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Heisman Hype, Rivalry Heat, and Real Contenders: CFB Week 4

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
September 19, 2025
Heisman Hype, Rivalry Heat, and Real Contenders: CFB Week 4

We’re three weeks in, and the curtain’s starting to pull back on who’s for real and who just had a nice September weekend or two. The transfer buzz guys? Some hit the ground running, others already look like square pegs. Coordinators are out of their comfort zone of the scripted plays and into the part of the season where defenses know your tendencies. Week 4 is when the fun early‑season vibes give way to the first real gut checks, and this slate has a handful of games that feel like they’ll echo into November.

I’ve been digging through the tape, box scores, and all the weird little details that actually swing games, and five matchups jump off the page. After those, I’ll get into the betting angles I like most for the weekend. Let’s get into it.

#17 Texas Tech at #16 Utah (12:00 ET, FOX): Tempo vs. Tectonics

This is such a stylistic clash between a Texas Tech outfit that wants to stress you horizontally and hit you vertically the second your safeties get nosy, and a Utah team that’s proud to make the game feel like a march — fewer possessions, heavier body blows, and a fourth quarter that belongs to the team that's the least tired.

Quarterbacking and rhythm are going to be the key to this one. Behren Morton has opened 2025 playing point guard with a flamethrower — north of 70% completions with 11 touchdowns to just one interception, and it’s not hollow volume. Tech is doing a great job keeping his feet clean and letting him rip in the intermediate windows off the RPO and play‑action drift routes. His one struggle has been when you force him off his spot and make him reset, that ball placement fades a tick. Utah’s answer — disguised pressure late, not just a sack hunt, but timing. They’ll roll a safety into the fit post‑snap and dare Morton to hold the ball.

Utah’s quarterback, Devon Dampier, has been the engine of this whole thing so far. He’s not the prototypical pocket statue; he’s the guy who stresses you because it's so difficult to create negative plays. Through three weeks he’s actually leading the Utes in rushing, and while he’s not putting up Heisman numbers, he’s playing within himself — taking what’s there, punishing soft edges with his legs, and giving Utah a real identity post‑Cam Rising. He’s efficient on early downs, he’ll hit a seam or hitch with confidence, and he has the knack for turning a busted play into four yards instead of minus two. That sounds small, but those little survival plays are what keep Utah on schedule and let their defense and run game dictate the flow.

Don’t sleep on the little things like first down either. Utah’s front isn’t flashy, but it’s stubborn — they want to turn every first‑and‑10 into second‑and‑8 and slowly choke out your playbook. That’s where their secondary in the back end looks sharpest. But if Tech can land a couple of haymakers — those +30 yard shots off a play action or a cleverly stacked set that causes traffic — it flips the math completely.

Utah wants this thing to be about 10 total possessions and a field position slugfest, while Tech would rather crank it up closer to 15. If the Utes keep Morton in second‑and‑long often enough and don’t eat an early haymaker, Rice‑Eccles is going to tilt things their way late. I think it ends up as a one‑score grinder where Utah’s ability to win first down and steal hidden yards on special teams makes the difference. My call: Utah comes out on top 27‑24 in a game that’s tight early, swings around halftime, and gets decided by execution in the fourth quarter.

Auburn at Oklahoma (3:30 ET, ABC): The Return, the Reset, and the Reality Check

The headline writes itself: Jackson Arnold, once anointed in Norman, now QB1 at Auburn, strolls back into Owen Field with a better fit and a cleaner plan. Across from him is John Mateer — the guy tied with Carson Beck for the best Heisman odds right now and the reason Oklahoma’s favored so heavily. This isn’t just an efficient quarterback running a system; he’s been the engine. Smooth in the pocket, accurate, on time, and dangerous when things break down.

Arnold is playing on‑schedule football. Take the profit, force the defense to tackle in space, then pick the shot — usually a post or corner that marries with max‑protect. Hugh Freeze isn’t asking him to be a superhero; he’s asking him to be a grown‑up. The Tigers are living in the “four‑yard run, easy access throw, then a shot” world that travels.

