Welcome to the way-too-early Final Four, Georgia.

Now, send Iowa State a thank you card and stay there while I check the rest of Miami’s schedule and count down the days until I get Kirby vs. Richt.

The impact of the Cyclones’ upset is just one of the 10 things I’m absolutely overreacting to after a wild Week 6 in and around the SEC.

10. The first domino has fallen: How much weight will Oklahoma’s victory over Ohio State carry? We’re about to find out.

The No. 3 Sooners were stunned at home Saturday, losing to Iowa State. TCU won and stayed unbeaten, but when the AP Poll is released today, there won’t be a Big 12 team in the top 4. Maybe not the top 6.

The biggest benefactors? Georgia and the SEC. The Bulldogs were No. 5 last week and certainly will move to at least No. 4 today. They were the most impressive team in Week 6.

I’ve noted this a couple of times, but it’s worth repeating: The AP Poll and Playoff rankings are separate entities voted on by separate parties, but more often than not, they almost exactly mirror each other at the top.

No conference has had two Playoff teams. Not sure any conference has had a more legitimate case of that happening than this year with the SEC.

9. Except, perhaps, the ACC: Looking at U, Mark Richt. Insane win. Now bring it home. Give the people what they want: Georgia vs. Miami, and I don’t really care where you play it.

8. Meet Mr. 4,000, Nick Chubb: The Georgia senior became just the eighth running back in SEC history to reach 4,000 yards, but we all know his journey back was a lot longer than that.

Of course he did it in typical Chubb fashion — on a touchdown run.

Awesome. Just awesome.

7. Admittedly, it’s a pet peeve …: But there has to be a better way to measure passing yards and rushing yards than the current system.

Jarrett Stidham threw a screen that didn’t cross the line of scrimmage, yet was credited with a 75-yard touchdown pass when Ryan Davis did the rest.

New proposal: The quarterback doesn’t get credit for a completion or yardage on any pass that doesn’t cross the line of scrimmage. Team stats? Fine. Individual stats? Nope.

Likewise, sacks shouldn’t count against a team’s rushing total.

Two simple tweaks and the numbers would more accurately represent what is happening on the field.

These bubble screens, shovel passes drive me nuts.

6. Pinch-hitting for the Overreacters, Matt Hinton:

5. If you thought the Rebels were terrible …

That guy actually got paid. (Easy now with the Ole Miss scandal jokes.)

In his defense, would you want to spend an afternoon watching Eastern Michigan and Toledo play football?

I’d rather explain to Nick Saban why I tried to return an onside kick for a touchdown instead of doing the smart thing and getting down, right Minkah?

4. Paging Dr. Andrews …: Normally I never complain when Shea Patterson drops back to pass; I love watching The Shea Show. But after throwing 34 times in the first half against Auburn, Patterson was on pace to break Tim Couch’s SEC record for attempts in a game (67, vs. Arkansas in 1998).

Patterson’s right arm is all the Rebels/Landsharks/Care Bears have, but can you guys give the man some help?

There’s no rushing game and there’s certainly no defense.

Just to prove the 66 points the Rebels/Landsharks/Care Bears allowed last week was not a fluke, they gave up touchdowns on Auburn’s first five drives Saturday.

They’ve already allowed 23 touchdowns in five games. The 2014 defense allowed 24 all season. (I know. Insert get-what-pay-for joke here … you guys are ruthless.)

So is the Auburn band.

Patterson threw for 346 yards and 2 TDs. He’s now at 1,792 yards through five games. If he maintains this pace (358.4 per game), he’ll break Couch’s SEC single-season record … by 30 yards.

We can only hope it’s after reversing field twice on his final throw of the season.

3. It’s always personal. These guys never forget. Never. Ever. Derrius Guice was stopped at the 1 last year on fourth down. How many times do you think he thought about that?

https://twitter.com/DhaSickest/status/916830888574509056

2. Overreactions sources can confirm Central Oklahoma was not part of the recent apparel scandal/FBI probe.

Your honor, I humbly submit Exhibit A.

1. Don’t ever complain about your QB again: Kyle Kempt, the Iowa State QB who threw for 343 yards and 3 TDs to beat Oklahoma and bring joy to the SEC, was a walk-on who hadn’t thrown a pass all year. He was also a former 3-star, No. 1,336 in the 2013 class.

Of course, his coach actually trusted him to take shots down field.

Nobody wants to hear about why your 4-star or 5-star can’t find the end zone.

OK, Mac?