MoStateHusker Posted October 15, 2012 Share Posted October 15, 2012 How is sos determined in the computer rankings when a team plays a team that cant be ranked, like Ohio State and Penn State? Is it like playing an fcs team? Anybody smarter then me know? Quote Link to comment
JTrain Posted October 15, 2012 Share Posted October 15, 2012 Computer rankings rank every team, not just 25. They also don't care about probation. Quote Link to comment
MoStateHusker Posted October 15, 2012 Author Share Posted October 15, 2012 Computer rankings rank every team, not just 25. But Ohio State and Penn State are not in their full rankings because they're not eligible Quote Link to comment
MoStateHusker Posted October 15, 2012 Author Share Posted October 15, 2012 Nevermind...they are on their full rankings. Doesn't that f with the whole system? Edit: to explain further: every team ranked below OSU in the computers are getting screwed one spot in the BCS? Quote Link to comment
JTrain Posted October 15, 2012 Share Posted October 15, 2012 The actual computer ratings do include Ohio St. That's what you're asking, right? So if Nebraska's schedule strength calcs get a boost from playing Ohio St. (it is not the equivalent of playing an FCS). When the final rankings are turned over to the BCS, they remove Ohio St. to do their final rating numbers, but the SOS has been factored in on each individual computer rating. 1 Quote Link to comment
MoStateHusker Posted October 15, 2012 Author Share Posted October 15, 2012 Ok, that makes sense. Thank You! Quote Link to comment
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