One of
the most important aspects of ranking college football teams is comparing the
respective strength of schedules. How many national contenders do they play,
what conference are they in and the current records are all questions that have
to be answered when comparing teams that have not played one another.
The
Cincinnati Bearcats, as an example, play in a conference considered to be weak
in terms of competitive teams. The conference members might all be equal to one
another but they are all weaker than, say, the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Cincinnati is undefeated so far this season but they have just one win against
a nationally-competitive program, Notre Dame.
Alabama,
pretty much the gold standard for the last decade. Alabama has lost a game this
season but is currently ranked either second or third in the country, depending
upon which poll you favor.
We did
some comparable research on two schools, Alabama and Notre Dame.
Alabama has won six
national championships in recent years under Nick Saban, beating Notre Dame in
the title game once. The Crimson Tide plays in the Southeastern Conference,
unquestionably the toughest conference to play college football in. Alabama is
10-1 and plays rival Auburn this weekend. Alabama will play top-ranked and
unbeaten Georgia for the SEC title in December.
Notre
Dame does not play in a conference but is an associate member of the Atlantic
Coast Conference. ACC member Clemson has emerged among the top programs in the
country and that has made other members of the ACC better. The Fighting Irish
have not won a national championship under the BCS or CFP formats. Notre Dame
is also 10-1 and plays its final regular season game against Stanford this
week.
Alabama’s
opponents are currently 66-62 this season. Eight Bama opponents have winning
records, but that statistic skews your vision in the wrong direction. Mercer
was horribly out-manned against Alabama, but Mercer is currently 7-3. Another
Alabama opponent, LSU, routinely fields one of the most physically talented
squads in the country but LSU is 5-6 and has already fired its coach.
Notre
Dame’s opponents are currently 64-62. Six of Notre Dame’s opponents this season
have winning records. Navy might be the weakest team on Notre Dame’s schedule,
but Toledo is 6-5 and really isn’t much better than Navy. Typically, Southern
Cal is among Notre Dame’s toughest opponents but few programs are as out of
whack as is USC’s. The 4-6 Trojans have also canned their head coach.
There
is no reasonable question: Alabama has played a tougher schedule than has Notre
Dame. Advantage Alabama.
Alabama’s
loss is to Texas A&M, which is 8-3 and ranked among the top 20 by most
ranking services. Notre Dame’s only loss is to unbeaten Cincinnati. Cincinnati
is ranked in the top six by most pollsters. Advantage Notre Dame.
Notre
Dame’s most notable wins have come against members of the Big 10: Purdue and
Wisconsin. Of all of the teams on Notre Dame’s schedule, only Wisconsin and
Cincinnati have as many as eight wins. Alabama’s most notable wins have come
against Mississippi and Arkansas. Alabama’s only game against what is now an
eight-win team resulted in a loss to Texas A&M. Four Alabama opponents
currently have seven wins (not counting Texas A&M). Purdue is Notre Dame’s
sole remaining seven-win opponent. You could read this in any of several
different ways. From a purely statistical standpoint, we go back to the
win-loss records and give the edge to Alabama. From the standpoint of wins
against eight-win teams, the edge goes to Notre Dame.
Both
Alabama and Notre Dame have lost players to injury this season. Both have
experienced unexpected excellence from some players. Both have won close games
and both have lost a game.
Finally,
you wonder what would happen is the teams flipped schedules.
ALABAMA
VS NOTRE DAME’S SCHEDULE: Notre Dame beat Florida State in game one (before FSU
had its rash of injuries) and then beat Toledo. Next came consecutive games
against Purdue, Wisconsin and Cincinnati and the Irish won two of the three.
After that, seven games against teams who now total just 29 wins (Virginia Tech
and Southern Cal, the North Carolina, Navy, Virginia, Georgia Tech and next
week’s Stanford). Speedylee can’t imagine Alabama losing to any of those
schools, although a theoretical match against Wisconsin would have been a great
game to watch. Prediction: Alabama would go undefeated.
NOTRE
DAME VS ALABAMA’S SCHEDULE: We assume Notre Dame would have had its way in
weeks one and two against Miami and Mercer. Florida would have been a tough out
for the Irish (the Gators have terrific physical talent), but if you figure
Notre Dame wins that game, then they’d have defeated Southern Mississippi and
had a record of 4-0. Then would come a run of games against Mississippi, Texas
A&M, Mississippi State, Tennessee and LSU. Speedylee does not believe Notre
Dame would get through that gauntlet without at least one loss. The grind of
consecutive weeks against competition like that is something the Irish never
have to contend with. Notre Dame would beat New Mexico in week 10 but then
would have to play Arkansas in week 11. In the SEC, Arkansas is average this
season but it would probably win the ACC or the Pac 12 titles. Arkansas would
also do very well in the Big 10. The final week of the season would be against
the unpredictable Auburn. Auburn is ALWAYS ready for Alabama, especially
at Auburn. Notre Dame might well have beaten Auburn, had they played this
season. Prediction: Notre Dame probably loses twice.
WHAT
DOES THIS MEAN? The truth is that neither Cincinnati nor Notre Dame belong in
the College Football Playoff tournament. Neither has played a schedule
representative of a team ranked among the top four in the country. Cincinnati
might be a television draw – little David against three Goliaths – and Notre
Dame is always a good ratings draw. But it will be their potential for helping
the slumping ratings of the CFP tournament that earns them berths among the
final four. It will not be their on-field victories.
For
either Cincinnati or Notre Dame to make the field, a few things will have to go
right. Alabama could lose to Auburn this weekend and, less likely, Ohio State
could lose to rival Michigan. A two-loss Crimson Tide is unlikely to make the
tournament, even with a victory over Georgia in the SEC title game. The same is
true for a two-loss Ohio State team. If Alabama beats Auburn and wins the SEC
title game, we expect both “Bama and the Bulldogs to make the final four. That
would be the nightmare scenario for Notre Dame and Cincinnati, especially if
you assume Ohio State beats Michigan and wins the Big 10 title game. That would
fill three spots. At best, only Cincinnati would have a path into the title
bracket.
While
Speedylee does not favor increasing the size of the CFP, there is one argument
for it: Each Division I conference champ would be likely to earn a berth in the
playoff. That could be bad news for Notre Dame since the Irish are not
full-time members of a conference.
We
don’t see Notre Dame joining a conference as a fulltime member for football in
the near future. The rich traditions of the program begin with its independent
status. But, sooner or later, the landscape of college football may force that
to change. The natural league for the Fighting Irish would be the 14-member Big
10. Notre Dame’s current agreement with the ACC makes that conference another
possibility. A better fit for the Fighting Irish than either the Big 10 or the
ACC would be the 10-team Big 12. We say that because Notre Dame could rule the
Big 12 in the same way Texas did. The Irish will have to join one conference or
another and join the current direction the game is following, sooner or later.
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