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AAC Standings & Scoreboard plus Week 11 Schedule for Nov 10th

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May 29, 2001
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UCF 52, Temple 40
Memphis 59, ECU 41
Tulane 41, cows 15
Cincinnati 42, Navy 0
SMU 45, Houston 31
Tulsa 49, UCONN 19

EAST
UCF 5-0 (8-0)
Temple 4-1 (5-4)*
Cinci 4-1 (8-1)
cow u 3-2 (7-2)
ECU 0-5 (2-6)
UCONN 0-5 (1-8)

WEST
Houston 4-1 (7-2)
SMU 3-2 (4-5)
Tulane 3-2 (4-5)
Memphis 2-3 (5-4)
Navy 1-4 (2-7)
Tulsa 1-4 (2-7)

*Temple owns tiebreaker vs Cinci with head-to-head victory
 
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Several games were on 6 day kickoff time hold so those 3 games will be scheduled for today:
Navy at UCF
cow u at Cinci
Temple at Houston

Noon: Tulsa at Memphis ESPNU
Noon: SMU at UCONN ESPN3
4 pm: ECU at Tulane ESPNews
 
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Kickoffs/Networks announced for these 3:
Noon: Navy at UCF, ESPN2
7 pm: cow u at Cinci, ESPNU
7 pm: Temple at Houston, CBS Sports
 
so I usually never root for them but now that they have a 2nd conference loss I wouldn't mind USF finding a way to give Cinci a 2nd conference loss then losing the following week at Temple.

What's the AAC's tiebreaker rules? If we lose to Cincy, that would leave UCF, Temple and Cincy all with 1 conf loss but a round robin set of losses to each other. Is it like C-USA where it goes to the higher ranked team? If so we should still be good.
 
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What's the AAC's tiebreaker rules? If we lose to Cincy, that would leave UCF, Temple and Cincy all with 1 conf loss but a round robin set of losses to each other. Is it like C-USA where it goes to the higher ranked team? If so we should still be good.
True. I forgot about that. We can still lose to Cincinnati and get in. We are really in the drivers seat right now
 
What's the AAC's tiebreaker rules? If we lose to Cincy, that would leave UCF, Temple and Cincy all with 1 conf loss but a round robin set of losses to each other. Is it like C-USA where it goes to the higher ranked team? If so we should still be good.

Divisional Champions
The divisional champions will be the teams from each division with the highest winning percentage in all conference games – both divisional and non-divisional.

In the event of a two-team tie within a division, the head-to-head winner between the tied teams will be the championship game representative.

In the event of a multiple-team tie within a division, the following tiebreaker criteria will be used, in order:
· Head-to-head record against the tied teams
· Divisional winning percentage
· Record against each team in the divisional standings, in descending order
· Record against common non-divisional conference opponents
· Overall winning percentage
· Most recent College Football Playoff Selection Committee rankings (provided the highest-ranked team won its final game)
· Average of selected computer rankings

If, at any point during the tiebreaker process, the criteria eliminates all but two teams, the two remaining teams would revert to the two-team tiebreaking procedure to determine the representative.

Championship Site
The site of the American Athletic Conference Football Championship will be the home venue of the divisional champion (as determined above) with the best record in conference games.

If the two divisional champions have the same conference record, then the regular-season head-to-head winner between the divisional champions would host the championship.

If the divisional champions have the same conference record and did not play in the regular season, then the team with the better overall regular-season winning percentage would host the championship.

If that does not produce an advantage, then the team that was ranked higher in the most recent College Football Playoff Selection Committee rankings would be the host, provided that team won its final regular-season game. The next tiebreaker would be an average of selected computer rankings.
 
Divisional Champions
The divisional champions will be the teams from each division with the highest winning percentage in all conference games – both divisional and non-divisional.

In the event of a two-team tie within a division, the head-to-head winner between the tied teams will be the championship game representative.

In the event of a multiple-team tie within a division, the following tiebreaker criteria will be used, in order:
· Head-to-head record against the tied teams
· Divisional winning percentage
· Record against each team in the divisional standings, in descending order
· Record against common non-divisional conference opponents
· Overall winning percentage
· Most recent College Football Playoff Selection Committee rankings (provided the highest-ranked team won its final game)
· Average of selected computer rankings

If, at any point during the tiebreaker process, the criteria eliminates all but two teams, the two remaining teams would revert to the two-team tiebreaking procedure to determine the representative.

Championship Site
The site of the American Athletic Conference Football Championship will be the home venue of the divisional champion (as determined above) with the best record in conference games.

If the two divisional champions have the same conference record, then the regular-season head-to-head winner between the divisional champions would host the championship.

If the divisional champions have the same conference record and did not play in the regular season, then the team with the better overall regular-season winning percentage would host the championship.

If that does not produce an advantage, then the team that was ranked higher in the most recent College Football Playoff Selection Committee rankings would be the host, provided that team won its final regular-season game. The next tiebreaker would be an average of selected computer rankings.
Winning in final week is used before overall record. So we’d have to beat USF.
 
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