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LGHL Hangout in the Holy Land Podcast: Zombie Buckeyes come to life, but questions and issues remain

Hangout in the Holy Land Podcast: Zombie Buckeyes come to life, but questions and issues remain
Josh Dooley
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


usa_today_21594805.0.jpg

Barbara J. Perenic/The Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK

Despite a win and a cover against previously undefeated Maryland, Josh and Chuck are both feeling a bit uneasy about Ohio State’s recent performance(s).

The latest episode of Land-Grant Holy Land’s flagship podcast is here! Join LGHL’s Josh Dooley and Chuck Holmes as they discuss Ohio State football, recruiting, and much, much more! Come for the hot takes, stay for the warm ones.

Listen to the episode and subscribe:


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On this episode of ‘Hangout in the Holy Land,’ Josh and Chuck try to keep it positive following their Buckeyes’ 37-17 victory over previously undefeated Maryland. But despite a win and a cover, Ohio State showed real regression on offense, as well as on the sideline. So how concerned should fans be moving forward?

While Jim Knowles’ defense continued to impress on Saturday, Ryan Day’s offense did anything but... for the better part of three quarters. Problems along the offensive line were only exacerbated by the absence of TreVeyon Henderson, but both Day and Kyle McCord have to be better if OSU has hopes of winning the Big Ten or a national championship.

That likely starts with better first halves. But the sky is not falling yet, as Ohio State does own a spotless 5-0 record. However, these hosts agree that Day’s squad must get better in a hurry with Penn State, Wisconsin, and of course TTUN on the schedule.

Please make sure to like, rate, review, and subscribe to the podcast! And as always, Go Bucks!



Connect with the pod
Twitter:
@HolyLandPod

Connect with Josh Dooley
Twitter:
@jdooleybuckeye

Connect with Chuck Holmes
Twitter:
@ctholmes3

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LGHL Ohio State offers Bryce James, son of LeBron

Ohio State offers Bryce James, son of LeBron
Gene Ross
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


F737S5pXEAAaDxF.0.jpeg

2025 SG Bryce James | via @@SLAM_HS on Twitter

The Buckeyes had a busy weekend on the field and on the recruiting trail.

Ohio State was back in the friendly confines of Columbus on Saturday afternoon, which meant another opportunity to host some key targets on the recruiting trail. While most of the attention is paid to the football team, and rightfully so, the 37-17 win for the Buckeyes over the Terrapins provided an avenue for Chris Holtmann to get some big names on campus as well.

One of those guys happened to be 2025 shooting guard Bryce James, who is of course the son of NBA superstar LeBron James and the younger brother of 2023 USC commit, Bronny James. Bryce took an unofficial visit to Ohio State, and was on the sidelines for the football team’s game against Maryland. Things must have gone well, as he left OSU with an offer from the Buckeyes — just his second in the early goings of his recruiting process.


Blessed to receive an offer from Ohio state #GoBuckeyes pic.twitter.com/C2JFXfCEoj

— Bryce James (@bryce_james23) October 7, 2023

At 6-foot-4, 180 pounds, Bryce played his freshman and sophomore seasons with his older brother at Sierra Canyon, but transferred to Sherman Oaks Notre Dame – one of the top high school athletic programs in the Southland. Not as highly-touted a prospect as Bronny, Bryce did look good on Nike’s EYBL Circuit with the Strive for Greatness program. He is currently ranked has the No. 20 SG and No. 129 player overall in the 2025 class, per the 247Sports Composite.

James wasn’t the only hooper in attendance on Saturday, as 2026 point guard Dezhon Hall also made the trip to Columbus for an unofficial visit. Hall does not yet have a ranking as a result of his class status, but the 6-foot-3 guard is expected to be one of the top prospects in a talent-rich state of Indiana. With his recruitment really starting to take off, Hall transferred this summer to Pike High School, where he will be coached by NBA veteran Jeff Teague.


Had a wonderful unoffical visit! #GoBuckeyes #notcommitted ⚪pic.twitter.com/2p45hy0Ti7

— DeZhon Hall (@HallDezhon) October 7, 2023

James also wasn’t the only son of a legend at Ohio State on Saturday, as 2025 running back Noah Sanders, son of NFL Hall of Famer Barry Sanders, visited the Buckeyes on the football side of things. Sanders has just one offer to his name thus far — from Toledo — but the 5-foot-11 Michigan native’s recruitment is very much just getting started. With Ryan Day’s group already having tremendous success with the son of an NFL Hall of Famer in Marvin Harrison Jr., not to say Sanders will be a prospect of quite that caliber, Tony Alford would certainly love to replicate something like that within his position group.


