Question about ACCCC

Jacket4Life13

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Okay, lets say that VT beats Virginia this weekend and Miami beats NCState. That means us, VT, and Miami will all be 5-3 in the conference.

How does that tiebreaker work, because we beat Miami, Miami beat VT, and VT beat us.

Anyone know?
 
Division record.

VT would be 4-1, UM 3-2, GT 2-3


Three (or More) Team Tie
(Once tie has been reduced to two teams, the two-team tiebreaker format is used)

1. Combined head-to-head record among the tied teams

2. Records of the tied teams within the division.

3. Head-to-head competition vs. the team within the division with the best overall (divisional or conference) record, and proceeding through the division. Multiple ties within the division will be broken first to last.

4. Overall record for non-divisional teams.

5. Combined record versus all common non-divisional teams.

6. Record versus common non-divisional with the best overall Conference (divisional) and non-divisional record and proceeding through the other common non-divisional teams based on their order of finish within the division.

7. The tied team with the highest ranking in the Bowl Championship Series Standings following the conclusion of regular season games shall be the divisional representative in the ACC Championship Game, unless the second of the tied teams is ranked within five-or-fewer places of the highest ranked tied team. In this case, the head-to-head results of the top two ranked tied teams shall determine the representative in the ACC Championship Game.

8. The representative shall be chosen by a draw.
 
Yep, the race is down to two each in both divisions (I think).

BC or FSU (BC controls their own destiny)
VT or GT (VT controls their own destiny)

Hopefully, UVa will man up and earn themselves a bowl game. Maybe even the DC bowl against Navy. UVa getting to 6-6 could help that bowl immensely.
 
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