Column: Bearcats face uphill climb to crack playoff puzzle
You’ve got to feel for the Cincinnati Bearcats. No matter what lofty heights they reach — and a perfect record was certainly within reach heading
into Friday night’s game against lowly
South Florida — in all likelihood they will
not be among four teams selected for the College Football Playoff.
What a pity.
Cincinnati is certainly worthy of more than a New Year’s
Day consolation prize for building the best
non-power Five program in the country, but the cash-cow playoff has always been reserved for those who make the rules and count the bucks.
Even if the Bearcats finished 13-0, won their conference title
and could point to a resume that included
an impressive road victory over Notre
Dame, it probably wouldn’t be enough.
“We’ve got to keep it going, keep the foot on the gas,” quarterback Desmond Ridder said. “We can’t let up.”
The Bearcats headed to Tampa having lost
only one game in the past two seasons — a last-second defeat to Georgia in the Peach Bowl.
The mighty Bulldogs are clearly the
best team in the land this season, which leaves three other
spots to be sorted out over the next few weeks.
The selection committee has already thrown a couple of
bones to the Bearcats, placing them sixth in its first poll and fifth in the most recent
survey — the highest rankings ever for a non-power Five team.
Granted, Cincinnati didn’t earn a whole lot of style points with last weekend’s
28-20 victory over Tulsa (3-6), a game that came down to the Bearcats recovering a fumble in the
end zone with less than a minute remaining.
But winning is really the only thing that matters. Luke Fickell’s bunch has
done that about as well as any team in the country, capturing their first nine games this year to improve to 40-6 since the beginning of the 2018 season.
“Nobody can live up to what other people want them to
be,” the coach
said. “When it
comes down to
it, there is one objective: win a football game.”
If there was ever a season to reward a team from the Group
of Five schools that generally get the shaft
on selection day, this appears to be it.
Three of the socalled power conferences are a mess:
Oregon is the only team worthy of a look from the Pac-12, which long ago
stopped being an elite football conference. And the Ducks have a
major blemish on their record, losing to a Stanford team that
has only two other wins in 2021. Still, the
playoff committee has them ranked at No. 3
behind only Georgia and defending national champion Alabama.
Oklahoma is 9-0 and on track to
capture another Big 12 title, but the Sooner had more style and
strength-of-schedule issues than Cincinnati. The combined record of the teams they have beaten is 31-51, with only two
of those squads currently above. .500.
With Clemson taking a major step
backward, the Atlantic Conference Conference has no one
even sniffing at playoff consideration. Wake Forest, ranked
No. 12, is the highest ACC team in this week’s CFP poll.
The remaining Power Five leagues are likely to contribute two or three teams to the playoff.
Georgia (9-0) is already a virtual
shoe-in from the powerful Southeastern Conference, even if the Bulldogs stumble along the way. They have a defense for the ages and have
barely been challenged, trailing only twice all season for a total of less than 11 minutes.
Presuming Georgia wins its last three regular-season games, not even a loss in the
SEC championship game would be
enough to keep the Bulldogs out. They’ll likely be matched in Atlanta against Alabama, which is ranked No. 2 by the
playoff committee even with a loss to Texas A&M.
Of course, if the Crimson Tide knocks
off the nation’s best team, coach Nick
Saban would surely get a crack at his
seventh national title in the past 13 years. No argument there.
The Big Ten will presumably will land
at least one team in the playoff, with Ohio
State currently at No. 4 in the CFP rankings. Michigan (No. 6) and Michigan State (No. 7) are right behind the Bearcats, with a
bunch of head-toheadings between those three one-loss
contenders still remaining.
Any team that navigates the November gauntlet without any further setbacks would certainly be a worthy selection.
Cincinnati’s best hope to make the playoff is Georgia
completing a perfect romp through the
SEC, which would likely eliminate Alabama or any other team from what is clearly the nation’s best conference.
Even then, though, we’re not at all confident that the committee would seriously consider an unbeaten
Bearcats team over Power Five schools such as Oregon, Ohio
State or Oklahoma, no matter their flaws.
Ridder sounded a bit naive when he
expressed confidence in the Bearcats’ chances.
“All we care about is winning the conference championship,” the quarterback said. “Once we do that,
everything is gonna take care of itself.”
Here’s a dose of reality: Since the
current playoff format was launched in 2014,
no team from outside the Power Five has
come close to getting the call. Those four playoff spots are
always reserved for the big boys.
No matter what the Bearcats do, they are unlikely to break through that imposing bit of history.
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Paul Newberry is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at pnewberry(at)ap.org
or at https://twitter. com/pnewberry1963 and check out his work at https://
apnews.com/search/ paulnewberry.