodores

Current record: 3-5 (0-4), 7th in SEC – East

  • Beat MTSU, 35-7
  • Beat Nevada, 41-10
  • Lost to #8 Notre Dame, 22-17
  • Lost to S Carolina, 37-14
  • Beat Tennessee St, 31-27
  • Lost to Georgia, 41-13
  • Lost to Florida, 37-27
  • Lost to Kentucky, 14-7
  • Arkansas, TBD
  • Missouri, TBD
  • Ole Miss, TBD
  • Tennessee, TBD

Sunday Best: Everything Starts Now, But For Which Quarterback?

 

Up until the minute Jarrett Guarantano left Saturday’s game with what originally was called a collarbone issue but wound up being bruised ribs, I would have told you the guy under center was the one who gave the Vols the best chance to win.

After watching Keller Chryst against Alabama and rewatching him again in a replay of the game, I’m not so sure.

And you know what, Vols fans? That is an excellent thing moving forward.

There’s no question you’re in one camp or the other when it comes to who should be Tennessee’s quarterback when the Vols travel to Columbia, South Carolina, next weekend for Saturday night’s all-important game against the Gamecocks that could determine how the rest of the season goes.

You know who’s camp I’m in? Neither. I’ve decided to spend the rest of the fall at Camp Whoever-helps-us-win.

I don’t see practice everyday, and I don’t know if Guarantano or Chryst gives Tennessee the best chance to do that. I don’t know if Alabama backed off a bit in coverage by the time the Stanford transfer replaced Guarantano, and I don’t know how Chryst would play a complete game against mere mortals.

But Chryst certainly had his exceptional moments against those crimson cyborgs on Saturday. That’s encouraging, and nothing else. It’s not worrisome. It’s not a reason to get on a soap box. It’s not a reason to start flinging darts in JG’s direction. It’s ONLY encouraging. You know why? Because now both guys have proven they can do good things against good teams, and it’s very possible Tennessee will need both of them before this season is over, especially considering just how bad this offensive line remains.

If you’re looking for positives in yet another Bama beat-down, this time a 58-21 loss that marked the record 12th-straight Crimson Tide victory in the Third Saturday in October, there aren’t that many. The best thing by far is that it’s over, and, barring the news on receiver Josh Palmer who went out with an injury, Tennessee may have survived. Guarantano is hurt, but is he injured? Coach Jeremy Pruitt didn’t sound terribly concerned Saturday night.

Chryst came in, however, and more than did his job. He finished 9-of-15 for 164 yards and a pair of touchdowns. It wasn’t just that he posted decent numbers, either. It’s that he looked really good doing it. He utilized Jauan Jennings, who had his second strong game in a row, catching six balls for 102 yards; he threw an absolute dime over the middle to Tyler Byrd [HE EXISTS!] for a touchdown; and he kept Ty Chandler in the passing game, throwing him a scoring strike, too.

There was plenty of zip on his throws, and it’s simply something we haven’t seen from him. According to practice reports, the coaches hadn’t seen it much, either.

All of those things are positive, but the most important thing — especially with this offensive line — is Chryst recognized blitzes, moved away from pressure and made some plays. His pocket presence is a lot better than JG’s, even if the latter can advance the ball downfield with authority and make every throw.

Now, I’m not saying that you absolutely need to start Chryst next week. As a matter of fact, I think if Guarantano is ready to go and I was the coach, he would probably remain the starter until he proves he isn’t the guy. Tennessee doesn’t really need a quarterback controversy right now, especially before such a pivotal stretch of the season — the most pivotal stretch of the season.

But Chryst’s emergence and Saturday’s performance gives Tennessee options, right? That’s not a bad thing.

Is it really a controversy to have a competition? If you believe Pruitt, every player every week is evaluated, and his game reps mirror how well he performed in practice. He reportedly hasn’t done that with the quarterbacks because the offense needs to develop continuity with “The Man” who is going to lead the team. That’s been Guarantano, and other than taking some absolute shots because he doesn’t yet have the pocket vision, he’s done nothing to be benched.

As a matter of fact, he’s coming off his career game in the huge win at Auburn. Do you punish him for getting hurt against Alabama?

No. But you also have to realize that taking those kind of hits may make you a warrior, but they hurt your team. They cause turnovers, extra possessions for the opponent, and drive-killing sacks. Those are mistakes the Vols can’t afford with such a slim margin for error.

So, why not split first-team reps this week, just to see? Guarantano may not be able to go against South Carolina, anyway. We don’t know yet.

Some of you on Twitter have argued that you believe the coaches are not only doing what they think is best for now but adding weight to what’s best for the future, and that’s why Guarantano is getting the nod. I don’t agree with that at all. These coaches know how important selling marked improvement is to recruits, and if there’s anything we learned about Pruitt after Saturday’s comments, it’s that he still values recruiting above all else and knows he needs to recruit 25 players who do things his way because there are still people on this UT team who don’t. You don’t strive for the future to hurt the present. I believe they really believe JG is the man for the job.

Do they still? We’ll see.

It’s hard to fault what JG has done in games, even though offensive coordinator Tyson Helton has only let him loose a couple of times.

We all loved him last week, remember? This week, we all love Chryst.

It’s just vitally important to remember that both are Vols, and now we know that both are capable. If JG wants to keep his job, he may need to elevate his game, right? How can that be a bad thing? If you pull him against South Carolina, you should now have confidence in Chryst where, before, any of that would have been blind hope.

