Who SHOULD Be Going to Which Bowls?

The bowls if selections were based on my C Ratings. TCU is in the C Ratings; teams in parenthesis among the BCS bowls are the teams that would be selected with Alabama still going to the national championship game. Realistically Central Florida is going to the St. Petersburg Bowl (creating a USF-UCF showdown the regular season somehow missed) and Southern Miss is probably going to the New Orleans Bowl because of proximity. Notre Dame ranks ahead of UCLA, but I picked UCLA partly because Notre Dame opted out of the bowls and partly because Notre Dame would have a rematch with Nevada if they were selected. Notre Dame, Texas A&M, Louisiana-Monroe, and Louisiana-Lafayette, all 6-6 teams, are left out. All times Eastern.

New Mexico Bowl
Albuquerque, NM

MWC /4

WAC

December 19

 

Wyoming

Fresno State

2:30

ESPN

 

St. Petersburg Bowl
St. Petersburg, FL

BE /SB

C-USA

December 19

 

South Florida

Southern Miss

8 PM

ESPN

 

R+L Carriers New Orleans Bowl
New Orleans, LA

C-USA

Sun Belt Ch.

December 20

 

Central Florida

Troy

8 PM

ESPN

 

Maaco Bowl Las Vegas
Las Vegas, NV

MWC

Pac-10 /5

December 22

 

Utah

Arizona

8 PM

ESPN

 

Poinsettia Bowl
San Diego, CA

MWC

Pac-10 /WAC

December 23

 

BYU

California

8 PM

ESPN

 

Sheraton Hawaii Bowl
Honolulu, HI

Hawaii/WAC

C-USA

December 24

 

Idaho

East Carolina

8 PM

ESPN

 

Little Caesar’s Pizza Bowl
Detroit, MI

Big 10 *

MAC

December 26

 

Minnesota

Central Michigan

1 PM

ESPN

 

Meineke Car Care Bowl
Charlotte, NC

ACC /6/7

Big East

December 26

 

BC/FSU

West Virginia

4:30

ESPN

 

Emerald Bowl
San Francisco, CA

ACC /6/7

Pac-10 /5

December 26

 

BC/FSU

USC

8:30

ESPN

 

Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl
Nashville, TN

ACC /6/7

SEC /7

December 27

 

Bowling Green

Kentucky

8 PM

ESPN

 

Independence Bowl
Shreveport, LA

Big 12

SEC /SB

December 28

 

Iowa State

South Carolina

5 PM

ESPN2

 

EagleBank Bowl
Washington, DC

ACC /MAC

Army/C-USA

December 29

 

Northern Illinois

Army/Marshall

4:30

ESPN

 

Champs Sports Bowl
Orlando, FL

ACC

Big 10

December 29

 

North Carolina

Wisconsin

8 PM

ESPN

 

Roady’s Humanitarian Bowl
Boise, ID

MWC

WAC

December 30

 

UCLA

Nevada

4:30

ESPN

 

Pacific Life Holiday Bowl
San Diego, CA

Big 12

Pac-10

December 30

 

Oklahoma

Stanford

8 PM

ESPN

 

Armed Forces Bowl
Fort Worth, TX

C-USA

MWC /4

December 31

 

SMU

Air Force

Noon

ESPN

 

Brut Sun Bowl
El Paso, TX

B12 /BE

Pac-10

December 31

 

Oklahoma State

Oregon State

2 PM

CBS

 

Texas Bowl
Houston, TX

B12 /USA

Navy/C-USA

December 31

 

Kansas State

Navy

3:30

ESPN

 

Insight Bowl
Tempe, AZ

Big 12

Big 10

December 31

 

Missouri

Michigan State

6 PM

NFL Net

 

Chick-fil-A Bowl
Atlanta, GA

ACC

SEC

December 31

 

Miami (FL)

Mississippi

7:30

ESPN

 

Outback Bowl
Tampa, FL

Big 10

SEC /4 (East)

January 1

 

Iowa

Tennessee

11 AM

ESPN

 

Konica Minolta Gator Bowl
Jacksonville, FL

ACC

B12 /BE

January 1

 

Clemson

Pittsburgh

1 PM

CBS

 

Capitol One Bowl
Orlando, FL

Big 10 *

SEC *

January 1

 

Penn State

LSU

1 PM

ABC

 

Rose Bowl Game pres. By Citi
Pasadena, CA

Big 10 /BCS

Pac-10 /BCS

January 1

 

Ohio State

Oregon

5 PM

ABC

 

Allstate Sugar Bowl
New Orleans, LA

SEC /BCS

BCS

January 1

 

Alabama (TCU)

Virginia Tech

8:30

FOX

 

International Bowl
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Big East

MAC

January 2

 

Connecticut

Ohio

Noon

ESPN2

 

Papajohns.com Bowl
Birmingham, AL

BE /SB

SEC /SB

January 2

 

Rutgers

Georgia

2 PM

ESPN

 

AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic
Arlington, TX

Big 12

SEC /4 (West)

January 2

 

Nebraska

Arkansas

2 PM

FOX

 

AutoZone Liberty Bowl
Memphis, TN

C-USA

SEC /7

January 2

 

Houston

Auburn

5:30

ESPN

 

Valero Energy Alamo Bowl
San Antonio, TX

Big 12 /5

Big 10 *

January 2

 

Texas Tech

Northwestern

9 PM

ESPN

 

Tostitos Fiesta Bowl
Glendale, AZ

Big 12 /BCS

BCS

January 4

 

Boise State

Cincinnati

8 PM

FOX

 

FedEx Orange Bowl
Miami Gardens, FL

ACC /BCS

BCS

January 5

 

Georgia Tech

Florida

8 PM

FOX

 

GMAC Bowl
Mobile, AL

ACC

MAC

January 6

 

Middle Tenn. St.

Temple

7 PM

ESPN

 

BCS National Championship Game
Pasadena, CA

BCS

BCS

January 7

 

Texas

TCU (Alabama)

8 PM

ABC

 

The prospects of the unholy union of Comcast and NBC from a sports perspective

There are a few things I don’t get about the Comcast/NBC merger. For one thing, how can Comcast own both its cable system and NBC’s owned-and-operated stations? (Answer: That would have been a problem a decade ago, but not now. Or maybe it is. Still, it’s one of many questions Comcast will have to answer to pass regulatory and Congress muster, and maybe Comcast wants to sell off the NBC network to a third party, as little sense as that seems to make.)

