CFB Blitz: Early Week 11 takeaways
College Football Blitz recaps the most important developments from the day's top games and examines their significance moving forward.
The Drive, Indiana edition
The FOX broadcast of Indiana-Penn State started with an on-field interview in which Jenny Taft informed Curt Cignetti that the Hoosiers had never won in Happy Valley. Cignetti didn't miss a beat before dropping his reply: "This team has never played here."
"Nothing concerns me"@JennyTaft talks with @IndianaFootball's Curt Cignetti before kickoff pic.twitter.com/5lWk0OrHVB
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) November 8, 2025
It was an interesting response because both were absolutely right. While the Hoosiers had never won at Beaver Stadium, this version of Indiana ain't the same program that holds the FBS record for most all-time losses. This one features dudes who will be competing on Sundays, and that's what wins games in the dramatic moments.
Fernando Mendoza, go ahead and book your trip to the Heisman ceremony in December. The star quarterback delivered his biggest moment of the season in the game's dying minutes, seemingly unbothered by a four-point deficit in a hostile road environment. The Cal transfer drove 80 yards in 1:15, making multiple big-time throws to put the Hoosiers back up for good. Charlie Becker's incredible grab to set Indiana up deep in Penn State territory was great, but it looked pedestrian compared to what Omar Cooper had in store.
THE MOST INSANE TOE TAP YOU'LL SEE ALL SEASON
— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) November 8, 2025
Omar Cooper Jr. take a bow 👏@IndianaFootball pic.twitter.com/07MncUCK4d
The catch of the year secured the win for Cignetti and Indiana, keeping them perfect on the campaign. The second-year coach admitted postgame that he'd never seen anything like that in his career - something Indiana fans are getting used to saying since Cignetti turned the program around.
Give Pavia the Auburn job

Auburn might as well wrap its coaching search tonight and name Diego Pavia to the position for next season. The Vanderbilt quarterback once again demonstrated that nobody has more ownership over the Tigers, piling up almost 500 yards of total offense in a thrilling overtime victory to make him a perfect 3-0 in his career against Auburn. Add the other two wins to the mix, and Pavia has almost 900 yards of offense and nine touchdowns versus the Tigers.
Pavia's brilliance helped the Commodores roar back from a 20-10 halftime deficit to secure the win and give Vanderbilt its most victories in a season since 2013.
From the Auburn side of things, life without Hugh Freeze began with a bang on offense and 38 points on the scoreboard. That comes after a dismal three-point showing at home last week versus Kentucky. The team's new offensive staff seems to have realized something Freeze never did: Ashton Daniels is QB1, and nobody can guard the receiver duo of Eric Singleton and Cam Coleman. The strategy seems obvious after Saturday, but that clarity was missing under Freeze. Daniels threw for 353 yards on the night - over 100 more than Jackson Arnold recorded in a game this season - while Singleton and Coleman combined for an absurd 21 catches, 245 yards, and two touchdowns.
Although the fan base certainly won't be thrilled with the defensive performance, it had to be somewhat therapeutic to see the offense put up points at a breakneck pace.
Punter leads Wisconsin in passing
First, let's admire this perfectly executed fake punt by Wisconsin's Sean Hunt for a 24-yard gain.
Wisconsin pulls off the fake punt 🤩 @BadgerFootball
— Big Ten Football (@B1Gfootball) November 8, 2025
📺: @BigTenNetwork pic.twitter.com/qy7REqPSZO
Great play, but I'm sure you're asking why we're sharing this. Turns out, that was about it from the passing game for the Badgers, with Hunt finishing the contest against No. 23 Washington as the team's leading passer. Now for the craziest part: Wisconsin won!
The Badgers entered play Saturday already without starter Billy Edwards and lost backup Danny O'Neil early to injury. In total, four players attempted passes for Wisconsin, with the punter leading the way at 24 yards. That was somehow enough, as the defense forced two turnovers and the running game piled up 157 yards.
The improbable win gave Luke Fickell his first top-25 victory at Wisconsin in the same week he learned he would return next season regardless of how things finish.
