The Big Ten has a lot going for it. It has the sport’s richest TV contract. It has three teams in the top 10. It is the sport’s chief exporter of cheese, beef and punts. What is often missing from Big Ten games, however, is drama.
It’s not that the Big Ten doesn’t have good games, necessarily. It’s just the drama often feels more “Masterpiece Theater” than “Alien vs. Predator” — a slow burn built upon subtle character studies and power run games. Like a 20-year cheddar, it’s made for refined tastes.
But every so often, the Big Ten offers a surprise. We’ll spend a Saturday wallowing in another defensive stalemate, poised to invest in one of those eye-opening contraptions from “A Clockwork Orange” just to stay awake, and then suddenly Indiana-Penn State becomes something utterly unexpected, like Bret Bielema taking off his hoodie to reveal a giant tattoo of Barry Alvarez astride a unicorn with lightning bolts shooting from his eyes. It’s surprising, disturbing and strangely beautiful.
On Saturday, the Big Ten delivered not just one of those unexpected classics, but two.
No. 2 Indiana was on the brink of disaster until Fernando Mendoza took the Hoosiers on another trip down the field for a game winner.
No. 9 Oregon toyed with becoming the latest victim of Kirk Ferentz’s uncanny ability to drag every offense in the country into a vat of quicksand until Dante Moore chipped away at Iowa’s blockade to set up a game-winning kick.
Each game turned in the final minutes, only to reverse course and deliver another shocking twist.
Saturday, the Big Ten was the savior of a lackluster Week 11 slate, as two of its best teams peered into the abyss and, seeing only the horrifying visage of Purdue Pete, pulled back from the brink to salvage playoff hopes and deliver enough adrenaline to increase the average Iowa fan’s health insurance premiums.
There had been little happiness in Happy Valley of late. Penn State had lost five straight entering Saturday’s game with Indiana. It had fired its coach. The seasonal flavors at Berkey Creamery were just OK. Before halftime, a contingent of bros had already removed their shirts, a sure sign of desperation in trying times.
The shirts are off in Happy Valley pic.twitter.com/46zxAeaxHX
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) November 8, 2025
But as Penn State roared back from a 20-7 third-quarter deficit to breathe life into a now raucous crowd, all the demons of the 2025 season felt as if they might be exorcised, and the Nittany Lions might do something that had long felt impossible by knocking off a top-five team. Nicholas Singleton’s 19-yard touchdown grab with 6:27 to go put Penn State up by four, and by the time Indiana got the ball with 1:51 to play, there was almost an air of certainty that the tide had finally turned for the Nittany Lions.
But if the powers that be can take Penn State away from James Franklin, they can’t take the James Franklin out of Penn State, and a win over a top-five team would not come so easily. The Big Ten, after all, isn’t like the grand opening of a Bass Pro Shop. There are rules here, and one of them is that Penn State cannot have nice things.
Mendoza completed passes of 22, 12, 29 and 17, dashing through the Penn State defense like it was security at the Louvre, ultimately delivering a 7-yard touchdown throw to Omar Cooper Jr. in the back of the end zone. Cooper’s grab, which warrants strong consideration for catch of the year, saved the Hoosiers from humiliation, silenced the Penn State crowd, kept Indiana on course for a trip to the Big Ten championship and got Gus Johnson dropped from his health insurance coverage.
INDIANA TAKES THE LEAD WITH 36 SECONDS LEFT 💥💥 @IndianaFootball
📺: FOX pic.twitter.com/zxaJYUDUoA
— Big Ten Network (@BigTenNetwork) November 8, 2025
Meanwhile, Oregon arrived in Iowa to find weather that could best be described as a circle of hell that Dante’s editors cut from his rough draft, deeming it “too on the nose,” and a Hawkeyes defense that was equally as unpleasant.
Iowa did what it does best. It ran the ball 43 times for a meager 101 yards. It stymied Moore, who entered the final drive of the game having thrown for just 65 yards. The Ducks were stifled deep in Iowa territory again and again.
