Week 9 preview: Conference title contenders, key matchups and more

No. 3 Texas A&M & No. 4 Alabama: Who’s the best in the SEC? (2:15)SEC Now takes a look at the upcoming schedules for both squads and discuss who is the more complete team. (2:15)

How could South Florida-Memphis affect the race for the G5 playoff spot?

We’re beyond the midpoint of the 2025 season and there’s not a conference in the country that has a clear-cut front-runner.

There are 60 FBS schools with no more than one conference loss, and ESPN’s FPI metric gives 29 of them at least a 10% chance of winning their league.

It’s not even just the sheer volume of contenders, it’s the surprising teams that are in the mix (hello, Virginia, Cincinnati and Vanderbilt).

All of that means we’re probably in for one of the wildest Novembers in recent memory, with every conference up for grabs and the playoff picture as murky as ever. Good luck with all that, committee. — David Hale

ACC: Take seven teams. Throw them into a hat. Shake it up. Pull out a name. There’s your ACC champion! OK, it’s not exactly that chaotic, but it certainly feels that way.

The current favorite to win the conference, according to FPI, is Georgia Tech — a team that is undefeated but hasn’t played a complete football game yet. The Yellow Jackets have trailed in the second half in three of their seven wins and have lost the turnover battle four times.

Virginia has played with fire even more than Georgia Techs. The Cavaliers have won three straight games in which they trailed in the fourth quarter, including two that went to overtime.

Louisville trailed Pitt by double digits in the second half, then lost to Virginia after surrendering two defensive touchdowns — but the Cardinals also have a win over Miami, which puts them in prime position to make a run.

The Hurricanes are unquestionably the most talented team in the ACC, but a Week 8 loss to Louisville exposed some glaring weaknesses in the run game, a lack of a perimeter threat in the passing game, and saw Carson Beck revert to the worst of his Georgia era when trying to force things.

Then there’s SMU, which came within a whisker of winning the conference last year, and the Mustangs still haven’t lost a regular-season ACC contest since joining the league.

Add in Duke and Pitt, who still have at least a puncher’s chance, and the race to Charlotte for the ACC championship game remains entirely up in the air without a clear-cut favorite to win it all.

Perhaps the bigger takeaway is that, of all the teams in the mix, Florida State and Clemson aren’t among them.

The ACC has had its share of wildness over the years — though typically reserved to the lesser Coastal Division back in the days of divisional play — but 2025 might be the most chaotic yet. — Hale

Big Ten: Two teams are barreling toward Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis for the Big Ten championship on Dec. 6. One has played there often, but not since 2020, and not before a full crowd since 2019. The other is the Big Ten school located closest to the stadium, but mostly an afterthought as a title hopeful until coach Curt Cignetti came to town.

Both Ohio State and Indiana have beaten No. 23 Illinois, and both squads also face preseason national title contender Penn State, which is shockingly 0-4 in Big Ten play and looking for a new coach.

No. 6 Oregon Ducks can still have a say, although the Ducks have lost the tiebreaker to Indiana and still face trips to Iowa and Washington. Six other teams have only one conference loss, including Michigan, so things could get interesting if Ohio State and Indiana start to stumble. But it would be a surprise if the league doesn’t come down to the Buckeyes and Hoosiers. — Adam Rittenberg

Big 12: Eight Big 12 teams are currently projected to finish 8-4 or better according to FPI, which should make for a ton of last-minute drama in a conference race that came down to tiebreakers last season amid a four-way tie atop the standings.

Texas Tech was dominant through its 6-0 start, winning every game by 24 points or more, until its road loss at Arizona State. The Red Raiders need to get senior quarterback Behren Morton back and healthy in time for their big showdown with BYU on Nov. 8.

BYU is off to another impressive 7-0 start but has arguably the toughest remaining schedule in the conference, including trips to Iowa State, Texas Tech and Cincinnati.

Cincinnati emerged as a surprise contender after knocking off Iowa State but still must face BYU plus road tests at Utah and TCU. If Utah takes down Cincinnati, there’s a real path to 10-2 with FPI currently giving the Utes a 17% chance of winning out.

Arizona State gets Houston and Iowa State up next. Coach Kenny Dillingham has to like how the rest of the schedule sets up for the Sun Devils if they can keep Sam Leavitt, Jordyn Tyson, Prince Dorbah and the rest of their stars healthy. Houston is the 6-1 team that nobody saw coming. The Cougars’ lone loss was to Texas Tech, and they can make a major statement this week with an upset in Tempe.

Iowa State lost two in a row after rising as high as No. 14 in the AP poll but can get right back in the race with a win over BYU on Saturday. And don’t count out TCU, which will have a chance to play spoiler against a November slate of Iowa State, BYU, Houston and Cincinnati. — Max Olson

SEC: With a whopping 10 SEC teams ranked in the AP Top 25 poll this week, it’s anyone’s guess as to which two will be left standing in Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Dec. 6.

The Aggies looked like perhaps the most complete team in the league until their defense struggled in a 45-42 win at Arkansas last week. Texas A&M faces one of the most demanding schedules the rest of the way with road games at LSU, Missouri and Texas.

