2016 is shaping up to give the College Football Playoff committee its hardest decisions ever.

Below, a rundown of the postseason picture, based on guesses updated after Rivalry Weekend.

That weekend included an Ohio State win over Michigan that knocked the Wolverines out of the Playoff, but that wasn't enough to secure a Big Ten Championship trip for the Buckeyes. Penn State and Wisconsin will play for the conference title, and how the committee handles this will be fascinating. In year three of the Playoff, we'll finally learn something about exactly how the committee really works.

There's still a chance that conference title weekend could either resolve a dilemma or give us whole new ones, but for now, here's how things might shape up. I'll update this somewhat on Tuesday night, after the committee reveals its new rankings, and then we'll be five days from seeing the real deal on Selection Sunday.

College Football Playoff Fiesta

Dec. 31, Glendale, AZ Clemson Washington Playoff rankings top 4 Peach

Dec. 31, Atlanta Alabama Ohio State Playoff rankings top 4 National Championship

Jan. 9, Tampa Alabama Clemson Fiesta winner vs. Peach winner

Two are obvious. If Bama beats Florida in the SEC Championship, Bama's in (Bama probably doesn't even need to beat Florida, really), and if Clemson beats Virginia Tech in the ACC Championship, Clemson's in.

The Big Ten's representation will teach us a lot about what the committee values. Conference championships are the committee's first stated criteria, but the committee also reserves the right to pick the four teams it thinks are the best, rather than only picking conference champions. So the previous sentence is basically meaningless.

Penn State and Wisconsin have two losses. Ohio State is 11-1. Do you take the conference champ, or do you take an OSU that's also beaten Oklahoma and that would be favored against the conference champ in a rematch? Do you take both the conference champ and OSU?

the conference champ and OSU? No one knows, because this scenario has never happened before. If someone tells you the answers are certain, that person is just making stuff up.

I'm guessing the committee takes OSU, a team that's already No. 2 and just beat No. 3. Is a team that's been No. 2 for three weeks really going to fall to No. 5 because of one weekend of conference title games?

the committee takes OSU, a team that's already No. 2 and just beat No. 3. Is a team that's been No. 2 for three weeks really going to fall to No. 5 because of one weekend of conference title games? Remember the committee's stated goal of selecting the four "best" teams, rather than the four "most deserving" teams. Advanced statistics, raw records, strength of schedule, strength of record, the eyeball test, and whatever else you want to use favor the Buckeyes over the Badgers or Nittany Lions on the season.

PSU's head-to-head win on a blocked field goal complicates things further. If PSU wins the conference in addition to holding a head-to-head over Ohio State, maybe PSU feels like a clear choice and the popular debate moves to Ohio State vs. Washington for the fourth spot.

The Huskies do not have a strong schedule to lean on, but still have a chance to finish as a one-loss Power 5 champ. It would be hard to bump them for a two-loss team or a team that didn't win its league, if you're the committee.

New Year's Six bowls Cotton

Jan. 2, Arlington, TX Western Michigan Penn State At-large Rose

Jan. 2, Pasadena, CA Wisconsin USC Big Ten 1 vs. Pac-12 1 Sugar

Jan. 2, New Orleans Oklahoma Auburn Big 12 1 vs. SEC 1 Orange

Dec. 30, Miami Louisville Michigan ACC vs. Big Ten/SEC/ND

Very few things are certain at this point. That's a big change, compared to most of the season.

Four Big Ten teams are likely to make the New Year's Six. We just have no idea which will go where. I'm picking UW to win the conference, but get jumped for the Playoff. OSU beat Wisconsin and has one fewer loss. That'd make UW the easy choice for the Rose.

With only two losses, Michigan can't fall far. Penn State might seem like a candidate to drop out of New Year's with a third loss, but remember: PSU would still be a division champ with the country's only win over Ohio State (yes, the Big Ten is this year's SEC, a.k.a. the conference whose best teams keep bouncing each other upward in the rankings).

The SEC Sugar bid comes down to a team that lost its most recent game. Auburn lost at Bama, which is more forgivable than the recent deeds by Florida, Tennessee, and Texas A&M. LSU's good, but a scant 7-4.

The Big 12 champ likely takes the other Sugar bid. Oklahoma hosts Oklahoma State next week for that.

