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The 2011 College Football Playoff: What If BCS Haters Actually Got Their Way?

Complaining about the lack of a college football playoff has become part of the sport's official timeline and fabric. What happens if playoff proponents actually get their way one day? And what would the 2011 field look like?

Nov 9, 2011 - Each year, the BCS Armageddon Watch follows a pretty strict timeline.

In mid-October, when there are somewhere between about eight and 15 undefeated teams remaining, everybody projects the most fantastical, least-likely, every-conference-ends-up-with-an-undefeated-team scenario. "THIS will be the year everybody gets screwed and the BCS blows up!"

In mid-November, once a supposedly great team has lost a game or two (preferably to other great teams), everybody mourns the fact that they are probably ineligible for the title despite the fact that they are clearly great. By late-November, we have poked every hole we can find in the "The current system is great because every game matters" truism. In early-December, every person with an Internet connection has shared their idea of the perfect playoff, gives examples, and tells you why their way is clearly better than the current system.

What will happen if, one of these years, playoff proponents actually get their way?

For all intents and purposes, we have been talking about a college football playoff for decades. In War As They Knew It, Michael Rosenberg talks about how demands for a playoff were building in 1977, and the idea was not, by any means, new then.

Fourth-ranked Michigan was headed to Pasadena to play No. 13 Washington. If the Wolverines won, they had a chance at the national title … as long as No. 9 Ohio State beat No. 3 Alabama in the Sugar Bowl, and No. 5 Notre Dame beat No. 1 Texas in the Cotton Bowl, and No. 6 Arkansas beat No. 2 Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl.

This was how college football had operated for years -- there was no system for producing a clear national champion. But the clamor for a playoff was increasing. The Football News told fans that if they wanted a playoff, they should write to the three most powerful men in college football: Walter Byers, the executive director of the NCAA; Roone Arledge, the president of ABC sports; and [Michigan athletic director] Don Canham.

Canham was not interested in a playoff. He didn't want to extend the season, and he thought the automatic Rose Bowl bid gave the Big Ten a huge advantage over other conferences. But the Football News was right: if Canhan had wanted a playoff, he was one of the few men who could help create one.

The BCS may be Public Enemy No. 1 (we blame "the BCS" for everything from the lack of a college football playoff, to academic scandals, to the lack of good food in dining halls, to awful gameday traffic, I believe), but it isn't like the BCS is actually the reason there is no college football playoff. The reason there is no playoff is that the most powerful people in the sport have never wanted one, for one reason or another.

I have plenty of issues with the BCS process and formulas. I loathe the way we have neutered the computer rankings. Not only is margin of victory -- which is, whether we like it or not, one of the best predictors we have if we are only using points scored and allowed to determine strength -- no longer allowed to be part of the equation, but one of the formulas used is designed, basically, to emulate AP voting. We have tweaked the computer portion of the formula so that it reflects what humans want to see, and that is both absurd and a waste of time. But it was a sign of progress to use computer rankings at all, and I realize that.

And if anything, the BCS truly has actually improved life ever so slightly. At the very least, we are now guaranteed a two-team playoff of sorts, and a surefire No. 1 vs No. 2 matchup at the end of the season now. Until the 1990s, we didn't even have that. College Football: Taking One Step Forward Every Two To Three Decades Since 1869.

To be sure, a playoff has support from a few more of college football's power hitters these days. Not enough support, mind you. But it exists. SEC commissioner Mike Slive, arguably the most powerful of the power hitters, has long expressed a modicum of support for a plus-one model. Meanwhile, ESPN long ago authorized their college football commentators to feel free to passive-aggressively talk about how a playoff would solve all of the world's ills. If ESPN and Slive are behind an idea, you have to think the odds of its eventual success are high, no?

So what will happen if or, more appropriately, when playoff proponents actually get their way? How will a playoff take shape? What will it look like?

The initial answer is easy: it will almost certainly be a Plus-One. A Plus-One playoff will simply take one of two approaches:

1) Use BCS-like formulas to create two national semi-final matchups, with the winners playing in the BCS championship game. Here's how that would have looked in recent history:

2007: No. 1 Ohio State (11-1) vs No. 4 Oklahoma (11-2); No. 2 LSU (11-2) vs No. 3 Virginia Tech (11-2)
2008: No. 1 Oklahoma (12-1) vs No. 4 Alabama (12-1); No. 2 Florida (12-1) vs No. 3 Texas (11-1)
2009: No. 1 Alabama (13-0) vs No. 4 TCU (12-0); No. 2 Texas (13-0) vs No. 3 Cincinnati (12-0)
2010: No. 1 Auburn (13-0) vs No. 4 Stanford (11-1); No. 2 Oregon (12-0) vs No. 3 TCU (12-0)
2011 (to date): No. 1 LSU (9-0) vs No. 4 Stanford (9-0); No. 2 Oklahoma State (9-0) vs No. 3 Alabama (8-1)

2) Continue BCS standings after the bowl games have been completed, then select the top two teams to play one extra "championship" game. This would have meant something more like, perhaps, LSU versus Georgia or USC in 2007, and Florida versus Utah (or Texas, or Oklahoma) in 2008, etc.

