Thought u might think it is interesting - i did not create this - i found it on blue and gold
http://www.petitiononline.com/ENDBCS/
http://www.petitiononline.com/ENDBCS/
I dont intend on being rude but could u explain yRip Rap said:While I do support ending the BCS, I will not support playoffs.
irishgo8 said:I dont intend on being rude but could u explain y
I don't, eeer won't, buy that for a minute or a dollar. There is a big difference in between having and not having the opportunity.Vince Young said:You can use the existing BCS formula to set the seeds for an 8-team tournament, but let's look at this year's matchups. Here's the seeds: #1 USC, #2 Oklahoma, #3 Auburn, #4 Texas, #5 Utah, #6 Virginia Tech, #7 Michigan, #8 Pittsburgh.
To get to the title game USC would have to beat a 7-4 Pittsburgh team and then either Texas or Utah, while Auburn would have to beat a tough Virginia Tech and an even tougher Oklahoma. Why? Because USC got seeded #1 and Auburn got seeded #3, so USC gets an easier road than Auburn.
The result? The same Auburn fans who are screaming that they were "left out" this year would be screaming about the lower seed screwing them over, and they'd be making all the same arguments: we're undefeated, we dominated everyone we played, we won a tougher conference, blah, blah, blah. Even if Auburn got to the title game and lost outright to USC, we'd still hear Tigers fans whining all through the offseason... as well as all the same sportswriters and ESPN hosts who think Auburn should've been #1 or #2 this year. "Would Auburn have been so tired in the title game if their first round opponent had been Pittsburgh instead of Virginia Tech? The Tigers got screwed this year by a bunch of computers."
All a playoff does is re-shape the argument. Well, that, plus destroying decades of tradition and greatly weakening the importance of every single regular season game. In the end, you get a longer season, more chances for unpaid student-athletes to get a career-ending injury, and a diminished regular season, all just to get the exact same results we had this year: USC winning the title and Auburn whining to anyone who will listen.
How, exactly, can this be called "progress"?
Svoboda said:I don't, eeer won't, buy that for a minute or a dollar. There is a big difference in between having and not having the opportunity.
In order to be the National Chamion, you have to take on and defeat all comers. You'd have to beat every team you faced regardless of the seeding you are given. This is what makes the NCAA basketball tourney so great.
I think the complaint, or at least the complaint I've always seen is that teams are simply not given the opportunity. Also, just my opinion, but I think you'd have to have a 16 team playoff, or maybe a setup similar to the NFL to get the separation of teams and/or byes for the top teams.
I think the BCS can be beneficial if used in conjunction with another tool to decide a true National Championship.
Svoboda said:In order to be the National Chamion, you have to take on and defeat all comers. You'd have to beat every team you faced regardless of the seeding you are given. This is what makes the NCAA basketball tourney so great.
Svoboda said:I don't, eeer won't, buy that for a minute or a dollar. There is a big difference in between having and not having the opportunity.
In order to be the National Chamion, you have to take on and defeat all comers. You'd have to beat every team you faced regardless of the seeding you are given. This is what makes the NCAA basketball tourney so great.
I think the complaint, or at least the complaint I've always seen is that teams are simply not given the opportunity. Also, just my opinion, but I think you'd have to have a 16 team playoff, or maybe a setup similar to the NFL to get the separation of teams and/or byes for the top teams.
I think the BCS can be beneficial if used in conjunction with another tool to decide a true National Championship.

Vince Young said:The top 2 teams played for the title this year, and if Auburn wanted to be taken more seriously, well, maybe they shouldn't have scheduled Louisiana Monroe, Louisiana Tech and The Citadel (Division I-AA) for their non-conference games.
Drunk Mick said:I didn't know there was anyone left (except conference commissioners) that opposed a playoff.![]()
Vince Young said:Yes, but in the NCAA basketball tourney, the difference between a 1-seed and a 3-seed is marginal at best: instead of playing 16-18 Hofstra, you play 19-15 McNeese State instead. In an 8-team football playoff this year, the difference between a 1-seed versus a 3-seed is playing Pittsburgh or playing Virginia Tech. That makes a difference, and you can't tell me that Auburn fans wouldn't complain. And you can't tell me that the jackasses on ESPN wouldn't complain either.
I just will not buy into the idea that a playoff is a magical cure-all solution. I also will not buy into the idea that the BCS is broken. The top 2 teams played for the title this year, and if Auburn wanted to be taken more seriously, well, maybe they shouldn't have scheduled Louisiana Monroe, Louisiana Tech and The Citadel (Division I-AA) for their non-conference games.
I also don't believe the system failed last year either. If USC wanted to be taken seriously, they should've beaten unranked Cal. And the only reason we had a split title was because the sportswriters saw a chance to invent a controversy by voting for USC and then writing about themselves in the third person.
Tradition was squashed when the Rose Bowl wasn't the Pac 10 champ vs the Big 10 champ. It just doesn't feel right any other way, so I think tradition was lost when the BCS came into play.Rip Rap said:Lots of us still oppose playoffs, but I don't think the conference commissioners do. The university presidents, bowl commissioners, many of the coaches, lots of the players' families, those who favor the game's tradition, and everybody who ever graduated and could care less about college football are the ones who oppose the playoffs. And that's a lot of people. That's why there isn't going to be a playoff.
Svoboda said:Tradition was squashed when the Rose Bowl wasn't the Pac 10 champ vs the Big 10 champ. It just doesn't feel right any other way, so I think tradition was lost when the BCS came into play.
Svoboda said:Tradition was squashed when the Rose Bowl wasn't the Pac 10 champ vs the Big 10 champ. It just doesn't feel right any other way, so I think tradition was lost when the BCS came into play.