LSU in 2007 got bumped from 7 to 2.
Right, but that's not because they won their CCG, it's because everyone else ahead of them lost. There were no 1 loss teams left, and they were the best 2 loss team, with both losses in overtime. Had they not had a CCG, they still would have been 2nd.
College football has been this way every since I started watching. Early wins move you up more than late wins. Late losses move you down more than early losses. So win a big game early, and then don't play anybody that can beat you late, and you'll be in the top #2.
The only way I could see a CCG helping a team is if that team is #3, and they are going to play #2 or #1 in the CCG. It doesn't help the conference get a team in the NCG, because without the CCG, the top 2 team would already be in the NCG. But it helped the team that's #3 be able to jump the team that is #2 or #1. But what sucks is if this game is a rematch.
If Ohio State and Michigan were in separate divisions, 2006 would have done this. If in 2006, Ohio State had lost to Michigan in a CCG, we'd likely have stayed home, where Florida would have played Michigan in the NCG. Fair? Maybe, that's what happens in sports. But it doesn't help you as a team.
I'm not saying I do or don't want a CCG, but I'm just saying it hurt the conference when trying to get teams into a NCG. If you want to argue that it helps teams win bowl games, then fine. That's opinion, and you can't really prove that. People want to blame 2006 and 2007 on long layoffs. We have won bowl games before. It isn't the layoff. Don't blame the layoff, blame the coaching staff/team. What's what loses you bowl games. Or congratulate the other coaching staff/team, because they did a better job. Now, having the bowl game in the home state of the team you are going to go play...that's a reason why it may be tougher to win.
I feel like I have heard quite a few people express not wanting a playoff. Doesn't a CCG hurt the regular season just like a playoff would? Why does a team that has 3 losses get a chance to play an undefeated team and go to a BCS game? Especially when sometimes this game is a re-match? Texas proved in the regular season they were the best Big 12 team. Why did they have to prove it again? Maybe if the teams have already played, then you don't have a conference championship? Or how about you keep the Big Ten at 11 teams, get the NCAA to allow the Big Ten to play 13 games, and play 10 conference games and 3 non-conference games. To me, that would be the best solution. I'd love to do it as the Pac-10 does. Play everybody. Non-conference games, save the big one every year, suck. 3 is plenty. Play your crap team, play your great team, then play an okay team. Then play 10 conference games. 13 games is fine...teams that have to go to CCG play 13 anyway.