Here are the stats. Number of teams is in (s).
Conferences Wins-Losses Win Percentage
INDEPENDENTS (2) 4-0 1.000
AMERICAN (8 teams) 6-2 .750
MAC (7) 5-2 .714
BIG TEN (12) 10-6 .625
SUN BELT (7)* 4-3 .571
SEC (13) 8-7 .533
BIG 12 (8) 4-5 .444
CONFERENCE USA (5)* 1-4 .200
MOUNTAIN WEST (5) 1-4 .200
ACC (13) 2-11 .153
PAC-12 (1) 0-1 .000
My takeaways:
-Big Ten was downright impressive. Three of their loses were from the playoffs with one of them being another big ten team (OSU) and the other two loses being the hands of Notre Dame (best record in college football).
-SEC has better teams at the top than the big 12 but top to bottom they may be more balanced than we thought. Orders would have been reversed if the refs called the Arizona St. game correctly.
-ACC has a lot of work to do.
-Non power schools can be competitive in bowl games when the top power teams are in the CFP.
This is how I would rank the top overall teams:
1) ND/OSU - Most deserving teams though injuries are mounting (especially for ND)
2) OSU/ND - Most deserving teams though injuries are mounting (especially for ND)
3) Oregon - Beat everyone but also slipped when it mattered most
4) Penn St. (played almost even with ND, OSU & Oregon in their close loses)
5) Indiana -- Controversial I think as you could make other arguments here (emphasis on Georgia).
I did Indiana over Georgia with their two loses being against the two national title teams (Georgia has three loses). Their final score against Notre Dame was also better than Georgia (granted it was garbage time but all 60 minutes counts). They also beat Michigan near the end of the season (right before they beat Ohio State and Bama so they were much better at the end than their weak season start). I'm fine with other teams in the top 5 if you remove Indiana.
No - I don't think Texas was a top ten team as they beat no one (only real win was Clemson who didn't deserve to be there) and if they weren't paying the refs - Arizona St would have won.
Conferences Wins-Losses Win Percentage
INDEPENDENTS (2) 4-0 1.000
AMERICAN (8 teams) 6-2 .750
MAC (7) 5-2 .714
BIG TEN (12) 10-6 .625
SUN BELT (7)* 4-3 .571
SEC (13) 8-7 .533
BIG 12 (8) 4-5 .444
CONFERENCE USA (5)* 1-4 .200
MOUNTAIN WEST (5) 1-4 .200
ACC (13) 2-11 .153
PAC-12 (1) 0-1 .000
My takeaways:
-Big Ten was downright impressive. Three of their loses were from the playoffs with one of them being another big ten team (OSU) and the other two loses being the hands of Notre Dame (best record in college football).
-SEC has better teams at the top than the big 12 but top to bottom they may be more balanced than we thought. Orders would have been reversed if the refs called the Arizona St. game correctly.
-ACC has a lot of work to do.
-Non power schools can be competitive in bowl games when the top power teams are in the CFP.
This is how I would rank the top overall teams:
1) ND/OSU - Most deserving teams though injuries are mounting (especially for ND)
2) OSU/ND - Most deserving teams though injuries are mounting (especially for ND)
3) Oregon - Beat everyone but also slipped when it mattered most
4) Penn St. (played almost even with ND, OSU & Oregon in their close loses)
5) Indiana -- Controversial I think as you could make other arguments here (emphasis on Georgia).
I did Indiana over Georgia with their two loses being against the two national title teams (Georgia has three loses). Their final score against Notre Dame was also better than Georgia (granted it was garbage time but all 60 minutes counts). They also beat Michigan near the end of the season (right before they beat Ohio State and Bama so they were much better at the end than their weak season start). I'm fine with other teams in the top 5 if you remove Indiana.
No - I don't think Texas was a top ten team as they beat no one (only real win was Clemson who didn't deserve to be there) and if they weren't paying the refs - Arizona St would have won.