Alabama, Ole Miss drop as South Carolina climbs in latest CFP Rankings
USA TODAY Sports’ Dan Wolken breaks down the fourth edition of the College Football Playoff rankings.
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Looking back at how each team reached the final Saturday of November, there was almost nothing out there to suggest the Wolverines would score this upset.
But there were two factors that were clearly overlooked. One was history: Michigan had won three in a row in this rivalry, so thoroughly humbling Ohio State that the No. 2 Buckeyes essentially reinvented themselves to regain a foothold in the series.
Another was Michigan’s defense. While not quite up to the standard set a year ago, this group carried the Wolverines into the postseason with no help from one of the worst offenses in modern program history.
History, defense, key plays in key moments, the ability to eventually dictate the flow of this game despite Ohio State’s best efforts, another dominant fourth quarter – that’s how the Wolverines scored what should go down as one of the great upsets in the rivalry’s history.
For Michigan, the win overwrites what had been an often miserable year under new coach Sherrone Moore. His tenure now has a marquee moment upon which to build the foundation for a future Big Ten or national champion.
In the immediate future, the Buckeyes will no longer reach the conference championship game. No. 1 Oregon will instead meet No. 4 Penn State, which closed out the regular season by beating Maryland. Not playing for the Big Ten crown will force Ohio State to sweat out the final College Football Playoff rankings and see where their postseason journey begins..
And in the bigger picture, this is a nightmare moment for coach Ryan Day. He is the first Ohio State coach to lose four in a row to Michigan since John Cooper from 1988-91 and the first coach to lose to an unranked Michigan team since Cooper in 1993.
FIRING TIME?: Latest Michigan loss has Ohio State’s Ryan Day under fire
This is the worst loss of Day’s tenure and one of the Buckeyes’ worst losses in this series. Despite his regular-season success against teams other than the Wolverines, Day may never live this one down.
The Buckeyes, Wolverines and South Carolina lead Saturday’s winners and losers:
Michigan should play a bowl game in Charlotte, Nashville or Tampa while Ohio State might end up in the playoff, so the Buckeyes could end up having the last laugh. Yeah, right: The Wolverines are going to be laughing at the Buckeyes’ expense for another year after owning the fourth quarter, continuing one of the dominant themes of this four-game winning streak. Going back to 2021, Michigan has outscored OSU 75-31 in the second half.
With his team down 14-10 with just over a minute left, South Carolina quarterback LaNorris Sellers weaved his way through No. 12 Clemson’s defense for a 20-yard touchdown run to complete the Gamecocks’ 17-14 win and an incredible run through the second half of the regular season. No. 14 South Carolina closed with six wins in a row, four against ranked competition, and now are in position to earn a miraculous playoff berth with some help in the Power Four. In a do-or-die rivalry matchup for both teams, the Gamecocks were able to intercept Cade Klubnik on the game’s final possession to win in Death Valley for the second time in a row.
But Clemson is also a winner, of a sort. Despite losing the rivalry game, the Tigers will backdoor into the ACC championship game by virtue of No. 6 Miami’s loss to Syracuse. After all this, Clemson might get back into the playoff by beating No. 9 SMU and winning the ACC for seventh time in nine years.
These two prominent playoff contenders locked down at-large bids with rivalry wins to close out the regular season. Nico Iamaleava had four touchdowns passes to spark No. 8 Tennessee’s 36-23 win against Vanderbilt. Later on Saturday afternoon, the No. 5 Fighting Irish outscored Southern California 21-7 in the third quarter and then had two field-length interception returns for touchdowns in the fourth to win 49-35. The Irish are in position to host an opening-round playoff opponent. The Volunteers may as well, depending on what happens in next week’s conference championship games.
Losing 42-38 to Syracuse puts No. 6 Miami’s playoff hopes in dire straits. But they aren’t dead entirely, not with the messiness that has ensued in the SEC and the dearth of contenders with fewer than three losses. We’ll know with the penultimate playoff rankings on Tuesday night where Miami really stands. The Hurricanes’ case rests on at least five wins against bowl teams, led by wins against Duke and Louisville. Overall, though, this is the story for the ACC: That Clemson and Miami lost on Saturday very likely makes this a one-bid league to the playoff.
It’s hard to describe just how disastrous Saturday was for Day, who has excelled at Ohio State in every metric but the two that matter: beating the Wolverines and winning national championships. He may still have the chance to achieve the latter thanks to playoff expansion. But regardless of what happens over the next two months, this loss to Michigan is one Day will never live down. While the idea that he’d be replaced after this year remains difficult to imagine, Day will at a minimum head into the 2025 season needing to beat Michigan, play for the Big Ten crown and make a deep run into the playoff to ensure his future with the Buckeyes.
The second-half magic ran out near the finish line for Kansas, which had three ranked wins in a row against Iowa State, Brigham Young and Colorado but lost 45-21 to Baylor to fall just shy of bowl eligibility. Down 21-10 at halftime, the Jayhawks allowed three touchdown drives of at least 62 yards in the third quarter to trail 42-17 heading into the third quarter. This was the first game all year that got out of hand: The Jayhawks’ remaining six losses came by a combined 30 points.
The Iron Bowl came at the right time for No. 13 Alabama. After last week’s 24-3 loss to Oklahoma, the Crimson Tide took out some frustration on Auburn by running for 201 yards and four scores in a 28-14 win. That’s the Tigers’ fifth loss in a row in the series, the program’s longest losing streak since dropping nine in a row from 1973-81. The loss also keeps Auburn out of the postseason for the second time in three years while handing coach Hugh Freeze back-to-back losing seasons for the first time in his coaching career.
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Ohio State football coach Ryan Day, players speak after Tennessee gameOhio State football coach Ryan Day and players speak after the 42-17 victory over the Tenn