MplsGopher
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The implication is that deregulation of how confs can select their title game combines with 12 team playoff, will cause all the P5 to get rid of divisions.Nope. Not until the SEC does.
End of discussion.
Actually, this would work even better with 8 conf games.Still think the best format now that we have 14 teams in the big ten is to have 3 protected games that you play every year and then use the remaining 6 to rotate through the rest of the conference. That way you are going to play every other team home and away in just over three seasons...
I'd vote for the same, but like you said, I think Michigan would probably not want us as a protected matchup...I figure they would probably want OSU, Mich St, and Penn St; but who knows how it would actually play out. Barring Michigan, I would probably take Nebraska (I know, your least favoriteActually, this would work even better with 8 conf games.
14 teams, minus yourself is 13, then 3 protected games every year leaves 10 teams with 5 remaining conf games per year. So you'd see everyone else home/home every 4 years.
Hopefully, a lot of P5 teams would try to schedule inter-conference P5 vs P5 games with that freed up 9th game, similar to how Iowa-Iowa St play every year.
For Minnesota, I'd of course propose the three protected as Axe, Floyd, and Jug. Not sure if Mich feels the same, but maybe they'd see it as an "easy win".
Thamel is working with a few assumptions that have proven false. There is no evidence that there is any urgency to have a conference’s two best teams play each other (usually in what will be a re-match).The implication is that deregulation of how confs can select their title game combines with 12 team playoff, will cause all the P5 to get rid of divisions.
If it couldn't be Michigan, I wouldn't vote Nebraska simply because we have no special history with them. I wouldn't want them just because they're western any more than I'd want Illinois for that reason.I'd vote for the same, but like you said, I think Michigan would probably not want us as a protected matchup...I figure they would probably want OSU, Mich St, and Penn St; but who knows how it would actually play out. Barring Michigan, I would probably take Nebraska (I know, your least favorite) or Northwestern.
The core problem is always going to be the SEC and ACC.Eliminate non-conference entirely. Play all trophy games every season.
That would help solve a lot of the scheduling issues and bring back meaning to some games. We'd see a better product on the field as well.
There are already plenty of rematches in conf championship games.Thamel is working with a few assumptions that have proven false. There is no evidence that there is any urgency to have a conference’s two best teams play each other (usually in what will be a re-match).
The SEC used divisions and an 8-game schedule to avoid having too many games between its best team, and this approach has directly resulted in more teams in the BCS championship game and the CFP.
Eliminate non-conference entirely. Play all trophy games every season.
That would help solve a lot of the scheduling issues and bring back meaning to some games. We'd see a better product on the field as well.
The FBS Championship should be a balanced 16 team championship, not an unbalanced 12 team playoff where 4 teams get a bye and only have to win 3 games vs. 4 to be champion. Huge advantage to the top 4. The champion will come from the top 4 90% of the time, not because they are better, but because they get to rest.
Additionally:
Conference championship games need to be eliminated.
Divisions within conferences are completely unnecessary, and create unfair advantages (see B1G west vs. east) for weaker divisions.
Terrible take, spoken like someone who's never been to a non-con road game.Eliminate non-conference entirely. Play all trophy games every season.
That would help solve a lot of the scheduling issues and bring back meaning to some games. We'd see a better product on the field as well.
StarkVegas coming up too!Terrible take, spoken like someone who's never been to a non-con road game.
Colorado this year and North Carolina in 2023 are going to be AWESOME!!
You mean like the B1G did this year in Baseball? How'd that go for the conf? Baaad Idea.Eliminate non-conference entirely. Play all trophy games every season.
That would help solve a lot of the scheduling issues and bring back meaning to some games. We'd see a better product on the field as well.
I think there is a case that Michigan would want us -- in a new format where getting the easiest conference games matter in order to make the title game I think we would be an attractive mate.I'd vote for the same, but like you said, I think Michigan would probably not want us as a protected matchup...I figure they would probably want OSU, Mich St, and Penn St; but who knows how it would actually play out. Barring Michigan, I would probably take Nebraska (I know, your least favorite) or Northwestern.
You are exactly correct .... and also this is exactly why it's going to happen.As Minnesota fans, we DO NOT want this. In a free-for-all we would face:
- Diluting our longstanding, every year rivalries and trophy games. Playing for the most and best trophies anywhere in the NCAA is perhaps our most unique football tradition. We're also one of only two B1G schools that is a primary historic rival to two other Big Ten schools. Michigan is the other.
- Murder schedules if we keep our rivalry games. Iowa and Wisconsin every year, plus more frequent dates with all the beasts of the East. Major disadvantage to schools with less competitive rivals.
- Losing our most realistic path to the league title, by winning the less top heavy West and then the title game.
You're making very legit points.The premise of this whole argument, to me, is incredibly ridiculous for an array of reasons. The circumstances in which the argument even come into play are infinitely small, ESPECIALLY in a 12 team playoff as is being proposed.
This idea that the best 2 teams may not play against each other in the title game truthfully will only be an issue in a tiny set of circumstances such as if, for example, OSU goes 12-0 and Mich goes 11-1 with a loss to OSU. OSU then goes to the title game and loses to, let's say, 8-4 MN. In that setting, Mich and OSU are probably both getting in as the rankings over the last several years had 3 loss teams in the top 12. If there are auto bids, MN and OSU (via head-to-head over Mich) are both getting in. In the setting that OSU is 11-1 (loss to let's say Oregon) and Mich is 11-1 (loss to OSU) followed by a loss again to 8-4 MN to finish 11-2, either OSU or Mich is getting in.
In truth, they're arguing hypotheticals that really will not be an issue for any of the P5. Someone is going to get in from every single P5 conference in a 12 team tournament.