With a twelve team playoff, any year we get left out would be considered a failure in my book. A program like Tennessee should be able to finish the regular season in the top 12 fairly regularly IMO
If a coach the level of Neyland, Fulmer, Majors, or Heupel (we hope) were with us constantly, year after year, decade after decade, I think we could reasonably expect 8-4 floors and 12-0 ceilings every year. And the results would probably fall in some kind of bell curve, with 10-2 as the most frequent outcome, 9-3 or 11-1 less frequent, and the 8-4 and 12-0 results as outliers.
So let's just make up some probabilities that sound reasonable:
8-4 - 15% of the time
9-3 - 20%
10-2 - 30%
11-1 - 20%
12-0 - 15%
That means we would go 9-3 or better 85% of the time with this caliber head coach.
And get this: 9-3 is, about half the time, good enough to make the playoffs.
In the history of the CFP (leaving out the covid '20 season because it was so weird), on average two teams with 3 losses have made the top 12 of the CFP final rankings. Some years, as many as four teams made the top 12 with 3 losses, and once five did. Of course, some years 0 did.
And being in the conference widely perceived as hands-down the best makes it VERY likely that any SEC team with 3 losses will be among those included in the CFP top 12. This year is an example: the Vols are the highest ranking team with 4 losses; that's the "SEC" effect.*
In other words, as long as we go 10-2 or better (65% of the time with a great coach), we'll probably make the playoffs. When we go 9-3, we have a 50/50 chance. All totaled, about 75%.
Conclusion: we can expect to be in the playoffs up to seven or eight times out of every 10 years, as long as Josh is as good as we think he is.
Yah, these coming years are gonna be a huge lot of fun. Can't wait.
Go Vols!
* Strongest argument in favor of those who want the SEC to win every bowl and regular season OOC game they play.