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    Monday, May 13, 2024

    Top 25 college football roundup

    Memphis' Paxton Lynch yells as he celebrates after Memphis upset No. 13 Mississippi on Saturday, 37-24, in Memphis, Tenn. (Mark Humphrey/AP Photo)

    Memphis 37, No. 13 Ole Miss 24

    Paxton Lynch and upstart Memphis showed that their high-scoring offense can work against anybody.

    Even a nationally ranked opponent from the mighty Southeastern Conference.

    Lynch threw for 384 yards and three touchdowns to lead Memphis over Mississippi in a convincing victory that showed the Tigers might just be the best team in the country that isn't in a Power Five conference.

    Memphis (6-0) has won 13 straight games dating back to last season, which is the third longest streak in the nation. It was the first win for the Tigers over a ranked opponent since 1996.

    Ole Miss (5-2) jumped out to a 14-0 lead less than six minutes into the game — partly thanks to a 68-yard touchdown pass by receiver Laquon Treadwell on a trick play — but Memphis responded with 31 unanswered points to take a 31-14 lead early in the third quarter.

    "We got down early and there were a couple of long faces on the sideline, but we knew we had to keep plugging away," Lynch said. "We knew early in the game we were moving the ball on them."

    The rankings may say this game was an upset, but the Tigers didn't appear overmatched.

    The Rebels were able to pull within 31-24 later in the third quarter, but could get no closer. Treadwell caught a school-record 14 passes for 144 yards and a touchdown.

    The 6-foot-7, 245-pound Lynch was superb, doing whatever he wanted against the Rebels' secondary. He completed 39 of 53 passes, helping the Tigers regroup following the rough start.

    It helped that he had plenty of time to throw. When the game was over, jubilant fans poured onto the field to celebrate. Security guarded the goal posts and fans took selfies with players.

    Lynch — who else? — was the main attraction.

    "I got hit harder in that (postgame) pile than I did the whole game with all those fans smacking me on top of the head," Lynch said.

    Anthony Miller was Lynch's favorite target, catching 10 passes for 132 yards and a touchdown.

    Memphis coach Justin Fuente was pleased with the way his team responded to the early adversity.

    "Invariably when you've got a young, inexperienced team, they get out there and try to do more than they're supposed to," Fuente said. "They settled down and made some plays."

    Ole Miss' Chad Kelly completed 33 of 47 passes for 372 yards, two touchdowns and two interceptions.

    The Rebels had some good moments, but a disastrous second quarter proved too much to overcome.

    It was an implosion accelerated by two questionable coaching calls.

    The first was when Robert Nkemdiche, one of the team's best defensive players, was injured while running the ball in a short-yardage situation. The team said the 6-foot-5, 296-pounder suffered a concussion and he didn't return.

    The second decision was even more stunning. Coach Hugh Freeze opted to stay with his offense on fourth-and-1 even though Ole Miss was at its own 34. Kelly didn't come close to converting on the run, Memphis took over and scored a touchdown seven plays later to take a 24-14 lead going into halftime.

    Memphis pushed its lead to 31-14 in the third quarter before Ole Miss finally righted itself, responding with 10 straight points. But it was too little too late.

    Ole Miss has lost two of three since a road victory over Alabama in September.

    "You've got to give all the credit to Memphis," Kelly said. "They played hard. They played to the whistle and knew what they were doing."

    Jake Elliott kicked a crucial 42-yard field goal with 9:44 left remaining that gave Memphis a 34-24 lead and halted the Rebels' momentum. The Tigers later used a clock-chewing drive that lasted more than seven minutes and resulted in another field goal to finish off the victory.

    After that, it was time to celebrate for Memphis, which earned arguably its biggest win since beating No. 6 Tennessee 21-17 in 1996. Usually known as a basketball school, the game drew 60,241 fans, which was the most for the Liberty Bowl since 2006.

    No. 1 Ohio State 38, Penn State 10

    J.T. Barrett played finisher for Ohio State, running for two touchdowns in the first half and then taking over full-time for Cardale Jones in the third quarter.

    Wearing black uniforms for the first time, the Buckeyes didn't look like themselves, though they did look a lot more like the dominant team many expected the defending national champions to be this season.

