College Football Odds, Predictions: Stuckey’s Week 4 Betting Spots, Including Colorado vs Oregon & More

College Football Odds, Predictions: Stuckey’s Week 4 Betting Spots, Including Colorado vs Oregon & More article feature image
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Getty Images. Design by Matt Roembke/Action Network. Pictured clockwise from top-left): Oregon quarterback Bo Nix, Cal running back Jadyn Ott, Notre Dame running back Audric Estime and Vanderbilt quarterback AJ Swann.

After losing Texas Tech in horrifying fashion two Saturdays ago, losing Georgia Tech on that Ole Miss late broken run certainly stung. But last week's spots still did finish in the green.

Hopefully, we can avoid a prime-time kick in the gut this week, but I did avoid almost any bad beats last season, so the gambling gods might levee a few taxes in 2023.

For Week 4, I have highlighted my 10 (probably the most I'll have in any single week all season!) favorite betting spots for Saturday's college football slate, starting with four noon kicks. Oh, what a slate we have in store. Is it Saturday yet?

For reference, last year's spots finished a ridiculously unsustainable 45-20-1 (69.2%). I don't think I'll ever repeat that level of success in a season, but hopefully we can avoid the regression monster and have another profitable season.

Although, there will always be rough weeks in this gig and I won't avoid a 2-6 stinker Saturday forever, so please wager responsibly. If you can't afford a horrible day of results, you're betting too much. Plus, my primary goal is to simply share a few key angles, notable matchups and injury situations for each particular game that hopefully make you a better bettor.

Keep in mind the actual spread value still reigns supreme. No matter how great a situational spot appears on paper, I still have to factor in how much value the number holds compared to my projections. A good or bad spot may sway me one way or the other on a bet I'm on the fence for, but it's certainly more art than science.

All lines referenced are current as of the time of writing, so I also included what I'd play each down to for your convenience.

  • 2022: 45-20-1 +22.82 units (69.2%)
  • 2023: 9-5-0 +3.38 units (64.3%)
  • Overall: 54-25-1 +26.20 units (68.3%)


GameTime (ET)Pick
12 p.m.Cincinnati +15
12 p.m.Vanderbilt +14
12 p.m.Clemson +2.5
12 p.m.Texas A&M -7.5
3:30 p.m.Oregon -21
6:30 p.m.Georgia Tech +4.5
7 p.m.Sam Houston +12.5
7:30 p.m.Notre Dame +3.5
8 p.m.Pitt +7.5
10:30 p.m.California +21.5

Cincinnati +15 at Oklahoma

12 p.m. ET ⋅ FOX

Cincinnati will make its Big 12 debut on Saturday in Nippert Stadium against Oklahoma as a home underdog of more than two touchdowns for the first time since 2005 against Louisville.

I think this sets up as a perfect buy-low opportunity on the Bearcats after their loss in overtime to in-state rival Miami (OH) last Saturday night. We should get their best effort here in front of a raucous crowd.

Additionally, I don't mind selling high on the Sooners, who I believe have an inflated market rating after blowing out two doormats in Arkansas State and Tulsa (with a backup quarterback) in addition to a fraudulent cover against SMU. The Mustangs trailed only 14-11 midway through the fourth quarter and actually outgained OU, 367-365.

I do believe the Sooners have improved significantly from last year's 6-7 campaign that included five one-possession losses, but I'm not ready to crown them as being back to their elite ways just yet.

The Cincy defense will provide the toughest test to date for Dillon Gabriel and company, while this will mark the first hostile environment Oklahoma will play in this season after enjoying the majority of fan support in Tulsa.

While I did downgrade the Bearcats after their defeat last week, they did outgain Miami (OH), 538-358, even with quarterback Emory Jones missing a wide-open 70-yard touchdown before throwing an interception on the very next play.

The hard luck didn't stop there, as they also went just 1-for-3 on fourth down and scored only nine total points on their final six trips inside the red zone thanks in large part to a blocked game-winning field goal attempt and a game-sealing interception in overtime.

