The New BCS playoff takes shape

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  • FirstTimer
    Freeman Error

    • Feb 2009
    • 18729

    The New BCS playoff takes shape

    The BCS commissioners and Presidential Oversight Committee have settled on a rotation of six bowls for the semifinals of the upcoming college football playoff system.


    DENVER -- The BCS commissioners and Presidential Oversight Committee settled on a rotation of six bowls for the semifinals of the upcoming college football playoff system.

    Also, the highest-rated champion from the "Group of Five" conferences -- the Big East, Conference USA, Mountain West, Sun Belt and Mid-American -- will receive an automatic berth in one of the six access bowls.

    Earlier, ESPN reported the six-bowl rotation would be used, as well as an automatic bid awarded for the "Group of Five" conferences.

    On Monday, the BCS commissioners and Presidential Oversight Committee reached an agreement on additional details to implement for college football's postseason.

    The national semifinals will rotate through the six bowl games, setting up two playoff games and four major bowl games each season. The national title game will be bid out each year through a separate process similar to the Super Bowl.

    The six games will include three "contract bowls" and three "host bowls." The spots in the contract bowls are reserved for teams that have deals with those bowls.

    The contract bowls are: Rose (Pac-12 versus Big Ten), Sugar (SEC versus Big 12) and Orange (ACC versus Big Ten, SEC or Notre Dame).

    While a Big Ten or SEC team could be selected to the Orange Bowl, the commissioners have agreed that when the Rose and/or Sugar bowls are hosting the semifinals, the Big Ten or SEC champion will not be placed in the Orange Bowl. Instead, it would have to be placed in one of the three other access bowls to increase the worth of that bowl, sources told ESPN.

    Those remaining three access or "host" bowls still must be determined, but the leading candidates are the Fiesta, Cotton and Chick-fil-A, sources said.

    With the "Group of Five" earning an automatic bid, that will lock up seven of the 12 berths in the six access bowls. The other five berths will be filled with at-large teams chosen, based on their final rankings, by a yet-to-be-formed selection committee.

    Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby wasn't concerned that his league does not have a second contract bowl.

    "I like our opportunities on the open market," Bowlsby said, noting the Big 12 has had at least two teams in the top 12 of the BCS rankings in 11 of the past 14 years.

    The "Group of Five" conferences fought to get automatic access to the six major bowls. It was especially important for the Big East, which has had an automatic berth into the BCS bowls, but in the new system, the conference will not have guaranteed access unless its champion is the top-rated among the "Group of Five."

    "I think that it's great," University of South Florida president Judy Genshaft said.

    Added Big East commissioner Mike Aresco: "This is a better plan for us. We'll work out the revenue. We'll be fine."

    As far as the "Group of Five" not getting the same access or revenue as the "Power Five" leagues (Big Ten, SEC, Pac-12, Big 12 and ACC), Nebraska chancellor Harvey Perlman said the Presidential Oversight Committee unanimously approved it.

    "They did it with a smile on their faces," Perlman said. "They thought it's fair."

    Sources said the group is close to finalizing the revenue distribution deal for the new playoff. The oversight committee gave the commissioners authority to finalize a media rights deal with ESPN. It is projected to be worth about $500 million a year over 12 years, Sports Business Journal reported.

    The SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, ACC and Pac-12 will receive the biggest chunk of the new revenue. Each of those leagues will receive the same base amount of revenue, sources said. The remaining "Group of Five" leagues -- Big East, C-USA, MWC, Sun Belt and MAC -- will split a smaller amount among themselves. How the "Group of Five" will divide that revenue is still to be decided.

    Each conference also will receive additional revenue for the number of teams it places in the national semifinals and six major bowl games. There also will be an academic component, in which 10 percent of each conference's revenue is set aside for academics.

    Schools within each conference that meet the NCAA's APR minimum requirements will divide that revenue within its conference, Perlman said.

