On the first Saturday of the college football season with Power Five conference teams playing, the Sun Belt was the star and the Big Ten grabbed headlines without even playing.

What figures to be at best a weird season as teams try to navigate the pandemic ramped up Saturday with 19 games, including a bunch involving the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Big 12.

The Power Five conferences all modified their schedules for this season to deal with the inevitable disruptions caused by COVID-19.

Good call. Three Big 12 teams had their openers this weekend postponed, including No. 15 Oklahoma State. In the ACC, four hours before the first conference's first game of the season, it was announced that next week's Virginia-Virginia Tech game was being postponed.

Welcome to 2020, folks. When the games did get going, the Big 12 might have been rethinking those nonconference matchups.

No. 23 Iowa State scrambled to bring Louisiana-Lafayette to Ames after not one but two previously scheduled games fell through.

The Ragin' Cajuns from the Sun Belt are no pushovers. They won 11 games last year and coach Bill Napier is looking like a rising star. In a season with few nonconference games, Louisiana's 31-14 victory has a chance to be the most impressive by a Group of Five team this season.

Meanwhile, Arkansas State scored another upset for the Sun Belt, knocking off Kansas State 35-31 with a late touchdown catch by Jonathan Adams Jr., who scored three times for the visiting Red Wolves. Arkansas State lost its opener at Memphis last week.

Fun Belt, indeed.

If this season holds together (cross fingers) the Sun Belt now has some credibility in the bank to show the College Football Playoff selection committee. No, the Sun Belt is not getting a team into the final four, but maybe a New Year's Six bowl could be possible for its champion.

Defending champion Appalachian State has another strong team and Louisiana is clearly legit. The two play Oct. 7 in Boone, North Carolina. A third straight Sun Belt title game between the Mountaineers and Ragin' Cajuns could produce a champ worthy of something better than the New Orleans Bowl.

BIG TEN, BACK?

One month and a day after the Big Ten postponed its football season, the conference took a step toward getting back in the game.

Things might move quickly now. And if they do, the Big Ten could be up and running by mid- to late October. An October 17 start would give the conference space for an eight-game season in nine weeks. With that schedule, the Big Ten championship game could be played Dec. 19, which is the day before the playoff selection committee sets the field.

The lynch pin of a salvaged season after much drama and consternation is likely to be the conference's ability to secure rapid, daily testing for its players.

The first couple of weeks of this season is showing how valuable that could be.

Games are being postponed left and right. An outbreak at Memphis this week led to its game against Houston next week being postponed. BYU announced Saturday night that it was postponing its game next week against Army.

Georgia Southern played without 33 players on Saturday, though the school said not all of those absences were related to COVID-19. Oklahoma had a severely depleted roster, too. Not that it mattered against Missouri State.

It's not just players testing positive. It's the contact tracing that lands players in quarantine for 14 days because they were deemed by health officials to have been too close to someone who was infected.

Testing every day means less time for a few positive tests to lead to numerous high-risk contacts.

The Big Ten has made a mess of its decision to postpone, not because it was necessarily the wrong decision. The conference leadership, including new Commissioner Kevin Warren, have failed to get all the stakeholders, from coaches to players to parents, on board. The conference totally lost control of its messaging and lacked the transparency needed to stand by its decision with conviction.

The Big Ten has allowed itself to become a political football.

After all that, it is very possible the conference could stumble into a fall football season that goes smoother than much of the rest of college football.

AROUND THE COUNTRY

Florida State lost an opening game for the fourth straight season. That hasn't happened since 1973-76. The latest meltdown came against Georgia Tech in coach Mike Norvell's debut and looked not much different than the meltdowns that got Willie Taggart fired after less than two full seasons in Tallahassee. Taggart, now at FAU, got $18 million to not have to deal with that anymore ... In between the first and second quarters of Notre Dame's victory against Duke, the school announced a contract extension for coach Brian Kelly that will run through 2024. Kelly will probably never be beloved in South Bend, but at this point he really should be respected. He has been unable to deliver a national title, but Fighting Irish football hasn't been this healthy since Lou Holtz's run in the late ‘80s/early ’90s.. Kelly has won 93 games in 11 seasons and had five double-digit victory seasons. Only Knute Rockne (105), Holtz (100) and Ara Parseghian (95) have won more at Notre Dame.

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