j_crazy;476375 wrote:This is my sentiment. If there's no playoff then IMO you can't necessarily call the NC the best team. Which to me is not good for the sport.
The sport is really doing just fine.
j_crazy;476375 wrote:This is my sentiment. If there's no playoff then IMO you can't necessarily call the NC the best team. Which to me is not good for the sport.
It also doesn't mean we should reward mediocrity just because other sports do it. We are conditioned to feel that more teams makes it better, but it doesn't. Baseball used to have four division winners. Why did they expand? Money. The NFL used to take its top two teams. Why did they expand? Money. Don't pretend that all other playoffs and tournaments were all about some kind of competitive fairness. Every league known to man added games to bring in more money. College football just happens to have a system it doesn't have to change to bring in more money.trep14;476360 wrote:That is a valid point, and the Giants are the perfect examples of it. A postseason playoff system does tend to reward the "hot" team, which may not have been the best team all season long. There isn't a postseason system that is out there that is perfect, but that doesn't mean we should accept mediocrity where there could be improvement. Because college football is such a regional game and there is so little overlap between opponents, I tend to think a postseason playoff is the best solution to determining who the most deserving teams are, especially since there are very few years where it is cut and dry, such as 2002 where there were only two undefeated teams left in Ohio State and Miami or 2005 where it was Texas and USC. But nothing is perfect and I understand your point.
enigmaax;476434 wrote:It also doesn't mean we should reward mediocrity just because other sports do it. We are conditioned to feel that more teams makes it better, but it doesn't. Baseball used to have four division winners. Why did they expand? Money. The NFL used to take its top two teams. Why did they expand? Money. Don't pretend that all other playoffs and tournaments were all about some kind of competitive fairness. Every league known to man added games to bring in more money. College football just happens to have a system it doesn't have to change to bring in more money.
I was talking about when they went away from two teams playing for the title to eventually/now 12.trep14;476443 wrote:Actually the NFL used to have a round robin format, with the champion being determined by a vote at the end of the season. They introduced a championship game because one year there were two teams with identical records. And when they split up into conferences in 1933, any time that there was a tie between the top two teams in the conference, they had a playoff game between those two teams to determine who went to the championship game. Yes some of it was money driven, but some of it was also in the interest of determining a champion. And like I said, I just can't accept a system that looks at two undefeated teams and determines one of them is better than another for intangible reasons.
Mooney44Cards;476327 wrote:I stopped reading at "conquer the moon".
enigmaax;476434 wrote:It also doesn't mean we should reward mediocrity just because other sports do it. We are conditioned to feel that more teams makes it better, but it doesn't. Baseball used to have four division winners. Why did they expand? Money. The NFL used to take its top two teams. Why did they expand? Money. Don't pretend that all other playoffs and tournaments were all about some kind of competitive fairness. Every league known to man added games to bring in more money. College football just happens to have a system it doesn't have to change to bring in more money.
jordo212000;476499 wrote:That's because his comparison was above your comprehension level.
BoatShoes;476550 wrote:No guy...I really thought you wouldn't need me to spell this all out...Jees man.
SEC West
Florida, georgia, Tennesse, kentucky, Vandy, South Carolina......these teams play each other all year to determine who is the best.....let's say Vandy wins.
They play the champion of the SEC west....say, Auburn.
Vandy has beaten out everyone in the SEC east...they have earned the right to play the champion of the SEC WEst just like Auburn has earned the right to play the SEC East Champion.
When Vandy wins....they have earned the right to go into the playoffs and challenge other conference champions....say, in the first round they play the Buckeyes....
The Buckeyes have defeated everyone in the big ten and earned their way into the playoffs....
What right do Indiana, Purdue and Illinois, etc. have to play Vandy in the playoffs? They're not even their conference champion....the buckeyes were the champion of their conference....they've conquered everyone in their conference and Vandy has conquered everyone in their conference....
It's like, if One Army has conquered all of the tribes in France and another army has conquered all of the tribes in Spain....why should the Army of Spain have to conquer the tribes of France when they should just conquer the controlling army of France to then have reign over the tribes already conquered by that Army?
And with Boxing....you start out low and have to beat out guys and earn your way to the Number 1 contender match...the winner of that match has earned his way to box the champion.....it just so happens that Boxer's have free will and can turn down who they fight...but it doesn't change the fact that they have fought their way to the top...knocking all of the other guys out of their way.
enigmaax;476418 wrote:I just find this to be ridiculous, especially since the argument for a playoff is to settle it on the field and then you are using "de facto" wins as your support. The point is, boxing picks two people to fight for the title. College football picks two teams to play for the title. Whoever quoted what a champion is defeated his/her own point since boxing was the example.
Mooney44Cards;476553 wrote:2002 Ohio State won the national championship and the Big 10. They didn't defeat Iowa. HOW DO WE KNOW?!
Mooney44Cards;476553 wrote:2002 Ohio State won the national championship and the Big 10. They didn't defeat Iowa. HOW DO WE KNOW?!
enigmaax;476452 wrote:I was talking about when they went away from two teams playing for the title to eventually/now 12.