    Ohio State (7-0, 3-0 Big Ten) still doesn't have a definitive answer at quarterback, but the Buckeyes have a 20-game winning streak. Barrett added two fourth-quarter touchdown passes to make it 38-10 and draw chants of "J.T.! J.T.!" from the blackout crowd of 108,423 for Dark Night in the Shoe. Jones started, as he has all season, but was only 9 for 15 for 84 yards.

    Freshman Saquon Barkley provided most of the offense for Penn State (5-2, 2-1) with 194 yards rushing.

    No. 2 Baylor 62, West Virginia 38

    Corey Coleman had three more touchdown catches and Baylor ran its FBS-best home winning streak to 19 games.

    Coleman matched and then broke the single-season school record for TD catches, his nation-leading 16 coming halfway through the regular season for the Bears (6-0, 3-0 Big 12).

    Seth Russell became the only Baylor quarterback other than Heisman Trophy winner Robert Griffin III in 2011 to throw for 300 yards and run for 100 yards in one game. Russell was 20 of 33 for 380 yards and five TD passes and ran 14 times for 160 yards with another score.

    Coleman finished with 10 catches for 199 yards, his fourth consecutive game with multiple touchdowns and his seventh in a row with at least 100 yards receiving. The 5-foot-11 junior had catch-and-run plays of 50 and 42 yards without scoring.

    Baylor's only regular-season loss last year was 41-27 at West Virginia, and the Bears wound up being left out of the initial College Football Playoff.

    Skyler Howard, from Fort Worth, Texas, less than 100 miles from the Baylor campus, threw four touchdown passes for West Virginia (3-3, 0-3).

    No. 3 TCU 45, Iowa State 21

    Trevone Boykin threw for 436 yards and four touchdowns for TCU.

    Josh Doctson had 190 yards receiving and two TDs for the Horned Frogs (7-0, 4-0 Big 12).

    Boykin's 3-yard scoring run with 14:36 left put TCU ahead 38-21. Doctson made it a rout with a 42-yard touchdown catch 6 minutes later.

    Sam Richardson had 251 yards passing for Iowa State (2-4, 1-2).

    No. 4 Utah 34, Arizona State 18

    Travis Wilson threw for 297 yards and two touchdown and Utah held off Arizona State to remain the lone undefeated team in the Pac-12.

    Special teams nearly buried the Utes.

    Tim White had a 100-yard kickoff return for a touchdown to put Arizona State on the board in the first quarter. De'Chavon Hayes' 48-yard punt return set up a field goal that gave the Sun Devils a 10-7 lead.

    Utah (6-0, 3-0) gave up a safety on a failed trick kickoff return and Arizona State (4-3, 2-2) added three more points on the ensuing possession to take an 18-14 lead.

    Devontae Booker's 25-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter gave Utah a 21-18 lead. He had 118 yards rushing and two touchdowns.

    No. 5 Clemson 34, Boston College 17

    Deshaun Watson threw for three touchdowns and a season-best 420 yards and Clemson rolled against Boston College's top-ranked defense.

    Watson added a rushing touchdown and the Tigers improved to 6-0 (3-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) for the third time in five seasons. Watson finished 27 of 41, including touchdowns throws of 21 yards to Zac Brooks, 51 yards to Artavis Scott and 6 yards to Jordan Leggett.

    Scott had 10 catches for 162 yards and Clemson put up 532 yards against a defense that was only allowing 140 a game coming in to lead the Football Bowl Subdivision. Boston College (3-4, 0-4) hadn't allowed so many yards since losing the Independence Bowl to Arizona State after the 2013 season.

    No. 10 Alabama, 41, No. 9 Texas A&M 23

    Derrick Henry ran for a career-high 236 yards and two scores and Alabama added a school-record three touchdowns on interception returns.

    Alabama (6-1, 3-1 Southeastern Conference) built a 28-6 lead in the second quarter on Henry's 55- and 6-yard touchdown runs, Minkah Fitzpatrick's 33-yard interception return and Eddie Jackson's 93-yard interception return.

