#5 Oklahoma killed #2 Texas Tech, 65-21. Oregon State’s last minute field goal topped Arizona, 19-17, taking the Beavers within one game of going to the Rose Bowl. And USC?!…USC did nothing, but still managed to move up to #5 in the BCS. Now how does it all add up for the Trojans’ title hopes? Thanks to Adam Rose at All Things Trojan and USC engineer Anthony Christodoulou it’s down to a (not-so-exact) science:
“with six games to go, there are 64 possible outcomes remaining and 31 that will find USC in Miami on January 8. That assumes USC can win out over Notre Dame (in the Coliseum) and UCLA (in the Rose Bowl).USC’s best shot is if Florida State upsets Florida next weekend, and then Florida beats Alabama the following weekend in the SEC Championship game.”
31/64 possible outcomes for a title shot? I’m no Einstein over here, but that looks more like a 48% chance. So why is the magic number at 30%?
The article continues:
If we give Oklahoma a 65% chance over Oklahoma State, Texas Tech a 75% chance over Baylor, Texas a 75% chance over Texas A&M, Mizzou a 33% chance of winning their conference championship, Florida a 75% chance over Florida State, Florida a 60% chance over Alabama, and USC wins out … crunchcrunchcrunch …The Trojans have a 30.1% chance of playing in the BCS National Championship Game.
And if the cards don’t fall right and USC doesn’t end up in the title game, and AP #17 Oregon State manages to beat #19 Oregon to end up in the Rose Bowl (remember OSU already lost to Penn State 45-14 back in September), hope USC gets the SEC loser. Give the Trojans an Alabama or Flordia match up, it would be as big as the title game itself. Not Pac-10 vs. SEC, but USC vs. the SEC. Let’s end this once and for all.
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