COLLEGE FOOTBALL WATCH GRID, Week 4: It’d be fun if Notre Dame lost

It’s college football season. We can pretend we only wanna watch good games, or we can face facts.

As always, the Watch Grid sorts your Saturday into three watchability columns. As always, watchability is not strictly about game quality, team quality or quality of any kind. These things matter, though, I guess.

This part of the college football season demands frequent use of this mantra: There is no such thing as a boring college football Saturday, no matter what the schedule looks like. Did you expect last Saturday to cram in so much weird, mean joy? No, nobody did, but that’s what happens every time we underestimate a Saturday. This schedule might look light now, but we’ve seen enough over the years to predict we’ll all be delirious by Sunday morning.

This mantra will continue to be repeated every week for the next month or so.

Thursday, Sept. 23 and Friday, Sept. 24 college football schedule

If Liberty’s playing Syracuse, it’s time to commemorate college football’s greatest hospital-bed mythmaking since “The Gipper.”

Saturday, Sept. 25 college football schedule

Stream live college football games every week this season from conferences across the country on ESPN+.

SICKOS GAME OF THE WEEK

If you’re just here for bad football, it might be hard to top Hawaii-New Mexico State and New Mexico-UTEP, the kinds of games that only make the Watch Grid because there’s little else going on late at night (otherwise, I usually exclude games that don’t involve any top-100 Division I teams).

But if you’re here for at least half-bad football involving the emotions of hundreds of thousands of people, you’re gonna wanna pay attention to Louisville-Florida State, where the Cardinals are favored in Tallahassee. A loss would give FSU its first 0-4 start since before Bobby Bowden showed up and would mean Mike Norvell must go 6-2 down the stretch in order to equal the record that got Willie Taggart fired. The Noles might be underdogs in six or seven of those games.

We’ll be certain to check back in with these folks either way.

The actual most important game of the week

Two ancient programs, neither of whom has won any sort of championship in quite a while, meet in a 100,000-seat stadium to play a few hours of gruesome gruntball. The winner will be 4-0 and in position to dethrone the division’s longtime bully. I’m speaking of Rutgers-Michigan, of course.

Ok fine, I’m speaking of Texas A&M-Arkansas in JerryWorld, where the Aggies annually pull out a 17-overtime thriller at the Hogs’ expense.

Actually, no. It’s Notre Dame-Wisconsin, because the Irish are three-for-three at doing the Notre Dame thing: Looking unimpressive against non-good teams (FSU, Toledo, and Purdue). Somebody’s gotta do something about it at some point, unless we want this to be yet another of those years when the Irish show up in January with a pretty record and then get flattened. Those are also pretty good too, though.

We recommend interesting sports viewing/streaming and betting opportunities. If you sign up for a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL WATCH GRID, Week 3: No such thing as a boring Saturday

It’s college football season. We can pretend we only wanna watch good games, or we can face facts.

As always, the Watch Grid sorts your Saturday into three watchability columns. As always, watchability is not strictly about game quality, team quality or quality of any kind. These things matter, though, I guess.

This part of the college football season demands frequent use of this mantra: There is no such thing as a boring college football Saturday, no matter what the schedule looks like. Did you expect last Saturday to cram in so much weird, mean joy? No, nobody did, but that’s what happens every time we underestimate a Saturday. This schedule might look light now, but we’ve seen enough over the years to predict we’ll all be delirious by Sunday morning.

This mantra will now be repeated every week for the next month or so.

Thursday, Sept. 16 and Friday, Sept. 17 college football schedule

UCF-Louisville was nearly a 2005 Conference USA rivalry, was the game that prevented anyone from arguing the 2013 Cardinals deserved any BCS consideration, is currently a meeting between a non-power and a power, and would be a meeting between two powers, if we were in the mid-2020s right now. But that’s nothing. Did you know Illinois is considered a power?

Saturday, Sept. 18 college football schedule

Stream live college football games every week this season from conferences across the country on ESPN+.

SICKOS GAME OF THE WEEK

Two weeks in a row, Nebraska has handled business like a competent team should. And the Huskers’ Week 0 loss to Illinois has only looked more and more fluky (though no less entertaining) as September has unfolded.

Yet Week 2’s SICKOS GAME was ordained before the season began.

Any time you try to make it so people don’t watch your game against your historic archrival, a game in which you’re a three-score underdog, rest assured people will show more interest in this game’s outcome.

And guess what? If the Huskers win, this is an even bigger SICKO outcome! You, the viewer at home, can’t lose — unless one of your teams is in this game. In that case, you can lose.

The actual most important game of the week

Sure, fine, whatever. It’s technically Bama-Florida. But there’s a high likelihood we already know exactly how this will go, especially if Nick Saban is this mad about giving up 14 points to Mercer.

