redfalcon;474406 wrote:
As for the second point, I agree with you as well, and I like a round robin, but without dragging the college football season into March, its not practical. A round robin already decides who the conference champs are, or at least the division champs. A playoff would be the next best thing.
I'm not against a playoff, but the more I think about, the more I feel we like it so much because we've become so conditioned to it. In actuality, the whole reason every sports league ever went to such expanded playoffs was for more money. I haven't seen a feasible model that would do that for college football yet, but people act like its the only sport who remains the same over money instead of competition.
I know its tough because there isn't a round robin, but that also makes it critically important to be more selective with the two teams that play for the title. Meaning, you have to look at who beat who and not just who you think looked good five years ago in an upset.
Eventually, the playoff argument will roll back around and how best to do it. Then it will become, who deserves automatic berths. You will probably say every conference champion and we will disagree again. Again because Troy doesn't deserve a shot for winning the Sun Belt (with five losses) over one loss losers of the following type games: Texas/Oklahoma, Florida/Alabama, Ohio State/Penn State.
It is all the same, you just have a smaller pool and thus, a better chance of ensuring the best teams do actually play for/win the title.