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NCAAF College Football Week 14 LIVE 10m ago Virginia is heading to the ACC title game to face 7-5 Duke next Saturday in Charlotte. Ryan M. Kelly Welcome to my College Football Playoff projections, which will be published weekly through the end of the season, updated and adjusted after each Saturday’s results. Check out the projected field according to Austin Mock’s model, which will look different from my opinion-based selections. When the Big Ten West and ACC Coastal divisions met their demise in favor of division-less conferences, title games were designed to pit the best teams in great matchups. Instead, we’re all wondering if we can bring back divisional play — thanks to the ACC. Advertisement A five-way tie for second place at 6-2 in ACC play has Duke (7-5 overall) joining Virginia (10-2) in the league title game. Not Miami, which finished the regular season at 10-2 overall, or 9-3 Georgia Tech or even 8-4 teams SMU and Pittsburgh. Instead, it’s Duke that gets a crack at the title. Should the Blue Devils beat the mighty Cavaliers on Saturday, the ACC could get left out of the College Football Playoff. On Tuesday, it’s probable that Duke won’t land in the selection committee’s Top 25. But it’s likely the committee ranks American champ (Tulane or North Texas) and possibly the Sun Belt champ (if it’s James Madison). If Duke wins and it doesn’t leapfrog at least the Sun Belt champ, ACC commissioner Jim Phillips might want to reconsider supporting Big Ten counterpart Tony Petitti’s automatic qualifier plan. But we won’t go down that path quite yet. Virginia blasted Duke 34-17 on Nov. 15, and we’ll pencil in the Cavaliers as the fourth champion, joining Ohio State, Georgia and Texas Tech. Although it’s shut out of the ACC title game, Miami still has a shot at reaching the CFP. But the Hurricanes need the committee to leap them past Alabama and BYU, both of which play in league title games this week. If both teams lose, then the committee will have a fascinating debate for the final at-large spot. Right now, Alabama remains locked in for the final at-large spot with a potential first-round game at Ole Miss. With a win, the Tide could face Georgia for the third time this year. Should Ohio State beat Indiana in the Big Ten championship game, the Hoosiers slide to No. 3, where it could meet Virginia (if it upsets Texas A&M) in a quarterfinal. In an odd twist, the Hoosiers canceled a future home-and-home series with the Cavaliers five months ago. Texas A&M losing to Texas causes it to fall out of the bye zone, but the Aggies still stay ahead of Ole Miss to claim a home game. An Oregon-Texas Tech quarterfinal could be called the NIL Bowl. Of course, Ohio State playing either Oklahoma or Notre Dame at the Rose Bowl is as classic as the mountaintops overlooking the iconic stadium. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle Scott Dochterman is a staff writer for The Athletic covering national college football and the Big Ten. He previously covered Iowa athletics for the Cedar Rapids Gazette and Land of 10.