What does Northern Illinois loss mean for Notre Dame?

Notre Dame probably would’ve been better off with an NIU win Saturday.

Just two weeks after coming into South Bend and beating Notre Dame in what might be the biggest upset of the 2024 college football season, the No. 23 Northern Illinois Huskies lost to Buffalo, 23-20, in overtime. At home.

This loss could have implications for Notre Dame’s playoff chances, though with just four games played, there’s still much more to figure out.

Almost every pundit and observer thought that not only would Notre Dame beat the Huskies, but the Irish would do it handily. We all know what happened next: Notre Dame lost 16-14.

The questions being asked after that game were these: Is NIU that good? Is Notre Dame overrated? Did Notre Dame simply have a bad day, perhaps by overlooking an underdog opponent?

Those questions remain unanswered. Northern Illinois jumped into the rankings after beating Notre Dame but also had the following week off. It’s too early to tell if a close loss to Buffalo means NIU isn’t as good as people thought. Neither does it help us determine if NIU is a playoff contender or if Notre Dame had a bad day — or both.

The following weeks will bring answers.

What does the NIU loss to Buffalo mean for Notre Dame?
Northern Illinois Huskies kicker Kanon Woodill kicks the game winning field goal in the fourth quarter against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish.

It would probably be good for Notre Dame if the Huskies are a true contender since it makes the loss to NIU look worse in the eye of any playoff decision-makers. Because the Irish are independent, they have no chance at an automatic bid via a conference championship.

While the Irish were considered, at the season’s start, as a possible playoff entrant with 1 or 2 losses, that depended on whom they lost to. Before the season kicked off, most observers would’ve excused an Irish loss to Florida State, USC or maybe Louisville. However, the conventional thinking since the loss to NIU is that Notre Dame will need to run the table to qualify for the College Football Playoff.

Notre Dame, for its part, hasn’t answered questions, either. The 66-7 drubbing of Purdue wasn’t particularly surprising, and the Irish once again started slowly at home against a Mid-American Conference team on Saturday, though this time they pulled away to beat Miami of Ohio.

There are other teams factoring into this equation. Florida State looks bad, so a win against the Seminoles no longer looks impressive. USC fell to Michigan on Saturday. Other upsets could happen, leaving a bunch of top 20 teams with one or two losses at season’s end.

Still, the NIU loss to Buffalo will likely hurt Notre Dame by making its loss to the Huskies look worse — unless NIU has a strong run to the finish line.

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Big Ten outlook remains bright in College Football Playoff picture

Which Big Ten teams are currently projected in the new 12-team College Football Playoff?

Two things were true heading into this season: the College Football Playoff was going to add more interest with the new 12-team format, and Big Ten football was going to be well represented.

According to this week’s USA Today CFP bracketology piece, those thoughts remain true. 9 of 18 teams in the Big Ten are undefeated, including 5 teams that are 3-0. Oddly enough, the top two Big Ten teams in USA Today’s most recent College Football Playoff bracketology haven’t played thrice yet.

Let’s look at the programs that made the cut this week, and a few knocking on the CFP door.

Ohio State Buckeyes

Week 4 CFP Prediction: #2 seed, Big Ten conference winner

The Buckeyes are listed as the top team from the Big Ten with a first round bye (the bottom eight teams play in the first round). No qualms there, even as they sit third in both major polls.

The top four seeds being conference winners is probably right, even if the fourth seed ends up being worse than seeds as low as eight.

Penn State Nittany Lions

Week 4 CFP Prediction: #6 seed, At Large bid

Penn State sitting ahead of USC is a surprise considering talent faced. What the Nittany Lions have over the Trojans is a higher seed to being the 2024 season.

As of today, USC should be ahead of of Penn State. Even a pummeling of Kent State Week 4 would not be enough to keep PSU ahead, short of USC losing at Michigan this weekend.

Oregon Ducks

Week 4 CFP Prediction: #9 seed, At Large bid

Speaking of teams that have an argument to be ahead of Penn State, Oregon’s blasting of Oregon State ended an odd streak of questionable performances.

The Ducks are on a bye this week, so a drop in next week’s bracketology would not be unsuspected.

