ATSWINS

Have Mizzou’s chances to make the College Football Playoff changed after 2OT Vanderbilt scare?

Updated Sept. 24, 2024, 11 a.m. by Eli Hoff St. Louis Post-Dispatch 1 min read
NCAAF News

What should Missouri make of a Vandy panic? The Tigers weekend double-overtime win over the Commodores raised both heart rates and the number next to Mizzous name in the polls, which isnt the direction the program was looking to move.

MU is 4-0 and, entering its first bye week of the season, ranked 11th in both the AP and USA Today Coaches polls, down a few spots in each from a week ago.

Given that Missouris 12 regular-season games are broken nicely into quartets separated by bye weeks this year, this threshold is an ideal one to take stock of how the Tigers are shaping up in a big-picture sense.

And the biggest picture or biggest goal, certainly for Mizzou this season is making the College Football Playoff.

Its still early to be making too much of a fuss about who will and wont make the expanded 12-team field and definitely too early to have any degree of certainty about it.

But given the timing of both MUs bye and the duality of a check to its momentum but a still unmarred record, its an interesting moment to explore Missouris chances of making it into the CFP.

Though Mizzous poll ranking has changed for the worse over the past couple of weeks, the results havent actually altered the math all that much.

As things stand now, the Tigers look like they could be just fine, as far as the College Football Playoff is concerned.

Heres why but first, two caveats: First, polling isnt the same as the CFP Selection Committees rankings, though the latter will ultimately determine the playoff field.

However, because the committee wont release its first rankings until early November, the AP Poll is the best indication of a teams public or national perception currently available.

Second, the first four weeks of the season are probably the least informative.

Conference play has only just begun around the nation, and there havent been a ton of clashes between heavyweights yet.

Teams, and those of us who are observers, are still figuring out who they are.

With that out of the way: Constructing a 12-team playoff field from the latest AP Poll would have Missouri snagging the last available spot.

As the top teams from each of the Power Four conferences, No.

1 Texas, No.

3 Ohio State, No.

7 Miami and No.

10 Utah would take the top four seeds and first-round byes.

No.

25 Boise State would be the Group of Five representative and the 12th seed.

The seven at-large teams would be No.

2 Georgia, No.

4 Alabama, No.

5 Tennessee, No.

6 Mississippi, No.

8 Oregon, No.

9 Penn State and No.

11 Mizzou.

With that seeding, MU would play 6-seed Alabama on the road in the first round of the College Football Playoff, with the winner of that game advancing to play Miami in a neutral-site quarterfinal.

But at this point, there isnt much value to that kind of specificity, given how seedings will change.

Whats most notable for Missouri is how favorable that breakdown of teams in the bracket would be.

Having the minimum of one team each from the Atlantic Coast Conference and Big 12 leaves the Southeastern Conference and Big Ten to split all of the at-large spots among themselves.

Currently, six SEC teams would make the playoff, compared with just three Big Ten schools.

That obviously favors a program like Mizzou that isnt expected to play for the SEC championship but will still be among the handful of programs at the top of the conference.

It still seems unlikely that the SEC would get six teams in, but five making the eventual cut does look more possible.

ESPNs playoff predictor algorithm gives the Tigers a 40.1% chance of making the CFP.

Thats the 10th-highest chance of any team in the country, behind Texas, Alabama, Tennessee, Ohio State, Ole Miss, Georgia, Miami, Penn State and Oregon.

And while 40.1% still sounds relatively unlikely, thats actually up from MUs 37% mark at the start of the season the algorithm likes the Tigers odds more now than it did a month ago.

Speaking of odds, sportsbooks calculations show Missouris CFP chances are in a similar range.

Fanduel has Mizzou to make the playoff at +136 ($10 bet pays out $23.60), which has implied odds of 42.37%.

DraftKings is slightly more bullish at +125 ($10 pays out $22.50), or implied odds of 44.44%.

Manipulating the variables of ESPNs predictor tool suggests that Missouris road performances will be the ones that make or break a playoff push which sounds about right.

The three games with the most influence on the Tigers probability are their next game, at Texas A&M on Oct.

5, then at Alabama on Oct.

26 and at South Carolina on Nov.

16.

Given Oklahomas unimpressive start to the season, the Gamecocks have replaced the Sooners as the third critical game for ESPNs calculations.

According to the algorithm, winning just one of those three games bumps Missouris chances up to at least 77%, depending on which of the away games the Tigers prevail in.

Of course, that relies on the assumption that MU takes care of business by winning its other games, but one result could greatly boost a CFP bid.

The Vanderbilt scare makes it tough to say Mizzou doesnt have much to worry about, playoff-wise, but the computers would like to share their numbers in a soothing tone.

If the Tigers can make that nervy finish a one-off a la Middle Tennessee in 2023 this season could remain securely on track for a spot in the College Football Playoff..

This article has been shared from the original article on stltoday, here is the link to the original article.