Thoughtsoncanes
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assuming this monstrosity goes into effect. What’s the timeframe? Obviously not this season but maybe 2027? 28? I am hoping espn and the sec are powerful enough to block it.
2027assuming this monstrosity goes into effect. What’s the timeframe? Obviously not this season but maybe 2027? 28? I am hoping espn and the sec are powerful enough to block it.
Greed ruins everythingassuming this monstrosity goes into effect. What’s the timeframe? Obviously not this season but maybe 2027? 28? I am hoping espn and the sec are powerful enough to block it.
Well we’d need to move start of season across the board to week 0. Remove conference champ games and make that week Play-In week of teams 9-24. Then give a bye. Then start the remaining 16team playoff. The play in game then 4 weeks of playoff. That should encompass 6 total weeks start to finish (with a bye). We have 12 games regular season plus a Bye. So total that is 19 total weeks. 20 weeks if we want to add another bye or spread out the playoff a tiny bit. If we begin week of Sat 8/29 which is current week 0. 20 weeks would end Sat 1/16/27… current national title game is scheduled 1/19… so we can still fit it all in, and even add in byes for most teams… and again that’s if we spread it to 20 weeks even with a 24 team playoff….I think it's F*tarded and greedy AF........ unless they are getting rid of all Conference championship games andddd 1-2 regular season games.. the brutal run teams would have to make is malpractice for a game like football.... IMO
even after our glorious run, when you think of it, it was brutal as ****.... A&M / OSU / Ole Miss / then Championship.... after a full season??? even that was insane to me.
At this point, we need to add 1987 Ted Dibiase to our list of supporters and get him to buy off our first round opponent.Greed ruins everything
ESPN currently owns the media rights to the CFP. Expansion beyond 16 teams triggers a clause to renegotiate those media rights.Can someone explain why the ACC, Bg12 and BIG favor the 24-team playoff and why the SEC and ESPN are against it?
What are the dynamics?
assuming this monstrosity goes into effect. What’s the timeframe? Obviously not this season but maybe 2027? 28? I am hoping espn and the sec are powerful enough to block it.
I agree the "monstrosity" reaction is overblown, but these cross-sport comparisons obscure the one thing that makes college football structurally different from every league on that list. Every NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, and MLS team plays a largely common schedule against the same pool of opponents. A 40-win NBA team and a 50-win NBA team have both been tested by the same competition. College football doesn't really have that. A 10-2 G5 champion and a 10-2 SEC or BIG or even ACC team have not been measured on anything close to the same standard. Strength of schedule varies so much across 138 teams that comparing participation rates to the NFL includes teams whose entire body of work is structurally incomparable to the programs at the top.Why is it a monstrosity?
The NFL has 32 teams and 14 make the 4-round playoffs. That means 43.75% of the teams make the playoffs.
There are 138 Division I-A (FBS) teams and 12 make the 4-round playoffs . With the same playoff participation percentage as the NFL, 60 college football teams would make the playoffs.
Same sport.
"Monstrosity"? Really? How about we stop overreacting.
A 16 team CFP field would be an 11.6% participation rate.
A 24 team CFP field would be a 17.4% participation rate. It would be a 5-round playoff, but without the conference championship games.
MLB - 12 teams out of 30 make the playoffs, for a 40% participation rate.
NBA - 20 teams out of 30 make the playoffs (including play-in tournament), for a 66.7% participation rate.
NHL - 16 teams out of 32 make the playoffs, for a 50% participation rate.
MLS - 18 teams out of 30 make the playoffs, for a 60% participation rate.
Let's try to keep things in perspective, here.
maybe he meant the amount of games is a bit much for football... we're looking at what 12regular season and 4-6 playoffs depending on where you fall in ranking.... 16-18games...Why is it a monstrosity?
The NFL has 32 teams and 14 make the 4-round playoffs. That means 43.75% of the teams make the playoffs.
There are 138 Division I-A (FBS) teams and 12 make the 4-round playoffs . With the same playoff participation percentage as the NFL, 60 college football teams would make the playoffs.
Same sport.
"Monstrosity"? Really? How about we stop overreacting.
A 16 team CFP field would be an 11.6% participation rate.
A 24 team CFP field would be a 17.4% participation rate. It would be a 5-round playoff, but without the conference championship games.
MLB - 12 teams out of 30 make the playoffs, for a 40% participation rate.
NBA - 20 teams out of 30 make the playoffs (including play-in tournament), for a 66.7% participation rate.
NHL - 16 teams out of 32 make the playoffs, for a 50% participation rate.
MLS - 18 teams out of 30 make the playoffs, for a 60% participation rate.
Let's try to keep things in perspective, here.
And may I add that the FCS who’s also division 1 college football has 128 teams and a 24 team playoff. They have a well oiled machine going for well over a decade.assuming this monstrosity goes into effect. What’s the timeframe? Obviously not this season but maybe 2027? 28? I am hoping espn and the sec are powerful enough to block it.
Why is it a monstrosity?
The NFL has 32 teams and 14 make the 4-round playoffs. That means 43.75% of the teams make the playoffs.
There are 138 Division I-A (FBS) teams and 12 make the 4-round playoffs . With the same playoff participation percentage as the NFL, 60 college football teams would make the playoffs.
Same sport.
"Monstrosity"? Really? How about we stop overreacting.
A 16 team CFP field would be an 11.6% participation rate.
A 24 team CFP field would be a 17.4% participation rate. It would be a 5-round playoff, but without the conference championship games.
MLB - 12 teams out of 30 make the playoffs, for a 40% participation rate.
NBA - 20 teams out of 30 make the playoffs (including play-in tournament), for a 66.7% participation rate.
NHL - 16 teams out of 32 make the playoffs, for a 50% participation rate.
MLS - 18 teams out of 30 make the playoffs, for a 60% participation rate.
Let's try to keep things in perspective, here.
I agree the "monstrosity" reaction is overblown, but these cross-sport comparisons obscure the one thing that makes college football structurally different from every league on that list. Every NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, and MLS team plays a largely common schedule against the same pool of opponents. A 40-win NBA team and a 50-win NBA team have both been tested by the same competition. College football doesn't really have that. A 10-2 G5 champion and a 10-2 SEC or BIG or even ACC team have not been measured on anything close to the same standard. Strength of schedule varies so much across 138 teams that comparing participation rates to the NFL includes teams whose entire body of work is structurally incomparable to the programs at the top.
The 12-team field is, IMO, defensible because it still preserves most of the regular season's weight. At 24 teams, mediocre regular seasons become survivable, which weakens the stakes of each game. The champion will still very likely come from the same 8-10 programs it always has, so you're not adding legitimacy or genuine competition at the top. I feel like the 24-team playoff just adds rounds while slowly converting college football's most beautiful feature into something that looks like every other sport.