Georgia
College football Week 12 winners and losers: Georgia dominates, USC ends with flop

Ranking the top 3 most unique tailgates in college football
From grilling, to trains, to boats… college football fans love to get creative with their tailgate plans. Mackenzie Salmon highlights the three most unique experiences from across the country.
The No. 1 team in college football is playing like the No. 1 team.
You’d say that’s obvious, but it’s not always the case. It is with Georgia, though, which continues to dominate against ranked SEC competition and put a headlock on the top spot in the US LBM AFCA Coaches Poll and the College Football Playoff rankings.
After rolling past Mississippi 52-17 last weekend, the Bulldogs controlled Tennessee for nearly every second of a 38-10 win. The Volunteers scored on a 75-yard run on the game’s opening play; from there, it was all Georgia.
You’re beginning to see a program has won the past two national championships round into form just in time to win a third and make college football history. Georgia may have looked vulnerable after some questionably close games to start SEC play and losing tight end Brock Bowers to an ankle injury, but those doubts have been put to rest as the Bulldogs hit another gear near the finish line of the regular season.
Bowers returned from his ankle injury before last week’s game against the Rebels and has picked up where he left off, with another touchdown against the Volunteers on 60 yards receiving. One constant has been the increasingly productive play of quarterback Carson Beck, who completed 24 of 30 throws for 298 yards and three scores. Beck now has 21 touchdowns and five interceptions and is completing nearly 73% percent of his throws.
Georgia is coming together. The rest of the FBS better watch out — especially Michigan, Ohio State, Alabama and the other blueblood programs in the mix for the national championship.
The Bulldogs top Saturday’s biggest winners and losers:
Winners
Arizona
Jedd Fisch is the Pac-12 coach of the year and should be one of the top names for national hardware after Arizona’s eye-opening 42-18 rout of Utah secured the Wildcats’ first eight-win season since 2014. The Wildcats had one touchdown via a blocked punt and then scored on a garbage-time touchdowns pass with under a minute left, inflating the final margin of victory a touch. But this was dominance: Arizona had four scoring drives of 60 or more yards, didn’t turn the ball over, held Utah to 3.2 yards per carry and averaged 7.7 yards per play, the most the Utes have allowed in a game this season.
Louisville
Another top-line contender for national coach of the year is Louisville’s Jeff Brohm, whose homecoming debut with the Cardinals should go down as one of the most memorable years in program history. After winning 38-31 at Miami (Fla.), the Cardinals are an incredible 10-1 heading into the rivalry against Kentucky and are locked into the ACC championship game against Florida State. Everyone expected immediate improvement under Brohm, a tremendous offensive coach, but no one could’ve seen this coming: Louisville has a small but recognizable path to the playoff with wins against the Wildcats and Seminoles.
SMU
SMU has quietly been one of the best teams in the Group of Five since September. This can be partly attributed to a schedule that included high-profile matchups against Oklahoma and TCU but missed Tulane and Texas-San Antonio during American Athletic play. Beating Memphis 38-34 on the road is easily the most impressive result of the season for the Mustangs, who are now in line to finish with an unbeaten record in conference play and play for the AAC crown with a win next week against Navy. What will be interesting to see on Tuesday night is whether the playoff committee ranks the Mustangs — not that it matters, but being ranked before the AAC championship game guarantees that SMU would reach the New Year’s Six with the win.
Northwestern
Think way back to August, when Pat Fitzgerald was fired amid allegations of hazing within the program, and think about the rock-bottom expectations around Northwestern and first-year defensive coordinator David Braun, Fitzgerald’s interim replacement. Who saw a bowl game coming? Well, here we are: Northwestern will reach the postseason after getting 95 rushing yards and two touchdowns from Cam Porter to beat Purdue 23-15. In addition to the summer’s turmoil and the ensuing coaching change, don’t forget that Northwestern had won four games in the previous two seasons and lost at least nine games in three of the past four. So what the Wildcats have done is incredible, and explains why Braun was named this week as the team’s permanent coach.
Arkansas State
Butch Jones was fired by Tennessee in 2017, spent a few years learning new tricks as an off-field assistant at Alabama and then landed the job at Arkansas State in 2021 in an effort to rekindle his coaching career. His first two teams were terrible, posting just a combined five wins, and this year seemed like more of the same after the Red Wolves gave up 70 points in a humbling non-conference loss to Oklahoma. About two months later, Arkansas State will land in bowl play after using four takeaways to score a 77-31 blowout of Texas State. Remarkably, none of the Red Wolves’ nine touchdowns came through the air, with seven on the ground — three from Ja’Quez Cross and two apiece from Zak Wallace and Cedric Hawkins — and the remaining two coming on interception returns in the fourth quarter.
Losers
Southern California
The only good thing you can say about the Trojans’ regular season is that it’s over. Thank goodness. The ending was predictable: UCLA took advantage of mistakes, controlled the line of scrimmage and was just the better team, period, in a 38-20 win that extends the Chip Kelly era for at least one more week. As they’ve had to do all season, the Bruins maximized some minimal returns on offense and let the defense lead the way; the defense responded with three takeaways and consistent pressure on Caleb Williams. After making last year’s Cotton Bowl and beginning the year as one of the trendiest picks for the playoff, USC heads into the postseason at 7-5 and one of the biggest disappointments in the country. And they’ll have to regroup fast with Williams likely headed to the NFL.
Auburn
Now, to be clear: This isn’t your dad’s New Mexico State, or even your older brother’s New Mexico State. The Aggies are a different program under the great Jerry Kill, who led the program to a bowl game in his debut last season and has his second team in the Conference USA championship game. But maybe you should sit down for this: New Mexico State 31, Auburn 10. One week after whipping Arkansas to reach bowl eligibility under Hugh Freeze, the Tigers were held in total check by a ball-control offense that held possession for almost 39 minutes and helped the Aggies outgain Auburn 414 yards to 213. This was the first win against the SEC after 27 losses in a row for New Mexico State, which was paid $1.85 million to come to Auburn and beat the Tigers like a drum. Nice return on investment, guys!

