🏈 Playoff scenarios: Who's in if things get weird?

PhillyGirl

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http://sports.yahoo.com/news/playoff-scenarios-whos-things-weird-195942522--ncaaf.html

The 12-member College Football Playoff selection committee will gather Saturday in Texas to watch the final weekend of the season play out and then rank the top 25 teams in the country. The top four will compete for the national championship in the sport's first ever playoff.

How difficult the committee's job will be depends on the outcome of about a half dozen games to be played Friday and Saturday.

''At that point, we will have had a season long body of work to evaluate, in addition to knowing who the conference champions are,'' committee chairman Jeff Long said.

The top four heading into the weekend are in order: Alabama, Oregon, TCU and Florida State. If they all take care of business, there is a good chance that will be the top four on Sunday, too. Probably. Maybe?

But what happens if things don't go as expected? Let's dive into the possibilities.

What happens if ....


Missouri beats Alabama?

The unthinkable - at least for many down South. There is a very real possibility the Southeastern Conference would be left out of the playoff. Missouri is ranked 16th in the latest playoff rankings. That's a long way to go to get in the four-team field. The committee clearly is not loving Missouri's ugly losses (at home against Indiana and 34-0 to Georgia), so it's doubtful it will forgive Alabama for losing to the Tigers and allow the Crimson Tide to back into the field. If the Tigers pull an upset, the SEC is going to need a lot of help. The Crimson Tide is favored by 14.5.


Arizona beats Oregon?

The Wildcats are seventh in the rankings, heading into a rematch with Oregon Friday. Two wins away from home against the Ducks would be like holding a pair of aces: tough to beat. It could come down to a resume contest between Baylor and/or Ohio State and Arizona. Don't bet against the Wildcats making the big jump. The Pac-12 and Commissioner Larry Scott are touting their championship as a playoff play-in game. They might be right. Despite losing the first game, Oregon is favored by 14.5.


Georgia Tech beats Florida State?

Considering the fourth-place and unbeaten Seminoles have been dropping when they win, there's no doubt they'd be done with a loss. Georgia Tech is 11th and beating Florida State would mean finishing the season with three straight wins against ranked teams. The Yellow Jackets would probably need Baylor (vs. Kansas State) and Ohio State (vs. Wisconsin) to lose to reach the top four, but considering who those teams are playing, that doesn't seem so like such a stretch. Florida State is favored by 4.


TCU struggles to beat Iowa State?

The Horned Frogs got a pass for squeaking by at Kansas last month. That can't happen again against a 30-point underdog at home. If it does, it would open the door for either Baylor or Ohio State to replace the Frogs in the top four. With the Bears and Buckeyes in position to add marquee wins to their resumes, the third-ranked Horned Frogs better exert some serious game control against the Cyclones.


Three of the top four teams lose?

Assuming it won't be TCU, the Big 12 would be looking good to get two teams in the field. TCU, Baylor, Ohio State and Arizona sounds about right in this scenario. If Baylor were to lose to K-State, the ninth-ranked Wildcats could become a viable option, though that scenario probably allows Georgia Tech to squeeze through.


Alabama, Ohio State and Baylor lose?

This is how Missouri could get in. Assuming Arizona and Georgia Tech also lose, the final spot with Florida State, TCU and Oregon comes down to Missouri, Kansas State and Wisconsin. Michigan State (eighth) and Mississippi State (10th) would likely come back into the conversation, but neither would have the conference championship that those other three would have on their resumes. And what team would have a better win than Missouri if it takes down the committee's No. 1 team on a neutral field?


The top six teams all lose?

Long and his crew might have to pull an all-nighter.

The questions with this doomsday scenario are: Could it allow Alabama to back in? Would Mississippi State and/or Michigan State get in? And how bad will the TV ratings be for a final four of Arizona, Georgia Tech, Kansas State and Wisconsin or Missouri?
 
So if the committee is looking at injuries then...

http://espn.go.com/college-football...te-seminoles-acc-championship-game-concussion

(video link included)

Florida State's Karlos Williams will miss Saturday's ACC championship game against Georgia Tech as the senior tailback won't be cleared to play after suffering a concussion last week, school officials said.

Williams, who suffered the concussion early in the No. 4 Seminoles' victory against Florida, has rushed for 609 yards and 10 touchdowns this season. He is averaging 4.4 yards per carry.

Freshman speedster Dalvin Cook will get start against No. 11 Georgia Tech (10-2, 6-2, No. 12 AP) on Saturday. Cook, who rushed for a career-best 144 yards against the Gators while filling in for Williams, has 728 yards this season.

Cook only need 161 more yards to break FSU's 33-year-old freshman rushing record, which was set by Greg Allen (888) in 1981.

"There's not enough positive things you can say about Dalvin," said senior center Cameron Erving, a two-time winner of the ACC's "best blocker award." "He's been very, very vital to our success."

Georgia Tech coach Paul Johnson ranks Cook among the best backs he's had to prepare for all season, comparing him to Georgia's Nick Chubb and Sony Michel.

"He's at least that caliber," Johnson said. "He's got great speed and really catches the ball well."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 
So if the committee is looking at injuries then...

http://espn.go.com/college-football...te-seminoles-acc-championship-game-concussion

(video link included)

Florida State's Karlos Williams will miss Saturday's ACC championship game against Georgia Tech as the senior tailback won't be cleared to play after suffering a concussion last week, school officials said.

Williams, who suffered the concussion early in the No. 4 Seminoles' victory against Florida, has rushed for 609 yards and 10 touchdowns this season. He is averaging 4.4 yards per carry.

Freshman speedster Dalvin Cook will get start against No. 11 Georgia Tech (10-2, 6-2, No. 12 AP) on Saturday. Cook, who rushed for a career-best 144 yards against the Gators while filling in for Williams, has 728 yards this season.

Cook only need 161 more yards to break FSU's 33-year-old freshman rushing record, which was set by Greg Allen (888) in 1981.

"There's not enough positive things you can say about Dalvin," said senior center Cameron Erving, a two-time winner of the ACC's "best blocker award." "He's been very, very vital to our success."

Georgia Tech coach Paul Johnson ranks Cook among the best backs he's had to prepare for all season, comparing him to Georgia's Nick Chubb and Sony Michel.

"He's at least that caliber," Johnson said. "He's got great speed and really catches the ball well."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Ah, Karlos Williams. The guy who beat his pregnant girlfriend. Class act.
 
Wow! That is a lot for my brain to digest but anything is possible on Sat. The case is simple for all 4 teams, wind and advance, lose and get knocked out. Hopefully, the top 4 stays the same but if I had to pick teams to lose their games it would be Oregon and Fl. St.
 
If Florida State loses, Ohio State loses, and Baylor loses, give me Georgia Tech in the 4th spot. Sounds crazy, but they have beat (Clemson, Florida State, and Georgia) more teams than Kansas State and Wisconsin, and their losses aren't as bad as the others in my eyes atleast. Of course, this is all if hell break's loose scenario.
 
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