And as for the common notion that having NBC and Versus join forces could start creating a genuine competitor to ESPN… am I the only one who remembers Versus’ Jamie Davis saying back in March he didn’t want to be ESPN? Or would he now say “We didn’t say we didn’t want to compete with ESPN, just that we didn’t want to be ESPN,” even though he was explicitly responding to people’s expectations and Versus may have to drop their “focusing on certain audiences” tack if they want to compete with ESPN? Or would Versus drop its “not ESPN” shtick in a heartbeat given the opportunity, as evidenced by its past plays for NFL and MLB rights? Or maybe “We have a huge opportunity to create another sports brand in America” just as Versus hits a low point with the DirecTV dispute? And how do Versus and Universal Sports fit together, anyway?

Comcast certainly has a lot of resources now. If it can find the right synergy between Versus and Universal Sports, it now has its own equivalent to ESPN2 – though which is which, and whether they’re equals, or even if Comcast wants to emphasize one or two channels as opposed to the whole, I don’t know. (If they’re equals, does the Tour de France move to Universal Sports? It seems to fit that network’s Olympic-sport theme better…) More importantly, it now has its own broadcast network connection, regardless of how strong NBC is, as well as a start on a Spanish-language presence with Telemundo (and its sister mun2). Versus also now has a connection with a general-interest sports news website, and a Versus connection could help build the brand of NBCSports.com. Those are important bargaining chips in negotiations with sports entities, matching some of the exposure ESPN can give.

Comcast also has some things ESPN doesn’t have, mainly a collection of regional sports networks, though those will help Comcast with the brand more than with national sports rights, as Rupert Murdoch found. (“Oh, ESPN is launching a series of local web sites? Oh look, we already have them!”) It’s anyone’s guess how Comcast SportsNet will benefit from an alliance from NBC and whether it’ll seek greater synergy with Versus and Universal Sports. Those networks could benefit from synergies with NBC stations in the same market. Comcast also has its own video-on-demand service for its cable customers, as well as the Golf Channel. To do: Launch your own version of SportsCenter, get some sort of international presence, get a radio network so you can offer rights there, and overcome the fact that NBC is the only one of the four major networks without a connected college sports network. (Comcast brings the mtn., but that doesn’t count.)

But if Comcast wants to get serious about creating competition for ESPN, they may have an even more uphill climb than most people think, and it’ll be a decade-long process to achieve theoretical parity that’ll also cost a lot of money. It used to be that whoever controlled the NFL cable contract controlled the world of sports, but the BCS deal shows anything not under the scrutiny of Congress could conceivably move to cable, though even there there’s fairly slim pickings. Comcast would need to either somehow pick up a contract on the level of the NFL or BCS (and picking up an NFL contract in addition to ESPN’s is fairly unlikely, and with all their NFL programming and cable ratings records ESPN isn’t giving up their NFL rights without a fight), or find a way to overcome its lack of that kind of big-ticket contract – I don’t see Sunday Night Football moving to cable (unlike some), and the Olympics are not going to give Versus the kind of big-ticket events that draw ratings (most of which are not only already on NBC, but already in primetime).

That means Comcast will need to focus on lots of slightly lesser-ticket events, and that brings me to the blueprint I proposed for an “ESPN killer” in March. (Which seems to suggest look for Golf Channel to pick up the first two rounds of the US Open at the next opportunity…) They will still need at least one major professional sport – and not the Traditional Big Four, which would make the NHL count, but the Modern Big Four, which swaps out the NHL for NASCAR. The NHL counterpoints the NBA and IndyCar counterpoints NASCAR, so baseball – up in 2013 – would be a good fit. ESPN’s partnership with baseball is nearly as deep and long-lasting as its partnership with the NFL, but it seems to be being forced out – after having baseball nearly ubiquitous on the schedule a few years ago, it’s now down to Sunday, Monday, and Wednesday Night Baseball, and no longer shows any postseason games. Comcast could take one (probably Sunday), two (Mon/Wed), or all of those, while making a play for at least some postseason games. If an LCS remains on cable Comcast’s biggest coup would be to take it, giving it much-needed eyeballs. If it can’t get that (though I see this contract as TBS transitioning out of baseball entirely, by having an excuse to dump the Braves), it should go after the Home Run Derby as a consolation prize, consistently one of the highest-rated non-NFL sports events on cable.

Comcast might also be thinking about going after one other sport, just to get one more boost in eyeballs. But if it can’t add the NFL, NBA, or NASCAR, it’s time to start thinking about going after college football – but that opens up a whole new can of worms. NBC brings its Notre Dame contract and Versus already has a deal with the Mountain West and lower-tier Big 12 and Pac-10 games, but generally ESPN gets all the good stuff before Versus, and while Comcast is reportedly thinking about putting some lower-tier Notre Dame games on Versus, Notre Dame would be livid if another college football conference were to share time on NBC. (That could mean Notre Dame and NBC are done after 2015, and maybe then Notre Dame joins a conference.) But Comcast should ideally go after at least three BCS conferences – establishing themselves, at least perceptually, as ESPN’s equal.

Comcast has an interesting opportunity right now (if it’s fine with pissing off Notre Dame), but not a lot of time to take advantage of it (if negotiations aren’t so far along there’s no time at all), and probably can’t wait for the merger to pass regulatory muster (and by merely mentioning this idea out loud I probably doom it not to happen). After seeing the megadeals the SEC and Big Ten received, the Big 12 and Pac-10, finding themselves waiting a year behind the ACC for their share of the pie, have reportedly been thinking about joining with the ACC to form one coast-to-coast college sports network. Here’s an idea: Perhaps Comcast can convince all three of them to abandon ESPN entirely (perhaps one can remain on ABC) and put their games on NBC, Versus, and Universal Sports, plus join with Comcast to form the aforementioned college sports network, convincing them that the three of them combined, with their existing power, can form a college sports television power rivaling ESPN – taking care of your college needs in one fell swoop. Comcast could even take over the Raycom syndication empire and have a college syndication arm to match ESPN Regional Television. This doesn’t give you either of the two conferences that are powers in both football and basketball, the SEC or Big Ten, and it gives you the two weaklings in basketball in the Big 12 and Pac-10, but it does give you the powerhouse conference in basketball, and with it a major coup: the Duke-North Carolina rivalry. What will Dick Vitale do?!?

