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Buckeyeskickbuttocks;1835239; said:What difference does seed make? I probably undercut the value of seeding more than most, but.. really.. who cares what seed you are? This is exaggerated in your hypo by including the bowl structure. So, Ohio State gets to wear Scarlet in the Cotton Bowl instead of White? Big fuckin deal.
Mili, a couple things...MililaniBuckeye;1835780; said:You're a lawyer? Seriously? And you can't fathom the value of seeding position? You know, playing a #16 seed vice a #9 seed, or getting to play the first round of playoffs at home vice on the road (if the system doesn't use bowls for the first-round). Here's an easy, black-and-white clear-cut example:
If we didn't lose at Wisconsin, we'd likely remained at #1 since we won out. Thus, we would play the #16 team (at home if system doesn't use bowls for first-round games), and would play the lowest remaining seeds throughout. With our loss, now we're #6 in the BCS rankings, and while we'd still play at home for the first-round game, we're now playing the #11 seed, and would most likely have to face higher-seeded opponents as we progress. Say all the highest seeds win their first-round games. If we were #1, we'd play #8 in the semi-finals. If we were #6, we'd play #3 in the semi-finals. And so forth. The road through the playoffs is much harder due to the loss at Wiscy.
So, your argument that a loss would be meaningless since we would still make the playoffs is as weak as the Michigan secondary.
I agree, the current system gives some degree of reward to superior late-season play as opposed to superior early-season play. My point is, the advent of a playoff would dramatically enhance this preference for superior late-season play. If you don't particularly care about this factor, it's not a reason for preference for one championship system over another. If you do prefer that late-season play not be further prioritized over early-season play, it is a reason to dislike proposed playoff implementation.matttank;1835732; said:...the current system does reward who is playing the best at the end of the year, because teams who lose early have an advantage in the human polls over teams who lose late.
You don't "know" the answer to that with or without a playoff. This goes, to some extent, to the point about the impossibility of determining a "true" champion from among 120/65 teams in ~15 games, assuming you don't flat-out dissolve conferences altogether. But the real point is that the current system (and moreso the previous system) at least were predicated on making this subjective determination, as opposed to any proposed expanded playoff system, where total-season performance becomes officially a largely secondary consideration.matttank;1835732; said:One other problem: How do you know who played the best football, on average, over the course of an entire season?
You're going back to the marketing/money-making argument. I'm not concerned with Nielsen ratings or "water cooler discussion" here. I'm concerned with September-through-January entertainment value.matttank;1835732; said:What I vehemently disagree with is the argument that interest in the regular season would decline substantially. In what tangible way would this occur? Who is going to stop watching/attending/talking about games?
Because bureaucratic expansion is always permanent. A "let's try it, and if it doesn't work, we'll revert" argument is a false enticement to attract the gullible. Because in reality, if it doesn't work, that will only lead to further ways to expand it in the illusory quest for something that "works".JXC;1837114; said:Why don't they just try it for a few years...and if it sucks, go back to the bowl system. If it's better...keep it.
Buckeyeskickbuttocks;1833079; said:Wrong. Here's how I'll prove it to you.
The BCS has been in force since 1998. Name 1 BCS National Champion which has been illegitimate. Just one. I'm not asking if other teams out there might have a bitch to pitch... I'm asking you to identify any illigitimate champion... a team which we all know was crap.
Next, for a playoff, I'll point to the New York Giants over the New England Patriots. Not only were the Pats 18-1 that year, while the Giants were 14-6, the Pats beat the Giants 38-35 on December 29 that season already. So... the Giants were better on some day while the Pats were better on some other day... Yet it's the Giants who got the ring.
Want more? Villanova beat Georgetown for the NCAA championship in 1985. Villanova had a record of 1-3 against Georgetown that season and lost about 10 more games than did the Hoyas over all. But... because Nova beat the Hoyas in March, and not January, that makes them Champion?
Come on....
Playoffs are not more legitimate. Again... I'll say they are a legit way to crown a champ, but don't bull[censored] me with "more legit" It's easily denied, and I don't give a [censored] who says what about other sports. As above... "but, every one else does it" didn't work as an argument when we were 10 and it doesn't work now.
