If you buy Lashlee point then who in the ACC or Big 12 should be ranked higher? Miami is #9, They have 0 quality wins. SMU has 0 quality wins and are ranked #14, Who should SMU be ranked above? Those are based on last weeks rankings. It will be interesting to see this weeks rankings. In the Big 12 BYU was ranked #6 with 1 quality win over SMU. They lost yesterday to a bad Kansas team. You could make a case Penn State should have been #6 vice #4 but that is at the margins.
Everyone in about the top 10-12 sitting behind IU and PSU should be ranked higher…EVERYONE… that would include Miami for certain, and probably SMU needs to be in that discussion too.
Miami and SMU arguably both have better wins than Indiana or PSU. Miami tumbled in ranks for a loss to upper / mid conf opponent. It wouldn’t happen in the Big / SEC… they would move that upper / mid team into rankings.
ND should be higher based on quality wins and their loss shouldn’t matter, right? CFP keeps changing the rules. Undefeated matters until it’s a team / conference they don’t like, then losses don’t matter.
Heck, Boise St has arguably as good a win as the Hoosiers. Has IU beaten a bowl eligible team yet? If they have, that team got eligible yesterday. Weak… but they’re too big to fail now.
When Miami is living on borrowed time, it’s weakness. Oregon proved unquestionable superiority last night against a stalwart wisc team, right?
If quality wins is the measure (your citation), then two Big Ten CFP locks
(IU &PSU) should be outside the top ten… possibly the top 15. Throw in Texas too… their best win (at the time, and possibly still)…Michigan?
Michigan is another UGA… they have played every top BIG team and stepped out of conference for Texas. That’s the type of scheduling we were promised from BIG / SEC teams but instead we’re getting a bunch of teams in late November who haven’t beaten anyone.
Yeah, the ACC needs to get it done in some big games, but it won’t matter. We’ve gotten it done before and it didn’t elevate the conference in any meaningful way. Most times it was ignored