On Saturday, November 5, 2022 at 10:11:17 PM UTC-5, Eric Ramon wrote:
I can see the CFP guy explaining it. "Yes, they lost but it was very, very close"
it wouldn't have mattered anyways since(had alabama kept winning) they would have played georgia in the sec title game
and everyone would agree that had they beaten georgia to win the sec and finished 12-1 they would easily be in. Like last year.
You worrying about such a thing weeks before it actually matters when there are meaningful games left that will determine everything
is silly.
BTW teams like Oregon now(with clemson losing) now have hope.
It's pretty clear now that:
1) barring a major upset *before* the sec title game, georgia has clinched a playoff slot.
2) barring a major upset over their last 3 games, Tennessee has perhaps not clinched a playoff slot at 11-1 but is in a *really really
good* slot. Like Tennessee's chances to make the cfp right now are *much better* than they were before the day started.
I think when TCU loses that will open up another slot as well.
So right now Georgia and Tennessee have basically clinched slots.....along with the Michigan/tOSU winner.
That leaves one slot left. If TCU goes unbeaten they get it. If LSU shocks the world, goes 11-2 and wins the sec by beating
georgia, they will likely get a lot and Tennessee might be out(that and TCU going 13-0 is basically the only thing that
keeps tennessee out)
But once TCU loses, teams like Oregon and USC(whichever one of them can go 12-1 and win the pac12 title...but of course usc needs a little help i think) are going to be battling with the loser of the Michigan/tosu loser to get the final seed.
What you say......a theoretical 12-1 pac title winner in Oregon vs an 11-1 Michigan(whose only loss came to tOSU)? Who deserves the
the final bid in that scenario?
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)