4. They would be detrimental to the
currently successful regular season
as well as the traditional bowl
season.
5. Other arguments against most playoff systems:
• The playoff structure that makes sense one year
would not necessarily makes sense every year.
• Playoffs would force student athletes to play too
many games.
• How do you determine who makes the playoffs?
Wouldn’t we simply be expanding the current
problem?
• Playoffs would turn college football into a watered
down version of the NFL.
6. And playoffs do nothing to address other
problems with the current system, such as:
• Inconsistencies between conferences: i.e. the
number of teams and whether or not they have a
conference championship game.
• Even greater inconsistencies when you consider
independent teams and non-BCS conferences.
• Teams out of bowl contention lack incentive.
• No real system in place to measure the relative
strength of each conference.
• Too many lopsided match-ups.
8. A solution that will address the
complaints of the playoff proponents as
well as other problems with the current
system without compromising the values
of the BCS stakeholders.
10. Step One
• Add one team to BCS to have 120 teams
• Divide 120 teams into 10 conferences with
12 teams in each conference
• Divide each conference into 2 divisions with
6 teams in each division
• Divide conferences into 2 regions with 5
conferences in the East, 5 in the West
11. Step Two
Schedule the season as follows:
• Games 1 – 2: Out-of-division games
• Games 3 – 7: Interdivisional round robin
• Game 8: Conference playoffs
• Games 9 – 12: Regional round robins
• Game 13: Bowl games
12. Regular Season Games 1-7
• Each team plays two games against teams
outside their own division of their own
conference.
• Each team also plays each of the other five
teams in their own division of their
conference.
• The results of the first seven games will
determine the ranking within each division
from #1 through #6.
13. Conference Playoffs
• The conference playoffs will be the eighth game of
the season.
• Team #1 from division A plays team #1 from division
B to determine the champion and runner-up.
• Team #2 from division A plays team #2 from division
B to determine 3rd and 4th place within the
conference. Team #3 will play team #3 and so on.
• Each division will alternate turns hosting these
games.
• The results of these games will determine the
overall rank within each conference from #1 through
#12.
14. Regional Round Robins
• In games 9 through 12, the #1 team from each
conference will play the #1 team from each of the
other conferences in their region.
• The #2 teams will play each of the other #2 teams,
etc.
• The conferences will alternate turns hosting these
games. For example, one year the Big Ten will host
all games vs. The Big East and the following year,
they will travel to all games vs. the Big East.
• The results of these games will determine the BCS
bowl match-ups and play a roll in other bowl
selections.
15. Tiebreakers
Ranking within each division will be determined by
divisional record. Ties will be broken by:
1) Head-to-head result
2) Overall record
3) Combined record of non-division opponents
End-of-season ranking will be determined by record
in the regional round robins. Ties will be broken by:
1) Head-to-head result
2) Head-to-head result of the entire conference
3) Overall record of the entire conference
16. Example Schedule
Ohio State Example Schedule
Game 1 vs. Bowling Green (non-divisional game)
Game 2 at West Virginia (non-divisional game)
Game 3 vs. Penn State (division game)
Game 4 at Indiana (division game)
Game 5 vs. Michigan State (division game)
Game 6 at Notre Dame (division game)
Game 7 vs. Michigan (division game)
Bye week (conference playoff games to be divided over two weeks)
Game 8 Conference Playoff vs. Big Ten West
Game 9 at Big East
Game 10 vs. SEC
Game 11 at MAC
Bye week (one compulsory bye week during regional round robin)
Game 12 vs. ACC
Game 13 possible bowl game
17. Advantages to Current System
• Will do a better job of determining who deserves to
play in the BCS bowl games.
• Creates exciting, even-strength match-ups
throughout the season.
• Gives all teams something to play for late in the
season.
• Eliminates inconsistencies between conferences.
• Will measure the strengths of conferences in relation
to each other in a way the current system does not.
• Will silence the critics who are calling for a playoff
system that would be detrimental to the sport.
18. Advantages to Other Playoff Systems
• Preserves the regular season and the traditional
bowls.
• Allows all teams to play at least 12 meaningful
games without forcing any team to play more then
13 games.
• Creates exciting match-ups for all teams, not just the
play-off teams.
