On Wednesday, November 2, 2022 at 12:50:35 PM UTC-5, The NOTBCS Guy wrote:
...says the guy who was convinced in 2017 that Alabama would be left out of the playoff - in fact, didn't you bet on that?
Then again, we (and pretty much everybody else on the planet, from what I can tell) do seem to agree that:
1. The SEC champion is in
2. The Michigan/Ohio State winner is in, if it wins the Big 10 championship as well
3. Clemson is in if it runs the table
If Alabama beats Tennessee and then loses to Georgia in the SEC championship, and Ohio State beats Michigan, I think Tennessee gets #4, the way Alabama "worked its way back up" in 2017.
If Michigan beats Ohio State, it is a one-loss Ohio State against a one-loss Tennessee, and with (a) Tennessee being the committee's preferred team at the moment and (b) Ohio State's loss being at home while Tennessee's would be in Athens, Tennessee
probably does get the nod. I don't see the "need" to let a 13-0 TCU in if there are already three undefeated teams in the playoff.
This is a big error on your part- the big12 may not have superstar power at the top, but it's insanely deep. They are already #3 in terms of strength of record. If they beat Texas Tech, Texas, Baylor, and Iowa State and win the big12 title game(which
they won't; going 3-2 in those 5 games is the most likely outcome and going 4-1 would be exceptional for them) they are in. No doubt about it. And they would be at worst a 3 seed.
I don't see them going 5-0 in the next 5 games. They just aren't good enough. But they certainly control their own destiny
at this point.
I think the one real wild card is Clemson - if it loses, and Georgia and Ohio State both win out, then it's Georgia, Ohio State, Tennessee...and a 1-loss Michigan, whose loss was in Columbus to the #2 team, against an undefeated TCU, assuming it wins
out. The committee is "supposed to" take conference championships into account, and neither team's strength of schedule outside of Ohio State is much to talk about; choosing TCU also reduces the chance of a conference rematch in the championship game.
an undefeated TCU is without question in. Hell they may even move all the way up to a 2 seed or so depending on what else happened. Again its not going to happen, but if it does that's a slot gone(and it probably will end up costing the Michigan/Ohio
State loser a slot)
Of course, a lot of things depend on Alabama getting by LSU first, and then Mississippi. If LSU upsets Alabama, it controls its destiny; otherwise, the Alabama-Mississippi winner does.
well yeah....but alabama is like a 13 pt favorite or so tommorrow. Obviously if 2 TD upset losses start to happen, then these 'most likely' scenarios are out.
Right now the following teams control their own destiny: Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Michigan, Ohio State, TCU, clemson.
It's tempting to add LSU right now(until saturday at least), but there is a scenario I believe where 1 loss tennessee can get in over 2 loss LSU that beats Georgia in the sec title game. Just because they annihilated them in baton rouge earlier hth and
have the 1 loss......
I view the wild card as more clemson vs TCU. Just because with 5 games left I believe it's too early to start giving serious consideration to them going 5-0. Win a few more games and then let's start considering it more. Clemson, otoh, has a great
chance to finish unbeaten. not because they are good but because the rest of the schedule is so bad.
But I think that outside of your error in thinking TCU doesn't definitely control their own destiny, you're mostly on track. Again the big picture is that in most likely scenarios going forward(ie Clemson does go unbeaten but TCU doesn't, 1 loss Bama
meets unbeaten Georgia in the sec title game), it's all going to come down to Tennessee watching the sec title game and rooting for Georgia so that they can get the 2nd sec bid as the #4 seed.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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