USC Trojans

Week 4 CFP Prediction: First Four out

It’s difficult to have qualms with USC on the outside looking in, especially with Missouri and Mississippi in the same boat.

The Group of Five will get at least one program in the 12-team field, leaving USC out for now. The Trojans could change that with a statement win over the Wolverines Week 4.

Nebraska Cornhuskers

Week 4 CFP Prediction: Team to watch

If the Cornhuskers sweep Illinois, Purdue, Rutgers, and Indiana prior to their matchup against Ohio State, and Nebraska will be firmly in the hunt for a CFP berth.

Big Ten football under or over-represented in CFP predictions?

Three Big Ten teams are projected into the 12-team College Football Playoffs – are they over or underrepresented heading into Week 3?

There’s no rest when it comes to the College Football Playoffs, especially with 12 teams now getting the chance to play for it all.

Sure there are obvious choices to fill openings (Georgia, Ohio State, Texas), and at least one spot will go to a team outside of the power conferences, the Group of Five, which limits the number of spots remaining.

Which teams made the cut, and how many of them are from the Big Ten?

No. 2 – Ohio State Buckeyes

The Buckeyes deserve to be no worse than top three heading into Week 3. A home matchup against the Marshall Thundering Herd is unlikely to change OSU’s spot in the CFP rankings.

Ohio State has to win at least their next four games before taking a loss – Georgia and Texas square off in five weeks –  to at least hope to sit atop the CFP ranks for one week.

No. 9 – USC Trojans

The talent drop-off between the Buckeyes and Trojans is reflected in the ranking predictions. There is also more to learn about L.A.’s finest to feel as if the playoffs make sense for them.

Travel is going to cause chaos for the west coast Big Ten teams, as only Hawai’i is logging more travel miles than both UCLA and USC.

No. 10 – Oregon Ducks

The Ducks are the last 2-0 team in this iteration of projections, and that may be a gift. Their two wins were nearly losses, and the next four games aren’t ideal: at Oregon State, at UCLA, and home against Michigan State and Ohio State.

Does the College Football Playoffs need more Big Ten teams? Should Oregon be in this week, let alone if they struggle to win Week 3?

College football analyst has Oklahoma Sooners making College Football Playoff

USA TODAY Sports College Football analyst believes the Sooners are in for a big season.

The game has changed in college football. Conference realignment has shaken up the sport, placing plenty of teams in new leagues in 2024. Name, image, and likeness has become a huge part of the sport, as players can now (legally) get paid by businesses and collectives. The [autotag]transfer portal[/autotag] has altered the way you can build your team.

The [autotag]College Football Playoff[/autotag] has expanded from four to 12 teams, beginning this season. It’s a change that aligns with the big realignment moves, making 2024 a season of change in college football.

We’re just a few days away from the Oklahoma Sooners kicking off their season at home against the Temple Owls, as Labor Day weekend marks Week One of the season. That means it’s time to get those final [autotag]CFP[/autotag] predictions and bowl projections in before the games begin.

That’s exactly what USA TODAY Sports did on Tuesday, predicting every bowl game and the playoff. While most national projections have [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag]’ team on the outside looking in when it comes to competing for a championship, college football expert Erick Smith  has a different opinion.

One thing to expect is a heavy dose of [autotag]SEC[/autotag] and [autotag]Big Ten[/autotag] teams. This year’s preseason forecast has four from the former and three from the latter. There’s two from the [autotag]ACC[/autotag], an independent and Group of Five winner and a [autotag]Big 12[/autotag] representative. Oklahoma sets up to be an excellent case study in how people need to readjust evaluating teams beyond win-loss record. The Sooners face five teams ranked in the top 15 of the preseason US LBM Coaches Poll with three of them on the road and one at a neutral site. A 9-3 record should likely be enough to overcome a 10-2 team without the same quality of wins. – Smith, USA TODAY Sports

Smith has the Sooners making the playoff and heading to South Bend, Indiana to face the Notre Dame Fighting Irish in the first round. It’s been 13 years since OU last visited Notre Dame, walking away with a 35-21 win in the 2013 season.

Smith has the Sooners moving onto the second round of the playoff, where they’d play Ohio State in the Rose Bowl.

