Top 100 college football games of 2022: Arkansas in seven

Arkansas football has another loaded schedule in 2022. Seven of the team’s 12 games are in the Top 100.

September cannot come soon enough in the Natural State.

Arkansas is coming off its best season in a decade, complete with an Outback Bowl win over Penn State to cap a 9-4 season. The Razorbacks are likely to be ranked inside the Top 25, or at least receiving votes, when the preseason poll is announced.

In the meantime, we can all look ahead. Brandon Marcello at 247Sports ranked the Top 100 FBS games of the season last week and it is, unsurprisingly, replete with SEC matchups. Arkansas found seven of its games listed, including two nonconference matchups.

Take a look at those seven and whether or not you agree with their particular order below.

A quartet of LSU football games named among top 100 of 2021

Which LSU games land on ESPN’s top 100 of 2021?

Four of the LSU Tigers games from the 2021 campaign made the list for the top 100 games of the season (subscription required). Not all of them are on the winning side of things.

No. 61: Auburn 24, LSU 19

Scott Clause-The Daily Advertiser/USA TODAY Sports

LSU came into the game at 3-1 and looking to continue their winning ways against Auburn in Death Valley. However, they had other ideas as the Purple and Gold forgot how to sack Bo Nix. He was able to get his team off the losing end in Baton Rouge for the first time this century.

What ESPN Says…

The Bo Nix game. Auburn won in Baton Rouge for the first time since 1999, thanks in part to … whatever this was.

No. 59: Alabama 20, LSU 14

Butch Dill-USA TODAY Sports

LSU came into the Alabama game reeling. Losers of three of the last four games and needing to get two wins in their final four to become bowl eligible. The defense came after Bryce Young, Orgeron called for fake punts to the backup tight end. They laid it all out on the line but failed to pull off the upset with multiple chances late in this game.

What ESPN Says…

Coming off of a bye week and playing with nothing to lose, LSU threw things at Bryce Young that it hadn’t shown all year, and it worked. Alabama scored 20 points in a five-minute span midgame but was otherwise held scoreless, and LSU twice had the ball in Bama territory with a chance to take a late lead but couldn’t get the job done.

Next, an offensive outburst