I had a long post all typed out here, but it was going to say basically the same thing, so - I think, given the way the system is devised, the 11 spots that were all but certain after last week’s games aren’t that bad. I know you think that’s a “gotcha,” but my biggest problems are with the system itself.
Oregon
Penn State
Texas
Georgia
Notre Dame
ACC champion
Big XII champion
MWC champion
Ohio State
Tennessee
Indiana
If SMU loses the ACC game, I’d lean towards keeping them in. In a truly unbiased world, I’d have BYU be in this conversation for the last spot if SMU wins, along with Alabama, Ole Miss, and Miami. I can see an argument putting Indiana somewhere in that group, but you can’t leave a 1-loss B1G team out, no matter how weak their schedule.
My issues are with the seedings, the bloated conferences that create wildly unbalanced schedules that prevent us from seeing who are truly the “best” teams in those conferences, and the system that starts with the bias of preseason rankings and sees that carry weight all the way through the season. I don’t care if Boise State goes 12-1, they still played a MWC schedule and shouldn’t get a bye.
Here’s the AP preseason top 15. Do we think Mizzou would be where they are now if they hadn’t started from 11? Would Alabama and Ole Miss have been able to survive losses to Vandy, Oklahoma, Kentucky, and Florida without a top 6 head start?
Georgia
Ohio State
Oregon
Texas
Alabama
Ole Miss
Notre Dame
Penn State
Michigan
Florida State
Missouri
Utah
LSU
Clemson
Tennessee
We shouldn’t have any weekly rankings at all until about Week 4 or 5 - not like the brand names still wouldnt matter, but at least maybe teams wouldn’t get credit for beating a woeful-but-still-ranked Florida State, or maybe might suffer some more serious consequences for losing a home game to Northern Illinois.