Versus shuns bowl games right now because it doesn’t fit its “total immersion experience” or something like that. That needs to change if it’s serious about building a college presence and taking on ESPN, and the contracts are on the line pretty much now for the next four years. Tip: The Alamo and Holiday bowls would provide Big 12-Pac-10 matchups. I would also go after either the MAC or Conference USA (the latter is up now, the former in 2016), just to create another even split of the mid-majors, even though that’s more to please me than for any actual ratings. (I’d also go after any two of the WCC (for Gonzaga), the CAA, or Horizon League, for basketball and an even split of those mid-majors, and maybe that College Basketball Invitational or College Insider tournament oddity.)

A union between Comcast and NBC might lead to big changes at Comcast’s sports networks – Dick Ebersol’s expertise might bring the quality of Versus, Golf Channel, and Comcast SportsNet more on par with NBC, and more importantly, ESPN. I also can’t help but wonder if the graphics on Versus shift to be more like the graphics on NBC or Universal Sports, and more consistent. (Versus’ college football and NHL score graphics have never looked very similar. In fact, you’d be hard pressed to find modularity between any two of Versus’ sports score graphics, despite theoretically similar overall graphics.) And what happens with the US Olympic Committee? They wanted to launch their own network with Comcast, which raised the hackles of its partners since it didn’t form one with partner NBC or hitch on to Universal Sports. What happens with that project? Does it hitch on to Universal Sports? Does it form a new network with Comcast/NBC, or someone else? If it forms a new network with Comcast/NBC, does most of Universal Sports’ programming move there, clearing the way for US to become “Versus 2” or vice versa? Also, I don’t see any need for Versus to change its name – odd as it sounds, and odd as it sounded at the time, it’s better than “OLN” ever was and kind of fits in its own little way. I can see a contrast between ESPN and “Versus”. Not that I wouldn’t be surprised if Comcast did change the name, but it fits in with such NBCU channels as “Stealth” and “Chiller”.

Things could get very interesting over the next ten years (and potentially just the next five) as Comcast seeks to shake up the sports TV landscape… before the Internet overturns the TV landscape in general.

College Football Schedule – Week 14

Alright, so we had a few weeks of weird posts there and skipped last week, but we are back on the road… just in time for the weakest college football week of the year. (Blame my sickness, and the finals crunch, for things being this late.) In a weird twist, every BCS conference except one has an effective title game this week… and the Big Ten had theirs a few weeks back, meaning the only two conferences in all of FBS not to have games that were considered effective title games at the time are the Mountain West and Sun Belt.

Honestly, the events of the last few weeks and missing last week have me thinking about whether or not I should keep doing the schedule. To be honest, it’s always been a bit of wankery so I can see my college football rankings next to each game (often as though they were on a ticker on some sports network), as well as see the connections between the rankings, the game, the TV, and the announcing teams. But no one has ever cared about the schedule or even the rankings, and while the schedule is never as time-consuming as the rankings, it’s still inconvenient as a piece of work I have to do in fall quarter but not the other quarters. So I’m starting a new Da Blog Poll asking you whether the schedule should stay, go, or whatever. The poll will stay up until the start of August, one of the longest polls I’ve ever done.

All times Eastern.

TOP 25 GAMES

Nebraska

v.

Texas

8 PM

ABC

Brent Musberger, Kirk Herbstreit, Lisa Salters

Florida*

v.

Alabama

4 PM

CBS

Verne Lundquist, Gary Danielson, Tracy Wolfson

New Mexico State

@

Boise State

3 PM

KTVB

Mark Johnson, Tom Scott, Justin Corr

Cincinnati

@

Pittsburgh

Noon

ABC

Sean McDonough, Matt Millen, Holly Rowe

#22 Oregon State

@

Oregon

9 PM TH

ESPN

Chris Fowler, Craig James,
Jesse Palmer, Erin Andrews

#19 Georgia Tech

v.

#20 Clemson

8 PM

ESPN

Brad Nessler, Todd Blackledge, Erin Andrews

South Florida

@

Connecticut

8 PM

ESPN2

Mark Jones, Bob Davie

WATCHLIST AND OTHER POSITIVE B POINT TEAMS

Wisconsin

@

Hawaii

8 PT

ESPN2

Terry Gannon, David Norrie

West Virginia

@

Rutgers

Noon

ESPN

Dave Pasch, Bob Griese, Chris Spielman

Arizona

@

USC

3:30

ABC

Mike Patrick, Craig James, Heather Cox

Houston

@

East Carolina

Noon

ESPN2

Ron Franklin, Ed Cunningham

Central Michigan

v.

Ohio

8 PM FR

ESPN2

Joe Tessitore, Rod Gilmore

    LINEAL TITLES

California*

@

Washington

6:30

CSN CA+
FSN NW
FCS

Barry Tompkins, Mike Pawlaski (CSN CA)
Tom Glasgow, Mack Strong,
Jason Stiles, Jen Mueller (FSN NW)

THIS WEEK’S OTHER HD GAMES

Fresno State

@

Illinois

12:30

BTN

Wayne Larrivee, Chris Martin, Charissa Thompson

WAC

San Jose State

@

Louisiana Tech

2 PM

ESPN+

Trey Bender, Jay Taylor

SUN BELT

Arkansas State

@

Western Kentucky

7 PM TH

CSS/CST

Todd Kalas, Derek Rackley

Florida Atlantic

@

Florida International

7 PM

CSS/CST

Todd Kalas, Derek Rackley

Sunday Night Football Flex Scheduling Watch: Week 12

NBC’s Sunday Night Football package gives it flexible scheduling. For the last seven weeks of the season, the games are determined on 12-day notice, 6-day notice for Week 17.

The first year, no game was listed in the Sunday Night slot, only a notation that one game could move there. Now, NBC lists the game it “tentatively” schedules for each night. However, the NFL is in charge of moving games to prime time.

