Remaining Undefeated, 1-Loss, and Winless Teams Final
Should have had this out a week ago, but been a little busy.
Teams with 1st Loss in Bowls/Championship:
Florida State
Liberty
Washington
Teams with 2nd Loss in Bowls:
(James Madison)
Ohio State
Alabama
Texas
Percent of Teams with 1st Loss of Season
Week 0/1: 37.6% (50 of 133)
Week 2: 38.6% (32 of 83)
Week 3: 23.5% (12 of 51)
Week 4: 30.8% (12 of 39)
Week 5: 18.5% (5 of 27)
Week 6: 36.4% (8 of 22)
Week 7: 21.4% (3 of 14)
Week 8: 18.2% (2 of 11)
Week 9: 11.1% (1 of 9)
Week 10: 12.5% (1 of 8)
Week 11: 0% (0 of 7)
Week 12: 14.3% (1 of 7)
Week 13: 16.7% (1 of 6)
Week 14: 20% (1 of 5)
Bowls/Championship: 75% (3 of 4)
Fianl Number of Undefeated Teams:
1: Michigan
-We lost the other three in their bowls games and/or championship game.
Bowl Thoughts:
-The similarities between the final year of the four team College Football Playoff and the first year of it were striking. Both had the Rose and Sugar Bowls as quarterfinals leading to a national championship in Texas. Both had one of the Big Ten's major powers defeat Alabama and then go on to defeat a Pacific Northwest PAC-12 champion. Meanwhile Florida State was undefeated, but not well respected in both years. We switched out Ohio State for Michigan, Washington for Oregon, and switched the Rose and Sugar match-ups, but still really weird similarities.
-The last year of the 4 team era was a pretty interesting one. We had 7 teams at the end of the regular season who would have been in high contention for the 4 spots in other years (Ohio State was #7 this year vs. #4 last year with a fairly similar resume, Georgia would have made it most years, and Florida State would have made any other year CFP in my estimate).
-Our lists shrank by close to as much as possible during bowl season. We lost three of our four undefeated teams and 4 of what had been our 5 one loss teams. Only Georgia survived on the 1-loss list and they beat previous unbeaten Florida State to stay there.
-Going into next year and our new era, we have a lot to watch, even if we watch it differently.
1. The group of 5 race for the CFP spot seems fairly wide open. The American and the Mountain West would have an advantage in my view, but we got a completely rebuilding Conference USA champ this year so any conference getting it is definitely a chance.
2. The SEC is getting two true blue bloods including a surging Texas, while the Big Ten is adding the four most powerful from the PAC-12. The ACC and Big 12 are also growing though. How will the conference races look in the new set-ups? How many bids will each conference end up with? My guess is you still going to generally see two extra bids (beyond the champions) from the Big 12/ACC/Notre Dame (and rarely less than 1). That will leave super-powered Big Ten and SEC with 7 between them. How would those shake out?
3. Washington State and Oregon State will effectively be independents next year. How will that fair and we'll see what is leads to.
I am still not a fan of all the changes, but will try to look on with excitement. Thanks for joining me in these threads everyone.
Remaining Undefeated Teams: ACC: 0, Big Ten: 1, Conference USA: 0, PAC-12: 0, total: 1
Michigan
1-Loss Teams: ACC: 1, Big 12: 0, Big Ten: 0, Conference USA: 1, PAC-12: 1, SEC: 1, Sun Belt: 0, total: 4
Georgia
Florida State
Liberty
Washington
Remaining Winless Teams: Total: 0
none
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