T
Tennesseeirish
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What happens if LSU, Cal, Ohio State, Boston College, and South Florida all go undefeated?? These teams are all in BCS conferences!! Who would play in the National Championship Game?
LSU vs Cal, done deal----- the media has made that choice already....College football is equally about wins as it is about media exposure and hype.... I hate to say it, but ESPN has a large say in who gets the shots.... if they all are undefeated, which I don't think will happen.... their will be a playoff in 2010
I REALLY hope this does happen!!! I hope all 5 go undefeated and win their conference. College Football is THE ONLY sport in America where there is not a Playoff.. WE NEED a playoff... 16 teams!!
if they all are undefeated, which I don't think will happen.... their will be a playoff in 2010
Point 2-- We don't need a playoff system at all. We already have a playoff. It is a 12 week playoff where teams are eliminated every week.
Point 1--the person who started this thread left off Missouri.
Point 2-- We don't need a playoff system at all. We already have a playoff. It is a 12 week playoff where teams are eliminated every week.
IMO, teams with two, three, and four losses should not be playing for the NC. You want mediocre teams playing for the NC? Go watch the NFL.
Wrong. A playoff determines a unanimous winner because the winners of matchups play each other progressively until there is one team standing. That is anything but the case now, when the majority of teams haven't EVER played each other. Thus, when there are multiple no-loss (or one-loss) teams, there is no way to declare a clear-cut winner. Thus, yearly chaos.
I think the only problem with a playoff is that with the BCS system now, its all about the top two teams who get in, in case of a 4 team playoff, most of the time the fifth and sixth ranked team will complain they didnt get in. No matter how many teams you have, somebody will always complain. The BCS isnt the best system in my opinion, i think a playoff would be better, but the complaining wont stop just because of a playoff system.
What happens if LSU, Cal, Ohio State, Boston College, and South Florida all go undefeated?? These teams are all in BCS conferences!! Who would play in the National Championship Game?
The practical problems of a playoff are numerous.
1. We have 6 BCS conferences which are composed of the heavy hitters in the NCAA. Their prime interest is themselves, not the good of the game. There would be no way that any of them would agree to a playoff without their champs getting automatic bids. If you think they would not require this, you are dreaming. But as soon as these 6 conferences get their champs automatic bids, we are talking 3 and 4 loss teams playing for the NC. UGH!
2. Where will the games be played? If higher seeded teams are going to host multiple games, how are they going to get large numbers of people to travel three or four weekends in a row to different cities? For example, if ND were to play in Austin, in Tallahassee, and in Eugene three weeks in a row, how many folks would be able to swing that? And don't tell me that they do it for the NCAA basketball tournament. Not only are the first and second round sites for basketball typically smaller, they don't sell out most of those games.
3. If you are talking about neutral sites, are we just going to do away with the bowl games? The bowls have done a lot of good for the game. But if we were to go the neutral site deal, that makes the problem described in point #2 above even worse--there will be no home crowd to even start with.
So if we are talking, say, Dallas, Nashville, and Pasadena, how are you going to get 80,000-100,000 to travel to three cities like that three weekends in a row?
Well, do it like they do it in the pros. In football, basketball, hockey, and baseball. The team with the best record (or tie breakers) gets to play at home. That gives tremendous financial incentive for teams to go undefeated. (And for pride of playing in front of their fans). The only difference may be revenue sharing, all of the gate and TV monies should go into a pool and pay out (but with each home team taking home a slightly larger slice to keep the financial incentive). Work?
Also, you would have to remove the current conferences and realign stuff to give every team a shot. I dunno how you would do that with so many teams, though.
Why in the hell would CFB ever want to emulate the pros, be it football, baseball, basketball or hockey? The St. Louis Cardinals won the 2006 World Series after going 82-79 during the regular season. With apologies to any St. Louis Cardinal fans who might inhabit this board, the Cards did not belong in the World Series last year.
That's exactly why the postseason is great! Fight, kick, claw your way to the postseason and who knows what will happen. It makes for great watching, and eliminates the notion of leaving an undefeated team out in the cold because of media bias. It's great to see someone who made mistakes during the regular season get to show they are legit, or to allow a team that started un-ranked develop until they are a real contender. As for baseball, the only reason you could ever argue the Cards didn't deserve to win was because Detroit pretty much handed them that series. If you win and you didn't cheat than you deserved it, period.
I'd love to see an 8-team playoff. Good for competition, good for tv/money, and it would make the end of the season so much more interesting.
Why in the hell would CFB ever want to emulate the pros, be it football, baseball, basketball or hockey? The St. Louis Cardinals won the 2006 World Series after going 82-79 during the regular season. With apologies to any St. Louis Cardinal fans who might inhabit this board, the Cards did not belong in the World Series last year.
You are overstating it to call it yearly chaos. More often than not, the NC is not disputed. But even if it were, yearly chaos is preferable to a system where a multiple loss team is playing for the NC. If we want 3 and 4 loss teams playing for the NC, why have a regular season at all?
The regular season is the one thing that distinguishes CFB from every other major sport. The regular season actually means something. There are no wild card (read: mediocre) teams playing for the champoinship. There are no teams which lost 25% of their games playing for the NC. Those are all good things, IMO.
78 - I'll admit that no one is really exploding with excitement when an 8-8 team is in the playoffs in the nfl. Thing is, there would be no 8-8 teams in a CFB playoff, it would be all undefeated, 1-loss to a good opponent, and maaaaaybe a 2 loss in there (if both teams were very high caliber). Nobody at the end of the year in the top 8 is an average team. It's feasible that someone with a super-cupcake schedule sneaks in but then they would get crushed anyway if they weren't a true contender. The NFL has teams like that in the playoffs because there is so much parity, and that frankly doesn't exist in college ball.
Who said anything about the ACC champ? If they would be outside the top8 (in an 8-team playoff) then they would play in some random bowl game. I don't think that the ACC had anyone in the top 8, so they simply wouldn't be represented. Yes UT beat USuCk in 2006.... but where was Boise State? Personally I think either team would have beaten them like the worlds biggest drum, but no one really knows considering they ended the season undefeated. A playoff ends that problem. I can't think of another sport that has such an asinine ending to the season as CFB. Maybe it's the skewed domer perspective since all I personally care about is the NC, so conference championships are meaningless in my mind.
Fact is a lot of the time the two best teams do indeed meet at the BCS championship. But it should be EVERY time, and the best way to determine that is a playoff.
What happens if LSU, Cal, Ohio State, Boston College, and South Florida all go undefeated?? These teams are all in BCS conferences!! Who would play in the National Championship Game?
I want to see the NC determined on the field and the best way to accomplish that is to have a 4 team playoff. Polls wouldn't be released until the first week of October. Thus the regular season still matters. You lose games your out of the conversation. I remember in '01 or '02 a two loss Colorado team was arguably the best team in the nation behind Miami.
Miami ended up stomping Nebraska and one can only wonder what would have happened if Colorado (the team that beat Nebraska by more than 30) would have played Miami. Yeah Oregon beat them badly in the Fiesta Bowl but who knows where the Buffs minds were at.
That is just one example. Bottom line I prefer NC's to be handled on the field.