Do you care about the lockout?
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And I disagree strongly that college hoops has just as many meaningless games. 3-2 Purdue vs. 3-2 Iowa means absolutely nothing in CFB. Completely meaningless. 10-6 Purdue vs 10-6 Iowa has meaning in hoops. Every hoops game has varying degrees of meaning. Big nuetral site wins in November can make or break you. Teams fighting to stay off the bubble. To teams playing for #1 seed. There are no throw away games. Every team starts the season with the opportunity to win the championship.
Half the teams (or more) in CFB play an entire season of exhibitions. There are like 60 teams that can go undefeated and it means nothing. Even for the BCS teams, CFB is dimishing returns. Less and less of the games hold meaning as the season progresses. By the last few weeks, you have like 2 or 3 games that matter for anything. And the postseason has ONE.
CFB, has by far, the largest percentage of meaningless games of any sport. By adding even a small playoff, you increase the percentage of menaingful games probably ten fold, by not shunning 60 teams before they even kick off, and keeping all others alive deeper into the season.Comment
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Do you know why NY pays attention to the Nation Championship and nothing else? It means something.
NY goes apeshit for the Big East tournament and March Madness.Comment
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You are looking at this from a NY perspective. NY is a pro town, always has been, always will. And its also a baseball first town. Nobody will ever care about CFB in NY. Even the Knicks and St Johns when they are good are neck and neck with the NFL. Its not a big football city in comparison to others. Most Giants/Jets season ticket holders are from Jersey and Connecticut. Its Yankees/Mets first all year long.Comment
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agreed a playoff system would be amazing but the NCAA doesn't seem to have any plans to change the current system.Comment
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You are looking at this from a NY perspective. NY is a pro town, always has been, always will. And its also a baseball first town. Nobody will ever care about CFB in NY. Even the Knicks and St Johns when they are good are neck and neck with the NFL. Its not a big football city in comparison to others. Most Giants/Jets season ticket holders are from Jersey and Connecticut. Its Yankees/Mets first all year long.
When I first moved away from Jersey, I was shocked at the sports culture change. Baseball gets no play here. None. At all. CFB is number one. They talk it year round, 24/7. Recruiting, spring games, shit puts me to sleep. But they eat it up. NFL is an afterthought. NBA doesn't exist. College hoops is #2 to CFB. Its 'different' in the south.
CFB owns rural america. Its NY/Chicago/big cities that are pro towns and likely always will be.
Miami is a bit different though, everyone is fairweather...and unlike small college towns, the entire South Florida (WPB, Broward, and Dade) accept the University of Miami as their own, but the Dolphins, at the end of the day, are the premier story, even when nothing is happening with them.Comment
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I've slowly lost interest in the NFL as a whole. I still follow the Lions pretty closely but I don't watch other teams as much unless the match up is a really good one.
Like some others have posted I really don't care who gets what between owners and players. Both make way too much money anyways and they have forgotten that it is the fans who make this even possible.
Also, college football with a playoff system would definitely trump the NFL.Comment
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^I feel the opposite. I cannot not watch an NFL game that is live unless its like a meaningless Thursday nighter towards the end of the season.Comment
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My life revolves around this lockout. All of you can fuck off.So, metaphorically speaking, our physiology basically has the universe mapped out and you're thinking it needs to be taught addition & subtraction.
-Alan AragonComment
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Nope, football is probably my fourth favorite sport to watch. Even if there isn't a season I still have the NHL and the EPL to watch in the fall/winter.
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