A Saturday full of upsets led to a reshuffling of the College Football Playoff rankings, with Ohio State being the biggest beneficiary.

The Buckeyes, runaway winners over Maryland, moved up from fifth to second in the latest CFP rankings, as they made the most out of losses by Clemson, Michigan and Washington.

Despite the defeats, the trio didn't wind up completely out in the cold.

Michigan, a loser on the road against Iowa, fared the best of the fallen, as the Wolverines remained at No. 3

Clemson, which lost at home to unranked Pitt, dropped from No. 2 to No. 4, while Washington's home loss to USC cost the Huskies two spots, dropping them from fourth to sixth.

Louisville, which could have made a case for a spot in the top four, instead had to settle for a one-spot move, going from No. 6 to No. 5 after pulling out a win over Wake Forest that was much tighter than the 44-12 final score would suggest.

Staying above the fray was Alabama, which is still locked into the top spot, thanks to being one of just two remaining unbeaten teams in FBS.

College Football Playoff Top 10 Ohio State took advantage of losses by Michigan, Clemson and Washington to move into the top four of this week's CFP rankings. Full Rankings 1. Alabama 6. Washington 2. Ohio State 7. Wisconsin 3. Michigan 8. Penn State 4. Clemson 9. Oklahoma 5. Louisville 10. Colorado

The Big Ten placed four teams in the top 10 this week, as Wisconsin and Penn State checked in at Nos. 7 and 8, respectively, with the Badgers holding steady, while the Nittany Lions continued their climb, jumping up from No. 10.

With six of the top 10 teams coming from the Big Ten and ACC, CFP executive director Bill Hancock told ESPN's Heather Dinich that being a division winner in a conference isn't a mandatory consideration.

"The committee's charge is to rank the top 25 teams in the nation; this is done based on the independent rankings of the 12 college football experts in the room," Hancock said. "The committee members are free to consider many different factors, and although being a division winner has not been discussed as a factor in any of our meetings, nothing prohibits it from being a factor, if that's what any individual committee member thinks. As you know, conference champion is indeed an explicit factor, but division champion is not."

Oklahoma is the highest-ranked Big 12 team at No. 9, and Colorado rounds out the top 10. They are followed by Oklahoma State, Utah, USC and West Virginia, all of which moved up in the rankings this week.

Auburn dropped from No. 9 to No. 15 after a 13-7 loss to unranked Georgia that handed the Crimson Tide the SEC West title.

Speaking of the SEC West, LSU made a large leap forward by moving from No. 24 to No. 16 after a road win over previously ranked Arkansas.

Florida State (No. 17) and Nebraska (No. 18) each moved up one spot, taking advantage of North Carolina's loss to rival Duke. As a result, the Tar Heels fell out of the CFP rankings altogether.

A win over Kentucky propelled Tennessee back into the rankings, as the Vols ended up at No. 19.

At Nos. 20 and 21 are Boise State and Western Michigan, in a battle for a New Year's Six bowl berth. Though behind Boise State, Western Michigan joins Alabama as the only undefeated FBS teams.

Washington State, Florida, Stanford and Texas A&M round out the top 25.