AP Top 25 Takeaways: Tide officially out; Fab frosh; Ducks can't close
No reason to hedge anymore: Alabama is out of the College Football Playoff race.
The 10th-ranked Crimson Tide beat No. 11 Mississippi, but all that did was clinch the SEC West for No. 7 LSU, which beat Arkansas earlier Saturday to eliminate Alabama.
Without a path to the Southeastern Conference championship game, the slim chance Alabama had to reach the CFP for the eighth time in its nine-year history is now none.
No. 6 Oregon (8-2) also saw its playoff hopes coming crashing down in a frantic and frustrating final four minutes against No. 24 Washington, the first of two Pac-12 upsets Saturday night.
Meanwhile, No. 4 TCU (10-0) stayed unbeaten, with a twist. This time the Horned Frogs did it with defense, smothering No. 18 Texas to clinch a spot in the Big 12 championship game.
As for Alabama (8-2), the only other time the Tide missed the CFP was 2019, when a loaded Tide with Tua Tagovailoa lost to Joe Burrow and an LSU team that went on to win a national title.
The last time Alabama entered the home stretch of a season truly eliminated from the national championship race was 2010.
This edition of the Tide could still find its way into a good bowl game. Maybe the Sugar or Cotton. But Heisman Trophy winner Bryce Young, who threw three touchdown passes against Ole Miss, is going to finish his Alabama career on college football's side stage.
Saban seemed particularly happy with his team after beating the Rebels.
“They have a lot of pride in what the standard of playing (at) Alabama is,” he told reporters.
It's fair to wonder, though, if Young, linebacker Will Anderson Jr. and some of the other Alabama stars will even play in the postseason with the first round of the next NFL draft calling.
Which brings up an interesting point to ponder as the days of the four-team College Football Playoff wane.
As soon as 2024, and no later than 2026, a 12-team format could be in place.
With a 12-teamer, Alabama would still be very much in the hunt and college football could look forward to at least one more meaningful postseason for Young and Anderson.
The downside of a 12-teamer, at least for some, is the likes of Alabama, Clemson and Ohio State — both of which missed the CFP last season — would seem to be a shoe-in for the playoff every year, even making it in their “down” seasons.
Perfectly Pac-12
The week before the Pac-12 was set to have two marquee matchups between four teams ranked in the top 12, three with playoff aspirations, two of the conference's contenders lost at home as double-digit favorites.
For a league that has not had a CFP team since 2016, the implosion felt familiar.
Oregon Coach Dan Lanning will face questions about not just his decision to go on fourth down deep in his own territory with the game tied late, but also for not using a timeout to get banged up quarterback Bo Nix on the field for the pivotal play.
“This game 100% falls on me,” Lanning said.
At least the Ducks fell to a ranked Washington team. No. 9 UCLA lost as a 20-point favorite to an Arizona team that had not beaten a ranked team since 2018.
UCLA hosts No. 8 USC and No. 13 Utah goes to Oregon next Saturday, both games having lost some juice.
The Trojans (9-1) are the Pac-12's last hope to snap its playoff drought.
Hal of a game
LSU freshman Harold Perkins caught the attention of the nation last week when the linebacker helped the Tigers upset Alabama, chasing down Young all over the field.
Against Arkansas on Saturday, Perkins was even better with four sacks and two forced fumbles.
"He willed this team to victory today," coach Brian Kelly tweeted.
Perkins was a huge recruiting win for Brian Kelly after he took over as LSU's coach last December. The five-star from Texas was expected to be part of Texas A&M's No. 1 class but flipped to the Tigers.
He has not only been one of the best freshmen in the country, but he's been one of the SEC's best defensive players.
Kelly said after the game that Perkins was sick with the flu and vomiting before kickoff. Kelly said he told Perkins that Michael Jordan played his best game when he was sick, referring to MJ's famous flu game in an NBA Finals.
Perkins response? “Who's MJ?” Kelly said.
Uuderdog uprising
For a span of about 15 minutes early in the day, Vanderbilt and Connecticut were the talk of college football.
The Commodores snapped a 26-game SEC losing streak, scoring a late touchdown to knock off Kentucky.
Second-year Vanderbilt coach Clark Lea inherited the streak and won a total of five games in his first two seasons. The Commodores (4-6) are taking baby steps under the former Vandy fullback.
“We’re building a program, and building a program’s hard," Lea said.
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