I considered putting this game in the Maybe column. Whatever.

Let’s not lose sight of Auburn-Penn State, which could end up having more ramifications, is likely to be more competitive, and involves two talented teams prone to playing football as savants who’ve never played football before.

We recommend interesting sports viewing/streaming and betting opportunities. If you sign up for a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL WATCH GRID, Week 2: We Ames to please

It’s college football season. We can pretend we only wanna watch good games, or we can face facts.

Hello and welcome to 2021’s third edition of the College Football Watch Grid, a weekly attempt to help plan your college football viewing schedule.

As always, the Watch Grid sorts your Saturday into three watchability columns. As always, watchability is not strictly about game quality, team quality or quality of any kind. These things matter, though, I guess.

So far, this season feels like a relatively normal one, I think? Compared to the previous one, at least? Week 0 felt exactly like Week 0, and Week 1 was also true to form. If history is any guide, Week 2 will be the usual handful of rival games played way early for some reason, along with most of the good teams digging into Cupcake September. Now let’s look at the schedule and see if that’s the case.

Thursday, Sept. 9 and Friday, Sept. 10 college football schedule

Confirmed. And I get it. It’s September. Everyone wants to get backup reps and collect some Ws before conference play. It’s just a shame the heavyweights can’t be bothered to choose more challenging non-conference opponents. Aim higher, Coastal Carolina.

Oh, and there is no Division I football on Thursday. Make do as best you can.

Saturday, Sept. 11 college football schedule

Why is Illinois kicking off at 10 a.m. Illinois time? We usually get started this early when someone’s playing in Ireland, but Charlottesville isn’t in Ireland, if you ask me. Assume no explanation will be offered.

Week 2 is typically among the Watch Grid’s most generous weeks, in terms of promoting games to Maybe Watch status. To be fair, we don’t know for sure which of these teams are really bad yet. And to continue being fair, we like bad football just fine anyway.

SICKOS GAME OF THE WEEK

The rare circumstance in which the weekend’s AP Poll-anointed game, College GameDay game, most disdainful rivalry game (alongside Utah-BYU), and SICKOS game are all one and the same.

Why the latter honor for Iowa-Iowa State? Where to begin.

The two teams have distinct football personalities, in addition to the different flavors of the chips on each fanbase’s shoulders. Iowa, the epitome of Big Ten West lumberball, fantasizes of winning by 4-0 margins. Meanwhile, Iowa State is one of the most carefree Big 12 teams, content to win by 99.4-99.3 in octuple overtime, especially if that offends the opponent.

But when the Hawkeyes and Cyclones collide, something bad happens. The game becomes either Hawkeyes-Hawkeyes or Cyclones-Cyclones. In 2017, the Hawkeyes had the country’s No. 108 offense in yards per play, yet beat the Cyclones in a 44-41 debacle. The following year, Iowa State’s FBS-average offense vanished down a 13-3 memory hole.

Making matters even more dire, both teams usually become Iowa. The final score has gone under Vegas’ points total 12 times in the last 15 meetings, per OddsShark’s database. The decisive play in their most recent meeting was a punt.

Nothing is safe here. Iowa State, almost always the underdog, is on a 12-7-1 run against the spread and beat double-digit-favorite Hawkeyes in 1998, 2005, 2007, and 2014.

Now things get even weirder, because the Cyclones are favored for once, by almost a touchdown. And weirder still, because for the first time in 68 meetings, both teams bear top-10 rankings. We’re in uncharted waters, but at least those waters are clean.

Also under SICKO consideration, in no order: Vanderbilt-Colorado State, Pitt-Tennessee, Kansas-Coastal Carolina, Purdue-UConn, Temple-Akron, Washington-Michigan, Buffalo-Nebraska, South Carolina-East Carolina, and Cal-TCU (based on nothing other than fond Cheez-It Bowl memories).

The actual most important game of the week

It might be Iowa-Iowa State! Probably not in terms of the College Football Playoff, but quite possibly at the New Year’s Six level. Both teams project to finish in the top 20 or so. Each year only offers a few such meetings in non-conference games, so a nice boost awaits not just the team that best survives being the Iowa Hawkeyes in Ames, but also for the winning team’s conference. Yes, there’s a remote chance that Oklahoma or Ohio State or whoever will take the playoff’s No. 4 seed because of something that happened in El Assico.

Oregon-Ohio State must also be mentioned, though it’s likely we already know the outcome there. If Oregon wins, please look up what likely means before screenshotting this at me.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL WATCH GRID, Week 1: The five-day forecast

It’s college football season. We can pretend we only wanna watch good games, or we can face facts.

Hello and welcome to 2021’s second edition of the College Football Watch Grid, a weekly attempt to help plan your college football viewing schedule.