Depending on the method chosen, of course, Boise State may still have never received a national title shot. Nor, perhaps, would Utah in 2008. The Orrin Hatch types -- the people of influence who care deeply about injustice when their school is involved (and less so when it's not) -- would have shouted no less vociferously if a plus-one were instituted, and the demand for an extended playoff would have begun before even the first Plus-One game was played. "Who's No. 5?" outrage would be just as strong as our current "Who's No. 3?" debates (and justifiably so, since in most seasons the difference between No. 3 and No. 5 is almost non-existent). While a Plus-One would suffice for keeping as much of the regular season meaningful as possible, and it would certainly give another couple of (potentially) deserving teams a shot at the crown, it would not quiet outcry more than about two decibels.

At college football's current rate of progress, a Plus One might be all we get for quite a while, whether it satisfies people or not. However, just because of the potential money involved, eventual expansion would be inevitable. This both excites and terrifies me. It would be nice because an expanded playoff could potentially both make conference titles a viable commodity again and offer everybody a seat at the table. I wrote a couple of years ago about my "Perfect Playoff" idea -- 16 teams including all conference champions and five at-large bids; first and second rounds at home stadium of higher-seeded team; first- and second-round losers cycle back into the bowl pool -- and I stand by it. My own personal preference is that, if we were to ever expand beyond four teams, then we should offer a spot to every conference champion.

(And if you wanted to assign a minimum rankings requirement like MWC commissioner Craig Thompson's recent proposal, that's fine too, though I prefer the all-inclusive iteration. I'm a sucker for the underdog tales.)

The problem, of course, is that expansion never stops once it begins. The NCAA basketball tournament has now expanded to 68 teams, and it seems a given that expansion will continue, perhaps to the 96 teams rumored a couple of years ago. The FCS playoffs recently expanded from 16 teams to 20. At some point, playoff opponents' cries that a playoff would reduce the importance of the regular season would become true; non-conference matchups, while occasionally entertaining, would mean next to nothing, and attendance might quite possibly lag. We would sacrifice September and October excitement for the hopes of January fireworks. And with things progressing as slowly as they ultimately would, maybe this wouldn't seem like a big deal by the time it happened. But it feels like it would be a significant change in current culture and mindset.

(Other options exist, of course, beyond the simple 4-, 8-, 12-, 16- or 20-team models. Matt Hinton has proposed an interesting 10-team layout, and others have established rules that would allow for a different number of teams to qualify in different years. These, too, are feasible -- more the ten-teamer than the flexible playoff that would probably confuse people more than it is worth -- and if we can go years with an awkward 65-team model in basketball, then anything is possible.)

As a whole, I am easy to please. I honestly don't hate the current system; I've often said our hatred of "the BCS" as all that is evil in college sports is misdirected since we really just hate it because it cannot figure out how to fit three teams on the field at the same time. Our current system of, basically, a two-team playoff suffices in some years, and a four-team Plus-One system would suffice in most. I roll my eyes at a lot of pro-playoff arguments because they either miss the point, because they want to force college football to be like college basketball (there's no inherent harm in being different), or simply because playoff proponents are quite often as rooted in self-interest as supporters of the current system.

That said, I am not of strong principle in this battle. I would completely and totally throw myself into an 8-, 10- or (obviously) 16-team playoff, and while I would wring my hands over the thought of something beyond 16 teams, I would dutifully throw myself into that too, eventually. I do think, however, that a playoff is coming, and as with a lot of the conference realignment drama, once it seems inevitable, I just want it to go ahead and happen so we can all move on with our lives. If I am not lying to myself, then I admit that virtually all of the following scenarios excite me.

2011 Two-Team Playoff: No. 1 LSU vs No. 2 Oklahoma State

2011 Four-Team Playoff: No. 1 LSU vs No. 4 Stanford; No. 2 Oklahoma State vs No. 3 Alabama

2011 Four-Team Playoff With Conference Title Requirement: No. 1 LSU vs No. 5 Boise State; No. 2 Oklahoma State vs No. 4 Stanford

2011 Six-Team Playoff: No. 1 LSU vs No. 4 Stanford/No. 5 Boise State; No. 2 Oklahoma State vs No. 3 Alabama/No. 6 Oklahoma

2011 Eight-Team Playoff: No. 1 LSU vs No. 8 Arkansas; No. 4 Stanford vs No. 5 Boise State; No. 3 Alabama vs No. 6 Oklahoma; No. 2 Oklahoma State vs No. 7 Oregon

2011 "Hinton Special" Ten-Team Playoff: No. 1 LSU (SEC champion) vs No. 6 Oklahoma (at-large)/No. 7 Oregon (at-large); No. 4 Stanford (Pac-12 champion) vs No. 9 Clemson (ACC champion); No. 3 Alabama (at-large) vs No. 12 Penn State (Big Ten); No. 2 Oklahoma State (Big 12 champion) vs No. 5 Boise State (at-large)/No. 23 Cincinnati (Big East champion).

