Started By
Message

re: The BCS

Posted on 7/8/09 at 4:04 pm to
Posted by Chill Pill
Between a Rock and a Hard Place
Member since May 2009
589 posts
Posted on 7/8/09 at 4:04 pm to
Even being from a BCS conference that has produced f national champions in the first 11 years of its existence, it is still completely fricked up and I think does most definitely violate antri-trust laws. Hopefully this is the final impetus for a playoff system. There finally are cracks in the unity of the Presidents.
Posted by Tmon225
Member since Jun 2009
7250 posts
Posted on 7/8/09 at 4:20 pm to
Do these people not realize that even with an 8 team playoff, smaller schools are still at a disadvantage. They would have to go undefeated just to be considered.

Plus, people will still bitch at the 8 team playoff because there are bound to be 5 or 6 teams with identical records vying for the last spots.
Posted by mikedatyger
Orlandeaux, FL
Member since Jun 2005
4015 posts
Posted on 7/8/09 at 4:20 pm to
quote:

Hopefully this is the final impetus for a playoff system.


I don't think you can ever have a "true" playoff system as long as the bowls are still involved. The biggest obstacle (besides all the money) is the Rose Bowl and the Big 10, who still believe that they are both more important than any playoff system.
Posted by King Joey
Just south of the DC/US border
Member since Mar 2004
12499 posts
Posted on 7/8/09 at 5:39 pm to
quote:

and I think does most definitely violate antri-trust laws.
Which ones? Unlawful barriers to market entry? Improper collaboration between competitors? And how do you define the "market" and the "competitors"? Is it all football, including a direct competitor to the BCS in both the NFL and the NCAA? Or is it specifically FBS division football, which would be a unique (and unprecedented) step to define a market for competitive purposes among a voluntary division of a voluntary organization? Or is it all of the NCAA, or all of college football? Who are the competitors (or potential competitors)? The conferences? The schools? The BCS? The bowls?

It is extremely easy (as well as simplistic, and incorrect) to throw out lines like "most definitely violate antitrust laws", but actually supporting such a claim is nigh impossible in a situation such as this.

Bear in mind that the only factors acting against the so-called "mid-majors" are consequences of their membership in lesser conferences, which is not a consequence of the BCS. And the regular and consistent flow of new teams into the BCS conferences over the last several years makes any argument of their non-competitive nature very difficult to take seriously. If the Utahs and Boise States of the world today were in the same boat as the Louisvilles and South Floridas and Florida States and Penn States and Miamis of yesteryear. The only difference is that some teams stepped up and actually tried competing on an even field to earn their shot, and others shied away and merely complained about not having it handed to them.

first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram