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CFB Week 14 winners, losers: CFP picture crystalizes
Texas Tech Red Raiders players celebrate after defeating the West Virginia Mountaineers at Milan Puskar Stadium. Ben Queen-Imagn Images

CFB Week 14 winners, losers: CFP picture crystalizes as top teams lock up likely bids

Another college football regular season is in the books. With conference championships next weekend, this Saturday was the last full weekend of action, and it delivered no shortage of memorable moments. 

Here are Week 14's winners and losers.

Winner: Teams clinching College Football Playoff berths

College Football Playoff No. 8 Oklahoma (10-2, 6-2 in SEC) punched its ticket to the first round of the CFP with a comeback 17-13 win over LSU (7-5, 3-5 in SEC). The Sooners were joined by No. 6 Oregon (11-1, 8-1 in Big Ten), which handled rival Washington (8-4, 5-4 in Big Ten), 26-14. No. 5 Texas Tech (11-1, 8-1 in Big 12) almost certainly guaranteed a playoff spot even with a loss next weekend in the Big 12 Championship Game following a resounding 49-0 win at West Virginia (4-8, 2-7 in Big 12).

With the top four teams in the country (Ohio State, Indiana, Texas A&M and Georgia) and Ole Miss also already securing berths and two more conference champions qualifying automatically, the bubble is shrinking. Oklahoma, Oregon and Texas Tech are on the right side.

Loser: Florida State Seminoles

Earlier this week, Florida State president Richard McCullough wrote a letter confirming head coach Mike Norvell will return in 2026. He may have been better off saving that for drafts.

On Saturday, Florida State capped a second consecutive dreadful season with a 40-21 loss at Florida (4-8), keeping the Seminoles from becoming bowl eligible. The result also ensured Norvell a fourth losing season in six years as Florida State head coach. He's been given a lot of leniency for someone with a spotty track record. The Noles' faith in him is perplexing to say the least.

Winner: Vanderbilt Commodores

No. 14 Vanderbilt (10-2, 6-2 in SEC) secured the first 10-win season in program history with a 45-24 road win at No. 19 Tennessee (8-4, 4-4 in SEC). Quarterback Diego Pavia rebounded from throwing two interceptions on the Commodores' first four drives by leading the charge during a dominant second half. Vandy won, 24-3. He finished with 433 total yards, including 165 rushing, likely cementing his Heisman Trophy bid.

Vanderbilt didn't get any help this weekend, with teams directly ahead of it in the CFP rankings winning, likely keeping it from receiving an at-large bid. But that by no means takes away the incredible season the Commodores had, one they can build on with head coach Clark Lea signing a new six-year deal on Friday.

Loser: SEC afterthoughts

The Kentucky Wildcats (5-7, 2-6 in SEC) and South Carolina Gamecocks (4-8, 1-7 in SEC) ended miserable seasons with decisive losses to ACC rivals Louisville Cardinals (8-4, 4-4 in ACC) and Clemson Tigers (7-5, 4-4 in ACC), respectively.

Kentucky lost at Louisville, 41-0, the program's largest shutout defeat in rivalry history, and afterward, head coach Mark Stoops threatened there was a "Zero-percent chance I walk." Per ESPN, the 13-year Wildcats coach has a buyout of roughly $37.7 million.

South Carolina entered 2025 with hopes of qualifying for the CFP but finished a 4-8 campaign — the team's worst record since former head coach Will Muschamp's last season (2020) — with a 28-14 home loss to Clemson.

Coach Shane Beamer offered a hollow vow when speaking with reporters, emphatically saying things will be different next season. Just trust him.

"I can one billion percent promise you this, when we have a hell of a season in 2026, and when I'm doing this press conference after the Clemson game next year, and we finish the regular season that, because of the success that we're gonna have next season — I know we will — we're gonna look back at this season and say, 'It sucked going through it,' but because of what we went through in '25, it led us to what we just did in 2026," Beamer said.

That's a lot of gibberish for a coach trying to save face after failing mightily this fall. It might be enough for him to survive the axe this year, but it leaves no wiggle room in 2026. Kentucky and South Carolina would likely be better off making changes at head coach, and their inaction could lead both to repeat this year's mistakes.

Winner: Ohio State Buckeyes

The Buckeyes nation has nothing to gripe about this season. After four consecutive losses to Michigan, the No. 1 team in the country won its first game in the rivalry this decade, 27-9, in The Big House to earn a place in next weekend's Big Ten title game against No. 2 Indiana (12-0, 9-0 in Big Ten).

Loser: ESPN reporter Marty Smith

If you're reading this, send Smith food and water. The longtime ESPN reporter was placed on Lane Kiffin watch Saturday, appearing early in the day during "College GameDay" in case news broke about where the Ole Miss head coach, who has been courted by LSU in recent days, will be employed in 2026.

Nearly 12 hours later, Smith was still on location in Oxford without any meaningful updates.

Not only is Kiffin holding two programs hostage, but also a reporter just trying to make a living. Please, somebody, stop the madness.

Winner: ACC chaos ... and two Group of Five champions making CFP

The ACC is the gift that keeps on giving. Following No. 21 SMU's 38-35 loss to Cal, the conference is in danger of being left out of the CFP completely and opening up two automatic spots to the top two Group of Five conference champions.

Duke (7-5, 6-2 in ACC) clinched a spot in next Saturday's ACC title game thanks to a win over Wake Forest and the SMU upset loss, and it will play No. 18 Virginia in Charlotte, North Carolina, for a chance to spoil the conference's playoff pursuit. 

If the Blue Devils win, the American champion — either No. 24 Tulane (10-2, 7-1 in American) or North Texas (11-1, 7-1 in American) — and likely Sun Belt champ James Madison Dukes (11-1, 8-0 in Sun Belt) would qualify for the 12-team field. A Duke win would also open the door for the Mountain West winner (the title game participants will be determined via computer) to make it in if the Dukes falter.

Eric Smithling

Eric Smithling is a writer based in New Orleans, LA, whose byline also appears on Athlon Sports. He has been with Yardbarker since September 2022, primarily covering the NFL and college football, but also the NBA, WNBA, men’s and women’s college basketball, NHL, tennis and golf. He holds a film studies degree from the University of New Orleans

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