Change is in the wind; NCAA appears headed for playoff


Blacknbengal

Well-Known Member
Change is in the wind; NCAA appears headed for playoff

GAME DAY EDITOR
Montgomery Advertiser


A college football playoff system is being born. The process began when the Atlantic Coast Conference raided the Big East, making off with Miami and Virginia Tech. There will be more spasms and contractions. The labor pains will persist until 2006, when the current Bowl Championship Series contract ends.

When it's all over, there will be six Super Conferences with 12 members each -- the minimum number of members required by the NCAA to qualify for a championship game.

Projected survivors: the Southeastern, the Atlantic Coast, The Big 12, The Big Ten (with 12 members), The PAC-10 (with 12 members) and Somebody Else. The Somebody Else League may be what's left of the Big East, the Western Athletic, the Mid-America -- or more likely a few select schools from each.

Between now and 2006, as the conferences jockey for teams, as schools jockey for position, backs will be stabbed, throats will be cut, empires will rise and fall. It'll be Armageddon -- which should be loads of fun to watch.

After the wolves have feasted, 72 schools will be among the chosen. There are currently 107 NCAA Division I-A teams. The 72 Super Schools will live in mansions of glory. The others will cringe outside, the bastards of the system.

There will never be more than six conferences. Why split the pie more ways than necessary?

And yes, Notre Dame will have to join a conference. Even mighty Notre Dame won't be able to stand alone in the brave new world of college football. Nor will it want to. There's too much money to be made. Even more than Notre Dame, which has its own contract with NBC. Here's why:

The six conference championship games will amount to the first week of the playoffs. Television revenues for those games will skyrocket. Some leagues will make more than others because each conference will control its scheduling, will manage its championship and will cut its own deal with networks, which will include regular-season programming.

The contracts will be huge and flexible, allowing for regional programming, even allowing for all Notre Dame's games to be on TV. And regular-season games will not lose their luster, as they have in basketball and professional sports, a concern voiced by past opponents of a playoff.

After the league title games have been played, the new, improved BCS will kick in. The six champions will advance to the national championship playoff, along with two at-large teams. Selection of at-large teams could conceivably, one day, result in bribery, blackmail, extortion or assassination -- that much money will be at stake.

How much? Rivers, lakes and oceans of money. Continents, planets, suns and galaxies of money. Universes of money. The six Super Conferences will own the championship tournament, and will be able to name their price.

The college football playoff will, sooner than later, become the single biggest event in American sports. The television rights will sell for billions and billions. Ticket sales will gross hundreds of millions more. The frenzy will build for a month. Geysers of money will erupt in ways we can't yet imagine.

And only six conferences, 72 teams will share in the bounty. The rest will go begging.

Oh, there will still be little, piddly bowl games here and there, exclusive of the playoffs. They'll be what bowl games were in the olden days. A reward for a semi-good season that'll pay expenses and a few lousy million bucks.

How quaint.

But the playoff will be the motherlode, the jackpot, the goose that lays golden eggs like an AK-47 on full auto.

The new BCS will make the NCAA men's basketball tournament look like 65 small, shriveled potatoes. The Super Bowl will be backseated as the nation's biggest sports spectacle. The World Series -- well, it's already not much more than a pleasant diversion, a nostalgia trip.

There's a new day dawning. A college football playoff is coming. You watch it happen.
 



Originally posted by Olde Hornet
I thought this was a very good article. Will they share any money with the rest of the Division 1A schools?
You kidding, right??? Hell no, they ain't sharing. Fend for yourselves. They gone be greedy and hog all the money.
 
Well remember they have those new rules going into effect. How many schools will not meet the attendance requirements and cut that 107 down to let say 80-90 schools and it will be interesting.
 
Yea right. I'll hold my breath waiting for conferences like tha Big 10, Big 12, SEC, Pac 10, and etc to part with guranteed money for a playoff system. They will never risk their premadonna status for a system that can cause "smaller" school's to jump up and bite them in a 1 and gone playoff system.
 
The new Super Conference coming is bad news for all Middle of the pack conferences. What this means is that they are not only locked even more out of the money, but they will be relagated to punching bags for the big boys. This move will also make it harder for the FAMU's to make it on the next level. To ne honest with you, I really want to see this develop. It really means that there will be a national champion without wondering "what if". And unlike I-AA it will not cost teams money to participate!!!

I think that this should be the model that I-AA should consider following. It would give the SWAC champion to participate in these overrated I-AA playoffs and it should ease the financial burdens to the schools participating.
 
Originally posted by Blacknbengal
Change is in the wind; NCAA appears headed for playoff

GAME DAY EDITOR
Montgomery Advertiser


After the league title games have been played, the new, improved BCS will kick in. The six champions will advance to the national championship playoff, along with two at-large teams. Selection of at-large teams could conceivably, one day, result in bribery, blackmail, extortion or assassination -- that much money will be at stake.

How much? Rivers, lakes and oceans of money. Continents, planets, suns and galaxies of money. Universes of money. The six Super Conferences will own the championship tournament, and will be able to name their price.


Truer words have never been written....

:nod2:
 
First, let's tackle the errors in the article.

There are 117, not 107 schools in I-A. The "Someone Else Conference" would suck, because CUSA and MWC are both better than either the WAC or MAC. Furthermore, most of the talk has been between the Big East and CUSA; some rumors involve specific teams, while others involve a merger between the two leagues. Because the Big East has only six schools left, CUSA has the upper hand, unless one of the other schools decides to become a traitor.

