Bill Connelly, ESPN Staff Writer 1y

FCS quarterfinals: Top games, key player, updated title odds

Insider College Football, North Dakota State Bison, South Dakota State Jackrabbits, Holy Cross Crusaders, Incarnate Word Cardinals, Samford Bulldogs, William & Mary Tribe, Montana State Bobcats, Sacramento State Hornets

There were two main questions heading into last week's FCS playoff action: Would the powerhouse programs begin looking the part now that they had to, and would the high-ranking upstarts meet the moment?

To the former question, the answer was a resounding yes. North Dakota State, the preeminent FCS program for the past decade, entered the playoffs having only occasionally flashed fifth gear in the regular season, but began this year's run with a dominant, 23-point win over Montana. Top-seeded South Dakota State, which had looked the part more than NDSU this season, continued to do so with a blowout of Delaware.

The answers to the latter question were mixed but eventually affirmative. No. 5 seed William & Mary reached the quarterfinals for the first time since 2009 with a blowout of Gardner-Webb, and No. 8 Holy Cross kept New Hampshire at arm's length in a 16-point win. But No. 6 Samford and No. 7 Incarnate Word both needed full time to get past Southeastern Louisiana and Furman, respectively, and unbeaten No. 2 seed Sacramento State, the projected favorite per SP+ (which doesn't take playoff history into account), fell behind Richmond by two touchdowns in rainy conditions before rallying to win by 7.

The top eight seeds indeed advanced, which could make for a dynamite set of evenly matched quarterfinals.

Here is what SP+ projects for the four matchups, three of which take place Friday evening.

• No. 3 North Dakota State 37.1, No. 6 Samford 31.5 (Friday, 7 p.m. ET, ESPN2)

• No. 4 Montana State 34.0, No. 5 William & Mary 30.2 (Friday, 10:15 p.m., ESPN2)

• No. 2 Sacramento State 39.0, No. 7 Incarnate Word 31.5 (Friday, 10:30 p.m., ESPN+)

• No. 1 South Dakota State 40.6, No. 8 Holy Cross 30.9 (Saturday, noon, ESPN)

Here's what to pay closest attention to this week.


Round 3's marquee game: Samford at North Dakota State

I mean, they're all marquee games by the time you reach the quarterfinals. William & Mary is stout, balanced and physical enough to trade blows with Tommy Mellott and Montana State. Incarnate Word's YOLO offense can score in batches on anyone. Holy Cross is well versed at winning in the cold and gray conditions that await at South Dakota State. These are all intriguing games.

Still, I can't stop thinking about Samford's trip up north. There is a decent chance it becomes the type of customary quarterfinal blowout North Dakota State has won a million times before: Of the Bison's last five quarterfinal victories, four have come by at least 24 points as they've shifted into "destroy" mode for the stretch run. But there's nothing customary about Samford's Chris Hatcher or his Bulldogs' path to this point.

Hatcher was the original son of the Air Raid. When Hal Mumme and Mike Leach, progenitors of the air-it-out style that so thoroughly changed college football over the last 30 years, arrived at Valdosta State in 1992, they found, in Hatcher, the best possible lump of clay for molding to their system. By the time he graduated, he had set more than 20 career passing records at VSU and won the Harlon Hill Trophy, aka the Division II Heisman.

By the time he was 27, Hatcher was Valdosta State's head coach. By the time he was 31, he had won a national title there. His coaching potential seemed off the charts, but when he moved to Georgia Southern in 2007, the progress stopped. His attempts to change the ways of the option-based program at Southern resulted in just an 18-15 record over three seasons, and he was fired after going 5-6 in 2009. He landed at Murray State and went 27-30 over three seasons there. And after a solid start at Samford, with playoff bids in 2016 and 2017, everything seemed to be playing out in a similar way there too. The Bulldogs went a combined 19-22 from 2018 to 2021 and were voted sixth out of nine teams in this year's Southern Conference preseason coaches poll.

But they went unbeaten in the SoCon. They're 11-1 overall. Quarterback Michael Hiers, a transfer from Northwest Mississippi Community College, has completed an incredible 77% of his passes with 35 touchdowns and only three picks. He's exactly the kind of quick passer we've come to expect from the Air Raid, but the Bulldogs proved last week that they could throw a pretty good curveball too. With Hiers injured, redshirt freshman Quincy Crittendon came in against Southeastern Louisiana and not only completed 26 of 40 passes for 314 yards but also rushed 19 times for 106 yards. He threw for four touchdowns to stake the Bulldogs to a pair of second-half leads, and when SLU responded, so did Crittendon. His 10-yard score in overtime gave the Bulldogs their first playoff victory since 1991. Hiers' status for Friday night is unclear, but Crittendon brings something interesting to the table in his own right.

The dreams of many up-and-comers have died in the Fargodome, and it's possible -- likely, even -- that Samford's will Friday night as well. But North Dakota State's defense has been vulnerable at times this season, and there's a chance Samford can match the Bison score for score.

Make no mistake: NDSU will score. A lot. Even without injured star back Hunter Luepke, the Bison still ground Montana into a paste last week. Kobe Johnson and TaMerik Williams rushed 23 times for 307 yards and three touchdowns; Johnson, Williams and quarterback Cam Miller all produced touchdown runs of at least 68 yards (Johnson had two), and NDSU turned a tight 21-13 halftime score into a 49-26 laugher. Samford's only loss this season was to Georgia, so the Bulldogs understand what it's like to go against a relentlessly physical attack, but that doesn't mean they're actually prepared for it.

