Porterville Recorder

Alabama, Clemson, Notre Dame and Michigan hold steady in CFP

- By RALPH D. RUSSO

The College Football Playoff rankings held steady at the top, with Alabama, Clemson, Notre Dame and Michigan an unchanged first four from last week.

The third rankings of the season were dramafree Tuesday night after every top-10 team won last weekend. In fact, the selection committee's entire top 10 stayed the same, the first time that has happened in the five seasons since the CFP was born.

With three weekends left until the final selections are made on Dec. 2, Georgia was fifth and Oklahoma was sixth. LSU, Washington State, West Virginia and Ohio State rounded out the top 10.

UCF moved up one spot to No. 11 and remained the highest-ranked team from outside the Power Five conference­s. The Knights on Saturday play Cincinnati, which is ranked or the first time by the selection committee this season at No. 24. DON'T COUNT ON STABILITY

In the four-year history of the College Football Playoff, the four teams at the top of the rankings after three weeks have never all made it to the semifinals. As much as it might feel as if the field is well set, it would be best to expect an unexpected result or two over the next three weeks.

Three not-so-outlandish upsets that could create confusion for the selection committee:

1. Alabama loses the SEC championsh­ip game to Georgia.

This could lead to the most controvers­ial call in CFP history. The Crimson Tide is the defending national champion and Tua Tagovailoa and Co. have been stomping everyone in their path. The Tide is not losing this week to The Citadel. The chances are slim Auburn beats 'Bama at home. But even if that were to happen, Alabama could quickly redeem itself by beating Georgia to win the SEC on championsh­ip weekend. A 12-1 SEC champion Alabama is not getting left out of the playoff, nor should it under any available circumstan­ces this season.

But 12-1 without an SEC championsh­ip? The committee has already twice sent teams that did not reach their conference title games to the playoff. Last year it was Alabama and the year before, Ohio State got there.

In Ohio State's case, the body-of-work argument was strong enough to overcome being bumped from the Big Ten title chase by Penn State, a team the Buckeyes had lost to in a close game at Happy Valley. Last year, Alabama seemed like a default pick at 11-1 over Ohio State and USC. Both were 11-2 with conference titles, but ugly losses on their ledgers.

Could the committee squeeze in the Tide after a loss to Georgia, which would obviously get in, if Clemson, Notre Dame and Michigan (and maybe even Oklahoma) all won out? It's not as if Alabama would have a loaded resume, with victories against LSU, Mississipp­i State and Auburn at the top. But there is also little doubt Alabama would be favored on a neutral field against any team in the country.

 ?? BUTCH DILL AP PHOTO BY ?? Alabama running back Josh Jacobs (8) carries the ball during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Mississipp­i State, Saturday, Nov. 10, in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
BUTCH DILL AP PHOTO BY Alabama running back Josh Jacobs (8) carries the ball during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Mississipp­i State, Saturday, Nov. 10, in Tuscaloosa, Ala.

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