What couldn’t have been anticipated was a late Iowa touchdown drive of 93 yards on 12 plays, forcing grizzled old Hawkeyes fans to turn to their grandchildren and mutter, “These eyes have never seen such beauty.” Given that the sun had already been blotted, this constituted an uncomfortable number of signs of an impending apocalypse being checked off the list.
But Oregon wasn’t going to go down that easily. Moore dinked and dunked his way down the field, driving to the Iowa 21 before stalling. Oregon sent in kicker Atticus Sappington, who put on hold his quest to regain his rightful title as the 3rd Earl of Huntingdon, to attempt the game winner. Sappington used his cravat, wiped a smudge off his monocle, gently tapped his pipe on his armchair, then strode onto the field to boot a 39-yard field goal to secure an 18-16 win.
Ultimately, the Big Ten’s drama did little more than restore order on what might’ve been a day of utter chaos, leading the ACC to quizzically ask, “Wait, you can do that?” The twists and turns still left us in the same place we started, with three teams from the league all but assured a place in the College Football Playoff. It was a Saturday that still saw another Ohio State blowout, a Wisconsin win over Washington that was only slightly more palatable than performing your own appendectomy, and a Rutgers-Maryland matchup that will be used by the CIA to extract information from suspected spies in the future. They can’t all be winners.
But for one Saturday, at least, the Big Ten was the center of the college football universe, the lone purveyor of suspense on a day that desperately needed a dose of excitement.
And if the outcome of all that drama amounts only to further assurances that the Hoosiers and Ducks are playoff bound, let’s just hope they haven’t used up all their magic already.
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Week 11 vibe check
Each week, the biggest matchups deliver major changes to the playoff picture. Meanwhile, dozens of smaller shifts in the landscape can add up to an even bigger impact. We track those here.
Trending up: SEC clarity
Texas A&M threw for 221, ran for 243 and demolished Missouri 38-17 on Saturday, further staking claim to the top spot in the SEC and all but guaranteeing a playoff bid.
In a season in which nearly every team has flirted with disaster, the Aggies have been an antidote to the notion that 2025 is a season of parity. They’ve scored at least 30 in all but one game this year. They’ve won four of their past five SEC games by at least two scores. Marcel Reed has quietly forced his way into the Heisman Trophy conversation, accounting for 250 yards and a pair of touchdowns in Saturday’s win. Texas A&M has blossomed into a relentless winning machine, displaying the type of businesslike constancy that has largely been lacking in college football since Nick Saban’s retirement — a team whose lone flaw is that it’s not all too interesting to see it chip away at each opponent’s psyche like Hannibal Lecter until it’s devouring the opponent’s soul alongside some fava beans and a nice Chianti.
If Texas A&M continues its dominance, it now seems destined to meet Saban’s old employer in the SEC title game. Alabama dispatched with LSU on Saturday 20-9 in a game that proved Louisiana’s governor is no better at designing an offense than Brian Kelly. Ty Simpson threw for 277 yards and a score, Bama’s defense racked up seven tackles for loss and LSU mustered just 232 yards of offense.
1:05
LSU Tigers vs. Alabama Crimson Tide: Full Highlights
LSU Tigers vs. Alabama Crimson Tide: Full Highlights
Is it a concern that Alabama managed just 56 yards rushing and continues to rely so heavily on Simpson and the passing game? Well, was it a concern that Chuck Norris relied heavily on roundhouse kicks and never bested an opponent via the subtle art of persuasion? Is it a problem that Chick-fil-A is stuck on chicken sandwiches without even trying to sell a nice tuna tartare? Should we be worried that the “beyond” in Bed Bath & Beyond doesn’t extend to lumber and sheetrock? Sometimes being awesome at one thing is enough.
Add in Vanderbilt’s overtime win against Auburn, and the SEC figures to have at least half the top 14 in the next playoff rankings, so for Alabama and A&M to sit comfortably atop the deepest conference in college football — and to do so by once again winning emphatically — speaks volumes.
It has been three years since an SEC team last won it all. That’s nearly as long as the average wait at a Krystal drive-through. But like a late-night Krystal run, the reward for the wait might be well worth it.
