Moderators CJ Vogel Posted 2 hours ago Moderators Posted 2 hours ago The Preseason AP Poll released this morning and The University of Texas comes in ranked as the No. 1 team in the country. Of course, the preseason poll is merely a conversation point, but the program will certainly be able to flaunt the No. 1 by its name for a few more weeks. A few talking points I wanted to expand on following the release of the poll will certainly have some implications on the greater picture of the college football landscape. *** – First, we were robbed of a true No. 1 vs. No. 2 battle to begin the season. I am positive the AP voters did not care to make that a priority, but it sure would have been fun to discuss for the next three weeks. On top of that, week one is shaping up to be an all-timer. No. 1 Texas vs. No. 3 Ohio State No. 9 LSU vs. No. 4 Clemson No. 6 Notre Dame vs. No. 10 Miami (Fl.) As we sit today, we are also just 12 days away from a top-25 matchup between Kansas State and Iowa State. *** I wanted to compile a rundown of how many ranked opponents each SEC school faces. Entering the season, Texas will face five top-20 opponents. 7 – Florida, LSU, Miss State, Oklahoma 6 – Arkansas, Kentucky, South Carolina 5 – Alabama, Georgia, Ole Miss, Texas, Texas A&M, Vanderbilt 4 – Auburn, Missouri, Tennessee Any conversation about Texas' schedule being easy falls on deaf ears. But the greater conversation is in regards to the B1G vs. SEC scheduling difficulty and how it plays into the College Football Playoff conversation. Especially in regards to why the eight vs. nine conference game schedule was such a point of contention. For instance, Illinois is ranked No. 12 in the country by the AP poll and has just two teams ranked on its schedule entering the 2025 season. Michigan, ranked No. 14, plays just two as well, one of which being Oklahoma in a non-conference meeting. And Oregon sees just two ranked foes as well. 4 – Ohio State 3 – Indiana, Penn State 2 – Michigan, Illinois, Oregon *** The Big 12 only has four teams ranked inside the top 25, but if the list expanded to a top 30, the conference would have as many members mentioned as the B1G. Each would have seven. BYU, Utah and Baylor came in just outside the initial ranking, with the three coming in at 26, 27, and 28 respectively. 3 Quote
Moderators CJ Vogel Posted 1 hour ago Author Moderators Posted 1 hour ago Also, good luck to South Carolina and Oklahoma during these month long stretches. 2 Quote
Hornmatic Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Oklahoma’s schedule is highly overrated. Tennessee will be average this year. Ole Miss and S. Carolina are no great shakes either. 2 Quote
Texus Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 15 minutes ago, Hornmatic said: Weak. Play 9 in conference like everyone else. CJ put data out there. The 8 game conference schedules already produce far more difficult strengths of schedule. Until and unless the committee comes up with something concrete to account for strength of schedule when looking at win-loss records and playoff seeding, I don't expect anything to change. 1 Quote
Hornmatic Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 21 minutes ago, Texus said: CJ put data out there. The 8 game conference schedules already produce far more difficult strengths of schedule. Based on one presason ap poll? Quote
Bunk Moreland Posted 56 minutes ago Posted 56 minutes ago 44 minutes ago, Hornmatic said: Oklahoma’s schedule is highly overrated. Tennessee will be average this year. Ole Miss and S. Carolina are no great shakes either. That’s why I’m predicting they’ll go 9-3. Their D should be excellent, which should keep them in pretty much every game. Michigan, Tennessee, Ole Miss, Mizzou…fools gold that OU should spank. Quote
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