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Previewing the Conference Championship Games

There are six conference championship games this weekend. Here’s a short preview breaking down this weekend’s action. All times Eastern.

MAC Championship (Detroit, MI)

Friday, 7PM: Kent State vs. Northern Illinois (-6.0)

What is inside of Dri Archer?

Weeknight MACtion doesn’t get better than this, and this is one of just two conference championship games featuring two 11-1 teams. The SRS hit the nail on the head, telling us that NIU is 6.2 points better than Kent State on a neutral field. The stars here are Northern Illinois’ quarterback Jordan Lynch and KSU’s running back Dri Archer. Lynch leads the MAC in Y/A, AY/A, TD/INT Ratio, and Passer Rating, and oh by the way leads the conference with 1,611 rushing yards and ranks third with 16 rushing touchdowns.

Archer, meanwhile, leads the MAC with 1,795 yards from scrimmage has scored 18 touchdowns. But here’s the killer stat: he averaging 9.7 yards per carry, the highest average of any player with at least 100 carries since at least 2000. In his spare time, Archer averages 38.2 yards per kick return, the highest average of any player with at least 12 returns since at least 2000.

Kent State lost to Kentucky, which didn’t seem odd at the time — because we’re talking about Kent State — but looks absurd in retrospect. The Golden Flashes received an SRS grade of 4.4 for that game. Northern Illinois’ one loss was on opening weekend against Iowa, an 18-17 loss in Chicago where NIU led most of the game.

My pick: NIU -6

Pac 12 Championship (Stanford, CA)

Friday, 8PM: UCLA @ Stanford (-8.5)

If we looked at the SRS standings from a week ago, we would set this line at Stanford -5.6. But the current projected SRS spread would be 8.6, mirroring the actual line. So how much do we take away from last week’s game, where Stanford had everything to play for and UCLA seemed content to walk away unscathed?

It’s tough to say. Jim Mora’s Bruins have been an exciting team to watch this year, but Stanford’s defense is well-equipped to stop any rushing attack. Runing backs Johnathan Franklin (UCLA) and Stepfan Taylor (Stanford) have been workhorse backs, each rushing for 11 touchdowns, ranking third and fourth in the conference in rushing, and chipping in in the passing game. And while freshman quarterback Brett Hundley has been outstanding for UCLA, I have a feeling he’s going to wind up very frustrated on Friday night.

My pick: Stanford -8.5

CUSA Championship (Tulsa, OK)

Saturday, 12PM: Central Florida @ Tulsa (-1.5)

These are the two best teams in Conference USA, but that isn’t saying too much. The SRS puts UCF as 3.1 points better than Tulsa, so this game should be a push in Oklahoma. The Golden Hurricane handed UCF their only conference loss two weeks ago in Tulsa, but UCF has the more impressive resume this year losing to just Ohio State and Missouri out of conference. Tulsa lost to Iowa State and Arkansas, and just lost on the road to SMU. So why am I going with the Golden Hurricane? Because Tulsa has gone 16-2 at home the last three years, with the only losses coming to teams ranked, at the time, 8th in the country (Oklahoma State and Houston, in 2011). The final score two weeks ago was misleading, as Tulsa outgained UCF by well over 100 yards rushing, average 1.9 more yards per pass, and won the first downs battle, 26-14.

My pick: Tulsa -1.5

SEC Championship (Atlanta, GA)
Saturday, 4PM: Georgia vs. Alabama (-7.0)

Aaron Murray looks to lead Georgia over Alabama.

Stop me if you’ve heard this one: the SRS perfectly predicted this spread. Alabama is ranked 2nd in the SRS with a 64.8 rating, while Georgia is 7th at 57.8, giving us a 7-point spread on a neutral field. The line might surprise people who sense the teams are trending in opposite directions. Georgia has scored an SRS of at least 66 in their last 4 games against FBS opponents — a 17-9 win over Florida, a 37-10 thrashing of Ole Miss, a 38-0 win in Auburn and a 42-10 victory over Georgia Tech. Meanwhile, it’s easy to remember that in Alabama’s last two games against non-FCS, non-Auburn teams, the Crimson Tide looked very vulnerable against both Texas A&M and LSU. But keep in mind: Alabama actually scored a 61.7 in the SRS against the Tigers and a 53 against the Aggies, and had a string of excellent performances before that (and they crushed Auburn last week 49-0, after jumping out to a 42-0 halftime lead). Looked mortal against elite teams is essentially the biggest knock on Alabama right now.

But I’ll take the points between two heavyweights, especially since Alabama’s biggest weakness (pass defense) coincides with Georgia’s biggest strength. Quarterback Aaron Muray leads the SEC in yards per attempt, while Tavarres King (20.7) and Marlon Brown (17.4) rank 1st and 3rd in the conference in yards per reception. Alabama isn’t bad at anything, but they rank 2nd in rushing yards and rushing yards per attempt in the SEC (trailing the Johnny Manziel-led Aggies in both metrics) and A.J. McCarron leads a very efficient passing attack. The Crimson Tide easily lead the conference in rushing yards allowed, rushing yards per carry allowed, and rushing touchdowns allowed, essentially making their pass defense the weak link by default. Manziel and LSU’s Zach Mettenberger had some success against the Crimson Tide, and Murray brings another difficult challenge.

My pick: Georgia +7

The Four Dollar Game ACC Championship (Charlotte, NC)

Saturday, 8PM: Georgia Tech vs. Florida State (-14.0)

Believe it or not, the SRS says Florida State (53.0) is only 13 points better than Georgia Tech (40.0). This game has letdown potential for the Seminoles, who lost their biggest game of the year last weekend at home against Florida, but I don’t think even the Yellow Jackets want to be here. FSU has no trouble embarrassing bad teams, and I suspect they will run up the score in this one. Even if it may seem like their birthright, just getting to the Orange Bowl should be more than enough motivation for the Seminoles to come prepared to stomp out Georgia Tech. Incredibly, FSU hasn’t been to the Orange Bowl since 2005, and the Seminoles haven’t won an Orange Bowl since 1995 — when Danny Kanell was their quarterback. [1]Note: I refuse to acknowledge the fact that these games took place during the first week of January the following year.

My pick: FSU -14

Big Ten Championship (Indianapolis, IN)

Saturday, 8:17PM: Wisconsin vs. Nebraska (-3.0)

Interest in this game is only slightly higher than for the ACC title game, as neither fan base seems all that excited to attend this game. Wisconsin has 5 losses, compared to just 2 for Nebraska, so why is this spread so close? Because not much separates these teams. The SRS ranks them 26th and 27th, with Nebraska being 0.6 points better on a neutral field. Wisconsin lost to Ohio State, Michigan State, Penn State and Nebraska, but consider: in those four games, Wisconsin was outscored by less than one point per game in regulation (75-72). And while Nebraska went 3-1 against Ohio State, MSU, PSU and Wisconsin, the Cornhuskers were outscored 137-128 in those four games. These are two very even teams. Wisconsin got up 20-3 against Nebraska in Lincoln in September, but lost 30-27. For the second year in a row, I think Wisconsin avenges a regular season loss in the process of winning the Big 10 Championship. In any event, in a game this close, take the points.

My pick: Wisconsin +3

References

References
1 Note: I refuse to acknowledge the fact that these games took place during the first week of January the following year.
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