2011 16-Team "Perfect Playoff": No. 16 Nevada (WAC) at No. 1 LSU (SEC); No. 9 Clemson (ACC) at No. 8 Arkansas (at-large); No. 12 Penn State (Big Ten) at No. 5 Boise State (MWC); No. 23 Cincinnati (Big East) at No. 4 Stanford (Pac-12); No. 11 Houston (CUSA) at No. 6 Oklahoma (at-large); Northern Illinois (MAC) at No. 3 Alabama (at-large); No. 10 Virginia Tech (at-large) at No. 7 Oregon (at-large); Arkansas State (Sun Belt) at No. 2 Oklahoma State (Big 12).

And the first time an Arkansas State takes out an Oklahoma State, then we forget whatever reservations we may have had.

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Bill Connelly

NCAA Football, Basketball and Tennis Contributor

Bill Connelly grew up a fan of the Miami Dolphins (post-1970s glory), Pittsburgh Pirates (ditto), Portland Trailblazers (ditto again) and Missouri Tigers. That he still enjoys sports at all shows... Read full bio


Comments

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Six-team Playoff

is my preference. Usually the top six teams in the nation are the only ones who should be playing for the National Title anyway.

And that means five games. Perfect for the BCS system to transition into.

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by Sean Keeley on Nov 9, 2011 10:13 AM EST reply actions  

Even though I would love a true 10 or 16 team playoff

I love how this looks:

2011 Four-Team Playoff With Conference Title Requirement: No. 1 LSU vs No. 5 Boise State; No. 2 Oklahoma State vs No. 4 Stanford

Ryan Miller was the true MVP. See my profile for rant.

by Jsz on Nov 9, 2011 11:17 AM EST reply actions  

Any playoff really needs to consider number of games played.

The pros only play 16 regular season and the players are fighting to keep it that way. Football is a brutal sport and asking twenty-year-olds (strong as they are) to play 16 games might be a stretch. I think you’d have to cut the regular season down a few games to keep it at no more then 13. I’d love to see a playoff but the first time BSU walked away with the trophy, they’d scrap the whole thing. I’m also a firm believer in being a conference champion before being a national champion. You might be the second best team in the nation but if you aren’t the best team in your conference, go play elsewhere.

Elway is in, Zimm is in, Little is FINALLY in but don't forget: Randy Gradishar, Steve Atwater & Terrel Davis

by BlueNOrangeNIdaho on Nov 9, 2011 11:20 AM EST reply actions  

why do

some high schools in the country play maybe 17 games if they make it to the state title. If high school kids can do it then why not college?

by Jeremy Mauss on Nov 9, 2011 11:37 AM EST up reply actions  

The "too many games" thing is a tired and failed canard.

And even if it were real, you solve it by simply cutting back regular seasons to 11 games (12 with potential CCGs). The LONGEST proposal I’ve seen—a 16-team playoff—would add 4 games to that. Nearly every state high school association lets their playoff teams who make deep runs play 15 or 16 games.

"An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come." *Victor Hugo*

by K.S.B. on Nov 9, 2011 11:56 AM EST up reply actions  

You're both right

Sixteen or seventeen games then. I wasn’t making the “shorter season for academics” argument (ROFL) I was thinking of the kids physical well-being.

Elway is in, Zimm is in, Little is FINALLY in but don't forget: Randy Gradishar, Steve Atwater & Terrel Davis

by BlueNOrangeNIdaho on Nov 9, 2011 12:02 PM EST up reply actions  

But the question still stands.

If the physical well-being of the players is somehow threatened by a 15 or 16 game season in college, why do they let them play that long (or longer) when teams make a deep run in high school—and other NCAA football divisions as well? And there would only be maybe 4 teams who would play even as many as 14 games, with another four who would play 13 games or so (maybe 14, depending upon CCGs). It isn’t like playoff proponents are looking to expand the regular season, as NFL owners are. In actual fact, I’ve seen many playoff proponents who want to return the regular season to 11 games. In other words, most college football players would be playing LESS games, not more.

"An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come." *Victor Hugo*

by K.S.B. on Nov 9, 2011 12:39 PM EST up reply actions  

It would be hard to reduce the number of regular season games

with conference expansion, though. Unless you had only conference games until the playoffs, which I think would kind of suck. Or maybe just one OOC game, but of course those would be against cupcake teams.