Here are the rules from the NFL web site (note that this was written with the 2007 season in mind):

  • Begins Sunday of Week 11
  • In effect during Weeks 11-17
  • Only Sunday afternoon games are subject to being moved into the Sunday night window.
  • The game that has been tentatively scheduled for Sunday night during flex weeks will be listed at 8:20 p.m. ET.
  • The majority of games on Sundays will be listed at 1:00 p.m. ET during flex weeks except for games played in Pacific or Mountain Time zones which will be listed at 4:05 or 4:15 p.m. ET.
  • No impact on Thursday, Saturday or Monday night games.
  • The NFL will decide (after consultation with CBS, FOX, NBC) and announce as early as possible the game being played at 8:20 p.m. ET. The announcement will come no later than 12 days prior to the game. The NFL may also announce games moving to 4:05 p.m. ET and 4:15 p.m. ET.
  • Week 17 start time changes could be decided on 6 days notice to ensure a game with playoff implications.
  • The NBC Sunday night time slot in “flex” weeks will list the game that has been tentatively scheduled for Sunday night.
  • Fans and ticket holders must be aware that NFL games in flex weeks are subject to change 12 days in advance (6 days in Week 17) and should plan accordingly.
  • NFL schedules all games.
  • Teams will be informed as soon as they are no longer under consideration or eligible for a move to Sunday night.
  • Rules NOT listed on NFL web site but pertinent to flex schedule selection: CBS and Fox each protect games in five out of six weeks, and could not protect any games Week 17 in 2007. Unless I find out otherwise, I’m assuming that’s still the case this year, especially with no tentative game listed Week 17. When looking up info on what the protected games might be, I found out that games were protected after Week FIVE this year, and presumably in some of the previous years. Previously all I knew was that games were protected after Week 4 the first year of flexible scheduling.
  • Three teams can appear a maximum of six games in primetime on NBC, ESPN or NFL Network (everyone else gets five) and no team may appear more than four times on NBC. A list of all teams’ number of appearances is in my Week 5 post.
  • A rule that may have come to light late last year but that, given its restrictiveness and lateness in coming to light, I’m having trouble accepting, is that the balance of primetime games taken from FOX and CBS can’t go beyond 22-20 one way or the other. The current tally is FOX 17, CBS 21; with tentative games, the tally is FOX 20, CBS 21.

Here are the current tentatively-scheduled games and my predictions:

Week 11 (November 22):

  • Selected game: Philadelphia @ Chicago.

Week 12 (November 29):

  • Selected game: Pittsburgh @ Baltimore.

Week 13 (December 6):

  • Selected game: Minnesota @ Arizona.

Week 14 (December 13):

  • Selected game: Philadelphia @ NY Giants.

Week 15 (December 20):

  • Tentative game: Minnesota @ Carolina
  • Prospects: Still lopsided, with the Vikings 10-1 and the Panthers 4-7. NBC is already worshipping at the Favre altar Week 13, against a team that is actually winning, not to mention the Giants Week 17 if that game has playoff implications.
  • Protected games: Packers-Steelers (Fox) and Bengals-Chargers (CBS).
  • Other possible games: Two good protected game choices mean that NBC can only select from games involving other teams with losing records. Bears-Ravens is out. Falcons-Jets is 6-5 v. 5-6, while 49ers-Eagles might be the most palatable at 7-4 v. 5-6 (but 5-6 is only two back in the NFC West). Dolphins-Titans is 5-6 v. 5-6 but may be the best of the bunch, with the Titans on fire.
  • Analysis: Given how good and otherwise appealing the Vikings are, and the NFL’s reticence to pull the flex, Vikings-Panthers may keep its spot yet; the main points against it are lopsidedness, the size of the markets, and the Panthers falling out of the playoff chase. But even if the Panthers keep losing, and one of the 5-6 teams wins, I don’t think there’s a compelling case that one of the other games is better for TV than Favremania.
  • Final prediction: Minnesota Vikings @ Carolina Panthers (no change).

Week 16 (December 27)

  • Tentative game: Dallas @ Washington
  • Prospects: Lopsided at 8-3 v. 3-8, but it is the NFL’s biggest rivalry so never count out its chances of keeping the spot.
  • Protected games: Ravens-Steelers (CBS).
  • Other possible games: Broncos-Eagles, a battle of one-game-back teams at 7-4, and Jags-Patriots, at 7-4 v. 6-5. They may make appealing cases for the flex, but are they enough to sweep the NFL off its feet?

Week 17 (January 3 Playoff Positioning Watch):

  • AFC East: Patriots lead, Dolphins and Jets two back, Bills another game back. New England plays Houston, the Jets play Cincinnati, Miami plays Pittsburgh and the Bills play the Colts.
  • AFC North: Bengals lead, Ravens and Steelers two games back. The Bengals play the Jets, while the Steelers play the Dolphins and Baltimore plays Oakland. Browns out.
  • AFC South: Colts clinched (Jags lose common games tiebreaker).
  • AFC West: Chargers lead, Broncos a game back, Chiefs and Raiders out on tiebreakers. The Broncos play the Chiefs while the Chargers play the Redskins.
  • AFC Wild Card: If the season ended today, the Broncos and either the Jags, Ravens, or Steelers would get the nod, with the Dolphins, Jets, Titans, and Texans a game back. The Jags play the Browns; the Titans play the Seahawks. The Bills are waiting in the wings. Bengals-Jets and Texans-Patriots the main AFC contenders, though Dolphins-Steelers is appealing as well.
  • NFC East: Cowboys lead, Eagles a game back, Giants another one, Redskins hanging on tiebreakers. Cowboys and Eagles play each other, while the Giants play the Vikings.
  • NFC North: Vikings lead by 3 games over Packers with the Bears out. The Vikings play the Giants while the Packers play the Cardinals and the Bears play the Lions.
  • NFC South: Saints lead, Falcons only hanging on by division tiebreaker. The Saints and Panthers play each other, as do the Falcons and Bucs.
  • NFC West: Cardinals lead by 3 over 49ers with the Seahawks a game behind that. Arizona plays Green Bay, while the Niners play the Rams and the Seahawks play the Titans.
  • NFC Wild Card: The Packers and Eagles would get the nod if the season ended today, with the Giants and Falcons a game back and the Niners waiting in the wings. The NFC definitely has the better games with Cowboys-Eagles, Giants-Vikings, and possibly Packers-Cardinals, but the NFL showed last year they’re more concerned with making sure the game has playoff implications no matter what happens when we get to primetime, so we’ll see how the rest of the season plays out.

