The second half of the college football season is upon us, when many teams' thoughts turn to qualifying for a bowl if not the College Football Playoff.
The usual suspects, and some new ones, are bidding for the 12 playoff spots. There are 70 more postseason openings for 35 non-playoff bowls.
Nine teams already have achieved the six-win threshold for bowl eligibility, and 21 five-win teams would join them with victories this week.
No team is more hungry than Nebraska, whose seven-season bowl drought is the longest among power conference teams. In the Cornhuskers' heyday under Bob Devaney and Tom Osborne, pocket and poster-sized schedules were printed with a line at the bottom reserved for ''bowl game'' as if it were preordained. From 1969-2003, it was.
The Cornhuskers, whose only loss is to Illinois in overtime at home, haven't been to a postseason game since the 2016 Music City Bowl. They have six chances to end the program's longest stretch without a bowl since 1955-61, the first coming Saturday at unbeaten and No. 16 Indiana.
''It's always a goal to go in and beat a ranked opponent," Nebraska defensive lineman Ty Robinson said. ''There's going to come a time again when we're those guys. We're going to be ranked, and people are going to be coming for us. That's the mentality we've been having this season. It's time to stop being the hunter. Let's be the hunted.''
The picks, with all games Saturday unless noted, and lines from BetMGM Sportsbook:
No. 5 Georgia at No. 1 Texas (minus 3 1/2)