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College Football Week 3 Gut Checks: Who’s Built for the CFP?

Hunter Tierney 's profile
Original Story by Wave News
September 12, 2025
College Football Week 3 Gut Checks: Who’s Built for the CFP?

The first two weeks of college football are like the preseason with better lighting. You get the fun gadgets, you get a few viral plays, and you absolutely get overreactions — good and bad. But Week 3? This is where teams stop hiding things. It’s when real road tests show up, coordinators finally put more on the call sheet, and we start to separate who’s just loud versus who’s actually good.

Clemson has to walk into an unforgiving Bobby Dodd Stadium with its offense still trying to find fifth gear. Georgia’s new-look attack goes to Neyland for its first grown‑man test against a Tennessee team that’s piling up points and wearing out the play clock. South Florida — yes, that South Florida — gets a third straight high‑stress spot at Miami. And so much more.

No. 6 Georgia (2–0) at No. 15 Tennessee (2–0)

Georgia’s defense looks like Georgia’s defense. The question is the other side of the ball. You can coast against most overmatched September opponents; you can’t hide in Neyland with the volume cranked to eleven and a tempo offense on the other sideline ready to run 90 plays. Tennessee doesn’t need to be perfect; it needs to keep Georgia in conflict and force the Dawgs to finish drives with something other than screens and YAC.

What We’ve Actually Seen Through Two

  • Georgia offense: Gunner Stockton has taken care of the ball and the quick game is functional. The nitpick — and it matters here — is the explosive pass element. The deep shots haven’t connected consistently, and a banged‑up offensive line has forced some conservative calls. Georgia’s receivers are talented enough to win outside; the timing hasn't been at that level yet.

  • Georgia defense: Vintage stuff. Layers of speed, long corners who squeeze space, and a front that wins with movement and power. The personnel is good enough to play nickel as a base call and still hold up to run fits.

  • Tennessee offense: The ball is out quickly, the verticals are on schedule, and the run game is a deep committee. Transfer QB Joey Aguilar looks calm handling protections and has been willing to drive the ball between the numbers when safeties overplay the sideline fades.

  • Tennessee defense: Faster than last year and better about setting the edge against the run. The vulnerability is still that intermediate range when the pass rush doesn’t get home.

The Chessboard

Communication vs. Tempo: Georgia has all the raw athletes to survive a track meet, but that doesn’t mean much if they aren’t lined up right. Tennessee’s pace is like a drummer who never slows down — if you’re still looking at the sideline for the call, the Vols have already snapped it. Steal five cheap plays because the defense isn’t set, and that’s basically giving away points. Georgia has to be sharp every snap, not just most of them.

Georgia’s Downfield Answers: The Dawgs can nickel-and-dime you with quick throws, but at some point they’ve got to land a couple haymakers. Hit a deep over or a slot fade for 30 yards and you’ll feel the noise in Neyland get sucked right out of the place. Miss those, and suddenly you’re settling for field goals while Tennessee keeps hanging around. That’s when it gets dicey.

Short Fields: This is where Tennessee really makes its money. Hand them a short field off a turnover or a big return and they’ll cash it in more often than not. Georgia usually doesn’t give you freebies like that, but if the Vols get a couple short fields, it completely changes the math.

The Call

Prediction: Georgia 30, Tennessee 20.
I like Georgia’s defense to cap the Volunteers’ explosives better than anyone has so far this season. Tennessee will land a couple haymakers — they always do at home — but Georgia’s run game plus a few timely intermediate throws feel like the difference.

Leans: Georgia -3.5. I'd even be willing to look for an alternate line at -6.5. Even with the slow start, this feels like the type of game that Kirby is able to get his Dawgs up for. 

No. 12 Clemson (2–0) at Georgia Tech (2–0)

Clemson quarterback Cade Klubnik (2) fakes a handoff to wide receiver Adam Randall (8) before passing to wide receiver Bryant Wesco Jr. (12) for the go-ahead scoring drive, during the third quarter at Memorial Stadium in Clemson, S.C. Saturday, September 6, 2025.
Credit: Ken Ruinard / USA Today Network South Carolina / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Perception says Clemson. Recent play says Georgia Tech won’t back down from anybody. The Tigers have won the last nine in the series, but that didn’t do them any good last week when they struggled to put away Troy. Meanwhile, Georgia Tech just stacked a gutsy road win with a blowout, and the energy around Brent Key’s program feels different — not gimmicky different, sustainably different. If the Jackets are for real, they don’t just cover here; they make Clemson play from behind a few times and see what happens.

