Saturday, November 24, 2018

Rethinking the Bowl Games

Yesterday, I outlined my plan for realigning the FBS level of college football. One aspect that I neglected to address is the postseason playoff and bowl game structure. Under this new alignment system, the bowl sites currently serving as the New Year's Six bowls would now serve as the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds of the playoff, on a rotating basis; however, these games would no longer be considered bowl games themselves. These sites are as follows: Pasadena, CA; New Orleans, LA; Miami Gardens, FL; Dallas, TX; Atlanta GA; and Glendale, AZ. Higher-seeded schools would get first choice in terms of site selection for these rounds. The final would also remain as a designated national championship game, to be played annually at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, TX. The quarterfinal round would be played on the first Saturday following the end of the regular season (currently conference championship week). The semifinal round would be played two weeks later, and the championship would be held two weeks after that.

Additionally, there would be 16 bowl games comprising the rest of the postseason, meaning that 40 teams in total (half of the reduced FBS) would be postseason eligible. Bowl sites are chosen based on geography (ie location south of the 36th parallel) and historical significance; corporate naming rights for bowl games would be prohibited. Bowl eligibility would still be determined by overall record, requiring 6 wins over FBS opponents. However, bowls would now be divided into regions, and each of the four regions would have a designated conference tie-in. Bowl eligible schools would be seeded 2-5 within each conference (with the playoff representatives being the #1 seed), and would play the same seed from the assigned opposing conference for that region, as follows:

East Region
Orange Bowl - Miami Gardens, FL - ACC #2 vs Big East #2
Citrus Bowl - Orlando, FL - ACC #3 vs Big East #3
Gator Bowl - Jacksonville, FL - ACC #4 vs Big East #4
Hall of Fame Bowl - Tampa, FL - ACC #5 vs Big East #5

Southeast Region
Sugar Bowl - New Orleans, LA - SEC #2 vs Big Ten #2
Peach Bowl - Atlanta, GA - SEC #3 vs Big Ten #3
Liberty Bowl - Memphis, TN - SEC #4 vs Big Ten #4
All American Bowl - Birmingham, AL - SEC #5 vs Big Ten #5

Southwest Region
Cotton Bowl - Dallas, TX - SWC #2 vs Big Eight #2
Sun Bowl - El Paso, TX - SWC #3 vs Big Eight #3
Bluebonnet Bowl - Houston, TX - SWC #4 vs Big Eight #4
Alamo Bowl - San Antonio, TX - SWC #5 vs Big Eight #5

West Region
Rose Bowl - Pasadena, CA - Pac-10 #2 vs American #2
Fiesta Bowl - Glendale, AZ - Pac-10 #3 vs American #3
Holiday Bowl - San Diego, CA - Pac-10 #4 vs American #4
Aloha Bowl - Honolulu, HI - Pac-10 #5 vs American #5

Note that if a conference does not have enough bowl-eligible schools to fill its bowl bids, a bowl-eligible school from another conference may be assigned instead.

These bowl games would take place across four consecutive days between the playoff semifinal and national championship game, with the final day being New Year's Day (if any of these days happen to fall on Sunday, that day would be skipped). Games in the East region would be held at 12:00 ET on ESPN, Southeast at 2:30 ET on CBS, Southwest at 5:00 ET on FOX, and West at 7:30 ET on ABC. A similar schedule would be used for the playoff quarterfinal games; semifinals would be held at 3:30 ET and 7:30 ET on ABC, while the national championship would be at 7:30 ET on ABC.

Overall, this vision of a new postseason would serve several purposes. First of all, it would detach the bowl games from the playoff and national championship contests, restoring them to their original purpose of being simply exhibition contests. Second, the money-driven glut of corporate sponsored bowl games would be massively curtailed, while still maintaining the most historically significant games. Third, and perhaps most interestingly, the bowl games would now serve as a greater source of interconference competition than ever before, with the explicit, consistent conference tie-ins that this proposal would employ. In a sense, bowl season would be transformed into "conference pride week". 

