November 3: No. 1 Washington defeated California 44–14. No. 2 Texas squeaked past Texas Tech 13–10 while No. 3 Nebraska shut out Iowa State 44–0, leading the two teams to switch places in the next poll. No. 4 Brigham Young beat UTEP 42–9, and No. 5 South Carolina won 35–28 over North Carolina State. The next poll featured No. 1 Washington, No. 2 Nebraska, No. 3 Texas, No. 4 Brigham Young, and No. 5 South Carolina.
November 10: No. 1 Washington went from first in the nation to second in their conference, losing 16–7 at No. 14
USC. Since the Trojans had the head-to-head advantage and were one game ahead in the Pac-10 standings with just one more to play, this ensured a
Rose Bowl berth for them. No. 2 Nebraska beat Kansas 41–7, but No. 3 Texas lost 29–15 to
Houston. After a 6–0–1 start, the Longhorns would go on to lose four of their last five games. Now the only remaining undefeated teams were two decidedly untraditional powers: No. 4 Brigham Young, which defeated San Diego State 34–3, and No. 5 South Carolina, which won 38–26 over No. 11 Florida State. No. 7
Oklahoma State, whose only loss was to Nebraska, beat Missouri 31–13. No. 10 Florida, which had started the season under a cloud as coach
Charley Pell was forced to resign due to recruiting violations, had caught fire under interim coach
Galen Hall and shut out No. 8 Georgia 27–0 for their seventh straight victory. The next poll featured Nebraska back at No. 1, followed by No. 2 South Carolina, No. 3 Brigham Young, No. 4 Oklahoma State, and No. 5 Florida.
November 17: No. 1 Nebraska finished their season with a disappointing 17–7 loss to No. 6 Oklahoma. No. 2 South Carolina also lost, falling 38–21 to Navy. This opened the door for No. 3 Brigham Young, which moved to the top spot with a 24–14 victory at Utah. No. 4 Oklahoma State defeated Iowa State 16–10, and No. 5 Florida won 25–17 at Kentucky to clinch the SEC title. However, due to the Gators’ recruiting violations, the
Sugar Bowl berth would go to the second-place team, No. 9
LSU. No. 8 Washington closed their schedule with a 38–29 win at Washington State. The next poll featured No. 1 Brigham Young, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Oklahoma State, No. 4 Florida, and No. 5 Washington.
November 23–24: No. 1 Brigham Young finished the year undefeated with a 38–13 win over Utah State. No. 2 Oklahoma and No. 3 Oklahoma State faced off for the Big 8 title, with the Sooners pulling out a 24–14 victory and an
Orange Bowl berth. No. 4 Florida was idle, and No. 5 Washington and No. 7 Nebraska had finished their seasons. The famous “
Hail Flutie” game also took place this weekend, with No. 10 Boston College defeating No. 12 Miami on a last-second 48-yard touchdown pass by
Doug Flutie. The next poll featured No. 1 Brigham Young, No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 3 Florida, No. 4 Washington, and No. 5 Nebraska.
December 1: The only highly ranked team which had not finished its schedule was No. 3 Florida, which closed with a 27–17 win at No. 12 Florida State. The rankings in the final poll remained the same. As the champions of the WAC, No. 1 Brigham Young was tied in to the
Holiday Bowl, where they would face an underwhelming opponent in unranked Michigan. The highest-ranked bowl matchup was the Orange Bowl between No. 2 Oklahoma and No. 4 Washington. The Sugar Bowl would feature No. 5 Nebraska against No. 11 LSU, the Rose Bowl would pit No. 6 Ohio State, the Big Ten champion, against No. 18 USC, and the
Cotton Bowl matched No. 8 Boston College against SWC winner Houston. ==Conference standings==