Fire (fill in the blank)! Or (blankety-blank!), in the Pac-12’s case.

So much outrage. So much drama. So many questions (such as, why did you kick the field goal and give the Irish a chance, Kirby?).

Here are 10 things I’m absolutely overreacting to after a wild Week 4 in and around the SEC.

10. Call the cops. Pac-12 refs robbed Ole Miss

I don’t know if the Rebels would have converted the 2-point conversion and forced OT.

But I know a TD when I see one.

And this was a TD.

Not to go all conspiracy theory, but the obvious question is: Why wasn’t the play reviewed?

Yes, Ole Miss’ clock management was abysmal, but which was worse?

A: The initial call (by Pac-12 officials).

B: The lack of review (by Pac-12 officials).

C: Kirk Herbstreit crediting Cal with a gutsy win on the road in SEC country, clearly admitting that he didn’t care that it was against an Ole Miss team picked to finish 6th in the West this season.

D: All of the above.

The answer is D, and Ole Miss interim AD Keith Carter wasn’t having any of it.

It has been a terrible stretch for Pac-12 officials. Friday night they called 27 penalties for 237 yards in the USC-Utah game. Our Matt Hinton, who is not prone to hyperbole or piling on, offered this assessment.

Last week Pac-12 blew a call at the end of the Arizona State at Michigan State game. That call also benefitted the Pac-12 and it prompted an apology from the league.

The silver lining? We won’t see a Pac-12 team or official in the Playoff.

9. Give Gus an extension!

Do it fast, too, before Michigan offers him $100 million to clean up its ongoing disaster. Or Arkansas finds $125 million …

8. So long, UCF

Down 21-0, on the road, against a Power 5 program that just pushed Penn State to the brink last week.

UCF had its best chance yet to make a statement to everybody, including the Playoff selection committee.

How did the Knights respond? With 31 consecutive points. It was impressive, but it wasn’t enough.

Pitt rallied for a 35-34 victory, the winning points courtesy of a “Pitt Special” play “borrowed” from the Eagles and renamed. It was the Knights’ first regular-season loss since 2016. The Pitt crowd celebrated wildly, chanting “overrated.”

UCF isn’t overrated, but Group of 5 teams only get one chance. UCF had it. There are no second chances, no do-overs, no excuses.

So long, Group of 5. We’ll see you next year.

7. Those were the days …

Phillip Fulmer beat Florida 5 times. That might not sound like much, but the Vols have only beaten the Gators once since he was fired.

Still think that was the right decision?

6. How was this not targeting?

Rutgers football, man.

Artur Sitkowski’s TD pass in the 1st quarter was the only TD the Scarlet Knights scored. That either prompted this over-the-top celebration or scared the QB so bad he never found the end zone again.

5. Bottom 5 of Power 5

The worst of the weak, in order of ineptitude, because alphabetical order is far too forgiving.

1. Michigan (Big Ten): Every year the Wolverines are overrated. And every year people act surprised when they are exposed. You realize Michigan has lost its past 3 games to ranked teams by the scores of 62-39, 41-15 and 35-14?

2. Tennessee (SEC): Jeremy Pruitt and Jarrett Guarantano are in over their head, and the waters have been calm compared with the storms that await. Georgia and Alabama can name the score. Georgia’s largest victory margin against UT is 44 (Herschel’s Dawgs won 44-0 in 1981). Alabama has won the past 3 meetings by 37, 38 and 39 points.

3. Texas A&M fans (SEC): Aggies fans talk big. Kyle Field draws big, more than 100,000. That’s all fine and good, but the stadium emptied out faster than a Big 12 backfield midway through the 4th quarter. No, it didn’t look good, but Kellen Mond and the Aggies rallied. If I’m Jimbo, I’m livid. The Aggies didn’t quit. But their fans certainly did.

Obviously that photo was taken a couple of minutes after Auburn’s victory. But 50,000 Aggies fans can’t exit in 3 minutes.

4. UNC (ACC): A week after losing a nonconference game to Wake Forest (interesting concept), Mack Brown’s Tar Heels lost to Appalachian State. UNC is 0-2 in its own state. They can’t go east, either. ECU has beaten UNC 3 consecutive times. At least the Heels beat South Carolina, right? Credit to App State. It was its first win over a Power 5 team since stunning Michigan in 2007. How crazy is it that in both instances, App State blocked a field goal to win it.

