justinsayne
Cody Rhodes is an excellant
I like my idea better

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just so we make this clear, the NC2A will listen to a single fan, and remove about HALF of the teams from Division 1 (something that they really can't do I don't think). Then remake ENTIRE CONFERENCES, eliminating the history of conferences and their Multi-Million Dollar profits, just to make their championship "easier" to get? Sorry, that's the stupidest thing I've heard on this forum that has anything to do with sports.
Forcing schools out of D1 will also murder their revenue from the football program, and force the schools to cut the football program. 1AA is not profitable, because it isn't D1. Schools have cut their football programs because of it (Hoftra and NorthEastern have cut their football programs this past year). And by cutting D1 in half, you will basically kill all recruiting, and lower the talent pool for the NFL draft (and thus the NFL).
This idea you have is both pathetic and a failure. You should get a time machine, go back in time to when you thought about thinking about this, and tell yourself that you have something better to do, like nothing, or twiddle your thumbs for 2 hours, or drink a gallon of gasoline and then swallow a match (OK, not the gas/match one).
Here's and Idea, there are what, 11 Conferences right now? make a 12 team tourny, the winners of each Conf. automatically get a spot, with one wildcard spot determined by the polls, (in which there would be three, computer, NCAA staff, and fans) the team that gets the highest avg. ranking of the three polls would be awarded the wildcard spot, the top 4 ranked teams would all get first round byes, that would give you 4 games in the first round, 4 games in the second round, 2 games in the third round, & then the championship game, each game would be sponsored by a current bowl sponsor, the later the round the bigger the sponsor, with the championship game rotating sponsors ever year
Any playoff will remove the 1 vs. 2 matchup, which is (and should be) the selling point for a national championship game. The ONLY way a playoff could work is if it were a 4-team playoff, which almost the National Championship is decided between 2 top teams. Anything more then 4 teams will give too many teams a shot. I'm sorry, but are you telling me #8 deserves as much of a chance at the national championship as #1 (a team that has CLEARLY played better all season)? They don't.
If anything, I could see maybe a 6 or 7 team thing where 7 plays 6, the winner plays 5, winner plays 4, etc. That would be the ONLY system to fairly give the #1 team a clear advantage over the other teams. Too bad that scenario takes WAY too long, and the season wouldn't end until February.
And all your systems are flawed beyond belief. You're eliminating Bowl games for half of the teams that get in bowls now, or just eliminating the teams itself. Bowls are HUGE payoffs for the institutions (and measuring sticks for some coaches), and you can't just eliminate that opportunity for teams.
Plus, you're acting as if money doesn't play a part in the situation. Money is the number 1 priority, and since sports is big business (and has been for a long long time), money should be the #1 priority.
No, because any large tournament leaves too much to chance. Look at March Madness. #1 seeds don't make the final 4 every year (hell, most years there's only 1 or 2 1's). You can't tell me that every year the 2 best teams make it, it's just the 2 hottest teams after the regular season. The 2 best teams after the regular season should play for the National Championship, not the 3rd and 7th best teams.In my Top-10, there were 3 undefeated teams, 6 one-loss, and 1 two loss teams. Alot of the teams didn't play each other, and if the teams that go into the tournament are really the best two, they'll make it all the way through the tournament, and they'll face each other at the win. They face the lower seeds, so they should have a better chance at winning those match-ups to begin with, and if they can't beat those teams, why should I believe they are the best. And they play on different ends of the spectrum, so to say, so if #1 and #2 win out they play each other in the end. It would prove the better team out of the elite in the country, and I would generalize the Top 10 are the best, seeing as there is only 1 team with more than 1 loss.
1. In your first scenario, you cut half the teams from Division 1 football. That's cutting the team. Sorry.I didn't eliminate the team. The system I created for the current system includes all 120 teams. And 70 of them shouldn't be allowed to qualify for bowls just because they were "bowl eligible" at 6-6 or 7-5. That is over half of Division 1 FBS teams. You don't see that problem in Division 1 FCS. They might be lower tier, but they could still get money from payoffs if they used a similar bowl system, but they don't and they're fine.
So you go and give them the millions of dollars they receive normally that they now won't get. And it's a BOWL game, not the championship. In the grand scheme of things who the hell cares who won the 2010 Meineke Car Care Bowl? No one, except the fans of the winning team.I have no problem eliminating oppurtunities for teams like Western Michigan and UTEP that went 6-6 in the MAC or C-USA, conferences that weren't extremely strong this year. They don't deserve the oppurtunity for a post season or the money, not for mediocrity.
