Assume Ole Miss losing the Egg Bowl is off the table because that's what we would all choose.
Easily 2+. The more the merrier.Assume Ole Miss losing the Egg Bowl is off the table because that's what we would all choose.
If they win out, they are probably in the CFP. But definitely not guaranteed.Win out and they make the play off 100%.
Its pretty hard to see any combination of 11 P4 teams getting selected over any 2-loss SEC team.If they win out, they are probably in the CFP. But definitely not guaranteed.
Id put a 11-1 Indiana team inIts pretty hard to see any combination of 11 P4 teams getting selected over any 2-loss SEC team.
For me going 0-for ever how many they have left would be satisfying.For me going 4-0 and still missing the playoffs would be the most painful for them.
With that said, it depends on who the two losses would be. Lose to Arkansas on the road, where they have not played well and Georgia at home, where they may not be favored, it would suck but not the most painful. Lose to Georgia at home and MSU at home (I'm aware the second loss here is not very likely) would be far more painful for them.
What if there are five 10+ win SEC teams? Six? Seven?Its pretty hard to see any combination of 11 P4 teams getting selected over any 2-loss SEC team.
That can’t all happen, though.What if there are five 10+ win SEC teams? Six? Seven?
What if Notre Dame is in?
What if the ACC and/or the Big 12 are multi-bid leagues?
How many Big Ten teams are in?
Too many scenarios to say 100%.
I think a 10-2 Ole Miss team is in the CFP in about 66.7% of the scenarios.
Tennessee has a much easier road, they can lose to Georgia and will still likely end up with just two Losses. Kentucky, us and Vandy.....That can’t all happen, though.
Remember - a 10-2 OM has head to head win over 10-2 (at best) UGA. Only 2 teams could possibly finish higher, Texas / Texas A&M winner, and Tennessee IF they beat UGA, and that puts OM solidly ahead of UGA if so.
Bottom line is they’ll be a Top 4 SEC team at 10-2, and the SEC is getting a minimum of 4 teams in. SEC, B1G, and ND together are getting a minimum of 8 teams.
I wasn’t suggesting it would all happen. Not all of it has to happen. The point is there are scenarios in which a 10-2 Ole Miss team doesn’t make it.That can’t all happen, though.
Remember - a 10-2 OM has head to head win over 10-2 (at best) UGA. Only 2 teams could possibly finish higher, Texas / Texas A&M winner, and Tennessee IF they beat UGA, and that puts OM solidly ahead of UGA if so.
Bottom line is they’ll be a Top 4 SEC team at 10-2, and the SEC is getting a minimum of 4 teams in. SEC, B1G, and ND together are getting a minimum of 8 teams.
No way. Missouri has the weakest schedule by far. Only 2 decent opponents (A&M and Bama), and both have blown them out. They are the only 10-2 SEC team that wouldn’t be a shoe-in.I wasn’t suggesting it would all happen. Not all of it has to happen. The point is there are scenarios in which a 10-2 Ole Miss team doesn’t make it.
They will end up with the weakest SOS in the SEC. In fact, the committee might value 10-2 UGA over 10-2 OM, despite head-to-head. UGA would have wins against Texas, Tennessee, and Kentucky* and no bad losses in that scenario. Ole Miss would have one good win and a very bad loss*.
Here’s how I see it:So take out Mizzou and the loser of that Bama-LSU game. It leaves 6 other SEC teams with possibly only 1 or 2 losses. 2 would play in Atlanta, possibly giving another team a 3rd loss. If, somehow, they all finish with 2 or fewer losses after all that (they won’t), they will all be in the playoff. Toss in 2 or 3 from the B1G/ND, a B12, an ACC, a G5, and a maybe a wild card team from somewhere and that’s your field.