FiveThirtyEight

Heading into the final week before college football’s conference championships, all eyes were on Columbus, Ohio, for the epic Michigan-Ohio State duel. And they should have been: It ended up being a double-overtime classic, with the Buckeyes pulling out the 30-27 victory when Curtis Samuel scampered 15 yards for a walk-off touchdown. With few upsets elsewhere in the college universe — aside from Michigan, the highest-ranking team in the College Football Playoff rankings to lose was No. 11 Louisville — this week’s committee rankings were fairly predictable. Alabama checked in at No. 1 with Ohio State second, while Clemson and Washington moved up to accommodate Michigan’s slide to No. 5.

All of this has brought a little more clarity to FiveThirtyEight’s CFP predictions. Last week, our model was pretty certain that Alabama would make the committee’s final top four, and reasonably sure about Clemson, as well. But it also knew the Ohio State-Michigan outcome would have far-reaching implications about the playoff picture as a whole, and that was a game between two evenly matched teams that ended up going down to the wire. Now that it’s over, and we’re mere days away from Selection Sunday, the model has less uncertainty about how things will play out. Here’s how the predictions changed since last week:

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Changes in FiveThirtyEight’s CFP prediction model are since last week. Changes for teams that already had a less than 1 percent chance of making the playoff or winning the national title are negligible and not precisely calculated.

Source: ESPN Stats & Information Group

That’s not to say there’s nothing left riding on this weekend’s conference championship games, however. Let’s work out a few of the scenarios that could happen:

 

The usual disclaimers about our model apply, of course. Though it’s based on the historical behavior of college-football pollsters, as well as the CFP committee’s first couple years of picks, the playoff is still relatively new and there’s still more than a little opacity to how their process works. They’ve made a head-scratching decision before and they probably will again. But for now, these are our best, most informed guesses as to how their choices will play out. Now we just have to wait for the weekend’s games — and Sunday’s selections — to find out who makes the playoff, and who will be on the outside looking in.


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