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FOOTBALL: Comments from CFP chair/Michigan AD Warde Manuel...

On Georgia being so far behind Texas:

“Well, obviously Georgia has a very good win at Texas, but as the committee analyzed the body of work of Texas versus where Georgia is at the present time with two losses, even to top-25 teams, we came out that Texas was still a very strong team deserving of a 3 seed. They have a top-5 defense. Quinn Ewers is leading one of the top passing offenses in the country. … It's nothing against Georgia. Georgia is a great team, but they did struggle against Ole Miss at Ole Miss but had a great win this past week against Tennessee. We will continue to monitor both teams and see how it goes in the next few weeks.”

Manuel also says the committee “had a long debate” about Georgia, Ole Miss, Miami and Alabama in particular. “It was very, very thorough. We're dealing with very small margins in terms of the different things that we're looking at and comparing, so I can assure you the committee went through it intensely in the last couple of days.”

On why Tennessee is ranked lower than the other SEC teams:

"Well, one, they just had a loss to Georgia, and they had the loss at Arkansas. It's really splitting hairs. They have great offense, great defense. They play hard. The committee just had a hard time. You're talking about four really good teams, when you look at Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia and Tennessee. I think the committee, we debated it, as I said earlier, quite a bit as it came down to how we saw those teams. But they have beaten each other at different times. So we have to look at Alabama the last three games, particularly the two before they played Mercer, they won in dominant fashion, and we were really impressed with their win at LSU two weeks ago. It is close. There's a lot of conversations. We'll continue to monitor the performance of all these teams as the season progresses towards the end."

On why Ole Miss moved up 2 spots on a bye week:

"Well, part of it was the loss by BYU and Tennessee that were ahead of them. The other part is they really did perform -- they had a great performance against Georgia, as you know, and really dominant on both sides of the ball in that win. For the most part, we've been impressed with Jaxson Dart. We've been impressed with their defense and how they have performed. Two close losses to Kentucky and LSU. We've been impressed with them, and I think they really moved up because they performed well and the teams ahead of them have had losses."

On UGA being at 10 despite having more notable wins than other teams:

"Yeah, I mean, it's hard as we look at all of these teams. They're playing different schedules. It's not the fault of one team who doesn't have a stronger schedule who they're playing in their conference opponents. These conferences have increased in size, and so there are less match-ups where you are matching the top teams in the league each weekend. So it does make it difficult to assess the teams even with the strength of schedule. We have to rely on how the teams are playing and who they're playing as well as how the other teams, regardless of strength of schedule, are playing their opponents. We take a look at it holistically. Strength of schedule is a component. It's an important data point to us and for us. But it is not the only assessment that we make. But Georgia, they had a great game this week against Tennessee, and we will continue to look at them as they progress in this season. Then there is also the possibility of being in the championship game. They perform well -- then when you look at it, the last thing I'll say is Georgia is behind Alabama and Ole Miss, and they've had head to head losses against those teams. It's one of those things where we try to assess everything and come to a decision about where the teams are ranked."

On Alabama being behind Penn State even though PSU lost its only big game and Alabama has more quality wins:

"Well, it is a part of the discussion, and if you're in the room, you would see that that is a considerable aspect of the discussion about how to evaluate each team, given that they're playing different schedules and who's in front of them in any given week. There's a lot of discussion about the variables, strength of schedule, who they're playing, where teams are ranked, where they're playing; are they home, are they away. There's all kind of things that we talk about and look at and debate and discuss as it relates to that. So it's not cut and dry. If it was about just strength of schedule, the rankings probably would look much different. But because we have the evaluation process, because we see how teams are playing, and all they can do is play who's in front of them, and then the committee has to deliberate and make a decision based on what we see in the results of the games and how they proceed. It's not easy. It's not something that we take lightly. It's something that we understand is a key part of the discussion process and something that we value and really take a hard look at in terms of strength of schedule."

Kiffin is correct about the SEC championship

Perhaps, he should have said it more artfully or perhaps not at all but it is true that playing that game does not seem near as important as it once was.

