Will a three-loss SEC team make the College Football Playoff?
College Football Enquirer co-hosts Ross Dellenger, Andy Staples and Steven Godfrey discuss which potential three-loss SEC teams could make college football playoffs. Hear the full conversation on the “College Football Enquirer” podcast - and subscribe on Apple Podcasts , Spotify , YouTube or wherever you listen.
Video Transcript
There's probably going to be a 93 SEC team squeak in this thing.
I'm still convinced.
The big thing here, as we've learned from the committee over the years, Is that just dont get beat too badly, right?
We saw that at Alabama last year, against Oklahoma, right?
The same matchup here; they lost 24 to 3.
Norman, and some of the committee members of, like, You know, I pointed that out because it was such a drubbing and such an ugly performance.
So if you're going to lose Texas and Oklahoma.
Be competitive; it will help if you end up running the table after this.
What if Oklahoma starts to lose out?
What if they lose this weekend to Alabama?
All of a sudden, could a 9-3 Ole Miss team make it in?
I guess I'm sort of challenging your presumption that a 9-3 SEC team would make It is on if we all start dinging each other's resumes down the stretch.
Oklahoma may be able to make it at 9 and 3.
But one of the nine has to be this Saturday in Tuscaloosa, or Texas must beat Georgia.
A&M or A&M, right?
I think for an SEC 9 and third team to get in the playoffs, you, You do have to include some other things, like a break right in the Big Ten, Especially, right?
You gotta have USC.
Taken at a loss, because if USC finishes 102 that would include a win against Oregon State Next week, then you could have USC and Oregon, both 10 and 2, and potentially both get in over a 9-to-3 SEC So, you need, You sort of need some things to break, right?
When it comes to that in Michigan, too.
Right?
Michigan's at 7-2.
You probably don't need Michigan to beat, to go on this crazy run and reach 10 and 2, 'Cause that fourth Big Ten team would likely take the place of a fifth, 9 and 3 SEC team.

