Miami Herald

Hurricanes drop eight spots to No. 18 in CFP

- BY SUSAN MILLER DEGNAN sdegnan@miamiheral­d.com Susan Miller Degnan: 305-376-3366, @smillerdeg­nan

It was nice while it lasted, but after Saturday’s 62-26 blowout of Miami by North Carolina, the Hurricanes knew what was coming.

Miami (8-2, 7-2 Atlantic Coast Conference) plunged eight spots Tuesday night from No. 10 to No. 18 in the next-to-thelast College Football Playoff rankings, while UNC (8-3, 7-3) rose two spots from No. 17 to No. 15 — making it all but official that should one-loss CFP No. 3 Clemson beat undefeated No. 2 Notre Dame on Saturday in the ACC Championsh­ip, the Tar Heels would play in the Jan. 2 Capital One Orange Bowl.

However, should Notre Dame defeat Clemson for the second time this season, the Tigers might drop out of the top four that advance to the playoffs and could instead play in the Orange Bowl. The Orange Bowl is obligated to take the highest ranked ACC team (that is not in the playoffs) in the final CFP rankings.

Regardless, the Tar Heels, not the Canes, would be the next in line for the Orange Bowl should Clemson and Notre Dame head to the playoffs.

“Watching the ACC Championsh­ip — watching that game between Notre Dame and Clemson, I know I’m looking forward to it,” College Football Playoff selection committee chairman Gary Barta said on the ESPN telecast that revealed the new rankings.

The top four CFP teams remained the same: No. 1 Alabama (10-0), Notre Dame (10-0, 9-0 ACC), Clemson (9-1, 8-1) and No. 4 Ohio State (5-0).

The Gators (8-2), who were No. 6 in last week’s CFP rankings, lost to unranked LSU (4-5) but surprising­ly fell only one spot Tuesday to No. 7.

“Florida is sitting at No. 7?” said ESPN analyst

Joey Galloway. “They still got a shot at this thing. I assumed that losing to a 3-5 LSU team that had looked terrible and lost by a million points to Alabama, I thought Florida would be much lower than

CFP weekly top-25 rankings,

21A

that. But sitting at 7, if they knock off Alabama [in Saturday’s SEC Championsh­ip Game], we got a discussion on Sunday.”

That, in turn, prompted conversati­on among the ESPN commentato­rs that if Florida only dropped one spot after its loss — though by only three points — to a losing team, then Clemson might still make it to the playoffs with a loss to Notre

Dame.

The Canes, however, are no longer in contention for a high-profile bowl. Because of their recent loss, the Canes will likely play in either the Cheez-It Bowl against a Big 12 opponent Dec. 29 in Orlando or the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl on

Jan. 2 against a Southeaste­rn Conference team in

Jacksonvil­le.

Duke’s Mayo Bowl on Dec. 30 in Charlotte or the Military Bowl Dec. 28 in Annapolis would still be possibilit­ies for Miami, but the coronaviru­s pandemic will likely have conference­s attempting to place their non-NewYear’s-Six-bound members in bowls that are closer to home.

The College Football Playoff selection committee will reveal its final rankings on Sunday, when teams will learn their bowl destinatio­ns.

Rounding out the CFP top 10 are No. 5 Texas A&M (7-1), No. 6 Iowa State (8-2), No. 7 Florida (8-2), No. 8 Georgia (7-2), No. 9 Cincinnati (8-0) and No. 10 Oklahoma ( 7-2).

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? UM dropped to No. 18 in the CFP after a blowout loss to North Carolina. It cost them a shot at the Orange Bowl.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com UM dropped to No. 18 in the CFP after a blowout loss to North Carolina. It cost them a shot at the Orange Bowl.

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