I'm sorry that article is incredibly dumb. It uses some of the same stupid logic that the CFP committee is using to put FSU at #4. I feel stupider (see?) just for reading that section about why we should jump a 1 loss Baylor. Statistics can prove your point about 99% of the time.
Here is the Baylor analysis for reference:
Baylor is presently ranked #6 in the College Football Playoff rankings, while Georgia Tech is ranked #11. Baylor plays Kansas State this weekend. For the sake of this analysis, we will assume Baylor wins this weekend, in order to make the case that Georgia Tech deserves a berth over the best possible case for Baylor.
Criteria
Georgia Tech
Baylor
Advantage
Overall Record
11-2
12-1
Baylor
Record Against Then-Ranked Teams
3-0
3-0
Draw
Record Against Now-Ranked Teams
3-0
3-0
Draw
Strength of Schedule
#20
#29
Georgia Tech
Total Margin of Loss
11
14
Georgia Tech
Record of Teams Responsible for Losses
15-9
7-5
Georgia Tech
Baylor’s overall superior record looms large as its only loss comes against 7-5 West Virginia. However, Baylor and Georgia Tech possess the same number of quality wins: assuming wins this weekend, Georgia Tech will have won games over teams now-ranked #19, #9, and #4, while Baylor will have won games over teams then-ranked #18, #9, and #4. Baylor’s lone loss came in an uncompetitive game against 7-5 West Virginia, while Georgia Tech’s two losses both game in games that went down to the last drive against 6-6 UNC and 9-3 Duke. It is obviously preferable to have one fewer loss, but the lopsidedness of Baylor’s one loss and the competitiveness of Georgia Tech’s two losses narrow the game. Georgia Tech’s three wins over ranked teams also come at the end of the year, suggesting superiority from Georgia Tech entering the last week of the season. Baylor, meanwhile, barely defeated 4-8 Texas Tech last weekend.
The only criteria by which Baylor is superior to Georgia Tech is that it has one fewer loss. Its one loss is worse than either of Georgia Tech’s losses, its strength of schedule is slightly weaker, and it struggled to defeat a bad team in the closing week of the season. It is also inferred that the committee would prefer not to place two teams from the same conference in the playoff bracket (much less two teams that played one another), and that a 2-loss ACC team would receive a berth over a second 1-loss Big 12 team. Based on these elements, a 2-loss Georgia Tech deserves a bid over a 1-loss Baylor team on the basis of superior performance at the close of the season.
He admits that the case comparing Baylor is the weakest link when comparing the given metrics (though GT still wins that comparison). The big thing putting GT in front of Baylor is not having 2 teams from the same conference and GT as conference champion. It would be total BS if the Big 12 got 2 teams in just because they don't have a championship game. I think it would even be fair if they didn't get any teams in (let alone 2) for not having to play a championship game. So, it's either TCU, Baylor, or none. Thus in his analysis with TCU being in, Baylor is eliminated. Makes complete sense.