The offense seems to be firing on all cylinders earlier in the season with Jones looking like a perfect fit for Scott Satterfield's offense, as we saw in a pair of dominant victories over EKU and Pitt to start the season.

I'm a bit worried about Cincinnati containing Oklahoma's explosive passing plays. However, the Sooners still have questions along the offensive line that the Bearcat defensive front can potentially exploit, while Cincinnati's rush-heavy offense should contain the flow and tempo of the game.

Lastly, Cincy has one of the better punters in the nation in Mason Fletcher, who can be weaponized to flip the field at any moment.


Notable Nugget

Per Action Labs, since 2005, teams that have started 3-0 straight up (SU) and against the spread (ATS), as Oklahoma has, have gone just 45-67-2 ATS (40.2%) as a favorite in their fourth game, failing to cover by almost a field goal per game. That includes a 23-38-3 (37.7%) mark as chalk of 14 or more points.

Pick: Cincinnati +15 (Play to +14.5)
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Vanderbilt +14 vs. Kentucky

12 p.m. ET ⋅ SEC Network

This is a pure hold-your-nose buy-low spot on the Dores after they lost on the road as a favorite at UNLV.

Vanderbilt's defense has major issues and the roster has some key injuries worth monitoring, but I couldn't pass up taking two touchdowns against a Kentucky offense still working out some kinks despite playing a laugher of a schedule to start the season with three home games against Ball State, Akron and Eastern Kentucky.

This also isn't an ideal situational spot for Kentucky, which might get caught napping early in this sleepy noon kick time slot with games against Florida and Georgia on deck. That would continue a theme we've seen early in the season with the offense failing to find any rhythm in the first half in each of their first three contests vs. inferior competition.

Quarterback Devin Leary has been working through a mechanical issue, while the receivers have had far too many drops. Plus, the Cats likely won't have the services of their best offensive lineman once again, as team captain Kenneth Horsey likely won't return until next week against Florida at the earliest.

And while you can almost always count on a Brad White defense, we haven't seen this Wildcats team get tested yet — or play on the road — after losing some key pieces from last season's stop unit.

Vanderbilt won't be able to run the ball here, but it can't do that against anybody. However, it does have an outstanding wide receiver duo and a competent enough quarterback in AJ Swann, who actually leads all SEC quarterbacks in passing yards heading into this weekend. He's also reportedly at full health after getting banged up last week.

As a result, the Commodores should have enough offense to keep this within two possessions and/or sneak in the back door late if necessary since Kentucky will likely get super conservative with a sizable second-half lead with a brutal stretch of SEC games on the horizon.

Lastly, to continue the punter theme from Cincinnati, Vanderbilt also has one of the better punters in the country. I feel like my card might be doomed if I have to bring up one more punter of a team I'm betting on Saturday.


Notable Nugget

Mark Stoops has only closed as a favorite of 14-plus in SEC play four times with each of those instances coming against Vanderbilt. He's failed to cover by over 11 points per game. The Wildcats have gone 0-4 ATS in those contests, including an outright loss as 17-point home favorites last season.

Pick: Vanderbilt +14 or Better


Clemson +2.5 vs. Florida State

12 p.m. ET ⋅ ABC

I was lower than most coming into the season on Clemson, as Dabo is falling behind the cream of the crop due to his refusal to utilize the transfer portal.

However, the more I broke this matchup down, the more I started to like Clemson, which I would have expected to be a 2.5- to 3-point favorite before the season.

Well, we have learned about both clubs with three games under their respective belts. However, has that much really changed to warrant this much of a move? Granted, it's still under a field goal for now, which makes it less meaningful than if it got to 3.

What if Clemson didn't completely botch every goal-line opportunity against Duke? What if LSU didn't do the same early against Florida State in a game the Tigers led at the half? The market perception would be completely different.

Instead, everybody remembers those two Week 1 prime-time results and is simply writing off Florida State's near-loss at Boston College — a team that should've lost at home to Holy Cross and Northern Illinois.

