B Lifsey
Helluva Engineer
- Messages
- 1,380
- Location
- Barnesville, Georgia
Hopefully, it is opportunity for back-ups to get real game-time experience. Note the use of "hopefully."
I’m ok with it. It’s “supposed” to give you a chance to rest some, work on things mid-year in a real game, and give younger guys some experience. We of course like to keep those games close enough that we get to do none of these things. My problem is the obvious favoritism towards certain schools on where they put these games on their schedule. Similar to how it screws us by teams getting cupcakes before they play us, teams like Bama get them before any real competition.Personally, I fail to see why schools like UGA, Bama and such even play FCS schools. It nothing more than a W and way to pad stats. It contributes nothing to the sport. Even us. I rather see us play a MAC school, than some crappy FCS school. Which we see one, next year.. LOL But, there are plenty of lower FBS teams out there. Why waste the money to pay a FCS school? Just seems like a waste. I mean... do we (as fans) really like seeing us play Furman or Southern Methodist school for girls and craps like that?
^^This^^Personally, I fail to see why schools like UGA, Bama and such even play FCS schools. It nothing more than a W and way to pad stats. It contributes nothing to the sport. Even us. I rather see us play a MAC school, than some crappy FCS school. Which we see one, next year.. LOL But, there are plenty of lower FBS teams out there. Why waste the money to pay a FCS school? Just seems like a waste. I mean... do we (as fans) really like seeing us play Furman or Southern Methodist school for girls and craps like that?
Well we don’t compare resumes anymore. Don’t you know this?You guys are all creating arguments that Shaw was not talking about. All he's saying is if we are comparing teams then we need to make it so the variables are the same.
You guys are all creating arguments that Shaw was not talking about. All he's saying is if we are comparing teams then we need to make it so the variables are the same.
I'd like to see the top teams in the SEC have to get scheduled a road game on a Friday night too. Clemson, USC, and Miami all took looses on a Friday night game on the road. Why is the SEC not forced to play one?
because saturday game slots pay more and are viewed by more people? Only Clemson and FSU would make the top half (and barely so) in attendance in the SEC, which is a good indicator of TV ratings. SEC is still king in ratings and will continue to do so for the near future.
Bama had the best resume. Eye test is an established metric, and 30 point losses disqualified Penn State in 2016, Ohio State, Miami, and USC in 2017. Playoff caliber teams shouldn't be blown out. It is what it is. And its been consistent. Georgia lost by 24, but they also beat that same team that beat them so its a moot point. They got lucky to get redemption. Wisconsin arguably has a shot, but their resume is by far the weakest
Team- 10+wins,9+ wins- 8+ wins, bowl elgible wins, (g5 inparentheses)
Clemson-2-3-6-10
Oklahoma-2-3-3-8
Georgia-1-2-5(1)-7(1)
Bama-0-2(1)-3(1)-7(2)
Ohio State-2-3-5(1)-5(1)
Wisconsin-0-2(1)-3(1)-5(1)
USC-0-2-2-9
UCF-(2)-(3)-(3)-(7)
Seems obvious that Clemson and Oklahoma get in, Georgia also deserves a shot. USC whiffed against all their elite competition, and relied on beating 6-6 and 7-5 teams. Ohio state had a top heavy and bottom heavy schedule. Wisconsin had a very bottom heavy schedule. UCF has a similar resume to every team, but against far weaker competition. Take into consideration the blowout losses, and you can see why Bama sneaks in.
It's different because USC played 12 power 5 teams this year. Playing that many games allows a higher chance of upsets. Why do you think the two leagues with 8 game conference schedules haven't been omitted yet? I agree about the November cup cake it's dumb. Most if not all big ten, big 12, and pac12 all schedule a power 5 outside their conference slate as it allows them to recruit other geography cal regions.
Sometimes the best team in the conference doesn't win the championship. There's 10 conference champs, 5 power 5 champs so they are always excluded. It's a dumb argument. Makes it impossible for Norte dame to make it even when they deserve it. And once again, add a column for precedent: you don't make it if you lose by 30 points and have two losses and voila everything makes sense! It happened last year and happened again this year. Wins matter, but so do losses. You can't just keep ignoring the fact that they lost twice and no team that has lost twice has made it. That's called precedent.But if OSU had been the fourth team, you could look at the 10+ win teams they played and seen why OSU got in over Bama. Any system where you don't know what it takes to qualify and explanations can be made for excluding a team is broken. If conference champs get in the committee cannot exclude anyone. If you need an at-large bid to get in then by definition you did not qualify and should have no standing to argue.
So if Alabama had played Florida instead of FSU, they could not have made it? If UGA had played Arkansas instead of GT, they could not have made it? UGA played 10 P5 games this year if you count ND as P5. Alabama played 9 P5 games this year. Why does it make a difference if the 9th game is in conference or out?
This year the SEC was thisclose to getting exposed. We just needed one more LSU loss (ideally to Syracuse) and one more loss by Miss State (Arkansas gave it to them). Then we’d be left with just 3 ranked SEC teams and only one in the CFP.
Because their .500 teams they played are not as good as the .500 teams Bama played.UCF beat up on a bunch of .500 teams all year long just like Bama and don't have a loss. Why are they not in consideration?
Also FWIW, if South Florida was playing LSU (Bama's best win), my money would be on South Florida and I don't even think it would be a one score game. Possibly the same with Memphis and UCF beat them twice.