Tennessee lost a game on Saturday, but it found out that the offensive hopes don’t necessarily hinge of the health of Guarantano. That is a huge positive, because you know what?

The rest of this season — Every. Single. Game. — is winnable.

You heard that right. Though I would say the odds certainly are against the Vols to run the table (can you even fathom an eight-win season, especially with how we started??) there are no reasons why the Vols should be huge underdogs in any remaining game.

Will Missouri’s high-flying passing attack be a problem for Tennessee’s youthful secondary? Absolutely. Will Kentucky’s dynamic defense and Josh Allen wreak havoc on the Vols awful offensive line? Sure, it will. Is South Carolina a more talented team? Yeah, probably. Can Vanderbilt beat UT? Well, yeah, it has two years in a row, hasn’t it?

But are you scared of any of those teams? You shouldn’t be. Especially not now.

Don’t let Saturday’s slaughter do anything to make you feel worse about this season. What happened was what was always going to happen, and it’s happened to every team Alabama has played this year. The Tide are an NFL team single-handedly sucking the life out of college football. It is what it is.

Anything is possible for the Vols from here on — from 8-4 to 4-8 — and they’ve got two capable quarterbacks who can do good things with the football and lead this team on drives.

At this point, we have to trust the coaches to make the right decisions, and if they’re struggling within the framework of a game, the other needs to be ready to play. If they seize that opportunity, all the better, right?

Chryst seized his chance against the Tide and looked excellent doing it. Guarantano did the same a week before against Auburn.

Small sample sets, both. Neither have proved they’re elite, dynamic signal-callers capable of carrying this team on their shoulders. Both are proving they’re perfectly competent, and it’s going to be fun watching this growing, developing team play against some competition that is on the same plane as them right now.

Florida is, and the Vols turned it over six times in a lopsided loss. Auburn is, and Tennessee finally took advantage, made its own breaks and won a big game. Every other team is in that sack of potatoes, too.

It’s time for Tennessee to take care of business in the “real” season, which starts next week. It will be interesting to see how Pruitt, Helton and crew handle the developing quarterback situation. However they do, the dude out there will have the Power T on their helmet.

We should all be encouraged by what we’ve seen recently, because we will need the quarterback to make plays for us to win games, especially next week against a South Carolina team that is angry, will be playing at home and had an extra week to rest and prepare.

You say the goal should be 6-6? I don’t agree. Every game is winnable, so the goal should be 8-4. Pruitt and Co. need to do whatever it takes to get there, including opening up the quarterback competition and seeing what shakes out.

Keep Punching

Progress looks smallest against Alabama and doesn’t feel like much progress at all. But the right feel was indeed present yesterday, even if briefly: down 28-0 with more than 11 minutes left in the second quarter, Tennessee forced consecutive three-and-outs on Alabama’s first-team offense. Then Tennessee’s own offense, which at that point had earned all of one first down (plus a second via penalty), came alive: Guarantano-to-Palmer for 30, then consecutive completions from Keller Chryst to Ty Chandler for a touchdown. And when Alabama answered after another near-miss on an onside kick, so too did the Vols: Jauan Jennings on 3rd-and-12, Jennings on a flea flicker (I was impressed but not surprised by the number of people in the stands who were absolutely confident Jennings would come out of the pile with that fumble), then Tyler Byrd (!) for a 20-yard touchdown.

The Vols were down 35-14 with 2:18 to play in the second quarter, and would receive the second half kickoff. I don’t think any of us thought we were winning. But Tennessee was alive, not just throwing wildly but landing some punches.

It didn’t last, of course: Tua’s six yard run on 3rd-and-5 three plays later was one of the game’s more important snaps, Bama punched it in with 15 seconds left before halftime, and more shenanigans on the second half kickoff ended most of the interest. But for Tennessee, against Alabama, this was progress.

It’s much more noticeable on paper. The Vols gained 258 yards in 55 plays against the Tide, 4.69 yards per play. Almost all of the damage was done against Bama’s first team: in the second half Tennessee ran only 24 plays for 84 yards (3.5 per play). It’s not just that Tennessee’s offense had a better day than Louisville, Ole Miss, and Missouri against Alabama’s defense. It’s how much better this Tennessee team was against the Crimson Tide than last year’s…and the year before that.

Hopelessness in this rivalry was last season, when the Vols gained 108 yards on 46 plays (2.35 per). The year before, still ranked ninth and with plenty of NFL talent, Tennessee gained 163 yards in 63 plays (2.59 per). Even trailing only 21-7 at halftime in 2016, there was a sense of impending doom quickly realized in the second half. To be fair, that team was decimated by injuries coming off Texas A&M, but Alabama made inept an offense that would go on to be the best in college football in the month of November.

We’ve been saying it all year, and it was true again yesterday: this year, competence is progress. Doing much of anything right against this Alabama team is competence, and the Vols showed it with a little flair in the second quarter. It was never going to be enough to win. But I like both the fight of this team, and the way that fight manifests itself versus last year.

Of course, the Vols already have their signature win, seem to have avoided any catastrophic injuries coming out of Bama, and still need just a split of their secondary SEC East rivals (plus a win over Charlotte) to get bowl eligible. So far Jeremy Pruitt has pushed the right buttons with this team.

