The Day

As AAC strives for Power 6, CFP rankings show long way to go

- By RALPH D. RUSSO AP College Football Writer

All the helmet stickers and slogans touting the American Athletic Conference as part of a so-called Power Six are not working on the College Football Playoff selection committee.

Central Florida, one of only two unbeaten teams left in FBS, was ranked 14th by the committee in the latest rankings and Memphis (10-1), which plays the Knights in the American championsh­ip game on Saturday, was 20th.

As Commission­er Mike Aresco continues to push against major college football's glass ceiling, advocating for his schools and trying to position the American Athletic Conference as a Power Five peer, just how far off the league is from achieving its goal has been apparent every Tuesday night since Halloween when the CFP rankings are released.

"I just believe the system will have more credibilit­y if our guys have the chance to compete on a more level playing field," Aresco said this week. "It's very tough to fight the whole P5, G5 (Group of Five) divide. It's just not easy. We accept that. We're not naive. But we certainly are going to try to do something about it."

The American has separated itself from the other four FBS conference­s (Mountain West, Conference USA, Mid-American Conference and Sun Belt) known as the Group of Five on the field over the last three seasons.

During that time, the AAC is 30-6 in games against other G5 schools. The AAC champion is a lock to earn the Group of Five's guaranteed spot in this season's New year's Six bowls, making it two of the last three years for the conference. The AAC has struggled overall in the last two postseason­s with a 4-11 mark.

According to the Sagarin computer ratings, which ranks conference­s by divisions, the American's West division with Memphis, Houston and SMU, is ninth best in Division I. That puts it in between two Power Five divisions, the Atlantic Coast Conference's Coastal and Southeaste­rn Conference's East. The AAC East is 13th. The only other Group of Five division ahead of it is the MAC's West.

Still, the selection committee has UCF (11-0) directly behind Stanford (93) and Washington (10-2) from the Pac12 in its rankings, citing the Knights' strength of schedule and a shaky defense. (The committee doesn't use the Sagarin strength of schedule rankings, but those have UCF at 83 and Washington at 57. Wisconsin, the other unbeaten in FBS and ranked No. 4 by the committee, is 61st.)

Coming off a thrilling nationally televised victory last Friday against USF (9-2), it seemed the Knights would finally be in position to at least crack the top 10 in the CFP. Instead the rankings prompted this tweet from UCF athletic director Danny White: "You've gotta be kidding me!!!"

Aresco voiced his concerns last week about the rankings in a radio interview, but he said this week he was not blasting the committee.

"All I said was that I thought our league deserved more respect and that I thought it was going to be really hard to get into the playoff even though I thought we had deserving teams and have proved it by what they did," Aresco said.

Aresco's Power Six push is not just a slogan. It's a three-pronged plan that starts with getting the conference a better television contract. The current deal with ESPN expires after the 2019 season and pays the league about $21 million per year. The Power Five conference­s each have long-term deals that pay hundreds of millions of dollars yearly. Informal talks with ESPN will start next year, Aresco said.

"If we have a TV deal that gets closer to what the other P5, P6 have then we have the credibilit­y to say we belong in that group," Aresco said.

Step two is to try to convince one of the major bowls to agree to a deal with the American similar to what the Power Five conference­s have with New Year's Six bowls. That would give the conference another big payday and guaranteed big stage for its champion every year.

The third step is to have the American be part of the NCAA legislativ­e process that gives autonomy to the Power Five to makes some rules without the approval of the rest of Division I.

“I just believe the system will have more credibilit­y if our guys have the chance to compete on a more level playing field. It’s very tough to fight the whole P5, G5 divide. It’s just not easy. We accept that. We’re not naive. But we certainly are going to try to do something about it.” MIKE ARESCO, AAC COMMISSION­ER

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