The same holds true for USC if they'd been undefeated and then lost either of their late season rivalry games to UCLA and ND.Goober McTuber wrote:Van,
USC and Florida both have looked rather shaky in a few games this year. Michigan only had one such game, Ball State. And is it really worse to lose your rivalry game to the #1 team in the country, or to one of your own conference’s also-rans?
If Michigan had lost to tOSU the last weekend in September, I don’t know that USC would have passed them in the polls. Maybe in the computer rankings, but that’s only one third of the BCS formula.
You simply can't lose your rivalry games and you definitely can't lose 'em late.
Michigan's problem vis a vis USC and Florida simply boils down to having to bank on a marquee loss rather than a number of marquee wins. Sure, USC and Florida didn't lose to Ohio St. They couldn't. They didn't get to play 'em. Same as Michigan though, but to a lesser degree, obviously, they lost close games in conference on the road. In Florida's case it was on the road, in conference, to a highly ranked rival, on some shaky calls by the refs.
The problem with Michigan is they're suffering from their loss being the worst type of loss (late season, to an undefeated conference rival who also took the conference too) combining with their decided lack of quality wins. ND and Wisconsin just won't cut it, not against USC's quality wins and probably not against Florida's.
Who said Texas played a tough schedule? Wasn't me. Besides losing to OSU Texas played Sam Houston St, Rice and North Texas, along with a very down year Big XII conference schedule. That ain't a very impressive schedule.And funny how that quirk in Sagarin that allowed Michigan’s schedule to rank 13th largely because they played tOSU couldn’t pull Texas SOS above 43rd.