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Tuesday,
November 6, 2001
Miami
Hurricanes jump to second in BCS polls
Nebraska
still in first after 51-7 whipping of Kansas, Oklahoma trails
with 7.83 points
Associated
Press
MIAMI
Even with a win over lowly Temple, Miami moved into
national title territory in the Bowl Championship Series standings.
The Hurricanes,
sitting third in the rankings for two weeks, rose to second
place ahead of Oklahoma and behind Nebraska
in the latest BCS standings released Monday.
Miami
(7-0) defeated Temple 38-0 on Saturday, and surged to a 1.22-point
advantage over Oklahoma in the five-pronged formula used to
rank teams. The Sooners (8-1) beat Tulsa, 58-0.
Nebraska
(10-0), a 51-7 winner over Kansas, remained first with 2.62
points, followed by Miami at 6.61 points and Oklahoma at 7.83
points. Last week, Miami trailed Oklahoma by just .12 points.
The standings
determine which teams play in the BCS national title
game in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 3. The rankings are based on
a formula that incorporates the AP media and coaches
polls, eight computers, strength of schedule, won-lost record
and bonus points for big wins.
Miami,
ranked No. 1 in the AP media poll and the USA Today/ESPN coaches
poll, jumped past Oklahoma thanks to the computers and a stronger
schedule, which also takes into account results of teams Miami
has already played.
For example,
Miami defeated Florida State earlier this season, and the
Seminoles (6-2) improved to 14th in the BCS standings after
beating Clemson on Saturday.
Tennessee
(6-1) moved up three places to fourth, with Texas (8-1) fifth.
Rounding out the BCS top 10 were Oregon (8-1), Florida
(7-1), Washington (7-1), Washington State (8-1) and Michigan
(6-2).
BYU (9-0),
the only other major college unbeaten team, made the rankings
for the first time, in 13th place.
Nebraskas
2.62-point breakdown was: 2 points for poll average, 1 point
for computer average, 0.92 for strength of schedule, 0 for
won-loss record and a 1.3-bonus point deduction for beating
Oklahoma on Oct. 27.
The bonus
award new this season is based on a sliding
scale from 1.5 points for beating a first-place team down
to .1 for a win over the 15th-place team. The bonus is awarded
after the other elements are calculated.
Miami
(6.61) had 1 point for poll average, 2.83 for computer average,
2.88 for strength of schedule, 0 for won-loss record and a
.1-point deduction for beating Florida State.
Oklahoma
(7.83) had 3.5 for poll average, 3.67 for computer average,
0.76 for strength of schedule, 1 for won-loss record and a
1.1-point deduction for beating the Texas Longhorns on Oct.
6.
Looking
ahead, the schedule seems to favor Miami, which plays four
strong teams to close the season at Boston College
(6-2), home to Syracuse (7-2) and Washington (7-1), and at
Virginia Tech (6-2).
Oklahoma
plays Texas A&M (7-2) at home, and visits Texas Tech (5-3)
and Oklahoma State (2-6) before a likely rematch against Nebraska
in the Big 12 title game.
Nebraska
plays Kansas State (4-4) at home, and visits Colorado (7-2)
before the Big 12 title game.
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