Also, it was Clemson (not Florida State) that was implementing a brand new offense on the road against a great defensive coach in Week 1 after hiring new offensive coordinator Garrett Riley — a move everybody, including myself, applauded Swinney for.

That offense has finally started to look how we expected with more downfield shots over the past two weeks, albeit against weaker competition.

I've also upgraded Duke a bunch. The Blue Devils are legit, so that loss doesn't look anywhere close to as bad as it may have at the time.

This is just such a classic buy spot on Clemson against a Florida State team that might not be as invincible as some may believe. The defense still has a few questions it needs to answer, especially after last week.

I'm waiting to see if a +3 pops. If not, may still take some +2.5 smaller and/or get some moneyline exposure while also looking for a live betting opportunity


Notable Nugget

Including the postseason, Dabo Swinney is 11-4 ATS (73.3%) as an underdog against ranked opponents, covering by an average margin of over six points per game. He has won nine of those 15 games as a pup straight up.



Texas A&M -7.5 vs. Auburn

12 p.m. ET ⋅ ESPN

In my opinion, Auburn is getting too much love for its 3-0 start against UMass, Samford and Cal.

The first two are fairly meaningless results against cupcakes, but Cal actually outgained Auburn, 273-230, in a game the Tigers needed a fourth-quarter touchdown drive (that included a third-and-17 conversion) to pull out a 14-10 victory.

I loved the Hugh Freeze hire, but it's going to take him time to get this thing fully turned around.

Meanwhile, I think many are still just remembering the Texas A&M loss at Miami. That's natural when there are so few marquee matchup results early in the season, but that's a game against a Hurricanes team that I believe is very real.

From a situational spot perspective, you better believe Texas A&M has had this game circled since last season. During its embarrassing 5-7 campaign, the low point came toward the end of the season when A&M suffered its seventh and final loss of 2022 at Auburn.

The Aggies limped into that game shorthanded and demoralized from a disappointing year and left even more dejected after losing 13-10 in a game where Auburn quarterback Robby Ashford finished 6-of-13 passing for a meager 60 yards and two interceptions.

new mexico vs texas am-pick-weather-edge-prediction-saturday-week 1-september 2-college-football
Daniel Dunn/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images. Pictured: Texas A&M Aggies wide receiver Ainias Smith (0) and Texas A&M Aggies linebacker Edgerrin Cooper (45).

So, how did Auburn win? It ran the ball 55 times for 270 yards. Texas A&M then had to watch Cadillac Williams and the fans in Jordan Hare celebrate like they just won a national title.

I'm sure that taste is still in their mouths. They must be foaming at the mouth for a shot at revenge in their own house this time.

Additionally, from a matchup perspective, Auburn still can't throw the ball, which is how Miami came out victorious against the Aggies.

Texas A&M has seemingly fixed its run defense issues based on all of the top-10 national rankings in the underlying metrics. The struggles in that department last season were truly mind-boggling when you consider all of the talent it had up front. I'm not sure how Auburn will really move the ball with any consistency.

Meanwhile, A&M also has a more potent offense with a much more modern scheme under new offensive coordinator Bobby Petrino.

Jimbo has let me down before as a favorite, but this looks like a prime spot to back the Aggies, who should be out for blood.


Notable Nugget

At Texas A&M, Fisher owns a stellar 14-6 ATS record (70%) when favored by more than a touchdown at home.

Pick: Texas A&M -7.5 (Play to -9)


Oregon -21 vs. Colorado

3:30 p.m. ET ⋅ ABC

Since 2005, no team has enjoyed more success as a home favorite against the spread in conference play than Oregon. Over that span, the Ducks have gone 73-53-3 (57.9%) ATS when laying points against Pac-12 foes, and I think they add another cover to that list.

I didn't get involved with Colorado in the first two games of the season but felt confident enough to fade the Buffaloes last week after gathering their first two data points. Fortunately, I never had to sweat the Rams covering three touchdowns in a double-overtime thriller.

