Santa Fe New Mexican

Georgia leads Alabama in first rankings

- By Marc Tracy

Defying the Associated Press poll and much recent history, the undefeated Georgia Bulldogs (8-0) occupied the top spot of the initial College Football Playoff rankings released Tuesday evening, one above the undefeated Southeaste­rn Conference colossus Alabama (8-0).

Rounding out the top six were Notre Dame (7-1), the defending national champion Clemson (7-1), Oklahoma (7-1) and Ohio State (7-1).

The committee will continue to announce weekly rankings until the final set is released Dec. 3, after all the conference­s play their championsh­ip games. At that point, the top four teams will be matched in the two national semifinals — the Rose Bowl and the Sugar Bowl — to be held on New Year’s Day.

The winners will meet in the national championsh­ip game on Jan. 8 in Atlanta.

Under coach Nick Saban, Alabama is in the middle of what is perhaps the greatest run in college football history. It has won four of the past eight national championsh­ips (and came within 4 points of a fifth title last season), and it has won its last three games against Georgia, including a meeting in the 2012 SEC title game.

But the 13-member playoff selection committee, which includes current athletic directors, former coaches and others, adjudged Georgia the superior team at this point in the season, at a time when the Bulldogs have played two ranked teams — including a win on the road at Notre Dame — while the Crimson Tide have played none. Alabama hosts No. 19 Louisiana State (6-2) on Saturday night.

Georgia’s next game is at home against South Carolina (6-2) on Saturday.

Notre Dame is coming off a dismal 4-8 season last year that made many suspect coach Brian Kelly was not long for South Bend. But the Irish have fought back, and they have the genuine honor of the season’s best loss: a 20-19 defeat at home to Georgia in the season’s second weekend. Still on the docket are No. 10 Miami (7-0) and No. 21 Stanford (6-2).

An independen­t in football, Notre Dame’s lack of a conference championsh­ip game could prove an obstacle to its playoff hopes, as other contenders should have a 13th game to make a final statement to the committee.

Clemson, the defending national champion, lost the twotime Heisman finalist — and current Houston Texans quarterbac­k — Deshaun Watson, but it still has managed wins over two ranked opponents, Virginia Tech (7-1) and Auburn (6-2).

Oklahoma edged Ohio State for the fifth spot, most likely by virtue of its early season win over the Buckeyes.

With Oklahoma (Big 12), Ohio State (Big Ten) and No. 12 Washington (Pacific-12) outside the top four, the playoff — were it held today — would exclude three of the so-called Power 5 conference­s.

The Huskies (7-1), who made last year’s playoff, still have the ranked opponents Stanford and No. 25 Washington State (7-2) on their schedule, and potentiall­y a matchup against No. 17 Southern California (7-2) in the conference title game.

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Georgia linebacker Roquan Smith celebrates in September after the Bulldogs beat Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind. Georgia took the top spot in the initial College Football Playoff rankings, while Notre Dame took third.
MICHAEL CONROY/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Georgia linebacker Roquan Smith celebrates in September after the Bulldogs beat Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind. Georgia took the top spot in the initial College Football Playoff rankings, while Notre Dame took third.

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