On the other side, Brent Venables’ defense finally has a weekly floor again. They’re not bringing the house as much as they’re threatening it — simulate, bail, rob the glance, and close windows right when the ball should be out. That’s a bad recipe for an offense stuck in 3rd‑and‑7. The Sooners need to earn those downs by winning first down with structure — get to 2nd‑and‑4 and the RPO opens up without exposing the tackles. The bonus for OU is that Mateer’s mobility and poise buy him just enough time to punish you even when you think you’ve got the play won.

The tells I’m watching.

  • Auburn’s willingness to call designed quarterback runs early. If Arnold keeps it a couple of times and survives contact, OU’s edge rush has to think first, and that tiny pause matters.

  • Oklahoma’s third‑down plan. If they’re content to spin to two‑high shells and rally, Auburn will stay patient and stack first downs; if they heat it up and get there, this can snowball.

This has “seven‑point game” written all over it, and I think it lands exactly there. Auburn’s path is pretty straightforward: keep Arnold clean, cash in two red‑zone trips for touchdowns, and avoid the back‑breaking turnover. For Oklahoma, it comes down to letting John Mateer do what he’s been doing all season — winning early downs with efficiency, stressing the defense with his legs, and hitting throws on time so the pass rush can close when it matters. At home, with the deeper rotation, a steadier defense, and a quarterback playing at a Heisman‑favorite level, I think the Sooners finish this one off. My call: Oklahoma 35‑28 in a game that the Sooners control that somehow gets close late.

Michigan at Nebraska (3:30 ET, CBS): AKA "The Bussin' Bowl"

Michigan’s true freshman phenom Bryce Underwood just detonated Central Michigan with a day that looked like the recruiting profile — layered throws, real QB‑run value, poise after the snap. Nebraska counters with Dylan Raiola, who’s started hot and, more importantly, looks comfortable running a true pro offense — play‑action, quick game, a vertical shot or two, and true command at the line.

When they're on schedule, Michigan wants to run duo, gap, split zone — all those downhill runswith clarity and then marry it to easy access throws for the tight ends and slots. The key is staying unpredictable on third down. If they’re stuck in 2nd‑and‑9, Nebraska’s crowd noise plus disguised coverage muddies everything and forces Underwood to win late in the down more often than you’d like.

Nebraska’s defense has been flat‑out smothering the pass so far. They squeeze those in‑breaking routes like they’ve seen them in practice all week, which lines up perfectly against Michigan’s bread‑and‑butter intermediate stuff. But here’s the rub: when it turns into a trench fight, the Huskers have shown they’ll give up some ground to physical run games. That’s where Michigan has a chance to flip it. If the Wolverines start moving bodies in the A and B gaps, the pass defense stats don’t matter nearly as much, and the whole game takes on a different feel.

Raiola’s start has been incredible: 77% completion rate, no picks, 8 tuds, timing throws on time, deep shots when they need them. But this is a different class of disguise. Michigan and Wink Martindale will spin the picture, take away the first read, and make him work the back side of concepts into tight windows. If Nebraska finishes red‑zone trips with seven points, they can absolutely bank enough to come out on top. They're going to move the ball, but Michigan's bend-don't-break could be the deciding factor in this one.

Underwood’s stress shows up in obvious moments: third‑and‑long in a loud building and the late fourth quarter throw that feels like a season. Fourtunately for him, he's gotten to experience that a bit already playing a tough Oklahoma team. Michigan can help him by creating layups to keep him from living in hero mode.

This one feels like a grind-it-out game that’s going to swing on just a few moments: a short field off special teams, one red‑zone turnover, or maybe even just whichever quarterback squeezes in one more big play. It’s going to be tough, physical, honest football, and with a freshman QB on the road, that edge matters. In the end, I think Nebraska makes just enough plays, leans on Rhule and Raiola’s poise, and finds a way to close it out. My call: Nebraska 30‑28 in a game that comes down to a kick with time winding down.

Illinois at Indiana (7:30 ET, NBC/Peacock): It’s Real, Don’t Laugh

Sep 12, 2025; Bloomington, Indiana, USA; Indiana Hoosiers quarterback Fernando Mendoza (15) throws a pass during the first half against the Indiana State Sycamores at Memorial Stadium.
Credit: Robert Goddin-Imagn Images

I know how it looks on paper if you haven’t watched them yet — “Indiana? Ranked? Primetime?” — but both teams are unbeaten for a reason, both are well‑coached into their strengths, and this is exactly the kind of Big Ten game that ages well in the standings.