Were his postgame quotes the right button? Pruitt is no doubt tired of losing, and tired of being non-competitive in the final analysis. So far he has not lost his team, and they have not lost their fight. It’s different, perhaps, when you’re coming off the worst season in school history and not a mediocre finish that ended the tenure of a longtime coach. These players, so far, have been invested as Pruitt has done the same in them.

This next part – South Carolina, Kentucky, Missouri, and Vanderbilt – was always going to be the most important for Tennessee to achieve its goals this year. And the Vols picked up a signature win along the way at Auburn. Tennessee seems to be entering the backstretch physically okay.

This has been the question all year: can the Vols be better in November than they were in September? To do that, Pruitt will have to keep his team together while continuing to challenge them to improve. I don’t doubt Tennessee’s spirit at this point. But can the Vols continue to throw and land meaningful punches and score meaningful wins against the rest of the schedule? Or will this team be beaten down, throwing punches with less behind them before collapsing to the canvas themselves?

These things are always a marathon, and in many ways the toughest miles should be behind us now. Does Tennessee have enough left to take advantage of what’s in front of them? If the answer is yes, progress will start looking better every week.

 

Alabama 58, Tennessee 21: And now, for the rest of the season

The Tennessee Volunteers lost to a historically good Alabama Crimson Tide team today 58-21, but at the same time completed their time in The Gauntlet, a three-game stretch against Georgia, Auburn, and Alabama.

They survived. Beaten, but not broken. Pressed, but not crushed. And only time will tell, but they may even be stronger for the experience. (Assuming the injury that sidelined Jarrett Guarantano this afternoon doesn’t keep him out for long. But even then, Keller Chryst looked as good today as well.)

Oh, and instead of stumbling out of the exit with an anticipated 0-3 record, they even managed to emerge with a surprise win in hand.

Forget about getting trounced by Georgia and run over by Alabama on its way to the history books. The only thing that matters about those games now is that they’re over.

Now, the team turns its attention to the games that are really going to matter this season. Winnable games that can earn a bowl trip and the extra practice that goes with it.

Assuming a win against Charlotte gets Tennessee to four wins, Tennessee needs only two of South Carolina, No. 14 Kentucky, Missouri, and Vanderbilt to make Jeremy Pruitt’s first season a modest success.

South Carolina is 3-3 with losses to Georgia, Kentucky, and Texas A&M, and a mere 2-point victory over Missouri. They’re beatable.

Kentucky is ranked for good reason, but although they appear to be a worthy opponent, it’s fairly easy to rationalize away some of their wins. They’re especially good this year, but they’re nowhere near as good as either Georgia or Alabama. They can be beat as well.

Missouri is winless in conference play, although those losses came to Georgia, Alabama, and the aforementioned 2-pointer to South Carolina. They know how to score, but they also know how to lose.

And Vanderbilt, while not looking terrible, is certainly no better than Tennessee.

The goal the rest of the way, then, is to win two of those four games. It won’t be easy. Those teams are looking better than usual, and Tennessee’s rebuild is still a work in process and fragile enough to shatter.

Hopefully, this won’t be the case for any season beyond this one, but those games are as important this year as games against Florida, Georgia, and Alabama have been in years past.

Get two or more, go bowling. Get the extra practice. Tout the progress to as many blue-chip recruits as will listen. And then see how much more ground we can gain against the elites next season.

Winning two more SEC games the rest of the way is the path to getting better next year, when we can really start closing the gap against the nation’s best.

Forget Alabama for now. The Gamecocks are up next. They’re not Alabama or Georgia. They’re beatable.

So let’s do it.

Your Gameday Gameplan: Tennessee-Alabama

It’s Gameday on Rocky Top, with the 3-3 (1-2) Tennessee Vols hosting the 7-0 (4-0) Alabama Crimson Tide at 3:30 on CBS.

Here’s the Gameday Gameplan for Vols fans. Where and when to find the Vols game on TV, what other games to watch, and what to listen to and read as you wait for kickoff.

When is the Vols game, and what TV channel is it on?

Here are the particulars for today’s Tennessee game:

The best other games for Vols fans to watch today

Here’s our list of games to watch today, curated just for Vols fans:

Saturday, October 13, 2018
Away Home Time TV How Why
NOON SLATE
No. 6 Michigan No. 24 Michigan State 12:00 PM FOX Channel Hop Top 25 Matchup
AFTERNOON SLATE
No. 1 Alabama Tennessee 3:30 PM CBS Live Go Vols!
No. 16 NC State No. 3 Clemson 3:30 PM ESPN, WatchESPN DVR Top 25 Matchup
EVENING SLATE
No. 22 Mississippi State No. 5 LSU 7:00 PM ESPN, WatchESPN Channel Hop Top 25 Matchup
No. 12 Oregon No. 25 Washington State 7:30 PM FOX Channel Hop Top 25 Matchup
Vanderbilt No. 14 Kentucky 7:30 PM SECN, WatchESPN Channel Hop Future opponents

 

And here’s a searchable version of the entire college football TV schedule for the day:

