USA TODAY International Edition

College Football Playoff will be controvers­ial, complicate­d

- Paul Myerberg

These are the numbers that will decide the College Football Playoff: 11, 10, nine and seven.

Eleven games for teams in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Ten for the Big 12 and Southeaste­rn Conference. Nine for the Big Ten, seven for the Pac- 12. And that's only if things go according to plan.

In any odd year, the final challenge for the playoff selection committee is to gather a couple dozen data points, punch them through the protocols, make any relevant headto- head comparison­s and settle on the top four. But this isn't just any odd year – it's the oddest regular season in college football history.

As a result, this year's playoff debate promises to be the most complicate­d in the history of the postseason format. The basic concern centers on the key comparison­s committee members will make between contenders: How will the panel decide who is worthy of reaching the national semifinals when it might be unable to evenly weigh the merits of teams and conference­s?

“The committee's job is to select the best four teams based on the schedules as establishe­d by each conference. This is why we have this committee of 13 experts,” CFP executive director Bill Hancock told USA TODAY Sports. “Clearly there will be challenges this year. We will see what those challenges are and work through them. But the committee's fundamenta­l mission has not changed. Whatever the season looks like, the committee will select the best four teams based on the protocol.”

The process was already strained by the widespread removal of non- conference games, which help inform the early pecking order of the Power Five leagues. The few intersecti­onal games that remained didn't include two conference­s from the Power Five.

More important, dropping non- conference play eliminated two key selection committee protocols: head- to- head re

sults and results against common opponents. Losing those non- league matchups removes the ability to gauge the relative strength of one league against another. Analysis may be replaced by conjecture.

“The committee members have been watching games since the season started,” Hancock said. “They'll be ready.”

There's no bigger issue facing the committee than the varying number and sort of games being played by each Power Five league.

Those 10 games for teams from the Big 12 include one intersecti­onal matchup against an opponent from the Group of Five or Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n. ( Not that the easier schedules helped the Big 12, which has lost three games to the Sun Belt.) The same number in the SEC is only conference games.

Teams in the SEC and ACC will play the same number of league opponents, but the ACC will have one non- conference game. As with the Big 12, teams in the ACC will only face intersecti­onal opponents from the Group of Five or FCS.

Beginning this month, teams in the Big Ten will play nine conference games. The Pac- 12 will play a sevengame schedule starting in November.

In all, there will be no scheduling uniformity across the Power Five – leagues are scheduled to play the same number of games overall or the same number of league games, but no two conference­s play the same number of total games and conference games. During a 12game regular season, the ACC and SEC play the same number of league games, eight, while the Big Ten, Big 12 and Pac- 12 play nine.

Again, this is only if teams are able to complete a full schedule. In September, several teams in the ACC and Big 12 had one or more games postponed or canceled due to COVID- 19 concerns.

Those leagues built in extra weeks to allow games to be reschedule­d, however. The Big Ten and Pac- 12 won't have the same luxury: Big Ten teams will have no off weeks between Oct. 24 and Dec. 19, when the league will conduct its championsh­ip weekend, while the Pac- 12 will proceed with no open dates beginning Nov. 6.

“If you've got two undefeated teams and one of them played eight games and one of them played five games, then I think you've got to give the team that played more games more considerat­ion,” said former Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer, a committee member from 2017 to 2020.

Even the best- case scenario – where every team plays its full number of games – complicate­s the normal selection process. The worst- case scenario, where teams play even fewer games than already scheduled, might turn the selection procedure into a guessing game as committee members extrapolat­e results from abbreviate­d seasons.

“As for the difference in the number of games teams play, well, the committee has dealt successful­ly with that nearly every season,” Hancock said. “Those were one- or two- game differences; this year could be more. We'll have to see about that, but the committee will be prepared.”

The difference in games played could muddy the waters enough to create an avenue to the semifinals for a team from the Group of Five, even if the deck is pretty well stacked against programs from outside the major conference­s. If still a long shot, if Central Florida goes unbeaten on a 10- game schedule, the Knights would argue for having achieved more than a Power Five champion on a six- or seven- game schedule.

The strangenes­s of this year's playoff chase has already fueled calls to expand the postseason bracket to six or eight teams. Pac- 12 Commission­er Larry Scott broached the idea of expanding this year's field during a meeting Wednesday with the playoff management committee but his proposal was not approved, Hancock said.

The argument for immediate expansion in time for this coming postseason is that casting a wider net is the only way to ensure that teams are not penalized or promoted for playing fewer or more games as a result of COVID- 19.

“That's the only thing that makes sense now because you'll have some teams who have a 12- game schedule, that they may play 10,” said Stanford coach David Shaw.

“The playoff committee is going to have a difficult job ahead. I don't envy them. I know they are conscienti­ous human beings and I know they'll do the best job they can. But eventually, we're just going to have to expand because it's the only thing that makes sense.”

It wouldn't be the playoff without the debate. But it's possible to go through the week- to- week debate over the rankings without ending the process in controvers­y – there's been little to no controvers­y over the top four in each of the past two years. During the 2020 playoff race, the controvers­y will be nearly impossible to avoid.

“I think there's going to be a difference of opinion regardless,” Beamer said. “I don't think it ever happens that everybody in the country says, ‘ That's the right four teams that should be there. That's the perfect four.' I don't believe that's going to happen.”

 ?? JAMES SNOOK/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “The playoff committee is going to have a difficult job ahead,” Stanford coach David Shaw says of selecting the four- team field. “I don’t envy them.”
JAMES SNOOK/ USA TODAY SPORTS “The playoff committee is going to have a difficult job ahead,” Stanford coach David Shaw says of selecting the four- team field. “I don’t envy them.”

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