Max
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Saban wants Power 5 teams to only play each other, and he doesnāt favor an expanded Playoff. Connect the dots.
Nick Saban has a bully pulpit. People listen when college footballās greatest coach talks, and Saban has used his megaphone to hawk a handful of policy ideas over the years.
One of Sabanās pet projects is convincing the rest of the sport that teams from power conferences should only play each other. He pushed it again at 2018ās SEC Media Days on Wednesday, using a similar rationale to the one heās laid out since at least 2014.
āI know nobody really asked this, but Iāve always been an advocate of playing all Power 5 schools,ā Saban told a media horde. āI think we need to have more really, really good games on TV for the players. We canāt have fans who pay a lot of money for tickets and boxes and loges who support our programs to pay for games that no one is interested in watching.ā
Sabanās idea would lead to more fun non-conference games. It might help stem a tide of falling attendance across the sport and bump ratings, too. It could be pulled off if everyone got together. Weāve already published a plan that could be a starting point. But:
Power 5 teams only playing each other would be awful for mid-majors.
The simplest reason why is that small schools (both FCS and Group of 5 FBS) depend on Power 5 games for money. They get hundreds of thousands of dollars per visit to power-conference stadiums. The money those games make for small-school athletic departments is a huge budgetary boost. They usually lose, but they get help funding more sports and scholarships. They donāt have out-of-this-world television contracts to lean on.
Sabanās plan would also crush whatever tiny chances mid-majors currently have of getting into the College Football Playoff. That eventās selection committee has made plain that it doesnāt respect mid-major schedules, and weāre all entitled to feel however we want about that. But UCF going unbeaten in 2017 and missing the Playoff after getting just one Power 5 win against a bad Maryland team made something else extra clear: For a mid-major to make the field, it needs to have a win or two against a really good power team.
Thatās why Houston made a lot of peopleās projected Playoff cuts early in 2016, after the Cougars beat Oklahoma in Week 1 but before they fell off a cliff later in the season. Itās why FAU, which plays OU in Week 1 in 2018, might be the mid-major with the best chance.
Saban knows a Power 5-only scheduling policy would hurt mid-majors. Itās common sense. He also knows that mid-majors arenāt his problem.
Heās made clear that he thinks little of UCFās national championship claim, which is the closest the Knights can get to a real title in a sport thatās locked out mid-majors.
At the same presser where he again put forth his exclusively Power 5 scheduling idea, he alluded to the obvious point that it would hurt teams like UCF. He said he āhas a tremendous amount of compassion for UCF and what they accomplished this year.ā
āBut I think they did a good job of determining who got in the playoffs, and we can have another discussion about the future of the playoffs and how many teams should get in the playoffs, but youāre going to minimize the effect of bowl games, which I stood up here ten years ago and said, as soon as we do this, itās going to diminish bowl games, the importance of bowl games. Everybody would just be interested in the playoffs.ā
An expanded playoff could leave an opportunity for a mid-major to get in even without the option to schedule Power 5 opponents. But Saban doesnāt want the Playoff to get bigger, either, and has spoken at length several times about how a larger Playoff makes bowl games less important, with players sometimes sitting out less meaningful bowls.
āAll of these things are not good for college football,ā he said Wednesday.
If Saban doesnāt want a bigger Playoff and also doesnāt want Power 5s to play mid-majors, then he doesnāt want mid-majors to have any shot at the Playoff.
He doesnāt have to say that, though, because what does he care?
āSo thereās a lot of philosophical questions that everybody needs to sort of take into consideration as what the best way to do this whole thing is, and I donāt think I have the answer to that,ā Saban said. āThatās not what I get paid to do.ā
Sabanās vision for CFB scheduling would still screw mid-majors
Nick Saban has a bully pulpit. People listen when college footballās greatest coach talks, and Saban has used his megaphone to hawk a handful of policy ideas over the years.
One of Sabanās pet projects is convincing the rest of the sport that teams from power conferences should only play each other. He pushed it again at 2018ās SEC Media Days on Wednesday, using a similar rationale to the one heās laid out since at least 2014.
āI know nobody really asked this, but Iāve always been an advocate of playing all Power 5 schools,ā Saban told a media horde. āI think we need to have more really, really good games on TV for the players. We canāt have fans who pay a lot of money for tickets and boxes and loges who support our programs to pay for games that no one is interested in watching.ā
Sabanās idea would lead to more fun non-conference games. It might help stem a tide of falling attendance across the sport and bump ratings, too. It could be pulled off if everyone got together. Weāve already published a plan that could be a starting point. But:
Power 5 teams only playing each other would be awful for mid-majors.
The simplest reason why is that small schools (both FCS and Group of 5 FBS) depend on Power 5 games for money. They get hundreds of thousands of dollars per visit to power-conference stadiums. The money those games make for small-school athletic departments is a huge budgetary boost. They usually lose, but they get help funding more sports and scholarships. They donāt have out-of-this-world television contracts to lean on.
Sabanās plan would also crush whatever tiny chances mid-majors currently have of getting into the College Football Playoff. That eventās selection committee has made plain that it doesnāt respect mid-major schedules, and weāre all entitled to feel however we want about that. But UCF going unbeaten in 2017 and missing the Playoff after getting just one Power 5 win against a bad Maryland team made something else extra clear: For a mid-major to make the field, it needs to have a win or two against a really good power team.
Thatās why Houston made a lot of peopleās projected Playoff cuts early in 2016, after the Cougars beat Oklahoma in Week 1 but before they fell off a cliff later in the season. Itās why FAU, which plays OU in Week 1 in 2018, might be the mid-major with the best chance.
Saban knows a Power 5-only scheduling policy would hurt mid-majors. Itās common sense. He also knows that mid-majors arenāt his problem.
Heās made clear that he thinks little of UCFās national championship claim, which is the closest the Knights can get to a real title in a sport thatās locked out mid-majors.
At the same presser where he again put forth his exclusively Power 5 scheduling idea, he alluded to the obvious point that it would hurt teams like UCF. He said he āhas a tremendous amount of compassion for UCF and what they accomplished this year.ā
āBut I think they did a good job of determining who got in the playoffs, and we can have another discussion about the future of the playoffs and how many teams should get in the playoffs, but youāre going to minimize the effect of bowl games, which I stood up here ten years ago and said, as soon as we do this, itās going to diminish bowl games, the importance of bowl games. Everybody would just be interested in the playoffs.ā
An expanded playoff could leave an opportunity for a mid-major to get in even without the option to schedule Power 5 opponents. But Saban doesnāt want the Playoff to get bigger, either, and has spoken at length several times about how a larger Playoff makes bowl games less important, with players sometimes sitting out less meaningful bowls.
āAll of these things are not good for college football,ā he said Wednesday.
If Saban doesnāt want a bigger Playoff and also doesnāt want Power 5s to play mid-majors, then he doesnāt want mid-majors to have any shot at the Playoff.
He doesnāt have to say that, though, because what does he care?
āSo thereās a lot of philosophical questions that everybody needs to sort of take into consideration as what the best way to do this whole thing is, and I donāt think I have the answer to that,ā Saban said. āThatās not what I get paid to do.ā
Sabanās vision for CFB scheduling would still screw mid-majors