Last-Minute Remarks on SNF Week 14 Picks

Week 14 (December 13):

  • Tentative game: Philadelphia @ NY Giants
  • Prospects: It’s an NFC East game (always = ratings), and while it doesn’t currently have the NFC East lead on the line it’s still a battle of playoff contenders. Still a pretty good shot to keep its spot – the Giants’ troubles might help it in the long run if the game would have become lopsided as opposed to 7-4 v. 6-5. However, there are strong flex contenders…
  • Protected games: Chargers-Cowboys (CBS) and Packers-Bears (FOX).
  • Other possible games mentioned on last week’s Watch and their records: Bengals (8-3)-Vikings (10-1), Broncos (7-4)-Colts (11-0), Saints (10-0)-Falcons (6-5), and Jags (6-5)-Dolphins (5-6).
  • Impact of Monday Night Football: The prospects of Saints-Falcons depends on whether the Saints are still unbeaten. After tonight, that’s probably the Saints’ best chance for a loss.
  • Analysis: The Broncos got back on track to stay ahead of the Falcons and the Colts are still unbeaten, but picking them would shut NBC out of the Colts the rest of the year, although that’s not as much of a problem as it sounds given the only half-decent team the Colts face the rest of the way is already scheduled for NFL Network. With the Favre factor, Bengals-Vikings looks mighty compelling with both teams winning and appears to be the current favorite (but it would probably mean three straight weeks of Favremania and limit NBC’s ability to flex the Vikings in again later). The Giants’ loss makes a flex much more likely, and the NFL can’t go wrong with either Broncos-Colts or Bengals-Vikings.
  • Final prediction: Denver Broncos @ Indianapolis Colts.
  • Actual selection: Philadelphia Eagles @ New York Giants (no change). Not terribly surprising, given the problems with the other games and the NFL’s reticence to pull the flex, but still a bit less than what NBC could have gotten.

Sunday Night Football Flex Scheduling Watch: Week 11

NBC’s Sunday Night Football package gives it flexible scheduling. For the last seven weeks of the season, the games are determined on 12-day notice, 6-day notice for Week 17.

The first year, no game was listed in the Sunday Night slot, only a notation that one game could move there. Now, NBC lists the game it “tentatively” schedules for each night. However, the NFL is in charge of moving games to prime time.

Here are the rules from the NFL web site (note that this was written with the 2007 season in mind):

  • Begins Sunday of Week 11
  • In effect during Weeks 11-17
  • Only Sunday afternoon games are subject to being moved into the Sunday night window.
  • The game that has been tentatively scheduled for Sunday night during flex weeks will be listed at 8:20 p.m. ET.
  • The majority of games on Sundays will be listed at 1:00 p.m. ET during flex weeks except for games played in Pacific or Mountain Time zones which will be listed at 4:05 or 4:15 p.m. ET.
  • No impact on Thursday, Saturday or Monday night games.
  • The NFL will decide (after consultation with CBS, FOX, NBC) and announce as early as possible the game being played at 8:20 p.m. ET. The announcement will come no later than 12 days prior to the game. The NFL may also announce games moving to 4:05 p.m. ET and 4:15 p.m. ET.
  • Week 17 start time changes could be decided on 6 days notice to ensure a game with playoff implications.
  • The NBC Sunday night time slot in “flex” weeks will list the game that has been tentatively scheduled for Sunday night.
  • Fans and ticket holders must be aware that NFL games in flex weeks are subject to change 12 days in advance (6 days in Week 17) and should plan accordingly.
  • NFL schedules all games.
  • Teams will be informed as soon as they are no longer under consideration or eligible for a move to Sunday night.
  • Rules NOT listed on NFL web site but pertinent to flex schedule selection: CBS and Fox each protect games in five out of six weeks, and could not protect any games Week 17 in 2007. Unless I find out otherwise, I’m assuming that’s still the case this year, especially with no tentative game listed Week 17. When looking up info on what the protected games might be, I found out that games were protected after Week FIVE this year, and presumably in some of the previous years. Previously all I knew was that games were protected after Week 4 the first year of flexible scheduling.
  • Three teams can appear a maximum of six games in primetime on NBC, ESPN or NFL Network (everyone else gets five) and no team may appear more than four times on NBC. A list of all teams’ number of appearances is in my Week 5 post.
  • A rule that may have come to light late last year but that, given its restrictiveness and lateness in coming to light, I’m having trouble accepting, is that the balance of primetime games taken from FOX and CBS can’t go beyond 22-20 one way or the other. The current tally is FOX 17, CBS 21; with tentative games, the tally is FOX 20, CBS 21.

Here are the current tentatively-scheduled games and my predictions:

Week 11 (November 22):

  • Selected game: Philadelphia @ Chicago.

Week 12 (November 29):

  • Selected game: Pittsburgh @ Baltimore.

Week 13 (December 6):

  • Selected game: Minnesota @ Arizona.

Week 14 (December 13):

  • Tentative game: Philadelphia @ NY Giants
  • Prospects: It’s an NFC East game (always = ratings), and while it doesn’t currently have the NFC East lead on the line it’s still a battle of playoff contenders. Still a pretty good shot to keep its spot – the Giants’ troubles might help it in the long run if the game would have become lopsided as opposed to 6-4 v. 6-4. However, there are strong flex contenders…
  • Protected games: Chargers-Cowboys (CBS) and Packers-Bears (FOX).
  • Other possible games: Bengals-Vikings, Broncos-Colts, and Saints-Falcons all remain very strong contenders. Jags-Dolphins worthy of note but not likely to go anywhere.
  • Analysis: With the Broncos at 6-4 and no longer leading the division, you can pretty much eliminate Broncos-Colts if the Colts lose, and even if the Colts win, picking them would shut NBC out of the Colts the rest of the year, although that’s not as much of a problem as it sounds given the only half-decent team the Colts face the rest of the way is already scheduled for NFL Network. With the Favre factor, Bengals-Vikings at 7-3 v. 9-1 looks mighty compelling and appears to be the current favorite (but it would probably mean three straight weeks of Favremania and limit NBC’s ability to flex the Vikings in again later), and Saints-Falcons has the same undefeated factor as the Colts (but the Falcons are still worse than the Broncos). And then there’s the existing tentative game. For Saints-Falcons to even have a shot it needs both teams to win and the Broncos (or maybe Colts) to lose. If the Eagles and Giants both win I would favor it keeping the spot given the problems with the other games and the NFL’s reticence to pull the flex; if the Broncos and Colts both win it becomes difficult to argue against. Otherwise, and even in those situations, Bengals-Vikings looks mighty compelling – unless either team loses…

Week 15 (December 20):

  • Tentative game: Minnesota @ Carolina
  • Prospects: Still lopsided, with the Vikings 9-1 and the Panthers 4-6. NBC is already worshipping at the Favre altar Week 13 and possibly Week 14, against teams that are actually winning, not to mention the Giants Week 17 if that game has playoff implications.
  • Protected games: Packers-Steelers (Fox) and Bengals-Chargers (CBS).
  • Other possible games: Two good protected game choices mean that NBC can only select from games involving other teams with losing records. Falcons-Jets, Bears-Ravens, and sudden dark horse Dolphins-Titans are all 5-5 v. 4-6, while 49ers-Eagles is a bit better (at the cost of lopsidedness) at 6-4 v. 4-6. Given how good and otherwise appealing the Vikings are, and the NFL’s reticence to pull the flex, Vikings-Cardinals may keep its spot yet; the main point against it is lopsidedness, especially since a 4-6 team is far from out of the playoff picture, especially in the NFC (although that race may have tightened – see below).

