Every week here at Blogging the Boys, we’ll spotlight the biggest college matchups and the players who could soon wear the Star. If you want to get a jump on who might help America’s Team in the years to come, this is your weekly college football guide
GAME OF THE WEEK
It’s over to Hard Rock Stadium for BTB’s Game of The Week as Florida and Miami dust off for their sand-spiked rivalry. The Hurricanes cruise in at 3–0, purring like a speedboat on Biscayne Bay, while the 1–2 Gators arrive with knuckles white on the steering
wheel, eager to steady the season and splash cold water on Miami’s momentum. The checklist is simple and nerve-testing as Florida needs tidy possessions, play-action haymakers, and zen in the face of a front that’s been setting the tone. Miami will race the edges, weaponize special teams, and let the home crowd tilt third downs. Predictions on the score for this one, let’s go Miami 34, Florida 21.
Game Overview
- Matchup: Florida vs. Miami (4)
- September 20, at Hard Rock Stadium
- Kickoff time: 7:30 p.m (EST)
- Miami favored by 8.5 points
- This matchup features the Miami Hurricanes, who are currently 3-0 and coming off a dominant 49-12 victory over South Florida. They will face their in-state rivals, the Florida Gators, who are looking to bounce back after a loss to LSU
Player Watch
Florida:
Austin Barber, OT
Barber plays left tackle very efficiently and is very smooth on his feet. He wins with balance, independent hands, and enough torque to finish without grabbing. Keep the pad level trimmed and the inside counter on a shorter trigger, and he profiles as a plug-and-play NFL tackle who can live on an island and let the playbook breathe.
Jordan Castell, S
Castell plays safety with teeth. He plays with steady eyes, sturdy strikes, and just enough range to tidy up messes. If he trims the penalties and keeps stacking on-ball plays like last year’s pass breakups, he profiles as a reliable every-down starter who lets Florida spin the dial in coverage without leaking in the run fit.
Miami:
Mark Fletcher Jr, RB
Fletcher is Miami’s tempo setter, he pushes drives forward with patient eyes and solid finishes. Keep the pass-pro polish coming and sprinkle in a few more designed perimeter touches, and he profiles as a volume back who can close games and carry the red-zone load all year.
Ahkeem Mesidor, DL
Mesidor plays like a jackhammer with a steering wheel, he can dent the pocket and he does it with purpose, not chaos. Keep the counter moves on a shorter fuse and the pads lower, and you’ve got a scheme-flex interior/edge hybrid who kills protections and never needs to come off the field.
Oregon (6) vs. Oregon State
Game Overview
Matchup: Oregon (6) vs. Oregon State (The Civil War)
- Matchup: Oregon (6) vs. Oregon State (The Civil War)
- September 20, at Autzen Stadium
- Kickoff time: 3 p.m. (ET)
- Oregon favored by 26.5 points
- Oregon is coming off a solid win against Northwestern and aims to maintain their momentum against their rivals. This game is crucial for both teams as they look to establish dominance
Player Watch
Oregon:
Matayo Uiagalelei, DE
Uiagalelei has the football blood lines and it shows on the field. He plays like a pry bar who opens the edge with burst, then snaps through with leverage. Pad level can be issues as the game wears on and his counters need a quicker trigger. He does that then you’re looking at a true three-down edge who dents pockets on pressure downs and sets a firm edge on early ones.
Dillon Thieneman, S
Thieneman is Oregon’s General on the back end. Watch him diagnose, close, and end the play. If he keeps his pursuit lines razor-clean and adds a touch more nastiness at the catch point, he projects as an every-down free safety who lets the Ducks disguise coverages without losing sturdiness in the run fit.
Oregon State:
Thomas Collins, DT
Collins scraps like a judo black belt keeping his hips under the opponent, good hands, and solid balance that refuses to budge. Add a quicker “Plan B” after his first punch and a little extra ballast versus double teams, and you’ve got a steady interior troublemaker who turns second-and-medium into third-and-long without living on marathon snap counts.
Texas Tech (17) vs. Utah (16)
Game Overview
- Matchup: Texas Tech (17) vs. Utah (16)
- September 20th, at Rice-Eccles Stadium
- Kickoff Time: 12:00 p.m. (EST)
- Utah favored by 4 points
Player Watch
Texas Tech:
Terrance Carter Jr, TE
Think big slot with tight-end abilities. Carter stretches zones, wins on the seam, and turns linebackers’ hips the wrong way. If the in-line grunt work keeps climbing, Carter projects as a true every-down TE who forces defenses to choose between light boxes or living with explosives up the hash.
Utah:
Spencer Fano, OT
Fano is the line’s timekeeper and thunderstick. He shows good feet, hands snapping like trapdoors, and just enough pop to scoot defenders without drawing laundry. Stack a few more pass-pro reps to harmonize with his run-game efficiency and he’s a scheme-agnostic bookend on Sundays. But then if an NFL team craves a bulldozer chorus, they can kick him inside and let him pancake the guard.
Caleb Lomu, OT
On Utah’s opposite edge of the line, Lomu also helps set the tone for the offense. His heavy hands and quick feet make rushers suddenly reconsider their plans. Drop the pads another inch and snap the counter a beat sooner, and he’s a Sunday-ready bookend who lets the Utes serve the full buffet from outside zone to shot plays.
Notable Games
Syracuse vs. Clemson
South Carolina vs. Missouri
Auburn vs. Oklahoma
Purdue vs. Notre Dame
Illinois vs. Indiana
Washington vs. Washington State
Michigan State vs. USC
Michigan vs. Nebraska