While the likelihood of a system like this ever being implemented is as low as the realignment scheme itself - after all, why would the Rose Bowl ever willingly give up its traditional role of hosting the Pac-8/10/12 and Big Ten champions - it's still something worth considering.

Friday, November 23, 2018

The (Almost) Perfect NCAA FBS Realignment Plan

In today's college football landscape, the trend is toward increasingly consolidated superconferences. For instance, the last wave of realignment led to the expansion of the Big Ten, ACC, and SEC to 14 teams each, while the Pac-10 expanded to 12 and was renamed the Pac-12. These moves mostly came at the expense of the Big 12, which contracted to 10 teams, and the Big East, which split into a basketball conference and a football conference (the current American Athletic Conference). When the next wave of realignment comes (likely in the 2020s), it is quite possible that the ACC, Big Ten, SEC, and Pac-12 expand to 16 teams each, with the Big 12 possibly ceasing to exist altogether.

It is understandable why the so-called "power" conferences want to expand: more programs means more television markets, which in turn means greater television revenue. As just one example, how else could we explain the Big Ten's addition of Rutgers other than the desire of the Big Ten to expand into the New York City television market?

Whatever benefits the conferences and individual programs may accrue from these trends, I would argue that college football as a whole is negatively affected. Conference expansion has broken up traditional regional conference rivalries. Expansion has also necessitated the creation of divisions within conferences, leading to unbalanced conference schedules and lopsided outcomes in conference championship games. The concentration of the strongest programs in just a handful of conferences means that most games at the FBS level have little if any meaning in terms of determining a national champion.

On the other hand, one of the more positive recent trends in college football has been the creation of the four team College Football Playoff (CFP) to replace the old top-two BCS system for determining a national champion. The BCS itself replaced a system in which there was no national championship game at all and champions were determined purely through the highly subjective polls. However, the new CFP system still has glaring issues - at least one Power Five conference champion will not have a chance to play for a national championship in any given year, while it's still nearly impossible for a Group of Five school to make it in at all (as we saw happen to an undefeated UCF team last year). Even a potential expansion of the playoff to eight teams would not fully resolve the issues with the system - consider how much subjectivity would still go into determining the two at-large spots under that hypothetical scenario.

With these points in mind, I set out to completely revamp the FBS level of NCAA college football. The system I devised would be fairly simple: there would now be eight 10-team conferences, with the winner of each conference getting an automatic bid to an eight team playoff to determine the national championship. Each team would play a single round-robin against the other nine teams in its conference during the regular season, and the team with the best conference record would be named the conference champion. (Ties would be broken by head-to-head record.) No conference would be divided into divisions, and no conference championship games would be played. Subjective rankings would be used only to determine the seeds for the playoff. Even with the addition of an extra playoff round, teams would still only play a maximum of 15 games in a season due to the elimination of the conference championships. In addition to the nine conference games, teams would schedule three non-conference games, including a maximum of one game against an FCS opponent. With the contraction of the FBS from 130 to 80 programs, the other 50 programs (all of them Group of Five schools) would be dropped down to the FCS.

The conference alignment system I've created is based on historical conference affiliations, rivalries, geography, and program strength. The new conferences are summarized as follows.

Big East Conference
Rutgers, Temple, Penn State, Pittsburgh, West Virginia, Maryland, Virginia Tech, Virginia, South Florida, UCF

The six italicized programs played in the Big East at some point in its history. Additionally, UCF currently plays in the American, the Big East's successor. Penn State sought to join the Big East in the 1980s when it was a basketball-only conference, but was rejected. Had it joined and then became a founding football member in the 1990s, the Big East may well have survived as a football conference. Maryland and Virginia have been cited as schools that may have followed Penn State into the Big East. There are a number of great intrastate rivalries here, including UCF-USF, Virginia-Virginia Tech, and Pitt-Penn State, as well as interstate rivalries like Pitt-West Virignia.

Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC)
Duke, Wake Forest, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Clemson, South Carolina, Georgia Tech, Florida, Florida State, Miami

The eight italicized programs currently play in the ACC. South Carolina was a founding member of the ACC; rejoining the conference would make Clemson-South Carolina a conference game again. Florida would join in-state rivals Florida State and Miami, while the four North Carolina schools are able to maintain their rivalries.

Southeastern Conference (SEC)
Kentucky, Louisville, Memphis, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, Alabama, Auburn, Georgia

The eight italicized programs currently play in the SEC. Louisville joins in-state rival Kentucky, while Memphis is given the opportunity to build rivalries with Tennessee and Vanderbilt and play in conference with rival Ole Miss. Great intrastate rivalries like Auburn-Alabama and Ole Miss-Mississippi State are preserved, along with interstate rivalries like Alabama-Georgia.

Big Ten Conference
Ohio State, Cincinnati, Michigan, Michigan State, Indiana, Purdue, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa

The nine italicized programs currently play in the Big Ten. The only new face is Cincinnati, which would be given the chance to build an in-state rivalry with Ohio State. A number of great interstate and intrastate rivalries are preserved, including Ohio State-Michigan, Michigan-Michigan State, and Minnesota-Wisconsin.

Big Eight Conference
Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa State, Missouri, Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Tulsa, Arkansas

The eight italicized programs were the original members of the Big Eight Conference. Tulsa would now be in conference with in-state rival Oklahoma State, while Arkansas could continue to build its rivalry with Missouri. Rivalries like Colorado-Nebraska and Missouri-Kansas are restored as conference games, while in-state rivalries are maintained in Kansas-Kansas State and Oklahoma-Oklahoma State.

Southwest Conference (SWC)
Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Houston, Baylor, Rice, SMU, TCU, LSU, Tulane

The eight italicized programs were members of the original SWC. Bringing these eight Texas schools back together in the same conference would restore a number of in-state rivalries, including Houston-Rice, SMU-TCU, and Texas-Texas A&M. LSU-Tulane is also restored as a conference rivalry, while LSU would be able to maintain its rivalry with Texas A&M.

Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10)
Washington, Washington State, Oregon, Oregon State, California, UCLA, Arizona, Arizona State, Utah, Boise State

The nine italicized programs are current members of the Pac-12. Boise State would finally be given the opportunity to play in a major conference. A number of in-state rivalries are preserved, including Washington-Washington State, Oregon-Oregon State, Cal-UCLA, and Arizona-Arizona State.

American Conference
USC, Stanford, BYU, Air Force, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Navy, Army, Syracuse, Boston College

This conference is no relation to the current American Athletic Conference. Instead, it is loosely based on the proposed "Airplane Conference" of 1959; the six italicized programs were part of that plan. This conference would bring the three service academies together in conference, as well as the seven private FBS schools of the west and north. Notre Dame, a long-time independent, would now have conference games against a number of its rivals, including Army, Navy, USC, Stanford, Northwestern, and Boston College. Meanwhile, Syracuse-Boston College and USC-Stanford are maintained as conference games. BYU, another large religious school and long-time independent, rounds out the conference nicely.

Overall, I believe this alignment would be a massive improvement over the current system. It would restore the geographic basis for conferences, bring back a number of historic conference rivalries, and potentially even create new rivalries. Having smaller conferences would reduce the concentration of the strongest programs in just a few conferences, bringing a degree of parity back to the college football landscape. Current Group of Five schools like Boise State and UCF would now have a legitimate chance to compete for a national title. Above all, conference championships would be given greater priority than subjective ranking systems, as winning the conference would give a program a bid in the playoff automatically - in other words, win and you're in. While it's highly unlikely that such an arrangement would ever actually come to pass, one can dream, right?