    Christian Kirk returned a punt 68 yards for a score just before halftime and Texas A&M (5-1, 2-1) added another touchdown on a 3-yard reception by Ricky Seals-Jones after a fumble early in the third to cut it to 28-20. But Alabama kicked two field goals before Fitzpatrick's 55-yard interception return for a score made it 41-23 and sealed the victory.

    No. 11 Florida State 41, Louisville 21

    Everett Golson threw for 372 yards and three touchdowns and Florida State rallied in the second half to beat Louisville.

    It is the eighth 300-yard game of Golson's career and his second since transferring from Notre Dame this year. A 70-yard touchdown pass to Kermit Whitfield, who had nine receptions for 172 yards, gave the Seminoles a 20-14 lead with 8:05 remaining.

    The win gives Florida State a 6-0 record for the third straight season. The Seminoles are 4-0 in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Cardinals dropped to 2-4 overall and 1-2 in the ACC.

    Dalvin Cook had his fourth 100-yard game of the season, gaining 163 yards on 22 carries.

    Louisville's Lamar Jackson passed for a career-high 307 yards, and James Quick had five receptions for 130 yards and three touchdowns.

    No. 14 Notre Dame 41, Southern California 31

    Corey Robinson made a diving catch in the end zone midway through the fourth quarter and Notre Dame rebounded to beat Southern California after squandering a two-touchdown lead.

    C.J. Prosise ran for 143 yards and two touchdowns, and DeShone Kizer threw two scoring passes, the second the 10-yarder to Robinson that made it 38-31.

    Southern California played for the first time since firing coach Steve Sarkisian, with interim coach Clay Helton directing the Trojans.

    The Fighting Irish (6-1) bounced back from an embarrassing 35-point loss to USC in the regular-season finale last year. The victory looked in doubt when the Trojans (3-3) scored three straight touchdowns to take a 31-24 lead. But the Irish rallied to win the Jeweled Shillelagh for the third time in four seasons.

    No. 17 Iowa 40, No. 20 Northwestern 10

    Reserve running back Akrum Wadley ran for 204 yards and tied Iowa's school record with four rushing touchdowns.

    With leading rusher Jordan Canzeri sidelined in the first quarter with an ankle injury, Wadley took over for Iowa (7-0, 3-0 Big Ten). The injury occurred following a short run when linebacker Jaylen Prater landed on Canzeri, folding his ankle under a pile of players.

    Wadley, who had only eight carries coming into the game, scored his third touchdown on a 2-yard run with 6:42 remaining in the third quarter, extending Iowa's lead to 23-10. His record-tying fourth scoring run, which followed a Northwestern fumble on the Wildcats ensuing drive, came on a 4-yard run that.

    Northwestern (5-2, 1-2) lost for the second straight week after five consecutive victories.

    No. 19 Oklahoma 55, Kansas State 0

    Baker Mayfield threw five touchdown passes and Oklahoma bounced back from its upset loss to Texas to beat Kansas State, the first time the Wildcats have been shut out since 1996.

    Kansas State had delivered serious scares to Top 25 opponents the previous two weeks, but the Wildcats (3-3, 0-3 Big 12) were helpless against the Sooners (5-1, 2-1). Oklahoma set the tone early, taking only 1:04 to score on its opening drive on a 22-yard pass from Mayfield to Sterling Shepard.

    The Sooners took a 35-0 lead into halftime and just kept rolling in the second half.

    Kansas State had scored in 234 straight games. Its last home shutout was in 1991.

    No. 22 Toledo 63, Eastern Michigan 20

    Phillip Ely threw for 327 yards and four touchdowns to help Toledo improve to 6-0 for the first time since 1997.

    The Rockets (6-0, 2-0 Mid-American Conference) led 28-6 at halftime, and then Ely really warmed up. He threw touchdown passes on Toledo's first two possessions of the second half, connecting with Corey Jones for a 55-yard score and then with Cody Thompson on an 88-yarder four minutes later.

    The touchdown to Thompson was the fourth-longest completion in school history, and it wasn't the only record book-worthy play of the game against Eastern Michigan (1-6, 0-3).

    Toledo sophomore Terry Swanson busted loose for a 90-yard run — also the fourth-longest in school history — late in the second quarter that set up Kareem Hunt's 4-yard touchdown run on the next play.

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