College football schedule today: TV channels, start times to watch every NCAA game on Saturday

Zac Al-Khateeb

College football schedule today: TV channels, start times to watch every NCAA game on Saturday image

College football features no shortage of nationally impactful games on the last day of Rivalry Week.

No game is more important on that national stage than "The Game" between No. 2 Ohio State and No. 5 Michigan, the winner of which will represent the Big Ten East division in the Big Ten championship game. The Buckeyes are fresh off a 56-7 drubbing of then-No. 7 Michigan State, but the Wolveries are better equipped defensively to slow down quarterback C.J. Stroud, running back TreVeyon Henderson and the receiving trio of Garrett Wilson, Chris Olave and Jaxson Smith-Njigba. Can the Michigan offense keep up, though?

MORE: Watch select NCAA football games live with fuboTV (7-day trial)

Elsewhere, the top-10 meeting between No. 7 Oklahoma State and No. 10 Oklahoma — the first meeting of one-loss opponents in Bedlam history — will help determine the Big 12 championship game. The Cowboys have already punched their ticket, but a win on Saturday would also knock the Sooners out of championship contention for the first time since Baylor and TCU split the title in 2014. The eighth-ranked Bears are still in contention, as well.

The Iron Bowl between No. 3 Alabama and Auburn will also be a game to watch, though it doesn't have near the national implications as "The Game" or Bedlam; the Crimson Tide are already set for their SEC championship game matchup vs. No. 1 Georgia. The Big Ten West meeting between No. 14 Wisconsin and Minnesota will determine the Big Ten West participant in the conference championship game if the Badgers win, though they Iowa and Minnesota are all still in contention; the Civil War between No. 11 Oregon and Oregon State will determine the Pac-12 North participant in that championship game as well.

Sporting News breaks down how to watch those games and more in Week 13. Here's everything you need to know.

MORE: Updated AP Top 25, Coaches Poll rankings after Week 13

College football schedule today

Here's every FBS game scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 27.

(All rankings reflect the latest College Football Playoff top-25 rankings; nationally televised games are bolded).

Matchup Time Channel
No. 1 Georgia at Georgia Tech Noon ABC, fuboTV
No. 2 Ohio State at No. 5 Michigan Noon Fox, fuboTV
Texas Tech at No. 8 Baylor Noon Fox Sports 1, fuboTV
No. 18 Wake Forest at Boston College Noon ESPN2, fuboTV
No. 24 Houston at UConn Noon CBS Sports Network, fuboTV
Florida State at Florida Noon ESPN, fuboTV
Maryland at Rutgers Noon Big Ten Network, fuboTV
Army at Liberty Noon ESPN+
Navy at Temple Noon ESPNU, fuboTV
Miami (Ohio) at Kent State Noon ESPN+
Akron at Toledo Noon ESPN+
Miami at Duke 12:30 p.m. ESPN3
Louisiana Tech at Rice 1 p.m. ESPN+
No. 22 UTSA at North Texas 2 p.m. ESPN+
Charlotte at Old Dominion 2 p.m. ESPN+
Texas State at Arkansas State 2 p.m. ESPN+
Troy at Georgia State 2 p.m. ESPN+
Georgia Southern at App State 2:30 p.m. ESPN+
Florida International at Southern Miss 3 p.m. ESPN3
UMass at New Mexico State 3 p.m.  
Hawaii at Wyoming 3 p.m.  
No. 3 Alabama at Auburn 3:30 p.m. CBS, Paramount+, fuboTV
Oregon State at No. 11 Oregon 3:30 p.m. ESPN, fuboTV
Penn State at No. 12 Michigan State 3:30 p.m. ABC, fuboTV
Western Kentucky at Marshall 3:30 p.m. CBSSN, fuboTV
Northwestern at Illinois 3:30 p.m. BTN, fuboTV
Indiana at Purdue 3:30 p.m. FS1, fuboTV
Vanderbilt at Tennessee 3:45 p.m. SEC Network, fuboTV
Virginia Tech at Virginia 3:45 p.m. ACC Network, fuboTV
No. 14 Wisconsin at Minnesota 4 p.m. Fox, fuboTV
Tulsa at SMU 4 p.m. ESPN2, fuboTV
Louisiana-Monroe at Louisiana 4 p.m. ESPNU, fuboTV
Arizona at Arizona State 4 p.m. Pac-12 Network
No. 15 Texas A&M at LSU 7 p.m. ESPN, fuboTV
Middle Tennessee at Florida Atlantic 7 p.m.  
West Virginia at Kansas 7 p.m. FS1, fuboTV
No. 10 Oklahoma at No. 7 Oklahoma State 7:30 p.m. ABC, fuboTV
No. 17 Pitt at Syracuse 7:30 p.m. ACCN, fuboTV
No. 23 Clemson at South Carolina 7:30 p.m. SECN, fuboTV
Kentucky at Louisville 7:30 p.m. ESPN2, fuboTV
Tulane at Memphis 7:30 p.m. ESPNU, fuboTV
No. 6 Notre Dame at Stanford 8 p.m. Fox, fuboTV
Nevada at Colorado State 9 p.m. CBSSN, fuboTV
No. 13 BYU at USC 10:30 p.m. ESPN, fuboTV
Cal at UCLA 10:30 p.m. FS1, fuboTV

