Auburn beat only Miss St., Vanderbilt, and Arkansas in the SEC. Those 3 teams have 2 wins in conference MSU beating Ark and Ark somehow beating Florida in OT. Auburn's other 3 wins are 3-9 Massachusetts, 6-6 Cal, and FCS 6-5 Samford. I'm not sure how they can be considered anything other than a bad team. I mean they aren't Vanderbilt terrible, but they are a bad team.
And if Bama wasn't prepared to play in Auburn, I'm not sure that is a selling point for Bama.
Never said it was a selling point although it does reflect Bama dealing with adversity. I just don't think it has any bearing on how Bama will perform in the playoffs. That same Bama team beat Georgia a week later in the SEC championship.
You've already minimized Michigan's struggle with 5-loss Maryland. The same week that Bama struggled with Auburn Washington needed a game winning field goal to beat their 7-loss rival Washington State. A few games ago, Texas only beat 7-loss TCU by 3 points. None of these teams are elite and even elite teams aren't immune to struggling with a lesser opponent.
The difference is that Alabama struggled at the beginning of the year, and we’re told that it doesn’t matter since it was early in the season, and when they struggled at the end of the year we’re told it was one-off. Alabama is a very good team, don’t get me wrong, but you’re comparing everyone else’s 1 week of struggles to Bama’s 5 and saying it’s the same.
Michigan didn't play anybody with a pulse until Penn State in week 9. Washington's largest margin of victory over its last 9 games was 10 points. That includes games against Arizona State, Stanford and Washington State. That's hardly one week of struggles. Besides TCU, Texas also struggled with Houston and Iowa State.
Bama struggled against Arkansas and Auburn. USF was closer than it should have been but that's because Saban benched Milroe to try out the other QBs. Buchner sucked for most of the 1st half. When Simpson came in late in the 2nd quarter, USF led 3-0. With Simpson, Bama controlled the rest of the game scoring 17 points. If Milroe had played it would have been a blowout.
I think how a top team plays against lesser teams has little bearing on how a top team will do in the playoffs. Bama struggling with Auburn meant little in regard to the Bama/Georgia game except it probably widen the spread a bit.
Struggling with lesser teams often means a team is susceptible to mistakes and poor play that many time shows up against the good teams. And you are right Michigan played a fairly weak schedule, but they also dominated everyone defensively. Take UNLV. Michigan held them to 7 points. The game before and the 4 games after, UNLV scored over 40 points in each of those 5 games. Michigan didn't give up 10 points in a single game until their 6th game of the season.
Washington just barely won all season long. I have no idea if they are any good, because I have no idea how good the Pac 12 is and that includes Oregon. That is why I've said I could make a very good case that Florida State should have been the 2 seed ahead of Washington. I'm not sold on Texas either, so I really have no idea who is going to win that game. Could go either way. Bama barely beat A&M and lost to Texas, I'd say they struggled in those games. You've already talked about USF, but they gave up a whopping 34.9 ppg this year, even with the backup QB's, Bama should have scored more than 17 points.
This is why they play the games, there is a lot of subjectivity in this stuff, but that is also why Florida State should be in the playoff.