10-2 is đźš« the standard for making the CFP.

I shouldve been more clear in what I mean. I dont mean its not possible, just that youre more likely to have a 9-3 team get in than a 10-2 left out.
Its very unlikely that the SEC finishes with six 10-2 teams.
I'm guessing the Big 10 gets 3, ND, plus 1 from the Big 12 plus 1 from the ACC, plus the G5, at a min. That leaves 5.
The wildcard right now for me is GT. They have a shot to run the table until they meet Georgia. Then the ACC would get 2 regardless of that outcome and then youre possibly leaving an SEC team out.
I dont think LSU reaches 10 wins. I'm also not sold on Mizzu hitting 10 wins just because its easier. (I think Tenn goes 9-3 as well).
So youre absolutely correct, and I shouldve clarified.
The odds agree with you. We thought there would be additional 10 win teams last year but it didn’t work that way. We must win or at least cover to stay in the race. Oklahoma and Florida both look like 6-6 / 7-5 teams. Vandy might be our big Win…if we sweep November.
 
It wasn't the final record. It was how the standings played out. Ole Miss bungled a game and it bumped us back up. We were out after the loss at UGA. 10-2 was never the criteria. And it certainly isn’t this season. Win the league, or hope. Simple as that.
Ole Miss lost at Florida

The final record was exactly the reason we got into the playoffs. The standings played out as a result of the final records.
 
Conference record determines the playoff potential. If you are not up at the top of the final SEC standings, then your ass ain't making the playoffs. Fairly simple. Going back and looking at how the CPF rankings played out last year, it's easy to see this principle in action. Ole Miss and Alabama fumbled games late after we blew it down at Georgia. We luckily bounced back up the rankings. Plain as day what happened.
 
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