Date Away Home Time TV
Thu Oct 18 Georgia State Arkansas State 7:30 PM ESPNU, WatchESPN
Thu Oct 18 Stanford Arizona State 9:00 PM ESPN, WatchESPN
Fri Oct 19 Colorado State Boise State 9:00 PM ESPN2, WatchESPN
Fri Oct 19 Air Force UNLV 10:00 PM CBSSN
Sat Oct 20 No. 6 Michigan No. 24 Michigan State 12:00 PM FOX
Sat Oct 20 Illinois No. 23 Wisconsin 12:00 PM FS1
Sat Oct 20 Maryland No. 19 Iowa 12:00 PM ESPN2, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 No. 20 Cincinnati Temple 12:00 PM ESPNU, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 No. 9 Oklahoma TCU 12:00 PM ABC, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Auburn Ole Miss 12:00 PM ESPN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Buffalo Toledo 12:00 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Miami (OH) Army 12:00 PM CBSSN
Sat Oct 20 Northwestern Rutgers 12:00 PM BTN
Sat Oct 20 Tulsa Arkansas 12:00 PM SECN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 North Carolina Syracuse 12:20 PM ACCNE, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Virginia Duke 12:30 PM ACCNE, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Bowling Green Ohio 2:00 PM ESPN3
Sat Oct 20 Idaho State Liberty 2:00 PM ESPN3
Sat Oct 20 Florida Atlantic Marshall 2:30 PM
Sat Oct 20 Utah State Wyoming 2:30 PM
Sat Oct 20 Charlotte Middle Tennessee 3:00 PM ESPN3
Sat Oct 20 Eastern Michigan Ball State 3:00 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Western Michigan Central Michigan 3:00 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 No. 1 Alabama Tennessee 3:30 PM CBS
Sat Oct 20 No. 16 NC State No. 3 Clemson 3:30 PM ESPN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Colorado No. 15 Washington 3:30 PM FOX
Sat Oct 20 No. 18 Penn State Indiana 3:30 PM ABC, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Akron Kent State 3:30 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Coastal Carolina UMass 3:30 PM
Sat Oct 20 Houston Navy 3:30 PM CBSSN
Sat Oct 20 Kansas Texas Tech 3:30 PM FS1
Sat Oct 20 Louisiana Appalachian State 3:30 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Minnesota Nebraska 3:30 PM BTN
Sat Oct 20 SMU Tulane 3:30 PM ESPNU, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 UTEP Louisiana Tech 3:30 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Wake Forest Florida State 3:30 PM ESPN2, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 California Oregon State 4:00 PM PAC12
Sat Oct 20 Georgia Southern New Mexico State 4:00 PM
Sat Oct 20 Memphis Missouri 4:00 PM SECN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 No. 22 Mississippi State No. 5 LSU 7:00 PM ESPN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 No. 10 UCF East Carolina 7:00 PM ESPN2, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 UConn No. 21 South Florida 7:00 PM CBSSN
Sat Oct 20 Texas State UL Monroe 7:00 PM ESPN3
Sat Oct 20 UTSA Southern Mississippi 7:00 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 No. 12 Oregon No. 25 Washington State 7:30 PM FOX
Sat Oct 20 No. 2 Ohio State Purdue 7:30 PM ABC, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Vanderbilt No. 14 Kentucky 7:30 PM SECN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Fresno State New Mexico 7:30 PM ESPNU, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 North Texas UAB 7:30 PM
Sat Oct 20 Old Dominion Western Kentucky 7:30 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Rice Florida Intl 7:30 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 USC Utah 8:00 PM PAC12
Sat Oct 20 Arizona UCLA 10:30 PM ESPN2, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 San Jose State San Diego State 10:30 PM CBSSN
Sat Oct 20 Nevada Hawai'i 11:59 PM

 

GRT games and contests

While you’re waiting for the games to begin, make sure that you submit your answers to the GRT Guessing Game questions and update your picks for the GRT Pick ‘Em.

GRT game-week audio

Here’s Will’s regular Friday appearance with Josh Ward and Will West on WNML’s Sports 180:

Pre-game prep

And to catch up on on your pre-game reading, have a look at our game preview posts from earlier this week:

Go Vols!

Gameday on Rocky Top Guessing Game: Alabama edition

I’ve been moving the past couple of weeks, and in addition to having all of our stuff spread out over two locations a half hour apart and the thing you need always being in the other place, working without my regular space or equipment has been very discomforting. I did get to watch the Auburn game in a tailgate chair in my basement surrounded by boxes last Saturday, but I hated being mostly unplugged for the after-party.

What I’m saying is that there’s a reason for the recent lack of podcasts and the failure to announce the winners of last week’s Pick ‘Em and Guessing Game. Like the Vols, I’m making progress toward the goal, but I still have a ways to go. The Pick ‘Em and Guessing Game results for last week will be coming later, but I wanted to go ahead and get this week’s questions out there.

As always, you can find out everything you need to know here.

Let’sa go!

  1. Submit your answers to our three questions below.
  2. Click the “Submit” button.
  3. Copy and paste your answers in the comments below.

Good luck!

On Leaving Fingerprints in the Museum

This one feels a bit like the Tennessee-Kentucky basketball rivalry through the mid-90’s. The Cats, fueled by Antoine Walker, Ron Mercer, and Nazr Mohammed among others, won the NCAA Tournament in 1996, lost in the title game in 1997, and won it again in 1998. During a stretch of 11 straight wins over Tennessee, Kentucky won in Thompson-Boling by 20 in 1995, then by 40 in 1996. You’d show up to these games with that 1% hope, then watch a dunk contest unfold for as long as you could stand it, consoling yourself that at least you could say you watched a championship team and, in Walker’s case, a three-time NBA All-Star.