What We’ve Actually Seen Through Two

  • Clemson offense: The design is fine — plenty of quick-game, RPO window dressing, and move-the-spot throws — but the efficiency and consistent execution isn’t there yet. Third‑down numbers have hovered in the low‑30s percentage-wise, which tells you they’re living in too many bad situations. The explosive pass game has shown flashes, not rhythm.

  • Clemson defense: Still fast up front with the usual gap integrity and violence inside. The issue has been mobile quarterbacks putting stress on them.

  • Georgia Tech offense: Multiple and explosive. Even with the quarterback room a little banged up, the Jackets have hit big runs from designed quarterback keepers and backs getting downhill off zone-read looks, then complemented it with real shot plays. It’s not smoke and mirrors — they’re creating horizontal stress, then taking verticals when safeties creep up.

  • Georgia Tech defense: Better in space than last year and flying to the ball, but penalties and a few loose tackling sequences have kept drives alive. The overall path is positive; the volatility still shows up.

The Chessboard

QB Run vs. Eyes: Georgia Tech’s read-option isn’t fancy, but it’s the kind of thing that makes linebackers lose sleep. Clemson’s backers and nickel can’t just freeload downhill — they have to stay disciplined. Play it perfect and Tech is only churning out a handful of yards. Overcommit, though, and suddenly the quarterback is pulling it, rolling out, and hitting you with a keeper or a bootleg that flips the field.

Clemson’s Early-Down Script: The Tigers cannot afford to spend the whole night in 3rd-and-7. That’s a death sentence in a hostile road environment. They’ve got to steal those easy yards on first down — quick hitches, little slants, swing passes that turn into five or six yards. Do that, and the deeper shots open up. Fail to do it, and Bobby Dodd is going to be rocking.

Special Teams and Hidden Yards: Georgia Tech plays aggressive here, not just in returning kicks but in going after punts and setting field position traps. Flip the field once and it’s the difference between punting out of your own end zone or starting at midfield. In what looks like a one-score type of game, that one hidden possession could be the decider.

The Call

Prediction: Clemson 27, Georgia Tech 24.
It’s not pretty. Clemson’s defense does just enough late, and the Tigers finally connect on a couple of intermediate throws to get out of Atlanta with a survive‑and‑advance win. But Georgia Tech’s offense is absolutely live here, especially if Haynes King is anywhere close to full go.

Leans: Georgia Tech +3.5, which becomes even more enticing with recent reports that King is likely to play in this one.

No. 18 South Florida (2–0) at No. 5 Miami (2–0)

Sep 6, 2025; Gainesville, Florida, USA; South Florida Bulls quarterback Byrum Brown (17) gestures towards fans after a game against the Florida Gators at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium.
Credit: Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images

USF is the early Group‑of‑5 darling after two statement wins. Now they have to hold up physically against a top‑5 roster that can rotate two lines on defense and has real juice at receiver. For Miami, it’s a focus check. Handle business and stack a quality nonconference win to the resume.

What We’ve Actually Seen Through Two

  • USF offense: Byrum Brown is the spark plug that makes this whole offense go. When USF’s pounding the rock and forcing safeties to creep down, that’s when the deep shots come alive. He’s not perfect — the ball can get a little loose now and then — but the identity is crystal clear: crank up the tempo, lean on inside zone and power runs, sprinkle in some QB keepers, and then hit you over the top before you can catch your breath.

  • USF defense: They’re mixing up looks up front and, honestly, tackling way better than last season. In the red zone they’ve been stubborn, making teams really earn it, and they’re not shy about loading the box to dare you to throw. It’s a tougher, scrappier group than folks probably expected coming in.

  • Miami offense: Miami’s offense looks a lot smoother than it did last year. They’re balanced, the pre‑snap stuff isn’t a circus anymore, and the receivers are actually getting open when they’re supposed to. Carson Beck has been incredibly steady and accurate — and that’s been more than enough to punish corners who give too much cushion.

  • Miami defense: Miami’s depth really shines as the game wears on. The defensive ends have a knack for closing things out in crunch time, the interior linemen keep collapsing the pocket, and the corners are confident enough to play on an island so the defense can crowd the box. It’s the kind of setup that lets them push opponents until they finally crack.

