Sports

Oklahoma, USC lead Week 13 winners and losers

Style points don’t matter for No. 8 Oklahoma.

Last week’s win against No. 10 Alabama bumped the Sooners into at-large position and made things very simple heading into games against No. 22 Missouri and LSU to end the regular season. Just win — by a point, by a touchdown, by five touchdowns — and make the College Football Playoff.

One game down, one more to go. While not pretty, the Sooners beat Missouri 17-6 thanks to an inspired performance from a defense that forced two turnovers and allowed just 4.2 yards per play.

That offset more weak production from the offense and quarterback John Mateer, who completed 14 of 30 attempts for 173 yards and has topped 200 passing yards just once in his past four games. Mateer did add a team-high 60 rushing yards and had two touchdowns passes without an interception for the first time this season.

Down the line, this offensive mediocrity will limit the Sooners’ ability to win one playoff game, let alone stack wins and advance to the national semifinals. Oklahoma hasn’t gained more than 359 yards in an SEC game and has topped 400 yards against just one Power Four opponent – No. 17 Michigan.

But that’s a down-the-road concern for a program more focused on nailing down double-digit wins for the first time as members of the SEC. And while struggling down the stretch, Missouri represents a much stiffer test than LSU, which has taken another step back since firing Brian Kelly.

Taking care of business put the Sooners atop Saturday’s biggest winners and losers:

Winners

Oregon

Hanging around the top of the playoff rankings despite having just one notable win — that would be two weeks ago against Iowa — No. 5 Oregon delivered a long-awaited statement by beating No. 16 Southern California 42-27 in a matchup with intense Big Ten and playoff implications. With the win, the Ducks are likely locked into an at-large berth and would even sneak into a rematch against No. 2 Indiana should No. 1 Ohio State lose a fifth game in a row against No. 18 Michigan. The defense forced a pair of turnovers, allowed just 1.8 yards per carry and slowed down prolific wide receiver Makai Lemon, who had seven receptions and two scores but only 34 yards. With 257 yards and two touchdowns, Dante Moore paced a balanced offense that averaged 8.6 yards per pass attempt with 179 rushing yards.

Brigham Young

No. 11 Brigham Young pushed around Cincinnati to the tune of 265 rushing yards on 49 carries in a 26-14 win that achieves two ends: one, the Cougars are still on track to have one loss when they rematch with No. 7 Texas Tech in the Big 12 championship game; and two, the playoff committee will have to be impressed by a controlling win against an opponent recently in their rankings, which might help BYU stick around in the at-large conversation even with a second loss to the Red Raiders. The Cougars had possession for over 38 minutes, slowing a Cincinnati offense that averaged 6.3 yards per play but turned the ball over twice.

SMU

Like last year, SMU is surging through the finish line of the regular season. Facing off against slumping Louisville, the Mustangs allowed just 228 yards and Kevin Jennings had four combined scores in an easy 38-6 win. Even better news came later on Saturday with No. 12 Georgia Tech’s loss to Pittsburgh, giving the Yellow Jackets two ACC losses. That means SMU will face off against No. 19 Virginia in the conference championship game with a win against California.

Notre Dame

Leaving nothing to chance, No. 9 Notre Dame returned two interceptions and a blocked punt for touchdowns as part of a 35-point first quarter and smashed Syracuse 70-7 to inch closer to an at-large playoff berth. Amid minor concerns that Miami could leapfrog ahead in the playoff rankings because of September’s head-to-head win, the Fighting Irish looked the part of a genuine championship contender against one of the biggest disappointments in a deeply disappointing ACC. Running back Jeremiyah Love continued to make a steady run toward the Heisman Trophy ceremony with 171 yards and three scores on 21.4 yards per carry.

Diego Pavia

While Love might get squeezed out of the mix as a Heisman finalist, Pavia seems locked into a trip to Manhattan after leading No. 13 Vanderbilt to a 45-17 win against Kentucky by completing 32 of 38 attempts for 484 yards and four touchdowns with a team-high 48 yards and a score on the ground. The senior is virtually assured of becoming the Commodores’ highest Heisman finisher since Carl Hinkle placed seventh in 1937 and could end up taking home the award with another brilliant performance next weekend against No. 20 Tennessee.

Tulane

No. 25 Tulane comes in third among Group of Five teams in the US LBM Coaches Poll but leads the way at No. 24 in the playoff rankings, giving the Green Wave the inside track for the Group of Five’s automatic spot. While getting there will eventually require a win in the conference championship game, Tulane escaped a sneaky test at Temple with a 37-13 victory and are only a matchup against hapless Charlotte away from playing for the American crown for the fourth year in a row.

Losers

Southern California

Losing in Autzen Stadium ends the Trojans’ Big Ten and playoff hopes. There was a slim path to a matchup against Indiana: USC had to win on Saturday, win again next week against UCLA and then have Michigan beat Ohio State. Now with three losses, the Trojans are not a serious contender for an at-large spot and must begin looking ahead to a vitally important transfer-portal season to continue building a deeper roster. In the end, losses to Notre Dame and the Ducks won’t be what ruined USC this season — the big miss was a 34-32 loss on a last-second field goal to Illinois earlier in Big Ten play.

Georgia Tech

In one of the biggest regular-season games for this program in years, Georgia Tech fell behind 28-0 early in the second quarter but rallied to within a touchdown late in the fourth quarter before taking a 42-28 loss. A second conference loss down the stretch knocks the Yellow Jackets out of the ACC championship game and virtually out of the playoff picture entirely heading into the rivalry against No. 4 Georgia. It wasn’t too long ago that Tech seemed like one of the surest bets for the bracket.

James Madison

Three explosive scoring plays — a 37-yard interception return, a 68-yard touchdown pass and a 58-yard touchdown run — helped No. 21 James Madison beat Washington State 24-20 to avoid what would’ve been a crippling loss for the Dukes’ playoff hopes. Though better than the alternative, the nature of the win might be too much to overcome: WSU was very competitive in games against No. 6 Mississippi and Virginia but did lose 59-10 earlier this season to North Texas, one of four teams in contention for the American championship. In the case where JMU and UNT are the two teams under consideration for the Group of Five’s playoff bid, this result would be another factor in favor of the Mean Green and the American.

North Carolina

Leading rival Duke 25-24 after making a fourth-down stop with about nine minutes to play, North Carolina went three-and-out to hand the ball right back to the Blue Devils and then gave up an 11-play, 67-yard touchdown drive to lose 32-25 and guarantee that Bill Belichick’s trainwreck debut will fall short of bowl play. (Join in a round of applause for Duke coach Manny Diaz and the design of a fake field goal that set up the Blue Devils’ winning score.) This will be the first year out of the postseason since 2019 for the Tar Heels, who won at least six games in all six seasons under former coach Mack Brown.

Baylor

Days after Baylor gave coach Dave Aranda a public vote of confidence in announcing he’d return for the 2026 season, the Bears were bulldozed during Arizona’s furious fourth quarter and suffered a demoralizing 41-17 loss to remain on the precipice of bowl eligibility heading into the finale against No. 24 Houston. Blame for four losses in five games falls squarely on the defense: Baylor allowed at least 41 points in all four setbacks, at least 34 points in five of six games and at least 27 points in seven of eight conference games.

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