The last time Alabama was in Knoxville, it wasn’t just the final margin (49-10). The Vols, still ranked ninth and in every championship chase after a double overtime loss at Texas A&M, were scattered, smothered, and covered by Alabama’s defense under Jeremy Pruitt: 2.59 yards per play for Dobbs, Hurd, Kamara, etc. Much has changed since then, for the Vols and Pruitt. Last year in Tuscaloosa was even worse – 2.35 yards per play – but that was to be expected given the state of the Vols this time a year ago.

I don’t think anyone expects the outcome to change this year. But is this going to turn into a dunk contest again, where we say, “Oh well, at least we can say we saw Tua play in Neyland”? Or can the Vols show signs of life?

There are a handful of things that would be tangible progress against this bunch:

  • Alabama doesn’t score a touchdown on its opening drive
  • Tua throws an interception
  • Tua throws a pass in the fourth quarter
  • Alabama scores 38 points or less

But beyond that, I think a good goal for Tennessee – aside from keeping Jarrett Guarantano alive – is to leave this game still feeling good about its chances the rest of the way home. That happened four years ago against Alabama in Knoxville, when the Tide raced to a 27-0 lead before Josh Dobbs started writing his legend in an eventual 34-20 Alabama win. This one should be less about individual ascension and more about the entire team continuing to pull in the same direction.

And against this bunch, we’d better pull real hard.

This could end up in the conversation for the best team Tennessee has ever faced. The Tide are currently playing in the 99.4 percentile in S&P+. The aforementioned 2016 Tide finished the year at 99.8%; 2012 Alabama at 99.3%. The Vols faced both LSU (99.3%) and Alabama (99.1%) in 2011. Tim Tebow’s 2008 Gators were at 99.5%; Danny Wuerffel’s 1996 Gators were at 99.2%.

Two years ago at Rocky Top Talk, we ranked the best teams Tennessee has beaten in S&P+. 2001 Florida topped that list at 98.9%. All this to say, this Bama team is operating at a rare level…and this Tennessee team is trying to make its way into their atmosphere, but just getting off the ground. The history major in me is curious to see the Tide.

Tua might also be the fourth Heisman winner the Vols have faced in the last five years. We saw Baker Mayfield two years before he won it and Marcus Mariota the year before. The Vols last faced a Heisman winner in the same season with Derrick Henry in 2015. Much the same with Mark Ingram in 2009, they almost pulled the upset. The last Heisman winner Tennessee beat: Eddie George in 1995. Chris Weinke was famously inactive when the Vols beat Florida State to win the BCS title.

But on the list of the best quarterbacks Tennessee has ever faced – Mariota, Tebow, Wuerffel, plus future NFL standouts like McNabb – what Tua is doing right now stands out. Averaging 14.3 yards per attempt is just stupid. So is a 21-0 TD-INT ratio. Stop it. This is high school stuff. It’s up to the Vols to not look like a high school team out there.

Back in Thompson-Boling in the 90’s, Kentucky came back to Knoxville in 1997, and the Vols were game. Tennessee lost by just ten. We left that game feeling hopeful, and though it took another season to get there, the Vols swept Kentucky in 1999 and took a major step forward under Jerry Green. Sometimes progress looks like a 10-point loss. I don’t know exactly what number would represent progress tomorrow, but I do believe it’s available beyond just the outcome. Stay healthy and stay alive, of course. But after two years of throwing completely ineffective punches against Alabama, perhaps Jeremy Pruitt’s Vols can land one or two in there, and leave their own mark on this game.

We might get to see something historic in this Alabama team and its quarterback. Will we also see progress from Tennessee?

Locks & Keys Week 8: Vols vs. Alabama, Hold Your Breath and Hope

 

When I was younger, there were no games I looked forward to more than Alabama. Your really could throw out the records, and the streaks were even fun because you knew it could go either way any year.

Nick Saban has sucked the joy out of that. Well, him and Derek Dooley. And Butch Jones. And Mike Hamilton. And Dave Hart. And all the failures.

Now, after a fun week — (man, it was fun, wasn’t it?? Maybe it was more fun for me because of all the bragging rights over my Auburn buddies) — it’s time to go out and probably endure the biggest gut-shot of the season. It’s the week that Alabama fans invade Neyland Stadium, the best FBS team of the modern era probably has its way with our Vols and we have to sit there, take it, and then listen to those buffoons sing “Rammer Jammer” afterward.

Makes me sick just thinking of it.

But here’s the deal: Coach Jeremy Pruitt and the Vols simply cannot let this game erase the momentum from the valiant Georgia showing and the resounding road upset at Auburn. The Crimson Tide is a different animal that has been destroying everything in its path. The Vols have to try to cover the four-touchdown spread, do some things they can build on and, most importantly, not get anybody hurt.

It sucks that those are the goals, but just being realistic, they are.

Could the Vols win this game? Absolutely, they could. Crazy things happen. They did in 1982. They did in 1990. There are many other examples.

Is it likely? Nah. If you think so, you’re drinking orange Kool-Aid and aren’t being very realistic about where these two programs are right now. Alabama under Saban is the most well-built, well-rounded, talented programs in college football history. This dynasty is even greater than Bear Bryant’s at Alabama. Until Saban leaves, it’s probably not changing.

Tennessee went 4-8 last year, don’t you remember? Don’t let last week fool you — this team is still a long ways away. But, also, don’t let this week fool you, either. We’re not going to be as far away as Alabama makes us look.

