stowfan;959130; said:I hate to say it but, I believe if we put in a better showing in the title game we wouldn't end up hearing a lot of shit we are going to hear.
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stowfan;959130; said:I hate to say it but, I believe if we put in a better showing in the title game we wouldn't end up hearing a lot of shit we are going to hear.
True.BrutusBobcat;959142; said:Being a disrespected #1 is good. Let the talking heads bash the Bucks all day long while holding the top spot in the polls. It's excellent motivation.
Zurp;959164; said:There's been discussions lately over people's opinions on what the rankings should mean. Many people think that the rankings should reflect the results of the games. Others think that it should be rankings should reflect which teams would win in head-to-head match-ups.
Obviously, the easy answer is "both." You can't simply rank teams based on who've they've beated, because there's always situations of "Team A beat Team B, Team B beat Team C, and Team C beat Team A." In that case, how do you rank the three teams? Also, you can't keep LSU #1 at this point, because they lost to Kentucky. But if the kicker had made that field goal at the end of regulation, does that change the LSU team at all? They'd still be #1 at this point. The LSU that makes that field goal is no different from the LSU that missed that field goal, so how can they be ranked differently?
So my question is this: which is more important, in your opinion: the rankings reflect the results of the games played, or they reflect who you think would win in head-to-head matchups?
Zurp;959164; said:Also, you can't keep LSU #1 at this point, because they lost to Kentucky. But if the kicker had made that field goal at the end of regulation, does that change the LSU team at all? They'd still be #1 at this point. The LSU that makes that field goal is no different from the LSU that missed that field goal, so how can they be ranked differently?
You could also add Oregon (losing the game by fumbling the tying TD out of the end zone) and Cal (losing a winnable game due to the brain-lock of a RS Frosh QB in his first ever game).Zurp;959164; said:Also, you can't keep LSU #1 at this point, because they lost to Kentucky. But if the kicker had made that field goal at the end of regulation, does that change the LSU team at all? They'd still be #1 at this point. The LSU that makes that field goal is no different from the LSU that missed that field goal, so how can they be ranked differently?
milkman21;959206; said:Bottom line: LSU didn't make that field goal, and they didn't win that game. There's a big difference between having a 0 in the loss column and having a 1 there.
LSU missed a field goal, but had equal opportunity to close out the game in OT. They failed to do so. That's got to hurt their confidence, it's gotta hurt their feeling of invincibility, and accordingly, it's gotta hurt their ranking.
For missing that field goal, LSU is indeed a very different team.
OSUBuckeye4Life;959252; said:USATODAY.com
#1 Ohio State (56)
#2 Boston College (1)
#3 South Florida (3)
#4 Oklahoma
#5 LSU
#6 Oregon
#7 West Virginia
#8 South Carolina
T-#9 Southern Cal and Cal
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AP Poll
1. Ohio State
2. Boston College
3. South Florida
4. Oklahoma
5. West Virginia
6. Oregon
7. LSU
8. South Carolina
9. Kentucky
10. USC
11. California
OregonBuckeye;959259; said:WVU back in the top 5? Give me a break!
OSUBuckeye4Life;959261; said:Michigan being ranked was my biggest surprise.
OregonBuckeye;959264; said:How about Wisconsin? They get their asses handed to them by a Morelli-led PSU team and are still considered a top 25 team? Just sad.