Well, with another data point in hand, I have no issues fading Colorado once again.

Look, Deion has already done a tremendous job in Boulder in such a short period of time. It's hard to put into words how bad this team was in 2022.

However, while improved, the roster still has major holes, specifically along the offensive line and across the entire defense, especially now without injured two-way star Travis Hunter, who will miss a few weeks.

If we dig a little deeper into Colorado's three results so far, it shocked TCU in the season opener but likely benefited immensely from the Horned Frogs having no idea what to expect from the Colorado offense. Then, Nebraska literally fumbled the game away with completely incompetent quarterback play. Then, it should have lost at home to a pretty bad Colorado State team that committed 17 penalties for 182 yards.

I just don't see a world where home Bo Nix doesn't march the potent Duck offense up and down the field all day long in Autzen Stadium. Meanwhile, Dan Lanning should have a very astute game plan to slow down this one-dimensional Colorado attack after getting three games of film.

The improved Oregon pass rush should also wreak Havoc in the backfield on the known passing downs that Colorado has made an unsustainable living on through three games. Plus, I think Oregon wants to run this up to make a statement, so I don't envision the foot stepping off the gas with a big lead, especially with Stanford followed by a bye week on deck.

Bo Nix Heisman hype season should be in full effect.

I'm waiting to see if any Colorado money comes in before locking in -21, which is what I'd play this up to.


Notable Nugget

Since 2005, in games between two ranked opponents, favorites of 17 or more points have gone 38-23 ATS (62.3%), covering by 4.7 points per game. That includes a 14-4 ATS mark (70%) when favored by 21-plus against a conference opponent.



Georgia Tech +4.5 at Wake Forest

6:30 p.m. ET ⋅ The CW

I feel like Georgia Tech is still undervalued in the market due to an offensive resurgence sparked by new coordinator Buster Faulkner, whose name will be tossed around for more high-profile jobs in the very near future.

He has this offense completely humming through three games with total yardage outputs of 474, 488 and 488 with the former two coming against Ole Miss and Louisville, which each have superior defenses to Wake Forest.

Quarterback Haynes King is in complete control of this offense thanks in large part to superb play-calling and very good protection up front, along with upgraded weapons on the outside.

Georgia Tech is also just a much better-schooled team since Brent Key took over as the interim coach for the fired Geoff Collins last year. Key has cleaned up a lot of the little things that plagued Tech during the Collins era, such as special teams blunders, clock management issues and especially penalties.

Through three games, Georgia Tech has the fewest penalties in the nation with five and only 65 penalty yards. That translates to 1.7 penalties per game — a far cry from the 8.9 it averaged in 2020 (121st in FBS).

college football-odds-best bets-picks-georgia tech vs louisville-hawaii vs stanford-michigan state vs central michigan-friday september 1
Austin McAfee/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images. Pictured: The Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets.

Yes, the Ramblin' Wreck come in at 1-2 on the season, but they really should've beaten Louisville and had an easy cover on the road against Ole Miss in a very tight game until late shenanigans.

While the Yellow Jackets have played a top-30 strength of schedule to date based on my numbers, Wake Forest hasn't played anybody, ranking outside the top 160 in that same category.

The Demon Deacons have faced Vanderbilt, Old Dominion and Elon. They did cover against Vanderbilt, but that final score was a bit misleading thanks to three Vanderbilt turnovers, including a muffed punt that Wake returned for a touchdown. And last week against Old Dominion, Wake had to overcome a late third-quarter 24-7 deficit.

Georgia Tech does have some injuries and its defense does have holes, but the same holds true for Wake Forest. This could certainly turn into a high-scoring affair — I'd take a hard look at the over as well — but I make this more of a coin-flip game that could come down to whichever team has the ball last.

That said, I'm still not totally sold on Wake Forest quarterback Mitch Griffs, who has to fill the massive void left by the departed Sam Hartman, who we all see thriving in South Bend. I still need to see Griffs face better competition before I buy in.