Had a great time at @OhioStateFB loved the experience, coaches and atmosphere. @AveryGach @RyanMayhew_ @CoachTonyAlford @TheD_Zone pic.twitter.com/YTXoQFNKmh

— Noah Sanders (@Noah__Sanders) October 7, 2023

One player that didn’t get to make the trip to see the Buckeyes on Saturday was 2025 cornerback Mark Zackery IV. Despite needing to stay home to get treatment for an ankle injury, the Indiana native had nothing but good things to say about Ohio State, naming them among six schools out of his nearly 30 offers that are currently ahead of the pack.

That’s one of my favorite schools,” Zackery said of Ohio State. “I’ve liked them since I was little... Coach (Tim) Walton I talk to him every week. He’s a key guy in my recruitment. We talk every week about how things are going there and how things are going for me. He feels like I’m a great fit for that kind of program playing under Coach [Ryan] Day showing toughness and I feel I showed that [Friday].”

Alongside the Buckeyes, Zackery mentioned Cincinnati, Michigan, Notre Dame, Purdue and Tennessee as schools that are currently catching his attention. The 6-foot DB has been to Columbus a handful of times, and received his official offer from Ohio State this past summer. Zackery ranks as the No. 16 CB, No. 117 overall prospect and the No. 1 player out of Indiana in the 2025 class, per the 247Sports Composite.

Quick Hits

  • A handful of other recruits posted on social media about their Ohio State game day visits this past weekend. Among those in attendance included 2026 defensive lineman Ben Nichols, 2025 offensive tackle Avery Gach, 2026 wide receiver Justen Hodge, and on the basketball side 2025 power forward Aleks Alston as well as 2025 center Dezmon Briscoe.

Had a great time in Columbus yesterday!! @CoachJFrye @CoachSollenne @Birm @DavCardFootball pic.twitter.com/dcrrtDL1p4

— Ben Nichols C/O 2026 (@BNichols2026) October 9, 2023

Thank you @OhioStateFB for a great visit. pic.twitter.com/jeIebr6ro1

— Avery Gach (@AveryGach) October 9, 2023

Had a great time at The Ohio state game today. Great atmosphere and great hospitality. Looking forward to visiting again. @ryandaytime @etwill21 pic.twitter.com/lmCCoZDAd8

— Justen Hodge (@JustenHodge) October 7, 2023

Buckeye Nation Waddup?? pic.twitter.com/TPpGRBLdd0

— AleksAlston/SerbianSniper (@alston_aleks) October 7, 2023

Go Buckeyes ⚪#not committed pic.twitter.com/XLA3gg3WV4

— Dezmon (@Dezmonbriscoe) October 7, 2023

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LGHL Stock Market Report: After a slow start, the defense makes game-changing plays

Stock Market Report: After a slow start, the defense makes game-changing plays
justingolba
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


usa_today_21594805.0.jpg

Barbara J. Perenic/The Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK

The offense needed a spark and the defense provided it.

Another week. Another Buckeye win. Another Stock Market Report.

Despite a pretty slow start and a not-so-great first quarter, the Buckeyes (5-0) defeated the Maryland Terrapins (5-1) 37-17 at home.

Let’s take a look at who helped and who hurt their stock in this one.


Blue Chip


Fall weather: The kickoff weather in Columbus was cloudy and 50 degrees. The air was crisp, and the hoodies were out in bunches. It felt like Oct. 7 in the Midwest, and I could not love it more.

We, as a society, say “football weather” for way too many different weather types. In reality, or at least in my humble opinion, the best football weather is cloudy (maybe sunny, but I need a couple of clouds), and 45-55 degrees. The weather that when you leave your house you don’t know if you need a jacket or a hoodie. That’s the good stuff. And it is here — at least for two weeks until it is snowing.


Solid Investments

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Barbara J. Perenic/The Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK

Josh Proctor: Proctor might have had his best game in an Ohio State uniform on Saturday. Proctor recorded seven tackles, 1.5 tackles for loss, an interception, and a touchdown. The pick-six came at a time when nothing was working for the Buckeyes. They needed a spark, and Proctor provided it in a huge way.

