USA TODAY International Edition

Big Ten starts at No. 1

Ohio State ranks ahead of ’ Bama

- Paul Myerberg

There’s a Southeaste­rn Conference feel atop the first College Football Playoff rankings, with three teams from the conference inside the top six, and the timing couldn’t be better: No. 3 Alabama hosts No. 2 LSU on Saturday, in one of the most hyped regularsea­son games of the past several seasons.

Another two SEC teams, No. 10 Florida and No. 11 Auburn, led all two- loss Power Five teams and even led unbeaten Baylor, due to the Bears’ weaker strength of schedule. The Big Ten put two teams in the top four, including No. 1 Ohio State, while the Pac- 12 saw its two front- runners, No. 7 Oregon and No. 8 Utah, seeded in position to take advantage of any chaos from the SEC, Big Ten and Atlantic Coast Conference.

The rankings were worse for the Big 12, which is paced by No. 9 Oklahoma. And in a twist that should fuel Clemson through the rest of the regular season, the defending national champs were ranked No. 5, behind Ohio State, LSU, Alabama and No. 4 Penn State. Here are the winners and losers from Tuesday’s debut rankings:

Winners

Pac- 12: Everything is coming together for the maligned Pac- 12, which has spent years wondering how to crack the code for the Playoff. Oregon and Utah are headed for a conference championsh­ip game pitting two one- loss teams with the potential to move even higher in the rank

ings by the first week of December. While the league needs help – the Ducks and Utes need to hold serve, most of all – the debut rankings paint a realistic scenario for how the Pac- 12 can put its champion into one of the national semifinals.

American Athletic: The selection committee respected the American enough to place four teams along the back end of the rankings: No. 20 Cincinnati, No. 21 Memphis, No. 24 Navy and No. 25 SMU. While there’s a case to be made for these teams being underranke­d – for Cincinnati and Memphis in particular – the high number of teams from one Group of Five league speaks to the American’s strong reputation among the committee and essentiall­y says that the conference champion, if with just one loss, is in the driver’s seat for a New Year’s Six bowl.

Big Ten: Ohio State’s two- month stretch of dominant play under firstyear coach Ryan Day has the Buckeyes atop the debut rankings, though the stay might only last a week – the winner of this Saturday’s matchup in Tuscaloosa will likely rise to No. 1, though the Buckeyes shouldn’t fall below No. 2 barring a loss. Another five Big Ten teams follow: No. 4 Penn State, No. 13 Wisconsin, No. 14 Michigan, No. 17 Minnesota and No. 18 Iowa. In the eyes of the committee, the Big Ten and the SEC are the top leagues in the country by a substantia­l margin. ( Cue the arguments for one of these conference getting two teams into the semifinals.)

While Minnesota is well outside the upper tier of teams, the Golden Gophers have ample opportunit­ies to climb the rankings. That starts with a home game

Saturday against Penn State. November also includes games against Iowa and Wisconsin. Wins against both would set up a potential Big Ten championsh­ip game against Ohio State. Win them all – good luck, Gophers – and Minnesota will be knocking on the door.

Losers

Clemson: It’s great for Dabo Swinney, who can use the Tigers’ ranking into ammunition for another ACC championsh­ip and Playoff berth. Clemson was docked based on the rightful perception that the ACC is the weakest of the Power Five leagues; while the Tigers have dominated nearly all comers, North Carolina notwithsta­nding, the schedule simply hasn’t presented an opportunit­y to sway the selection committee. One positive: Wake Forest, the Tigers’ opponent Nov. 16, came in at No. 19. In the end, Clemson remains in position to replace the loser of LSU- Alabama in next week’s top four and then even move up again based on the result of Ohio State and Penn State later this month. But it’s clear there is no margin for error.

Big 12: It wasn’t all bad news for the conference: Kansas State came in at No. 16 and Oklahoma State, despite three losses, at No. 23. But unbeaten Baylor was at No. 12, behind those twoloss teams from the SEC, though the Bears have high- profile games against Oklahoma and Texas to come in November. The biggest blow is with the Sooners, who trail not only the best teams from the SEC, the Big Ten and the ACC, as expected, but were slotted in behind those two leaders in the Pac- 12. There’s time and opportunit­y to make up ground, but Oklahoma’s ranking suggests the selection committee holds the Big 12 in lower regard than the remaining Power Five leagues.

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