Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Oklahoma ahead of Ohio St. in pivotal playoff rankings

- By Ralph D. Russo

Oklahoma was No. 5 in the pivotal second-to-last College Football Playoff rankings released Tuesday night, ahead of Ohio State heading into championsh­ip weekend when the final four will be set.

The biggest question facing the selection committee this week was how much to value Ohio State’s 62-39 blowout of Michigan on Saturday. The answer: The Buckeyes moved up four spots but were still stuck behind the Sooners.

“I really don’t have a measuremen­t for closeness,” selection committee chairman Rob Mullens said when asked about how much Ohio State and Oklahoma were separated.

Mullens cited Oklahoma’s historic offense. The Sooners are on pace to set an FBS record for yards per play, averaging 8.92.

“While their defense has been a challenge, their offense has been superior,” Mullens said.

The top three teams in the selection committee’s rankings, released Tuesday, What else could make for mystery heading into selection Sunday?

MAXIMUM OUTRAGE

The defense-smitten committee could be presented with an alternativ­e option for the fourth spot depending on how things go in the SEC championsh­ip game. It will drive fans outside of SEC country out of their minds, but Alabama seems like a lock to make the playoff even if it loses — barring some kind of epic beatdown of the Tide by the Bulldogs in Atlanta. Note: Alabama has never lost a game by more than 14 points under Nick Saban. What will make SEC haters even angrier: What if Alabama beats Georgia 31-28 on a last-play field goal and the committee is so impressed with the Bulldogs they just throw them in there at No. 4, despite the two losses and lack of a conference championsh­ip? That seems extreme considerin­g the committee has yet to include a two-loss team in the playoff, bypassing ones with conference championsh­ips for one-loss teams without. But if Ohio State and/or Oklahoma are unimpressi­ve winners — or they both lose — the CFP could have two SEC

PLAYOFF RANKINGS

held steady for a fourth straight week. Alabama, Clemson and Notre Dame — all unbeaten — are Nos. 1, 2 and 3. Georgia moved into the fourth spot that was previously occupied by Michigan, heading into its SEC championsh­ip game against Alabama. It’s a given the SEC winner makes the playoff. Maybe the loser, too.

Notre Dame is already in the clubhouse at 12-0 and Clemson faces Pittsburgh in the ACC championsh­ip game. That leaves one spot very much in play.

Ohio State faces Northweste­rn (8-4) in the Big Ten championsh­ip in Indianapol­is and Oklahoma rematches Texas (9-3) in the Big 12 title game in Arlington, Texas. The Longhorns handed the Sooners their only regular-season loss in October. teams in it for the second straight season. And, just to make even more people angry, Notre Dame’s inclusion would mean three of the Power Five conference would not be represente­d.

IS CLEMSON IN ALREADY? Looks good for the Tigers. Don’t bet on Clemson losing to Pitt (7-5) in the ACC title game this weekend — seriously, do not do that. If it were to happen, though, would it really be worse than losing to Purdue the way Ohio State did? And could the committee really pass over Clemson’s balancel — fourth in offensive yards per play and third in defensive yards per play — for the lopsided Sooners? Not having that conference championsh­ip could get tricky, and Ohio State and Oklahoma fans would cry strength of schedule because of a down year in the ACC, but having played Texas A&M and South Carolina outside the conference means the numbers look OK there for the Tigers, too. TOUGH LOSS FOR COUGARS After Washington State lost to Washington last Friday to hand the Huskies a spot in the Pac-12 championsh­ip game, the

assumption was Wazzu was still in fine shape for a big game. Maybe the Fiesta Bowl. Upon further, review probably not. The Cougars (10-2) were ranked

13th, behind ninth-ranked Florida, 10th-ranked LSU, 11thranked Washington and 12thranked Penn State, all with three losses. Wazzu will be shut out of the New Year’s Six.

IF FORM HOLDS

If all the favorites win and the committee doesn’t become infatuated with Georgia, the New Year’s Six bowls will likely look like this:

Orange Bowl (semifinal): No. 1 Alabama vs. No. 4 Oklahoma. Cotton Bowl (semifinal): No. 2 Clemson vs. No. 3 Notre Dame. (Note: Alabama is close to Arlington, Texas, but Oklahoma is even closer. CFP protocol directs the committee to give the No. 1 seed as much of a homefield advantage as possible. Would that be served if the No.

4 is playing closest to home?) Rose Bowl: Ohio State-Washington.

Sugar Bowl: Texas (or West Virginia) vs. Georgia.

Peach Bowl: Michigan vs. Florida.

Fiesta Bowl: UCF vs LSU.

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