The Rose Bowl represents one of the low moments in the [autotag]Lincoln Riley[/autotag] era. Oklahoma took a 31-14 lead with six seconds left in the first half. Riley opted to squib kick the ball back to Georgia, who got the ball in great field position. Bulldogs kicker Rodrigo Blankenship kicked a 55-yard field goal to cut Oklahoma’s lead to two scores.

Georgia took control of the game, scoring the next 21 points to take a 38-31 lead. The Sooners battled the Bulldogs but ultimately fell in double overtime.

Facing Ohio State in the Rose Bowl would provide Oklahoma an opportunity to play one of the best teams in the nation. Going back to the Rose Bowl, the Sooners would be able to exorcise some demons.

A trip to the playoff and advancing to the quarterfinals this year would validate everything that Venables and his coaching staff have been doing since he took the reins. Navigating their brutal schedule this year to make it into the top 12 would send a statement to the rest of college football that the Sooners are going to be a force.

It’s a tall task, but those are the expectations in Norman, Oklahoma.

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Why a chaotic college football season could benefit the Sooners

Chaos could be the way the Sooners find their way into the College Football Playoff.

The 2024 college football season is underway. Week Zero featured just four FBS games on Saturday before most teams get started in Week One, which will begin on Thursday night and run through Monday evening.

Game No. 1 of the college football season gave us our first upset, as No. 10 Florida State was defeated by unranked [autotag]ACC[/autotag] foe Georgia Tech in Dublin, Ireland. The Seminoles fell by a final score of 24-21, as the Yellow Jackets made a field goal as time expired. If the first day of games is any indication, we could be in for a chaotic season in 2024.

It’s now game week for the Oklahoma Sooners, as they’ll host Temple in their first game of the season. The Owls will come to town on Friday night for a 6 p.m. kickoff. Normally, programs like Oklahoma would like to avoid chaos, as they’ve typically been favored in most games in the [autotag]Big 12[/autotag]. As one of college football’s premiere blue-blood programs, regularly among the best in the country, the word upset is not something the Sooners like to hear.

But the game has changed. OU is now a member of the [autotag]SEC[/autotag] and is no longer the biggest fish in a relatively small pond. Instead, the Sooners are a big fish in an ocean filled with plenty of other big fish.

In addition, the postseason in college football has changed. The [autotag]College Football Playoff[/autotag] has expanded from four to 12 teams, with the four highest-rated conference champions earning first-rounds byes.

Chaos might help the Sooners for the first time, as there will be plenty of teams hovering around the 10-15 rankings, hoping they won’t be left on the doorstep of the [autotag]CFP[/autotag]. Oklahoma could be one of them. A 2007-style year where unpredictability reigns supreme in college football would be something that could benefit OU.

The Sooners are facing a brutal schedule in Year 1 in the SEC. Home games against Tennessee and Alabama are mixed in with road contests against Ole Miss, Missouri, and LSU. Not to mention the annual neutral-site [autotag]Red River Rivalry[/autotag] matchup against Texas. The other conference games aren’t gimmes either, as contests at Auburn and at home against South Carolina will test the Sooners at all levels. It’s also imperative that Oklahoma goes undefeated in nonconference action, as well with home games against Temple, Houston, Tulane, and Maine.

Needless to say, going 12-0 or 11-1, the normal expectations in Norman, will be a difficult mountain to climb. Oklahoma isn’t favored to win the conference, or even to play in the conference title game. The SEC tests your program every week, a change from the Big 12. Instead, if the Sooners are at their best in 2024, they will likely be hovering in the hunt for a playoff berth.

That’s where the chaos comes in. If the Florida State loss is just the beginning of something bigger, Oklahoma could slip in and steal a playoff spot, provided that they take care of business on their end. The Sooners will need higher-ranked teams to lose two or even three games in the 12-team playoff format. This is because that’s likely where Oklahoma will be as well. That’s where “SEC-bias” could also help OU, as playing in the sport’s strongest conference and going, let’s say 9-3, with their difficult schedule could push them in over other 9-3 or even 10-2 teams.

College football’s unpredictable nature is one of the best things about the sport. Typically, it’s been something Sooner fans have hoped to avoid, as simply winning all of their games has been enough to get OU where they need to be. However, with the move to the SEC, there will be setbacks and rough outings. Chaos across the sport this season is something Sooner Nation should root for and embrace in 2024.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Aaron on X @AaronGelvin.

