Zach Braziller

Zach Braziller

College Football

The Post’s college football rankings, Heisman watch following Week 7

Here are The Post’s college football rankings following Week 7:

1. Texas (6-0) (Last week: 2)

The Red River Rivalry was a bloodbath, Texas torching Oklahoma, 34-3, in Dallas. The two rivals didn’t look like they belonged on the same field.

2. Oregon (6-0) (3)

This was the Oregon everyone expected to see from the season’s onset. It outplayed Ohio State in the early game of the year, was explosive offensively (496 yards) and made enough plays on defense despite the absence of star edge rusher Jordan Burch.

3. Ohio State (5-1) (1)

Will Howard made a mistake, taking off as time expired instead of getting rid of the ball to save precious seconds, at the end of Ohio State’s loss at Oregon. He was otherwise brilliant. In the long run, the Buckeyes know they have a quarterback who can lead them to a national championship.

Quinn Ewers and Texas jump to No. 1. Ricardo B. Brazziell/American-Statesman / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Will Howard and Ohio State fall to No. 3. Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images

4. Georgia (5-1) (4)

Georgia isn’t going into Austin and winning unless it performs much better than it did in Saturday’s shaky 10-point win over Mississippi State.

5. Penn State (6-0) (5)

Nov. 2 in Happy Valley against Ohio State is shaping up to be the biggest game of the James Franklin era. Penn State is 6-0 for the fourth time since Franklin arrived in 2014. Ohio State handed Penn State its first loss in two of those seasons.

6. Alabama (5-1) (6)

Kalen DeBoer should send South Carolina quarterback LaNorris Sellers a gift basket for his shoddy play late in that game. Alabama, a 21.5-point home favorite, deserved to lose. Sellers missed an open receiver on what would’ve been a game-tying two-point conversion and was even worse after the Gamecocks recovered an onside kick in the final minute.

Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer after the team’s win over South Carolina. USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

7. Tennessee (5-1) (7)

One of the week’s biggest games features two teams — Tennessee and Alabama — that haven’t looked right the last two weeks. Both could easily be 0-2 against subpar opponents.

8. Miami (6-0) (9)

Miami may be favored in every game the rest of the regular season, which says more about the ACC than the Hurricanes, who have struggled to get by California and Virginia Tech in recent weeks.

9. Clemson (5-1) (10)

You can look at Clemson’s five-game winning streak one of two ways. It has taken advantage of a soft schedule — the Tigers’ five opponents are a combined 10-21 — or it has hit its stride after that Week 1 blowout loss to Georgia. Maybe it’s a little bit of both.

10. LSU (5-1) (NR)

Much like Clemson, LSU has rebounded from a Week 1 loss to reel off five straight wins. The latest one was by far the most impressive, a come-from-behind victory over Ole Miss in overtime.

Dropped out: Ole Miss (5-2)

Heisman Watch (in alphabetical order)

QB Dillon Gabriel, Oregon

Hello, Heisman. Gabriel looks like a true contender after a thrilling win over Ohio State, throwing for 341 yards and amassing three total touchdowns without a turnover.

WR/CB Travis Hunter, Colorado

A right shoulder injury knocked out Hunter early in the Buffaloes’ loss to Kansas State. Missing time would significantly hurt his chances.

RB Ashton Jeanty, Boise State

Jeanty is the nation’s lone 1,000-yard rusher and has already scored 17 touchdowns on the ground in six games. It’s not crazy to think he could break Barry Sanders’ single-season record for rushing touchdowns of 37 at his current pace.

QB Jalen Milroe, Alabama

Milroe has followed up his all-world performance against Georgia with two duds, throwing more interceptions (three) than touchdown passes (two) the last two weeks.

QB Cam Ward, Miami

Miami is on pace for its best season in over two decades, and Ward is a major reason for the Hurricanes’ success.

  翻译: