Seems like the more teams you add the more teams can make an argument they belong in.
A lot more teams will feel left out.
The only reason I'm against it is because it would make it that much harder for Nebraska to win a National Title again.
Eight teams obviously increases the chance of making the playoff but a consequence of this is it becomes harder to actually win a national title.
Generally speaking, eventual champions in an eight team playoff would need to beat a top 10-15 team in a conference title game, and then win back-to-back-to-back games against top 8 opponents. This requires a lot of depth that I believe is only present in a small portion of teams year over year. Most namely - Alabama. So, while I don't necessarily believe this is a reason to avoid expanding to eight teams, I'm not sure people are weighing this part of the equation very often.
Also, @Mavric, interesting point about caps on automatic berths. One of my qualms with p5 champions automatically qualifying was looking back to 2012 when Wisconsin won the B1G at 8-5.
Naturally, but so does increasing the field to 12, 16 or 32.You can't win it unless you're in it, and 8 makes it easier to get in.
Naturally, but so does increasing the field to 12, 16 or 32.
As I stated, I don't think increased difficulty is necessarily reason enough to halt expansion, but it's a side effect worth noting.
You get into issues of dilution when you get past 8, but I agree with the sentiment.
I ultimately think 8 is the way to go, but the argument for 6 is very compelling.
The season already doesn't matter. Why? Because Alabama got a spot in the playoff last year.
The season already doesn't matter. Why? Because Alabama got a spot in the playoff last year.
BLUF: Don't worry. They'll **** up the 8-team just like they have the 4-team playoff. It's not like the playoff is the only problematic element of college football anyway. Look at how few meaningful games there are between good teams during the regular season and yet we all act as if we know which teams and conferences are the best.All the rage right now seems to be moving to a 8 team playoff. Frost is for it but I am against it. Here's why:
I want the season to matter. Yes you have to have a good season to get into playoff position but lose a couple games and as long as you play good at the end of the season, it will not negatively effect you.
p5 champions should not automatically get in. All the talk is about 5 p5 champions and 3 at large, but what about when your conference champion has an average/poor record?
what about the last team left out: There will always be a last team left out that is arguably as good as the last team in.
4 or more post regular season games: add up your conference championship and your playoff games and to become a champion you have to play a heck of a lot of games.
other bowl games mean even less:woohoo you get into the orange,fiesta, rose bowl, etc with a terrible record because all capable teams are in playoff.
less undefeated champions: Tom Osborne went for 2 against Miami because he believed to be a champion you had to beat your opponent. Adding to the playoff will increase the chances of teams having 2, 3, or more losses.
Hype: Certain teams seem to get overranked because of their name (not their performance) i.e. notre dame
higher chance of playing teams multiple times same season. Imagine a year where Nebraska beats ohio state in the regular season only to lose in the conference championship but gets an at large bid and play again in the playoffs
Wrong champion: Coinciding with the first one. Is the champion the best team or the team that played the best at the end of the season?
hard on fans: unless they are going to move games to college campuses, how many of you super fans can travel 3 or 4 weeks in a row to watch nebraska play?
It’s not irrelevant, or a fallacy nope, just a different take . The idea is to get the best team in the country .Exactly why the "devaluing the regular season" argument is a red herring. If you want a meaningless regular season game, look no farther than the 2011 Alabama-LSU game (before a four-team playoff). In fact, you could make an argument that losing that game made Alabama's path to the National Championship EASIER because they didn't have to play in the CCG.