You probably haven’t had time to keep tabs on all this College Football Playoff stuff. Life gets in the way, right? Paying bills, catching up on work. So here’s a little breakdown for you.
Back in February, the Big Ten and SEC bigwigs got together in New Orleans. Sounds fun, right? But they weren’t there for the jazz. They were plotting — how about a 14-team playoff with guaranteed slots for their teams? Seemed like a power move. Not surprisingly, people flipped. Aren’t playoffs supposed to be about who’s best that year?
Fast forward, and it’s even wilder now. They’re toying with a 16-team plan. Ralph Russo at The Athletic spilled the beans. No clean brackets either. Imagine it: the bottom four teams battling it out while everyone else chills. Kind of a head-scratcher.
This only happens in college football where folks in fancy suits get to mess around with seasons like they’re playing a game of Monopoly. Season one with a 12-team setup was like trying to figure out chess from a rulebook. Now, it’s all gonna change again, just because they can.
And the whole “First Four” play-in? College hoops, not needed in football, but hey, why not? Last season, these hypothetical matchups might’ve looked like Miami vs. Clemson or Ole Miss vs. South Carolina. Used to be an Outback Bowl thing.
And oh, let’s talk about the guaranteed spots. The Big Ten and SEC want more slices of the pie with this 4-4-2-2-1 model or whatever. Even the NFL doesn’t pull moves like this. It’s like major league sports went rogue with ego. But they’ve got data backing them up — well, of course.
Guess who’s cooking up this whole mess? Tony Pettiti, the Big Ten boss. Wants to make mini tournaments like the NBA. Probably thinks it’s a genius move for TV bucks. Networks love drama, right?
Schools need cash too, especially with athlete payments on the horizon. Gotta make those spreadsheets happy. Commissioner Sankey isn’t protesting either. Trust the standings, not some committee, they say.
Imagine, huge games like Texas vs. Ohio State becoming practice scrimmages. If you’re the coach, do you play your stars or check out the backups? Makes you wonder if these guys considered this chaos. Or maybe dollar signs blind reason.
All this tinkering with trivial brackets could seriously harm the sport’s reputation. Fans might bail, and legal folks could probe into this setup. Remember the BCS drama? Complicated tech and yearly tweaks led it to crash and burn. Congress got involved — yikes!
If they wise up, they’d go for a simple top-16 playoff. But betting against the self-interest of these conferences? Yeah, good luck with that.