Aberzombie1892 said:
bear2be2 said:
Aberzombie1892 said:
bear2be2 said:
Aberzombie1892 said:
The challenge for the Big 12 is usually a lack of meaningful regular season out of conference wins. At this point in the season, the SEC has wins over 6-1 Clemson, 5-2 Wisconsin, 4-3 Virginia Tech, 4-3 Boston College, 4-3 Michigan, 4-4 NC State, etc. with additional opportunities for wins over 6-1 Clemson, 5-3 Georgia Tech, 4-3 Louisville, etc.
In the case of the Big 12, it's been a win over 6-1 SMU and then wins over 4-3 Arkansas and 4-3 Iowa. That's fine, but that's not how the conference builds its case relative to other conferences - especially with maintaining a larger conference than the SEC. While it's true that there were some non conference games against conference opponents this season, this issue is not limited to this season.
Clemson is the only feather in the cap win on that list. The others are OK, but they're likely going to be over 7-5 or 6-6 type teams by the end of the year.
The SEC usually does have more good out-of-conference wins than other leagues, but this season, that list isn't terribly impressive. Whether it's a one-off deal or not, the SEC's dominance gap has closed considerably this year, and that needs to be acknowledged when it's the case.
I have no problem crediting that league when it is head and shoulders above the field, as it has often been in the past 15-20 years. But that's not the case in 2024. A lot of the teams that folks tried to convince us in September were dominant this season simply aren't. It's Georgia, Texas and a bunch of good, but vulnerable teams after that. And Georgia has only looked dominant in spurts.
The end of the year is the end of the year, but, right now, the SEC has a great collection of wins and such wins stabilize the rankings of the very SEC teams that many in this very forum whine about the rankings of. BYU, Oklahoma State and Iowa State have the only meaningful out of conference wins for the league as of this week and it's reflected in the rankings - or lack thereof - for the conference.
The key is regular season out of conference wins vs P5 opponents help stabilize rankings of P5s early in the season, and that is an area of weakness for the Big 12 that shows.
What helps "stabilize the rankings" (whatever the hell that means) for the SEC is starting every season with five or more teams in the top 10.
The problem people have with the way the SEC is represented in the rankings stems from the fact that it is perception and not results that start the ball rolling in a pre-determined direction.
By this point in the season, we have enough information to look at objective strength of schedule/strength of record data. And because of the influence of preseason biases, the current rankings are largely out of line with that data.
College football is -- and has always been -- more about perception than results. And the treatment of SEC also-rans is perhaps the most visible symptom of that illness.
Let's explain using examples: Texas is where it is in the rankings in part because it beat Michigan, Georgia is where it is in the rankings in part because it beat Clemson, and Alabama is where it is in the rankings in part because it beat Wisconsin. In contrast, Briles' teams would fall like a rock in the rankings after their first loss because they didn't have a meaningful out of conference win. This is well known.
Let's look back at the final AP rankings of 2023. Which of the four SEC teams didn't belong there? Similarly, which of the four SEC teams didn't belong in the preseason 2024 rankings? Ole Miss finished 11-2 in 2023, returned their QB, returned their coach, and signed the #1 transfer class, so surely they aren't who we are talking about here.
And let's do look at the 2023 rankings:
From the preseason rankings to the final rankings ...
Georgia fell from No. 1 to No. 4
Alabama fell from No. 4 to No. 5
LSU fell from No. 5 to 12
Tennessee fell from No. 12 to 17
Texas A&M fell from No. 23 to unranked
And mediocre or worse teams from South Carolina, Arkansas, Kentucky, Auburn, Mississippi State and Florida were all receiving votes, which is obviously a joke.
The only SEC teams that moved up from preseason to postseason were:
Ole Miss from No. 22 to 9
Missouri from unranked to No. 8