Still, while NDSU ranks third in offensive SP+ this season, the Bison rank an uncharacteristic 44th on defense. Their pass rush, led by big Spencer Waege, is nasty and was the only reason they led Montana at halftime. They forced a field goal early in the second quarter thanks to a Jaxon Duttenhefer sack, and they scored on a fumble recovery after a Kody Huisman strip sack. Montana was able to drive 60-plus yards on four occasions against the Bison, and Samford's offense grades out better than the Grizzlies'. If Hiers or Crittendon can neutralize the NDSU pass rush with quick throws, Samford could make things interesting.

Then again, they've made things interesting just by getting to this point. Hatcher's renaissance has been a surprise. We'll see if the Bulldogs have another surprise in store Friday evening.


Round 3's marquee player: Lindsey Scott Jr., Incarnate Word

The most "no, no, no ... YES!" quarterback in the Football Championship Subdivision.

Don't try that at home, kids.

Suiting up for his fifth school over a seven-year career -- LSU (2016), East Mississippi CC (2017), Missouri (2018), Nicholls State (2019-21), and now Incarnate Word -- Scott seems to have found his forever home in San Antonio. He came to town with first-year head coach G.J. Kinne, and the duo built on last season's 10-3 season with something even greater. He's thrown for 4,185 yards and 55 touchdowns this season, and he's also the Cardinals' second-leading rusher with 466 yards and seven more scores. He threw an early pick-six against Furman last week, then nearly threw another one, but he and the Cardinals just kept right on charging forward. They took the lead for the last time with 1:54 left.

UIW is a projected 7.5-point underdog at Sacramento State this week, so it's possible that this is Scott's final collegiate game. For that matter, it could be the last game for Kinne too: He's leaving for Texas State after the playoffs, and UIW will soon be on to its third head coach in three seasons. But soak this game in because it could be wild. UIW games usually are.

Scott has at his disposal an incredible receiver duo in Darion Chafin and Taylor Grimes, who have combined for an obscene 130 catches, 2,246 yards and 30 touchdowns. And while the UIW defense isn't particularly good by any reasonable definition, it's active. The Cardinals are averaging nearly 10 tackles for loss per game with 40.5 sacks and 14 interceptions. If Sacramento State is to continue its incredible run, the Hornets will have to properly deal with this incredibly volatile underdog.


Updated title odds

Each week, I take a look at each team's national title odds, per SP+ projections. Here are this week's projections.

8. Holy Cross 4.3%. If FCS were like FBS, with its tiny, elites-only playoff (for now), the unbeaten but eighth-seeded Crusaders would have wrapped up their season with a nice bowl game and a pat on the back. Instead, quarterback Matthew Sluka, linebacker Liam Anderson and the rest of head coach Bob Chesney's dynamite squad get to find out exactly what their limits are.

They ground out a comfortable win over New Hampshire in inclement conditions last week, and they haven't lost since last year's round of 16. They have met every challenge, but it goes without saying that this week's challenge -- at top-seeded South Dakota State -- is the biggest of the season.

7. Samford: 6.1%. It's really difficult to see the Bulldogs' defense faring well against the wheat thresher that is the North Dakota State run game, but they've won some track meets this season.

6. Incarnate Word: 7.5%. If this is the last time we see Scott and Kinne together, here's to hoping their sendoff is the wild track meet they deserve.

5. William & Mary: 9.3%. The Tribe looked good in last week's 54-14 win over Gardner-Webb, both rushing and passing for more than 300 yards and forcing six turnovers. Mike London has built a balanced squad capable of exploiting whatever weaknesses opponents bring to the table. They can run, they can throw -- Darius Wilson is completing 65% of his passes at 15.2 yards per completion -- and the defense, led by sophomore linebacker John Pius and end Nate Lynn, swarms against both run and pass.

It remains to be seen what the Tribe will find to exploit against Montana State, however: The 11-1 Bobcats are one of two teams to rank in the top 10 in both offensive and defensive SP+.

4. North Dakota State: 14.7%. The defense remains a bit of a question mark, but the Bison have outscored playoff teams by a combined 91-47 in their last two games and should handle Samford as well.

3. Montana State: 14.8%. Tasked with surviving a tricky rematch last week, Montana State responded with aplomb. Quarterbacks Tommy Mellott and Sean Chambers combined for 250 rushing yards, 166 passing yards and 3 touchdowns as the Bobcats eased out to a 33-10 lead over a strong Weber State team. The Wildcats scored a couple of late TDs to make things interesting (final score: 33-25), but MSU appears to be in playoff form.

2. South Dakota State: 20.9%. In writing a lot about both upstarts and NDSU in recent weeks, I feel like I've given SDSU -- the top seed and a team that has lost only to Iowa of the Big Ten (and barely) this season -- short shrift. My excuse: I've just been assuming I'll have plenty of opportunities to write about them during this playoff run.

The veteran Jackrabbits have been the surest thing in FCS this season, and they routed Delaware 42-6 last week. They held a good Blue Hens offense to 192 total yards, scored touchdowns on their first three possessions and very much looked the part of a title team. They will probably do so again Saturday against Holy Cross.

1. Sacramento State: 22.3%. On one hand, last week's performance against Richmond rang alarm bells. Jake Dunniway threw three interceptions, and the Hornets needed two fourth-quarter touchdown drives to secure a narrow 38-31 win. Richmond is good, but every opponent from here on out is better.

On the other hand ... Sac State survived. Troy Taylor's team has proven capable of blowouts -- it wouldn't be first overall in SP+ without that trait -- but it also has beaten five ranked opponents by tight margins. The Hornets faced rain and an early deficit and couldn't run the ball as well as usual but still figured out a way to advance. And now they'll have to strap their track shoes on against Incarnate Word.

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