There were few surprises in the third edition of this season’s College Football Playoff Rankings, as the Ohio State Buckeyes stayed put at No. 2 following a lopsided 56-21 victory over Rutgers. The Joe Burrow-led LSU Tigers squad remained at No. 1 with a 58-37 win over Ole Miss, despite allowing over 400 yards rushing to the 4-7 Rebels.

The Clemson Tigers and Georgia Bulldogs followed right behind at No. 3 and No. 4 respectively, as the four playoff spots remained unchanged from last week.

There were not a ton of huge changes, with a few teams moving up a spot and the Golden Gophers falling slightly with the loss to Iowa. Alabama did not take a hit for the loss of Tua Tagovailoa, as it appears the committee will wait and see how they look without their star quarterback before making any change to the ranking. Baylor fell to No. 14 following the loss to Oklahoma, who is now No. 9.

The other Big Ten teams in the CFP rankings include this week’s opponent Penn State at No. 8, followed by No. 10 Minnesota, No. 12 Wisconsin, No. 13 Michigan and No. 17 Iowa. Cincinnati, whom Ohio State throttled 42-0 in Week 2, moved down a bit to No. 19.

Check out the complete College Football Playoff rankings:

CFP Rankings Nov. 19 Rank Team Rank Team 1 LSU 2 Ohio State 3 Clemson 4 Georgia 5 Alabama 6 Oregon 7 Utah 8 Penn State 9 Oklahoma 10 Minnesota 11 Florida 12 Wisconsin 13 Michigan 14 Baylor 15 Auburn 16 Notre Dame 17 Iowa 18 Memphis 19 Cincinnati 20 Boise St 21 Oklahoma State 22 Iowa State 23 USC 24 App State 25 SMU

Ohio State will still have a chance to regain the top spot in the rankings, with matchups against Penn State, Michigan and either Minnesota or Wisconsin in the Big Ten Championship looming should they run the table. The Buckeyes may need to win convincingly to jump LSU, however, as the Tigers will play No. 4 Georgia in the SEC Championship game.

If everything holds serve until the end, which it almost never does in college football, we are set up for an all-time great championship weekend. Outside a good Big Ten game, we are looking at a No. 1 against No. 4 matchup in the SEC title game, a rematch of this past weekends thrilling Baylor/Oklahoma game in the Big 12, and a Pac-12 title game between Oregon and Utah with potential playoff implications.

There’s also Clemson, who played maybe the easiest schedule of all time and will likely not see much greater competition even in the ACC Championship.