DwayneTwill
Well-Known Member
PhoenixHawk is right on.
The NCAA has no legal right to implement a playoff, since it was created by conferences. The Supreme Court even ruled on this a couple of decades ago saying that only the conferences and individual schools, not the NCAA, have a right to negotiate TV and other appearances.
A playoff wouldn't solve anything. You really think that New Mex St. has a "right" to be in a playoff by winning their conference of nobodies over the #2 in the B10 or SEC? So then you say "conference champions + highest polled teams." What about when you have 3 B10 teams winning 10+ games like last year? Someone will get left out while Eastern Michigan gets in with an 8-4 record for winning its conference. Very fair! Yes, and of course we know that the better the conference, the worse record the champion will have. Just look at 8-5 conference champion UCONN of the mighty Big East from last year. Very impressive in losing to Oklahoma 48-20!
The $$$ all comes from the top schools and conferences. When some starts throwing $300 million a year to televise the MAC, then you can start talking about financial equitability. But 90% of the money in cfb is coming from the fans of 50% of the schools, and to try and legislate that they have to share that money with programs that can't even fill half of their 25,000 seat stadium every saturday is Big Government at its absolute worse.
If the non-BCS schools want more money and access, why don't they put together their own BCS-style bowl package, and start shopping that around to ESPN and Fox?
The notion that some teams will get left out happens in every sport at every level. Every year a bunch of 'bubble' teams get left out of the NCAA tourney and it really doesn't affect the final product. Same thing in the other sports, the NFL turns away plenty of 9-7 and 10-6 teams from the post-season.
The other notion that doesn't make sense is that a playoff system will some how lesson the importance of a regular season. If anything it would be the biggest reward in all of major team sports. To put it in perspective...
8 out of 30 MLB teams or 27% of the league makes the playoffs.
12 out 32 NFL teams make the playoffs that's 37.5% of the league.
64 or 65 (depending on how you count it) out of 346 NCAA D1 basketball teams make the tourney. That's 19% of the 'league'
If only 6-12 out of 120 NCAA D1 football teams make the playoffs, that's between 5-10% of the 'league' in the postseason. That has to be the lowest percentage in all of major team sports. That would make the college football playoffs a truly 'elite' club and make getting there all the more special. If entry into the post-season is based on regular season performance then how does that diminish the regular season?
It's less a diminishment of the regular season, and more of a "how do you decide who goes" problem.
Top x teams in the polls makes the most sense, but this doesn't address any of the actual "bcs is unfair to non-bcs conferences!" arguments, since the voters can vote for anybody, and non-bcs teams will still whine about their team with a "great" record being voted lower than SEC #3.
Conference champs-only is a non-starter with the current D-1 setup. No one can seriously think that the sunbelt or MAC champ, regardless of ranking or record, should automatically belong in a playoff on an equal footing with a B10 or SEC team. The sheer possiblity of it would, in fact, devalue the entire D-1 playoff package, since the networks would reduce their bids knowing that half the teams in the playoff would represent small/nonexistant markets and would likely be unranked.
What would *really* happen is that the NCAA would be restructured, with the current BCS conferences forming a new "D-1a" division, and the non bcs-conferences being reordered into a "D-1b" division. This would be formalized on attendance and financial support, etc.
Remember, D-II teams like Northern Iowa currently play D-1 teams like Iowa, but no one is having a snit-fit over their lack of access to the BCS championship and Rose Bowl, are they? They should just formalize the insignificance of the non-bcs conferences in the same way. Do an 8 team playoff for current BCS teams, and a separate one for the non-bcs teams. Problem solved. Does that make you happy now?
PhoenixHawk is right on.
He couldn't be more off-base.
The BCS is the best model for 1A football? Really?
A playoff wouldn't solve anything? Really?
Wetzel is claptrap? Really?
It's apparent you haven't read and digested his arguments. Too bad.
What his book did for me was pull together various opinions, observations and the like I've had for several years regarding:
- Completely and non-researched invalid pre-season, and, weeks 1-3 polls, which set the momentum for the entire season,
- The sudden mitigation of momentum and the under-valuing of the post-season income potential due to the 4-5 week layoff after the regular season,
- The absurdity of the homerism of the human pollsters,
- The lack of knowledge the pollsters actually have regarding the teams and their subsequent futures they vote for,
- Computer polls which have been proven to be statistically flawed,
- Watered down SOS,
- The NCAA selling off it's best games basically to the bowl committees,
- The self-sustaining cartel called the BCS and its unabated/unabashed cronyism,
- Piling up easy pre-season teams for "wins",
- Undefeated teams being told "sorry, you're not under consideration for the #1 spot because 'we say so'" (would have happened to Iowa in 09)
I'll stop here. Yes, with all due respect, my name isn't baa-baa blacksheep, and come to think of it, I can think just fine on my feet and have observed this quagmire for many a decade. Again, what Wetzel's book did was tie it all together for me and the millions of other fans who continually scratch their heads year in and and year out why the current not-so-golden goose called the BCS is still alive.
