The whole premise of the playoffs is based upon that all teams are deserving like the NFL. However, at least NFL is small enough to compare the competitors by records. They play enough of each other that the team records, although not perfect, is sufficient to qualify for the playoffs. College has too many teams and the talent pool gets diluted from the top teams down. There are too many teams eligible in college. I have no idea what would be a good number of teams, but it's not bigger than 40 for this playoff model, especially if you're ignoring SOS.
There is also substantial parity in the NFL that will never exist in CFB.
The 2007 Patriots that went undefeated played the worst team in the NFL that year (the 1-15 Dolphins) twice. They won both games by 21 points. The second-worst team they played was the Jets, and they beat them first by 24 in the opener and then by only ten AT HOME in December. The third-worst team that the Patriots played, the 5-11 Ravens, LED THE PATRIOTS until the final minute, and beat them in every way possible save for 13 penalties for 100 yards.
Sagarin has Ohio State at #1 right now.
How badly would Ohio State beat...in the same rankings.....
- the worst FBS team (FIU)?
- the second worst FBS team (ULM)?
- the fifth worst FBS team (Purdue)?
Well, we know the answer to the last one, 45-0.
And FIU did lose by 24 points to Indiana, so we can make some conclusions.
And ULM lost by 48 to Texas and by 34 to (wait for it) Auburn.
Yes, this is a small sample size, I get it. But this point could be made over and over: the distance between the best and worst team in the NFL is 2-3 possessions (maybe less) while the distance between the best and worst teams in CFB appears to be at least 4-5 TDs.
Of course, the REAL issue is that the distance even between the Top Six teams in CFB and the bottom five teams in the Top 25 is USUALLY severe, too.
21-25 Sagarin
21 Clemson
22 Iowa
23 Baylor
24 Missouri
25 Kansas State
Note: using Sagarin ratings:
Clemson lost to #6 UGA by 31, #13 SCAR by 3, and beat #18 SMU by 3
Iowa lost to #1 Ohio State by 28 and to #27 Iowa State by 1
Baylor lost to #29 BYU by 6, #27 Iowa State by 22
Mizzou lost to #19 aTm by 31, to #7 Alabama by 34, to #13 SCAR by 4
K State lost to #29 BYU by 39, #11 Arizona St by 10, and #27 Iowa St by 8
The 21-25 teams played 13 games against the Top 27....and went 0-13. I didn't include yesterday, or it's 0-14.
Of course, there's.....maybe.....an obvious flaw, which is that I'm using ratings AFTER the game is played, but I'm simply making the point that the college gap is demonstrably bigger than the NFL gap is, probably by a factor of 4 or more. (I also don't quite understand K-State being rated ahead of BYU, given the Cougars have a higher SoS, better Top 30 record, and a 29-point shellacking of K-State).
This doesn't mean that Oklahoma cannot beat Alabama
in a single game...but it's probably no accident that Vandy had an off week while Alabama was playing Georgia in a slugfest, and Oklahoma had an off-week while Alabama had to risk injury (but not defeat) against Mercer.
But ask yourself - among the Big Dawgs, how many REAL upsets happened in 2024? Not "did upsets happen" but how many affected the Top 8 teams? And when I upset, I don't mean "Georgia Tech beat the Florida State team that wound up 2-10," I mean legit upsets,
MAMMOTH upsets, I mean Chaminade taking down Ralph Sampson's Virginia. I mean App State knocking off a ranked Michigan team.
AP TOP EIGHT
Oregon - unbeaten
Georgia - they lost to playoff contenders on the road
Notre Dame - okay, you've got me here with Northern Illinois
Texas - two reasonably narrow losses to UGA
Penn St - losses to maybe the two best teams in the B1G
Ohio State - losses to #1 Oregon on the road and a stunner to Michigan
Tennessee - loss to 6-6 Arkansas and to UGA
Boise St - loss to the only decent team they played
The same 8 teams top the coaches poll.
So out of the top 8 teams, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Tennessee, and Boise State had LOSSES that should take them out of the loop (if that's your gig), but I'd also have a hard time choosing Penn State over Ohio State, too.
The point?
We don't need anything beyond a four-team playoff.
Ever.