This was Proctor’s 46th game as a Buckeye. He looked experienced, hungry, and, most importantly, happy.

“I was just out there having fun, honestly,” Proctor told media after the game. “Wasn’t thinking too much, just playing ball.”

I am all here for the season of Josh Proctor.

Sonny Styles: At this point, I am just going to put his name and say nothing else. His play is doing all of the talking.


Junk Bonds


Third down efficiency: Hello, darkness, my old friend. After the Notre Dame game, the third-down issues looked like they might be getting better. However, against Maryland, they reared their ugly head again. The Buckeyes were 3-for-12 on third down and struggled to find any momentum when that magic down came along.

Against Maryland, that won’t come back to bite you. But against Penn State and Michigan, that number and percentage have to be better. The first way to fix it is to have more success on first down, so you put yourself in fewer third and long situations. We will see how this gets adjusted as the season evolves.


Buy/Sell


Buy: Caden Curry. Curry has made the most of his snaps thus far this season. He has been great in stopping the run and pressuring the quarterback. It will be interesting to see how much his playtime increases as the games intensify later in the season.

Buy: Winning. Have the Buckeyes been perfect this season? No. Are the Buckeyes still 5-0? Yep. At the end of the day, it really doesn’t matter how you get there as long as you win the games, and Ohio State has done that thus far.

With the win on Saturday, Ryan Day achieved his 50th career win as the head coach at Ohio State. It took him 56 games to achieve this to put his record at 50-6. This was the second-fastest FBS coach to ever get to 50, with Chris Peterson getting to 50 wins in 54 games.

Winning is fun, and I know people have Ryan Day complaints, but 5-0 is 5-0.

Sell: Injuries. I get it. Injuries are part of the game. Blah, blah, blah. They still suck.

TreVeyon Henderson was starting to really hit his second gear this season. Marvin Harrison Jr. hurt his ankle on a weird tackle, and the same situation happened with Emeka Egbuka. All three of these players should be fine moving forward, and it’s very likely they all play next week, but I still hate injuries. I would like to turn them off.

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LGHL Ohio State opens as 20.5-point favorites over Purdue

Ohio State opens as 20.5-point favorites over Purdue
Gene Ross
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Maryland v Ohio State

Photo by Ben Jackson/Getty Images

The Buckeyes return to some not-so-friendly confines in West Lafayette.

Ohio State survived a tough test from Maryland on Saturday, battling back from a 10-0 deficit before turning things around and pulling away for a 37-17 victory on the strength of a stout defensive effort and some big plays by Marvin Harrison Jr., including the game’s final touchdown. Purdue, meanwhile, is coming off its third loss in its last four contests, this time a 20-14 defeat on the road at Iowa. While the 2-4 Boilermakers aren’t much to write home about, West Lafayette has not been kind to the Buckeyes, as Ohio State has dropped three of the last four meetings at Ross-Ade Stadium.

All lines courtesy of DraftKings Sportsbook.

Spread: Ohio State -20.5


The Ohio State offense still has not hit its stride this season, as the Buckeyes failed to score a touchdown on each of their first six drives against Maryland — a botched snap resulting in a turnover on downs, four punts and a field goal. A lot of blame can be placed on the shoulders of Ryan Day, whose play-calling has been abysmal, however Kyle McCord has also been shaky at times. McCord went 19-of-29 for 320 yards and two TDs against the Terrapins, but held onto the ball too long on several occasions and also severely under threw a few deep balls that were still caught by his really talented receivers — though they would have been TDs on good throws and could have been picked by better defenses.

The Buckeyes have really been carried by their defense this season, and Jim Knowles’ group was once again excellent. The Silver Bullets held Taulia Tagovailoa to under 200 yards passing with two total TDs (one rushing) and two interceptions, including a pick-six by Josh Proctor. J.T. Tuimoloau continues to come up big in key moments, registering his first 1.5 sacks of the season, and as a unit the Ohio State defense tallied five TFLs and five QB hurries. It was, however, another rough day for the linebackers, as they were continually put into conflict and took some bad routes both in the gaps and to the football, most notably on Tagovailoa’s touchdown run.

