Germainfitch1 wrote:BGSU33 wrote:I'm probably not in the majority here, but I actually like the bowls and would rather have them over a playoff in I-A. Being a fan of the MAC, having two and likely three bowls next season for 12 teams to compete for postseason play in is good news to me. And although last year was quirky, we landed five teams in bowl games last season. If you enter a playoff, the MAC is looking at one team in, and that puts us in the same problem we've been in for men's basketball with a field of 65.
I do like the idea of the "plus-1" with the bowl system though. But I'll take the bowls over a straight playoff. But I do think the "plus-1" is a good idea and one I would be in favor of if a change was to be made.
Explain to me why you have to limit the number of overall bowls to have a playoff??
The answer. You don't. All the games are meaningless now save one! You can still have a bunch of meaningless bowl games with an 8 team playoff.
If you're going to quote people, at least understand the point being made and don't botch it up when you reply. Where did I say above you have to "limit the number of bowls to have a playoff?" I never said you had to. but I will tell you this much, if it did go to a playoff sytem, we wouldn't have 56 teams playing postseason, I promise you that. You'd be looking at just a fraction of that.
And I completely disagree that bowl games are meaningless except for one! That's a very narrowminded to say. It's true that one of the bowls means more than the others, that's why it's being played for the national championship. But if you think games from Notre Dame-Ohio State through Akron-Memphis are meaningless, then you are only kidding yourself.
Trying to compare what Divisions I-AA, II & III do for postseason compared to what I-A does is like comparing apples to oranges. They're both fruits, but look and taste very different. Bowls work for I-A teams and have provided many teams the opportunity to play for something, even if teams have lost a few games. One of many reasons lower divisions have playoffs is because they couldn't ever support a bowl system. When 20,000 show up for a I-AA national championship game and TV ratings are low compared to many I-A bowl games, or 4,000 people show up for a D-III game, year in and year out every "meaningless" bowl game will surpass those figures.
The bottom line is, whether I-A sticks to bowls or goes to playoffs, there's always going to be room for discussion. But the fact of the matter is, the way it is now and they way it's always been is I-A is about the bowls. And there's no way in hell I'll ever look at a chance for BG to play in a bowl game whether our record is 6-5 or 10-1 as "meaningless." It's a chance to reward our players with a lasting memory, a chance for fans to watch, travel and attend a game against a new opponent, it's a showcases for our school, and it is great for recruiting. That's certainly doesn't sound meaningless to me, but sitting at home with a 10-1 record locked out of a playoff system does.