Georgia
Why Florida hiring Lane Kiffin could ruin Kirby Smart’s day

Georgia’s enjoyed a coaching advantage in rivalry with Florida since the day it hired Kirby Smart. Lane Kiffin would help level the scales.
Lane Kiffin: Ole Miss has ‘a lot to fix’ before Oklahoma
Lane Kiffin said Ole Miss needs to improve before what he called a big test in Oklahoma in Week 9.
Sunday turned just a bit sour for Kirby Smart, because it became a good day for Florida. By firing Billy Napier, the Gators got better. Maybe that sounds harsh, but it’s the truth. Napier’s coaching had been holding Florida back.
By firing Napier, Florida gave itself an opportunity to level the longstanding coaching mismatch inside the “Cocktail Party” rivalry Smart’s ruled.
By firing Napier, Florida gave itself a chance to chase Lane Kiffin. If you’ve watched the Georgia-Mississippi games the past two seasons, you know Kiffin can go toe-to-toe with Smart. The Gators haven’t had a coach capable of doing that since Georgia hired Smart.
Dan Mullen gave Florida a shot with X’s and O’s, but Smart ran circles around him on the recruiting trail. Mullen managed to beat Smart once in four tries. Florida replaced Mullen with its very own version of “Ray Goof,” as Steve Spurrier once called the former Georgia coach whom he beat seven straight times. Napier brought some talent into Florida, but coaching gaffes defined his tenure.
If Florida lands Kiffin, it finally would employ a coach capable of matching sideline wits with Smart and who also could counteract his recruiting prowess. Smart still rules the old model of signing high school talent, but Kiffin’s aced the transfer free agency roster-building strategy better than anyone.
With Kiffin, Florida could hope to field a team as talented as Georgia’s, while having a coach as savvy as Smart. It also would have one of college football’s best quarterback developers. That goes a long way anywhere. It goes miles with Gators fans thirsting for the second coming of Steve Spurrier.
Even in Ole Miss’ 43-35 defeat in Athens, Kiffin’s schemes and play-calling gave Smart’s squad fits for three quarters until his Bulldogs rallied late, as is their style.
“A lot of credit goes to Lane and his staff,” Smart said after his team overcame a two-score deficit, one year after getting smashed by Kiffin’s Rebels. “Their team was really prepared to come into this game and start fast, as they did.”
Smart labeled Kiffin “the best in the country” at clock management.
What a contrast that would be for Florida. It spent the past four seasons competing with the nation’s worst clock manager on the sideline, and also a coach who struggled to master how to get 11 men — and only 11 men — on the field.
Ole Miss scored touchdowns on five straight possessions against Smart’s defense, while Napier had his hands full with Jeff Lebby and Mississippi State. True, Kiffin’s Rebels failed to land the knockout blow, but X’s and O’s couldn’t be faulted, at least.
Everything matters in coaching nowadays. The boss man must be a good CEO, a steady recruiter, a keen evaluator of potential transfer talent, and a glorified grifter who can help attract booster bucks. Actual coaching matters, too, especially in this era of increasing parity.
It’s still a game of Jimmies and Joes, but any school with a billionaire or at least a few motivated millionaires can hope to land a five-star Jimmy and some four-star Joes or snag some value buys out of the portal.
They’re not all going to Alabama, Georgia and Ohio State.
Check out a typical Saturday inside the modern SEC. Vanderbilt whupped LSU, and it didn’t count as an upset. Texas needed overtime to survive Kentucky. Missouri bested Auburn in two overtimes. Georgia survived Ole Miss in a thriller.
On a day when eight conference games were played, six were decided by one possession. The days of Nick Saban assembling a three-deep of all-stars and routinely creaming the field on a run of dynastic dominance are finished.
The game’s changed, and this is no time to employ a sideline stiff, not when in-game coaching can swing the difference in these white-knuckle SEC games that unfold weekend after weekend. Ole Miss has a coach that’s buoyed it into playoff contention and onto Georgia’s level. He could be the solve to Florida’s problems.
From Florida to Auburn to Georgia Tech, Smart’s owned each one of his most important rivals. Kiffin in a Florida visor would make the “Cocktail Party” a fair fight.
Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.
Georgia
Georgia State can’t hold on to late lead, falls to Georgia Southern

