Monday Morning Quarterback: The polls, clarifying assorted polls, region projections update (Updated Tuesday with Maxwell rankings)
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MMQB: The Polls
Top 5
Division I
1.Warner Robins
They had the week off, and the gap ahead of No. 2, a new team this week, has narrowed. Alas if things remain the status quo region-standings-wise, and they both win in the postseason, Central Georgiaās No. 1 and No. 2 wouldnāt play until the state championship. And if that happens, please let the Dome ā itās still āthe Domeā, or āthe domeā ā not be available.
2. Jones County
For all the talk of the Greyhoundsā offense, itās worth noting that theyāre eighth in Class 5A in points allowed. Their defense is pretty underrated, and special teams are pretty good. Those final two elements close the gap with No. 1.
3. Mary Persons
And there is logic in the argument ā OK, the top four teams are all pretty close. The Bulldog defense has improved. Donāt look now, but theyāre third in 4A in points allowed, and theyāve two ranked 3A teams, two 6A teams (albeit 2-7 teams). Desmond Williams is among the top dozen defensive players in Central Georgia.
4. Northside
For those wondering why the Eagles remain ranked anywhere, note that their losses are to teams ranked No. 1 and No. 9/10 in 6A, No. 3 and 5 in 5A, and No. 4 in 3A. To think the Eagles couldnāt hammer nearly every other area school is absurd. And Lee County is the only team of the five that doesnāt want Northside again. As per the Maxwell Ratings, Northside had ā entering last week ā the seventh-toughest schedule in the state, and lost to those teams by 35 points. They may be a fringe Class 6A top-10 team, but theyāre certainly among the top seven in Central Georgia.
5. Veterans
The game with Thomas County Central went as expected, so the Warhawks still get the nod over Upson-Lee, but the gap narrows. Only two non-region wins came over assured playoff teams, but theyāre finding ways to win, albeit ugly at times, not surprising for a team in transition. A rematch with Upson-Lee ā which can happen only in our heads or computers ā sure would be fun.
Top 10
Division II (3A-2A-A-other)
1. Peach County
Lather, rinse, repeat. Sorry, but thereās no suspense in this region until the Trojans play Westside and itās a close game. Peach County has won 19 straight region games, and by an average of 45 this year, 47.5 last year and 32.3 in 2016. Make it: arrive, drill, depart.
2. Westside
The slobbering for some before they got on the bus after smacking Pike County by 33. See, this is the rare chance Westside has had to play Peach County at the end of the season with both undefeated in region play. And they have matching overall records. The Seminoles have allowed 29 points in the last five games.
3. Dublin
Dublin can pull the double-dip it hasnāt pulled since 2011 with a win over Washington County: a 9-win regular season and the outright region championship. And itās been since 2007 that Dublin went undefeated in region, a sign of the toughness of the regions.
4. Dodge County
Again, Dodge County has the final week off and watches others beat up on each other for region seedings. Last year, those battles were for second, because the Indians had clinched. They can finish second with a Dublin win or a not-by-enough Washington County win.
5. Washington County
The Golden Hawks sure didnāt take Northeast for granted, returning the opening kickoff for a touchdown and keeping the foot on the gas to actually give the Raiders their worst loss of the season. The House of Pain will be home to some electricity when Dublin visits on Friday. The Irish have won four straight in the series, and took a 27-26 road win in 2006.
6. Mount de Sales
The Cavs has āclinchedā its second GHSA playoff spot as earlier as any of its Macon brethren have done, and Mount de Sales has been impressively one of the areaās most consistent teams. Worth noting: The Cavs are getting into an offensive groove. Granted, the region is low-heavy, but you still have to execute to score.
7. Tattnall
Man, that 55-0 loss to Dublin and 45-27 humbling by Trinity Christian-Sharpsburg a week later sure do seem like an awful long time ago, huh? The Trojans have won five straight.
8. John Milledge
The Trojans may have gotten that nice and close wakeup call win just in time to refocus a little for the postseason. The only other undefeated Class AAA GISA team is Tiftarea.
10. Hancock Central
Boy, they were happy in Sparta all weekend. A long bout of joy happens when you break a 21-game losing streak against a former perennial Class A power, Lincoln County. The win clinches the Bulldogsā most regular-season wins since 6-3-1 in 2006, so they may have some burly momentum heading into the postseason.
MMQB: Around Central Georgia
Clarity to come to Class A, finally ā¦ well, almost
Thereās a lot of sweating going on for three Central Georgia Class A teams, and suspense for seeding for a few others.
Reminder: Region champs get moved up in the rankings, which can knock down teams with actually higher ranking numbers.
Region 7-A is one of five with subdivisions, and thus play-ins this week. The regions with a public and private school playing each other for the championship make things interesting, with that region champ moving up and higher-rated teams sliding down. Of the other four, three have public-vs.-private region championships.
Information on assorted region tiebreakers is apparently kept under wraps for a day or two, but Mount de Sales does have a shot at a first-round bye if it beats Hancock Central, public schools win region titles and there are no private-school upsets. Oddly, if No. 23 Stratford can upset No. 9 Aquinas ā¦
Tattnall is likely to need some public-school help, too, if it loses to Greene County.
But from Region 7, Mount de Sales and Hancock Central are in.
Dooly County locked itself up a spot with the win over Manchester, and is No. 15. Macon County gave itself at least a little margin of error with its upset of Brookstone to jump to No. 20. Now itās ranked higher by two spots than Manchester, so their battle in Montezuma is big.