Trending up: Big-budget wins
If there was any doubt who the favorite in the Big 12 should be, Texas Tech set the record straight with a dominant 29-7 win over BYU on Saturday.
Cameron Dickey ran for 121 yards and a touchdown, Behren Morton played mistake-free ball, and the Red Raiders’ defense was suffocating, led by Jacob Rodriguez, who had 14 tackles and an interception. The Red Raiders had three takeaways, held BYU to just 255 total yards and allowed just three conversions on 14 third-down tries.
It’s further proof that Texas Tech’s decision to treat the transfer portal like the buffet at a Golden Corral was a stroke of brilliance. After all, nothing bad has ever happened after consuming too many portions of popcorn shrimp that have been sitting under a heat lamp for six hours.
Adding to the emphatic result Saturday, Texas Tech fans found a workaround for the rule banning the throwing of tortillas onto the field by throwing them — um, not on the field.
Somebody in the Texas Tech crowd threw a tortilla on the sky cam 😂 pic.twitter.com/8hnohOJ2U8
— Kalshi CFB (@KalshiCFB) November 8, 2025
Trending up: Wedding season in Mississippi
“Daddy, tell me about how you proposed to mommy.”
“Well, son, we were losing to Georgia by 30, and…”
Not a dry eye in here 🫶 pic.twitter.com/zAOzosteAA
— Mississippi State (@msstate) November 8, 2025
No, it wasn’t a good day for Mississippi State, which was demolished by Georgia 41-21 as Gunner Stockton threw for 269 yards and three touchdowns. But Stockton couldn’t supply the most romantic moment of the game, despite preparing for the contest by sitting in his F-150, listening to Journey’s “Open Arms” on cassette and staring longingly at a photo of Uga trying to bite an Auburn player.
Of course, when it comes to true love, no one upstages Lane Kiffin.
What a dream💍@OleMissTrack x @Lane_Kiffin pic.twitter.com/2J9t0T0fub
— Ole Miss Athletics (@OleMissSports) November 8, 2025
Kiffin, whose Ole Miss team cruised past The Citadel 49-0, is like the cupid of college football, insofar as he appreciates a romantic gesture like this, and also because he’s the most likely SEC coach to shoot someone with an arrow.
Sure, getting engaged during a blowout loss or a blowout win over an FCS foe might not be what these young ladies always dreamed of, but as anyone who has ever held a rehearsal dinner at Waffle House can tell you, you can’t spell “romance” without S-E-C.
Trending down: Up-tempo offense
Army escaped Temple 14-13 by running out the clock on an Owls’ comeback effort with an 18-play drive that ate up the final 9:53 before the Black Knights took a knee at the Temple 5-yard line.
Army held the ball for 13:31 in the fourth quarter, running 24 plays to Temple’s three.
Afterward, Army’s keep-away performance was lauded as the greatest triumph of American military strategy since Patton famously engaged Mussolini in a nearly three-day version of the “Orange you glad I didn’t say ‘Banana'” joke while the Allies took control of the Mediterranean.
Trending up: Buzz cuts
Things are bleak in Boulder, as Colorado lost its third straight — 29-22 to West Virginia — assuring the Buffaloes will miss out on a bowl in Deion Sanders’ third season at the helm.
Colorado freshman QB Julian Lewis got the start and had some good moments, throwing for 299 yards and two scores, but he was sacked seven times, including one particularly painful takedown.
It’s the most unfortunate hair day in college football since Mike Gundy got his mullet caught in an escalator at the mall while trying to prove gravity only exists because we believe it does.
Trending up: Candy motivation
Dabo Swinney, hoping to send a message to his team after a 3-5 start, reportedly gave his players Sour Patch Kids before Saturday’s game with Florida State — a reminder that you have to get through the sour before you get to the sweet.
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It proved a far more effective lesson than when he tried to teach trick-or-treaters about offseason training techniques with boxes of Milk Duds a week earlier.
Cade Klubnik threw for a touchdown and ran for another, and the Clemson defense sacked Tommy Castellanos six times and forced two Florida State turnovers en route to a 24-10 win.
After the game, FSU coach Mike Norvell handed out 100 Grand bars to his team to symbolize the hefty buyout he’s likely to be getting after the Seminoles lost their fifth game to fall to 1-5 in ACC play.