Week 16 (December 27)

  • Tentative game: Dallas @ Washington
  • Prospects: Lopsided at 7-3 v. 3-7, but it is the NFL’s biggest rivalry so never count out its chances of keeping the spot.
  • Protected games: Ravens-Steelers (CBS).
  • Other possible games: Broncos-Eagles and Jags-Patriots, both involving nothing but teams at 6-4 or, in the case of the Pats, better. They (as well as dark horse battle of 5-5 teams Texans-Dolphins) may make appealing cases for the flex, but are they enough to sweep the NFL off its feet?

Week 17 (January 3 Playoff Positioning Watch):

  • AFC East: Patriots lead, Dolphins two back, Jets another game back, Bills another game back. New England plays Houston, the Jets play Cincinnati, Miami plays Pittsburgh and the Bills play the Colts.
  • AFC North: Bengals lead, Steelers a game back, Ravens waiting in the wings. The Bengals play the Jets, while the Steelers play the Dolphins and Baltimore plays Oakland. Browns would have to resort to tiebreakers I’m not ready to look up yet.
  • AFC South: Colts running away with it; Jags a full four back, while the Titans are down to tiebreakers. The Colts play Buffalo while the Texans play New England and the Jags play the Browns.
  • AFC West: Chargers lead, Broncos a game back, Chiefs and Raiders four back. The Broncos play the Chiefs while the Chargers play the Redskins.
  • AFC Wild Card: If the season ended today, any two of the Broncos, Jags, and Steelers would get the nod, with the Dolphins, Texans, and Ravens a game back. The Titans and Jets are waiting in the wings; the Titans play the Seahawks. Bengals-Jets and Texans-Patriots the main AFC contenders, though Dolphins-Steelers is appealing as well.
  • NFC East: Cowboys lead, Eagles and Giants a game back, Redskins mathematically in it. Cowboys and Eagles play each other, while the Giants play the Vikings.
  • NFC North: Vikings lead by 3 games over Packers with the Bears two behind that. The Vikings play the Giants while the Packers play the Cardinals and the Bears play the Lions.
  • NFC South: Saints lead by 5 over Falcons, with the Panthers a game behind that. The Saints and Panthers play each other, as do the Falcons and Bucs.
  • NFC West: Cardinals lead by 3 over 49ers with the Seahawks a game behind that and the Rams hanging on by a tiebreaker. Arizona plays Green Bay, while the Niners play the Rams and the Seahawks play the Titans.
  • NFC Wild Card: Any two of the Eagles, Giants, and Packers would get the nod if the season ended today, with the Falcons a game back and the Bears, Panthers, and Niners waiting in the wings, giving Panthers-Saints dark-horse appeal. The NFC definitely has the better games with Cowboys-Eagles, Giants-Vikings, and possibly Packers-Cardinals, but the NFL showed last year they’re more concerned with making sure the game has playoff implications no matter what happens when we get to primetime, so we’ll see how the rest of the season plays out.

Last-Minute Remarks on SNF Week 13 Picks

Week 13 (December 6):

  • Tentative game: New England @ Miami
  • Prospects: 7-3 v. 5-5. Still lopsided.
  • Protected games: Cowboys-Giants (FOX) and Titans-Colts (CBS).
  • Other possible games mentioned on last week’s Watch and their records: Eagles (6-4)-Falcons (5-5), Vikings (9-1)-Cardinals (7-3), and Jags (6-4)-Texans (5-4).
  • Impact of Monday Night Football: Texans can move to 6-4, but…
  • Analysis: …I said last week that any game would need a perfect storm to happen to steal the flex away from Vikings-Cardinals, and the Cards won, so Favremania it is.
  • Final prediction: Minnesota Vikings @ Arizona Cardinals.
  • Current situation: No announcement yet, which could mean Jags-Texans has a shot after all, or it could mean the NFL is being insane and sticking with Pats-Dolphins.

College Football Schedule – Week 12

All times Eastern.

