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Bleed S & G;1329716; said:$$$$$$$
Look at it like this.. the Big 10 gets 5-8 teams in bowl games a year..
With a playoff - the Big 10 gets 2-3 teams (16 team playoff)..
anything more than 4, maybe 6, and the rest of the bowls become a lot more irrelevant imo.methomps;1329885; said:Just because you move to a playoff to determine a NC doesn't mean you have to scrap the rest of the bowl system.
jwinslow;1329888; said:anything more than 4, maybe 6, and the rest of the bowls become a lot more irrelevant imo.
Then why did Boise State beat them on a neutral field in the 2007 Fiesta Bowl?
mross34;1329676; said:In 2006, an 10-1 Wisconsin team didn't even sniff the title game after battling through a strong Big 10. In 2005, a 10-1 Penn State had the same story. In 2004, an undefeated Auburn squad couldn't get higher than 3rd in the BCS rankings until after the title game because everyone severely underrated the SEC until 2006. That same year a 10-1 Texas squad didn't enter title talk once because of a loss less than halfway through the season. In 2003, 1 loss USC didn't make the title game even though it was ranked in the top slot in both polls.
MililaniBuckeye;1329751; said:Texas beats Oklahoma, Texas Tech beats Texas, and Oklahoma beats Texas Tech (if that happens this Saturday). Now, how do you determine which team is better? This stuff happens all the time in college football (which is one of the great things about it).
The fairest (not the "perfect", the "fairest") way is to rack-and-stack the top 16 teams in the country based on their performance throughout the season and then let them decide the champion on the field.
OHSportsFan9;1329770; said:On the money side, if a Big10 team got a chance to play in 2 or 3 extra games, pretty sure that = more money.
jwinslow;1329802; said:amen bmac.You mean like my last post, where I asked whether LSU deserved to be in a playoff? They're ranked 18th and will likely make the top-16 after attrition. LSU is not a title-worthy team.
tugger5000;1329815; said:As a fan, I think I would favor a playoff... I wouldn't mind seeing more CFB, but not sure if it would diminish the regular season games or not. I don't watch the NFL anymore and only pay attention to the playoffs and the Superbowl.
MililaniBuckeye;1329835; said:Then why did Boise State beat them on a neutral field in the 2007 Fiesta Bowl?
First of all, you would honestly trash the Rose Bowl?billmac91;1329894; said:This makes ZERO sense to me. The BCS bowls don't diminish Bowl Games. The title game doesn't diminsih bowl games. Why would fans of Akron, Michigan State, Notre Dame, Cincinnati, etc., be any less inclined to go to their teams bowl game b/c of a playoff?
I can see an argument for the BCS bowls going away, and being replaced with playoff games. I'd say the advertising dollars would be just as high and the stadiums would sell just as well.
They won't.Sure, you could say "oh, well, we'll just incorporate the bowls into a playoff." If the bowls agree. Remember, they're separate, non-profit entities. They might agree and they might not.
well said.And either way it wouldn't work. There's a reason that all but the championship games in I-AA, II, and III are played on home fields. Fans won't travel twice. Like you said: they want a vacation in December or January. A vacation.
I thought that the whole point of a playoff was to settle it on the field?mross34;1329850; said:Because they played a better game. Doesn't unequivocally mean they were the better team.
HailToMichigan;1330758; said:First of all, you would honestly trash the Rose Bowl?
You're missing the point on the diminishing of bowl games. The Rose Bowl wouldn't disappear, but it would forever be relegated to the third-best of the Big Ten and Pac-10. And it would trickle down. The Citrus would get the fourth best. And so on.
Sure, you could say "oh, well, we'll just incorporate the bowls into a playoff." If the bowls agree. Remember, they're separate, non-profit entities. They might agree and they might not. And either way it wouldn't work. There's a reason that all but the championship games in I-AA, II, and III are played on home fields. Fans won't travel twice. Like you said: they want a vacation in December or January. A vacation.
Would the naming rights to a playoff really be worth more than five separate naming rights? I imagine you can squeeze more out of five companies than one. And why would TV pay more for a playoff than for the BCS? I don't think there's any basis for an assumption like that.billmac91;1330795; said:Correct. I wouldn't have much of a problem trashing the current BCS Bowls for a playoff. In regards to this year, if Oregon State wins the Pac 10 and Michigan State beats PSU, I'd be very disappointed in playing Oregon State. I'd rather go to the Outback bowl and play an SEC team. I'm a younger guy, so truthfully, the history doesn't grab me like someone who grew up with the Big 10 - Pac 10 tie-in.
There would be no impact at all on lower tier bowls. If the current BCS Bowls agree to become part of the playoff, fantastic. Money-wise, losing the BCS Bowls in a trade for a playoffs, will make as much if not more money for the Universities/Presidents/etc. Again, the naming rights alone on a Playoff system would be astronomic. Add in TV rights, especially come renewal time, and you're making more than the current system. I can see less money being made at the playoff games to the hosting cities economy (Pasadena, NO, Miami, Tempe, etc.) In overall dollars, a playoff makes more. And if you really want to reward the top rated teams as an incentive, let them host the first round.
Mike Tirico did bring up a good point today in regards to ESPN getting television rights to all of the BCS games. ESPN/ABC had rights to the Rose Bowl, while Fox had rights to the rest. Fox and ESPN would not sit together at a table to discuss any playoff format. ESPN can at least bring all of the parties together now that they have rights to all of the BCS games.
HailToMichigan;1330824; said:Would the naming rights to a playoff really be worth more than five separate naming rights? I imagine you can squeeze more out of five companies than one. And why would TV pay more for a playoff than for the BCS? I don't think there's any basis for an assumption like that.
And again: forget about "hosting cities" - they'd be foolish to play them anywhere but at home fields until the championship.