What if the SEC Champion was based on regular season Conference Won/Loss records? That would obviously give teams with easier schedules an advantage. I do think going to a nine game rotation with 3 traditional rivals and the rotation of the other 12 (6 a year) would add clarity and substance. You play one Power 4 Team at least and then you can have the two "cupcakes".

We all know that the SEC Baseball Tourney has become a coaches nightmare regarding using up pitcher's arms and Basketball has also lost relevance.

I realize that these three events are big money makers so I don't expect any changes.

What do you think?

ChatGPT predicts....

ME: Chat GPT "Who will win the Ole Miss at Florida football game this weekend?"

CHATGPT: The Ole Miss Rebels are favored to win against the Florida Gators in their matchup this Saturday at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium. Ole Miss enters with strong momentum, having won eight of their last ten games and coming off a dominant victory over Georgia. The Rebels' balanced offense and solid defense give them a competitive edge, especially with quarterback Jaxson Dart leading the charge. They are also listed as 9.5 to 10-point favorites in betting lines

Sports Chat Place
College Football Network

Florida, meanwhile, has been inconsistent, although they secured a surprising win over LSU last week. Their offense has struggled with consistency, and their defense will need to step up significantly to compete with Ole Miss's high-powered attack. The Gators, however, have historically performed well at home against top-ranked teams, which could make this an intriguing contest

College Football Network
SportsLine

Most experts predict Ole Miss to cover the spread, citing their stronger overall performance this season, but Florida's home-field advantage might make it closer than expected.

..There ya have it folks! LOL I did this vs. Oklahoma and it picked the winner. :p
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MSU recruiting

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This is the schools they are fighting for talent.
A poster asked also about Oatis from Bama and Rosebowl mentioned that the ship had sailed and he had no interest in MSU. It was also mentioned it would be a JUCO heavy class because you have to take what you can and that’s currently the best they can get. I hope to see them keep falling

Playoff expansion idea

BLUF: Proposal to reward P4 teams who qualify for and participate in the conference championship games while also preventing possibly being penalized for losing said game.

Listening to the conversation on the pod about the G5 teams having their own playoff (which I agree with COMPLETELY) got me to thinking about another flaw in the current system with 12 teams. In the current setup, making your conference championship game can actually be a BAD thing. In our situation this year, I would much rather be a 10-2 team that hosts a 1st round playoff game at home than go to Atlanta and risk losing, or getting a key player(s) hurt, or both, and getting left out at 10-3 with a key player(s) out. Suggestion:
1. Add 4 teams to the playoff, bringing the total to 16. P4 championship game participants automatically qualify. Highest rated G5 team (if we are going to continue this meaningless charade), and 7 at large bids.
2. Set up double bye bracket. Championship game winners get double bye. Runner-ups get a single bye. G5 team (whatever) and 7 at large teams play round one as currently set up.
3. Championship game losers host 2nd round. Brackets are set up to avoid championship game losers being in the same bracket as the team that beat them in the championship game.
4. Continue current setup from this point.

Thoughts?

Blue Sky - Gas Stations vs Lib Twitter Safe Space

When Pizza Bob opened the restaurant in 1966, it was known as Pizza King but had to change names because a company in the Northeast had the name trademarked. I agree with you on the Stromboli sandwich. I still go to Pizza Den two to three times a month and get the Stromboli. Now that the Beacon has closed, Pizza Den is the only local Oxford restaurant that was serving students and locals when I entered college in 1967.
This post in the Neal Made The Funky's Pizza Review thread got me thinking. What does Craddock think of the new Lib Twitter safe space being called Blue Sky? He just went through a big rebranding (from what I understand). Does he have any power to make them change that name of the App? How does that work?

Anyone hiring?

They didn’t renew our contracts so I am currently out of work. I’m a SQL Server DBA, but I can do most anything IT related. Feel free to DM me if you have any contacts or know of something. I’m right outside of Little Rock but I’ve been doing remote work for quite some time.

Thanks for reading and appreciate any help in advance.
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