Top 25 Capsules

Updated: September 21, 2014, 2:43 AM ET
Associated Press

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- With Heisman Trophy winner Jameis Winston watching from the sideline, No. 1 Florida State came back to beat No. 22 Clemson 23-17 in overtime on Karlos Williams' 12-yard touchdown run Saturday night.

Winston was suspended for the game against Clemson (1-2, 0-1 ACC) after making "offensive and vulgar" comments earlier this week on campus.

His backup, Sean Maguire, had an up-and-down night, and Clemson had enough missed opportunities to allow Florida State (3-0, 1-0) to extend its winning streak to 19 games.

Clemson coach Dabo Swinney declined to attempt a 33-yard field goal on the first possession of overtime and Adam Choice was stuffed for no gain on fourth-and-1. Two plays later, Williams bounced outside and went untouched into the end zone.

Clemson kicker Ammon Lakip missed two short field goals earlier in the game.

Maguire made the first start of his career. He was regularly pressured by a loaded Clemson defensive line and completed 21 of 39 passes for 305 yards with two interceptions and a 74-yard touchdown to Rashad Greene to tie it at 17 with 6:04 left in the fourth.

NO. 2 OREGON 38, WASHINGTON STATE 31

PULLMAN, Wash. -- Marcus Mariota threw for 329 yards and five touchdowns as No. 2 Oregon held off Washington State 38-31 on Saturday night in a matchup of two of the top offenses in the nation.

Devon Allen and Keanon Lowe each had two touchdown receptions for Oregon (4-0, 1-0 Pac-12), which has won eight straight games against Washington State.

Connor Halliday threw for 436 yards and four touchdowns for Washington State (1-3, 0-1), which boasts the nation's top passing attack. They came into the game as 24-point underdogs, but stayed close the entire way.

Washington State played stout defense in the first half, sacking Mariota five times and recording seven tackles for losses, while holding the Ducks to a total of 210 yards. The score was tied 21-all at halftime.

However, the Cougars' offense stalled in the second half, as the Ducks outscored them 17-10 to take the win.

Mariota completed 21 of 25 passes with no interceptions. Halliday was 43 for 63.

NO. 3 ALABAMA 42, FLORIDA 21

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Blake Sims threw for 445 yards, the second-best passing performance in Alabama history, and the third-ranked Crimson Tide overcame a sloppy performance to beat Florida 42-21 on Saturday.

The Tide (4-0, 1-0 Southeastern Conference) committed 11 penalties for 80 yards and four turnovers that turned into 21 points for the Gators (2-1, 1-1).

Sims threw scoring passes of 87 yards to Kenyan Drake on the opening play and 79 to Amari Cooper later in the first quarter. Cooper caught 10 passes for 201 yards and three touchdowns.

The Tide's turnovers and miscues kept the game close into the fourth quarter. Alabama's 645 total yards was the most the Gators have allowed. The previous high was Nebraska's 629 yards in the 1996 Fiesta Bowl.

Sims was 23-of-33 passing with four touchdowns, and was already up to 335 by halftime.

Derrick Henry gained 111 yards on 20 rushes.

The Gators' offense wasn't much more successful than its defense.

Florida's Jeff Driskel was harassed and ineffective passing. He was 9-of-28 passing for 93 yards and threw two interceptions. Driskel did run for 59 yards. Demarcus Robinson, who had 15 catches in an overtime win over Kentucky, was held to two receptions for 14 yards.

No. 4 OKLAHOMA 45, WEST VIRGINIA 33

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. -- Bruising freshman Samaje Perine rushed for 242 yards and four touchdowns to lead Oklahoma.

Alex Ross scored on a 100-yard kickoff return and quarterback Trevor Knight caught a 4-yard scoring pass on a trick play for the Sooners (4-0, 1-0 Big 12).

Oklahoma won its eighth straight game dating to last season and its 11th road game in 12 tries.

Perine had second-half scoring runs of 9, 5 and 19 yards as the Sooners pulled away after the game was tied 24-24 at halftime.