Steve19;1837140; said:Less money for the universities and more for the NCAA
mross34;1837143; said:A playoff might not crown the very best team every single year, but it will ensure that the championship debate is settled on the field.
JXC;1837114; said:Why don't they just try it for a few years...and if it sucks, go back to the bowl system. If it's better...keep it.
I do feel though that any playoff system needs homefield advantage to work on many levels. If they ever come up with a playoff, and don't have that, that will be a big mistake.
Of course, the counter-point is that a playoff ensures no such thing. It ensures that, according to arbitrary definition, the team that wins the right games will be champion, with at best partial regard to how many of the wrong games they failed to win.mross34;1837143; said:But here's what a playoff does ensure: the debate is settled on the field.
zincfinger;1837166; said:Of course, the counter-point is that a playoff ensures no such thing. It ensures that, according to arbitrary definition, the team that wins the right games will be champion, with at best partial regard to how many of the wrong games they failed to win.
Steve19;1837140; said:We're not going to have a playoff because that means it becomes an NCAA tourney. Less money for the universities and more for the NCAA. It ain't never gonna happen.
Muck;1837145; said:A point that is stressed nearly often enough.
The Bowl Championship Series will distribute $142.5 million of revenue from its five bowl games, with 81 percent of it ? $115.2 million ? going to the big six conferences.
The majority of the rest ? $24 million ? goes to the coalition conferences: Mountain West, Western Athletic, Conference USA, Mid-American and Sun Belt. Notre Dame, as an independent member of the BCS, takes $1.3 million
MililaniBuckeye;1837179; said:Not sure how you gentlemen arrive at this conclusion. Monies derived from all rounds of the playoffs--from the first round all the way through to the NC game--should be distributed just as they are for bowl games. Let's look at the payouts from the last BCS bowls (ref link):
$142.5 mil - 115.2 mil - 24 mil - 1.3 mil = $2 mil remaining
Even if the NCAA gets the entire remaining $2 mil, that's only 1.4% of the bowl revenue. I have zero problem with that. Now, assuming the current BCS bowls are incorporated into the quarter-finals, semi-finals, and title game, there's still the eight opening round games and several quarter-final game that aren't covered by the BCS bowls. That's a shit-load more money to be made for the conferences.
mross34;1837143; said:BKB, I think you've made the best possible argument you could make for a playoff. I've found it admirable and it's been highly persuasive, but you haven't persuaded me enough to push me over to your side.
In short, here's why: what you're looking for in a playoff, is not what I'm looking for in a playoff. You seem to be arguing against the concept that a playoff ensures a title for the best team, or at the very least does so better than the BCS. Whether a playoff or a BCS would be better at crowning the best team could be argued endlessly with neither side getting anywhere.
But here's what a playoff does ensure: the debate is settled on the field. After a playoff, there are no excuses. If a team gets knocked out, it gets knocked out. The fact that a team didn't walk home with a crown can be attributed to their own performance. They just didn't live up to the moment.
But it wasn't. The teams were 1-1 "on the field" The Giants won their game on some Sunday and the Pats on some other Sunday.So the Pats beat the Giants in the regular season. The stakes on the line there were enormous for the Pats: the first 16-0 regular season in NFL history. The Giants had some serious reasons to come to play too, but the Pats won. Come Super Bowl Sunday? The Patriots couldn't win the game they needed to win to take home the Lombardi Trophy. But at least it was settled on the field.
Except it wasn't settled. In fact, if anything had been settled, it's that Georgetown had demonstrated 3 previous times that they were the better team head to head against Nova. And ... they were made to "prove it" a 4th time. And they failed. Even taking the Championship games as even attempting to settle anything, all Nova settled was that they could win 1 in 4 games.Same thing with the Georgetown-Villanova matchup. Georgetown won the match-ups in the regular season. As a result of their wins, they went on to grab the Number 2 seed in the Big East Tournament, a tournament they went on to win. But when the NCAA championship was on the line, Villanova stepped up and won. It was settled on the court.
I can't really argue against the conclusion - it's true, it'll be settled on the field. I'm just not real sure that phrase has any particular meaning, and I would argue its suggested meaning is A) a matter of perspective and B) over-emphasized.A playoff might not crown the very best team every single year, but it will ensure that the championship debate is settled on the field.