College football will finally have a
playoff. Come 2014, the BCS is dead.
A committee of university presidents on
Tuesday approved a plan for a four-team playoff put forward by commissioners of
the major football conferences.
The new system doesn't go too far, Virginia
Tech President Charles W. Steger said.
"It goes just the right amount,"
he said.
The move completes a six-month process for
the commissioners, who have been working on a new way to determine a major
college football champion after years of griping from fans.
"There were differences of
views," Steger said. "I think it would be a serious mistake to assume
it was a rubber stamp."
Instead of simply matching the nation's No.
1 and No. 2 teams in a championship game after the regular season, the way the
Bowl Championship Series has done since 1998, the new format will create a pair
of national semifinals.
College football fans have been clamoring
for a playoff for years, and the BCS has been a constant target for criticism.
Lawmakers have railed against it. A political action committee was formed,
dedicated to its destruction. The Justice Department looked into whether it
broke antitrust laws. Even President Obama said he wanted a playoff.
Now it's a reality.
No. 1 will play No. 4, and No. 2 will play
No. 3 on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1. The sites of those games will rotate among the
four current BCS bowls — Rose, Orange, Fiesta and Sugar — and two more to be
determined.
The winners will advance to the
championship on the first Monday in January that is six or more days after the
last semifinal. The first championship Monday is set for Jan. 12, 2015.
The site of the title game will move around
the way the Super Bowl does, with cities bidding for the right to host.
The teams will be selected by a committee,
similar to the way the NCAA basketball tournament field is set. The men's
tournament has 68 teams, and 37 at-large bids.
The football committee will have a much
tougher task, trying to whittle the field down to four. Among the factors the
committee will consider is won-loss record, strength of schedule, head-to-head
results and whether a team is a conference champion.
The commissioners want to lock in this
format for 12 years with a television partner. The current BCS deal with ESPN
runs through the 2013 season. The new format will be presented to potential TV
partners in the fall, starting with ESPN.
There are still some details to work out —
such as who will be on the committee and what new bowls will be involved in the
semifinal rotation — but all the decision-makers are on board.
Lower divisions of college football already
have a playoff, but the highest level has always used bowls and polls to
determine its champion. Those days are coming to an end.
"By making this change we felt we
could enhance the regular season but at the same time provide the fans with the
kind of postseason that will contribute to the regular season,"
Southeastern Conference Commissioner Mike Slive said.
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