5 games to watch during the Oklahoma Sooners bye week

The Oklahoma Sooners are on a bye this week, but there are several big time matchups in week 7. Here are five to watch.

It’s a bye week for the 6-0 Oklahoma Sooners. The first-place, undefeated, and Red River Rivalry winner Oklahoma Sooners get a Saturday to rest.

They bye week falling smack-dab in the middle of the season and coming right after your biggest game of the season is pretty perfect. The Sooners get an opportunity to rest and recuperate for the second half of the season. It’s time to get guys healthy in order to get back to the Big 12 title game and possibly more.

While the Sooners are off, there are some big-time college football matchups to take in as neutral observers and one game in which Sooners fans will be incredibly interested in.

Here are five games to watch this week during Oklahoma’s bye week.

Men’s college golf notebook: Another member of the 60 club, freshmen make their mark

Here’s what you missed in the men’s college golf world.

Ryan Eshleman came close to making college golf history in the desert.

The junior at Auburn stepped to the 18th tee at Mirabel Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona, at 10 under for the day. 11 birdies, one bogey and five pars in Eshleman’s first 17 holes. A birdie on the 18th would mean becoming the first college golfer to shoot 59.

He made it on the green with an opportunity for birdie. Eshleman hit the putt, and it tracked toward the hole yet died right before reaching it, leading to a tap-in par.

He signed for a 10-under 60, setting the new mark for lowest round in Auburn history. He became the 16th men’s golfer to card a 60 in college golf all time.

Eshleman ended up finishing T-8, as Auburn captured the Maui Jim Intercollegiate, finishing at 45 under. That mark set a new school record for lowest three-round score in school history, and the 22-under mark after the first round set a single-round record. In addition, the Tigers also set new program marks for lowest 18- and 36-hole scores. Arizona State came in second place at 40 under, which was its lowest three-round score in program history.

Tennessee freshman Caleb Surratt won the individual competition, shooting an 18-under 192. He beat Florida State’s Cole Anderson by three shots. The Volunteers also set a new 54-hole program scoring record.

2022 Maui Jim Intercollegiate
Tennessee’s Caleb Surratt holds the trophy after winning the Maui Jim Intercollegiate. (Photo: Tennessee Athletics)

Speaking of a 59 watch, there was more than one performance that nearly tried to reshape the college record books.

Lipscomb’s Jason Hong was 12 under after 15 holes at Streamsong Resort’s Blue Course, needing one birdie in his final three holes to shoot a 59 (par-72 layout). Hong parred the first then made eight straight birdies to close the front nine. He started the back nine with two consecutive pars before four straight birdies. He narrowly missed a birdie putt on the par-3 16th, but Hong made bogey on the 690-yard par-5 17th. A par at the last, and he signed for an 11-under 61.

The round set a new Streamsong Blue course record and a Lipscomb 18-hole record.

Hong finished in third place at 15-under 201, five shots behind Virginia freshman Ben James, who had 18 birdies, an eagle and no bogeys en route to his victory. Virginia also won the Streamsong Invitational, shooting 56 under to set a new program mark for a 54-hole low score. The Cavaliers topped Lipscomb by seven shots to win.

Meanwhile, Georgia Southern is continuing to show why it’s the best men’s mid-major in college golf. The Eagles won the Gopher Invitational in Independence, Minnesota, by five shots over Kansas and Kent State. Georgia Southern shot 20-under 832, including a 9-under final round to pull away for victory. Wilson Andress came away with the individual victory for Georgia Southern at 11-under 202, beating Coastal Carolina’s Garrett Cooper by two shots. U.S. Amateur runner-up Ben Carr finished T-10 at 5 under for the Eagles.

There was a crazy finish at the VCU Shootout, where the hosts and Charleston Southern went four playoff holes before determining the winner. VCU and Charleston Southern each finished at 36-under 828 for the tournament, but it was the latter coming away with the late win. George Washington University finished a shot out of the playoff.

Cameron Jourdan covers college and amateur golf for Golfweek. Got a college or amateur story? Email him at cjourdan@golfweek.com.

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College golf notebook: Vanderbilt, Oklahoma duel at Frederica Cup, Oakland women win in coach’s debut

It has been a busy first week of college golf.

If the first week of college golf is any indication, we’re in for a doozy of a season.

