Winners and losers from first College Football Playoff Top 25 rankings
The important thing to remember about the debut College Football Playoff rankings is that they’re meaningless.
The make-or-break matchups that will define the chase for the national championship are coming fast and furious, beginning with this Saturday’s must-see pairing of No. 1 Tennessee and No. 3 Georgia.
Later on in November, the Big Ten will be decided between No. 2 Ohio State and No. 5 Michigan, a crowded race atop the Pac-12 will be trimmed down to one or two teams, and the Big 12 will either submit an unbeaten champion for playoff inclusion or settle for a home in the slate of New Year’s Six bowl games.
The history of the playoff format tells us that all answers will be supplied by the first Sunday in December.
For now, what we can glean from the first rankings of the 2022 season is that the committee loves the SEC — no big surprise there, obviously. The committee is also low on No. 7 TCU and higher on No. 4 Clemson than voters in the USA TODAY Sports AFCA Coaches Poll.
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First rankings:Tennessee leads Ohio State in initial rankings reveal
Bowl projections:Loss won’t significantly hurt College Football Playoff chances of Georgia, Tennessee
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These teams and conferences lead the list of winners and losers from the debut playoff rankings:
Winners
The SEC
OK, let’s count ‘em up. Tennessee’s at No. 1, and no surprise there. The Volunteers have amassed a sterling resume and can put a headlock on the top spot with a win Saturday against the Bulldogs, who land at No. 3. Alabama is No. 6, as the highest-ranked one-loss team entering Saturday’s game against No. 10 LSU, the top-ranked team with two losses. Just behind the Tigers is No. 11 Mississippi. So, to sum up: Of the top 11 teams in the rankings, five come from the SEC. The league has multiple avenues to putting two teams into the playoff.
Clemson and the ACC
It wasn’t as bad for the ACC as believed heading into the rankings, beginning with the fact that Clemson came in ahead of Michigan to round out the top four. With the easiest remaining schedule of any of the top playoff contenders, the Tigers have to feel very positive about their chances of returning to the semifinals after a one-year absence. Clemson coming in at No. 4 is due to wins against three other ACC teams in the rankings: No. 20 Syracuse, No. 21 Wake Forest and No. 22 North Carolina State. (North Carolina was the fifth ACC representative at No. 17.) The committee respects the top third of the conference and how Clemson has risen to the top of the league.
Tulane
Tulane comes in first among Group of Five teams at No. 19, thanks in large part to a non-conference win against No. 13 Kansas State. The Green Wave are the only team still unbeaten in American play heading into two crucial November matchups against Cincinnati, the defending conference champions, and No. 25 Central Florida, the only other Group of Five team in the rankings. Being in the driver’s seat for the access-bowl bid might even give Tulane enough room for error where a loss in one of those two games, if…
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