Offensively, Purdue scored its fewest points of the season in the 20-14 loss to Iowa. Hudson Card was not at his sharpest, completing 25-of-40 passes with two picks and a TD. Card was also sacked six times, which didn’t make matters any easier. It wasn’t a terrible day for the Boilermakers on the ground, as both Devin Mockabee (20 carries for 89 yards and a TD) and Dylan Downing (8 carries for 39 yards) averaged over 4.5 yards per carry, and TJ Sheffield had a strong day through the air with six catches for 93 yards and a score, but Purdue just could not score. The Boilermakers actually out-gained Iowa 357-291 on the day, but the Hawkeyes were able to hit on just enough big plays to earn them a victory.

It’s tough to learn much about the Purdue defense playing against a Brian Ferentz-led offense that is now without its starting quarterback, but the Boilermakers were pretty strong defensively outside an early long TD run by Kaleb Johnson. Still, this is a unit that ranked 102nd in scoring defense coming into the day with 29.6 points per game allowed. That being said, Purdue still ranks second in the Big Ten with 18 sacks on the year, and ties for fifth with six interceptions. Freshman DB Dillon Thieneman is a player to watch out for, with 53 total tackles and three picks through six games.

Ohio State can’t go into this game expecting to roll just because of Purdue’s 2-4 record. This is still a team that will be able to test the Buckeyes on Saturday. Card is an experienced quarterback, and he has some weapons alongside him in Mockabee and receiver Deion Burks. Defensively, the Boilermakers get to the QB and have made some plays on the football, so it will be another test for McCord as he looks to find some consistency. The Buckeyes have not returned to West Lafayette since that infamous game in 2018, and they cannot afford a repeat performance.

Odds/lines subject to change. T&Cs apply. See draftkings.com/sportsbook for details.

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LGHL Minnich’s Musings about Maryland at Ohio State

Minnich’s Musings about Maryland at Ohio State
Chip.Minnich
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Football: Maryland at Ohio State

Joseph Maiorana-USA TODAY Sports

The 2023 Ohio State Homecoming was an inconsistent and sloppy affair.

Before progressing too far into my article, first I want to give praise to the Terrapins. Ohio State was on the ropes for most of the game, and that is a credit to Maryland’s coaches and players. It may sound overly optimistic, but Penn State and Michigan had better beware of their upcoming trips to College Park, Maryland later this season. The Terrapins are a good football team.

Let me get into the areas of concern, which Maryland definitely exposed, even in the 37-17 win, that qualify as five alarm fires for Ohio State...


  1. The Ohio State offensive line

Ohio State’s offensive line gave up three sacks, five tackles for loss, and generally made things especially difficult for Ohio State to develop any offensive consistency. With a tough road game at Purdue on the horizon, followed up by an anticipated top-five home clash against Penn State, Ohio State will need to fix whatever is ailing the offensive line — and fast.

2. Ohio State’s running game

I joked previously about the lack of “Three Yards And A Cloud Of Dust”, but Ohio State is simply unable to run the ball consistently. Chip Trayanum emerged with a strong effort, carrying the ball 20 times for 61 yards and a crucial touchdown, but Ohio State needs to be able to run the ball well against Big Ten opponents, no matter which B1G opponents they are facing.

Collectively, when Kyle McCord’s sacks are factored into the rushing total (see point No. 1 up above), Ohio State averaged only 1.9 yards per rush. Ugh.

3. B1G officiating

This last point is going to come across as a pure homerism, and I will gladly take criticism for this point, but what in the name of Ed Hochuli is going on with the officiating and Ohio State this season? On two separate occasions this season, The Big Ten has had to contact Ohio State head coach Ryan Day to apologize for blown calls.

What are they going to do after this game, when Ohio State defensive lineman Tyleik Williams was blatantly held on a play that was not called, and the result was a Maryland touchdown the illegal motion penalty on Xavier Johnson that was openly questioned by FOX commentator Joel Klatt, or the Mean Girls temper tantrum call on Ryan Day for 15 yards? Take your pick, B1G officials. These are the kind of mistakes that could help to derail Ohio State’s season.



Time for a deep breath. Ohio State is 5-0, and they just defeated a team that is going to be playing in a good bowl game this season. Taulia Tagovailoa is not going to be the top NFL draft choice his older brother Tua was, but Taulia has established himself as one of the better quarterbacks in college football. The Ohio State defense should be happy with holding Maryland to 17 points.