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by billycthulhu on Nov 9, 2011 1:14 PM EST up reply actions  

If we go to a Playoff

The Hinton special appeals to me.

10 is a nice number to ensure that the regular season remains meaningful, but also that a team with one loss is not automatically out of the picture… but that a team with one loss better be darn sure it is a decent loss too.

12 wouldn’t be bad either. Give the 4 best conference champions a bye. That’s 10 percent of the total teams.

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by ezcuse on Nov 9, 2011 12:09 PM EST reply actions  

I like the idea of giving the top 2 or so teams a bye

It gives an incentive to keep winning at the end of the season once you’ve already locked up a playoff spot.

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by billycthulhu on Nov 9, 2011 1:15 PM EST up reply actions  

I hate byes

Bye + home field (and any playoff with more than 4 teams will have have home field advantage for everything but the finals) is too big of an advantage to give to a higher seed, I think. In the NFL, where talent levels are much more similar than in college football, the higher seed wins nearly 75% of the time given both a bye and home-field advantage to work with.

Having said that, I’d favor just about any playoff plan over the BCS. And while the BCS is better than the old bowl system, the old bowl system was more honest.

Dave’s rankings of plausible playoff plans (barring radical conference realignment)

  1. Wetzel-style 16-team/all conference champs + 5 at-large (this is the only system where everyone but the handful of independents can always make the playoffs by winning all of their conference games)
  2. 16 teams, no automatic bids
  3. 8 teams, no automatic bids (IMO, too many good teams are excluded from a BCS 6 + 2 at-large playoff)
  4. 12 teams, BCS AQ conferences get automatic bids
  5. 8 teams, BCS AQ conferences get automatic bids
  6. any other 9-16 team playoff plan
  7. any 17-32 team playoff plan
  8. any other 5-8 team playoff plan
  9. BCS semifinals (4-team playoff), conference champions and independents only
  10. BCS semifinals, no qualifiers
  11. any ‘flexible’ plan
  12. ‘pure plus one’ (play ‘traditional’ bowls, BCS championship game participants selected after the bowls); this one has problems mostly because sometimes the traditional bowls will get a #1 vs. #2 game, but also because the bowl results may create more confusion rather than less
  13. current BCS (2-team playoff, no qualifiers)

by drothgery on Nov 9, 2011 6:47 PM EST up reply actions  

I prefer a playoff where every conference gets a bid

and a couple at larges. Give byes to the top teams.

by thewiz06 on Nov 9, 2011 1:16 PM EST reply actions  

It works for FCS schools, why not FBS schools?

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by JoeCB1991 on Nov 9, 2011 1:20 PM EST reply actions   1 recs

My preference

Is with Bill, 16 teams with 11 conference champs and five at-large choices.

by Jeremy Mauss on Nov 9, 2011 3:36 PM EST reply actions  

My suggestion

A 17 team playoff but force the WAC and Sun Belt Champions to play a play-in game during the conference championship week and then have the conference champions and 6 at larges which this season would get Penn State in as the 12 seed.

by Cowsaidmoo on Nov 9, 2011 7:42 PM EST reply actions  

I hate the 16 team all conference bit

And here’s why: unlike in the NFL the notion of conferences in college is exceedingly fluid. The NCAA doesn’t even have rules on what makes up a conference; a 6-team Big East is a conference, technically, and would have a right to a playoff spot just as much as a 16-team superconference would.

And honestly, while the ‘underdog’ story is nice, the fact of the matter is that underdogs are a lot less likely when you’re dealing with football over basketball. Football needs a lot of things to go right – coaching, athleticism, teamwork, scheme and plan. When you have two disparate teams in that regard the results are usually not particularly underdoggy. The best you can hope for is one team looking past the other, but in a playoff that’s unlikely to happen. And unlike in Basketball it takes a lot more than one player getting hot at the right time to make things work.

But really, the conference championship just is a non-starter when conferences are mercurial.

by kalon on Nov 14, 2011 9:25 PM EST reply actions  

The purpose of a playoff is to determine the best team

The purpose of a playoff is not to reward teams for having a good year. The thought of a 16 team playoff makes me want to puke a little bit in my mouth. Uh on, I just did it. I just puked a little bit…in my mouth.

It needs to be no more complicated than a plus-one. The plus-one solves the major problems (the 2004 Auburn problem, for example) without completely and fundamentally changing what college football is and has been since generations before professional football even existed. The plus-one is such a simple, elegent and non-destructive solution, that I fear it is too good to be true. I hope I am wrong. I really don’t want to ever see college football become nothing more than NFL-lite.

No homer.

by kidbourbon on Nov 17, 2011 9:06 AM EST via mobile reply actions  

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