The reason why NCAA College Football is a joke
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I hate when people say this.
College Football is the sport where the least amount of games "count".
-Every team in all of the non BCS conf. are playing entire schedules of games that don't "count" for anything, because even if they go unbeaten, they can't win a national title.
-Essentially, as soon as any of the BCS teams lose once, there is a good chance no more of their games will "count".
-Once they lose twice, the remaining schedule is a virtual lock to be meaningless.
-With each week that passes, you have diminishing returns in terms of games that "count", with less and less each week, and by the last few weeks, you are lucky if you get more than two or three games that "count".
College Football is the only sport where you can win every game you play, and win nothing.
College Fooball, "A few games count!"
Originally posted by JTWAnd every year I scream for a four team playoff involving conference champions, which would allow those powerhouse mid-majors a shot at the National Title...but nobody seems to listen. They are too hard up for 8 and 16 team playoffs.
Twelve-team playoff with top six BCS teams playing in the Rose Bowl, the Sugar Bowl, the Orange Bowl, and the Fiesta Bowl depending on conference allegiance. Of course, the bowl left out will be reserved for the NC.
A second-tier bowl (probably Gator or Cotton, but maybe also Capital One, etc.) gets use later. Also, HB/S Ernie "The Elmira Express" Davis won a NC at the Cotton. Y'all should see that movie. "The Express" It's exceptional. . . Or atleast I thought so.
But I digress.
Anyway. Seeding/games:
# 1 team vs # 12 team
# 2 team vs # 11 team
# 3 team vs # 10 team
# 4 team vs # 9 team
# 5 team vs # 8 team
# 6 team vs # 7 team
Top six teams are at home, obviously. Using 2005-2006 final rankings.
# 1 Texas vs # 12 Florida
# 2 USC vs # 11 Notre Dame
# 3 Penn State vs # 10 Alabama
# 4 Ohio State vs # 9 UCLA
# 5 West Virginia # 8 TCU
# 6 LSU vs # 7 Virginia Tech
Let's say the winners are 1 Texas, 4 OSU, 8 TCU, 7 VT, 11 Notre Dame, and 10 Alabama are the winners. (These teams won their bowl games that year and it means we have some conference variety. . . Some of the teams picked as losers also won their games, but we're letting that go for the conference variety angle.)
The top teams' conference allegiances determine the bowls, as aforementioned.
# 1 Texas vs # 11 Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl
# 4 Ohio State vs # 10 Alabama in the Rose Bowl
# 7 Virginia Tech vs # 8 TCU in the Orange Bowl
This is where things get hairy. Let's say # 1 Texas, # 10 'Bama, and # 8 TCU move on, because Texas won the NC in real life and for the sake of variety and the underdog.
Texas gets a bye. In another system, maybe they'd have gotten it earlier. . . say the NFL's system.
Moving right along. . .
# 8 TCU vs # 10 'Bama in the Cotton Bowl
TCU wins for sake of the story. They have homefield advantage, kinda.
# 1 Texas vs # 8 TCU in the National Championship at the Sugar Bowl. Who wins at this point is semantics, I'm just using this to demonstrate my system. It's not perfect, but in defense of the NC being played at the Sugar, besides the fact that the NCAA rotates the championship at each BCS Bowl, it gives us a neutral field in this run-through.
What do you guys think? As aforementioned, it's not perfect, but I think it's unique. I haven't seen anything like it. Perhaps a sixteen-team one would be more realistic, but this leaves-in the incentive of a high ranking :tocktock:, as well as allowing some measure of variety. :DComment
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Originally posted by ARobb21I'd say do it like this, to make things more equal:
#1 vs #6
#2 vs #5
#3 vs #4
#7 vs #12
#8 vs #11
#9 vs #10.
But that's just my opinion.
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I found this on an old site I posted on, covering my area's local sports and such. This is a year old.
Originally posted by retro1530 on BleachercoachesWow, what a year in college football. I picked a Florida-Oklahoma national championship, and although unfairly to Texas, it looks like I have a great chance at being right.