The Chessboard

Rush‑Lane Integrity: Miami can’t afford to let the USF quarterback start freelancing outside the pocket. If they keep the cup solid and make him throw into tight windows, the Bulls have to grind it out. But lose contain just once and that second‑and‑eight turns into an easy first down, and suddenly USF has life. It’s not about being flashy, it’s about being disciplined snap after snap.

Perimeter Tackling: This is the old “don’t let five‑yard passes turn into 20‑yard gains” rule. USF loves to test corners and nickels with bubbles, swings, and quick outs. If Miami rallies and tackles, those plays go nowhere. Miss a couple in space, though, and you’re watching the chains move while wondering how a harmless little throw turned into a highlight.

Fatigue Factor: This is USF’s third straight emotional, all‑in game, and that wears on a roster that doesn’t rotate two‑deep like Miami does. If they hang tight early, the real question is whether they’ve got the gas tank for the second half. That’s usually where the talent and depth gap shows up, when Miami still looks fresh and USF is running on fumes.

The Call

Prediction: Miami 37, USF 17.
I expect a competitive first half and then Miami’s lines to squeeze the game. USF’s legit; this spot is just brutal.

No. 16 Texas A&M (2–0) at No. 8 Notre Dame (0–1)

Aug 31, 2025; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Notre Dame Fighting Irish quarterback CJ Carr (13) drops back to pass against the Miami Hurricanes during the first quarter at Hard Rock Stadium.
Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Styles make fights, and this one has the feel of two totally different worlds colliding. Texas A&M finally looks like it’s leaning into what it should’ve been all along — stretching you side to side with speed, then hitting you with a dagger downfield. Notre Dame, on the other hand, is old-school in the best way. They want to drag you into a phone booth, mash you with gap schemes, sprinkle in play‑action off duo, and let the home crowd roar when it’s third down and short. Both fan bases are treating this as a measuring stick game, almost like a referendum on where their program really stands.

What We’ve Actually Seen Through Two

  • Texas A&M offense: Collin Klein’s fingerprints are all over it. Defined QB runs in the red zone. Motions to sort coverage. Perimeter playmakers who turn throws behind the line into eight‑yard gains. Marcel Reed looks like a different quarterback — confident, decisive, and dangerous when plays break down.

  • Texas A&M defense: Up‑and‑down against the run in Week 1, a lot better in Week 2. The front is athletic, and the edges can close, but the test here is pad level and tackling against a top‑shelf line.

  • Notre Dame offense: Freshman QB CJ Carr handled the moment in the opener but took some heat in two‑minute. The Irish still want to be balanced, but the tight end room and backs are good enough to carry a heavier load until Carr hits more deep shots.

  • Notre Dame defense: Fast at linebacker, savvy at safety, and coached to win situational downs. The vulnerability is when perimeter speed forces them to tackle in space for four quarters.

The Chessboard

A&M Space Game vs. Notre Dame Tackling: Texas A&M is basically trying to turn the whole field sideways. Screens, swings, RPO slants — anything to make Notre Dame’s defenders chase in space. If the Irish rally, tackle, and turn those plays into harmless two‑yard gains, no problem. But miss a couple open‑field tackles and suddenly it’s a footrace down the sideline.

Notre Dame Run Efficiency: The Irish live for second‑and‑five. That’s their comfort zone — keep CJ Carr relaxed, keep the playbook wide open, and let the offensive line move people against their will. If A&M forces them into second‑and‑long, though, that flips the script and puts the pressure squarely on Notre Dame’s receivers to win one‑on‑ones. That’s not where the Irish want to live all night.

Special Teams Swing: Here’s the hidden part of the matchup. A&M already found points on special teams this season, and you really don’t want to be chasing a non‑offensive touchdown on the road in South Bend. Flip the field once on a return or block and it changes the whole math of a close game.

The Call

Prediction: Notre Dame 27, Texas A&M 20.
It’s tight and physical. Notre Dame’s run game controls just enough of the script, and the pass rush finds a couple timely sacks late. A&M has a fighting chance if Reed’s legs tilt the red zone, but the Irish at home is the lean.