5. Utah (Pac-12): Imagine if a top 10 SEC team lost to an unranked team. I laughed last week when the West Coasters celebrated the fact that 6 Pac-12 teams were in the Top 25. “We’re back!” It’s true. You were in the back of the rankings. You had as many teams ranked 20-25 as the SEC had ranked 1-5. And now the team you propped up as a Playoff favorite just lost to an unranked team.

I’d ask Nick Saban how that feels, but he doesn’t know.

4. The 4 Playoff teams are …

  1. Clemson
  2. LSU
  3. Alabama
  4. Georgia

Relax Oklahoma and Ohio State fans. Obviously 3 SEC teams aren’t making the Playoff, especially not after Notre Dame nearly knocked off Georgia. But just remember how dominant the SEC has been when they inevitably start cannibalizing their own.

And there’s no guarantee those 3 SEC teams beat Auburn, either.

That’s especially true of Georgia. The Dawgs survived Notre Dame, but they didn’t eliminate Notre Dame from Playoff contention. If anything, Notre Dame likely gained some street cred with the manner in which it went toe-to-toe with Georgia for 4 quarters Saturday, on the road, before a record crowd.

I will give Kirby Smart some credit, however. He blitzed on Notre Dame’s final Hail Mary, forcing Ian Book to make a wild throw. So many teams sit back, rush 3 and play the pass with 8. I blasted Smart after he did that against Tennessee and got beat. It’s never made sense to me. Get after the guy and don’t allow him to set his feet and make the throw he wants. Kirby did that and Georgia escaped.

Have to admit: I laughed when Paul Finebaum, a friend of the program, joked a few weeks ago that Notre Dame should be eliminated from future Playoffs because of its performance last year against Clemson.

The Tigers beat Notre Dame by 27.

The Tigers beat Alabama by 28.

3. South Carolina isn’t going to make a bowl game

The Gamecocks have no clue who they want to be on offense.

Let me help: Given your personnel, run the damn ball. South Carolina, in theory, has a dynamic 1-2 rushing combo in Rico Dowdle and Tavien Feaster. Nothing went right Saturday, but abandoning the run game isn’t the answer. The 103-yard pick-6 off Ryan Hilinski was soul-crushing.

It might be worse than that.

South Carolina is 1-3. Will Muschamp is in trouble. I don’t see 6 wins. I don’t see an identity. I don’t see hope. I see the Gamecocks losing to Kentucky, Georgia and Florida. I see 1-6 with Texas A&M and Clemson still a month away.

2. How much is Jimbo’s buyout?

Oh, that’s right. The full amount is guaranteed.

Jimbo Fisher is now 2-4 against ranked teams — and needed OT in both wins.

Good news, Aggies. He has 7 more seasons to figure this league out.

1. Joe Burrow is going to win the Heisman

Burrow set an LSU single-game record Saturday with 6 TD passes. He already has 17 this season — 1 more than he had all of last season and just 12 from LSU’s single-season mark.

Give Ed Orgeron credit: He’s allowing his strong-armed QB to rewrite the record book.

Comfortably ahead, Burrow was still throwing deep late in the 3rd quarter against Vanderbilt.

Contrast that to how Nick Saban continues to handle Tua Tagovailoa.

Tagovailoa threw 4 TD passes in the 1st half Saturday. He added his 5th — tying Alabama’s single-game record for the 2nd consecutive week — on Bama’s opening possession of the second half. He threw 1 more pass before retiring early.

That’s become the norm. Tua should have set the school record Saturday. He should have made a run at the SEC record — 7, held by many. Truth be told, he should have set the SEC single-season record last year.

Instead, Burrow might beat him to 7 or 8 in a game. He might beat him to 45 in a year. If he does that and takes out the Tide in Tuscaloosa, give him the Heisman.

Here’s my question: Burrow is 6-3 with a big arm. At what point does Joe Burrow enter the conversation for the No. 1 overall pick in next April’s NFL Draft?