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CFP’s top 5 unchanged, but Oregon hurdles Mississippi for No. 6 spot

প্রকাশিত November 26, 2025, 02:20 AM
CFP’s top 5 unchanged, but Oregon hurdles Mississippi for No. 6 spot

By EDDIE PELLS AP National Writer

A sleepy week filled with nonconference blowouts locked the College Football Playoff rankings into a near standstill. Ohio State, Indiana, Texas A&M, Georgia and Texas Tech remained the top five teams, while Oregon jumped ahead of Mississippi after its 42-27 victory over USC – one of the few significant changes in Tuesday’s new top 25.

The Ducks are now No. 6, with Mississippi at No. 7 – the only change to the top 10 from a week ago. Oklahoma remains at No. 8, followed by Notre Dame at No. 9, Alabama at No. 10 and BYU at No. 11.

After beating USC, Oregon coach Dan Lanning said his team deserves credit for the schedule it plays – which included a tough conference game during a week in which many in the SEC were going against non-ranked, double-digit underdogs.

The committee agreed.

“Their strength of schedule continues to climb,” CFP committee chair Hunter Yurachek said during the rankings reveal show on ESPN. “We’ve been waiting for them to have that signature win to really put them where they need to be.”

Miami moved ahead of Utah to No. 12, while the Utes dropped to No. 13 following a come-from-behind 51-47 win over 5-6 Kansas State. Despite the head-to-head victory over the Fighting Irish, the Hurricanes remain three spots behind in the latest rankings as they push for an at-large spot. Vanderbilt stayed No. 14 while Michigan moved up three spots to No. 15.

Yurachek noted that this week Miami and Notre Dame were directly compared and evaluated in the same pod as Alabama and one-loss BYU.

“The committee still feels Notre Dame is a complete team,” Yurachek said of ranking the Irish atop that group.

Texas is No. 16, USC is at No. 17, Virginia is No. 18, Tennessee is No. 19 and Arizona State is No. 20.

SMU enters the rankings at No. 21, followed by Pitt, Georgia Tech, Tulane and Arizona.

With Rivalry Week set to begin, there could be major ramifications to the rankings. All eyes will be on the Egg Bowl first, when Mississippi plays Mississippi State on Friday with a possible CFP berth on the line. Coach Lane Kiffin is expected to announce a decision about his future the following day, having drawn interest from SEC rivals Florida and LSU.

If he opts to leave Mississippi, making him unavailable to coach the team in the CFP, the selection committee could take his departure into account when ranking the Rebels.

According to CFP protocol, the committee can consider the loss of key players or coaches when ranking teams. In 2023, the committee left Florida State out of the four-team playoff in part because starting quarterback Jordan Travis was out for the season.

“It is in the protocol, but I’m not sure we will have a data point to use that as part of the protocol,” Yurachek said, referring to Kiffin’s potential departure.

When asked to elaborate, Yurachek said the committee “will not have seen [Ole Miss] play without a coach,” meaning Kiffin.

There are other big rivalry games with possible CFP ramifications: No. 3 Texas A&M travels to No. 16 Texas on Friday night. A win for the Aggies clinches a spot in the SEC championship game. Alabama is at Auburn in the Iron Bowl, with an SEC championship game appearance at stake for the Crimson Tide.

No. 15 Michigan hosts No. 1 Ohio State as the Wolverines push for a possible spot in the Big Ten title game or as an at-large team. Ohio State has lost four straight to its rival, but a win Saturday would put the Buckeyes into the Big Ten title game against Indiana, which faces Purdue this week.

Meanwhile in the ACC, No. 18 Virginia hosts rival Virginia Tech. A win for the Cavaliers puts them in the ACC championship game.

The five highest-ranked conference champions will make the 12-team field, but there is a tweak to the format this year, as the committee is using a straight seeding model. The top four teams in the final ranking, regardless of conference championship, will receive a first-round bye.

If the playoffs were held today, these would be the first-round matchups: Tulane at Texas Tech, Miami at Oregon, Alabama at Mississippi and Notre Dame at Oklahoma. While Miami is slotted in as the highest-ranked ACC team, the Hurricanes have long odds to win the conference title (9%, according to ESPN FPI).

SMU is the current ESPN FPI favorite to win the ACC, at 55%. A win over Cal on Saturday gets the Mustangs into the ACC title game for the second straight season.

There are multiple scenarios for Miami to make the ACC title game, and they all involve a win at No. 22 Pitt plus a combination of losses among the other ACC teams that are currently 6-1 in league play. The Hurricanes still have hopes of making the playoff bracket as an at-large pick.

“Miami is a team that really appears they’re trying to look like the Miami team that started 5-0,” Yurachek said.

The SEC continues to lead the way with eight ranked teams, while the Big Ten, ACC and Big 12 each have five. Tulane remains the lone Group of 5 representative at No. 24.

There are two more rankings to be revealed, with the final one to be announced on Dec. 7, the day after the conference championship games. The four first-round games will be played at the home campuses of the higher-seeded teams on Dec. 19 and 20. The four quarterfinal games will be played at the Cotton Bowl in Arlington, Texas (Dec. 31), the Orange Bowl in Miami (Jan. 1), the Rose Bowl (Jan. 1) and the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans (Jan. 1).

The two semifinal games will take place at the Fiesta Bowl in Glendale, Arizona, and the Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl in Atlanta on Jan. 8 and 9, respectively.

The CFP National Championship game is Jan. 19 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

1. Ohio State (11-0)

2. Indiana (11-0)

3. Texas A&M (11-0)

4. Georgia (10-1)

5. Texas Tech (10-1)

6. Oregon (10-1)

7. Mississippi (10-1)

8. Oklahoma (9-2)

9. Notre Dame (9-2)

10. Alabama (9-2)

11. BYU (10-1)

12. Miami (9-2)

13. Utah (9-2)

14. Vanderbilt (9-2)

15. Michigan (9-2)

16. Texas (8-3)

17. USC (8-3)

18. Virginia (9-2)

19. Tennessee (8-3)

20. Arizona State (8-3)

21. SMU (8-3)

22. Pitt (8-3)

23. Georgia Tech (9-2)

24. Tulane (9-2)

25. Arizona (8-3)