UniversalMartin
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Geaux Tigers!
I like me some Ed
I like me some Ed
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2017, Ohio State had 2 losses. No team has made the playoffs with 2 losses.
2018, there were 3 undefeated teams and Oklahoma was taken over Ohio State mainly due to Ohio State getting smoked by Purdue. Yes, the Big Ten was considered “down” in 2018, but Michigan probably would have made the playoff if they had beaten Ohio State and then won the conference title game.
The biggest thing that has hurt the Big Ten and making the playoff isn’t the perception of the conference, it’s the fact the conference forces teams to play 9 conference games.
Only one team (Ohio State this year) has gone through a 9 game conference schedule and conference championship game season undefeated. It cost Oregon this year, and it probably cost Ohio State in 2017 and 2018.
The thing with the 9 conference game schedule is that it has shown to make a difference in the regular season. It’s one less obstacle for the SEC and ACC teams to overcome. Another thing with the 9 game conference schedule is that it’s not used by the committee as a reason to bolster those conferences. If anything, it’s used as a penalty for those conferences.Whether it would have been enough for them to make the playoffs is a different argument than would a better conference reputation have given them a better chance. You think a 12-1 Alabama team gets left out in favor of Oklahoma last year?
I don't really buy so much being made of 9 conference games. I think it's much more correlation than causation. It just so happens that the two most dominant teams of the Playoff era happen to play in conferences that play 8 conference games. Other than Clemson, the ACC is bad. If they would have been playing 9 conference games, Clemson still would have made the playoffs. If Ohio State was in the ACC instead of Clemson, they would have made the playoffs as much. Penn State might have as well. And if Alabama was in the B1G or the Big XII, they would have been in the playoffs every year. So far it's a small sample size and Clemson, Alabama and LSU have happened to be the best teams.
So those two conference have always made the playoffs because they have easily had the best teams, not so much because of how many conference games they've played. And Alabama has gotten the benefit of the doubt (and not Ohio State) because of the reputation of the conference, not how many games they've played.
Oregon got penalized for scheduling too tough of a non-con game. There have been plenty of teams who have one loss in a nine-game conference who have still made the playoffs. Oklahoma has done it the last three years. There has been one each year of the playoff. The thing that has decreased the margin for error is that the SEC and ACC have had such good teams that they are always taking up two (or three) spots, so there isn't much room for anyone else.
Also, go Memphis.
The whole root for your conference is dumb. Ohio State winning a national championship does not help Nebraska at all. It just ensures that most recruits we are competing for are going to choose them over Nebraska.Don't understand your thinking, but to each their own....
GBR!!!
The thing with the 9 conference game schedule is that it has shown to make a difference in the regular season. It’s one less obstacle for the SEC and ACC teams to overcome. Another thing with the 9 game conference schedule is that it’s not used by the committee as a reason to bolster those conferences. If anything, it’s used as a penalty for those conferences.
Fair points, but I would argue that conference opponents have more knowledge about the other teams in their conference and have greater motivation to win games within the conference. IMO, conference games are more challenging that non-conference games, especially when the conference games are played consecutively.Again, correlation vs causation.
How is Ohio State playing 9 conference games plus Cincinnati that much more of an obstacle than Clemson playing 8 conference games plus Texas A&M and South Carolina? Other than the rest of Clemson's conference is garbage.
The Big XII got selected for the playoff once in the first three years. Then they added a CCG (another obstacle) and has now made it the last three years. So the only direct evidence we have on that actually shows the opposite of that argument.
That argument gets repeated a lot. But I don't think it really holds up. But if you say something often enough and loud enough....
Fair points, but I would argue that conference opponents have more knowledge about the other teams in their conference and have greater motivation to win games within the conference. IMO, conference games are more challenging that non-conference games, especially when the conference games are played consecutively.
Fair points, but I would argue that conference opponents have more knowledge about the other teams in their conference and have greater motivation to win games within the conference. IMO, conference games are more challenging that non-conference games, especially when the conference games are played consecutively.
The 8 vs. 9 argument does depend on the non-conference schedule and the # of power 5 teams are scheduled in the non-con. Clemson, Georgia, Florida, and other teams do have non-conference “rivals” which are P5 teams. I can’t remember the last time Alabama played 2 P5 teams in the non-conference schedule.I do think there's something to that.
But the 8 vs 9 argument is completely ignoring 25%-33% of the schedule. I fail to see how that makes any sense.