Forty names, games, teams and minutiae making news in college football (humble pie sold separately in Blacksburg):

[More Dash: Key October games | Bad coaching hires | NCAA on the clock]

FIRST QUARTER

SEPTEMBER IN REVIEW

We’re five weeks into the season and still in September, so that tells you a lot has transpired. The Dash rips through 10 important developments as we prepare to dive into October:

Team of the Month: Auburn (1). The Tigers are The Dash’s No. 1 team right now, and frankly they should feel insulted about being No. 7 in both the AP and USA Today Coaches’ polls. If you average the Sagarin Rating of every team that the top eight unbeatens have played thus far, Auburn’s is by far the highest at 42nd. The Tigers are the only team in Sagarin’s Top 10 that has beaten another member of that Top 10 (Oregon, on a neutral field). Throw in three more Top 50 wins (Texas A&M, Mississippi State and Tulane) and this is the best résumé to date. Auburn’s start is all the more impressive when you factor in a true freshman quarterback (Bo Nix) and the fact that Gus Malzahn began the season coaching to keep his job.

Radical Makeover of the Month: LSU (2). If Bill Belichick became a standup comedian, it might be less surprising than the Tigers’ metamorphosis from a low-wattage offensive team to the national leader in scoring. LSU’s points per game is up more than 25 from last year and more than 30 from the previous year. The Tigers are second nationally in passing yards per game, after the following rankings in that category the previous five seasons: 67th, 84th, 101st, 106th and 116th. The addition of Joe Brady as passing game coordinator, the continued progression of quarterback Joe Burrow and the willingness of Ed Orgeron to get outside of his hidebound comfort zone are combining to work wonders in Baton Rouge.

Best Return to Identity: Wisconsin (3). Last year, the Badgers were an injury-riddled shell of their normal selves defensively. They allowed 22.6 points and 344 yards per game, and 5.5 yards per play — all of them the highest averages given up by a Wisconsin defense in more than a decade. So far in 2019, coordinator Jim Leonhard’s unit is back on shutdown patrol. The Badgers lead the nation in scoring defense, total defense, rushing defense, pass efficiency defense and yards allowed per play, and Saturday against Northwestern they had two defensive touchdowns. That, in every form and fashion, is more like the Wisconsin we’re used to seeing.

Most improved: Jalen Hurts (4). Playing quarterback for Lincoln Riley makes everyone a superstar, and Hurts is the next man up in the Oklahoma assembly line. The Alabama transfer has seen his pass efficiency rating soar from 150.75 in 2017 (his last season as the starter in Tuscaloosa) to 249.86, which leads the nation by a mile over Burrow and the guy who beat out Hurts, Tua Tagovailoa. It’s early, but Hurts is on pace to break a number of single-season FBS records, including pass efficiency and yards per pass attempt (15.2).

Quarterback Jalen Hurts #1 of the Oklahoma Sooners looks to throw against the Texas Tech Red Raiders at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium on September 28, 2019 in Norman, Oklahoma. The Sooners defeated the Red Raiders 55-16. (Getty Images) More

Least improved: Trevor Lawrence (5). The Clemson quarterback looked like the best freshman anyone had ever seen at his position at the end of last season, throwing lasers and tearing up Notre Dame and Alabama in the College Football Playoff. But the sophomore slump has been real. Lawrence threw more interceptions (five) in Clemson’s first three games than he did in the entire 2018 season. After finishing last year 12th nationally in efficiency, he’s currently 57th. He’s still unleashing a couple of throws every game that dilate your pupils, but the overall production has trailed where he left off last winter.

Bust of the Month: The preseason polls misevaluated several teams — Syracuse, Nebraska, Stanford, Iowa State — but the biggest miss was assigning a top-15 ranking to Texas A&M (6). The Aggies were no match for Clemson in Death Valley, and there’s no shame in that. But losing handily at home to Auburn was not what fans envisioned in Year 2 under Jimbo Fisher, and following that with a narrow escape over the worst team in the SEC (Arkansas) further diminishes expectations going forward. With games remaining against Alabama, Georgia and LSU, the ceiling looks like 7-5.

Story continues