Ohio State is still undefeated, and have to get themselves mentally prepared for a trip to West Lafayette, Indiana — a place that has been extremely difficult for Ohio State to win at over the years. Tune into the Silver Bullets Podcast with Michael Citro and I to get our further thoughts on this game, and do what is necessary to make sure you have your Peacock account all squared away before next Saturday at 12:00 p.m. ET.

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LGHL Ohio State squeaked out a win against Maryland, but Ryan Day should be on the hot seat

Ohio State squeaked out a win against Maryland, but Ryan Day should be on the hot seat
Gene Ross
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Ohio State v Notre Dame

Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images

The Buckeye head coach’s obsession with toughness is going to cost his team big time.

If two losses to Michigan, an embarrassing 52-24 blowout loss to Alabama in the 2020 national title, a blown 16-point lead to Clemson in the 2019 College Football Playoff and a blown 14-point lead in the fourth quarter against Georgia in the 2022 College Football Playoff weren’t enough, Saturday’s lackluster performance against Maryland at home — a microcosm of the entire Ryan Day tenure — should be all that you need see from the Ohio State head coach to know that things are never going to change.

It won’t be, but it should be his last season in Columbus.

Ohio State under Day will never reach its full potential. The Buckeyes have come into far too many big matchups looking woefully unprepared and lacking the intensity needed to win football games at the highest level. Lauded as an offensive mind, Day seemingly lost any sort of feel for calling plays, and doesn’t understand the personnel at his disposal as he constantly goes away from his best players when it matters most. Once one of the nation’s best units, the Buckeyes have shied from the mesh offenses that worked so well, and instead is doing everything under the sun to achieve some ‘toughness’ obsession for Day, regardless of how much the group flounders as a byproduct.

Day has too much pride to give up the play-calling duties, and this season more than ever his decision-making has been dreadful. We’ve watched the Buckeyes slam their heads against a wall in short-yardage situations, running stretch run after stretch run into the boundary and play-action bootlegs to its tight end while painfully unaware that it has two of the nation’s best wide receivers in Marvin Harrison Jr. and Emeka Egbuka available. Day has to be the smartest man in the room and re-invent the wheel at every opportunity. He coaches like he is at a talent disadvantage despite having one of the most talented rosters in the sport.

On top of that, Day cares too much about hurting guys’ feelings, and that showed with Ohio State’s lack of aggression in the transfer portal this past offseason. Everyone knew the Buckeyes were desperately hurting for offensive line help, but instead of going after some of the best players the portal had the offer when the window first opened, Day went bargain shopping at the last minute, and as a result the Ohio State offensive line has been terrible — especially in the run-blocking department. The product on the field has to come before anything else, and if your current group isn't getting the job done, you must be willing to make a change.

In addition to his own problems, Day has been awful at putting together a coaching staff.

He let Kerry Coombs stick around for an extra season as defensive coordinator when it was clear from the get-go that he was way in over his head. He extended Parker Fleming, who in addition to being the nation’s worst special teams coordinator is also taking a full-time coach off the defensive side of the football, and continues to allow Larry Johnson to get in the way of Jim Knowles’ defensive scheme despite LJ’s own position group playing well below its potential. Perhaps worst of all, he’s let Mick Marotti lead an outdated and misguided strength and conditioning program that leaves Ohio State’s players behind the eight-ball and attributes to so many of the soft tissue injuries we have seen.

Jim Harbaugh’s viral quote about Ryan Day being born on third base looks more and more correct as the years go on. The Buckeye headman inherited a strong Ohio State program that Urban Meyer helped build, and proceeded to make copies of copies each year without learning from any of his prior mistakes. Day was handed the keys to a Ferrari, got behind the wheel and drove it into a brick wall. A brand of this caliber and a roster this talented shouldn’t be as hard to coach as he makes it look, which only makes everything even more frustrating.

Supporters of Day will point to his 50-6 record and his recruiting prowess as reason to keep him around. In terms of the record, I don't really care that you can win regular season games with the Buckeyes’ schedule. Congrats on being able to beat up on Indiana and Purdue and Rutgers. I genuinely think the players could coach themselves to wins over 90% of the teams Ohio State plays each season. At the end of the day, Day only has two Big Ten titles and a 1-3 record in College Football Playoff games over now five seasons to show for it. That isn’t good enough, and the schedule is only going to get harder with Oregon, Washington and USC joining the conference.