Florida (1–1) at No. 3 LSU (2–0)

Tigers Quarterback Garrett Nussmeier 18 hands off to Caden Durham 29, LSU Tigers take on the Louisiana Tech. Sept 6, 2025; Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA; at Tiger Stadium.
Credit: SCOTT CLAUSE / USATODAY Network / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Florida’s penalty total last week wasn’t just costly; it felt like the team’s whole identity unraveled. You can’t gift your opponent a football field’s worth of free yardage and expect to come out on top, especially not in a place as unforgiving as Baton Rouge. On the flip side, LSU didn’t exactly look crisp either. Losing their starting center early threw the whole offense off rhythm, and you could see it in how clunky the run game looked. This weekend feels like a reset button for both teams — Florida has to prove it can play disciplined football, and LSU needs to steady the ground game before the SEC gauntlet really cranks up.

What We’ve Actually Seen Through Two

  • Florida offense: DJ Lagway has all the arm talent you could want, and Florida’s got some real weapons on the outside, but the big plays just haven’t come in bunches yet. When things are clicking, the Gators lean on the ground game to set the tone and then let Lagway fire those in‑breaking routes right behind it — smooth, simple, effective. When things fall apart, though, it’s usually the little stuff: pre‑snap miscues, sloppy penalties, drives that stall before they ever get going. It’s been a mix of promise and frustration.

  • Florida defense: The Gators’ defense looks quicker at the second level than it did a year ago, and they’re more than capable of forcing LSU to grind out long drives instead of hitting home runs. The issue is, they can’t seem to stay on the field without shooting themselves in the foot. A couple of dumb flags here and there, and suddenly that patient, bend‑but‑don’t‑break approach turns into extra chances for LSU’s offense.

  • LSU offense: Garrett Nussmeier can flat-out sling it, no doubt about that. The bigger question is what this LSU offense looks like when the middle of the line isn’t healthy. With the starting center in the mix, the Tigers can run their full playbook — balance the run and pass, keep defenses guessing, and look like the contender they want to be. Without him, though, things get clunky fast. The run game bogs down and the play-calling leans too heavily on Nussmeier’s arm.

  • LSU defense: LSU’s secondary looks organized this year, and they’re confident enough to play man coverage without blinking. When they get you into third‑and‑long in Death Valley, it feels almost unfair — the crowd is deafening, the corners are in your receivers’ grills, and the pass rush is licking its chops. That’s a tough recipe for any offense to cook against.

The Chessboard

Florida’s Discipline: Florida’s biggest opponent at times isn’t the other team, it’s themselves. You just can’t keep handing LSU free first downs with boneheaded penalties and expect to survive in Baton Rouge. If they can tighten it up and keep the flags under, say, half a dozen, they give themselves a real chance to hang around.

Explosive Scarcity: Florida doesn’t need a highlight reel every drive, but they do need to land a couple of true chunk plays — something that flips the field or stuns the crowd. We’re talking legit deep shots, not a short throw that turns into yards after catch. Without those, LSU’s nickel and dime looks are going to slowly choke out the Gators’ offense and force them into long, ugly drives.

The call

Prediction: LSU 30, Florida 17.
The Tigers aren’t perfect, but the venue plus a much more composed offense should be enough. Florida has a narrow path: play clean, steal a turnover, and land a few of explosive plays. Otherwise, LSU grinds.

Best Bets of the Weekend

Coach Dan Lanning celebrates amid a crowd of fans on the field as No. 3 Oregon knocked off No. 2 Ohio State 32-31 on Saturday at Autzen Stadium in Eugene, Ore.
Credit: Credit: Ben Lonergan/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

1) Arkansas at Ole Miss UNDER 61.5

Pace doesn’t always mean points on the board. Both of these teams can absolutely fly, but when they’ve lined up against equal talent the efficiency hasn’t always matched the speed. Oddsmakers clearly set this number expecting a shootout, but the real swing might come in the “middle eight” — the last four minutes before halftime and the first four after the break. That’s where momentum usually flips.

2) Oregon -27.5 vs Northwestern

This is a straight-up trench mismatch. Oregon’s run game has been steady as a drumbeat, and the Ducks can score in just about every way imaginable without needing their quarterback to play hero ball. Northwestern’s front has had a tough time setting edges and handling even basic inside zone, and if you let Oregon get into its up-tempo rhythm, it can snowball fast. That’s when it goes from a manageable game to an avalanche in a hurry.

3) New Mexico +15.5 at UCLA

This is purely a numbers play against a defense that’s been too generous on third down and too soft versus the run. If the Lobos stay within one score through the third quarter, their ground game keeps it inside 16 points.

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