I can but I don't matter. The committee doesn't seem to be concerned about schedule difficulty. Otherwise you wouldn't be rated where you are. SOS is either used as a criteria or it isn't. And from what the CFP committee has shown us, they use it in certain situations and don't in others. It doesn't seem to be impacting the CFP ranking of Texas, Indiana or Miaimi. I just want the committee to send a message that encourages good OOC scheduling...at least to a certain extent.
But let's be real. When the season starts, (or even way before that time in regards to OOC scheduling) teams can only control how they play against the teams assigned by the conference (which they don't have much control over) and their OOC opponents (which they have 100% control over).. But if SOS is going to be a metric, at the end of the season, teams are somewhat at the mercy of how their well or poorly their opponents performed that season.
In your case, your rival up north and the skunkweasels screwed your SOS. You guys at least made the effort by scheduling Michigan OOC. Aggie being as good as they this year should help your schedule a hell of a lot more than OU or Michigan.
Miami gets some of the same credit for scheduling Florida. They didn't know they'd be playing a Florida team that was a shadow of its former self.
Penn State scheduled West Virginia which may not be the same as Michigan or Florida, but still not bad.
It looks like Indiana did not make an effort to upgrade their OOC. It was reported they even paid $1million to get out of a home and home with Louisville which would have improved things some because I think they'd have beaten Louisville.
Good thing is all will get to validate the committee's placement.
and PSU's Kent State game was a reschedule impacted by covid and other schedule changes. That wasn't supposed be the cupcake it was. Not that they would have ever challenged, but the 56-0 route with backups for half the game is not the normal schedule.