Taylor County is No. 23 Public is on the bubble, and visits No. 28 Private Pacelli, which is out of the playoff race. The Vikings will be pulling for their Macon County buddies while hoping to avoid the upset themselves.
Nevertheless, thereāll be coaches checking scores Friday night before they reach the fieldhouse.
Clarifying the polls and stats
In addition to the above Central Georgia polls, submitted after research and thought, there are two primary state human polls, and a computer poll.
The Georgia Sports Writers Association and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution are the human polls.
The GSWA poll has media folks from all over the state involved, so thereās a broad viewpoint, and it includes teams getting votes, which is good.
The AJC is less broad, but has some resources throughout the state.
Both utilize eyes and ears and news and context and usually a heaping helping of common sense.
And then there is the Maxwell Ratings, which are solely computer based. Thatās the one that, for example, moved Mary Persons up to No. 1 two weeks ago in Class 4A.
The Maxwell process is numbers-heavy and pretty complicated. A team can have a negative rating, soooo it ātells usā that, say, No. 44 Dodge County would beat No. 377 Wilkinson County (with a minus 5.13) by 65 points.
If you list the Central Georgia teams based on the ranking, itās pretty close to what any objective observer would come up with. Mary Persons might be the best team in 4A, but is Mary Persons the sixth best team in the state? With a 90th strength of schedule?
Is Warner Robins the seventh best team? Are the Bulldogs and Demons 11 points better than Jones County?
The Maxwell Ratings are very interesting and offer a view worth discussing, but in reality, the two human polls offer more credibility because of what they take into account that a computer program doesnāt.
Worth noting: The Georgia High School Football Daily Newsletter ā very much worth your time if you put time into high school football: email for the daily 4 a.m. email delivery ā offers a weekly composite of the polls for each GHSA class, with the GSWA, AJC, GPB, Score Atlanta, MaxPreps, and Maxwell Ratings. Any team that makes the top 10 gets points.
MaxPreps uses a human poll for its national top 25, and it āranksā every team in the nation ā which it does in several sports. It doesnāt know the difference between associations ā like the GHSA and GISA ā or private or public schools.
For example, Maxpreps ranked Tiftarea, a GISA school, 76th in the state, ahead of the likes of Eagleās Landing Christian, Vidalia, Baldwin, Swainsboro, and, well, Tucker, which is a composite No. 5 Class 6A team.
More iffy are MaxPreps stats rankings, which can be extraordinarily misleading because of the number of coaches ā and itās a large number, certainly in Central Georgia - who donāt make sure up-to-date stats are input in a timely manner, if at all, to the website.
For whatever cracks there are in any of the pollsā process, there is no schmoozing or click-baiting or connections involved in the rankings. All polls are debatable, but theyāre pretty close to consensus.
Still undefeated
Two remain: Mary Persons and John Milledge.
Still looking
Twiggs County and Rutland appear destined for the nightmare record.
Region projections, Week 2
Little has changed since last weekās first projections of region playoff teams, other than Northside solidified No. 3 in 1-6A with its heartbreaking loss to Valdosta.
Sure, weāll find out soon enough, but what fun is not analyzing and guessing? So, The Sports Report is predicting outright the Central Georgia GHSA region playoff teams and seeds. An asterisk indicates that the position has been officially determined.
Region 1-6A: 3. Northside*
Region 1-5A: 1. Warner Robins; 2. Veterans
Region 4-5A: 2. Jones County
Region 4-3A: 1. Peach County; 2. Westside
Region 3-AA: 1. Dublin; 2. Dodge County; 3. Washington County; 4. Northeast
Region 5-AA: None. Lamar County (3-6, 1-4) was, as predicted, eliminated last week. The Trojans would lose any tiebreaker ā which is unlikely ā with Spencer.
Region 8-AA: 4. Maybe Monticello. Monticello (4-5, 3-3) looks to slide in at No. 4, having beaten Banks County, which has the same record. Unless the region has some funky tiebreaker other than head-to-head. The Hurricanes visit Social Circle (4-5, 1-5), which has a minus 32 point differential to minus 40 for Monticello. Banks County hosts Elbert County (6-3, 4-2), so itās still TBA.
Region 4-A: Taylor County and Macon County are now on the rankings fringe at 24 and 25, a few spots behind No. 19 Dooly County. Dooly County hosts Manchester (5-3, 3-2/18 Public), Macon County welcomes Brookstone (6-2, 4-1/14 Private), and Marion County (8-0, 5-0/2 Public) is at Taylor County in the crossovers. Thatās OK news for the Bobcats, tolerable news for the Bulldogs, not good news at all for the Vikings.
Region 7-A: As per the latest rankings, Mount de Sales is in, and Tattnall and Stratford are on the fringe. The Trojans can get the automatic bid by winning the region title, and Stratford basically needs to win its crossover game. Hancock Central is pretty safe at No. 16.
(422 schools listed, overall ranking and rating included, and what last weekās ranking was is to the right) The entire statewide list is here
7. Mary Persons 81.36 6
8. Warner Robins 78.52 7
24. Peach County 67.30 29
25. Jones County 67.27 22
34. Northside 62.47 32
39. Dublin 60.67 42
42. Dodge County 58.88 44
48. Washington Co. 56.54 49
51. Veterans 56.12 52
54. Upson-Lee 55.09 61
78. Howard 49.33 88
81. Baldwin 48.85 80
95. West Laurens 47.21 91
97. Westside 46.98 105
115. Perry 43.54 121
152. Houston County 36.33 157
195. Southwest 29.35 205
214. Northeast 28.54 209
220. Bleckley County 26.50 227
221. Central 26.24 221