CBS Sports projects two Big 12 teams to College Football Playoff

A pair of Big 12 programs were projected in the 12-team College Football Playoffs by CBS Sports.

With the college football season right around the corner, the projections are flying in fast and furious. A new rule change means 12 teams will head to the College Football Playoff that will take place in late December and early January. Two teams from the Big 12 were listed in the latest projections from CBS Sports.

Both the Utah Utes and Kansas State Wildcats are heading to the postseason according to the projections. For Kansas State, they get in as the 11th seed. They would face a first-round matchup just before Christmas, on the road at Oregon.

The Utes garner the 3 seed and play in the Fiesta Bowl on New Year’s Eve.  They would await the winner of the Kansas State – Oregon matchup.

If Utah did play in the Fiesta Bowl, that game would take place in Glendale, Arizona.

The rest of the projections have the Georgia Bulldogs, Ohio State Buckeyes, and Florida State Seminoles getting the “Bye”. Texas, Alabama, Texas A&M, Penn State, Miami, and Boise State round out the top 12.

In the projections, the Big 12 has two teams, while the SEC leads the way with four teams. The Big Ten settles for three, while the ACC comes away with two. The final team, Boise State, comes from the Mountain West as the guaranteed representative from the Group of Five.

Georgia could make the playoff with 3 losses

Looking at the path for the Georgia Bulldogs to make the 12-team playoff with three losses

The Georgia Bulldogs have been named as one of the seven college football teams that could make the expanded 12-team College Football Playoff with three losses.

All seven of the teams that Brad Crawford of 247Sports highlights as potential three-loss playoff teams hail from either the SEC or Big Ten. Schedule is a key factor in teams that have a shot to make the playoff with three losses.

A three-loss Power Four conference champion would make the playoff as an automatic qualifier. However, Crawford is primarily looking at teams that could earn an at-large bid.

In order for a three-loss Power Four school to win an at-large bid, they will need some help. They’ll need some upsets along the way and they’ll have to play a challenging schedule themselves without any suffering any embarrassing losses.

Georgia’s tough schedule is a big reason with Crawford thinks the Bulldogs could make the playoff with three losses. Crawford notes that Georgia would have to lose to Alabama, Ole Miss and Texas (all three are road games).

“Given the challenging schedule with possibly six games against top 25 teams if you include Kentucky in that mix, the Bulldogs could foreseeably lose a couple regular-season games (or another SEC title game appearance) and still get in the playoff with a 9-3 or 10-3 finish,” said Crawford.

Most good college football teams would have trouble getting through Georgia’s 2024 schedule without multiple losses. The Bulldogs should be able to manage at least a 10-2 campaign this season, which would likely be enough to make the playoff.

“Given the way this program has recruited under Smart and its recent dominance at the top of the sport, the expanded playoff will feature Georgia for many years to come and it won’t take unbeaten — or even one-loss seasons — to get there,” continued Crawford.

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Georgia has more margin of error in the expanded playoff era. The Bulldogs are a team nobody wants to face in the postseason. Georgia has outscored its opponents 128-10 in its last two bowl games.

Brent Venables believes there’s no limit to what Sooners can achieve

The Sooners’ head coach joined SEC Network’s Marty and McGee to talk about the Oklahoma standard.

Oklahoma Sooners head football coach [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] answered many questions in 2023.

After being hired to be the next head coach of the historic OU football program on Dec. 5, 2021, he had plenty of work to do to build the program in his image after his predecessor’s sudden and unexpected departure.

At the time, Oklahoma fans didn’t know just how much of a rebuild it would be. Venables clearly believed the Sooners had slipped from the standard of toughness, physicality and discipline that made them one of college football’s premier programs.

Venables’ inaugural season was a disappointment. OU went 6-7, its worst record of the 21st century. At this time last year, there were plenty of questions nationally about Venables and his direction for the program in Norman.

A 10-3 season last year answered many of the critics. The Sooners bounced back, improving in just about every area. A [autotag]Red River Rivalry[/autotag] win over Texas was the season’s highlight, but unfocused and mistake-filled football plagued OU in losses against Kansas and Oklahoma State.

