Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Alabama snags final spot over Ohio State in CFP

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together, ensuring only conference champions would be included was considered. Eventually, the compromise was to craft a protocol that emphasized conference championsh­ips, but not make them mandatory.

“I don’t see anything that’s happened in the first four years in the work of the selection committee or the playoff that is inconsiste­nt with how it was designed or what was possible ,” Pac-12 commission­er Larry Scott said.

Tide or Buckeyes was the toughest call for the committee in the four-year history of the playoff.

“We walked into that room knowing we had a big task ahead of us,” said committee chairman Kirby Hocutt, athletic director at Texas Tech.

The Tide had been more consistent and lost just once. The Buckeyes lost twice, including an embarrassi­ng 31point loss at unranked Iowa, but have the more impressive set of victories. Ohio State won the Big Ten while Alabama did not even win its SEC division.

The committee rolled with the Tide and stayed on the task of choosing the best teams, regardless of conference affiliatio­n. For the second year in a row a team that didnot win its conference is in the playoff. Ohio State did it a yearago.

“Of course we all know at the end of the day what the narrative is going to be based on the identifica­tion of the those four very best teams because we’re all in this profession. This is our livelihood. We’re very familiar with it,” Hocutt said. “But does it impact our discussion in that room? And I can tell you very straightfo­rward no.”

Ohio State was ranked fifth by the CFP, Wisconsin was sixth and Auburn was seventh. Southern California finished eighth, followed by Penn State and Miami. Washington was 11th and unbeaten Central Florida was 12th.

The rest of the New Year’s Six bowls fell this way: USC (11-2) vs. Ohio State (11-2) Dec. 29 in the Cotton Bowl; Washington (10-2) vs. Penn State (102) Dec. 30 in the Fiesta Bowl; Miami(11-1) vs. Wisconsin (121) Dec. 30 in the Orange Bowl; and UCF (12-0) vs. Auburn (103)Jan. 1 in the Peach Bowl.

“Look at how healthy the system is,” Scott said. “From our perspectiv­e, of course we’d love a team in the playoff this year, but we’ve got amazing bowl games.”

Hocutt said the Iowa loss hurt Ohio State and the Buckeyes were not close enough to the Tide for the Big Ten championsh­ip result — a 27-21 victory against previously unbeaten Wisconsin — to matter.

Alabama made it 4 for 4 in the playoff, the only team that has made them all. Coach Nick Saban said he trusted the committee would come to the right conclusion.

“I really do believe based on the total body of work that our team really deserved to be in,” Saban said in an ESPN interview.

For the third consecutiv­e season, college football gets an Alabama-Clemson matchup in the playoff, though this time in the semifinals. The Tide beat the Tigers in a classic national championsh­ip in Glendale, Ari., two seasons ago. The teams played another thriller 11 months ago and Clemson took the title in Tampa, Fla.

Ohio State coach Urban Meyer said “I sank in my chairat home, because I really thought we were in.” He noted his team had three wins “against the top 16 teams in America.” “But I get it,” he said. Revenue distributi­on from the College Football Playoff is not heavily weighted toward the teams and conference­s that reach the semifinals. The SEC, Big 12 and ACC will get $6 million for each playoff team and no additional money if its teams advance. The conference­s get $4 million for each team in a New Year’s Sixgame.

So the SEC gets $16 million for three teams in the six games. The Big Ten makes $12 million for three teams. The ACC gets $10 million for Clemson in the playoff and Miami in the Orange Bowl. The Big 12 gets $6 million for Oklahoma in the playoff. The Pac-12 gets $8 million and the American Athletic Conference gets $4 million for UCF in the Peach Bowl. That money is in addition to the approximat­ely $54 million each power five conference receives before a team is even selected.

Every year the commission­ers meet to discuss the playoff and Scott said he doubts this year’s selections will change the agenda.

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