Notable Nugget

Believe it or not, these ACC clubs have only met once over the past 12 seasons. That will change moving forward, as they will face each other on an annual basis with the new ACC scheduling format.

Pick: Georgia Tech +4.5 (Play to +3.5)


Sam Houston +12.5 at Houston

7 p.m. ET ⋅ ESPN+

Sadly, we couldn't bet Sam Houston for a third straight week since it had a bye last week. Well, our double-digit dog darlings are back in action, as they head an hour south to take on a reeling Houston bunch.

I'm not sure what's going on with the Cougs, but something is seriously off. After a lucky win over UTSA in the season-opener in which they finished with a sub-30% post-game win probability thanks to 17 gifted points in a 17-14 victory, Houston then lost outright to Rice after falling behind 28-0.

Then, in what you'd think would be a great bounce-back spot on paper, it laid a complete egg in its Big 12 debut at home against the defending national runner-up TCU. The 36-13 final score doesn't even do the Horned Frogs justice in how much they dominated a Houston club that didn't score an offensive touchdown for the first time since 2014.

Based on some of the quotes I've seen from head coach Dana Holgorsen, he might have lost this locker room and might be on his way out the door sooner rather than later.

There's something seriously wrong with the offense, which grades out poorly across the board. The Cougars obviously miss Clayton Tune and Tank Dell — both now on NFL rosters — and Texas Tech transfer quarterback Donovan Smith has yet to live up to expectations despite flashing plenty of potential in the past. He also just might not be fully healthy, as he alluded to an oblique injury after last week's game.

That's bad news for an offense that simply can't run the ball. Through three games, the Coogs have managed only 3.3 yards per attempt on the ground, which ranks 117th in the country. The defense has also taken a step back after losing its top pass rushers and a pair of defensive backs to the NFL.

Things won't get much easier against a very stingy Sam Houston defense that has helped the Bearkats cover each of their first two games despite the offense scoring three combined points.

It's only two games, but the defensive metrics are elite, and they have looked the part.

Even more impressive is the fact that they shut down two completely different offensive attacks in BYU and Air Force, which have looked fairly competent on that side of the ball in their other games.

While the Sam Houston defense has thrived in its first two games at the FBS level, the same can't be said for the offense, which simply can't move the ball. The Bearkats rank dead last in the country in many advanced offensive metrics, but all you need to know is they rank dead last in rush yards per attempt (1.4) and their quarterback has thrown for less than 200 yards total in two games with no touchdowns and three interceptions.

So, how will they score? I'm really not sure. They did have two weeks to prepare for this game, so I'm sure they worked on that side of the ball quite a bit during a well-timed early-season bye.

You may also see a quarterback change, as former Arizona starter Grant Gunnell is on the roster. I'm not sure how you don't at least give him a shot. Regardless, the bye week should help rejuvenate this awesome defense that had to play way too many snaps over the first two weeks.

Despite the offensive concerns, I'll happily go back to the well with SHSU catching double-digits for a third straight time, especially in a game with a total of 38.

For what it's worth, Holgorsen's clubs have generally come out super uninspired and underprepared for inferior opponents. Just like we saw against Rice, his teams have a propensity for digging an early hole and trying to climb out of it against inferior competition.

I'm sure Sam Houston will come into this game with much more enthusiasm than Houston. #EatEmUpKats

This line is in a dead zone, so I'm waiting to see if it goes back up before locking in a bet. I'd play the Kats down to +11.5.


Notable Nugget

Holgorsen is just 17-27-1 ATS as a favorite of more than 10 points in his head-coaching career.

Pick: Sam Houston +12.5 (Play to +11.5)


Notre Dame +3.5 vs. Ohio State

7:30 p.m. ET ⋅ NBC

This is a rematch of last year, but these teams couldn't look any different now.

Despite having two quarterbacks that couldn't throw a birthday party, Notre Dame actually hung around with Ohio State in a very low-scoring (and boring) affair.