Men's BB, Women's BB, Men's division II and III FB, wrestling, baseball, softball, etc., have a playoff...most everybody except 1A football. So they're all wrong and the 1A BCS model is correct? Really? Then why not institute a bogus bowl voting-system for the men's BB 'playoff'....heck I guess none of those other games needed to be played in March other than Kansas vs OSU.
I'm not pro-gov't involvement in sports, but in this case, I'm 100% for it. The ends will justify the means to get rid of the BCS. Good riddance. It's so fundamentally flawed it's laughable.
Decide it on the field.
1. I didn't say it is the best model, I said that no one has the power to change it but university presidents, whose actual job requires them to choose the best model. (Seth: They choose the best model for their own self-serving, boy's-club interests. Not the fans, not the players, not the purity of the sport. People like Delaney wear the NCAA hat all year, then switch and wear a BCS hat. Crazy).
2. A big part of the reason there is no playoff is there is no agreed upon "best playoff model." Another big reason is that there is no demonstrated model that would be more profitable than the current system, which is very, very profitable. Any playoff system could be just as, or even more controversial than the current system, and any playoff system could lead to reduced revenue for individual teams or conferences by either marginalizing opportunities for some weaker schools (loss of bowls and possible reduced significance of games once they are "out" of contention), or reducing income for wealthier schools (spreading the wealth around). (Seth: Wetzal has great model. In synopsis...16 teams, 10-11 conf champs, at-large from a NCAA-BB type selection committee with criteria....SOS being a big part. Polls are almost completely discounted as being irrelevent).
3. There is no entity that can legally compel individual teams and conferences to have a playoff. Individual teams and conferences have the absolute right to determine their own schedules and media contracts. This is settled law straight from the Supreme Court. (Seth: I understand that and the Cartel understands it perfectly well as well.)
4. Individual teams and conferences have the obligation to do what is in their own best interest. Rubes like Wetzel always miss this point. It is the best interest of Texas and the B10 to maximize their revenue at the expense of everyone else! It is their obligation to develop a competitive advantage so that they can increase their success on the field, and therefore generate more revenue. You cannot get more "free market" than that, folks. (Seth: Read the book. The bowl system is under-valuing the return on investment by 50% of more. MORE money could be made by being in a playoff. And BTW, the 'minor' bowls could spin their wheels and pit two 6-6 teams against each other to their heart's content)
5. Over 80% of cfb revenue is generated by the B10, B12, P12, and SEC. DII playoff, you say? Maybe when the Missouri Valley gets their first $2.8 billion Espn contract, or UNI gets it's own channel for $15 mill a year, we can start talking how DII's playoff is at all relevant. (Seth: Again, the bowls are under-valuing, under-performing what they could really generate. Ticket sales mean squat. TV exposure means everything...and a playoff would generate a ton more than now).
6. Polls are nothing but opinion, and have been for a century. Bowls have sucked since 1911. This is, of course, why DII and DIII ball is sooo popular, and DI has withered and is dying. Polls provide a mammoth free marketing bonanza, provide huge amounts of material to debate, watch, and argue about, and tons of free publicity for the schools and game. (Seth: DII and DIII are popular....but the talent level is minor league. DI flourishes in spite of the BCS nonsense.)
7. MBB is nothing compared to FB. The *highest* rated reg. season MBB game gets like a fourth of the viewers as an *average* network broadcast FB game. Its playoff history (since the 1930s) is also completely different, as its logistics. They can afford to play half the number of games in their playoff than a football team will play in an entire season 3 weeks. Try limiting NCAA MBB participants to the conference champs only, and see how popular March Madness remains. (Seth: 16 FB teams correlates to the 64-team tourney. Wetzel explains this well.)