The Vols have to stay on schedule. They have to keep Jarrett Guarantano upright, get Jonathan Kongbo’s replacements (like DeAndre Johnson and Jordan Allen) some valuable repetitions and not lose anybody else of any value. Games against South Carolina, Kentucky, Missouri and Vanderbilt are going to determine the postseason. Tennessee needs a split to get one.

They can’t lose those games this week. That is very important. Tennessee needs to fight, it doesn’t need to give up, and it needs to find some building blocks. But the most important thing is don’t lose more than once against Alabama, and don’t lose what you’ve built. There is a lot of season left to be played.

Now, if there was a chance, let’s take a look at what must happen.

KEYS

Protect JG

If the Vols are going to shock the college football world and upset Alabama, they have to do that by keeping Jarrett Guarantano’s jersey clean. This offensive line did some positive things a week ago against Auburn, and you’re going to be hard-pressed to find a signal-caller tougher than JG.

But Alabama is going to have a bunch of manimals coming after him, blitzing, breathing down his neck, trying to crush his soul and his will. It is vitally important Tennessee’s offensive front plays with more pride than it has so far this season and that Tyson Helton finds some ways to help his quarterback get the ball out quickly.

UT needs to run some play-action to keep the Tide honest and keep the pressure off. The Vols need to hit them with some draws up the middle, and that means they need to win some one-on-one battles in the trenches. If those things happen, UT could put up some points against an Alabama defense that is very good but nothing like it has been in recent years.

Biguns

While Helton needs to dial up some quick strikes to help JG get the ball out of his hands, he also needs some time to get the ball downfield.

Tennessee won the game against Auburn last week because Guarantano threw the ball up and let Jauan Jennings, Marquez Callaway and Josh Palmer beat the AU cornerbacks on 50-50 balls. Alabama’s DBs are better than its counterparts on the Plains, but again, this secondary isn’t as dominant as it has been.

Do the Vols have an advantage with their wide receivers? That’s still debatable because of all the talent Saban has recruited, but Tennessee has talent, too. JG has to take some shots downfield, and the Vols have to take advantage of man coverage and win those battles with some big gains. Then, they’ve got to convert those big plays into touchdowns.

Coming of age

Last week was a breakout party for freshman cornerback Bryce Thompson, who had a huge interception and a pass deflection in the end zone against Auburn that may have been the game’s two biggest plays.

He’s really emerging into a young star before our eyes. And his fellow first-year defensive back Alontae Taylor has enjoyed flashes of brilliance, too.

Though Baylen Buchanan isn’t the kind of defensive back you want in man coverage, he’s doing better playing the nickelback position.

They’re all going to be tested this week like they never have before. UA quarterback Tua Tagovailoa isn’t a guarantee to play, but he probably will. If he does, the Vols must face the Heisman Trophy frontrunner who throws one of the prettiest deep balls of any collegiate quarterback in recent memory. Alabama has nearly patented the first-drive long scoring pass with guys like Jerry Jeudy routinely on the other end.

The Tide are going to go long, and they are going to convert more often than not.

Take this into consideration: There hasn’t been a single game this year where Alabama failed to score a touchdown on its opening drive.

This will be the best wide receiving corps the Vols’ young secondary faces all year, and they’ve got to minimize the huge gainers and make their share of plays. UT has a lot of talent and even more inexperience in the secondary. They need their share of wins this week. This is where the game will be won or lost.

Uncle mo

We say it a lot, but we mean it a lot, too: Tennessee will have a rowdy crowd at Neyland on Saturday, and the Vols must keep them in it. If not, Alabama’s fans (they’ll travel plenty, too) will take over and so will its team.

The last time UT was at home, Florida gutted the crowd early and kept pushing. We never had a chance to stay in the game as the Vols killed themselves. If that happens against UA, the Vols will lose by 70.

Uh, that’s not an exaggeration.

Tennessee needs some big early plays to get the players believing, get the fans believing and stay in it till late. That’s a huge ask, but it needs to happen if UT has any chance.

Mistake-free

Last week, Tennessee not only made big defensive plays, it played spotless, mistake-free football. Penalties were minimal, and there were zero turnovers.

Giving up the ball and extra possessions against Alabama lead to bunches of Tide points. This is the best Bama offense of the Saban era, and you must keep it off the field. I want to see Tennessee aggressive, and when you play like that against great teams, you can get burned. That doesn’t mean it should change anything about the approach. Guarantano needs to throw the ball around and whatever happens, happens.

But if what happens are interceptions, the Vols are in trouble. They’ve got to make big plays and keep UA from making big plays. They have to make their own breaks and can’t give ‘Bama anything.

They do not need help.

***

All that said, I have a hard time believing the Vols win or even cover the spread. There is just too much talent on Alabama’s side of the ball, and UT doesn’t have the horses to hang.

My fear is the Vols get banged-up and it keeps them from beating South Carolina the next week in a very winnable game. They’ve got to play aggressive, but they’ve got to be smart and get a little lucky, too.

You’re not going to like the prediction, but given my record ATS this year, it should make you feel better about the game.

Prediction:  Alabama 48, Tennessee 17

LOCKS

Well, we took a vacation last week. It certainly wasn’t because of all the money we’ve been making betting on college football, that’s for sure. So far this season, it’s been one step forward, two steps back.

Last week, we were off, but the week before, it was more like 10 steps back. We went 1-6 which takes us to 20-22 so far this season. That’s embarrassing. As a matter of fact, it’s the worst I’ve ever been in this column. That is going to change. I’m not going to predict undefeated this week because every time I do that, I suck.