Well, the Irish finally have a quarterback in veteran Wake Forest transfer Sam Hartman, who now swings the advantage of the most important position on the field in Notre Dame's favor.

That matchup last year also marked the first-ever game as a head coach for Marcus Freeman, who has already come a long way since that loss. I'm sure he'll have a much more aggressive game plan, especially knowing he has an offense that can use the pass to set up a nasty stable of backs, led by Audric Estime, who is averaging an eye-popping 8.3 yards per carry on the season.

In fairness, the Ohio State defense is likely improved — especially on the back end — in the second year under the tutelage of highly-respected coordinator Jim Knowles.

However, from what I've seen so far in this young season, the sturdy Notre Dame offensive line (outside of one weak spot at guard) should get a push up front, enabling the Irish to sustain drives and set up the patented Hartman deep shots to a wide receiver room that has looked better than I expected.

The emergence of an actual slot receiver in converted running back Chris Tyree adds an element of explosiveness this offense sorely needed.

While Notre Dame upgraded at quarterback since last year's meeting, the same can't be said for Ohio State. After losing No. 2 overall pick CJ Stroud, head coach Ryan Day just recently named Kyle McCord the full-time starter under center.

After a pair of underwhelming offensive performances, the Buckeyes finally did break out in an absolute romp over Western Kentucky last weekend, but that came against a Tops defense that I'm super down on this year. I mean, they gave up almost 400 yards rushing to South Florida in their season opener.

I'm still not fully sold on McCord. I'll make him prove he can win in a hostile environment in a major step up in competition against a stingy Notre Dame defense that should be at full strength this week after three starters sat out last week, including linebacker JD Bertrand and safety DJ Brown.

Look for Bertrand and his superb linebacker running mates — along with former Buckeye transfer defensive end Javontae Jean-Baptiste — to exploit a vulnerable Ohio State offensive line, forcing the green McCord into a key mistake or two.

In fairness, McCord doesn't have to be perfect with the best wide receiver room in the country at his disposal, but Notre Dame has as good of a cornerback duo as any team in the country in the supremely talented Benjamin Morrison and the super-experienced Cam Hart.

Keep in mind that the secondary held Stroud to only 222 yards passing with this receiving corps despite Hart not being at 100% and Morrison making his first collegiate start last season.

In what I expect to be a very close and competitive game, I'm siding with the quarterback I trust more catching a field goal-plus at home.


Notable Nugget

Ryan Day is just 4-10 ATS (28.6%) as a favorite against top-20 teams, including 1-8 over his past nine matchups. Meanwhile, quarterback Sam Hartman has covered five of his past six games as an underdog against ranked opponents.

Pick: Notre Dame +3.5 (Play to +3)


Pitt +7.5 vs. North Carolina

8 p.m. ET ⋅ ACC Network

If you really want to hold your nose, boy, do I have an ugly buy-low spot on Pitt this weekend.

The Panthers have had almost zero production from Boston College transfer quarterback Phil Jurkovec. The reunion with offensive coordinator Phil Cignetti, whom Jurkovec thrived under in 2020, has certainly not gone to plan so far in 2023.

Through three games, Jurkovec has gone an abysmal 35-of-75 (46.7%) for 474 yards (158 per game) with only four touchdowns to three interceptions — and most of that production came against FCS Duquesne and Cincinnati in garbage time with the game out of hand.

Meanwhile, UNC has one of the nation's top quarterbacks in Drake Maye, who has the Tar Heels off to a 3-0 start.

However, I do expect this Heels offense to ultimately take a slight step back after losing so much production at wide receiver and downgrading, in my humble opinion, at offensive coordinator from Phil Longo to Chip Lindsey.

Don't get me wrong, Maye will still put up silly numbers — but he does have four touchdowns and four interceptions through three games after a 38:7 touchdown-to-interception ratio in 2022.

So, how can I recommend a bet with such a massive quarterback disadvantage? Well, first off and most importantly, I simply can't get to this number that I project right around -5 even if I aggressively downgrade the Pitt offense to levels we haven't ever seen under Pat Narduzzi.

