
It was another mixed week for three of the four teams in action from the West in the Pac-12 and ACC.
Washington State rebounded from a tough loss two weeks ago with a victory over Toledo.
Cal and Stanford were not as fortunate, losing to Virginia Tech and Miami. The Beavers had a bye to prepare for this week’s game against the Cougars and continue their search for a new head coach.
Here’s my take on all four teams heading into Week 10.
I know the West Coast is chill, but at some point, Cal needs to figure out what they’re doing with Justin Wilcox. This season’s 5-3 isn’t bad, but if they can’t beat Virginia Tech, what are the Golden Bears really doing?
California’s remaining schedule is difficult, which means they could finish the season with a losing record. It would be their eighth time in nine years with him in charge.
The Bears host Virginia this week in a matchup that they should be able to win. The Cavaliers are beatable; they barely survived their last two outings against North Carolina and Washington State, both overtime victories.
The key for Cal is no more excuses. Time’s up. It’s time to beat some good teams or get a new coach.
The Golden Bears have the talent to beat UV at home, and they match up well against the Cavs’ passing attack. The Bears rank 33rd in passing yards allowed per game. Virginia also struggles to defend the pass, ranking 88th in yards allowed per game.
Cal travels to Louisville the following week, and then has a bye before Stanford and Notre Dame to end their slate.
Notes
If you look at the final score of the game last week, it looks awful. But Stanford was tied 7-7 at halftime against Miami. While a 42-7 loss isn’t going to make the boosters smile, the Cardinal are starting to show that they can play some defense.
Holding the Hurricanes to seven points in the first half is impressive and shows consistency after limiting Florida State to 13 points the week prior. If the Tree plays this type of defense against Pittsburgh, they could pull off the upset at home.
The Panthers have the eighth-ranked scoring offense nationally, but they have a signal-caller with limited playing experience.
Mason Heintschel has only started four games at the collegiate level; he took over for Eli Holstein after Pitt had back-to-back losses earlier this season.
Stanford will need Ben Gulbranson to take advantage of Pittsburgh’s 74th-ranked pass defense in yards allowed per game. They rank 13th in rushing yards allowed per game, so moving the ball on the ground might prove difficult.
It feels like the Cardinal are improving. They’re in the process, but they might pull some upsets in the process.
Notes
Jimmy Rogers is building something at Washington State. The win against Toledo will get overlooked on the national radar, but the Rockets are a legitimate program, which has had a winning record 14 the last 15 years.
UT kinda gave the game to the Cougars, but WSU gave away the prior game against Virginia. Either way, a 28-7 victory over Toledo is impressive, even with Chip Trayanum out.
Flipping the week, the Cougs have a chance to finish the regular season 8-4, but they can’t overlook Oregon State. The Beavers enter this contest with a 1-7 record, getting their first win against Lafayette before the bye.
OSU hasn’t beaten an FBS team yet this year. The key for Washington State is to destroy the Beavers’ soul from the beginning.
The Cougars’ offense has struggled most of the season, but goes on random spurts from time to time. They scored 21 points in the second quarter against UT.
If WSU could get one of these explosions in the first quarter, it could put away the Beavers early. But this feels like a trap game, and a must win to build momentum heading into Pac-12 part 2.
Notes
Oregon State has a chance to change the narrative of its season, but they have to get it done against Washington State.
Even though the Beavers’ record is terrible, from a talent standpoint, they should be able to compete in this matchup.
Coinciding with OSU’s final four games is their search for a new Head Coach. Interim coach Robb Akey likely won’t be the candidate, due to his struggles as the head man at Idaho.
Akey, however, does have a chance to make an argument for himself. But it’s likely he’d have to win out to even get considered.
Among the candidates floated by various media are Brent Vigen, Brennan Marion, Paul Chryst, Bryan Harsin, Ed Orgeron, and Jason Eck. Other potential candidates mentioned include Jonathan Smith and Nick Rolovich.
The Beavs’ final four contests are all winable, but a loss this weekend pretty much ends interest beyond the coaching search. But Oregon State could definitely beat the Cougars, It’s important to never overlook the Beavs at Reser.
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