It's good for the 8 schools you are involving. Not the 112 you aren't.So the 15 Bowl Games, National Television deals for all the games, the hugely sponsered playoffs that can also be done as sponsered bowl games, and all other money income related to the offseason isn't enough money for the NCAA and the schools involved. The only people that suffer are the schools that don't make the offseason cut, and as I said before, they honestly do not deserve it.
Why do you think 1AA is this almighty amazing prosperous entity? It's NOT. Schools are LOSING MONEY because of it, and as such CUTTING FOOTBALL ENTIRELY!And I also bring up my Division 1 FCS argument for this portion too.
No, because any large tournament leaves too much to chance. Look at March Madness. #1 seeds don't make the final 4 every year (hell, most years there's only 1 or 2 1's). You can't tell me that every year the 2 best teams make it, it's just the 2 hottest teams after the regular season. The 2 best teams after the regular season should play for the National Championship, not the 3rd and 7th best teams.
1. In your first scenario, you cut half the teams from Division 1 football. That's cutting the team. Sorry.
2. Why are you acting like D1AA (now known as D1 FCS) is this huge moneymaking proposition for schools? It's NOT. Schools are CUTTING FOOTBALL because of it. You can't fill the stadiums for minor league College Football (which 1AA football is).
So you go and give them the millions of dollars they receive normally that they now won't get. And it's a BOWL game, not the championship. In the grand scheme of things who the hell cares who won the 2010 Meineke Car Care Bowl? No one, except the fans of the winning team.
It's good for the 8 schools you are involving. Not the 112 you aren't.
As I said before, you take millions of dollars from people, and they won't be happy (nor should they). You're taking money from these schools, and act like everyone should be happy with it. Sadly, you're WAY wrong on this. If I took a percentage of your annual income that I felt you "didn't deserve", you'd be pissed.
the BCS's job is to determine #1 and #2. They've done that 9/10 times, if not 10/10. This year they will do the same. Auburn/Oregon are clear-cut #1 and #2 right now, and if Auburn loses the SEC Championship game, #3 TCU will become #2 and get a shot. If you think otherwise, sorry, you're dead fucking wrong. That means the BCS was actually successful.
Any playoff will remove the 1 vs. 2 matchup, which is (and should be) the selling point for a national championship game. The ONLY way a playoff could work is if it were a 4-team playoff, which almost the National Championship is decided between 2 top teams. Anything more then 4 teams will give too many teams a shot. I'm sorry, but are you telling me #8 deserves as much of a chance at the national championship as #1 (a team that has CLEARLY played better all season)? They don't If anything, I could see maybe a 6 or 7 team thing where 7 plays 6, the winner plays 5, winner plays 4, etc. That would be the ONLY system to fairly give the #1 team a clear advantage over the other teams. Too bad that scenario takes WAY too long, and the season wouldn't end until February.
And all your systems are flawed beyond belief. You're eliminating Bowl games for half of the teams that get in bowls now, or just eliminating the teams itself. Bowls are HUGE payoffs for the institutions (and measuring sticks for some coaches),
SportsIllustrated said:"Most conferences pool all their bowl payouts, using the bigger-money BCS games to cover the losses incurred in the smaller games. Thus does the Rose Bowl help subsidize the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl-a bowl bailout system that indeed spreads the wealth. Bowl directors privately admit that fewer than half the bowls could survive without the financial support from the schools. "
and you can't just eliminate that opportunity for teams. Plus, you're acting as if money doesn't play a part in the situation. Money is the number 1 priority, and since sports is big business (and has been for a long long time), money should be the #1 priority.
SportsIllustrated said:"Meanwhile, the sad sack programs that fail to qualify for a bowl often end up in the best financial position. As former Michigan AD Bill Martin said after the 2009 season, The fact we didn't go to a bowl game the last two years means we actually made money.' "
SportsIllustrated said:"Halftime entertainment at the Jan. 1, 2009, Outback Bowl was provided by the [ Iowa ] Hawkeye Marching Band. And how did the Tampa Bay Bowl Association, which runs the game, thank the band for that gratis performance? By charging the university $65 a head for each of the 346 band members. According to university records submitted to the NCAA, the school was forced to purchase face-value tickets totaling $22,490 for the band, even though the game wasn't sold out."
"For their appearance in the 2009 Orange Bowl, Virginia Tech and the ACC agreed to purchase 17,500 tickets at $125 per seat, but they could sell only 3,342, according to university documents. The result: a $1.77 million bath for the school, not the bowl."
SportsIllustrated said:Some estimates place the value of a 16 team playoff at $700-$800 million that could be distributed evenly among the conferences. In short, major money is being left on the table. Money that would go to the schools and the conferences, but not into the pockets of those in control at the moment.