You need a dictionary..... and stop with this thing you've got about redefining the meaning of words.
No they are not facts. Facts by definition are indisputable. Data on the other hand is subject to a variety of interpretations and is subjective.
I'll let 'skygusty' give you definition of "ordinal" and while he's at it maybe he'll d give you the definition of 'arbitrary' and the function and use of such things.
............by the way, of course it's my 'subjective opinion' about Florida State and of course it's hypocrisy. And since that's the case, why on earth would you defend 'subjective opinions' and hypocrisy on one hand and condemn it on the other?
The stated objective of the Playoff Committee was "To select the 4 best teams". You think the method(s) they used resulted in placing the 4 best teams in the playoff in light of the "FACT" one 1 of their "4 best" lost by 39 points while omitting 1 or 2 better teams? And "ranking" Alabama as their 1st seed who lost, Oregon as their 2nd seed who lost, Florida State as their 3rd seed who lost BIG TIME? Hell, the Playoff Committee demonstrated that they can not only NOT select the '4 BEST TEAMS' they can not even seed the 4 they did select correctly.
Settle it on the field of play, my man. [smoke]
Yes, they are facts. You are once again being dishonest, and twisting what I said. It is a FACT that Florida St beat 3 ranked teams. It is a FACT that TCU only beat 2 ranked team.
If you go look up the final committee rankings, 3 of the teams Florida St beat are listed. Only two of the teams TCU beat are listed. That is a "fact." It is "indisputable" that 3 teams Florida St beat are listed in the rankings, and only 2 teams TCU beat are listed.
Here is the problem. You may disagree with whether the teams
deserve that ranking. You are correct that the rankings themselves are subjective. I never said otherwise. The
fact is not whether the rankings are accurate. The
fact is whether the teams simply appeared in the rankings. Just because you misunderstood is not my fault. It's your fault.
To answer the rest of your questions, why don't you read what I
actually write instead of what you
assume I wrote. Let me try to explain it so you will understand.
I agree with you that the playoffs should be based on a qualifying process, rather than by selection. I don't have a problem with that. What I'm saying is, that's a completely separate argument from how the committee performed
within the framework of the selection process. The committee did not decide that there would be a selection process themselves. The
conferences decided there would be a selection process. The committee is just the entity that actually makes the selections. If you want to do away with the selection process entirely, that that is above the committee's heads. If you want the selections process removed, then you argument is with the conference commissioners, not the committee.
The point I'm making is that
within the framework of the selection process, the committee did about as well as they can do. They had a set of criteria, and Alabama, Florida St, Oregon, and Ohio St measured up the best
within that criteria. If you had an actual qualifying process on the field, then yes you are correct that the results may have been different. The problem is, you can't use that to judge the committee's performance, because the idea to have a selection process was already decided before the committee ever sat down.