Trending down: Certainty in the Group of 5
Memphis wasn’t ranked in the committee’s first top 25, but the Tigers were still pegged as the top team outside the Power 4 and in line for a playoff berth.
On Friday, Tulane upended those plans, as Jake Retzlaff threw for 322 yards and three touchdowns, and the Green Wave toppled Memphis 38-32.
That opened the door for James Madison to make its way to the top of the Group of 5, and the Dukes delivered a 35-23 win over Marshall Thundering Herd, sparked by Alonza Barnett III’s three touchdown throws.
The committee will now follow protocol by asking ChatGPT if UCF is still a Group of 5 team, then let the algorithm decide who should be ranked highest.
Trending down: Committee hate
In the first playoff rankings of the season, the committee saw fit to rank Miami eight spots below Notre Dame, despite having the same record and a head-to-head win. It seemed an illogical choice, but one easily defended by committee members who rightly noted that the Canes’ offense too often looked like a toddler who hadn’t mastered object permanence trying to parallel park.
On Saturday, the Canes took out their frustration on woeful Syracuse, with Carson Beck leading a 38-10 win, in spite of a host of Miami offensive standouts missing the game due to injury.
Miami seemed intent on proving to the committee that the offense had its share of imagination, with receiver Malachi Toney throwing a touchdown to Beck, and Beck delivering a TD throw to 335-pound offensive lineman Francis Mauigoa.
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Francis Mauigoa crosses goal line for 3-yard rushing touchdown
Francis Mauigoa crosses goal line for 3-yard rushing touchdown.
The win proved something of an empty statement, however, as all committee members had missed the game as their DVRs were full, and they were forced to watch a bunch of episodes of “9-1-1: Nashville” instead to make space.
Trending down: Nice things in the ACC
In Week 10, top-ranked teams Georgia Tech and Miami were both upset, utterly upending the ACC’s hopes for multiple playoff bids.
Week 11 ACC said, “Hold my beer,” and then proceeded to slip on a banana peel and spill that beer all over itself.
Virginia, the league’s highest-ranked team, saw QB Chandler Morris leave the game with a concussion and the offense disappear, falling to Wake Forest 16-9.
Louisville, the team that might have had the best case for a top-12 ranking, played without star tailback Isaac Brown and struggled to consistently move the football. Instead, Cal QB Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele threw for 323 yards and a pair of touchdowns, including a 3-yard strike to Jacob De Jesus on fourth down in overtime to secure a 29-26 win.
And Duke, a team now tied for first place in the conference, lost its third nonconference game of the year — and second to a non-Power 4 team — to UConn 37-34.
Now, there is the possibility that two Group of 5 champions could ultimately end up ranked higher, leaving the league out of the playoff entirely. Regardless of that unlikely outcome, the committee has recommended that the ACC not book any travel in advance and should probably wear mittens when using scissors for the rest of the season.
Trending up: Cashing NIL checks
Cutter Boley threw two touchdown passes, Kentucky ran for 233 yards, and the Wildcats embarrassed Florida 38-7 on Saturday.
Afterward, we can only imagine QB Zach Calzada, smoking a cigar and wearing a velvet tracksuit, handed hundreds to each Florida player, patted them on the cheek and said, “good game, good effort,” before popping a bottle of Ale 8, spraying it on a group of confused groundskeepers and hopping into a limo with Ashley Judd and Secretariat’s great-grandson.
Under-the-radar play of the week
Early in the second quarter with the score tied, USC engaged in a little cloak-and-dagger scheme on a fourth-down play, running backup QB Sam Huard onto the field in a No. 80 jersey — which just so happens to be the same number worn by punter Sam Johnson.
The ruse was effective against Northwestern, and Huard tossed a completion to Tanook Hines for a 10-yard gain and a first down. USC scored on the drive to take a 14-7 lead and went on to win 38-17.
The play didn’t exactly sit well with everyone though.