Georgia has already played five SEC gamess and has only one true road game remaining — at Mississippi State on Nov. 8. The Bulldogs play rival Florida in Jacksonville the week before and host Texas the week after.

No. 8 Ole Miss is still very much in the SEC title hunt, even after losing 43-35 at Georgia last week. The Rebels will have to survive road games at Oklahoma on Saturday and at Mississippi State in the Egg Bowl on Nov. 28.

The Commodores host Missouri on Saturday and have road games left at Texas and Tennessee. That’s a difficult stretch, but who’s going to doubt quarterback Diego Pavia & Co. at this point?

Oklahoma leads the SEC in scoring defense (9.4 points), run defense (80.4 yards) and total defense (213 yards). Can the Sooners get quarterback John Mateer and the offense back on track? They’ll have to because each of their final five games are against ranked opponents, including trips to Tennessee and Alabama.

There’s plenty of parity in the SEC, and the conference title race figures to be even tighter when the league goes to a nine-game SEC schedule in 2026. — Mark Schlabach

What seems fairly clear heading into Week 9 is that the champion of the American Conference will land the Group of 5’s CFP spot. What’s less clear is what teams will find their way into the league’s title game. The South Florida-Memphis game should provide some clarity, although the clash lost a bit of zest after Memphis dropped its first game last week to a UAB team that had fired its coach.

Bottom line: the great American race (to a CFP berth) is wild, and much of it goes through Memphis, beginning this weekend. — Rittenberg

“I guess coming from Lane, I take it as a compliment,” Venables responded during his weekly radio show. “Like, he must have watched our guys be really prepared, because that’s who they are, man. They’re relentless.”

“I am still trying to identify weaknesses. Like, it is crazy how disciplined they are. Coach [Curt] Cignetti does a great job with those guys,” UCLA interim coach Tim Skipper said of Indiana.

“The video we posted — that wasn’t even me, that was AI,” Arizona State coach Kenny Dillingham said of a video of him doing the worm following the Sun Devils’ Week 8 win over Texas Tech. “I don’t even know what it real … that would be awesome if I could do the worm like that. That’d be pretty cool. I’m not quite that cool. But AI makes me look cool.”

“I leaned into throwing tortillas at the beginning of the football season,” Texas Tech athletic director Kirby Hocutt said Monday while announcing that the school would no longer permit the Red Raiders’ decades-old tradition. “Now I must ask everyone to stop.”

Ohio State and Indiana are the top two ranked teams in the country, and the top contenders for the Big Ten title. The Buckeyes and Hoosiers do not meet during the regular season. Indiana has zero ranked opponents left on its schedule and could post its first 12-0 regular season after recording its first 10-0 start just last season. Ohio State will finish with No. 25 Michigan, which, in case you’ve been stranded on an deserted island, has won four consecutive games against coach Ryan Day and the Buckeyes.

Texas A&M-LSU: For LSU, the Tigers’ biggest challenge is corralling the Aggies’ dynamic receivers, KC Concepcion and Mario Craver while keeping A&M quarterback Marcel Reed from also making plays with his feet. The Tigers don’t want to get in a high-scoring game with their offensive struggles (they currently are 85th in scoring offense), and the Aggies will be looking to continue the formula that has worked for most of the season: get a lead, then wear out the defense with the offensive line and a deep pool of running backs. LSU’s defense, meanwhile, which ranks 15th in defensive passing efficiency, picked off Florida’s DJ Lagway five times, played keep-away and won the field-position game in a win against a dynamic quarterback. Reed will have to make smart decisions and not try to do too much. If the Aggies can manage that, they can stay undefeated and continue this run. But a night game in Baton Rouge will test the nerves of any opponent. — Dave Wilson

Missouri-Vanderbilt: Coming into this game, Missouri and Vanderbilt each rank top 15 nationally in run defense, defensive pressure rate and tackle for loss yardage. With that, Saturday’s matchup might swing on whichever team’s offense holds up better in a battle between two of the country’s most aggressive and dominant front-seven units. Auburn and Alabama found ways to slow down Tigers running back Ahmad Hardy and the program’s SEC-leading rushing attack (244.9 YPG) earlier this month. If the Commodores — who have yet to give up more than 146 rushing yards in a game this fall — can contain Missouri on the ground, they’ll be able to keep the Tigers in long-yardage situations and bring the kind of pressure that has tended to disrupt Missouri quarterback Beau Pribula this fall. Vanderbilt has the ultimate X-factor in Heisman hopeful Diego Pavia, who took full advantage of a weak LSU pass rush in Week 8, accounting for three touchdowns in the Commodores’ 31-24 win over the Tigers last weekend. Led by defensive ends Zion Young and Damon Wilson II, a Missouri front seven that’s blowing up opposing backfields more frequently (49.4% pressure rate) than all but three defenses nationally will present a much tougher proposition. Any recipe for a Tigers victory in Nashville begins with limiting Pavia on the ground and keeping a lid on one of college football’s most dynamic playmakers. — Eli Lederman

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