cowboycwr said:
FLBear5630 said:
cowboycwr said:
It should matter if you play someone with a pulse but more importantly it should matter if you WIN your games. If you lose, whether to someone with a pulse or someone who just gets lucky, that should be a huge ding on a resume for the CFP.
Let's cut the BS, Bama lost to Vandy. They had one good game. According to Bama Conference membership matters, unless you are the B10 or anyone else than it doesn't. This is positioning to get the most money, if it wasn't Bama at 12, it would be Old Miss at 16 or Vandy at 64. It is what the SEC does.
I think you misunderstood what I was saying. I was NOT pushing for bama.
They have two losses to bad teams and a third loss to a good team. That should keep them out. But Indiana didn't have any good wins, even against teams with winning records. That should also have hurt them.
Wins should matter. But once you get past the top 3 or 4 teams it should matter who you beat and who you lost to. If you have two losses against winning teams and another school has two losses against mediocre teams then the first team should be ranked higher.
Outside of nonconference scheduling, which is usually completed years in advance, you can't control how good the teams you beat are. It's not Indiana's fault, for instance, that Michigan and Washington -- playoff teams a year ago -- fell off a cliff this season.
For this reason, I'm OK just saying outright that any power conference team that goes 11-1 in the regular season deserves a playoff spot. I'm also OK saying that a second regular-season loss should disqualify a team that played the type of schedule that Indiana or SMU did this year.
To me, a strong schedule buys you one extra loss. But once you get to two losses with a weak schedule or three losses with a strong one, you should fall to the back of the list of playoff hopefuls and should only get a spot if there aren't enough other worthy teams to fill out the bracket.