atop this week’s rankings – to the deeply complex, with some in the latter group requiring the equivalent of chaos in November.
No matter how you map out these final weeks, however, there will be at least one spot available to a team currently outside the top four. That’s due to the head-to-head matchup between Big Ten favorites Ohio State and Michigan, which could end up being an elimination game for the loser.
Even then, the losing team in that rivalry could still land in fourth with enough help from teams in the other Power Five leagues. In other words: Everything is very complicated.
Let’s try to simplify things by mapping out the most realistic road for every unbeaten, one-loss and select two-loss playoff contender to reach the semifinals, starting with those teams currently at the top. In every case but one – and you can guess which team is the outlier – every contender needs to win out to guarantee a seat at the table.
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Of this group, only Georgia can afford to lose once and still land in the top four. In fact, that loss can come at any point, including in the SEC championship game – as was the case a season ago, when the Bulldogs lost to Alabama before avenging that defeat to claim the national championship.
For argument’s sake, here’s how the loser between the Buckeyes and Wolverines could climb back into the playoff with some help, as long as the loss is competitive:
TCU has a more difficult road should the Horned Frogs lose one to either Texas, Baylor or Iowa State but still take home the Big 12 crown. In that case, TCU would need:
But given how the committee has waffled on TCU, one loss may end up being enough to send the Horned Frogs packing from the playoff race.
The Volunteers are lurking just outside the top four in this week’s playoff rankings and are ready to pounce following that huge end-of-November matchup in the Big Ten. It might not take more than this to guarantee Tennessee a hugely unexpected playoff berth:
While Tennessee routed LSU last month, a conference championship could provide the Tigers with the ammunition to leapfrog the Volunteers to become the second SEC team in the four-team field.
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Behind an outstanding offense piloted by quarterback Bo Nix, the Ducks have rocketed back into contention after an ugly loss to Georgia in the season opener. Oregon’s simplest path to the playoff requires:
Should Georgia and the Big Ten champion occupy half the field, an unbeaten TCU and one-loss Tennessee might fend off Oregon and leave the Ducks in fifth.
With wins against Mississippi and Alabama already in hand and the chance to add another résumé-making win against Georgia, LSU would be nearly impossible to ignore even as a two-loss SEC champion. Just to be safe, the Tigers would need:
Much like LSU, the one-loss Rebels are in with an SEC championship. Losing just once would be an eliminator, though, since dropping this Saturday’s key game to Alabama would hand the Crimson Tide the tiebreaker; the Tigers already own the head-to-head advantage.
The selection committee thinks more highly of USC than UCLA, which could leave the latter out of the playoff even as a one-loss Power Five champion. For the Bruins, getting to the top four starts with a rivalry win against the Trojans and includes:
In this setup, UCLA would round out the semifinals with Georgia, the Big Ten champion and either TCU or the Volunteers. The scenario for USC is similar, only the Trojans might finish ahead of the second-place Big Ten finisher regardless of how competitive the game is between Ohio State and Michigan.
Alabama needs two steps to climb back into the top four, one plausible and the other mathematically feasible but difficult to imagine:
While hard to picture during the preseason, there’s a chance that this year’s playoff doesn’t feature one of Alabama or Clemson for the first time in the format’s history.
Saturday’s loss to Notre Dame has put the Tigers’ playoff hopes on life support. To get back into the semifinals after a one-year absence, the Tigers would need:
Should this unfold, Clemson would be the certain fourth seed with Georgia, the Big Ten winner and Tennessee.
Currently the lowest-ranked one-loss Power Five team, North Carolina could still make the playoff with a strong close to the regular season and a run of assistance:
Even then, that UNC is coming in so far off the preseason radar without any major fanfare means the Tar Heels could still be edged out by a second-place Power Five team.