    "Today's meeting is a unanimous ratification of what we announced last June in Washington, D.C.," said Virginia Tech president Charles Steger, the chairman of the Presidential Oversight Committee, in a release. "I'm delighted that additional details have been resolved and that everything is on track so fans can enjoy the postseason they've been asking for. College football, with its great regular season, is strong and popular -- it's about to get stronger and more popular."

    Next up for the commissioners is naming the new structure, details of the selection committee, the rotation of the semifinals and determining the site for the first championship game on Jan. 12, 2015.

    In September, sources told ESPN the site of the first title game has been limited to six bowls: Fiesta, Orange, Sugar, Rose, Cotton or Chick-fil-A.
  • Saluki
    Ball So Hard
    • Oct 2008
    • 9445

    #2
    Wait.... so its the national semi finals, national championship and 6 bowls with a mid major vs an at large? Or did I understand that wrong.

    Sent from my HTC myTouch 4g using Tapatalk 2

    Comment

    • FirstTimer
      Freeman Error

      • Feb 2009
      • 18729

      #3
      Originally posted by Saluki
      Wait.... so its the national semi finals, national championship and 6 bowls with a mid major vs an at large? Or did I understand that wrong.

      Sent from my HTC myTouch 4g using Tapatalk 2
      This one.

      Comment

      • St. Francisco
        45-35 Never Forget
        • Feb 2009
        • 4753

        #4
        Originally posted by Saluki
        Wait.... so its the national semi finals, national championship and 6 bowls with a mid major vs an at large? Or did I understand that wrong.

        Sent from my HTC myTouch 4g using Tapatalk 2
        There will be seven major bowls. The national championship will be bid out yearly just like the Super Bowl. Then there will be a group of six other bowls. Two of those bowls will play host to the semi-finals, the other four will essentially be the new BCS bowls, featuring those teams who didn't make the playoffs. The non-BCS conferences (which now apparently includes the Big East) will have one AQ spot, whichever conf. champ ranks the highest at season's end. The other spots will be BCS conference champs and at-large teams.

        Comment

        • Saluki
          Ball So Hard
          • Oct 2008
          • 9445

          #5
          Originally posted by St. Francisco
          There will be seven major bowls. The national championship will be bid out yearly just like the Super Bowl. Then there will be a group of six other bowls. Two of those bowls will play host to the semi-finals, the other four will essentially be the new BCS bowls, featuring those teams who didn't make the playoffs. The non-BCS conferences (which now apparently includes the Big East) will have one AQ spot, whichever conf. champ ranks the highest at season's end. The other spots will be BCS conference champs and at-large teams.
          That very adequately and concisely answered my question.

          Sent from my HTC myTouch 4g using Tapatalk 2

          Comment

          • Jayrock
            mini MJ
            • Apr 2012
            • 1828

            #6
            So right now this could look like

            Semi-final 1: Alabama vs. Kansas State
            Semi-final 2: Notre Dame vs. Oregon

            Rose Bowl: Nebraska vs. USC
            Sugar Bowl: LSU vs. Oklahoma
            Orange Bowl: Florida State vs. Georgia

            Chick-fil-A Bowl, Fiesta Bowl, Cotton Bowl would have some combo of:

            Florida, Texas A&M, Louisville, USCe, Clemson, Stanford

            If I am understanding correctly

            Comment

            • Saluki
              Ball So Hard
              • Oct 2008
              • 9445

              #7
              Missing non bcs team

              Sent from my HTC myTouch 4g using Tapatalk 2

              Comment

              • Jayrock
                mini MJ
                • Apr 2012
                • 1828

                #8
                Originally posted by Saluki
                Missing non bcs team

                Sent from my HTC myTouch 4g using Tapatalk 2
                Louisville...

                Comment

                • Warner2BruceTD
                  2011 Poster Of The Year
                  • Mar 2009
                  • 26142

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Jayrock
                  So right now this could look like

                  Semi-final 1: Alabama vs. Kansas State
                  Semi-final 2: Notre Dame vs. Oregon

                  Rose Bowl: Nebraska vs. USC
                  Sugar Bowl: LSU vs. Oklahoma
                  Orange Bowl: Florida State vs. Georgia

                  Chick-fil-A Bowl, Fiesta Bowl, Cotton Bowl would have some combo of:

                  Florida, Texas A&M, Louisville, USCe, Clemson, Stanford

                  If I am understanding correctly
                  No no no, you are confused.

