TJnTN;2085905; said:
The big difference is none of those other systems leave us with a question of "what if?".
We will never know if OkieSt could have beat either team of those teams last night. We can sit here and debate till the cows come home whether or not they would or who deserved to play in that game but in the end we are still left with that uncertainty where a playoff, should at least eliminate that. I realize that could mean the best team in the nation may not win it every year and I'm fine with that. I'd prefer that over having this stupid debate every year.
It'll never end. Wherever the line is drawn, that's where the complaints start. Look at all of the talk about which teams get left out of the 68-team March Madness between the time the pairings are announced until the first game.
If there's a 4-team playoff, folks will ask for 6 or 8.
If its 8 they'll ask for 12.
If it's 12, they'll ask for 16.
If it's 16, many will still ask for 32.
Going to a conference champion only 4-team format would allow exciting early season OOC contests, without seriously damaging a team's chance to make the final 4 teams. It would also keep out garbage conference champions which have been in the BCS as winners of 'AQ' conferences lately.
Conference champion only minimizes the impact that human voters and EPSN hype can have on determining the playoff participants. Each conference determines its own champion, and the 4 highest ranked go into the playoff. The controversy would be between the 4th, 5th, and 6th rated conference champions, but I could live with that.
That would also be good for tOSU, since starting in 2017, tOSU will have an annual game against a PAC-12 contender, such as Oregon or USC. A potential loss in those September games wouldn't knock tOSU out of the NC race, as long as they win the B1G CCG and are one of the 4 highest ranked conference champions, which would almost always be the case for the B1G winner.
This year, it would have been: LSU-Oregon-Oklahoma State-Wisconsin