Clint Trickett threw for 376 yards and two touchdowns for West Virginia, (2-2, 0-1). But he was intercepted twice and lost a fumble.

NO. 6 TEXAS A&M 58, SMU 6

DALLAS -- Kenny Hill had 322 yards of total offense playing only the first half, and Jeremy Tabuyo turned two short passes into touchdowns for Texas A&M.

Trey Williams ran for two touchdowns for the Aggies, who last started 4-0 in 2006. The Mustangs (0-3) played for the first time since coach June Jones resigned two games into his seventh season.

Hill, the sophomore who succeeded 2012 Heisman Trophy winner Johnny Manziel as the starting quarterback, completed 16 of 22 passes for 265 yards with two touchdowns and his first interception at Texas A&M. His 58-yard run set up another touchdown as the Aggies built a 38-3 halftime lead.

Tabuyo caught a 30-yard TD pass from Hill and a 50-yarder from Kyle Allen.

MISSISSIPPI STATE 34, NO. 8 LSU 29

BATON ROUGE, La. -- Dak Prescott highlighted a dynamic performance with two touchdown passes and 56-yard scoring run, and Mississippi State held off a wild rally to snap a 14-game losing streak in the series.

MSU led 34-10 in the fourth quarter, but LSU scored three late touchdowns, including two in 28 seconds. That set up a last-second desperation heave by LSU backup quarterback Brandon Harris, which was intercepted by Will Redmond at the goal line.

Prescott, a Louisiana native, finished with 268 yards passing and 105 yards rushing while helping the Bulldogs (4-0) not only beat LSU (3-1) for the first time since 1999, but win in Tiger Stadium for the first time since 1991 -- about two years before Prescott was born.

His touchdown passes went for 74-yards to Jameon Lewis and 9 yards to De'Runnya Wilson. Josh Robinson rushed for 197 yards and a touchdown.

NO. 11 MICHIGAN STATE 73, EASTERN MICHIGAN 14

EAST LANSING, Mich. -- Connor Cook threw two touchdown passes and ran for a score and Michigan State scored the third-most points in program history.

The Spartans (2-1) came up three points short of matching the school record set in 1989 against Northwestern and scored on their first five possessions. They had 75 points against Arizona in 1949.

Eastern Michigan (1-3) was outgained 320-1 in the first half and surrendered the game's first 20 first downs. The Eagles have been outscored 155-17 by Florida, Old Dominion and the Spartans.

Michigan State finished with 336 yards rushing, 496 in total offense and held the Eagles to five first downs. Cook wound up 5 for 6 for 83 yards, accounting for all his touchdowns in the first quarter. Delton Williams ran for 103 yards and three TDs on 10 carries.

NO. 13 GEORGIA 66, TROY 0

ATHENS, Ga. -- Sony Michel ran for 155 yards and three touchdowns for Georgia.

Michel, a freshman playing behind Todd Gurley, had a 75-yard gain to set up his second touchdown.

Among other standout freshmen for Georgia (2-1) were receiver Isaiah McKenzie, who scored on a 52-yard punt return, and Bryce Ramsey, who threw his first career touchdown pass.

Dontreal Pruitt started at quarterback for Troy (0-4) as Brandon Silvers was held out after leaving last week's loss to Abilene Christian with a concussion. The Trojans' last 0-4 start was in 1982.

The Bulldogs posted their highest scoring game since a 70-6 win over Northeast Louisiana in 1994 and their most lopsided victory since beating The Citadel 76-0 in 1958.

No. 14 SOUTH CAROLINA 48, VANDERBILT 34

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Dylan Thompson threw for 237 yards and three touchdowns, and he ran for another score as South Carolina rallied from 14 points down.

South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier now has 202 Southeastern Conference wins, breaking a tie with Vince Dooley and putting him second only to Paul "Bear" Bryant (292). Spurrier also got his 20th win all-time against the Commodores.

The Gamecocks (3-1, 2-1) started slow coming off their 38-35 win over Georgia in their first road trip this season. They got going by scoring 17 points in the second quarter as part of 24 straight points giving them the lead for good in beating Vanderbilt for a sixth straight time in this series.