Each week, the Watch Grid will sort your Saturday into three watchability columns. As always, watchability is not strictly about game quality, team quality or quality of any kind. These things matter, though, I guess.

We’ve reached Week 1. Despite being named Week 1, it’s the season’s second week, because the first week only counts if you go and do something like lose to Illinois.

Most weeks, things also happen before Thursday, when the Watch Grid posts. Congrats to teams who win things on Tuesdays or Wednesdays. And I’m not listing every game. I’m listing all FBS games with broadcast information readily available as of publish, along with select lower-level games.

Thursday, Sept. 2 and Friday, Sept. 3 college football schedule

Let’s start it off with a hot one, which is also a battle to maybe become the undefeated team ranked No. 13 by the College Football Playoff committee. And yes, Kansas is a Maybe. The Jayhawks have a real chance to pull an upset.

Saturday, Sept. 4 college football schedule

We’re being generous with Maybe status this week, because it’s Week 1! Anyone (besides Vanderbilt) might be decent! Anyone (besides Alabama) might be bad! That’s why Bama’s only a Maybe, actually. I think Miami can stay within 20 of the Tide, but how many times have we thought something like that about Miami and/or Bama before?

Sunday, Sept. 5 and Labor Day 2021 college football schedule

Week 1 is just relentless. Right when you think you’re done, college football’s on the NFL Network. It’s actually aired more amateur football that you might realize, including some high school stuff, a few editions of the Texas Bowl, and the New York Jets.

SICKOS GAME OF THE WEEK

Thanks to answering the call from Week 0’s Watch Grid, the Nebraska Cornhuskers are an automatic SICKOS GAME OF THE WEEK contender until they make it through one Scott Frost Day intact. Against middling FCS team Fordham, the Huskers should win pretty comfortably, but few words are less applicable to Nebraska football than comfortable, let alone pretty.

The actual most important game of the week

Obviously, it’s Clemson-Georgia. Sure. Fine. The winner will likely deserve to rank No. 1 for the time being and will buy itself a huge mulligan (golf term, for UGA fans) with the playoff committee. Great.

Except the loser will remain in basically the same long-term playoff position. If Georgia wins the SEC, Georgia makes it. And if Clemson sweeps the ACC … hang on. I just said, “If Clemson sweeps the ACC.” Sorry. Let’s move on.

The best case for this game might be how much pressure the winning team will immediately begin feeling. Let this sentence simmer, and then scroll all the way back up and look in Uga’s eyes. Ok. Yes. This game is really important.

In a roundabout way, maybe it’s also Bama-Miami. If the Tide have to really work for it, if Thanos spills a drop of blood at any point, then the whole season will look a little more wide-open. But if they win by 45, we’ll know we can sim through even bigger chunks of their schedule than usual.

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL WATCH GRID, Week 0: Surrender to SICKO Mindset

It’s college football season. We can pretend we only wanna watch good games, or we can face facts.

Hello and welcome to 2021’s first edition of the College Football Watch Grid, a weekly attempt to categorize your college football schedule by watchability. I’ve done my best with it each week since the mid-2010s or whatever, and this year, it’s here at For The Win.

As always, watchability is not strictly about game quality, team quality or the honest prestige of your alma mater, which I think boasts the most underrated academics, athletic department, fanbase, traditions, ethics, party scene and campus greenery in all of college sports. These things matter, but we’ll discuss what else watchability is about.

Each week, the Watch Grid will sort your Saturday into three columns. We’ll begin with Week 0, the opening-act trial run that we trot out to make sure everyone can remember how to find CBSSN in their channel guides, and to make sure people have excuses to stop going outside, except for the football players, who have to go outside, in my opinion.

Let’s get right to it.

Each week, we’ll break down a couple special categories. The first one takes longer to explain.

SICKOS GAME OF THE WEEK

There are three levels of college football fan.

  1. Person who only cares about one team, only watches one team and reroutes every CFB convo back to one team. This can be an enjoyable and relatively healthy way to consume the sport, as long as this person accepts most people don’t care about this one team, which usually goes 7-5.
  2. Person who samples the varied bounties of this coast-to-coast patchwork, straining to watch only the most evenly matched, mistake-free competition between competent teams, enduring statesmanlike Big Ten West chess matches with scores like 13-10, but always ending up drawn toward an 11-interception catastrophe probably involving Ole Miss, West Virginia or some damn foolish thing in the Pac-12. Each week, this person joins the stampede of viewers toward the bad game, beholds things never before imagined, needs a moment to recover from such awful wonders, atones for indulging such guilty pleasures, swears off future lapses in judgment and then lies all week about looking forward to a game that will be coached by Jimbo Fisher.
  3. Person who admits right up front that we love college football for one reason: We enjoy bad things. So we might as well plan our Saturdays around the South Carolinas of the world, rather than fall into the weekly trap of trying to appreciate Georgia leading whoever by exactly 16 points for four hours.

