This is hilarious. Back in the BCS days, everyone clamored for the 4 team playoff. Now it had to be expanded to 12. In ten years is it going to be 16? 32?
Yeah and back then everyone had to have a playoff so we could “settle it on the field”. Now, all anyone talks about is how they KNOW that this or that 3-loss team is better than ____!
@@ericostby6762 College Football Tournament Turn the college football playoff into the college football tournament. Expand it to 24 teams and have 8 slots dedicated to a playoff bye. Conferences that have made the four team playoff format have what I call final four rights. If they have 16 or more teams they are guaranteed two playoff spots. If they have less than 16 teams, but still have 8 or more teams; they will be granted 1 playoff spot. To earn final four rights your conference must make the final four in the tournament. If your conference earns final four rights it will gain 1 or 2 guaranteed playoff spots depending on how many teams your conference has. The final four rights will encourage teams to realign to conferences with guaranteed spots. This will help the pac-12 grow and it will eventually open up another conference when they break into the final four. This will help direct conference realignment. The 8 byes are reserved for division winners only. If your conference has more than 16 teams you'll break your conference into two divisions. You can rotate the divisions every year. In the Big Ten there would be 2 nine team divisions. You'd play everyone in your division once, plus one team in the other division. You'd still have 3 games available to schedule a tune up game or a rivalry game. The winner of each division would get the guaranteed playoff spot and possible bye. You could set up the entire Power 4 like this and the Pac-12 could eventually catch up. You'd eliminate conference championships and play the first round the same weekend as conference championship games. The college football committee would select who gets a bye and the final 16-13 spots. The group of five are guaranteed 3 spots if they are ranked. If they win their division or conference they could potentially get a bye. Boise State this year is an example. The first round would be played at neutral sites just like conference championships. The second round would be rewarded to the division winners who received a top 8 seed. They would receive a home playoff game. Every game after that is a neutral field. This would make the season at most 17 games. That's the same amount a sec or big ten champ loser might play this season if they can make a run in the playoffs and make to the championship final.
College Football Tournament Turn the college football playoff into the college football tournament. Expand it to 24 teams and have 8 slots dedicated to a playoff bye. Conferences that have made the four team playoff format have what I call final four rights. If they have 16 or more teams they are guaranteed two playoff spots. If they have less than 16 teams, but still have 8 or more teams; they will be granted 1 playoff spot. To earn final four rights your conference must make the final four in the tournament. If your conference earns final four rights it will gain 1 or 2 guaranteed playoff spots depending on how many teams your conference has. The final four rights will encourage teams to realign to conferences with guaranteed spots. This will help the pac-12 grow and it will eventually open up another conference when they break into the final four. This will help direct conference realignment. The 8 byes are reserved for division winners only. If your conference has more than 16 teams you'll break your conference into two divisions. You can rotate the divisions every year. In the Big Ten there would be 2 nine team divisions. You'd play everyone in your division once, plus one team in the other division. You'd still have 3 games available to schedule a tune up game or a rivalry game. The winner of each division would get the guaranteed playoff spot and possible bye. You could set up the entire Power 4 like this and the Pac-12 could eventually catch up. You'd eliminate conference championships and play the first round the same weekend as conference championship games. The college football committee would select who gets a bye and the final 16-13 spots. The group of five are guaranteed 3 spots if they are ranked. If they win their division or conference they could potentially get a bye. Boise State this year is an example. The first round would be played at neutral sites just like conference championships. The second round would be rewarded to the division winners who received a top 8 seed. They would receive a home playoff game. Every game after that is a neutral field. This would make the season at most 17 games. That's the same amount a sec or big ten champ loser might play this season if they can make a run in the playoffs and make to the championship final.
The playoffs are crap. OSU loses to Michigan today, which in years past would have meant their title chances were over. Now, they still get in? Really took the drama out of the game today, did not matter.
Boise aas winning up to the last 2 seconds of that one lost game against the best team iin college football. They have 2 qualidy top 25 team wins as well as that inoeder to get into the playoffs they will face and beat a top 20 team. No crying guys! Enjoy the rules you created. Go Boise!
@@kevinbond8966 Well, then it's a good thing you have so many TV networks that are willing to tell you which two conferences those are, completely independent of any contracts they might share with conferences.
College Football Tournament Turn the college football playoff into the college football tournament. Expand it to 24 teams and have 8 slots dedicated to a playoff bye. Conferences that have made the four team playoff format have what I call final four rights. If they have 16 or more teams they are guaranteed two playoff spots. If they have less than 16 teams, but still have 8 or more teams; they will be granted 1 playoff spot. To earn final four rights your conference must make the final four in the tournament. If your conference earns final four rights it will gain 1 or 2 guaranteed playoff spots depending on how many teams your conference has. The final four rights will encourage teams to realign to conferences with guaranteed spots. This will help the pac-12 grow and it will eventually open up another conference when they break into the final four. This will help direct conference realignment. The 8 byes are reserved for division winners only. If your conference has more than 16 teams you'll break your conference into two divisions. You can rotate the divisions every year. In the Big Ten there would be 2 nine team divisions. You'd play everyone in your division once, plus one team in the other division. You'd still have 3 games available to schedule a tune up game or a rivalry game. The winner of each division would get the guaranteed playoff spot and possible bye. You could set up the entire Power 4 like this and the Pac-12 could eventually catch up. You'd eliminate conference championships and play the first round the same weekend as conference championship games. The college football committee would select who gets a bye and the final 16-13 spots. The group of five are guaranteed 3 spots if they are ranked. If they win their division or conference they could potentially get a bye. Boise State this year is an example. The first round would be played at neutral sites just like conference championships. The second round would be rewarded to the division winners who received a top 8 seed. They would receive a home playoff game. Every game after that is a neutral field. This would make the season at most 17 games. That's the same amount a sec or big ten champ loser might play this season if they can make a run in the playoffs and make to the championship final.
It’s real, but it’s still REALLY flawed. The whole “conference champ auto bye” thing is ruining the bracket. The 5th seed is better than the 1st seed. As a Michigan fan I’m actually rooting for Ohio State to win the conference, I’d MUCH rather they get a bye and play Georgia first than play Arizona State and Boise State for 2 free playoff wins
College Football Tournament Turn the college football playoff into the college football tournament. Expand it to 24 teams and have 8 slots dedicated to a playoff bye. Conferences that have made the four team playoff format have what I call final four rights. If they have 16 or more teams they are guaranteed two playoff spots. If they have less than 16 teams, but still have 8 or more teams; they will be granted 1 playoff spot. To earn final four rights your conference must make the final four in the tournament. If your conference earns final four rights it will gain 1 or 2 guaranteed playoff spots depending on how many teams your conference has. The final four rights will encourage teams to realign to conferences with guaranteed spots. This will help the pac-12 grow and it will eventually open up another conference when they break into the final four. This will help direct conference realignment. The 8 byes are reserved for division winners only. If your conference has more than 16 teams you'll break your conference into two divisions. You can rotate the divisions every year. In the Big Ten there would be 2 nine team divisions. You'd play everyone in your division once, plus one team in the other division. You'd still have 3 games available to schedule a tune up game or a rivalry game. The winner of each division would get the guaranteed playoff spot and possible bye. You could set up the entire Power 4 like this and the Pac-12 could eventually catch up. You'd eliminate conference championships and play the first round the same weekend as conference championship games. The college football committee would select who gets a bye and the final 16-13 spots. The group of five are guaranteed 3 spots if they are ranked. If they win their division or conference they could potentially get a bye. Boise State this year is an example. The first round would be played at neutral sites just like conference championships. The second round would be rewarded to the division winners who received a top 8 seed. They would receive a home playoff game. Every game after that is a neutral field. This would make the season at most 17 games. That's the same amount a sec or big ten champ loser might play this season if they can make a run in the playoffs and make to the championship final.
No one cares..... hardest 'strength of schedule' meanwhile they have more losses too.... both of which are to teams that multiple 500 teams beat.... Indiana played in the hardest division last year playing 3 top 5 schools, did you complain about schedule for Indiana then? Probably not.... wonder why....
Boise State played Oregon for it’s only narrow loss by a field goal. It was a great game. Come on give Boise State some credit…
No. The blue field sucks.
They are definitely some issues with the 12 team playoff. It's fun though
Two former Pac 10 teams in the playoffs. I'm good with it.
This is hilarious. Back in the BCS days, everyone clamored for the 4 team playoff. Now it had to be expanded to 12. In ten years is it going to be 16? 32?
16 within 2 years and i think that's gonna be the cap
Yeah and back then everyone had to have a playoff so we could “settle it on the field”. Now, all anyone talks about is how they KNOW that this or that 3-loss team is better than ____!
