I know that the article is "just for fun" but I've said it before and I'll say it again. A tournament is the dumbest possible way to select a national champion. MLB, NHL, and NBA playoffs are all reasonable because they incorporate a series structure that eliminates the potential for a fluke "any given Sunday" win by an inferior team. The NCAA tournament, College Football Playoff, and NFL Playoffs are affronts to the integrity of their respective sports and serve as nothing more than profit and hype generators.
I think that the search for a "perfect" system that always produces a "consensus" national champion is an exercise in futility. I say kick it back to the conferences and bowl commissioners to organize their own agreements. If the Rose Bowl wants to sign contracts with the Big 10 and the Pac 12, they should do so. If the Sugar Bowl wants to bring in the SEC and Big 12 champions, great for them. It would make the bowl games mean something again. If the AP thinks Notre Dame is #1 at the end of the season but the USA Today says they're #3, so be it.So what would you suggest for college football? Can't be BCS because that has the same problems. Any given Saturday some terrible team can ruin a much better teams national championship.
I think that the search for a "perfect" system that always produces a "consensus" national champion is an exercise in futility. I say kick it back to the conferences and bowl commissioners to organize their own agreements. If the Rose Bowl wants to sign contracts with the Big 10 and the Pac 12, they should do so. If the Sugar Bowl wants to bring in the SEC and Big 12 champions, great for them. It would make the bowl games mean something again. If the AP thinks Notre Dame is #1 at the end of the season but the USA Today says they're #3, so be it.
I also think "head-to-head" is highly overrated. Consider this scenario: Alabama is 12-1 with a 20-point loss to mediocre Kentucky. Stanford enters the NCG at 13-0. Stanford loses the NCG 23-20 in double overtime. Both teams finish 13-1. Alabama is crowned the national champion because they won the NCG, but who really had the better season? Stanford had one loss in overtime to an outstanding team. Alabama had a blowout loss to a mediocre team. If I'm an AP voter, Stanford is getting my #1.
I'm not opposed to a tournament per se, but I think the "prize" for a tournament win should be the tournament championship, not the "national championship."
Yeah, except the determination of who gets INTO the playoffs in the first place is done by a selection committee that's even more bullshit than any poll or computer.A playoff is the only way to crown a true consensus champion. Determine it on the field, not in computers and arbitrary polls.
Define "better". More enjoyable? Probably. More fair? Sure, unless you're the #5 team.Honest question for Wizard.. Do u think the CFP won't be better than the BCS? C'mon man.
I know that the article is "just for fun" but I've said it before and I'll say it again. A tournament is the dumbest possible way to select a national champion. MLB, NHL, and NBA playoffs are all reasonable because they incorporate a series structure that eliminates the potential for a fluke "any given Sunday" win by an inferior team. The NCAA tournament, College Football Playoff, and NFL Playoffs are affronts to the integrity of their respective sports and serve as nothing more than profit and hype generators.
This.Playoffs were made for breaking ties when, on rare occasion, the reg. season couldn't do its job. The only reason we have now thrown out the much larger sample size, and more legit findings, of the regular season is because of dollars, legitimacy or consensus have absolutely nothing to do with it.
You can't ban the AP from publishing a poll and building a trophy, nor can you ban Alabama from "claiming" a national championship if they're #1 in said poll. We can argue about whether that claim is legitimate or not, but if a school wants to brag about the time they were #1 in the final Bleacher Report Fan Voting, so be it. I do agree that these polls should not be any "official" program of the NCAA.If youre going to do this, then just say screw the national championship as an award in general then. Teams will claim championships based off whatever poll they are number one (I.e Alabama) and if two people are "winning" a championship every year, it devalues the award for when there actually is a consensus #1.
This.
You can't ban the AP from publishing a poll and building a trophy, nor can you ban Alabama from "claiming" a national championship if they're #1 in said poll. We can argue about whether that claim is legitimate or not, but if a school wants to brag about the time they were #1 in the final Bleacher Report Fan Voting, so be it. I do agree that these polls should not be any "official" program of the NCAA.
I wouldn't, that's exactly what I'm saying. The flaw is thinking of "the NCAA" as a league. It isn't.Allright. So if you were the NCAA commissioner, what kind of system would you employ to determine a national champion?
Playoffs were made for breaking ties when, on rare occasion, the reg. season couldn't do its job. The only reason we have now thrown out the much larger sample size, and more legit findings, of the regular season is because of dollars, legitimacy or consensus have absolutely nothing to do with it.
This.
"Larger sample size" doesn't require every opponent to play every other opponent. Every criticism of using the regular season to determine a champion is an equally valid criticism of using the regular season to determine who makes the playoffs. Let's go to the other extreme. Expand D1A to 128 teams and have a 7-round tournament. Winner takes all. You better not suck or your season is only one game long.So, a 119 game regular season for CFB?? Actually, should probably be 238 games, so there is a home and away schedule. That's over 4 games a week throughout the entire year.
"Larger sample size" doesn't require every opponent to play every other opponent. Every criticism of using the regular season to determine a champion is an equally valid criticism of using the regular season to determine who makes the playoffs. Let's go to the other extreme. Expand D1A to 128 teams and have a 7-round tournament. Winner takes all. You better not suck or your season is only one game long.
I wouldn't, that's exactly what I'm saying. The flaw is thinking of "the NCAA" as a league. It isn't.
We should just have all of the captains of every top 25 team play a big game of Duck, Duck, Goose...
So what the hell are the players playing for then? A sense of pride and a warm feeling inside?
Oddly, when all this started, that's exactly what they played for.
Yeah, except the determination of who gets INTO the playoffs in the first place is done by a selection committee that's even more bullshit than any poll or computer.
Define "better". More enjoyable? Probably. More fair? Sure, unless you're the #5 team.
To be clear, my preferred system is neither the BCS nor the CFP.
No. There is no capital-N capital-C National Championship.So, hypothetically:
ND schedules a normal load for a 12 game schedule, and OSU counters with a B-10 slate, and Iowa St/Kentucky/Western Michigan/Army. ND goes 11-1; OSU goes 12-0.
OSU wins National Championship based on regular season records?
That'd be nice, wouldn't it?So what the hell are the players playing for then? A sense of pride and a warm feeling inside?
With over 100 teams?The ncaa should adopt the nfl playoff model.
No, I'd rather there not be a "them" at all.So you would rather have them screw up the decision between who is number 1 and 2.
I know that the article is "just for fun" but I've said it before and I'll say it again. A tournament is the dumbest possible way to select a national champion. MLB, NHL, and NBA playoffs are all reasonable because they incorporate a series structure that eliminates the potential for a fluke "any given Sunday" win by an inferior team. The NCAA tournament, College Football Playoff, and NFL Playoffs are affronts to the integrity of their respective sports and serve as nothing more than profit and hype generators.
I wouldn't, that's exactly what I'm saying. The flaw is thinking of "the NCAA" as a league. It isn't.
What system would you employ?
No. There is no capital-N capital-C National Championship.
That'd be nice, wouldn't it?
With over 100 teams?
No, I'd rather there not be a "them" at all.