Week 3 of college football finally gave us some actual action in the top 25. BYU shocked Wisconsin, LSU took down Auburn, Oklahoma State upset (!) Boise State at home, and ranked USC and Arizona State teams lost as well.

Below, we’re collecting new top 25s heading into Week 4.

The usual disclaimers apply. The only ranking that matters in the end is the Playoff selection committee’s ranking on Selection Sunday, and the committee can change its mind suddenly. It doesn’t even start to release weekly Playoff rankings until around Halloween.

We’ll update each of the following rankings as they release.

The historical gold standard of human polls.

Alabama Georgia Clemson Ohio State Oklahoma LSU Stanford Notre Dame Auburn Washington Penn State West Virginia Virginia Tech Mississippi State Oklahoma State UCF TCU Wisconsin Michigan Oregon Miami Texas A&M Boston College Michigan State BYU

Every poll and rating smashed into one continually updating ranking, more or less. We’ll update this one a couple times throughout Sunday as rankings come out.

Alabama Georgia Ohio State Clemson Oklahoma Penn State LSU Mississippi State Oklahoma State Auburn Stanford Notre Dame Virginia Tech Washington Wisconsin Iowa Duke Boise State TCU UCF Miami Michigan Boston College West Virginia Washington State

Bill Connelly’s S&P+ ratings

SB Nation’s favored college football advanced stat, which tends to perform well against the Vegas spread, along with offering much deeper evaluations of teams.

Alabama Ohio State Georgia Clemson Mississippi State Oklahoma State Washington Penn State Oklahoma Michigan Memphis Texas A&M Wisconsin Auburn WVU Boise Boston College Notre Dame UCF Michigan State LSU Kentucky Indiana Miami TCU

A long-running computer that also includes FCS teams.

Alabama Ohio State Oklahoma Penn State Clemson Washington Georgia Oklahoma State Mississippi State Auburn LSU Michigan Iowa Wisconsin Virginia Tech Stanford TCU Texas A&M Miami Duke! Boise State Michigan State West Virginia NC State Texas!

Doesn’t matter much, and often is more a poll of PR directors than actual coaches.