Only a late touchdown with the game well out of reach allowed Florida to avoid being blanked for the first time since 1988.
Small victories will have to suffice in place of actual wins, which have proved harder to come by in coach Dan Mullen's fourth season. The 34-7 loss to Georgia illustrated the chasm of space separating the Gators from the top-ranked Bulldogs and raised another round of questions about whether Mullen has what it takes to close the gap.
It's been that kind of year for the Gators. After winning the SEC East and putting a scare into Alabama during the pandemic year, Florida stands among the biggest flops in the Football Bowl Subdivision.
While the schedule gets significantly easier from here — South Carolina, Samford, Missouri and Florida State — don't let an eight-win regular season distract from what's really at play: Florida is a team and program heading in the wrong direction.
The Gators are among Saturday's biggest winners and losers:
WINNERS
Michigan State
Down 16 points in the third quarter and with a magical season on the brink, Michigan State outscored Michigan 23-3 in the final 19 minutes to become the only unbeaten team in the Big Ten. The star was running back Kenneth Walker III, who ran for 197 yards and five scores — the most Michigan had ever allowed to a single player. Walker should be at or near the top of every Heisman Trophy watchlist.
Ohio State
Heavy favorites against slumping Penn State, the Buckeyes suffered uncharacteristic struggles in the red zone, scoring just one touchdown in six trips, and didn't put the Nittany Lions away until under three minutes left in a 33-24 win. On defense, the Buckeyes shut down Penn State's running game but failed to get stops on third down, allowing conversions on 11 of 15 attempts. The good news? Even three touchdowns inside the PSU 20-yard line — and OSU had been getting six points on almost 80% of those trips — and a grind-it-out win becomes a blowout.
Looking ahead:Big Ten title runs through Michigan State and Ohio State - for now
Miami (Fla.)
The Hurricanes upset Pittsburgh 38-34 and have won back-to-back games against ranked teams to right the ship heading into a big slate of games in November. One factor that reflects well on embattled coach Manny Diaz is the Hurricanes' effort, which didn't waver amid a very poor first half of the season. This run of strong wins has been highlighted by a star turn from young quarterback Tyler Van Dyke, who threw for 426 yards and three scores to outduel Kenny Pickett.
Kansas State
Much like Miami, the Wildcats have reversed a troubling run of ugly losses with two straight wins in Big 12 play. The latest, 31-12 against TCU, was keyed by another all-conference performance from running back Deuce Vaughn, who ran for 109 yards and two scores with another 49 receiving yards. Kansas State is now 5-3 and a virtual lock to reach bowl eligibility for the second time under coach Chris Klieman.
Minnesota
Tossed aside after last month's loss to Bowling Green — and yeah, that was a horrific loss — Minnesota now sits in first place in the Big Ten West after a 41-14 win against Northwestern. That makes four straight wins for the Golden Gophers with two enormous games to come in November: Iowa on Nov. 13 and Wisconsin on Nov. 27.
Auburn
The Tigers are starting to make a move under first-year coach Bryan Harsin after a sluggish start to the regular season. Auburn is 6-2 and set to rocket up the USA TODAY Sports AFCA Coaches Poll after a 31-20 win against Ole Miss keyed by quarterback Bo Nix, who threw for 276 yards with three touchdowns, two coming on the ground. The win leaves Auburn at 3-1 in SEC play and raises the chances that the Iron Bowl against Alabama will be for the division. And nothing wacky ever happens in that rivalry, right?
LOSERS
Michigan
There is still no signature moment for Jim Harbaugh, who has managed to build a program that beats nobodies but can't nail down meaningful wins in the biggest games on Michigan's schedule. The loss to MSU drops Harbaugh to 3-9 in rivalry games against the Spartans and Ohio State and 2-13 in games against top-10 competition. In games against everyone else, Harbaugh's record is 54-10.
Iowa State
Losing 38-31 to West Virginia is dreadful for a laundry list of reasons, beginning with the fact that falling on the road to a team near the bottom of the Big 12 standings essentially eliminates the Cyclones from contention for the conference championship game. In a broader sense, this is just the latest setback for a team once picked to contend for the playoff. Instead, Iowa State is the biggest letdown in the Big 12.
Iowa
Iowa flirted with disaster during its 6-0 start, when consistent failures on offense were papered over by the play of an elite defense. But as bad as the Hawkeyes were in losing to Purdue on Oct. 16, that performance had nothing on the egg laid in Saturday's 27-7 loss to Wisconsin. The Badgers held Iowa to 156 yards of offense, including 24 yards on 30 carries; forced three game-changing fumbles to build a 20-0 halftime lead; and gave up just two third-down conversion in 13 attempts.
Texas
What do losses to Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Baylor have in common? Beyond the fact that each loss was to a ranked opponent and each sent Texas tumbling down the power rankings in the Big 12, the losses are linked by this: In each game, Texas held a double-digit lead in the second half but still managed to give it away. Up by 21 points against the Sooners and 11 points against the Cowboys, the Longhorns led Baylor 21-10 in the third quarter.
SMU
Here's one way to lose a game and blemish your unbeaten record: SMU kicked a 45-yard field goal to tie Houston 37-37 with 30 seconds left, only for the Cougars to return the ensuing kickoff 100 yards to pull off a 44-37 win. The returner, Marcus Jones, is one of the nation's very best; he now has two touchdowns on punt returns and another two on kickoffs. The loss puts Houston into position to meet Cincinnati in the American title game.
Nebraska
It's going to be very hard for new athletics director Trev Alberts to convincingly sell the idea that Scott Frost should get another year if the Cornhuskers finish 3-9 with one win in Big Ten play, which seems likely after a 28-23 loss at home to Purdue. Up next? Just Ohio State, Wisconsin and Iowa, three teams Nebraska has barely sniffed since joining the conference a decade ago. At this point, the program has much more in common with Vanderbilt and Kansas than with the upper echelon of the Power Five.
Kentucky
Kentucky's chances of reaching a New Year's Six bowl took a huge hit with a 31-17 loss to Mississippi State, dropping the Wildcats to 6-2 heading into a pretty smooth slate of games to cap the regular season (Tennessee, Vanderbilt, New Mexico State and Louisville). Struggling to score points isn't anything new for UK, which came into Saturday ranked 71st nationally in scoring. But a typically reliable defense allowed Mississippi State quarterback Will Rodgers to complete 36 of 39 attempts for 344 yards and a touchdown.
Follow colleges reporter Paul Myerberg on Twitter @PaulMyerberg