MORE: College football picks, predictions against the spread for every Week 13 top 25 game

How to watch, live stream college football games

Twenty-three games will be nationally broadcast on Saturday of Week 13, starting with the noon slate all the way through 10:30 p.m. ET. The games will appear on CBS, CBS Sports Network, Fox, Fox Sports 1, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU and ABC. Live streaming options include the ESPN app, Fox.com, ESPN+, Paramount+ and fuboTV, which offers a 7-day free trial.

College football scores Week 13

Saturday, Nov. 27

Matchup
No. 1 Georgia at Georgia Tech
No. 2 Ohio State at No. 5 Michigan
Texas Tech at No. 8 Baylor
No. 18 Wake Forest at Boston College
No. 24 Houston at UConn
Florida State at Florida
Maryland at Rutgers
Army at Liberty
Navy at Temple
Miami (Ohio) at Kent State
Akron at Toledo
Miami at Duke
Louisiana Tech at Rice
No. 22 UTSA at North Texas
Charlotte at Old Dominion
Texas State at Arkansas State
Troy at Georgia State
Georgia Southern at App State
Florida International at Southern Miss
UMass at New Mexico State
Hawaii at Wyoming
No. 3 Alabama at Auburn
Oregon State at No. 11 Oregon
Penn State at No. 12 Michigan State
Western Kentucky at Marshall
Northwestern at Illinois
Indiana at Purdue
Vanderbilt at Tennessee
Virginia Tech at Virginia
No. 14 Wisconsin at Minnesota
Tulsa at SMU
Louisiana-Monroe at Louisiana
Arizona at Arizona State
No. 15 Texas A&M at LSU
Middle Tennessee at Florida Atlantic
West Virginia at Kansas
No. 10 Oklahoma at No. 7 Oklahoma State
No. 17 Pitt at Syracuse
No. 23 Clemson at South Carolina
Kentucky at Louisville
Tulane at Memphis
No. 6 Notre Dame at Stanford
Nevada at Colorado State
No. 13 BYU at USC
Cal at UCLA

Zac Al-Khateeb

Zac Al-Khateeb Photo

Zac Al-Khateeb has been part of The Sporting News team since 2015 after earning his Bachelor's (2013) and Master's (2014) degrees in journalism at the University of Alabama. Prior to joining TSN, he covered high school sports and general news in Alabama. A college sports specialist, Zac has been a voter for the Biletnikoff Award and Heisman Trophy since 2020.