Rose Zhang and Stanford dominated in the Carmel Cup at Pebble Beach. Teammates at Holy Cross recorded albatrosses on the same hole in the same group. In an inaugural event, the Frederica Cup, multiple team scoring records were set and even an NCAA record was broken.

Nevertheless, college teams are back in action across the country for the fall season with plenty of big tournaments slated for the remainder of the calendar year, as well.

Golfweek takes a loop around the country to update you on all the latest news in the college game.

Men

Haskins Award: Preseason watch list for 2022-23 season

Vanderbilt had a season-opening win to remember.

In the Frederica Cup at Frederica Golf Club in St. Simons Island in Georgia, which counted the five best scores from six golfers (as opposed to the normal four-count-five scoring format), top-ranked Vanderbilt blistered the field to the tune of 69 under to record a victory at the inaugural event, winning by three shots against No. 9 Oklahoma. William Moll won the individual title at 19 under, beating teammate Cole Sherwood by one stroke.

There was a weather delay with three holes to play, and the teams were tied at 67 under. Then Vanderbilt pulled away once play began again.

Texas Tech’s Ludvig Aberg, the 2022 Ben Hogan Award winner, finished in third at 17 under, and Oklahoma freshman Jase Summy shot 15 under, along with teammate Drew Goodman and Mississippi State’s Ford Clegg.

Meanwhile, Wright State picked up right back where it left off last season. The Raiders won the Earl Yestingsmeier Invitational, the second straight season Wright State has won the event. Mikkel Mathiesen won the individual title after a playoff.

At the Fighting Irish Classic, Florida came away with the victory but mid major Georgia Southern finished only a stroke behind the Gators. Ben Carr, who finished runner-up at the 2022 U.S. Amateur, finished in solo fourth at 8 under. Teammate Mason Williams was a shot better at 9 under in third.

Colorado’s Dylan McDermott captured the title in a playoff, finishing at 10 under and tied with North Carolina’s David Ford.

Missouri won both the team and individual titles at the Tiger Turning Stone Intercollegiate. The Tigers defended their title from last year with the 11-stroke victory over runner-up, Stetson, and Jack Lundin finished at 13 under to win the individual crown.

Women

ANNIKA Award: Preseason watch list for 2022-23 season

Sarah Burnham got off to a great start in her head coaching career at Oakland.

In her first tournament as coach, Oakland captured the A-Ga-Ming Invitational in Kewadin, Michigan. Oakland won by three strokes over host Central Michigan. Freshman Bridget Boczar tied for first at 4 over but lost in a playoff to Eastern Michigan’s Alyssa DiMarcantonio. Paige Scott finished tied for third at 5 over for Oakland.

Western Kentucky freshman Sydney Hackett earned her first collegiate win in her first start for the Hilltoppers at the USA Intercollegiate at Magnolia Grove Crossing Golf Course in Mobile, Alabama. The freshman fired a school-record 10-under 206 for her 54-hole total, including a final-round 4-under 68, to claim the championship.

It is the first time a Lady Topper has taken home an individual championship since Megan Clarke won the Little Rock Golf Classic in Fall 2018.

Arkansas State won the event at 14 under par, beating South Alabama by five strokes.

On Monday, the ANNIKA Intercollegiate gets underway in Lake Elmo, Minnesota, right outside of St. Paul. The 54-hole event features some of the top women’s college golf teams in the country, including Wake Forest, Oregon and defending champion South Carolina.

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Final news, notes and predictions before kickoff on Saturday evening

Looks like the rain will stay away on Saturday night!!

Nebraska will play its second game of a four-game homestand on Saturday night when the Cornhuskers welcome the Georgia Southern Eagles to town. The Huskers will be entering with a record of 1-1 after a 38-17 win over North Dakota last weekend, while Georgia Southern is 1-0 on the young season after defeating Morgan State 59-7.

Here are some of the major headlines heading into Saturday evening kickoff.

Nebraska’s game against Georgia Southern will kick off at 6:30 pm on FS1.

What you need to know about the Georgia Southern Eagles

Don’t know much about Nebraska’s upcoming opponent Georgia Southern? Get the skinny right here:

Sep 18, 2021; Fayetteville, Arkansas, USA; Georgia Southern Eagles running back Gerald Green (4) signals first down after a run as offensive lineman Verneal Henshaw Jr. (94) celebrates the play against the Arkansas Razorbacks during the second quarter at Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Nelson Chenault-USA TODAY Sports

Nebraska welcomes an unfamiliar opponent to Memorial Stadium on Saturday evening in the Georgia Southern Eagles. The Cornhuskers come into the game at 1-1 after breaking their 7-game losing streak with a 38-17 win over FCS member North Dakota on Sept. 3. Georgia Southern will make a 1,201 mile trip to Memorial Stadium fresh off a 59-7 thumping of Morgan State in their first game of the season.

