Last night, watching that instant classic, got me thinking....What is you guys opinion on the 12 team format. Too many teams? Too little teams? Just right?
I have no interest in it, maybe I'll regain some interest once MT completes a long climb out of the hole its leaders dug over the years. Very plainly college football post-season play has no relevance to this fan as I have no divided loyalty. F utk, F vandy, F memphis state, F the $ec and F the rest.Ain't watching that garbage
If they ever fix college football would consider it. I can't be the only person who finds it incredibly boring watching the teams with the biggest pockets winning every year.
Ain't watching that garbage
If they ever fix college football would consider it. I can't be the only person who finds it incredibly boring watching the teams with the biggest pockets winning every year.
Then eliminate some bowls, but make others an NIT of football for those that didn't make the CFP. Guarantee the other G5(6) champs a spot and say 7 others. That allows 24 teams to play post-season. That's plenty. Maybe still keep Hawaii/Bahamas and a few others. But this 84/134 teams (63%) making the post-season is ridiculous.
I see what you are saying, but does the country want to watch a team like JSU get slaughtered first round?I agree with the idea something has not been quite right on this variation of the college football playoff. It's seemed a bit off despite two quality semifinal games.
Causes: (1) For me, maybe its because of MT's poor football season this past year. (2) Perhaps I've become more jaded/sour about NIL and what transfer portals have become: think that process needs adjustment and that is entirely another discussion. (3) The playoff season is creeping deeper and deeper into January well beyond New Years and College Basketball comes into focus. (4) FCS and lower NCAA divisions seem to do a more credible job of actually crowning a champion in football, which I'm not so sure this CFP format really does even though Ohio State and Notre Dame have earned the right to be there. (5) Secondary and tertiary level bowls seem more obscure than before even though they are televised...fan engagement? news stories? matchups? think it's a mix of all that.
Solution: A 16-team playoff that guarantees all conference champions a place. The remaining at-large CFP teams should be selected on metrics similar to old BCS model. To me, conference championships should be valued at a premium. Strength of schedule should matter significantly as well. The ticket should be knowing the need to win your conference convincingly, which will determine that team's seeding. Additionally, they will also have to be some contingency consideration on the Army/Navy game, should Army/Navy finish undefeated or with 1 loss, on how that formulates. Had Army completed an undefeated slate prior to Navy, it would have been a harder call as an at large. But, winning the conference would have likely locked-in the #12 spot this year as an automatic qualified under these playoff formats.