Auburn, Missouri Move Up in Week 14 BCS Standings

By Kevin Kelley -

The Auburn Tigers have moved up to fourth and the Missouri Tigers to fifth in the Week 14 BCS Standings.

Auburn, which was off this weekend, moved up to 4th from 6th. Missouri, which won at Ole Miss 24-10, moved up three places from 8th. The Tigers jumped over Clemson.

Both Auburn and Missouri benefited from losses in the Top 5 this weekend. Baylor fell from 4th to 9th after being crushed by then #10 Oklahoma State 49-17.  Oregon dropped eight spots to 13th after being thumped by unranked Arizona 42-16.

Other teams that made big moves up in the Week 14 BCS standings include Oklahoma State (10th to 7th), Arizona State (17th to 12th), Northern Illinois (16th to 14th), Wisconsin (19th to 15th), and LSU (22nd to 17th).

NIU’s move up was big because they jumped Fresno State, now 16th, for an at-large berth to a BCS bowl.

Listed below are the complete Week 14 rankings.

BCS Poll (Complete) Coaches Poll (Complete)
  1. Alabama
  2. Florida State
  3. Ohio State
  4. Auburn
  5. Missouri
  6. Clemson
  7. Oklahoma State
  8. Stanford
  9. Baylor
  10. South Carolina
  11. Michigan State
  12. Arizona State
  13. Oregon
  14. Northern Illinois
  15. Wisconsin
  16. Fresno State
  17. LSU
  18. Oklahoma
  19. UCF
  20. Louisville
  21. Texas A&M
  22. UCLA
  23. USC
  24. Duke
  25. Notre Dame
  1. Alabama
  2. Florida State
  3. Ohio State
  4. Clemson
  5. Auburn
  6. Missouri
  7. Oklahoma State
  8. Baylor
  9. South Carolina
  10. Stanford
  11. Michigan State
  12. Oregon
  13. Fresno State
  14. Wisconsin
  15. LSU
  16. Louisville
  17. Oklahoma
  18. Arizona State
  19. UCF
  20. Northern Illinois
  21. Texas A&M
  22. UCLA
  23. USC
  24. Duke
  25. Cincinnati
Harris Poll (Complete) AP Poll (Complete)
  1. Alabama
  2. Florida State
  3. Ohio State
  4. Clemson
  5. Auburn
  6. Missouri
  7. Oklahoma State
  8. Stanford
  9. Baylor
  10. South Carolina
  11. Michigan State
  12. Oregon
  13. Fresno State
  14. LSU
  15. Wisconsin
  16. Arizona State
  17. Northern Illinois
  18. Louisville
  19. Oklahoma
  20. UCF
  21. Texas A&M
  22. UCLA
  23. USC
  24. Duke
  25. Notre Dame
  1. Alabama
  2. Florida State
  3. Ohio State
  4. Auburn
  5. Missouri
  6. Clemson
  7. Oklahoma State
  8. Stanford
  9. Baylor
  10. South Carolina
  11. Michigan State
  12. Oregon
  13. Arizona State
  14. Wisconsin
  15. LSU
  16. Fresno State
  17. UCF
  18. Northern Illinois
  19. Texas A&M
  20. Oklahoma
  21. Louisville
  22. UCLA
  23. USC
  24. Duke
  25. Notre Dame

Comments (4)

If the season ended today, these are the BCS Bowl selections:

BCS Championship Game: Alabama (BCS#1) vs. Florida State (BCS #2)

Sugar Bowl: Missouri (SEC) vs. Fresno State (MWC, best Non AQ, and higher ranked than an AQ Champ and #16 BCS)

Rose Bowl: Stanford (PAC-12) vs. Ohio State (Big Ten)

Orange Bowl: Clemson (ACC) vs. Baylor (Big 12)

Fiesta Bowl: Oklahoma State (Big 12) vs. Central Florida (American Athletic)

What is wrong with 1A college football —ten simple fixes to problems-
1. Assumptions about power conferences and an inherent bias in the AQ/Mid-major set-up. Every conference can be a power conference if recruiting, money, name prestige were evened out. Solution—16 team playoff with EVERY conference winner (10) and six (6) at-large spots. Florida Atlantic wins the SunBelt? Good, they play Alabama in playoff week 1. SEC strong? Good, give them three playoff spots (1 champ, 2 at-large)
2. Pre-season rankings–why??! How about rankings begin in week 3!
3. Teams setting their own out of conference schedule. In what other athletic venue (with as few games as gridiron football) do you see a team create it’s schedule for 25% of the fixtures? Solution? NCAA schedules one out of conference road, one out of conference home game for each team
4. Lack of a minor league for the NFL. Using NCAA football as a farm system. Solution? NFL should do the ethical thing and create a two-tiered system or the NFL2/NFLDL. Not only because the exploitation of the college athlete has gotten out of hand, but because listening to press conferences, you can tell some of these guys don’t belong in a classroom.
5. Wacky rankings. Oregon and Baylor were just blown out. Oregon’s opponent wasn’t ranked. Stanford has lost two games to teams that were unranked at the time. Sorry, you are no longer top-12 material. Solution—punish bad losses even more than nailbiting losses.
6. Too many bowls. Solution—Semi-final games for the right to win a bowl. A four team field for the Holiday bowl, for example.
7. (Also connected to (6.)) Too long a layoff between championship week and the heart of the bowl season. Three weekends off? That’s ridiculous. See number 6 for the solution.
8. Conference inequity (make a conf. championship game mandatory)
9. Game hosting bias–enough with teams having 8 home games and going on the road only four times for mandatory conference games. 7 home games max. 8 allowed if hosting a championship game. In what other sport do you see such a thing?
10. Start season earlier and end later. I’m bored in January and need more football…..

There is something wrong when a team runs the table but can’t contend for a national title. Doesn’t matter how cupcake the schedule is–you win out, you need a place at the table.