• Will be a more effective way to determine the best
team.
• Eliminates inconsistencies between different
conferences and independent teams.
• Will measure the strengths of conferences.
19. Conferences
• Big Twelve, SEC, ACC, Conference USA and MAC
already have twelve teams split into 2 divisions so
no changes are necessary
• Big Ten adds Notre Dame
• Pac 10 adds Fresno State and Hawaii
• Big East adds Army, Navy, W. Kentucky and
Appalachian State
• Mountain West adds Boise State, Utah State and
San Jose State
• WAC/Sunbelt combine with all remaining teams
20. Conferences
East
Atlantic Coast Conference
Big East Conference
Big Ten Conference
Southeastern Conference
Mid American Conference
West
Big Twelve Conference
Mountain West Conference
Pacific Ten Conference
Conference USA
Sunbelt/WAC Conference
21. Conferences
ACC Big East
Atlantic Division
Boston College
Florida State
Maryland
Clemson
Wake Forest
North Carolina State
Coastal Division
Virginia Tech
Georgia Tech
North Carolina
Miami (FL)
Virginia
Duke
North
Rutgers
Pittsburgh
Connecticut
Syracuse
Navy
Army
South
South Florida
Western Kentucky
Louisville
Cincinnati
Appalachian State
West Virginia
22. Conferences
Big Ten Big Twelve
East
Penn State
Ohio State
Michigan
Michigan State
Indiana
Notre Dame
West
Purdue
Iowa
Northwestern
Minnesota
Illinois
Wisconsin
North
Missouri
Nebraska
Kansas
Colorado
Kansas State
Iowa State
South
Texas
Texas Tech
Texas A&M
Oklahoma
Oklahoma State
Baylor
23. Conferences
Conference USA MAC
East
East Carolina
Memphis
Southern Miss
UAB
UCF
Marshall
West
Tulsa
Rice
Houston
UTEP
Tulane
SMU
North
Buffalo
Bowling Green
Akron
Temple
Kent State
Ohio University
South
Ball State
Central Michigan
Western Michigan
Northern Illinois
Toledo
Eastern Michigan
24. Conferences
Mountain West Pac Ten
North
Utah State
Utah
Colorado State
Boise State
Brigham Young
Wyoming
South
TCU
UNLV
San Diego State
New Mexico
Air Force
San Jose State
North
Washington
Washington State
Oregon
Oregon State
Cal
Stanford
South
USC
Arizona
Arizona State
UCLA
Fresno State
Hawaii
25. Conferences
SEC Sunbelt / WAC
East
South Carolina
Florida
Georgia
Vanderbilt
Tennessee
Kentucky
West
Alabama
LSU
Mississippi
Mississippi State
Arkansas
Auburn
East
Louisiana – Lafayette
Arkansas State
Troy
Middle Tennessee
Florida Atlantic
Florida International
West
Louisiana Tech
Louisiana – Monroe
North Texas
Idaho
New Mexico State
Nevada
26. Frequently Asked Questions
Q - How would this system affect rivalry games?
A – Most rivalries are between teams in the same division, so they would continue to play
each year. This includes Ohio State vs. Michigan, Oklahoma vs. Texas, Auburn vs.
Alabama, Georgia vs. Florida, USC vs. UCLA, Army vs. Navy and many others. Other
rivalries, such as Notre Dame vs. USC could be continued through the 2 non-divisional
games.
Q – How would teams, fans and broadcasters coordinate travel plans?
A – The first seven games would be scheduled preseason as they are now. The remaining
games would be scheduled in terms of the dates and location, you just won’t know in
advance who the home team will be hosting. (This situation currently exists with
conference championship games, and it would also exist in any playoff system.) In this
system, game 8 would be scheduled after games 7 and games 9 through 12 would be
scheduled after game 8. A bye week before and/or after game 8 could be implemented to
facilitate travel planning.
Q – How would the bowl selections be made.
A – The top team to emerge from the East plays the top team from the West. Beyond that,
the selection process would be similar to how it is now. Conference winners would be
given top consideration but the number 2 or 3 team from top conferences may be
selected before the top teams from weaker conferences.
Q - Is this system better then the current system and all other proposals?
A - Yes.