24
@@ericostby6762 College Football Tournament
Turn the college football playoff into the college football tournament. Expand it to 24 teams and have 8 slots dedicated to a playoff bye. Conferences that have made the four team playoff format have what I call final four rights. If they have 16 or more teams they are guaranteed two playoff spots. If they have less than 16 teams, but still have 8 or more teams; they will be granted 1 playoff spot. To earn final four rights your conference must make the final four in the tournament. If your conference earns final four rights it will gain 1 or 2 guaranteed playoff spots depending on how many teams your conference has.
The final four rights will encourage teams to realign to conferences with guaranteed spots. This will help the pac-12 grow and it will eventually open up another conference when they break into the final four. This will help direct conference realignment.
The 8 byes are reserved for division winners only. If your conference has more than 16 teams you'll break your conference into two divisions. You can rotate the divisions every year. In the Big Ten there would be 2 nine team divisions. You'd play everyone in your division once, plus one team in the other division. You'd still have 3 games available to schedule a tune up game or a rivalry game. The winner of each division would get the guaranteed playoff spot and possible bye. You could set up the entire Power 4 like this and the Pac-12 could eventually catch up. You'd eliminate conference championships and play the first round the same weekend as conference championship games. The college football committee would select who gets a bye and the final 16-13 spots. The group of five are guaranteed 3 spots if they are ranked. If they win their division or conference they could potentially get a bye. Boise State this year is an example. The first round would be played at neutral sites just like conference championships. The second round would be rewarded to the division winners who received a top 8 seed. They would receive a home playoff game. Every game after that is a neutral field. This would make the season at most 17 games. That's the same amount a sec or big ten champ loser might play this season if they can make a run in the playoffs and make to the championship final.
Anyone who follows the bitching during the selection of the NCAA basketball tournament knew the complaining would NEVER stop.
LETS GO DEVILS🔱🔱🔱
College Football Tournament
Turn the college football playoff into the college football tournament. Expand it to 24 teams and have 8 slots dedicated to a playoff bye. Conferences that have made the four team playoff format have what I call final four rights. If they have 16 or more teams they are guaranteed two playoff spots. If they have less than 16 teams, but still have 8 or more teams; they will be granted 1 playoff spot. To earn final four rights your conference must make the final four in the tournament. If your conference earns final four rights it will gain 1 or 2 guaranteed playoff spots depending on how many teams your conference has.
The final four rights will encourage teams to realign to conferences with guaranteed spots. This will help the pac-12 grow and it will eventually open up another conference when they break into the final four. This will help direct conference realignment.
The 8 byes are reserved for division winners only. If your conference has more than 16 teams you'll break your conference into two divisions. You can rotate the divisions every year. In the Big Ten there would be 2 nine team divisions. You'd play everyone in your division once, plus one team in the other division. You'd still have 3 games available to schedule a tune up game or a rivalry game. The winner of each division would get the guaranteed playoff spot and possible bye. You could set up the entire Power 4 like this and the Pac-12 could eventually catch up. You'd eliminate conference championships and play the first round the same weekend as conference championship games. The college football committee would select who gets a bye and the final 16-13 spots. The group of five are guaranteed 3 spots if they are ranked. If they win their division or conference they could potentially get a bye. Boise State this year is an example. The first round would be played at neutral sites just like conference championships. The second round would be rewarded to the division winners who received a top 8 seed. They would receive a home playoff game. Every game after that is a neutral field. This would make the season at most 17 games. That's the same amount a sec or big ten champ loser might play this season if they can make a run in the playoffs and make to the championship final.
The playoffs are crap. OSU loses to Michigan today, which in years past would have meant their title chances were over. Now, they still get in? Really took the drama out of the game today, did not matter.
Boise aas winning up to the last 2 seconds of that one lost game against the best team iin college football. They have 2 qualidy top 25 team wins as well as that inoeder to get into the playoffs they will face and beat a top 20 team. No crying guys! Enjoy the rules you created. Go Boise!
They need to dump the idea of conference champions getting into the CFP playoffs. It should be the top 12 ranked teams.
Or you could watch more than one conference. That’s also an option.
@@SenorHomeslice nah, just the 2 good ones
@@kevinbond8966 Well, then it's a good thing you have so many TV networks that are willing to tell you which two conferences those are, completely independent of any contracts they might share with conferences.
Rankings are 100% subjective. Guessing doesnt make a team great 😂😂😂
College Football Tournament
Turn the college football playoff into the college football tournament. Expand it to 24 teams and have 8 slots dedicated to a playoff bye. Conferences that have made the four team playoff format have what I call final four rights. If they have 16 or more teams they are guaranteed two playoff spots. If they have less than 16 teams, but still have 8 or more teams; they will be granted 1 playoff spot. To earn final four rights your conference must make the final four in the tournament. If your conference earns final four rights it will gain 1 or 2 guaranteed playoff spots depending on how many teams your conference has.