IT’S A FAKE PUNT 🫨
Punter Sam Johnson throws it for a @uscfb first down! pic.twitter.com/eRMSo0gQ2m
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) November 8, 2025
Punting is sacrosanct in the Big Ten, and now these carpetbaggers from Holly-weird come waltzing into this historic conference and make a mockery of its most beloved traditions.
Lincoln Riley was unapologetic afterward, however, noting that no Trojans in history had ever so cleverly toppled an opponent by presenting something as a benign concession when it was, in truth, an offensive attack.
Under-the-radar game of the week
With 2:23 to play, Jacob Fields picked off Delaware QB Nick Minicucci and returned it to the end zone to give Louisiana Tech a 24-16 lead.
Then things got weird.
Delaware marched 72 yards on eight plays, scoring with 34 seconds to go to pull within two. The Hens failed to connect on the 2-point try, but Nate Reed used a plotline from a “Now You See Me” sequel to execute one of the greatest onside kicks in recent history, giving the Hens the ball back with 33 seconds to go.
Have you ever seen a better onside kick 😏 pic.twitter.com/Rm0iN93pVU
— Delaware Football (@Delaware_FB) November 8, 2025
Then, on Delaware’s third straight possession without Louisiana Tech running an offensive play, Reed came on to drill a 51-yard kick to win the game 25-24.
It was the type of chaotic finish rarely seen in Delaware outside of last call at The Starboard, and it gave the Hens win No. 5 for the season. As a first-year FBS member, however, Delaware won’t be in a bowl unless there aren’t enough eligible teams elsewhere, but the good news is the Hens can still do all their holiday shopping tax-free at the Christiana Mall, which is nice.
Heisman five
1. Ohio State QB Julian Sayin
There’s something that just feels off about Sayin’s Heisman candidacy. It has been too easy, like an email from a deposed prince assuring you of millions if you can just help him out by providing your credit card number. Sayin threw for 303 yards and a score against Purdue, even without one of his top receivers, while Jeremiah Smith picked up the slack, catching 10 balls for 137 yards. Sayin looks like he shouldn’t be able to get into an R-rated movie without a member of the Ohio State coaching staff accompanying him, and yet he has been nearly flawless all season. How is this possible? It feels like someone is about to explain that he’s as much a real quarterback as is a sentient Jugs machine that was developed by OpenAI to eventually eliminate the need for human quarterbacks.
2. Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza
If Mendoza takes home the Heisman as many pundits seem to feel is inevitable now, his final drive that toppled Penn State and shredded Gus Johnson’s vocal cords will be lauded as his “Heisman moment.” Hard to argue. It wasn’t just that he found the holes in Penn State’s defense. There weren’t holes. He created them. He put the ball, time and again, in the one spot his receivers could catch it, and each time — miraculously on the final throw — they did. We’re not quite ready to hand him the hardware yet, but the Big Ten title game, if it is a matchup between Indiana and Ohio State, figures to be the deciding factor.
3. Alabama QB Ty Simpson
Years from now, our greatest scientists will study the game film of Simpson’s Week 1 loss to Florida State, and the first one to explain it rationally will win a Nobel Prize.
4. Notre Dame RB Jeremiyah Love
Love carried 13 times for 94 yards and 2 touchdowns in a 49-10 win over Navy in Week 11. He has multiple touchdowns in six of his past eight games. His next three games are against ACC teams. He might finish the year with 100 touchdowns.
5. UConn QB Joe Fagnano
OK, we know, putting a UConn QB in the Heisman conversation is a bit like adding Nachos BellGrande to the tasting menu at The French Laundry. But hear us out: Fagnano was 27-of-39 for 311 yards and three touchdowns passing, ran for 51 more yards and scored a critical 2-point conversion late as the Huskies knocked off Duke 37-34. Fagnano now has 25 touchdown passes without a pick this season — the first player to do that since Marcus Mariota in 2013. Fagnano has thrown 382 consecutive passes without an interception, passing Russell Wilson (379) for the second-longest streak in FBS history. He now trails only Louisiana Tech’s Colby Cameron, who threw 444 straight without an INT in 2011 and 2012. In other words, it’s time to award Taco Bell with a Michelin star.
















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