Darrius Sims returned two kickoffs for touchdowns for Vanderbilt. The Commodores (1-3, 0-2) pulled to 34-27 with 5:57 left but couldn't get closer.

NO. 19 WISCONSIN 68, BOWLING GREEN 17

MADISON, Wis. -- Melvin Gordon rushed for career highs of 253 yards and five touchdowns, and Wisconsin ran for a Big Ten-record 644 yards.

Gordon had 179 yards and four scores by halftime alone before dashing for a 69-yard touchdown run on his first carry of the second half. He silenced any doubters worried about his 38-yard outing the previous game.

The Badgers (2-1) forced turnovers on consecutive possessions by the Falcons (2-2) in the first half, and Gordon capitalized each time with scores before closing the half with a 21-yard touchdown run.

The team rushing total was the most in the Big Ten's modern era, dating back to 1946.

The only drama left in the second half was whether Gordon would eclipse the school single-game rushing record of 339 set by Ron Dayne in 1996.

But the junior's day ended after his 13th carry with about 12 minutes to go in the third quarter. Corey Clement took over and added two rushing touchdowns in the second half. Clement finished with 111 yards on 16 carries, and quarterback Tanner McEvoy had 158 yards rushing on 11 attempts.

INDIANA 31, NO. 18 MISSOURI 27

COLUMBIA, Mo. -- D'Angelo Roberts scored on a 3-yard touchdown run with 22 seconds remaining and Nate Sudfeld passed for 252 yards and a touchdown to help Indiana upset Missouri.

After giving up 10 consecutive points in the fourth quarter, the Hoosiers (2-1) went 75 yards on six plays to reclaim the lead. Tevin Coleman ran 44 yards to the Missouri 15 to setup the winning score.

Coleman finished with 132 yards on 19 carries.

Maty Mauk completed 28 of 47 passes for 326 yards and two touchdowns and Russell Hansbrough gained 119 yards on the ground for Missouri (3-1). The Tigers play at South Carolina next week to start a stretch of eight consecutive games against Southeastern Conference opponents.

NO. 21 BYU 41, VIRGINIA 33

PROVO, Utah -- Taysom Hill threw two touchdown passes and ran for a score in BYU's comeback victory.

The Cougars (4-0) trailed 16-13 at the half and lagged behind the Cavaliers (2-2) in almost every statistical category, but turned around the game around with two third-quarter touchdowns.

Adam Hine sealed the victory with a 99-yard kickoff return midway through the final quarter.

Hill, averaging nearly 230 yards passing and 130 yards rushing, completed 13 of 23 for 187 yards and rushed for another 72 on 17 carries. He had only 29 yards rushing in the first half.

The Cavaliers had 519 total yards to BYU's 332 and doubled the Cougars in time of possession. The BYU defense entered the game allowing only 312 yards of total offense and only 59 yards on the ground per game. BYU also committed 12 penalties for 133 yards.

NO. 24 NEBRASKA 41, MIAMI 31

LINCOLN, Neb. -- Ameer Abdullah ran for 229 yards to lead a punishing ground game, and No. 24 Nebraska celebrated the 20th anniversary of its 1994 national championship team with an emotional victory.

The Cornhuskers (4-0) will start Big Ten play next week off a performance that drew a Memorial Stadium record crowd of 91,585 that came to see a meeting of programs that combined for eight national titles from 1983 to 2001.

Miami (2-2) got within three points in the third quarter, but its five personal fouls in the second half helped the Huskers pull away. Only the coaches and team captains shook hands after the game. Fans booed as Miami left the field.

Miami's Brad Kaaya threw for 359 yards and three touchdowns but was intercepted twice, and Duke Johnson ran 18 times for 93 yards.


Copyright 2014 by The Associated Press

This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire. Wire index

Comments

Use a Facebook account to add a comment, subject to Facebook's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your Facebook name, photo & other personal information you make public on Facebook will appear with your comment, and may be used on ESPN's media platforms. Learn more.


MORE COLLEGE FOOTBALL HEADLINES