Those games not only kept Oklahoma out of the [autotag]College Football Playoff[/autotag] after a 7-0 start, they also kept the Sooners out of the [autotag]Big 12[/autotag] championship game. Oklahoma settled for an Alamo Bowl berth, which was an uneven, turnover-plagued loss against Arizona with a different starting quarterback and offensive coordinators.

The message from Venables to his team was clear: The Sooners still had plenty of room for improvement.

Now, the Sooners enter the toughest conference in college football, the [autotag]SEC[/autotag].

Oklahoma must continue along its trajectory and take another step forward in 2024. However, a brutal schedule in a very strong conference will make that difficult to do. But Venables was hired with the SEC move in mind, and he has been preparing for this for 2 1/2 years. His focus is competing for championships in 2024 and beyond.

OU looks ready to improve again this season with a veteran defense leading the way. A younger, but talented, offense has big potential, and the head coach knows special teams must be better. Along with breaking in new coordinators on both sides of the ball, there are points of concern on the roster and, of course, with the schedule. But the Sooners have the pieces to make another leap in 2024. They also have a head coach who believes he has improved since this journey started as well.

Venables joined the SEC Network’s Marty Smith and Ryan McGee on their show, “Marty and McGee” to talk about his team and the program overall entering the SEC. He was asked what led to him finally becoming a head coach after a long stint as an assistant at Kansas State, defensive coordinator at Oklahoma and then Clemson.

“I’ve always had this stance. That if you have what you’ve always valued, don’t screw it up,” Venables said. “I think too often we go with the narrative of the next raise or the next title or the next promotion. We make it about ourselves, and then we get into our feelings, and we start comparing our career to someone else’s or whatever everybody else expects you to do. When you have this amazing quality of life, don’t screw it up. So I always had this amazingly high standard for what it would take for (Venables’ wife) Julie and our family to pivot, and I’ve always been a people person.”

But, Venables explained that his relationships and confidence in Oklahoma’s leadership, namely athletic director [autotag]Joe Castiglione[/autotag] and university president [autotag]Joseph Harroz Jr.[/autotag] led him back to Norman.

“So at the end of the day, when this opportunity came, you’re talking about somebody in myself, in our family, all four of our children were born in Norman, the relationship, the peace, and the confidence I had in the leadership of Joe Castiglione and Joe Harroz, these are mainstays at Oklahoma during my career,” Venables said. “I know if I’m going to be successful as a head coach, I want to wake up every day when my feet hit the ground and love what I do, where I do it, and where I do it with, and it was just like check, check, check. I had this peace because of the past experience, and I always knew, man, there’s no limits on what Oklahoma can achieve. This is the standard in college football.”

Venables was long coveted by other programs to become a head coach after successful stints calling defenses at both Oklahoma and Clemson. He was the co-defensive coordinator (along with Mike Stoops) for the 2000 team that won the national championship at OU and the 2003 team that played for a national title. He was the solo DC for the 2004 and 2008 OU teams that played for national championships as well. He was a a part of seven of [autotag]Bob Stoops[/autotag]’ 10 conference titles at Oklahoma.

During his time at Clemson, the Tigers rose to national prominence, often with Venables’ defense leading the charge. Clemson won two national titles (2016 and 2018), played in two more national championship games (2015 and 2019), and fell in the [autotag]CFP[/autotag] semifinals twice (2017 and 2020). Six conference titles came from the 10-year Dabo Swinney-Brent Venables partnership at Clemson.

Though Venables was heavily pursued on multiple occasions to leave Clemson and take the reins of his own program, he didn’t budge. That was until his former employer came calling. Now, over 2 1/2 years later, Venables has the Sooners on the rise again after the rebuild that proved necessary. They were slipping under former head coach Lincoln Riley. Though some rough times have followed, the roster looks more and more like a Venables team.

Venables and Oklahoma agreed to, essentially, a two-year contract extension this offseason, meaning the feeling of fit and belonging the head coach has in Norman is mutual. The extension’s statement is obvious. The Sooners believe they have their guy in place to lead them into the [autotag]Southeastern Conference[/autotag], and Brent Venables is fired up to be the one in that position.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes and opinions. You can also follow Aaron on X @AaronGelvin.

