I apologize if this was discussed already but I just heard about this aspect of the playoffs this weekend – I live halfway around the world so I cannot follow as closely as before.
With the new playoff structure, the top 4 teams get a bye. In the first round, teams 5-8 play teams 9-12 with the higher ranked team getting to play the game on their home campus. I think this is a great idea and will go a huge way in answering how much the South/West benefitted from weather changes and playing within their own region in prior bowl seasons.
As such, I think the key for B1G success is getting the 5-8 seeds and eliminating the SEC schools early using this weather advantage. For instance, I think teams like Wisconsin and Iowa have historically been at a huge advantage traveling to play in the warm, humid south with little time to acclimate. If I take the NFL as a proxy (and this is an outlier), but the Miami Dolphins have not won a cold weather game since 2016 and have a 25-47-1 record in outdoor games when the temperature is 40 degrees or colder.
Given that the top 1 or 2 SEC teams will likely still have home field/byes in the first round, I don’t think it will ultimately change the NC by a large degree, but I think it will go a long way in setting the perception on conference strength as more of the first round games go the way of the B1G or Big 12. Even without the huge advantage of cold weather, teams like USC and Washington will benefit huge from time zone and travel time.
Anyway, in an overall disappointing opening weekend of football, I did like to learn of this potential bright spot.
With the new playoff structure, the top 4 teams get a bye. In the first round, teams 5-8 play teams 9-12 with the higher ranked team getting to play the game on their home campus. I think this is a great idea and will go a huge way in answering how much the South/West benefitted from weather changes and playing within their own region in prior bowl seasons.
As such, I think the key for B1G success is getting the 5-8 seeds and eliminating the SEC schools early using this weather advantage. For instance, I think teams like Wisconsin and Iowa have historically been at a huge advantage traveling to play in the warm, humid south with little time to acclimate. If I take the NFL as a proxy (and this is an outlier), but the Miami Dolphins have not won a cold weather game since 2016 and have a 25-47-1 record in outdoor games when the temperature is 40 degrees or colder.
Given that the top 1 or 2 SEC teams will likely still have home field/byes in the first round, I don’t think it will ultimately change the NC by a large degree, but I think it will go a long way in setting the perception on conference strength as more of the first round games go the way of the B1G or Big 12. Even without the huge advantage of cold weather, teams like USC and Washington will benefit huge from time zone and travel time.
Anyway, in an overall disappointing opening weekend of football, I did like to learn of this potential bright spot.