Lodi News-Sentinel

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- By David Wharton

A wonderful kind of madness overtook college football last week.

Eleven ranked teams lost and seven new names popped up in the polls as the dust settled. Upsets and unpredicta­bility are what make the game special.

So don’t get too comfortabl­e with the first weekly ranking issued Tuesday by the College Football Playoff selection committee, even if the names at the top of the list seem utterly familiar.

Defending champion Alabama started at No. 1, the Crimson Tide still seemingly a cut above everyone else this season. Below them, No. 2 Clemson, No. 3 Louisiana State, No. 4 Notre Dame and No. 5 Michigan have all shown signs of making a championsh­ip run this fall.

It doesn’t mean the order won’t get shuffled, and reshuffled, in the very near future, starting with a Southeaste­rn Conference showdown between Alabama and Louisiana State on Saturday night.

As Alabama coach Nick Saban said: “Our record or any other statistic that you guys want to sort of bring up ... will not affect the outcome of this game at all.”

From now to Dec. 2, when the four semifinali­sts for the national title are selected, the CFP will drop a new list every Tuesday.

The 13 voters, including athletic directors, former coaches, a former player and a former journalist, follow a written protocol that weighs strength of schedule, head-to-head results and any outcome against common opponents. As the regular season draws to an end, conference championsh­ips will also enter the equation.

Chairman Rob Mullens, the athletic director at Oregon, said he and his colleagues go a step further, employing what he called the “eye test.”

“Data is one part of it,” he said. “The committee watches a lot of games.”

The biggest surprises Tuesday emerged from lower down the rankings, which shouldn’t be a surprise at all, given what happened last week.

All but two of the teams ranked from No. 15 to No. 25 in the Associated Press poll suffered a loss. The seven previously unranked teams that jumped into the fray included Syracuse. On Tuesday, the Orange landed at No. 19 in the CFP rankings.

“Yes we’re here and it’s fabulous,” coach Dino Babers said. “And now we need to get ready to play another game on Saturday and, if we win, it’ll get better. If we don’t, it won’t.”

In a season with few bright spots, the Pac-12 Conference got some good news with Washington State sitting in the No. 8 spot.

The committee praised the Cougars’ offense and especially transfer quarterbac­k Gardner Minshew II. Their win over Utah factored into the ranking, as did a close loss on the road at USC.

One thing the committee did not consider from the latter game — the controvers­y surroundin­g a conference executive who persuaded replay officials not to call targeting on a Washington State linebacker who hit a kneeling Trojans quarterbac­k JT Daniels.

The incident prompted an investigat­ion by the Pac-12 and a change in replay protocol.

“We watched the games, we know what happens,” Mullens said. “But that was not part of the discussion in the room.”

Central Florida was a hotter topic if only because the undefeated Knights hold the nation’s longest winning streak (20 games) spanning two seasons. Strength of schedule kept them at No. 12, below teams that have lost one and even two games.

“They’re they only team in the country that has not played a team with a winning record thus far,” Mullens said.

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 ?? STEPHEN M. DOWELL/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Alabama defensive players celebrate with defensive back Deionte Thompson (14) after he intercepte­d a pass against Louisville on Sept. 1.
STEPHEN M. DOWELL/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Alabama defensive players celebrate with defensive back Deionte Thompson (14) after he intercepte­d a pass against Louisville on Sept. 1.

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