ESPN thinks this early season game is key for Oklahoma

The Sooners can’t overlook this opponent early on in their schedule.

College football season is getting closer. One surefire way to tell that the season is almost upon us is the release of the Associated Press Top 25. Even though the AP Top 25 isn’t as useful in the [autotag]College Football Playoff[/autotag] era, it’s something for fans to get excited or upset about in the days before the season kicks off.

The Oklahoma Sooners ranked 16th in the AP Top 25, the same place they landed in the US LBM Coaches Poll. OU has a daunting schedule in 2024, as it enters the SEC. However, ESPN believes a crucial early season, nonconference game could be telling for its chances to make the [autotag]playoff[/autotag] this year.

ESPN went team-by-team through the AP Top 25, giving best-case and worst-case scenarios for each. Then, it highlighted one game early in the season that will be crucial for that team.

OU’s ceiling was placed at an excellent 11-1, which would pleasantly surprise even the staunchest of Oklahoma defenders. However, the Sooners’ floor was placed at 6-6, which would be very disappointing after a 10-3 season last year. The ESPN matchup predictor put the Sooners at 9-3, which would have them on the verge of the playoff.

Head coach [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] improved from 2022 to 2023 and. Despite the program entering the [autotag]SEC[/autotag], the expectation is for it to take another step forward in 2024.

With the brutal SEC schedule on many people’s minds this offseason, a nonconference matchup that isn’t getting a lot of buzz was picked as OU’s key early season game. On Sept. 14, the [autotag]Tulane Green Wave[/autotag] come to town, and ESPN believes the Sooners will need to be at their best that day to win.

Oklahoma’s stiffest pre-SEC tune-up may well come when Tulane visits Norman for the third time since 2017. Oregon quarterback transfer Ty Thompson and running back Makhi Hughes, the reigning [autotag]AAC[/autotag] Rookie of the Year, should test the Sooners’ experienced defense, and a Green Wave defense that held opponents to 20.5 points per game will challenge first-year starter [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag]. A week before Tennessee visits to open SEC play, Oklahoma can’t overlook Tulane — it was only three years ago that the Green Wave nearly upset the Sooners in Norman. – Eli Lederman, ESPN.

The Tulane contest could be seen as a classic trap game before the Volunteers arrive for a highly-anticipated matchup on Sept. 21. The Sooners and Green Wave have met twice in their history, both in Norman.

The first meeting came in 2017, when the Sooners won in decisive fashion, 56-14. Oklahoma was on its way to a third straight [autotag]Big 12[/autotag] title that year during their run of six in a row. The Sooners also made the playoffs for the second time in three years (and the first of three in a row and fourth out of five in total) that year, going 12-1.

The second meeting was far more interesting.

In 2021, the season opener was supposed to be played in New Orleans, but it was moved to Norman due to Hurricane Ida. In the first sign of trouble in [autotag]Lincoln Riley[/autotag]’s final season at OU, the highly-ranked Sooners couldn’t put the Green Wave away, barely hanging on for a 40-35 victory. Oklahoma blew a big lead and nearly suffered a catastrophic loss.

The Sooners failed to live up to expectations in 2021, missing the conference title game. Riley departed for USC hours after the regular season ended, leading to the hire of Venables a week later.

The Sooners would do well to take Tulane seriously. It has been one of the best programs at the Group of Five level the past couple of seasons. With all of the changes and realignment in college football, the Green Wave are looking to make the playoff in the 12-team expansion era. The Group of Five level has been significantly thinned after UCF, Cincinnati, Houston, BYU and SMU joined a Power Four league. After head coach Willie Fritz left to coach the Houston Cougars, who OU will see a week before it plays Tulane, the Green Wave hired former Troy head coach Jon Sumrall. It’s a move that was regarded as an excellent hire in New Orleans.

Additionally, this game likely means more to Tulane than it will Oklahoma. With a win, it could make a huge early statement that it should be the non-Power Four team that gets a shot in the postseason.

In short, the Sooners have to be ready to go when Tulane marches in on Sept. 14. With its incredibly difficult conference schedule, OU can’t afford a loss in the nonconference schedule if it wants to live up to the standard this season. As much fun as the following week’s game against Tennessee will be, the Sooners need to be 3-0 when the Volunteers get to Norman.