8. If CFB truly "watered itself down" because of polls, then why does USC or Texas still schedule OSU, or LSU still play Oregon? How "watered down" would it become if you really only let conference champs into the post season? Guess what, Nebraska would have joined the WAC, not the B10, and Iowa would be better off playing the MAC. The fact is that the BCS conferences are getting tougher all the time, with few if any "gimmes" left. The fact that most teams find playing a single additional BCS team pre-conference is as much testimony to their increasing separtion in quality from unpopular conferences, as it is in their best interest to host as many home games as possible. (Seth: I'm talking about everybody, and I mean everybody, schedule weenie OOC games because SOS means nothing to the BCS. Wetzel suggests adding one more league game, a meaningful game, and then see how teams schedule OOC knowing SOS really matters)
9. The only "quagmire" that exists is for people who have nothing better to do than manufacture non-existant problems for themselves to stew over, and for columnists trying to come up with a new controversy to sell books or articles. Millions and millions of casual and hardcore fans have no problem with the current system. The layoff between the season and post-season adds excitement and anticipation to the final games, and increases their value and market share by spreading them out over prime tv space in the holiday season. (Seth: The BCS problems certainly are "not nothing"...wow...besides, you can STILL have all the minor bowl games you want.....you in essence put the BCS-bowl teams in a playoff...nothing more...and the layoff...sorry...have to agree to disagree...it puts a damper on the whole thing. Imagine a playoff a week after the exciting league championships...the buzz would never be greater.)
I appreciate your effort, but there is nothing that you, Wetzel, or anyone else has said that can either compel or convince the college presidents that there is a better or more profitable way to handle DI's postseason at this time. Because if there was, they'd do it. That's their job.
1. I didn't say it is the best model, I said that no one has the power to change it but university presidents, whose actual job requires them to choose the best model.
2. A big part of the reason there is no playoff is there is no agreed upon "best playoff model." Another big reason is that there is no demonstrated model that would be more profitable than the current system, which is very, very profitable. Any playoff system could be just as, or even more controversial than the current system, and any playoff system could lead to reduced revenue for individual teams or conferences by either marginalizing opportunities for some weaker schools (loss of bowls and possible reduced significance of games once they are "out" of contention), or reducing income for wealthier schools (spreading the wealth around).
3. There is no entity that can legally compel individual teams and conferences to have a playoff. Individual teams and conferences have the absolute right to determine their own schedules and media contracts. This is settled law straight from the Supreme Court.
4. Individual teams and conferences have the obligation to do what is in their own best interest. Rubes like Wetzel always miss this point. It is the best interest of Texas and the B10 to maximize their revenue at the expense of everyone else! It is their obligation to develop a competitive advantage so that they can increase their success on the field, and therefore generate more revenue. You cannot get more "free market" than that, folks.
5. Over 80% of cfb revenue is generated by the B10, B12, P12, and SEC. DII playoff, you say? Maybe when the Missouri Valley gets their first $2.8 billion Espn contract, or UNI gets it's own channel for $15 mill a year, we can start talking how DII's playoff is at all relevant.
6. Polls are nothing but opinion, and have been for a century. Bowls have sucked since 1911. This is, of course, why DII and DIII ball is sooo popular, and DI has withered and is dying. Polls provide a mammoth free marketing bonanza, provide huge amounts of material to debate, watch, and argue about, and tons of free publicity for the schools and game.
7. MBB is nothing compared to FB. The *highest* rated reg. season MBB game gets like a fourth of the viewers as an *average* network broadcast FB game. Its playoff history (since the 1930s) is also completely different, as its logistics. They can afford to play half the number of games in their playoff than a football team will play in an entire season 3 weeks. Try limiting NCAA MBB participants to the conference champs only, and see how popular March Madness remains.
8. If CFB truly "watered itself down" because of polls, then why does USC or Texas still schedule OSU, or LSU still play Oregon? How "watered down" would it become if you really only let conference champs into the post season? Guess what, Nebraska would have joined the WAC, not the B10, and Iowa would be better off playing the MAC. The fact is that the BCS conferences are getting tougher all the time, with few if any "gimmes" left. The fact that most teams find playing a single additional BCS team pre-conference is as much testimony to their increasing separtion in quality from unpopular conferences, as it is in their best interest to host as many home games as possible.
9. The only "quagmire" that exists is for people who have nothing better to do than manufacture non-existant problems for themselves to stew over, and for columnists trying to come up with a new controversy to sell books or articles. Millions and millions of casual and hardcore fans have no problem with the current system. The layoff between the season and post-season adds excitement and anticipation to the final games, and increases their value and market share by spreading them out over prime tv space in the holiday season.
I appreciate your effort, but there is nothing that you, Wetzel, or anyone else has said that can either compel or convince the college presidents that there is a better or more profitable way to handle DI's postseason at this time. Because if there was, they'd do it. That's their job.
Good post. I love how people read Death to the BCS and then take the author's 1.) playoff plan as gospel even though it barely goes into any details and all his 2.) financial numbers are based off of very rough estimates. 3.) How would his playoff system solve the issues of biased preseason polls or uninformed coaches? They would still be picking at large teams. 4.) How would it solve the issue of the decreasing number of high profile non conference games? 5.) Teams still aren't going to go out and schedule tough non conference games, losses still hurt your at large chances.