The Pac-12 is tricky. If Colorado loses to Washington, that means USC has the country's only win over the Pac-12 champ. USC also beat Colorado head-to-head and hasn't lost since September.

The ACC is also tricky! Louisville was a sure bet, but lost to Houston and an unranked Kentucky as Florida State whooped Florida. However, Louisville annihilated FSU by 43 points in September, and Bama's likely win over Florida would make that win over UF mean less. Let's see where these two rank on Tuesday.

Unbeaten WMU is in the mid-major driver's seat, but here comes Navy. An AAC title win over Temple would give the Midshipmen an undoubtedly superior schedule, albeit with two more losses. The Cotton bid would be delayed six days in order for Navy to play Army, if the committee felt Navy still had a shot to overtake WMU.

Conference selection order, not based on standings Outback

Jan. 2, Tampa Nebraska Florida Big Ten 2-4 vs. SEC 3-8 Citrus

Dec. 31, Orlando Virginia Tech LSU Big Ten 2-4/ACC vs. SEC 2 TaxSlayer

Dec. 31, Jacksonville Miami Tennessee ACC 3-6/Big Ten 5-7 vs. SEC 3-8 Music City

Dec. 30, Nashville Minnesota Arkansas ACC 3-6/Big Ten 5-7 vs. SEC 3-8 Liberty

Dec. 30, Memphis TCU South Carolina Big 12 5 vs. SEC 3-8 Sun

Dec. 30, El Paso, TX Pitt Stanford ACC 3-6 vs. Pac-12 5 Arizona

Dec. 30, Tucson Air Force Idaho MWC vs. Sun Belt Alamo

Dec. 29, San Antonio Oklahoma State Colorado Big 12 2 vs. Pac-12 2 Belk

Dec. 29, Charlotte North Carolina Kentucky ACC 3-6 vs. SEC 3-8 Birmingham

Dec. 29 USF Georgia American vs. SEC 9 Foster Farms

Dec. 28, Santa Clara, CA Indiana Utah Big Ten 5-7 vs. Pac-12 4 Pinstripe

Dec. 28, New York City Georgia Tech Maryland ACC 3-6 vs. Big Ten 5-7 Russell Athletic

Dec. 28, Orlando Florida State West Virginia ACC 2 vs. Big 12 3 Texas

Dec. 28, Houston Kansas State Texas A&M Big 12 4 vs. SEC 3-8 Cactus

Dec. 27, Tempe, AZ Baylor Colorado State* Big 12 6 vs. Pac-12 7 Heart of Dallas

Dec. 27 Army* WKU Big Ten vs. C-USA Holiday

Dec. 27, San Diego Iowa Washington State Big Ten 2-4 vs. Pac-12 3 Military

Dec. 27, Annapolis, MD NC State Temple ACC vs. American Independence

Dec. 26, Shreveport, LA Wake Forest Vanderbilt ACC vs. SEC St. Petersburg

Dec. 26 South Alabama* Houston ACC vs. American Quick Lane

Dec. 26, Detroit, MI Boston College Northwestern ACC vs. Big Ten Hawaii

Dec. 24, Honolulu Southern Miss Hawaii C-USA vs. MWC Dollar General

Dec. 23, Mobile, AL Toledo Troy MAC 1 vs. Sun Belt 2 Armed Forces

Dec. 23, Fort Worth, TX Mississippi State** Navy Big 12 vs. Navy Bahamas

Dec. 23, Nassau Old Dominion* EMU American vs. MAC Potato

Dec. 22, Boise, ID CMU Boise State MAC 2 vs. MWC Poinsettia

Dec. 21, San Diego BYU Wyoming BYU vs. MWC Boca Raton

Dec. 20 Memphis LA Tech American vs. C-USA Miami Beach

Dec. 19 UCF Ohio American vs. MAC Las Vegas

Dec. 17 San Diego State North Texas** MWC 1 vs. Pac-12 6 Camelia

Dec. 17, Montgomery, AL Miami (OH) Arkansas State MAC 3 vs. Sun Belt 3 Cure

Dec. 17, Orlando MTSU* ULL American vs. Sun Belt New Mexico

Dec. 17, Albuquerque UTSA New Mexico C-USA vs. MWC New Orleans

Dec. 17 Appalachian State Tulsa* Sun Belt 1 vs. C-USA * = Filling another conference's spot

** = Here at 5-7, thanks to APR scores

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Ohio State's questionable first down against Michigan