That means taking care of business against what could be a very pesky opponent in the Tulane Green Wave.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes and opinions. You can also follow Aaron on X @AaronGelvin.

Where does Oklahoma land in ESPN’s SEC preseason power rankings?

OU’s first preseason in the SEC sees some doubt from national analysts.

The Oklahoma Sooners are about three weeks away from beginning the 2024 football season, their first as a member of the [autotag]SEC[/autotag]. Talking season and prediction season are almost over, but for now, we still have a few more weeks of projections to go.

ESPN has been previewing the college football season, going conference-by-conference to look at each team. On Thursday, staff writers Chris Low and Mark Schlabach previewed the SEC, giving their power rankings and [autotag]College Football Playoff[/autotag] outlook for the conference.

The duo had the Sooners as the eighth-best team in the conference, matching ESPN’s Football Power Index and the SEC media poll. Here’s what they had to say about the Sooners landing in the middle of the league.

“In his third season at OU, [autotag]Brent Venables[/autotag] likes the experience on this team, with many players having been in the program for three years now,” Low and Schlabach wrote. “The Sooners’ schedule in Year 1 in the SEC is challenging, to say the least.”

The pair also had Oklahoma as a playoff long shot along with Texas A&M. In all, they believed three SEC teams should make the [autotag]playoff[/autotag] (Georgia, Texas and Alabama) with four more in the running (Ole Miss, Missouri, Tennessee and LSU) ahead of the Sooners and Aggies, who they believe have less of a chance.

“There’s no question the Sooners were better in Venables’ second season in 2023, but it might be rough sledding in Year 1 in the SEC,” they said. “Oklahoma faces a brutal road slate that includes games at Auburn, Ole Miss, Missouri and LSU, as well as home contests against Tennessee and Alabama, and the [autotag]Red River Rivalry[/autotag] game against Texas. Quarterback [autotag]Jackson Arnold[/autotag] takes over for [autotag]Dillon Gabriel[/autotag], who left for Oregon. The bigger question is up front on offense, where all five starters departed. The Sooners are hoping five transfers can help: tackles [autotag]Spencer Brown[/autotag] (Michigan State) and [autotag]Michael Tarquin[/autotag] (USC), guards [autotag]Geirean Hatchett[/autotag] (Washington) and [autotag]Febechi Nwaiwu[/autotag] (North Texas) and center [autotag]Branson Hickman[/autotag] (SMU).”

Oklahoma’s home matchup with Tennessee was specifically highlighted. OU’s first conference game is starting to generate plenty of buzz. After all, it’s not every day that the program’s most recent national championship-winning starting quarterback and his team come to town.

“It’s Oklahoma’s SEC debut and a homecoming of sorts for [autotag]Josh Heupel[/autotag], who played quarterback for the Sooners and was the runner-up for the [autotag]Heisman Trophy[/autotag] in 2000,” Low and Schlabach said. “But his exit as OU’s offensive coordinator in 2014 wasn’t his fondest memory as he was fired by [autotag]Bob Stoops[/autotag]. Both teams have talented young quarterbacks in their first years as starters, Nico Iamaleava at Tennessee and Jackson Arnold at Oklahoma. It should be a wild atmosphere in Norman with the winner making a major statement in the playoff chase.”

Lastly, linebacker [autotag]Danny Stutsman[/autotag] was named one of the duo’s favorite players in the conference heading into the season. The senior will have to be instrumental if OU will be better again defensively.

“Stutsman is a big reason the Sooners improved from 106th in the FBS in rushing defense (187.5) in 2022 to 44th (138.6) last season,” they said. “Stutsman is a tackling machine with more than 100 stops in each of the past two seasons to go with six sacks and two forced fumbles. His return should help OU take another step forward under Venables.”

As previously stated, the Sooners have been picked to be middle-of-the-pack, specifically eighth in the conference, multiple times in the last month. Venables and his team have reiterated time and time again that they aren’t focusing on any outside noise or anything but themselves and getting better. Still, you have to think they’re seeing the lists and predictions and remembering that the national media thinks they’ll be an average SEC team in 2024. As the games come closer, Oklahoma is almost through talking season. They’ll finally have an opportunity to prove themselves on the field.

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