Superbad is on TBS…you’re welcome.
Gotta get a glimpse of these warlocks
Superbad is on TBS…you’re welcome.
I'll agree that an expansion is desperately needed. But if you think throwing out an undefeated Cincinnati in favor of two loss Ohio State is good for the sport, you're crazy. Having the same group of 5-6 teams in the playoff every year leads to stagnation and fatigue, even if you can make the argument that they're the best 4 teams. Seeing Michigan and Cincinnati make the playoff was refreshing this year, if only because it's finally some new blood.
What is expansion going to do? I agree that seeing Cincinnati & Michigan in was refreshing. But the result is the same as seemingly every other year: blowouts in the semis.
Is an expanded playoffs just going to get us more exciting lead in games before the top 2 of that particular year inevitably meet?
The cream will rise on average more than other teams. There is no way around that.Exactly the cream rises to the top whether it's 4, 8, 16, etc.
It's not ESPN's fault, it's on other teams to step up.
1.) The best four- which should incorporate upside and who is playing their best at the end of the season. We care way too much about some loss in the middle of the season when we make it a season trophy.
2.) The playoff committee.
3.) Because a one game sample is worthless. 18-22 year olds have variance in play, and only needing to get up for a fraction of your games is a big advantage of the G5. I don't care if one team went undefeated and passed their couple hard games while the other got upset. Go with the team that is better. Cincy is not better than Ohio St.
4.)Too much human bias towards this being about deserving rather than who are the best 4 when at their best is why Cincy is in imo. A model like Sagarin had them 6th and Bama 1st. A committee allowed to forget anything but who do you think has the best chance to beat #1 should be in.
Way too much emphasis on record in college football. In the NFL, teams like GB's 2011 super bowl team or Tampa's team last year wouldn't even make the playoffs. Yes, that adds value to the season, but it makes for a bad postseason.
Hmm, have you noticed where those recruits are located? And the SEC has long cared more about college football, going back to when there were few pro teams in the south.They created this monster. ESPN is the host network for the SEC and ACC. They get the most airtime, get talked about ad nauseam. The recruits pay attention. In a sport of 130 teams, only Ohio State has been good enough to take them down. Ohio State has won one title in the CFP era and the other seven (including this year’s) belong to the ACC and SEC. So yes I think ESPN is at least at some fault for cultivating what looks like an unstoppable monopoly.
LMAO. Are you serious? No it doesn't- I am contending the committee change what they look at, or look at it differently. That is basically the point.Considering that the playoff committee literally just selected Cincinnati as one of the four “best” teams this year completely undermines your argument.
LMAO. Are you serious? No it doesn't- I am contending the committee change what they look at, or look at it differently. That is basically the point.
And they had their chance against one of the current CFP teams in Michigan and got their asses handed to them. That same Michigan team that just got done getting railroaded by Georgia. All we know is Ohio State got handled by the two best teams they played (Michigan State I may put in front of Oregon, but Oregon beat the Buckeyes in the Shoe). Cincinnati did play and beat, on the road, what ended up being a top-5 team. They never lost, so they should have got in over Ohio State on every measure that actually matters. Who cares about metrics? Win the games in front of you. Metrics really did well for us this year and our 7-6 record.Based on season long stats, yet still better in many metrics than Cincy.
Wait, how does scholarship limits hurt parity?With NIL, scholarship limits, transfer portal, "eye test," etc., championship-level football is largely unattainable outside of a handful of teams.
They created this monster. ESPN is the host network for the SEC and ACC. They get the most airtime, get talked about ad nauseam. The recruits pay attention. In a sport of 130 teams, only Ohio State has been good enough to take them down. Ohio State has won one title in the CFP era and the other seven (including this year’s) belong to the ACC and SEC. So yes I think ESPN is at least at some fault for cultivating what looks like an unstoppable monopoly.
Yes, and that bias should be towards the teams best able to compete with Bama, for lack of better definition. Which is also what something like Sagarin is for.What I’m saying is any human committee choice is going to suffer from bias of some kind. I happen to think putting Cincy in this year was a good thing overall; you disagree. You think the committee should change their criteria to pick who’s playing better at the end of the season and ignore upsets/mid season losses; I disagree. That doesn’t make your approach “better” - it makes it your approach, which of course you want to see put in place because it fits your biases.
The guy you are responding to is right about everything, just ask him. He is God on here, and don't even try to disagree with him. He contradicts himself all of the time. This is a gem right here on the post you are responding to:Considering that the playoff committee literally just selected Cincinnati as one of the four “best” teams this year completely undermines your argument. Yes, I understand you seem to think the committee just needs to take a different approach - your approach, apparently - but there’s nothing saying a future committee might pick, say, a 10-3 Iowa squad or an 11-2 Wake Forest just because they think they’re “better.”
Your method of “best” seems to be biased in favor of the blue bloods. Thats fine, I guess - every human method of picking teams is going to end up biased in some way. Which is why my method of establishing a clearly defined selection criteria prior to the season would be better than letting any group of people simply pick who they think is “playing better at the end of the season.”
If ”some loss in the middle of the season” or an “upset” doesn’t matter, why the hell are we playing the games? Just pick the four teams you think are the bee’s knees in August and let them play for the championship, since apparently the actual results on the field don’t even matter.
Part of the problem is we can’t decide what we want the playoff to be. Is it a winner-take-all of the teams we think are playing better? Is it a two-round playoff of the best program resumes? Why can’t we just make it a Tournament of Champions, where you have to earn your way in by winning your conference? That’s not necessarily going to find us the “best” team in a given year, but let’s face it - Ohio State was not the “best” team in 2014, they got gifted a playoff spot and managed to win two games.