The recruiting success I will give to Day, even though I don't think it's very hard to get guys to play at a place like Ohio State and he gets a ton of help from Brian Hartline’s wide receiver room. His quarterback recruiting has been thoroughly impressive, and the development of those guys has been strong. Still, they’ve missed on a bunch of key prospects, especially on both sides of the line — which seems pretty important IMO. Also, the quarterback position has declined this season, as Kyle McCord has shown flashes but has overall not impressed.

If you can’t utilize the talent once you get it on the field, what does that really matter? What good is pulling in a top-five class every season when you can’t win in the trenches or in the postseason?

They say the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. This Ohio State program has had the same exact issues for years on end, and nothing has been done to try and correct it. There have been small adjustments along the way, but the key areas of concern have not been fixed or even really addressed. The only real improvement has come on defense, where the Buckeyes have been impressive in 2023, but Ohio State still can’t convert on third-and-short, they still can’t score in the red zone, and special teams aren't nearly good enough to warrant a full-time assistant coaching spot.

Nothing the Buckeyes are doing on offense right now seems easy or well-designed; Everything feels forced and unnecessary. Every play is drawn up purely for Day to prove his team is tough, without a care in the world about the actual result. None of that seems to matter, because Ryan Day is determined to prove that it is him that is actually right and everyone else is wrong.

How long can Ohio State afford to do this dance? What else do we need to see from Day to learn that he does not have what it takes to overcome his own shortcomings and achieve the ultimate goal for the Buckeyes? This whole season feels like a slow-motion car crash leading up to what will be losses to both Penn State and Michigan — and maybe even Wisconsin on the road.

I hope I'm wrong, but another close call against a team Ohio State should handle with ease doesn’t exactly inspire confidence that things are change ahead of those three marquee matchups.

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Week 7 Games Discussion

Tuesday action starts this week. This list hasn’t been updated with the TV info for a handful of games on Saturday.

And since ND now has 2 losses, and USC isn’t a B1G member yet, we’ll allow rooting against Caleb and USC.

Week 7

Tuesday, Oct. 10

Louisiana Tech at Middle Tennessee | 7 p.m. | CBSSN
Liberty at Jacksonville State | 7:30 p.m. | ESPNU
Coastal Carolina at Appalachian State | 7:30 p.m. | ESPN2

Wednesday, Oct. 11

UTEP at Florida International | 7:30 p.m. | ESPN2
Sam Houston at New Mexico State | 9 p.m. | CBSSN

Thursday, Oct. 12

West Virginia at Houston | 7 p.m. | FS1
SMU at East Carolina | 7:30 p.m. | ESPN

Friday, Oct. 13

Tulane at Memphis | 7 p.m. | ESPN
Fresno State at Utah State | 8 p.m. | CBSSN
Stanford at Colorado | 10 p.m. | ESPN

Saturday, Oct. 14

No. 1 Georgia at Vanderbilt | 12 p.m. | CBS
Indiana at No. 2 Michigan | 12 p.m. | FOX
No. 3 Ohio State at Purdue | 12 p.m. | Peacock
Syracuse at No. 4 Florida State | 12 p.m.
Arkansas at No. 11 Alabama | 12 p.m. | ESPN
Michigan State at Rutgers | 12 p.m.
Temple at North Texas | 12 p.m. | ESPNU
Georgia Southern at James Madison | 12 p.m. | ESPN2
Kent State at Eastern Michigan | 12 p.m. | CBSSN
Sacred Heart at Yale | 12 p.m. | ESPN+
Princeton at Brown | 12 p.m. | ESPN+
San Diego at Marist | 12 p.m. | ESPN+