                  The two semi final games are bowl games that rotate year to year.

                  It's twelve teams total playing six bowl games, two of which are playoff games.

                  The national championship is not a bowl game and is bid on like the Super Bowl by the six bowl locations. There is no rotation.

                  Comment

                  • NAHSTE
                    Probably owns the site
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 22233

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Jayrock
                    So right now this could look like

                    Semi-final 1: Alabama vs. Kansas State
                    Semi-final 2: Notre Dame vs. Oregon

                    Rose Bowl: Nebraska vs. USC
                    Sugar Bowl: LSU vs. Oklahoma
                    Orange Bowl: Florida State vs. Georgia

                    Chick-fil-A Bowl, Fiesta Bowl, Cotton Bowl would have some combo of:

                    Florida, Texas A&M, Louisville, USCe, Clemson, Stanford

                    If I am understanding correctly
                    Originally posted by Warner2BruceTD
                    No no no, you are confused.

                    The two semi final games are bowl games that rotate year to year.

                    It's twelve teams total playing six bowl games, two of which are playoff games.

                    The national championship is not a bowl game and is bid on like the Super Bowl by the six bowl locations. There is no rotation.
                    What warner said. Also there is a stipulation that says when a conference's contracted bowl (ie the Rose for the B10/P12, or the Sugar for the B12/SEC) is the host site of a semi-final, the team that receives the auto bid for that conference (assuming its not in one of the semi finals anyway) has to play in the 2nd tier bowl games.

                    So let's say Alabama is in one of the semis this year, hosted by the Sugar, and Notre Dame/Oregon is in the other, hosted by the Rose, that would mean the 2nd SEC representative (say, Georgia) is looking at a best case scenario of Chick-fil-A/Fiesta/Cotton and are prohibited from landing in the Orange. Ditto that for the Big Ten champ, who I believe would not be permitted to go to the Orange. This could get pretty weird certain years.

                    Comment

                    • Jayrock
                      mini MJ
                      • Apr 2012
                      • 1828

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Warner2BruceTD
                      It's twelve teams total playing six bowl games, two of which are playoff games.
                      Ahhh... so it's like the old BCS Championship that rotated bowls?

                      Gotcha

                      Comment

                      • FirstTimer
                        Freeman Error

                        • Feb 2009
                        • 18729

                        #12
                        Originally posted by NAHSTE
                        What warner said. Also there is a stipulation that says when a conference's contracted bowl (ie the Rose for the B10/P10, or the Sugar for the B12/SEC) is the host site of a semi-final, the team that receives the auto bid for that conference (assuming its not in one of the semi finals anyway) has to play in the 2nd tier bowl games.

                        So let's say Alabama is in one of the semis this year, hosted by the Sugar, and Notre Dame/Oregon is in the other, hosted by the Rose, that would mean the 2nd SEC representative (say, Georgia) is looking at a best case scenario of Chick-fil-A/Fiesta/Cotton and are prohibited from landing in the Orange. Ditto that for the Big Ten champ, who I believe would not be permitted to go to the Orange. This could get pretty weird certain years.
                        Which could be pretty cool.

                        Comment

                        • EmpireWF
                          Giants in the Super Bowl
                          • Mar 2009
                          • 24082

                          #13
                          ESPN bought the TV rights for the playoffs between 2014 and 2026.


                          Comment

                          • Bmore
                            The True Free-Man
                            • Oct 2008
                            • 6256

                            #14
                            go figure...


                            Comment

                            • NAHSTE
                              Probably owns the site
                              • Feb 2009
                              • 22233

                              #15
                              Best possible scenario, college football is the one sport ESPN covers better than its competition. Anything to keep it away from the awful FOX production is a good thing.

                              Comment

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