OK, so I let you down in Week 4. Tennessee did not fold like a cheap taco. Vanderbilt worked up the gumption to hold off Western Kentucky. And Ole Miss made Georgia look silly. But this week is a comeback. Time to get more right than I get wrong.

And if not, you can just start picking the opposite of my predictions and you’ll be right.

Rawleigh Williams III will be the SEC’s leading rusher after this week: He’s third right now, so this isn’t a huge leap, but Ralph Webb and Boom Williams won’t be going off this weekend, and Nick Chubb and Leonard Fournette won’t catch him, so the surprising SEC rushing leader will be Mr. Williams from Fayetteville.

Not bad for a guy with 254 yards last year and coming off a serious neck injury. Meanwhile, Arkansas cruises and sets up two of the most interesting games of the season with home games against Alabama and Ole Miss coming up.

Austin Appleby will throw for 300 yards: Vandy’s run defense isn’t bad, and Florida hasn’t shown a top-shelf running game, so give me the Gator QB with a huge passing day. Florida will cover, and Vandy will continue to give Ralph Webb as little help as is humanly possible.

This is the game where Marlon Davidson explodes: Auburn will cover against an awful UL-Monroe team and put up a ton of yardage. But this game will be notable because true freshman defensive end Marlon Davidson will some his unblockable self. As Davidson improves and Carl Lawson finally has the huge season so long expected, Auburn could be dangerous down the back half of the schedule.

Tennessee (gulp) is for real: It would be terrible for the Vols if getting the Gator monkey off their backs spun them into an upset loss at Georgia. But this isn’t your grandfather’s Bulldogs team and Tennessee will win by 10, heading into the Vols’ two toughest games of the season.

A&M will run for a million yards (or 300): South Carolina’s run defense is putrid, and the Muschamp system hangs its hat on bending but not breaking. The problem is that A&M’s ground game (with a 7+ yards per run average) will break the Gamecocks. If USC fans thought last week’s loss at Kentucky was dispiriting, wait until Trayveon Williams, Trevor Knight, et al., hang 300 rushing yards on USC.

Alabama will run for a billion yards (or 400): See what I said about South Carolina above and make it worse. Kentucky’s defense is incredibly vulnerable, especially in a soft and depthless front line. ‘Bama will call the tune on this one, and ram the ball down Kentucky’s throat at will. Bama will cover.

Ole Miss will trail at halftime, rally for a solid win: I can’t get a grasp on this Ole Miss team. When they’re good, they’re really good.

And when they’re bad, they’re the worst team in the West. Memphis is better than most people think and the Rebels are likely to start out unfocused. Chad Kelly will rally the troops late, but it won’t be the prettiest thing you see Saturday.

Missouri hangs an upset on a broken LSU squad: There’s no doubt — on paper — that LSU has more talent than Missouri. But Mizzou has thrown the ball ridiculously well this season, and LSU is a broken team. There’s one narrative that says that the talented Tigers will rally behind Ed Orgeron and save this season. I don’t buy it.

Mizzou is going against a torn-apart team led by an interim coach who is somewhere between Farmer Fran from The Waterboy and Foghorn Leghorn. He’s not the answer. Drew Lock’s passing game is. Give me Missouri not just to cover, but to win.