It all depends on how many teams lose. Right now the best scenario for that is probably Ohio St losing to Mich St in a close game and Iowa winning out, and enough other teams losing for Ohio St to climb back to 4th. LSU could climb back as well. I know that wouldn't go over well here. The committee has shown a willingness to move teams up and down without requiring a team above them to lose as the other polls mostly do. Between that and a lot of loss opportunities for top teams, I don't really look at anybody in the top 10, maybe even top 13, being totally out of the picture.Is there a scenario right now that would have two teams of a conference make it in? I'm not sure there is. But we're all assuming Clemson wins out, too. If they lose this gets busted wide open.
We saw a lot of movement like that last year. I totally agree that we can't paint teams in or out at this point. I would say we can maybe look all the way down to 15 (though I feel Mich/st/TCU/Utah are all a bit behind). Mass chaos can still ensue!It all depends on how many teams lose. Right now the best scenario for that is probably Ohio St losing to Mich St in a close game and Iowa winning out, and enough other teams losing for Ohio St to climb back to 4th. LSU could climb back as well. I know that wouldn't go over well here. The committee has shown a willingness to move teams up and down without requiring a team above them to lose as the other polls mostly do. Between that and a lot of loss opportunities for top teams, I don't really look at anybody in the top 10, maybe even top 13, being totally out of the picture.Is there a scenario right now that would have two teams of a conference make it in? I'm not sure there is. But we're all assuming Clemson wins out, too. If they lose this gets busted wide open.
Eh, I'm don't subscribe to that philosophy as a 100% absolute. Going strictly by that, Houston would be ahead of Alabama and I don't think Houston is the better team.Except for the part where they lost and are ahead of teams who haven't ...
I think a 1 loss Big Ten champ gets in considering the liklihood of the Pac 12 champ having 2 losses and the Big 12 champ having one loss and no conference title game.Notre Dame will be interesting.
I'm also intrigued by how the Big Ten scenario plays out. For example, you could have a one-loss Iowa playing a one-loss MSU in the championship game. Both of those losses could be Nebraska, and would they get it with such a bad loss (relatively)?