Howard at Harvard | 1 p.m. | ESPN+
Bucknell at Cornell | 1 p.m. | ESPN+
Dartmouth at Colgate | 1 p.m. | ESPN+
Georgetown at Lehigh | 1 p.m. | ESPN+
St. Thomas (Minn.) at Drake | 1 p.m. | ESPN+
Furman at Samford | 1 p.m. | ESPN+
Tennessee Tech at South Carolina State | 1:30 p.m. | ESPN+
Penn at Columbia | 1:30 p.m. | ESPN+
Navy at Charlotte | 2 p.m. | ESPN+
VMI at The Citadel | 2 p.m. | ESPN+
Toledo at Ball State | 2 p.m. | ESPN+
Gardner-Webb at Austin Peay | 2 p.m. | ESPN+
North Dakota State at North Dakota | 2 p.m. | ESPN+
Youngstown State at South Dakota | 2 p.m. | ESPN+
Morehead State at Valparaiso | 2 p.m. | ESPN+
Cal at No. 16 Utah | 3 p.m. | Pac-12 Network
Indiana State at Illinois State | 3 p.m. | ESPN+
Alabama A&M at Grambling | 3 p.m. | ESPN+
Alabama State at Jackson State | 3 p.m. | ESPN+
Tarleton State at Eastern Kentucky | 3 p.m. | ESPN+
Sacramento State at Northern Colorado | 3 p.m. | ESPN+
Southern Illinois at Murray State | 3 p.m. | ESPN+
UNI at South Dakota State | 3 p.m. | ESPN+
Eastern Illinois at Southeast Missouri State | 3 p.m. | ESPN+

UMass at No. 6 Penn State | 3:30 p.m.
No. 8 Oregon at No. 7 Washington | 3:30 p.m. | ABC
Texas A&M at No. 19 Tennessee | 3:30 p.m. | CBS
Illinois at Maryland | 3:30 p.m. | NBC
No. 23 Kansas at Oklahoma State | 3:30 p.m. | FS1
Troy at Army | 3:30 p.m. | CBSSN
Florida at South Carolina | 3:30 p.m. | SEC Network
Wake Forest at Virginia Tech | 3:30 p.m. | ACC Network
BYU at TCU | 3:30 p.m. | ESPN
Florida Atlantic at South Florida | 3:30 p.m. | ESPN2
Akron at Central Michigan | 3:30 p.m. | ESPN+
Bowling Green at Buffalo | 3:30 p.m. | ESPN+
Miami (Ohio) at Western Michigan | 3:30 p.m. | ESPN+
Wofford at East Tennessee State | 3:30 p.m. | ESPN+

Iowa at Wisconsin | 4 p.m. | Fox
Ohio at Northern Illinois | 4 p.m. | ESPNU
North Alabama at Abilene Christian | 4 p.m. | ESPN+
Portland State at Northern Arizona | 4 p.m. | ESPN+
Missouri State at Western Illinois | 4 p.m. | ESPN+
Lamar at SE Louisiana | 4 p.m. | ESPN+
Robert Morris at Bryant | 4 p.m. | ESPN+
Northwestern State at Nicholls | 4 p.m. | ESPN+
Lindenwood at Charleston Southern | 4 p.m. | ESPN+
Chattanooga at Mercer | 4 p.m. | ESPN+

UNLV at Nevada | 5 p.m. | Mountain West Network
Stephen F. Austin at Central Arkansas | 5 p.m. | ESPN+
Texas A&M-Commerce at UIW | 5 p.m. | ESPN+
Norfolk State at Tennessee State | 6 p.m. | ESPN+
Eastern Washington at Idaho State | 6 p.m. | ESPN+
No. 14 Louisville at Pitt | 6:30 p.m. | CW Network

Marshall at Georgia State | 7 p.m. | ESPN2
UL Monroe at Texas State | 7 p.m. | ESPN+
Wyoming at Air Force | 7 p.m. | CBSSN
Prairie View A&M at Houston Christian | 7 p.m. | ESPN+
Arizona at No. 19 Washington State | 7 p.m. | Pac-12 Networks
Auburn at No. 22 LSU | 7 p.m. | ESPN
No. 10 USC at No. 21 Notre Dame | 7:30 p.m. | NBC/Peacock
No. 25 Miami (Fla.) at No. 12 North Carolina | 7:30 p.m. | ABC
Missouri at No. 24 Kentucky | 7:30 p.m. | SEC Network

No. 18 UCLA at No. 15 Oregon State | 8 p.m. | FOX
NC State at No. 17 Duke | 8 p.m. | ACC Network
UAB at UTSA | 8 p.m. | ESPNU
Cal Poly at Montana State | 8 p.m. | ESPN+
UC Davis at Weber State | 8 p.m. | ESPN+

Montana at Idaho | 10:30 p.m. | ESPN2
San Diego State at Hawai'i | 11 p.m. | CBSSN

Iowa State at Cincinnati
Kansas State at Texas Tech
Boise State at Colorado State

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