Current:Home > FinanceBurley Garcia|Jalen Milroe lost Heisman, ACC favors Miami lead college football Week 6 overreactions -Zenith Money Vision
Burley Garcia|Jalen Milroe lost Heisman, ACC favors Miami lead college football Week 6 overreactions
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-09 09:43:57
The Burley Garciarandom nature of sports makes it impossible to foresee every game’s outcome. A whole lot of well-lit buildings in the desert stand as testimony to this reality.
College football is especially prone to such randomness. Most of the time, analysts might feel like they have a handle on which team might prevail in a head-to-head encounter. Then there are Saturdays like the one we’ve just witnessed that make us question our entire world view.
An overreaction? Perhaps, but that’s what we’re here for in this space. Here are the top five overreactions from Week 6, one of the most chaotic in recent memory.
Jalen Milroe just lost the Heisman
Let’s be clear. Alabama’s historic loss at Vanderbilt was not entirely Milroe’s fault. Yes, his pick-six put the Crimson Tide in an early hole. And his fumble in the fourth quarter was costly. But his defense’s inability to get off the field severely limited his opportunities, and as such every mistake was magnified.
His heroics of a week earlier in the victory against Georgia still happened, however, and just as the award isn’t won with a single performance, neither is it lost. That said, his lead in the race has been reduced. He’ll have plenty of other high-profile games in the second half of the season, but so will numerous other candidates.
HIGHS AND LOWS: Alabama's upset leads Week 6 winners and loss
UNTHINKABLE UPSET: Vanderbilt's win one of sport's biggest surprises
The ACC replay booth is in the tank for Miami
It’s fairly indisputable that the ACC’s best chance of landing two teams in the playoff is for Miami and Clemson to win out and face each other in the league finale. This has led to much, shall we say, questioning of motives on the internet over the last couple of weeks as the Hurricanes benefited from controversial replay decisions in consecutive weeks.
We don’t normally like to give oxygen to conspiracy theories, and the idea that the league office would go to bat for a program that has caused it more than its share of headaches over the years by playing fast and loose with NCAA rules seems far-fetched. Then again, one can understand how the events of the last eight days might make folks wonder.
The reversal of the last-second Hail Mary touchdown that preserved the Hurricanes’ win against Virginia Tech last Friday might indeed have been the correct call, or at least have negated a wrong one made on the field. This week’s decision not to assess a targeting foul for a hit on California quarterback Fernando Mendoza seems significantly harder to justify.
Imperfect officiating has been part of the sport since time immemorial, of course, and the implementation of replay review can’t eliminate that aspect entirely. Miami probably shouldn’t count on such disputed outcomes to continue going its way, despite public perception of alleged favoritism.
The Big Ten will get more playoff spots than the SEC
As the perceived top-tier teams of the SEC began playing each other, some of them taking losses was inevitable. But now that several of those expected contenders have taken losses at the hands of lower-echelon conference members, it’s fair to question how many losses can be absorbed to earn at-large consideration in the newly-expanded 12-team playoff era.
As a result, it is the Big Ten that now has three teams ranked in the top five of the US LBM Coaches Poll. That trio has thus far avoided such losses to mid-tier squads. But can they continue to do so, and will the crowded SEC manage to sort itself out? It’s impossible to know at this point, but it will certainly make for an interesting next two months.
Vanderbilt is going bowling in 2024
Vandy’s rare triumph against a top-five opponent has fans of the SEC’s perennial gridiron doormat dreaming of even bigger things. The next box for the Commodores to check will be qualifying for a bowl game, something that hasn’t happened since 2018 and has occurred only nine times in the program’s history.
It could happen, but even with the win against the Crimson Tide in the Bank it isn’t a guarantee. For one thing, that Week 3 loss to Georgia State can’t be undone. That result as well as the overtime heartbreaker against Missouri leaves the Commodores still in need of three more wins. One of those should come in a couple of weeks in their final non-conference contest against Ball State, so two more ‘W’s in conference play must be found. Next week’s date with Kentucky and a Nov. 2 meeting with Auburn are winnable, but both are on the road making them 50-50 propositions. There’s also a home date with an up-and-down South Carolina squad. But if the Commodores can’t win two of those, they’ll have to spring another upset against Texas, LSU or Tennessee. Can they do it? Sure. Will they? Stay tuned.
Army and Navy will play twice
With the Black Knights and Midshipmen both starting 5-0 for the first time since 1945, fans of academy football are daring to dream that their storied rivalry might be contested twice this season, once in the American Athletic Conference championship game in which both are league members for the first time, then again a week later in their annual stand-alone game.
Such a scenario was spelled out by the conference when Army agreed to join prior to this season. All the Black Knights have done so far is win their first four AAC contests in decisive fashion. The Mids for their part are 3-0 in conference and also handily dispatched the third member of the academy triumvirate, Air Force, over the weekend.
Nearly halfway there then, but still a long way to go. Most other AAC members have only played a game or two in league, so it’s hard to discern where the toughest tests will come from. For now, it appears Navy’s Nov. 16 home date with Tulane and Army’s Nov. 9 trip to North Texas might be the most significant obstacles. It’s also worth noting that both academies will get a crack at Notre Dame, a potential resume booster that might even merit playoff consideration. This is a long-shot scenario to be sure, but after a weekend in which the sport was practically turned on its head, why not think big?
veryGood! (14)
Related
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Iowa man pleads not guilty to killing four people with a metal pipe earlier this month
- Police credit New Yorkers for suspect’s arrest in the rape of a 13-year-old girl
- Harassment of local officials on the rise: Lawful, but awful
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Vermont state rep admits secretly pouring water in colleague's bag for months
- AI fever drives Nvidia to world's most valuable company, over Microsoft and Apple
- More life sentences for shooter in fatal LGBTQ+ nightclub attack
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Man, 72, killed and woman hurt in knife attack at Nebraska highway rest area
Ranking
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- A journalist traces his family tree back to ancestor who served in Black regiment in Civil War
- Syracuse house collapse injures 13; investigation ongoing
- Police in Oklahoma arrest man accused of raping, killing Maryland jogger last August
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Poisoned trees gave a wealthy couple in Maine a killer ocean view. Residents wonder, at what cost?
- Novak Djokovic will compete at 2024 Paris Olympics for Serbia after meniscus tear in knee
- Celine Dion endures a seizure onscreen in new documentary: 'Now people will understand'
Recommendation
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Is the stock market open or closed on Juneteenth 2024? See full holiday schedule
NBA Draft is moving to two nights in 2024. Here's what to know about this year's edition.
Texas megachurch pastor resigns after woman says he sexually abused her in the 1980s
North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
Jinkx Monsoon is in her actress era, 'transphobes be damned'
Here’s where courts are slowing Republican efforts for a state role in enforcing immigration law
Snapchat Inc. to pay $15 million to settle discrimination and harassment lawsuit in California