Panthers outscored 21-0 in fourth quarter of 41-24 loss
Georgia State head coach Dell McGee looks onto the field during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Vanderbilt, Saturday, Sept. 20, 2025, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Despite a career night from quarterback Cameron Brown, Georgia State could not capitalize, losing a fourth-quarter lead in a 41-24 loss to Georgia Southern Saturday night.
Although they produced their highest point total of the season against an FBS opponent, the Panthers were still outscored 21-0 in the fourth quarter, as the Eagles rallied for the victory.
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Georgia
What channel is Ole Miss vs Georgia today? Time, TV schedule to watch game

College Football Playoff remains unclear and chaotic midseason
With a very unclear CFP field midway through the 2025 season, Before The Snap argues why this might be the best playoff race yet.
Only Georgia stands between Ole Miss football and a perfect 7-0 start to the 2025 college football season.
The No. 5 Rebels (6-0, 3-0 SEC) will look to defeat the No. 7 Bulldogs (5-1, 2-1) on Saturday, Oct. 18, for a chance to continue to a 7-0 start for the third time since 2014. Ole Miss is coming off a close call, 24-21 win over Washington State last week.
Meanwhile, Georgia itself escaped with a 20-10 win over Auburn last week. The Bulldogs’ lone loss this season was a 24-21 loss to Alabama on Sept. 27.
Stream Ole Miss football vs. Georgia live on Fubo (free trial)
The Rebels defeated the Bulldogs 28-10 last season in Oxford, Mississippi. Georgia leads the all-time series between the programs 33-14-1.
Here’s how to watch, including time, TV schedule, live streaming info and game odds:
What TV channel is Ole Miss vs Georgia on today?
Ole Miss vs. Georgia will air nationally on ABC in Week 8 of the 2025 college football season. The teams will play at Sanford Stadium in Athens, Georgia. Chris Fowler (play-by-play) and Kirk Herbstreit (analyst) are calling the game, while Holly Rowe will serve as the sideline reporter.
Streaming options include the ESPN app, ESPN+ and Fubo, the latter of which offers a free trial to potential subscribers.
Ole Miss vs Georgia time today
- Date: Saturday, Oct. 18
- Time: 3:30 p.m. ET
The Week 8 SEC matchup between Ole Miss football and Georgia is scheduled to start at 3:30 p.m. ET on Saturday, Oct. 18.
Ole Miss vs Georgia predictions, picks, odds
Odds courtesy of BetMGM as of Thursday, Oct. 16:
- Spread: Georgia (-7.5)
- Over/under: 54.5
- Moneyline: Georgia (-285); Ole Miss (+230)
Prediction: Georgia 27, Ole Miss 24
Ole Miss’ late comeback effort falls short as the Bulldogs pull away with a one-score victory to hand the Rebels their first loss of the season.
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