The Huskers and Eagles have never met on the football field before and the game is Nebraska’s 18th all time against opponents from the Sun Belt Conference. On the other end, Georgia Southern has played two Big Ten opponents in their short history in the FBS, losing on both occasions. The Eagles were an FCS member until 2014 and won the Sun Belt that same year. In their FCS tenure, Georgia Southern won six championships between 1985 and 2000.

Listed below is key facts, stats and players from Nebraska’s Week 2 opponent:

Nebraska Cornhuskers vs. Georgia Southern Eagles odds, tips and betting trends | Week 2

Get all the latest information before game day!

The Nebraska Cornhuskers play the Georgia Southern Eagles on Saturday, Sept. 10, and if you’re looking to do some last-minute betting research, you’re in luck! We’ll give you the latest point spread, money line odds and over/under number, as well as the information you’ll need to make the smartest bet at Tipico Sportsbook.

The game starts at 6:30 p.m. Central time and can be seen on Fox Sports 1.

The Cornhuskers and the Eagles are squaring off for the first time ever. Georgia Southern is a member of the Sun Belt Conference after making the jump from FCS to FBS in 2014. 

Last week, the Huskers were knotted up at 17 against North Dakota, an FCS member, before reeling off 21 straight points in the second half for a victory. Running back Anthony Grant helped solidify his status in the backfield with 23 carries for 189 yards and two touchdowns, earning Co-Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week honors for his efforts. Fellow tailback Ajay Allen tallied 60 yards and 11 carries and a score. The Huskers have played Sun Belt opponents 17 times and won 15 of those games. 

In their first game under new head coach Clay Helton, Georgia Southern won in convincing fashion over Morgan St., 59-7. The Eagles put up over 500 yards of offense. Last season, Georgia Southern went 3-9 and the program is 0-2 all-time against Big Ten foes. 

Georgia Southern Eagles Preview 2022: Season Prediction, Breakdown, Key Games, Players

Georgia Southern College Football Preview 2022: Team breakdown, season prediction, keys to the campaign, and what you need to know

Georgia Southern Eagles Preview 2022: Previewing, predicting, and looking ahead to the Georgia Southern season with what you need to know and keys to the season.


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Georgia Southern Eagles Preview
Head Coach: Clay Helton, 1st year at Georgia Southern,
6th year overall, 46-24. 2021 Preview
2021 Record: Overall: 3-9, Conference: 2-6
Keys To The Season | Season Prediction, What Will Happen
Georgia Southern Top 10 Players | Schedule

Georgia Southern Eagles Preview 2022

Clay Helton was hardly awful at USC.

A good guy who everyone liked – you don’t survive a 5-7 season at that place if you rub people the wrong way – he won a Pac-12 title, won a Rose Bowl, and it wasn’t nearly enough for a program that demands College Football Playoff consideration.

He knows how to get an offense going, and now he gets to tweak a Georgia Southern program that also rightly expects success – albeit on a different scale.

The Eagles came into 2021 with three straight winning seasons and bowl appearances, but the O couldn’t get going, the losses kept rolling, and in comes Helton to change all of that.

With eight starters back on offense, six back on D, and with what should be one of the Sun Belt’s better kicking games, things should bounce back fast.

Georgia Southern Eagles Preview 2022: Offense

The offense has been in a pivot from the triple option style for a while, but now the new coaching staff really will adjust a bit more with a spread style that incorporates even more of a balance. Whatever it’s going to be, it has to work a whole lot better than the version of last year that struggled to average 20 points and 340 yards per game.

The running game wasn’t good enough, the passing game wasn’t efficient, and now it all has to be better with eight starters back.

The hope is for Buffalo transfer Kyle Vantrease to add a steady veteran presence. The sixth-year quarterback can run, but he’s more of a passer who can do a little of everything. The Eagle quarterbacks combined to throw for five touchdown passes and 12 picks – Justin Tomlin is gone, but Cam Ransom isn’t a bad No. 2 option to work around.