Otherwise, it's a good article.

Someone asked about revenue sharing. I don't think they will unless the NCAA runs the tourney and mandates it. However, there would be no need for superconferences if there is an NCAA mandated tournament because EVERY conference in I-A would be involved, which would definitely put a stop to raiding and expansion. I-AA provided a good model for what a playoff would look like, and on the I-A level there is a lot more money for everyone if there is a playoff. Imagine what could have happened if Tulane in 1998, Marshall in 1999, or BYU and Fresno in 2001 were allowed a chance in a playoff.

The BCS is unAmerican, and it's ironic that the flag waving lemmings in the SEC, Big Ten, Big XII, etc. are so supportive of it.
 
Re: Re: Change is in the wind; NCAA appears headed for playoff

BTW, the at-large system is already corrupted. Look at Florida getting into the baseball tourney after failing to qualify for the SEC tourney.

Now, in my system, the conference champs automatically get in, and the at-large determined by a committee that includes a representive from each conference who use an objective ranking system as a guide. Sure, it's not airtight, but it combines a good distribution of power while using an objective system. Oh, and the transcripts of this meeting would be made public ASAP after the meeting, so EVERYONE knows how it goes down.

Dayum, I should be NCAA Czar.
 
Originally posted by sophandros

The BCS is unAmerican, and it's ironic that the flag waving lemmings in the SEC, Big Ten, Big XII, etc. are so supportive of it.

First off, I'm not a fan of the BCS.....

But I'll ask this: How's the BCS unAmerican?????:(

The conferences got together, crafted a system that gives them 'exclusivity' and pays them millions of dollars, and contractually keeps out everybody else.......

Sounds like true 'capitalism' to me...........

Since when is it unAmerican to create a monopoly and sit back and get paid outda arse????


:dude:
 
Robber,

You kidding, right??? Hell no, they ain't sharing. Fend for yourselves. They gone be greedy and hog all the money.

I disagree. If they are still under the NCAA umbrella they will share some revenue from the tournament wth other members of the NCAA. It just want be anything worth mentioning. Consider this, they actually share some of the revenue from the BCS contract. It is like pennies on the dollar. Many suggest it is one reason that the non-BCS schools have not seriously considered letigation against the BCS members. I think the biggest concern right now. That there is some talk that these 60-72 schools will seriosuly consider leaving the NCAA to form their own governing body and have their own tournaments in every sport.
 
Originally posted by Taylor-Made'90
First off, I'm not a fan of the BCS.....

But I'll ask this: How's the BCS unAmerican?????:(

The conferences got together, crafted a system that gives them 'exclusivity' and pays them millions of dollars, and contractually keeps out everybody else.......

Sounds like true 'capitalism' to me...........

Since when is it unAmerican to create a monopoly and sit back and get paid outda arse????


:dude:

They are in violation of anti-trust laws, which is why Scott Cowen is leading a crusade against it.

Monopolies are the WORST thing for the consumer, btw. That's an econ 101 principle.
 
Originally posted by sophandros
They are in violation of anti-trust laws, which is why Scott Cowen is leading a crusade against it.

Monopolies are the WORST thing for the consumer, btw. That's an econ 101 principle.

OK.....I'll agree with that......:nod2:


But that still doesn't make it(what they're doing) unAmerican?????

Our country was built on monopolies and insider trading....and back-room dealings....and kickbacks......

I don't know how you can say their unAmerican......They're an example of a what most Americans are----->GREEDY


:D:D:D
 
Originally posted by Taylor-Made'90
OK.....I'll agree with that......:nod2:


But that still doesn't make it(what they're doing) unAmerican?????

Our country was built on monopolies and insider trading....and back-room dealings....and kickbacks......

I don't know how you can say their unAmerican......They're an example of a what most Americans are----->GREEDY


:D:D:D

Critical thought and radical dissent against authority created this country.

The principle that the little guy always has a chance to succeed sustained this country.

Sadly, monopolies, insider trading, backroom deals, and kickbacks is what this country has become.

Most Americans aren't greedy, just those who horde all of the money and power. The rest of us merely want a fair share, but we're not going to get it until we storm the mutha fuggin' bastile.

Oops, getting radical again... Wrong board. :D
 
Originally posted by Blacknbengal
Change is in the wind; NCAA appears headed for playoff
GAME DAY EDITOR
Montgomery Advertiser
A college football playoff system is being born...There's a new day dawning. A college football playoff is coming... [/B]

There already are college football playoffs. Another hack job.
 



Originally posted by Taylor-Made'90
OK.....I'll agree with that......:nod2:


But that still doesn't make it(what they're doing) unAmerican?????

Our country was built on monopolies and insider trading....and back-room dealings....and kickbacks......

I don't know how you can say their unAmerican......They're an example of a what most Americans are----->GREEDY


:D:D:D

YEP YOU GOT A GOOD POINT THERE, THATS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU LET THEM DAMN REPUBLICAN'S WIN..OPPS STEAL THE ELECTION ,FREE ENTERPRISE AT ITS BEST. :lmao:
 
Originally posted by bluedog
YEP YOU GOT A GOOD POINT THERE, THATS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU LET THEM DAMN REPUBLICAN'S WIN..OPPS STEAL THE ELECTION ,FREE ENTERPRISE AT ITS BEST. :lmao:

I know it's the sports board, but I have to say something about the Appointed One.

When Clinton lied, nobody died.
When Shrub lied, many died.
;)
 
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