TOP 25 GAMES
Kansas @ Texas 8 PM ABC Ron Franklin, Ed Cunningham
TCU @ Wyoming 2 PM mtn. Dan Gutowsky, Blaine Fowler, Natalie Vickers
Florida International @ Florida 12:30 Gameplan Larry Vettel, Nat Moore, Steve Babik
Chattanooga @ Alabama Noon SEC Net Doug Bell, Chris Doering
Boise State @ Utah State 9:30 FR ESPN2 Joe Tessitore, Rod Gilmore
Ohio State @ Michigan Noon ABC Sean McDonough, Matt Millen, Holly Rowe
Oregon @ Arizona 8 PM ABC Brent Musberger, Kirk Herbstreit, Lisa Salters
NC State @ Virginia Tech 3:30 ESPNU Todd Harris, Charles Arbuckle
Penn State @ Michigan State 3:30 ABC/ESPN
HD ABC only
Mike Patrick, Craig James, Heather Cox
#12 Oklahoma @ #23 Texas Tech 12:30 FSN Joel Meyers, Gary Reasons, Jim Knox
Minnesota @ Iowa Noon ESPN Dave Pasch, Bob Griese, Chris Spielman
Virginia @ #15 Clemson 3:30 ABC/ESPN Bob Wischusen, Brian Griese
LSU @ #22 Mississippi 3:30 CBS Verne Lundquist, Gary Danielson, Tracy Wolfson
Kansas State @ Nebraska 7:30 ESPN Brad Nessler, Todd Blackledge, Erin Andrews
Colorado 28-31 #18 Oklahoma State 7:30 TH ESPN Chris Fowler, Craig James,
Jesse Palmer, Erin Andrews
California @ #19 Stanford 7:30 VS. Ron Thulin, Kelly Stouffer, Lewis Johnson
#20 Rutgers @ Syracuse 3:30 ESPN360  
Mississippi State @ #21 Arkansas Noon SEC Net Dave Neal, Andre Ware, Cara Capuano
Connecticut @ Notre Dame 2:30 NBC Tom Hammond, Pat Haden, Alex Flanagan
#25 Oregon State @ Washington State 5 PM    
WATCHLIST AND OTHER POSITIVE B POINT TEAMS
Air Force @ BYU 3:30 CBS CS Tom Hart, Aaron Taylor
Duke @ Miami (FL) Noon ESPNU Clay Matvick, David Diaz-Infante
Wisconsin @ Northwestern 3:30 BTN Wayne Larrivee, Chris Martin, Charissa Thompson
San Diego State @ Utah 4 PM VS. Tim Neverett, Glenn Parker, Lindsay Soto
Memphis @ Houston 1 PM CSS Matt Stewart, Chuck Oliver, Allison Williams
Kent State @ Temple 1 PM CSD.com  
Northern Illinois @ Ohio 2 PM CSD.com  
THIS WEEK’S OTHER HD GAMES
Buffalo 42-17 Miami (OH) 6 PM WE ESPNU Dari Nowkhah, Tom Luginbill
Central Michigan 35-3 Ball State 8 PM WE ESPN2 Dave Lamont, Trent Dilfer
Akron @ Bowling Green 5:30 FR ESPNU Kevin Negandhi, Jon Berger
North Carolina @ Boston College Noon ESPN2 Pam Ward, Ray Bentley
Maryland @ Florida State Noon Raycom Tim Brant, Rick Walker, Mike Hogewood
Purdue @ Indiana 3:30 BTN Craig Coshun, Anthony Herron, Mark Campbell
Arizona State @ UCLA 4 PM FSN Barry Tompkins, Petros Papadakis, Michael Eaves
Colorado State @ New Mexico 6 PM mtn. James Bates, Todd Christensen, Keenan McCardell
Vanderbilt @ Tennessee 7 PM ESPNU Eric Collins, Brock Huard
Tulsa @ Southern Miss 7:30 CBS CS Dave Ryan, Akbar Gbaja-Biamila
Kentucky @ Georgia 7:30 ESPN2 Mark Jones, Bob Davie
Nevada @ New Mexico State 7 PT ESPNU Terry Gannon, David Norrie
BOWL SUBDIVISION
Eastern Michigan @ Toledo 7 PM FR CSD.com  
Louisville @ South Florida Noon B.E. Net Mike Gleason, John Congemi, Quint Kessenich
Tulane @ UCF 2 PM BH Sports Drew Fellios, Mark Royals, Dave Baumann
Iowa State @ Missouri 2 PM    
UAB @ East Carolina 3:30 MASN Patrick Kinas, Billy Weaver, Brian Meador
UTEP @ Rice 3:30 CBSCS XXL  
Baylor @ Texas A&M 3:30    
Army @ North Texas 4 PM CSD.com  
Florida Atlantic @ Troy 4 PM CSS/CST Todd Kalas, Derek Rackley
Arkansas State @ Middle Tenn. St. 4:30 Gameplan Chip Walters, Kelly Holcomb
SMU @ Marshall 4:30 CBSCS XXL  
Louisiana Tech @ Fresno State 5 PM    
Louisiana-Monroe @ Louisiana-Lafayette 7 PM CSD.com  
Hawaii @ San Jose State 8 PM Gameplan Bill Leahey, Russell Yamaoha

2009 College Football Rankings – Week 11

Remember 2004? We had five undefeated teams going into the bowls. Utah became the first BCS buster, but Auburn was the only team people were crying about not making the title game. We’re headed for five undefeated teams again, but boy, have times changed.

For one, people are talking about Boise State not being jilted for a BCS bowl this time, something that has now happened twice. What’s more, a stumble by Texas or the eventual SEC champion could, conceivably, open the door for a Cincinnati or even (whisper) TCU to enter the mix. (Or it could allow a one-loss champion to get in ahead of the other three unbeatens. But despite the fact few are yet willing to vault Texas to number 1, there would be rioting in the streets if that turned out to be the eventual SEC champion.)

A lot of teams further down in the ratings lose, creating upheaval from the 19 spot on down, starting with a booming move onto the Top 25 for the new darlings, Stanford, and continuing with a whopping three teams moving from negative B Points to the top 25, and in what may be a record this late in the year, five teams moving off the top 25, and in quite a few cases, out of positive B Points. And a behind-the-scenes alert: Utah falls so far down that they and BYU are almost neck-in-neck. Maybe within the conference, it’s not so much that BYU’s overrated as Air Force is underrated. We’ll know for sure when the two play each other this week.

How the C Ratings are tabulated: First, A Ratings are tabulated by multiplying the total score ratio, which is expressed by (points-opponents’ points)/points, by the winning percentage. Score ratio minimizes the effect of running up the score. Next, B Points for each game are tabulated by (margin of victory)/(opponent’s A rating)+/-1 for wins, and -(margin of loss)/(1-opponent’s A Rating)+/-1 for losses. The “+/-” is + for road games and – for home ones. The total number of B Points is multiplied by the A Rating to get the B Rating. Conference Ratings are tabulated by averaging the B Ratings of all teams in the conference. (Independents are counted separately, and Army and Navy are counted as one conference.) Finally, the C Rating is tabulated by taking the difference between the team’s B Rating and his conference’s rating, taking a fraction of that equal to the fraction of Division I-A the conference makes up, and taking the result off the B Rating. The three ratings go A, B, C across. Click here to see the complete ratings.