New-era Texas Tech is a problem
It's not every day you get a top-10 matchup in Lubbock, and Saturday's contest between BYU and Texas Tech brought the Red Raiders' favorite son, Patrick Mahomes, back to campus. Mahomes' tenure was a perfect representation of what Texas Tech was for almost the entire 2000s: an explosive passing attack that lit up scoreboards offset by a defense that barely existed. For example, Mahomes once threw for 734 yards in, of course, a loss to Oklahoma. But what we witnessed Saturday on the field was the furthest thing from your dad's Texas Tech, and that has the Red Raiders in the driver's seat for the Big 12 title game.
We've touched on the dominant Texas Tech defense earlier this season, but we may have undersold its excellence. BYU entered with the nation's 14th-ranked rushing attack at 5.39 yards per carry, but managed only 2.5 yards per carry for 67 yards Saturday. The Red Raiders' defense also excelled on third and fourth down, holding BYU to 4-for-17 in those situations and getting off the field with ease.
There's plenty of game-breakers all over the field for Texas Tech, but none more important than linebacker Jacob Rodriguez. Just ask BYU.
Texas Tech Linebacker Jacob Rodriguez vs #7 BYU
— NCAAF Nation (@NCAAFNation247) November 8, 2025
• 14 Tackles
• 1 Tackle for Loss
• 1 INT
• 1 PBU
• 1 Fumble Recovery
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/OXYoxXRhro
If anything, the 29-7 scoreline flattered the Cougars, thanks to the ongoing struggles of Texas Tech's red-zone offense. The Red Raiders entered Saturday ranked 98th nationally in red-zone touchdown scoring at just under 58%. That's only getting worse after five red-zone trips yielded just one touchdown for Texas Tech. Yes, it didn't matter, but if the Red Raiders have intentions to make a CFP run, they must clean up that area.
Oregon out-Iowas the Hawkeyes
A rainy smashmouth game with only 250 combined passing yards, four field goals, and seven punts? That sounds a helluva lot like you're walking in an Iowa wonderland. A Kirk Ferentz-special was precisely what went down Saturday at Kinnick Stadium, but Oregon left with the victory in a dramatic finish against the Hawkeyes.
As if the elements didn't make passing hard enough, the Ducks were also missing their top three receivers. That forced Oregon to pound the ball on the ground, and that's exactly what it did. Noah Whittington's 117 yards led the way, as four players rushed for 261 yards on 36 carries. Compiling a hefty 7.3 yards per carry when the defense essentially knows you're running the ball is an incredible total.
OK, we've hyped up the running game enough. Now, let's get to a throw - THE throw - that went a long way toward deciding this contest. Dante Moore proved why he's a future first-round pick with one of the most clutch tosses you'll ever see.
Dante Moore with a PERFECT throw.
— CBS Sports College Football 🏈 (@CBSSportsCFB) November 8, 2025
CBS | Paramount+ pic.twitter.com/sCfBb2kmnF
That set up the game-winning field goal to keep Oregon very much alive in the race for the Big Ten and CFP.
UCLA, USC, and Washington may have seemed like odd fits when they joined the Big Ten prior to last season, but the Ducks always appeared more than capable of taking on the conference's identity. They showed that to be the case Saturday, much to the delight of their head coach.
"That looked like an old school Big Ten game today, didn't it?"
— CBS Sports College Football 🏈 (@CBSSportsCFB) November 9, 2025
Dan Lanning joins @JennyDell_ after a huge win for Oregon. pic.twitter.com/ZgEXKJuY4K
Explosive Georgia shows up
We called out Georgia last week for another underwhelming SEC win versus Florida, and it looked like that was on the menu again early in Saturday's game at Mississippi State. However, the Bulldogs rebounded with an unfamiliar weapon - the explosive play. Georgia entered the contest with only 36 total plays of at least 20 yards this season, ranking 76th nationally - a surprising number given the collection of talent the Bulldogs have. But they hit that number seven times over 60 minutes in Starkville, with Nate Frazier and Noah Thomas running wild in a blowout win.
Frazier's 59-yard touchdown was part of an absurd 181-yard output on just 12 carries from him, while Thomas took a 64-yard reception to the house to help break things open. Georgia finished with 567 yards - including 303 on the ground - and a whopping 30 first downs. This is exactly the performance Kirby Smart wanted before next weekend's blockbuster matchup with Texas.