People always ask about when we're going to get a playoff and what not, and I thought about the subject of a playoff. I created a sort of complex playoff, but if you read through it, it's really easy to follow along. I doubt that the NCAA would consider this, but I believe this could challenge "March Madness" in excitement. So here it is; my proposed playoff system.
At first glance after the season, what do you see? You usually pay attention to the top ten teams ranked, while 11-25 don't get as much love. In fact, no one really seems to remember the bottom of the AP Top 25 anymore. My proposed system will change all that. As soon as the regular season ends in the first weekend in December, the final AP Top 25 will come out. The teams ranked in this poll will advance to the FBS playoffs. That's right, no more controversial conference championships. After the final regular season game, the #24 and #25 ranked teams will play in a Wednesday night game to determine who makes the official bracket; kind of like a NCAA tournament play-in game, perhaps? Once that game's over, the real fun begins.
The winner of that game will take on the #9 team in the Top 25. The matchups will be played on the Saturday of the same week of the play-in game and the games will go as follows: #9 vs. #24/25 | #10 vs. #23 | #11 vs. #22 | #12 vs. #21 | #13 vs. #20 | #14 vs. #19 | #15 vs. #18 | #16 vs. #17 | All of these games will be held at current bowl site such as the New Orleans Bowl, Ponsettia Bowl, MPC Computers Bowl, etc. The winners will advance to the next part of the bracket and the losers kiss their championship dreams goodbye.
What happened to the #1 through #8 ranked teams? They all got first round byes. Once the first round ends, the following Saturday the #1 team will take on the winner of the #16/17 matchup; #2 will take on the winner of the #15/18 matchup, and so on. You might be asking, why wouldn't you just re-rank the teams after the first round? Hey, the NCAA basketball tournament doesn't say, "hey we had a 5/12 upset. Why don't we give the #1 seed the #12 team to face instead of the #8?" That would take out the potential bracket games that the NCAA basketball tournament has.
After that, there would be only eight teams. You should know the drill now; the games in this round will be played on the following Saturday and be played at bowl game sites such as the Cotton, Outback, Sugar, and Fiesta Bowls. Then you are at your Final Four teams. These games would be held at the Rose Bowl and the Orange Bowl; as I believe they have the most tradition out of all the BCS bowls.
Finally you have your championship game. Instead of doing what the BCS does now; with two games being held at the site of the Fiesta Bowl or any other BCS bowl, find a neutral site like the Super Bowl does. I believe this system would determine a true national champion.Last edited by Woy; 09-18-2009, 02:21 PM.
^ Shouts to MvP for the sick sig. GFX TEAM BACK
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Originally posted by sappisgodTo me, anything over 8 teams would be overkil.Comment
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Hmm...an interesting idea for sure. On one hand, it does devalue the regular season, but on the other hand, it makes for a very exciting postseason NCAA basketball style where more than just a handful of teams would be involved.Comment
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Originally posted by sappisgodI gotta ask, why does the topic of the BCS (which has always been criticized as flawed because another one-loss team should have an equal chance at the NC [we all remember Miami, Oregon, Texas last year] or due to an undefeated small school not getting a chance [Boise St, Utah, possiby BYU this year]) ALWAYS have some wackjobs who want to implement a 12, 16, 24, 32, some other stupid number playoff?
I always thought the college football season was great, but marred by the fact that teams that actually deserve the right to play for the NC got it taken away by computers and polls. I never heard the argument that say the 18th ranked team last year needed an opportunity to face Florida, or that the winner of the weak ACC conference last year deserved a shot at a title.
To me, anything over 8 teams would be overkill just because people want CFB to be like March Madness or the NFL.....when it isn't. The NFL doesn't have 119 teams. And college basketball's season is so meaningless that trying to make the college football season, quite possibly the best regular season in all of sports, more like that is downright retarded. I'd even be happy with a 4 team playoff.Comment
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