How Loss to Michigan Alters Ohio State's Playoff Chances


A 22-point loss means the Buckeyes likely face an uphill climb to a bid.

After dominating its schedule heading into Saturday’s regular-season finale against MichiganOhio State’s College Football Playoff hopes took a big setback after a 45–23 loss to the Wolverines.

Michigan (12–0) will remain within the top four once the latest CFP rankings are revealed Tuesday night. Ohio State (11–1) will more than likely drop out of the Playoff spot it’s held over the past month, pending what happens later Saturday—No. 4 TCU (11–0) takes on Iowa State, while No. 6 USC (10–1) hosts Notre Dame.

There are a few slim scenarios remaining for the Buckeyes to earn a bid, but Saturday’s 22-point margin of defeat and the lost opportunity to play in next weekend’s Big Ten championship are working against them.

TCU and USC can still chalk their way into the dance, but if they don’t, I am not really sure Ohio State should sneak its way in a la 2016 (without a division or conference title) after Saturday’s performance. The Buckeyes were outscored 28–3 by Michigan in the second half and were repeatedly gashed for big plays by the Wolverines’ offense.

The circumstances in 2016 were substantially different for Ohio State. It lost a close matchup against eventual division champion Penn State by three points in October and had multiple opportunities to continue to impress the committee.

Michigan was able to beat Ohio State in Columbus for the first time since 2000 and won back-to-back games against its rival for the first time in 22 years—even without injured star running back Blake Corum. With the win, the Wolverines advance to next weekend’s Big Ten title game and will look to lock in their second straight Playoff appearance.

Meanwhile, Clemson's loss to rival South Carolina on Saturday—its second of the season—takes the No. 8 Tigers out of the Playoff running. Still lurking is two-loss LSU, which enters this week’s game with Texas A&M ranked fifth and has a win over Alabama on its résumé. No two-loss team has ever made the College Football Playoff, but the Tigers could potentially do so with a win over No. 1 Georgia in next Saturday’s SEC championship game.

More College Football Coverage:

• Matt Rhule May Be the Hire Nebraska Has Needed
• Ryan Day Criticized After Timid Play-Calling
• Blake Corum Plays Two Carries, Doesn't Return