The receivers are in place to help. The emphasis wasn’t on the passing game so the numbers weren’t amazing, but Khaleb Hood led the way with 35 catches and 442 yards, and there’s just enough speed around to hit more deep plays. Three of the five touchdown catches went to TE Beau Johnson, a 6-1, 225-pound junior who needs to be a featured target.

The running backs need more room to move. The Eagles have high-powered runners who should average over five yards per carry. Leading rusher Logan Wright is gone, but juniors Gerald Green and Jalen White combined for over 800 yards, nine touchdowns, and 5.6 yards per pop.

The offensive front that couldn’t generate a push and allowed way too many plays behind the line gets back just about everyone around all-star guard Khalil Crowder.

Georgia Southern Eagles Preview 2022: Defense

The defense tried to help the cause, but it wasn’t great against the run and finished 110th in the nation overall. It’s not as experienced as the offensive side, but six starters are back with just enough upside to be a whole lot stronger under the new coaching staff.

The line should be the early strength. Sixth year senior Justin Ellis returns after tying for the team lead with five sacks. Combined with veteran Dillon Springer, the Eagles have the ends.

Now they need the tackles to form a solid rotation with good interior pass rusher CJ Wright gone off the nose.Size and bulk will be an early issue, but 300-pound former North Carolina transfer Kristian Varner should help.

The linebacking corps went young last season, and now it should pay off. Eldrick Robinson is gone to Wake Forest, and Michael Edwards is off to East Carolina. There was next to nothing happening in the backfield from the outside linebackers – that’s about to change under the new staff – but the inside guys have to emerge.

The secondary has to be far, far better. It will be thanks to the return of star CB Derrick Canteen, one of the best defensive players in the Sun Belt who missed most of last year with a torn pectoral muscle.

Leading tackler Anthony Wilson is back at one safety spot after making 78 tackles, and versatile Justin Birdsong returns for a fifth year after finishing fourth on the team with 49 stops.

Keys To The Season | Season Prediction, What Will Happen
Georgia Southern Top 10 Players | Schedule

Georgia Southern Eagles: Keys To The Season, Top Game, Top Transfer, Fun Stats NEXT

Georgia Southern Eagles Top 10 Players: College Football Preview 2022

Who are the top 10 Georgia Southern players going into the 2022 college football season?

Georgia Southern Eagles Preview 2022: Who are the top 10 players going into the season?


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Georgia Southern Eagles Preview 
Offense, Defense Breakdown | Keys To The Season
Season Prediction, What Will HappenSchedule 

Two years ago, Ben Carr made magic at the Southeastern Amateur to spark an upward progression that hasn’t stopped

A magical round and a 10-shot victory at the 2019 Southeastern Amateur put Ben Carr on a steady upward trajectory.

On Southeastern Amateur week, Ben Carr’s Georgia Southern teammates flood his hometown of Columbus, Georgia. There are so many competing this week – six, counting him – that the Carrs can’t put them all up. But that’s part of what makes the week special for the 20-year-old team captain.

“I definitely star it on the calendar every year,” said Carr, who opened his sixth consecutive Southeastern with a 6-under 64 at Country Club of Columbus to land one off the lead.

Two years ago, Carr gave his people reason to linger. In the third round, he had posted 9-under 61 to set the scoring record at CC of Columbus. Even after holing out for an eagle on the second hole, Carr wasn’t thinking 61 until he reached 7 under on the 14th hole. He birdied No. 18 to beat his low competitive round by three shots.

Scores: Southeastern Amateur

With his brother Sackett, three years younger, on the bag, Carr took an eight-shot lead into the final round. He closed with 68 and ended up winning by 10 shots. It was a colossal breakthrough after a freshman season in which Carr had been the No. 2 scorer on a Georgia Southern team that reached the NCAA Championship for the first time since 2010. Golfstat named the Eagles’ freshman class the best in the country.

“Going into the rest of that summer, it just made me feel like I was a better player than I thought I was beforehand,” Carr said of his Southeastern title. “That’s huge in golf. I think you can ride confidence for months. I think I was able to do that that summer.”

Carr finished in the top 5 in his next three tournaments and qualified for the 2019 U.S. Amateur at Pinehurst. He has won two college events since, and ties those back to the Southeastern, too.

