hm.grwn.grizfan said:
There are teams in the bottom half of the top 25 with .500 records and below!!!!! The Griz WILL get in with an 8-4 season, but will go 9-3 (lose to either MSU or USD but not both). Looking at the bottom half of the top 25 though, who gets in over an 8-4 Griz team? Throw some names out there. Here is a list of teams currently ranked below us to think about. Do you think all of these teams will finish the rest of their season undefeated? I don't......So which of them with one or two more losses gets in ahead of us?
No. 13 Bethune-Cookman (8-1, 5-0 MEAC)
No. 14 Northern Arizona (7-2, 5-1 Big Sky)
No. 15 Samford (6-3, 4-1)
No. 16 New Hampshire (4-4, 3-2)
No. 17 Wofford (5-3)
No. 18 Central Arkansas (5-4, 2-2)
No. 19 South Dakota State (5-4)
No. 20 Villanova (4-5, 3-3)
No. 21 Delaware (7-1, 4-1 CAA)
No. 22 Lehigh (6-2)
No. 23 Tennessee State (7-3, 4-2)
No. 24 Charleston Southern (9-1, 2-0 Big South)
No. 25 Southeastern Louisiana (7-2, 4-0)
Polls do not have any gearing in the selection process anymore.
http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2013/09/11/in-fcs-huddle-nothing-simple-about-fcs-playoff-selections/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
While the expansion of the FCS playoffs by four teams this season has been met with open arms nationally, the less-publicized addition of a ratings system for the NCAA selection committee to use in picking its field has been embraced with a sense of enthusiasm, if not relief, across the FCS.
The Simple Rating System, or SRS, is similar to the RPI system used in college basketball and will quantify the strength of a team's schedule. Its use will help lead to a more concrete selection of at-large qualifiers, which will rise by three to 13 in the new 24-team field. The additional bid for the Pioneer Football League champion brings the number of conference champions to 11.
"It's been long overdue in my opinion. I think you'd find that is the consensus with our coaches," said coach Clint Conque of eighth-ranked Central Arkansas
One of the main reasons, according to coach Mark Farley of seventh-ranked Northern Iowa, is "probably the biggest deficiency right now in FCS is the difference in schedules. There's a lot of (teams) that are getting automatic bids that maybe don't play as strong of leagues or strong of schedules" as a conference like Farley's, the Missouri Valley Football Conference, which is home to North Dakota State, the reigning two-time FCS national champion.
The SRS will factor in all of a team's games against FCS, FBS and Division II competition. In past years, a game against a Division II opponent did not count toward a team's resume.
But the new system will incorporate them into the equation and rightfully differentiate the levels of wins, including both home and away, which will provide a true strength of schedule tool. It will be recalculated on a weekly basis through the final regular-season games on Nov. 23 and the announcement of the playoff field the next morning.
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