But it’s gonna be a winning record, guaranteed. We’re going to get back to .500 this week and vow to improve afterward. It’s time, as Lane Kiffin would say.

  1. Illinois vs. Wisconsin under 55: What in the world happened to the Badgers this year? They’re not anywhere near as good as I thought they’d be, and they’ll take out some aggression this week against a bad Illini team. But Illinois can’t score enough for this over to hit.
  2. Arkansas -5.5 over Tulsa: I don’t see the Hogs losing to Colorado State, North Texas AND Tulsa in the same season. I see Chad Morris’ team improving each week, and this is my favorite pick of the week.
  3. California -6.5 over Oregon State: Oh man, the Beavers are bad. Yes, Justin Wilcox’s team is reeling, but it isn’t far removed from playing decent football. This line is far too low even if it is in Corvallis.
  4. Oregon +1.5 over Washington State: I love the Ducks. They’ve been good to me this year, and they’re a well-coached, disciplined team that can win games many different ways. I like them to cover this way-too-low line against the Fighting Leaches.
  5. North Texas -0.5 over UAB: The Mean Green have come back down to earth a little, but I still love Mason Fine and they look back on track after a 30-7 win over Southern Miss. They’ll cover this scant line easily in a defensive battle. Fine will make enough plays.
  6. Purdue +14 over Ohio State: This was my Bleacher Report upset of the week. Not only do I think the Boilermakers are going to win, I’m going to follow up this bet by laying on the money line as well. I’m a Brohm believer, baby! I also think it’s a matter of time before the Buckeyes have their midseason “WTH” game.
  7. Western Michigan -4.5 over Central Michigan: This has trap game written all over it, and the line is just dangling out there as too good to be true. Still, I’m falling for it. I think the Chippewas are awful and the Broncos aren’t. This is a solid cover.

Tennessee-Alabama statsy preview: Georgia, Take 2?

After delving into the stats and comps this week, we emerge with what appears to be another put a phonebook in your pants game for the Vols this week against Alabama. But hey, if it’s looking like the Georgia game of a few weeks ago, perhaps just a little more improvement and a friendly home crowd will make it interesting even longer this time around.

Here are the predictions, stats, comps, and reasoning.

Predictions

SPM: Alabama 41, Tennessee 18

Eye- and gut-adjusted: Alabama 45, Tennessee 17

Tennessee rushing yards: 80

Alabama rushing yards: 230

Tennessee passing yards: 220

Alabama passing yards: 330

Tennessee points: 17

Alabama points: 45

Tennessee rushing

Tennessee is averaging 159.0 rushing yards per game, while Alabama is giving up 125.1 per game. The Vols have played no one better, but Auburn, which is giving up 125.9 yards per game on the ground, is pretty much the same. Tennessee got 68 against them. Based on all of that, my guess for rushing yards for Tennessee against Alabama is 80.

Alabama rushing

The Tennessee defense is allowing 152.7 rushing yards per game, while the Alabama run game is averaging 216.7 yards per game. The closest “not-as-good” comparison for a prior Tennessee opponent is Florida, which is getting 197.3 yards per game on the ground, and they got 201 against Tennessee. The closest “better-than” comparison for a prior Tennessee opponent is Georgia, which is averaging 226.3 rushing yards per game and got 251 against Tennessee. I’m guessing Alabama will get about 230 rushing yards against Tennessee’s defense.

Tennessee passing

Tennessee is averaging 207.0 passing yards per game, and Alabama is allowing 189.9. The closest “not-as-good” comparison for a prior Tennessee opponent is Auburn, which is giving up 208.0 yards per game through the air, and Tennessee put up 328 against them. The closest “better-than” comparison for a prior Tennessee opponent is UTEP. They’re allowing 189.0 passing yards per game, and Tennessee got 167 against them. My guess is that Tennessee will put up 220 passing yards this weekend.

Alabama passing

The Tennessee pass defense is allowing 205.8 passing yards per game. Alabama is getting 350.3. Tennessee’s played no one better. The closest “not-as-good” comparison for a prior Tennessee opponent is West Virginia, which is getting 320.5 yards per game through the air, and they got 429 against Tennessee. I’m going with Alabama putting up about 330 passing yards against Tennessee.

Tennessee scoring

Tennessee is averaging 26.7 points per game, and Alabama is allowing 15.1. The Vols have played no one better. The closest “not-as-good” comparison for a prior Tennessee opponent is Georgia, which is allowing 16.3 points per game, and Tennessee got 12 against them. My prediction is that Tennessee will score around 17 points against Alabama.

Alabama scoring

Tennessee is allowing 25.3 points per game. Alabama is averaging 53.6. Nobody’s better. The closest “not-as-good” comparison for a prior Tennessee opponent is Georgia, which is averaging 39.0 points, and they got 38 against Tennessee. I’m going with Alabama putting up about 45 points against Tennessee.

Comparison of predictions to other models and Vegas

Left alone, the SPM says Alabama 41, Tennessee 18, a spread of -23.

With eyeball and gut adjustments, I’m going with Alabama 45, Tennessee 17, a spread of -28.

Bill Connelly’s S&P+ says Tennessee has an 8% chance of winning and puts the score at Alabama 44.8, Tennessee 20.5, a spread of 24.3.

The Vegas spread favors Alabama by between 28.5 and 29, with an over/under of 56.5-57, which converts to something like Alabama 42, Tennessee 14.

ESPN’s FPI gives the Vols only a 5.7% chance of winning.

