Austin American-Statesman

Parity can be good, bad for conference

Competitiv­eness might knock the league from College Football Playoff.

- By Anne M. Peterson

Big upsets in the Pac-12 Conference point to more parity across the league than perhaps ever before.

That’s good for the conference, right? Certainly it’s good for fans.

But for now only this is certain: This season the Pac-12 will have no undefeated teams. And that could mean a tougher path to the College Football Playoff for the league.

“We eat each other,” UCLA coach Jim Mora said. “And I don’t mean that rhetorical­ly. We just gobble each other up. Every game’s just a complete battle for survival.”

This weekend was particular­ly brutal for the Pacific Northwest.

Previously unbeaten Washington State — which knocked USC off in a memorable game on the way to a 5-0 start — stumbled dramatical­ly Friday in a 37-3 loss at California.

The Cougars had climbed to No. 8 in the rankings before the loss to the Golden Bears, who were 0-3 in conference play going into the game. The loss dropped Washington State (6-1, 3-1) to No. 15.

Washington won the Pac-12 championsh­ip game last season and went to the playoffs. This season the Huskies were undefeated until Saturday night, when they fell 13-7 to Arizona State.

The Huskies (6-1, 3-1) fell from No. 5 to No. 12 with the loss.

“There’s no gimmes in this league,” Mora said. “There’s no teams that you can look at and say, ‘Oh, yeah, we should win this game even if we don’t play our best.’ Every week you have to play your best. This conference is just like the NFL, where every game is a complete battle.”

Stanford coach David Shaw’s take: “There are no upsets in our conference. There’s no such thing.”

It’s not just the clichéd notion that anyone can win on any given Saturday. Some say the Pac-12 schedule lends itself to cannibalis­m.

The No. 22 Cardinal (5-2, 4-1) were hurt by a nonconfere­nce loss to San Diego State, but they’ve since won four straight.

“In our conference we play, most of us, five, six or seven conference games in a row. Whereas in other conference­s, they’ll play a couple of conference games, and then they get a bye, or they have a I-AA opponent or a nonconfere­nce opponent,” Shaw said. “In our conference, a lot of times it’s attrition. Back-to-back-to-back-toback-to-back conference games, and those are tough.”

Asked if that hurts the league when it comes to a shot at the national championsh­ip, Shaw said it’s up to the CFP committee.

“I have talked to a couple of committee members in the past. They do recognize that what we do in our conference is difficult. It is different,” he said.

There are other schedule issues. The Trojans lost on the road to Washington State on a Friday night, a short week after playing another road game the Saturday before. Same thing happened to Washington State: A road game on a Saturday was followed by a road game (this time a loss) on Friday.

Washington faces a challenge in that three Pac-12 opponents this season are coming off byes.

Colorado coach Mike MacIntyre pointed out the Pac-12 plays nine conference games, while other leagues play eight.

The nine-game schedule has been criticized because it’s obviously more difficult, and there’s less likelihood a team will finish undefeated — which lowers the odds of getting coveted playoff berths. That challenges a conference where some key matchups are played late.

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