The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Clemson shouldn’t fret ... but Alabama?

If Tide lose to No. 2 LSU Saturday, UGA could be in better CFP position.

- Mark Bradley Only In The AJC

Clemson has played for three of the past four national titles and won two. Alabama has played for the past four national titles and won two. Clemson is undefeated. Alabama is undefeated. Neither is ranked among the nation’s top two teams, according to the College Football Playoff committee, which generates the only rankings that matter.

For all who insist rankings are largely a function of reputation, the set released Tuesday night stands as counterpoi­nt. Clemson and Alabama have essentiall­y been 1-2, or 2-1, in college football for 4½ seasons. But Bama wasn’t No. 1 or No. 2 in the CFP’s eyes, and Clemson wasn’t No. 3 or 4. If you’ve ever asked, “Does the commit

tee even watch games?” ... well, there’s your answer.

This isn’t to say the two superpower­s won’t be included in the field of four come Dec. 8. It would still be a shock if Clemson doesn’t make it. (Alabama has a rockier road, as we’ll discuss momentaril­y.) But the committee has been saying for the entirety of its existence it doesn’t go on what happened in any year other than the one at hand, and someday folks might begin to believe it.

The writers/broadcaste­rs who vote in the Associated Press poll have Bama No. 2 and Clemson No. 4. Alabama is No. 1 and Clemson No. 3 in the USA Today coaches’ poll. The committee held neither in such high esteem, ranking the Crimson Tide No. 3 and the Tigers No. 5. AP has LSU No. 1; the committee rated it No. 2. That part gave me pause, seeing as how Ohio State is No. 1 and the Buckeyes’ claims to fame are victories over Wisconsin and Cincinnati, Nos. 13 and 20 in the CFP’s ranking. LSU, meanwhile, has beaten No. 10 Florida and No. 11 Auburn. But if we check strength of schedule on TeamRankin­gs.com, we find ...

Ohio State is No. 3 nationally. LSU is No. 8. To paraphrase Jesse Pinkman: Yay, data!

It’s easy to make fun of committees. (Google “sarcastic definition of committee,” and you’ll get the drift.) The CFP, however, must pluck four teams from somewhere, and everybody agreed the BCS mashup of human polls and computer ratings was flawed if not foolish. The CFP has commission­ed 13 actual people — all of whom have a background in college sports, one of whom is athletic director at the Georgia Institute of Technology and another who may or may not be my cousin — and lets them work.

(Florida AD Scott Stricklin is on the committee. He believes we’re related. He has relatives from Paintsvill­e, Kentucky. Some are named Williams. My mom and dad were from Paintsvill­e. My mom’s maiden name was Williams. DNA tests are pending.)

This isn’t to say the committee has or will get everything right. This is, however, to suggest that the committee tries very hard to get things right, which is all we can ask. Georgia fans will whine forever that the twoloss nonchampio­n Bulldogs should have been admitted ahead of oneloss Big 12 champ Oklahoma or no-loss no-champ Notre Dame last year, but most of the committee disagreed — and so did I. When in doubt, being the champ of something should matter. Being unbeaten against Notre Dame’s schedule should matter.

There’s a chance the committee could again face a similar issue re: Georgia. If the Bulldogs win the rest of their regular-season games but lose to Alabama/LSU in the

SEC Championsh­ip game, they’d be a two-loss nonchamp. Tuesday’s rankings had Georgia as the top one-loss team at No. 6, ahead of No. 7 Oregon and No. 8 Utah and well ahead of No. 9 Oklahoma. This was a warning flare to the Big 12: Its oneloss champ mightn’t make the field. (Unbeaten Baylor is ranked behind two two-loss SEC teams, and nobody expects the Bears to stay unbeaten.)

Even with the worst loss of any team in the CFP Top 25, Georgia seems in decent shape. (It has two victories over teams ranked among the top 15.) It might be in better shape than Alabama. Should the Tide lose at home to LSU on Saturday, there could be no way back. And here’s where you say, “Yeah, but with Alabama there’s always a way back.” Historical­ly, yes. But this Bama hasn’t beaten a team ranked among the CFP’s chosen

25. If it loses Saturday, it almost certainly won’t play for the SEC title, and it could finish the regular season with nothing more than a victory over an Auburn team that might dump its coach.

Say LSU beats Georgia for the SEC title. Would the committee choose one-loss nonchamp Alabama over the two-loss nonchamp Bulldogs? Would it choose one-loss Pac-12 champ Oregon/ Utah over Georgia? Would it again pick one-loss Big 12 champ Oklahoma? Would the South Carolina loss seem bigger Dec. 8 than in the first week of November?

If Georgia wins out, it’s in. The same holds with Clemson. Forget the momentary indignity of being ranked No.

5. At least two of the four teams ahead of the Tigers will lose: Bama plays LSU; Ohio State plays Penn State. Clemson is No. 5 because its strength of schedule is No. 42 among 130 FBS teams. If Clemson is one of two or three unbeatens at season’s end,

Even with the worst loss of any team in the CFP Top 25, Georgia seems in decent shape. It has two victories over teams ranked among the top 15.

it won’t be No. 5. (Though it won’t be No. 1, either. The ACC is awful.)

It’s fashionabl­e to maintain we overreact to the first CFP rankings, but do we really? In 2016, the teams that made the playoff were ranked No. 1, 2, 5 and 6 in the initial set. In 2017, they were No. 1, 2, 4 and 5. In 2018, they were No. 1, 2, 4 and 7. Only two of the 20 invitees over the CFP’s five-year history were ranked above No. 7 in the first week, and those were teams — Oklahoma in 2015, Ohio State in 2014 — that wound up being one-loss champs of Power Five leagues.

Things will change between now and Dec. 8, but at this moment a best guess at a final four would be: The SEC champ, the Big Ten champ, Clemson and either a second team from the SEC or a oneloss Pac-12 champ. That’s provided a second team from the Big Ten, which hasn’t had any of its members make the field since 2016, doesn’t slip in. If you check these rankings — Ohio State No. 1, Penn State No. 4 — there’s reason to believe it might.

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