It’s the final weekend of the college football regular season, which means rivalry games take center stage.

Built on proximity, high stakes and decades of tradition, the blood pumps a little harder for players and fans alike this week.

With seven at-large bids for the first 12-team College Football Playoff up for grabs, not to mention spots in next week’s conference championship games, some of these games take on even more significance.

Rivalry Central will be College Station, Texas. That’s where the “Lone Star Showdown” will be renewed for the first time since 2011 on Saturday night. The winner between No. 3 (CFP) Texas and No. 20 Texas A&M advances to the Southeastern Conference game to play Georgia.

Speaking of No. 7 Georgia, the Bulldogs host Georgia Tech on Friday in the game known as “Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate.” The Bulldogs are double-digit favorites — ask Miami how that worked out when it played the Yellow Jackets — and they can save themselves a lot of playoff anxiety by taking care of business here.

Michigan, which has taken a step back since winning the 2023 national championship, will have plenty of motivation to play the spoiler’s role in “The Game” at No. 2 Ohio State. The Wolverines have won three straight against the Buckeyes, and an upset Saturday could keep Ohio State out of the Big Ten championship game again and dent its playoff dreams.

No. 12 Clemson, still alive for a spot in the Atlantic Coast Conference title game against No. 9 SMU, hosts No. 15 South Carolina in the “Palmetto Bowl” on Saturday. The winner keeps its playoff hopes alive.

No. 13 Alabama will have its slim playoff chances squashed if it doesn’t beat Auburn at home in the Iron Bowl. Same with No. 14 Mississippi, which hosts Mississippi State in the Egg Bowl on Friday.

And then there’s the mess in the Big 12 that needs to be sorted out. Nine teams — yes, nine — remain alive for the conference championship game. No. 16 Arizona State, picked to finish last in the 16-team league, goes to Tucson for the Territorial Cup against Arizona. The Sun Devils, with a win, have the best chance of advancing — though Big 12 number crunchers could be sorting through tiebreakers by Saturday night.

Best game

No. 3 Texas (10-1, 6-1 SEC) at No. 20 Texas A&M (8-3, 5-2), 7:30 p.m. ET on Saturday (ABC): The tradition is back after a 13-year hiatus. That’s a big deal, and even bigger with the winner going to Atlanta next week to face Georgia in the SEC championship game. The Aggies probably need to win the SEC to make the playoff; the Longhorns can get to the playoff if they lose this game but their seeding could take a hit.

Texas has won 10 straight road games and takes a top-20 offense and top-five defense to Kyle Field. Texas A&M has dropped two of its last three, including last week’s four-overtime loss at Auburn.

The Longhorns are 5 1/2-point favorites, according to BetMGM Sportsbook.

Heisman watch

This week’s Heisman Trophy polls indicate a two-man race between Colorado two-way star Travis Hunter and Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty. Ballots go out Monday to the 928 voters.

Hunter had eight catches for 125 yards and two touchdowns and made seven tackles and broke up a pass in last week’s loss to Kansas. The No. 25 Buffaloes play Oklahoma State at home on Friday.

Jeanty has put together the nation’s first 2,000-yard rushing season since 2019. He’s gone over 100 yards in all 11 games, including four over 200. The No. 11 Broncos host Oregon State on Friday.

Numbers to know

6 — Tulane’s nation-leading defensive TDs.

7 — Illinois wins secured in the final minute or OT since the start of the 2023 season.

9 — Collin Rogers’ career field goals of 50-plus yards for SMU, most in the nation since 2022.

Under the radar

Miami (Ohio) (7-4, 6-1 MAC) at Bowling Green (7-4, 6-1), Noon on Friday (ESPNU): Miami, the defending Mid-American Conference champion, will go to the league title game in Detroit next week for the third time in six years if it wins. Bowling Green will play for the championship for the first time since 2015 if it wins.

The RedHawks enter on a six-game win streak; the Falcons have won five in a row. The spotlight will be on BG tight end Harold Fannin Jr., who could give the MAC an NFL first-round draft pick for the second straight year (Toledo CB Quinyon Mitchell went to the Eagles as the No. 22 pick in April.)