Bret Bielema is still very much the king of old‑school, downhill football. Illinois wants to pound the rock, let the backs be patient behind double teams, and then run through arm tackles. When they stay on schedule like that, they shrink the game, protect their quarterback from too many 3rd‑and‑longs, and make you play their style. There’s also some spice to it — Illinois will hit you with that quick hitter to one of their talented wideouts if you overload the box.

Indiana, meanwhile, finally looks like it has a grown‑man quarterback running the show. Fernando Mendoza, the Cal transfer, has been sharp — he’s accurate, he’s on time, and he’s fearless throwing between the numbers. The whole offense looks like it knows where to go with the ball before the snap, which turns third‑and‑medium into a layup. And if you creep up, they’ve shown they’ll take the shot off play‑action.

Illinois’ corners haven’t been totally healthy though, and if they’re down one of their top guys, Indiana’s receivers become a real problem on those stack and bunch sets. But Illinois’ defense is a bear in the red zone. If they force Indiana to settle for three points a few times, they can win this game even if they only connect on one big play all night.

It’s not going to make highlight reels, but it’s going to be real football. Indiana’s knack for moving the chains on third down should carry weight at home. Illinois has that punishing run game and a stingy red‑zone defense that keeps them hanging around even when they’re behind, but I think Indiana does just enough to finish it off. My call: Indiana 21‑17 in a tough, hard-fought game where every point feels like it has to be earned.

Florida at Miami (7:30 ET, ABC): Rivalry Noise, Line‑of‑Scrimmage Truth

Sep 13, 2025; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Miami Hurricanes quarterback Carson Beck (11) reacts against the South Florida Bulls during the second quarter at Hard Rock Stadium.
Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Miami comes into this one looking like a complete team — Carson Beck has brought veteran poise and NFL‑ready throws, the offensive line looks like it could double as an airport security line, and the defensive front just bullies people without needing extra help. Florida isn’t short on talent, but consistency has been their hang‑up. The defense can swing with anybody, but the offense has a bad habit of making things way harder than they need to be.

Beck has been in total control. He’s efficient, he’s aggressive when he sees it, and he doesn’t panic when things get cloudy. As long as he’s upright, Miami can open the whole playbook — deep overs, daggers, smash‑fades, you name it. If Florida’s front can’t make him uncomfortable rushing four, then Miami’s going to nickel‑and‑dime them until a big shot lands.

Hard Rock at night feels like the perfect stage for Miami to flex, and I think they actually do it this time. As long as the Hurricanes don’t hand Florida cheap possessions, their drive quality and Beck’s poise should be too much. The Gators will land a few shots, but Miami just looks deeper, steadier, and more trustworthy in the big moments. My call: Miami wins it 37‑28, and it doesn’t feel quite as close as the score makes it look.

Best Bets of the Weekend

Oklahoma ‑6.5 vs. Auburn

I trust OU’s defensive floor at home, but the real story is John Mateer. His poise and mobility keep drives alive, and when the game tightens in the fourth quarter, he’s the difference between OU stalling out and OU pulling away. If Auburn can stay out of long yardage and finish in the red zone, they’ve got a shot to cover, but Mateer’s ability to make plays on early downs and OU’s defense keeping things steady make me feel confident in the Sooners here.

Illinois–Indiana Under (52.5)

Both staffs adjust well, and to me that makes the full‑game under the smarter look. Even if we get a couple of early chunk plays, the adjustments usually clamp things down. Illinois is tough in the red zone, Indiana likes to bleed clock when ahead, and the middle part of the game tends to crawl. Add it all up and the total feels a little too high, which is why I’m leaning under for the game overall.

Miami to Cover vs. Florida (-8.5)

Protection is the story. If Miami keeps Beck clean and Florida isn’t +2 in turnovers, The U will be in control early. Florida has the athletes to turn this into a sweaty cover — special teams or a defensive score would be the path — but in straight ball, Miami’s floor is higher.

Tulsa +10.5 at Oklahoma State (Friday)

The Cowboys haven’t earned double‑digit trust yet. Tulsa’s front can create just enough havoc to make every point precious, and the tempo profile leans fewer possessions. If the market gives you an 11 or 11.5 near kick, I’ll happily take the hook.

All odds courtesy of FanDuel.

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