 

2018 college football TV schedule for Vols fans: Week 8

Gameday

Saturday, October 13, 2018
Away Home Time TV How Why
NOON SLATE
No. 6 Michigan No. 24 Michigan State 12:00 PM FOX Channel Hop Top 25 Matchup
AFTERNOON SLATE
No. 1 Alabama Tennessee 3:30 PM CBS Live Go Vols!
No. 16 NC State No. 3 Clemson 3:30 PM ESPN, WatchESPN DVR Top 25 Matchup
EVENING SLATE
No. 22 Mississippi State No. 5 LSU 7:00 PM ESPN, WatchESPN Channel Hop Top 25 Matchup
No. 12 Oregon No. 25 Washington State 7:30 PM FOX Channel Hop Top 25 Matchup
Vanderbilt No. 14 Kentucky 7:30 PM SECN, WatchESPN Channel Hop Future opponents

 

The noon slot this Saturday offers an appetizer for Vols fans in the form of a Top 25 matchup between No. 6 Michigan and No. 24 Michigan State on Fox.

Tennessee then hosts No. 1 Alabama at 3:30 on CBS. If you’re interested in checking in, channel-hopping, or score-/moment-watching, No. 16 NC State is also taking on No. 3 Clemson at the same time on ESPN.

There are several good games in the evening slot, including one between Top 25 SEC West teams, another between Top 25 Pac12 teams, and the most important one to Tennessee fans — a matchup between future Vols opponents No. 14 Kentucky and Vanderbilt.

Full sortable and searchable college football TV schedule

Date Away Home Time TV
Thu Oct 18 Georgia State Arkansas State 7:30 PM ESPNU, WatchESPN
Thu Oct 18 Stanford Arizona State 9:00 PM ESPN, WatchESPN
Fri Oct 19 Colorado State Boise State 9:00 PM ESPN2, WatchESPN
Fri Oct 19 Air Force UNLV 10:00 PM CBSSN
Sat Oct 20 No. 6 Michigan No. 24 Michigan State 12:00 PM FOX
Sat Oct 20 Illinois No. 23 Wisconsin 12:00 PM FS1
Sat Oct 20 Maryland No. 19 Iowa 12:00 PM ESPN2, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 No. 20 Cincinnati Temple 12:00 PM ESPNU, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 No. 9 Oklahoma TCU 12:00 PM ABC, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Auburn Ole Miss 12:00 PM ESPN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Buffalo Toledo 12:00 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Miami (OH) Army 12:00 PM CBSSN
Sat Oct 20 Northwestern Rutgers 12:00 PM BTN
Sat Oct 20 Tulsa Arkansas 12:00 PM SECN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 North Carolina Syracuse 12:20 PM ACCNE, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Virginia Duke 12:30 PM ACCNE, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Bowling Green Ohio 2:00 PM ESPN3
Sat Oct 20 Idaho State Liberty 2:00 PM ESPN3
Sat Oct 20 Florida Atlantic Marshall 2:30 PM
Sat Oct 20 Utah State Wyoming 2:30 PM
Sat Oct 20 Charlotte Middle Tennessee 3:00 PM ESPN3
Sat Oct 20 Eastern Michigan Ball State 3:00 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Western Michigan Central Michigan 3:00 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 No. 1 Alabama Tennessee 3:30 PM CBS
Sat Oct 20 No. 16 NC State No. 3 Clemson 3:30 PM ESPN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Colorado No. 15 Washington 3:30 PM FOX
Sat Oct 20 No. 18 Penn State Indiana 3:30 PM ABC, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Akron Kent State 3:30 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Coastal Carolina UMass 3:30 PM
Sat Oct 20 Houston Navy 3:30 PM CBSSN
Sat Oct 20 Kansas Texas Tech 3:30 PM FS1
Sat Oct 20 Louisiana Appalachian State 3:30 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Minnesota Nebraska 3:30 PM BTN
Sat Oct 20 SMU Tulane 3:30 PM ESPNU, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 UTEP Louisiana Tech 3:30 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Wake Forest Florida State 3:30 PM ESPN2, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 California Oregon State 4:00 PM PAC12
Sat Oct 20 Georgia Southern New Mexico State 4:00 PM
Sat Oct 20 Memphis Missouri 4:00 PM SECN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 No. 22 Mississippi State No. 5 LSU 7:00 PM ESPN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 No. 10 UCF East Carolina 7:00 PM ESPN2, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 UConn No. 21 South Florida 7:00 PM CBSSN
Sat Oct 20 Texas State UL Monroe 7:00 PM ESPN3
Sat Oct 20 UTSA Southern Mississippi 7:00 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 No. 12 Oregon No. 25 Washington State 7:30 PM FOX
Sat Oct 20 No. 2 Ohio State Purdue 7:30 PM ABC, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Vanderbilt No. 14 Kentucky 7:30 PM SECN, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 Fresno State New Mexico 7:30 PM ESPNU, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 North Texas UAB 7:30 PM
Sat Oct 20 Old Dominion Western Kentucky 7:30 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 Rice Florida Intl 7:30 PM ESPN+
Sat Oct 20 USC Utah 8:00 PM PAC12
Sat Oct 20 Arizona UCLA 10:30 PM ESPN2, WatchESPN
Sat Oct 20 San Jose State San Diego State 10:30 PM CBSSN
Sat Oct 20 Nevada Hawai'i 11:59 PM