Additionally, I assume the Pitt offensive game plan will rely heavily on the ground game, as it intended to do last week in Morgantown before a couple of bad Jurkovec interceptions led to its demise in a game where both teams finished with exactly 211 yards.

In that game, Pitt ran the ball on 16 of its first 17 plays before Jurkovec threw his first interception with five minutes left in the first half.

Fortunately for the Panthers, that game plan has a much better chance of working against UNC than it did against West Virginia, as the Heels have a much worse run defense.

As a result, the Panthers should find success just churning for 4-5 yards a pop on the ground in order to sustain drives and keep Maye on the sidelines for extended periods, especially with the new clock rules. That's good news for the home-running conference dog.

Also, in spite of Narduzzi's insistence that he isn't considering a quarterback change, I have to imagine he'd consider going to Penn State transfer Christian Veilleux if Jurkovec looks lost again.

Meanwhile, the Pitt defense is still solid, as that unit is pretty plug-and-play on an annual basis. The staff does tend to leave its cornerbacks on islands, which leaves them susceptible to explosive plays. That's obviously not ideal against Maye, who shreds opponents with the deep ball, but I'd have to imagine they play a little softer on the back end after last year's loss.

I could end up looking very foolish when this game ends, but it won't be the first or last time that happens. I'm just playing my number with a matchup I fancy while hoping this is the bottom of the market on the desperate Panthers after back-to-back horrible performances.

You should at least get their best effort at home against a ranked opponent that beat them by 18 last season. For what it's worth, Josh Downs and Antoine Green combined for 21 catches for 282 yards and four touchdowns in that victory. Both have since moved on to the NFL.

Pitt seems to win one of these games every year, and UNC plays some odd games against inferior competition, as we saw at home in Week 2 when it needed double overtime to beat Appalachian State.


Notable Nugget

Narduzzi is 6-1 ATS (85.7%) as a home conference underdog of at least a field goal, covering by over 12 points per game. That includes five outright victories in a row in this spot.



California +21.5 at Washington

10:30 p.m. ET ⋅ ESPN

Who wants to get in front of this Washington juggernaut that just put up over 700 total yards of offense despite star quarterback Michael Penix only playing less than three quarters? I might be the only idiot who raised his hand.

Cal has thrived in these spots under head coach Justin Wilcox, who uglies up the game against superior opponents with the best of them by taking away explosive plays (Cal is excelling in that department once again this year) and leaning on a ball-control offense that will feature a heavy dose of running back Jaydn Ott.

Look no further than last season when a bad Cal team lost four one-possession games against quality opponents:

  • at Notre Dame
  • at USC
  • UCLA
  • Washington

Against these same Huskies, Cal trailed, 6-0, at the half in an eventual 28-21 loss in which it turned the ball over on downs in Washington territory in the final minute.

You can even look at the game against Auburn earlier this season that ended, 15-10, in a game Cal probably should've won.

Look, to me, Washington has looked like the best team in the country top to bottom so far this season. That doesn't mean the Huskies are the best team, but they are certainly rolling.

I'm banking on Cal making this a more low-scoring affair and on the fact that this may mark the peak market value of Washington after three blowout victories over FBS teams that I'm lower than the market on when it comes to their quarterback play and defense.

The Cal defense really fell off a cliff last season, which was a bit shocking under the defensive-minded Wilcox, but it seems to be in much better shape this season.

It's worth noting that Cal listed both Ben Finley and Sam Jackson V as co-starters at quarterback this week, which I actually like since Finley is the more competent passer who can potentially get in the backdoor if need be against a banged-up Washington secondary. It also makes the preparation a touch more difficult for Washington.


Notable Nugget

Wilcox has gone 26-11-1 ATS (70.3%) as an underdog, covering by 3.75 points per game. That includes an insane 21-6 ATS mark (77.8%) when catching more than four points with an average cover margin just shy of a touchdown.

Pick: Cal +21.5 (Play to +21)

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