The final four rights will encourage teams to realign to conferences with guaranteed spots. This will help the pac-12 grow and it will eventually open up another conference when they break into the final four. This will help direct conference realignment.
The 8 byes are reserved for division winners only. If your conference has more than 16 teams you'll break your conference into two divisions. You can rotate the divisions every year. In the Big Ten there would be 2 nine team divisions. You'd play everyone in your division once, plus one team in the other division. You'd still have 3 games available to schedule a tune up game or a rivalry game. The winner of each division would get the guaranteed playoff spot and possible bye. You could set up the entire Power 4 like this and the Pac-12 could eventually catch up. You'd eliminate conference championships and play the first round the same weekend as conference championship games. The college football committee would select who gets a bye and the final 16-13 spots. The group of five are guaranteed 3 spots if they are ranked. If they win their division or conference they could potentially get a bye. Boise State this year is an example. The first round would be played at neutral sites just like conference championships. The second round would be rewarded to the division winners who received a top 8 seed. They would receive a home playoff game. Every game after that is a neutral field. This would make the season at most 17 games. That's the same amount a sec or big ten champ loser might play this season if they can make a run in the playoffs and make to the championship final.
Don't want OSU getting two schmucks for the first 2 rounds
I think ots a fine rule for the top 5 champions to get in but I wouldn't seed champions in the top 4 automatically. We dont do that in March Madness
It’s real, but it’s still REALLY flawed. The whole “conference champ auto bye” thing is ruining the bracket. The 5th seed is better than the 1st seed. As a Michigan fan I’m actually rooting for Ohio State to win the conference, I’d MUCH rather they get a bye and play Georgia first than play Arizona State and Boise State for 2 free playoff wins
“Two free playoff wins”.
Kind of Iike TCU a couple years ago?
@@mrp4242they beat michigan so try again
Why they don't reseed is beyond me, that's a huge issue
College Football Tournament
Turn the college football playoff into the college football tournament. Expand it to 24 teams and have 8 slots dedicated to a playoff bye. Conferences that have made the four team playoff format have what I call final four rights. If they have 16 or more teams they are guaranteed two playoff spots. If they have less than 16 teams, but still have 8 or more teams; they will be granted 1 playoff spot. To earn final four rights your conference must make the final four in the tournament. If your conference earns final four rights it will gain 1 or 2 guaranteed playoff spots depending on how many teams your conference has.
The final four rights will encourage teams to realign to conferences with guaranteed spots. This will help the pac-12 grow and it will eventually open up another conference when they break into the final four. This will help direct conference realignment.
The 8 byes are reserved for division winners only. If your conference has more than 16 teams you'll break your conference into two divisions. You can rotate the divisions every year. In the Big Ten there would be 2 nine team divisions. You'd play everyone in your division once, plus one team in the other division. You'd still have 3 games available to schedule a tune up game or a rivalry game. The winner of each division would get the guaranteed playoff spot and possible bye. You could set up the entire Power 4 like this and the Pac-12 could eventually catch up. You'd eliminate conference championships and play the first round the same weekend as conference championship games. The college football committee would select who gets a bye and the final 16-13 spots. The group of five are guaranteed 3 spots if they are ranked. If they win their division or conference they could potentially get a bye. Boise State this year is an example. The first round would be played at neutral sites just like conference championships. The second round would be rewarded to the division winners who received a top 8 seed. They would receive a home playoff game. Every game after that is a neutral field. This would make the season at most 17 games. That's the same amount a sec or big ten champ loser might play this season if they can make a run in the playoffs and make to the championship final.
Boise State is not a free win
Just remember UGA has the toughest SOS in the country and nobody in the top 12 even has a top 10 SOS besides UGA.
No one cares..... hardest 'strength of schedule' meanwhile they have more losses too.... both of which are to teams that multiple 500 teams beat....
Indiana played in the hardest division last year playing 3 top 5 schools, did you complain about schedule for Indiana then? Probably not.... wonder why....
Nobody in the top 10 has a quarterback who loves to give the ball to the other team either
Just remember sos is a bs stat that uses opinions not facts
Go Ducks!!!🦆🙌🏻
3 minutes of nothing added to the discussion. How does this guy even have this job?