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Other Games 11/22 - 11/26

OTOH, I'm sick of non-division winners getting a shot at the playoff.

Say what you want about UGA, Michigan, TCU, and USC, and how they would match up head-to-head with Alabama, Ohio State or Tennessee, the fact is the above 4 have to play another game this weekend, against probably a top ten team for TCU and a top 12 team for USC.

It is absolutely unfair that a team can benefit from not being good enough to be in their own conference championship game.
This is part of why I have never liked the idea of a playoff, especially an expanded playoff in college football.

It was far from a perfect system but I always liked the idea that the champion and the major bowl champions were there because they were the best over the entire season.

A playoff, and the larger the bracket the worse it gets, is simply a measure of be good enough to get in they get hot/lucky and win the title.

This means we get teams that didn't win their divisions, teams that lost 2 games (soon to be 3 or more games when they expand) that just have to win their way through the bracket for a title while a team that was best over the entire year goes home because they got an unfavorable seeding, lost a couple top players to injury, lost a game on turnovers and or bad calls, etc.
 
gotta be uga, tcu, usc, and michigan if everyone wins out, right? or am i missing something...
 
Interesting stat:

SEC - 14 teams, 5 ranked in the CFP top 25.
ACC - 14 teams. 4 ranked
Big 12 - 10 teams, 3 ranked
Big Ten - 14 teams, 3 ranked(!)

Pac-12 ‐ 12 teams, 6 ranked
That’s because our Buffs did their job and gave every ranked team a free win. Good job, CU!
 
This is part of why I have never liked the idea of a playoff, especially an expanded playoff in college football.

It was far from a perfect system but I always liked the idea that the champion and the major bowl champions were there because they were the best over the entire season.

A playoff, and the larger the bracket the worse it gets, is simply a measure of be good enough to get in they get hot/lucky and win the title.

This means we get teams that didn't win their divisions, teams that lost 2 games (soon to be 3 or more games when they expand) that just have to win their way through the bracket for a title while a team that was best over the entire year goes home because they got an unfavorable seeding, lost a couple top players to injury, lost a game on turnovers and or bad calls, etc.
The best part of the old format was that every game mattered.

You could literally lose the MNC in September (and we did once).

Every single team had zero margin for error, and it made September and October games even better.

Even if you weren't in the picture, you could ruin the other team's entire season with an upset.

Now... an upset loss is something that can be overcome.
 
The best part of the old format was that every game mattered.

You could literally lose the MNC in September (and we did once).

Every single team had zero margin for error, and it made September and October games even better.

Even if you weren't in the picture, you could ruin the other team's entire season with an upset.

Now... an upset loss is something that can be overcome.
All of this. If a team lost early, even to a quality opponent they spent the rest of the season knowing that one more loss puts them out and knowing that they would need some help to have a chance.

At the same time the National Championship was the most important but winning the major bowls also meant something. It was a successful season, no questions asked to be the Orange Bowl Champ, the Rose Bowl, the Cotton or the Sugar. Those were the goal with teams hoping that their season would be good enough to also win the NC.
 


ESPN apparently not a fan of USC


WTAF?

If UGA, UM, TCU, and USC all win this weekend, and Ohio State gets in over USC, burn the mother****er down.

1 loss, which they would have presumably avenged, on the road, to the conference runners-up by one point, against getting absolutely housed at home. Granted, it was to the presumptive conference champion and #2 team in the nation, but they got curbstomped. Why tf would they get a do-over?
 
The best part of the old format was that every game mattered.

You could literally lose the MNC in September (and we did once).

Every single team had zero margin for error, and it made September and October games even better.

Even if you weren't in the picture, you could ruin the other team's entire season with an upset.

Now... an upset loss is something that can be overcome.
Agree with everything but the first sentence.

To me, the best part of "the old format " was that if a team did disqualify from the MNC early, they still had a meaningful conference championship to play for.
 
Agree with everything but the first sentence.

To me, the best part of "the old format " was that if a team did disqualify from the MNC early, they still had a meaningful conference championship to play for.
Yep. For Big 8 teams, fans throwing oranges on the field when the conference title was clinched. It mattered. A lot. We gained some things with the changes, but we also lost some things. I liked the idea of a playoff, but now think I was wrong.

What makes college sports different (and better, imo) is the pageantry. All these moves the past 30 years have reduced rivalry matchups and the importance of conference. Also reduced the relevance of bowl games as they got diluted to the point where some years they even have to take teams with losing records to fill all the slots.

Playoffs are great tv and I love watching. But we gave up a lot. I think a big problem was trying to be half pregnant to protect the bowl system. A 4-team playoff was really bad.
 
Yep. For Big 8 teams, fans throwing oranges on the field when the conference title was clinched. It mattered. A lot. We gained some things with the changes, but we also lost some things. I liked the idea of a playoff, but now think I was wrong.

What makes college sports different (and better, imo) is the pageantry. All these moves the past 30 years have reduced rivalry matchups and the importance of conference. Also reduced the relevance of bowl games as they got diluted to the point where some years they even have to take teams with losing records to fill all the slots.

Playoffs are great tv and I love watching. But we gave up a lot. I think a big problem was trying to be half pregnant to protect the bowl system. A 4-team playoff was really bad.
Tremendous respect for accountability and the ability to admit one may have been wrong.
 
Agree with everything but the first sentence.

To me, the best part of "the old format " was that if a team did disqualify from the MNC early, they still had a meaningful conference championship to play for.
Which meant that every game mattered, even after you were out of the MNC. ;)
 
Which meant that every game mattered, even after you were out of the MNC. ;)
I see what you're saying. I guess my take is that in the "old system", I'd argue non-conf games weren't as meaningful as they are today. they could be used for warmup for conference season and I perceive that teams were more likely to schedule tough matchups.
 
I see what you're saying. I guess my take is that in the "old system", I'd argue non-conf games weren't as meaningful as they are today. they could be used for warmup for conference season and I perceive that teams were more likely to schedule tough matchups.
I would agree that the OOC games weren't as meaningful, *unless* you (or the opposing team) were aiming at an MNC. Then they all mattered, bigly.

The wiscy/CU and Michigan/CU games back in the day were off the charts.
 
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