BleedGopher
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2008
- Messages
- 62,825
- Reaction score
- 20,289
- Points
- 113
This is coming from the same dumbass that came up with leaders and legends.
"BCS executive director Bill Hancock has said 11 conference commissioners and Notre Dame's athletics director will present a "small number" of options — two to seven configurations — for a four-team playoff to their leagues at conference meetings."
What the
Notre Dame is a special snowflake that must be protected. The BCS may be going away but Notre Dame's unusually large seat at the table is not.
This is coming from the same dumbass that came up with leaders and legends.
I'd guess you're one of the folks who thought the BTN was a really stupid idea?
Delany's not perfect, but I sure as heck am thankful that he repesents the Big Ten. There's a reason the Big Ten brand continues to carry the most clout of any conference in the country, and Delany is a big reason why.
I'd guess you're one of the folks who thought the BTN was a really stupid idea?
Delany's not perfect, but I sure as heck am thankful that he repesents the Big Ten. There's a reason the Big Ten brand continues to carry the most clout of any conference in the country, and Delany is a big reason why.
Really?!? More so than the SEC? I don't think so and I hate the SEC with the exception of Vandy and now A&M. And I'd guess you're one of the folks who thought leaders and legends was a really swell idea. And yes, dpodoll68 is probably right.
The only problem is what happens the year that the Legends winner is 12-1 after a loss to the Leaders winner who is 7-6, and SEC East winner at 8-5 after beating the SEC West winner at 12-1, and the Pac12 winner at...
I agree with Delaney, why allow subjective reasoning to take precedence over objective competition. A team that doesn't win it's division doesn't qualify through head to head competition, why let rankings which by their nature allow human likes and dislikes to enter the picture.
Really?!? More so than the SEC? I don't think so and I hate the SEC with the exception of Vandy and now A&M. And I'd guess you're one of the folks who thought leaders and legends was a really swell idea. And yes, dpodoll68 is probably right.
This; this completely. If they can't make their own Conference Championship why should they play for a National Championship? The "hey, give a second chance" shouldn't apply in a sport with only a 12 game season. No losers of a Conference Championship should get in either.
So you're saying teams that play in an average or bad major conference should have an advantage over teams that play in a very good conference? I don't understand that. Pick the top two or four teams, plain and simple.
What if there are only two teams from a major conference with less than 2 losses? One team has one loss, the other no losses. And those two teams played a triple OT game in the regular season game. The one loss team doesn't play in the CC and would then would not have a chance at the NC if this were to happen. But two or even three loss teams potentially would. That doesn't make sense to me at all. Pick the best teams, plain and simple.
So you're saying teams that play in an average or bad major conference should have an advantage over teams that play in a very good conference? I don't understand that. Pick the top two or four teams, plain and simple.
What if there are only two teams from a major conference with less than 2 losses? One team has one loss, the other no losses. And those two teams played a triple OT game in the regular season game. The one loss team doesn't play in the CC and would then would not have a chance at the NC if this were to happen. But two or even three loss teams potentially would. That doesn't make sense to me at all. Pick the best teams, plain and simple.
The argument to that is, that second place team 'had' their chance to win it on the field. Picking the teams is always subjective.
Delaney is talking about winning the division within a conference. In Delaney's scenario, LSU would've still gotten in the four-team playoff if they lost to Georgia in the title game, while Alabama would've been left out.
When is he going to move Wisconsin to the West where it belongs - and Michigan to the East?
The argument to that is, that second place team 'had' their chance to win it on the field. Picking the teams is always subjective.
I don't disagree with that argument if there are other teams with similar resumes. I'm just saying that I wouldn't like the "automatically being disqualified from the National Championship" rule. Generally, yes it would make sense. But there are situations where a team should get that chance IMO.