The thing you said about two undefeated teams happens every day in real life. Try for a job - you are going to be judged on your resume. I definitely don't consider the BCS a perfect system, but I have yet to hear a real reason why playoffs is the answer or why a change is needed. Sure it would be fun for us fans, but there's a lot more to it than that.
Mooney44Cards;476552 wrote:Good one, I forgot that resorting to insults was par for the course for you.
Anyways, on with the debate......
Oh man, I've seen it already like 10 times.
Something about how winning a playoff format means you "beat every team" even though you only beat 3 teams out of 7 in an 8-team playoff, and 4 out of 15 in a 16-team playoff. Again.....only going undefeated in a round robin means you "beat everyone". So since the Saints won the Super Bowl, and the playoff format, that means they would have beat every single team that was in the playoffs, even though they only beat 3? Thats a bad argument that makes no sense. And if you're going to use the "well they beat team A which beat team B which beat team C, we also would have beaten team C", then you lose all credibility whatsoever.
trep14;476572 wrote:That's a good question and one that a playoff system would answer.
BoatShoes;476550 wrote: SEC West
Florida, georgia, Tennesse, kentucky, Vandy, South Carolina......these teams play each other all year to determine who is the best.....let's say Vandy wins.
They play the champion of the SEC west....say, Auburn.
Vandy has beaten out everyone in the SEC east...they have earned the right to play the champion of the SEC WEst just like Auburn has earned the right to play the SEC East Champion.
When Vandy wins....they have earned the right to go into the playoffs and challenge other conference champions....say, in the first round they play the Buckeyes....
The Buckeyes have defeated everyone in the big ten and earned their way into the playoffs....
What right do Indiana, Purdue and Illinois, etc. have to play Vandy in the playoffs? They're not even their conference champion....the buckeyes were the champion of their conference....they've conquered everyone in their conference and Vandy has conquered everyone in their conference....
It's like, if One Army has conquered all of the tribes in France and another army has conquered all of the tribes in Spain....why should the Army of Spain have to conquer the tribes of France when they should just conquer the controlling army of France to then have reign over the tribes already conquered by that Army?
And with Boxing....you start out low and have to beat out guys and earn your way to the Number 1 contender match...the winner of that match has earned his way to box the champion.....it just so happens that Boxer's have free will and can turn down who they fight...but it doesn't change the fact that they have fought their way to the top...knocking all of the other guys out of their way.
sherm03;476590 wrote:The problem with your idea is that just because all those teams play each other...it does not produce "the best team." One of the biggest arguments for the playoffs is that it will allow for "upsets" and "Cinderella teams" to make it through. So let's say a crappy team upsets Alabama in round 1. And then in round 2, Ohio State beats said crappy team. Does that meant that Ohio State is better than Alabama? No...it means they are better than the team that upset Alabama and the argument that it's settled on the field is completely blown out of the water.
BoatShoes;476554 wrote:I mean Cassius Clay had to go undefeated for four years before he was the number 1 contender to take on Sonny Liston.
You still have to have some way of determining participants. Somewhere along the line, there is human involvement and a selection process. The only difference is that with only two teams, that process is much more highly selective.trep14;476577 wrote:I really don't think college football should be compared to that of a job application, where there is literally no way to make two candidates go head to head. What are you going to do, have a steel cage match? I mean some places may look at standardized test scores or something like that, thats about the extent of it. Meanwhile, that option exists in college football. You can take two teams, line them up, and see who can come out on top. And how is that not a real reason for there to be a playoff system? I'll refer you to what jordo said about the BCS legitimizing the need for these things to be decided on the field by holding a "national championship game", yet the BCS still denies several qualified teams the right to do that almost every year.
Mooney44Cards;476588 wrote:Oh ok, so this playoff system guarantees that every team plays every other team? Cool, just so we cleared that up.
sherm03;476590 wrote:The problem with your idea is that just because all those teams play each other...it does not produce "the best team." One of the biggest arguments for the playoffs is that it will allow for "upsets" and "Cinderella teams" to make it through. So let's say a crappy team upsets Alabama in round 1. And then in round 2, Ohio State beats said crappy team. Does that meant that Ohio State is better than Alabama? No...it means they are better than the team that upset Alabama and the argument that it's settled on the field is completely blown out of the water.
enigmaax;476687 wrote:You still have to have some way of determining participants. Somewhere along the line, there is human involvement and a selection process. The only difference is that with only two teams, that process is much more highly selective.
If you have a playoff, are you going to give all conference champs automatic bids? Because then you'd be telling me that a 7-5 Sun Belt champion that lost all its games to BCS teams earned the right on the field? And if you don't include those teams, then you've just made a judgment as to who deserves a shot and who doesn't - same thing that happens now. Then you are going to say, well I'd rather take a chance on the 17th best team being left out than the 3rd. And I'll turn right back around and say, I'd rather see a team with a legitimate claim to being in the top 2 win the title than the 13th team who already lost 3-4 games taking advantage of a couple upsets and playing for a title all of a sudden.