1 Texas (10-0)
Big 12 Leader
.826 59.715 52.630 Texas hasn’t needed any help from officials any step of the way. SEC parity, or Texas dominance?
2 TCU (10-0)
Non-BCS Leader
.809 50.209 44.173 Utah is the only team in the Mountain West deserving of a Top 25 ranking, and TCU blew them out. Is that a sign the Mountain West really is WAC-level this year, or a sign the Horned Frogs really are national title material?
3 Florida (10-0)
SEC Leader
Princeton-Yale Title
.812 43.837 39.183 People are starting to split hairs over which team in the SEC is better. But in the SEC Title Game (and in Florida’s upcoming blowout of Florida International) we’re all losers.
4 Alabama (10-0) .804 38.871 34.713 Alabama gets its act together in a blowout of an admittedly weak Mississippi State team the Tide held to a field goal. But expect them to dip again for playing an FCS school.
5 Boise State (10-0) .795 37.116 31.464 So far as I can tell, the main reason Boise could still go to a BCS bowl is because of an odd lack of parity: few non-conference champions are impressive. But Nevada is still unbeaten in conference.
6 Cincinnati (10-0)
Big East Leader
.755 31.893 29.531 CBS’s Gregg Doyel says the team long part of the C Ratings’ Big 4 aren’t title game worthy. They certainly didn’t look it beating WVU by only three at home with SEC-like help. Could they fall to Pitt on the road in two weeks?
7 Ohio State (9-2)
Big Ten Leader
.607 19.170 16.199 It was by three in overtime, but it was still the effective Big Ten title game. But people still don’t trust the Big Ten, or a team that lost to now-struggling USC and mediocre-to-bad Purdue.
8 Pittsburgh (9-1) .649 17.446 16.046 Basically matched what Ohio State did, against a worse team (sorry, Golden Domers). Now look for them to potentially slip for the bye.
9 Oregon (8-2)
Pac-10 Leader
.542 18.226 14.824 Rebounded against Arizona State and now head into an effective Pac-10 title game against Arizona, despite the Civil War potentially looming as a second.
10 Virginia Tech (7-3)
ACC Leader
.473 17.291 14.206 V-Tech’s ACC title hopes are officially dashed, and Duke wasn’t quite good enough for G-Tech to leapfrog the Hokies despite a blowout. Where are they or Pitt for BCS at-large bowl consideration?
11 Penn State (9-2) .604 13.441 10.995 Hmm. Penn State outranks Iowa in the polls as well, and in the BCS they’re behind only because the BCS computers still don’t count MoV. It looks like, despite losing to Iowa, PSU may be getting an upgrade to LSU and the Cap One Bowl.
12 Oklahoma (6-4) .406 12.609 10.235 Despite not having Bradford, every loss has been by a score to a team ranked in at least one poll, and they’ve looked dominant in the other games (see: A&M). Explain to me why they aren’t among the ranked?
13 Iowa (9-2) .509 12.390 10.040 The Hawkeyes have one game left and then I’m not sure if anyone knows for sure what bowl they’re going to. They’re going to do a lot of Big Ten and SEC game watching, that’s for sure.
14 Georgia Tech (10-1) .594 12.530 9.921 G-Tech may have blown out Duke by so much it limited their own benefit by hurting Duke’s A Rating. But while they didn’t leapfrog V-Tech they did leapfrog Clemson, and that’s their likely ACC Title Game opponent.
15 Clemson (7-3) .474 11.680 9.156 Don’t pop the corks just yet. Beating Virginia would give Clemson the Atlantic, but a loss would allow BC to control their own destiny. Fortunately, North Carolina has proved a trap game for everyone in the ACC.
16 LSU (8-2) .524 8.915 7.754 Considering the reaction, turns out LSU may need to scout Penn State instead – perhaps this week against Michigan State.
17 Nebraska (7-3) .488 8.415 6.460 Well, as it happens, despite the chaos that has enveloped the Big 12 North this year, it’s now very simple: the Kansas State game is an effective North title game, for the right to try to be a trap game for Texas.
18 Oklahoma State (8-2) .539 7.056 5.237 A one-score win over Texas Tech is probably to be expected. But I can’t help but wonder if the Cowboys will drop next week for letting a worse Colorado team get even closer…
19 Stanford (7-3)
2006 Boise State Title
.450 6.562 4.132 Amazing what two big wins can do for you, and Toby Gerhart’s Heisman candidacy. Losses to Oregon State and Arizona (the former meaning Stanford’s rooting for the latter) and lowly Wake Forest are all water under the bridge now.
20 Rutgers (7-2)* .544 3.797 3.308 Rutgers’ only losses were to the Big East’s Big Two, but an incredibly weak non-conference slate (seriously, Army’s the best among them?) and narrow win over UConn held them back – until they shut out a USF team ranked in the polls.
21 Arkansas (6-4)* .360 3.817 3.165 Blew out a terrific-by-Sun-Belt-standards Troy team, and despite early blowout losses they still have their beef-with-the-refs-in-a-Florida game and Ws over Auburn and the other USC. But can they pass Ole Miss and Auburn for the Cotton Bowl?
22 Mississippi (7-3)* .455 2.962 2.395 Maybe not, if it’s the Rebels that take the spot, thanks to a blowout win over the beleaguered but Top 25 Vols – and a big-time game against the third-best team in the SEC coming up next.
23 Texas Tech (6-4) .384 3.474 2.013 The Red Raiders lose to Oklahoma State on the road. Now they get Oklahoma at home. Trap game, or do they get the same Oklahoma feeling twice in a row?
24 Notre Dame (6-4) .344 1.757 1.757 They kept it within five, but both of their remaining games are against teams in positive B Points. And they might both be must-wins for Weis to keep his job.
25 Oregon State (7-3) .429 3.884 1.677 Blowout win over admittedly-underperforming Washington just what the doctor ordered to put the Beavers on the Top 25. Every loss was to a good team (USC doesn’t look the part anymore) but tight wins over UNLV and Stanford had held them back.

29 teams total with positive C Rating (none with negative B Rating)

Off Top 25: #27 Miami (FL) (was #20), Arizona (was ), Utah (was #25), #40 Tennessee (was #23), #46 USC (was #21)

Watch List: #26 Air Force, #27 Miami (FL), Wisconsin, Connecticut

Other Positive B Ratings: Arizona, Utah, #33 BYU*, #36 Houston, #37 Temple*, #39 Northern Illinois (*=Newly Positive)

No Longer Positive: #30 West Virginia, #40 Tennessee, #46 USC, #52 Fresno State

Bottom 10: #111 Memphis, #112 Miami (OH), #113 San Jose State, #114 Tulane, #115 New Mexico State, #116 New Mexico, #117 Western Kentucky, #118 Eastern Michigan, #119 Washington State, #120 Rice

Conference Rating: SEC (-2.703), Big East (-3.546), Big 12 (-11.135), Big Ten (-13.244), ACC (-13.560), Pac-10 (-22.596), Mountain West (-30.266), WAC (-38.237), MAC (-44.758, leader #37 Temple), Conference USA (-46.569, leader #36 Houston), Sun Belt (-51.211, leader #58 Troy)

Best game of week: Oklahoma @ Texas Tech, 9:30am PT, FSN

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