So yes, we want our college football schedules to spotlight not just the great games, but also the horrible games. Evaluating a game’s SICKOness is a complex process, however.

Will the game be poorly played? This is the quickest path to SICKO consideration, though it’s not a requirement.

Are both teams reliable chaos generators? If so, fun is guaranteed, but SICKO fun?

How’s the weather forecast? Sunny, 72-degree weather is pleasant, and pleasant is not SICKO. The people prefer mudstorm, but cannot demand it, unless they do sacrifices.

Are one team’s fans already enraged? Now we’re really talking. Quintuple SICKO points if the team drawing all the anger is a once-proud power. If fans of both important teams have lost all emotional control even before kickoff, we’ve got a SICKO GAME OF THE YEAR contender.

The biggest SICKO factor for me is this: What is the maximum possible rage this game is somewhat likely to generate? Because everyone likes it when other people feel bad about something that doesn’t matter.

Let’s use Week 0 of 2021 as our example. The SICKO novice might sprint toward the games involving UConn or New Mexico State.

After all, UConn will likely get blown out on the far side of the world by a Fresno State that was, until a few years ago, the Huskies’ alleged conference inferior. Now, that’s fairly SICKO, but UConn fans have long accepted this as standard UConn behavior.

And UTEP, possibly the FBS’ worst team, faces New Mexico State, possibly the FBS’ worst team. That sounds bad, but come on. Does it feel good to revel in the hardships of NCAA Football 14 starter dynasties? Do we really want to mock cash-strapped, recruiting-deprived universities as they try their best? What did NMSU ever do to you? Does the idea of UTEP having a bad day really give you the following vibes?

No. We’d rather not think about these things at all, because they make us sad.

The Watch Grid’s inaugural SICKOS Game of the Week thus calls upon an old friend: the Nebraska Cornhuskers, who make every looming Saturday feel like the end of the world, like Runza Ragnarok. In this regard, they rank among fancrusher-plus powerhouses like Texas, Tennessee, Michigan, Georgia, Auburn, and whoever is playing Pitt.

Embracing SICKO mindset is about letting the past flow into the future, like if Dr. Strange focused on determining which fumbles would hurt the most feelings.

The Huskers, the greatest college football program of the America Online era, hired Scott Frost in 2018. A can’t-miss sure thing and local legend, Frost has since presided over a 12-20 record and a new NCAA investigation, the kind of thing that’s much cuter when you aren’t 12-20.

Now take that past and spin it into this scenario: Nebraska loses to lowly Illinois for the second time in a row. And not just Illinois. An Illinois coached by Bret Bielema, a snickering loudmouth of Iowa and Wisconsin stock, two more programs long ago regarded as inferior to Nebraska. Imagine bringing home your program’s championship-winning golden son, then watching him lose to this barbarian:

Do you see? Now do you see? And Nebraska still has to play Oklahoma, Michigan, and Ohio State, plus all these Big Ten West teams who were not as good as Nebraska during the No Limit Records administration. This means the future of Nebraska’s schedule also informs the SICKOness of its present.

Are we picking on Nebraska? Is this unfair treatment? No! This will happen to somebody else in next week’s Watch Grid. Maybe Penn State, LSU, UCLA, Virginia Tech, or even Nebraska.

But what if Nebraska wins by 42? Then what? SICKOism was a lie all along? No. In that case, we sought the spirit, but found only the wind, then had to turn elsewhere. Something else surely went wrong in a different game, and this will be the key: We were prepared to abandon the boring Nebraska game and pounce on the debacle, because we spent all week seeking to attune with SICKO energies.

The actual most important game of the week

In this portion each week, I’ll write some notes about the playoff race and stuff. Some people don’t like the playoff being a year-long topic, and that’s fine! Other people say they don’t like it, but click without ceasing on articles about it, leading one to wonder.

I’ll just admit I love the playoff race. I like parsing the rankings, which are bad, made by a committee inventing its own criteria on the fly. I like projecting bowl matchups, which are rigged according to antiquated systems. The whole playoff system is unfair, we should scrap the playoff for a plus-one championship after bowl season and I love the playoff race.

This Week 0 is likely irrelevant to the playoff race, unless we wanna talk FCS playoffs, and even then, might not matter in any way. The only Week 0 teams with even a theoretical chance of making the four-team FBS playoff are Illinois, Nebraska, and UCLA, for no other reason than they each joined the right kinds of conferences like 100 years ago.

For that reason, I think the most important game of Week 0 is also the SICKOS game. Things involving Nebraska’s rises and falls are important. The reason is that many people care about whether Nebraska rises or falls. Whether Nebraska launches a stunning 10-2 bounceback or a 2-10 meltdown or anything in between, it will be important to many people.

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