Every one of Carr’s teammates who teed it up in Columbus that week stuck around not for the golf, but for their guy. Carr’s father David, then 52, had passed away three months before the Southeastern Amateur. The win at home was going to be emotional. Carr remembers giving interviews after his 61 and not being able to finish them.

“There were definitely a lot of tears shed after the third round and after the final round,” he said.

David Carr introduced his son to golf at the Country Club of Columbus. Ben has pictures of himself playing there when he was as young as 4 even though his earliest memories begin at 7.

As a kid, his dad drove him to golf tournaments and, before that, coached his baseball and basketball teams. The results didn’t matter so much to his dad as the way you treated people and the way you carried yourself. So while winning at home would certainly have made his dad proud, Carr knows there’s more to it than that.

“I know he was definitely happy that I won but I think he’s a lot more proud of the way I did it and the way I went about … just proud of the way I carry myself,” Carr said. “At least I hope he was just throughout that week since it was fresh on my mind.”

In the weeks after his dad passed, Carr closed ranks with his mom and brother. Georgia Southern head coach Carter Collins watched Ben become a rock for Sackett – calling him after each round of golf. Sackett will be a freshman at the University of Georgia this fall.

“I can’t tell you how good of an older brother he is,” Collins said.

But Ben hours spent working through his grief in Collins’s office, too. Support came from the whole team, particularly senior Steven Fisk, with whom Carr had become especially close.

“I don’t know if I would have handled it as well as I did if not for people like Coach and Steven just being there for me throughout the entire thing,” Carr said.

Carr still played through that spring’s postseason, finishing seventh at the Sun Belt Conference Championship and 33rd in the NCAA Stanford Regional.

Georgia Southern finished 26th as a team at the NCAA Championship, with Fisk finishing runner-up to Matthew Wolff individually. Carr got a front-row seat – this after spending many nights on the road during his freshman year listening to Fisk dissect a round. Carr loved to soak in anything Fisk had to say about golf.

“I can think of five or six specific times (Steven) told me was going to win before the week started and he won,” Carr marveled. “Just being around somebody that has that level of confidence, it kind of transferred over.”

In addition to rooming together, the two practiced together frequently. Collins called Fisk’s influence a trampoline in Carr’s progression as a player. Fisk was a First-Team All-American who won a total of nine times at Georgia Southern. In the 2018-19 college golf season, he brought Georgia Southern to the forefront but the Eagles never really left. Carr is a big reason for that. After winning the Southeastern Amateur, his game kept spiraling upward. He was a captain this past season as a junior and plans two more years on the roster.

“I just don’t want to leave,” he said.

As captain, Carr tries to build up his teammates as much as possible. He’ll try to rally them if the team has played through a particularly tough stretch of tournaments.

“You always hear the phrase pay it forward,” Collins said. “All the mentorship and the leadership he has received from guys before him, he has paid it five times back already. So I’m really excited about what he can do for us from a leadership standpoint.”

Collins sees similarities between Carr and Fisk in the way both are able to compartmentalize success – how they put a situation behind them quickly and ready for the next one.

With Carr’s Southeastern Amateur win, Collins saw the start of a steady progression. Carr proved his talent to himself and to his peers.

“Ben became a lot tougher from that situation, not that he wasn’t tough before,” Collins said. “That really inspired him to be so good to others.”

It’s the thing that mattered most to David Carr.

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Penn State’s all-time record against every member of the Sun Belt Conference

Penn State has never lost a football game to a team currently in the Sun Belt, but Appalachian State came close.

Of all of the FBS conferences in college football, Penn State has the least head-to-head contact with the Sun Belt Conference. The Nittany Lions have played a member of the Sun Belt Conference just three times in program history, and one of those meetings took place before one of those current Sun Belt members was even playing FBS football.

And although Penn State has won all three of their meetings against the Sun Belt Conference, the last one nearly shook the entire program to start the season.

Here is a look at how Penn State fares all-time against schools currently in the Sun Belt Conference.

All data referenced is credited to College Football Reference. Rankings referenced are AP Top 25 where available.

If you want more, check out Penn State’s all-time records against current members of the Big TenACCBig 12Pac-12, and SEC. We are also adding all-time records against non-power conferences. Here is Penn State’s all-time record against the American Athletic ConferenceMAC , and Mountain West Conference membership.

Note: Penn State has never faced Arkansas State, Georgia Southern, Louisiana, South Alabama, Texas State, Troy, or ULM.