The committee will semi-arbitrarily pick what guidelines they use in order to justify their picks.
The committee says that Alabama is better than Miami because even though they have one more loss, they have a better record against ranked teams. In a vacuum, this makes sense; and as much as I dislike Bama, I think it’s a reasonable argument. The strength of schedule for Alabama seems to matter to the committee.
But then Boise being ranked above ASU or ISU? Their best resume points are… a close loss to Oregon in an early season game, and a win against an 8-4 Wazzu team (who no longer plays in a real pac 12).
Indiana has played a grand total of 2 teams over .500 this year; Michigan and OSU. A close win and a blowout loss.
Miami beat florida! ….and seven teams at .500 or below. Against teams above .500, they are 3-2.
SMU is 11-1 and LOST TO BYU AT HOME; their wins are similar to Miami’s.
Both SMU and Miami are ranked significantly higher than every 10-2 Big 12 team, including BYU, who beat SMU on the road. Seemingly, having 11 wins means that SMU must be better than BYU. Strength of schedule (and head to head) do not matter here.
It’ll be 4 SEC, 4 B1G, 1 G5, ND, and then 1 ACC/B12 most years at this rate. If ND is bad or there’s a down year, it’ll be 2 ACC teams if some combination of Miami/FSU/Clemson are having good years. I just don’t see the Big 12 getting 2 bids almost ever.
Which will then end up with more SEC/B1G champs, which will feed into another loop of “they’re the best” because they have the benefit of the doubt and the most chances.