ORLANDO -- For now, put your calculator away. Turn off your computers.
You might need them late tonight and Sunday, but Saturday's business happens on the field.College football has three undefeated teams with a chance to play for its national championship, and all three must win to keep their chances alive for at least a few more hours.
No. 3 UCLA finally makes up its road game at Miami, long ago postponed by Hurricane Georges.
No. 2 Kansas State plays No. 10 Texas A&M in the Big 12 title game in St. Louis.
And tonight, top-ranked Tennessee faces No. 23 Mississippi State in the Southeastern Conference title game in Atlanta.
If only two of three win today, Sunday's Bowl Championship Series selection process will have few detractors and no angered unbeaten team.
If all three win on Saturday, one will be left out of the Jan. 4 BCS title game at the Fiesta Bowl.
Today, that team would be K-State, which trails Tennessee and UCLA in the all-important BCS standings. Who knows which team will be third come Sunday?
Computer whiz Jeff Sagarin, whose mathematical rankings represent one-third of the BCS computer ratings, fueled a notion that all three teams could win and wake up Sunday in a different position. Specifically, Sagarin has told anyone who will listen that K-State, because it plays the strongest rated opponent, will move the most. His calculations have K-State jumping Tennessee and UCLA and the Vols falling to third -- and out of the national championship game.
"What I've been telling everybody is if all three teams win on Saturday, I can honestly say that when they walk off the field, they won't know what bowl they're going to," BCS spokesman Charles Bloom said. "If all three teams win, I think it's going to be real close -- I mean REAL close."
Chris Hester, one of the architects of the Anderson and Hester Seattle Times computer poll, also predicts a K-State gain, but he said he hasn't run the numbers and doesn't know any results.
Hester and Sagarin believe one of the undefeated teams will unseat Florida State in the third computer rankings compiled by The New York Times.
This much is certain: Saturday's SEC and Big 12 winners are guaranteed spots in the BCS bowls (Fiesta, Rose, Sugar and Orange) alongside UCLA (Pac-10 champ), Wisconsin (Big Ten co-champ), Syracuse (Big East champ) and Florida State (ACC champ).
Syracuse already has accepted a bid to the Orange.
The BCS removed Notre Dame from consideration earlier this week, leaving Tennessee, Mississippi State, K-State, Texas A&M, Florida, Arizona and Ohio State as possible BCS participants.
Bowl and television sources confirm Arizona will play in the Rose Bowl if UCLA is playing for a national title and that Ohio State and Florida are vying for the second at-large slot.
If the three top-ranked teams win Saturday, and barring any shakeup in the BCS standings, your bowl lineup is this:
Fiesta: Tennessee vs. UCLA
Sugar: K-State vs. FSU
Rose: Wisconsin vs. Arizona
Orange: Syracuse vs. Florida