Your Small College Is Never Getting Invited To The College Football Playoff
Only 72 hours ago, college football fans of TCU and Baylor were looking at hotel prices in New Orleans and Pasadena. The Horned Frogs were ranked third in the college football playoff standings and the Bears were ranked sixth, but had one last chance to impress the college football community by beating a highly ranked Kansas State team.
Then Ohio State beat the middling Wisconsin Badgers into the ground and the college football playoff committee saw dollar signs and an escape route.
It’s hard to argue that Ohio State, 12-1, had a better season than TCU or Baylor. The fourth-ranked Buckeyes lost to a putrid Virginia Tech team by double digits at home on Sept. 6, which was by far the worst loss of all three teams. The same Virginia Tech team, later in the season, provided us with this:
Plus, Ohio State competes in the Big Ten–the second weakest football power-five conference. Baylor and TCU play in the Big 12, a conference ESPN ranked in its Power Index as the strongest in the country, ahead of the SEC. The Buckeyes played consistently better throughout the year, but that Virginia Tech loss doesn’t disappear. It can’t. It’s terrible.
TCU, which sported a one-loss record like the Buckeyes and the Bears, had one common opponent with Ohio State. The Horned Frogs slaughtered a top 25 Minnesota team by 23. The Buckeyes beat the same Gophers team by seven. TCU had the best loss of any of the three schools on the road against a top five opponent–and only lost that game by three.
Baylor’s strength of schedule doomed the Bears from the start, but was it that much worse than Ohio State’s? Baylor’s non-conference games included a road contest against Buffalo and two decisive home wins against SMU and Northwestern State. Ohio State didn’t play a true road non-conference game, facing Navy on a neutral field, losing to Virginia Tech at home, and beating down Kent State and Cincinnati. In fact, the adjusted strength of schedule rankings have TCU and Baylor ahead of the Buckeyes.
So why did Ohio State get the four-spot? Money. (Image via Barking Carnival):
TCU and Baylor are small, private schools, and those schools don’t drive ratings. Small schools don’t sell tickets. Small schools don’t sell advertisements. It’s why bowl committees start sweating when pundits predict “Duke” or “Vanderbilt” to their venues.
If your school represents a minuscule segment on this map, chances are, it would’ve gotten jumped, too.
If TCU or Baylor’s name was replaced with “Texas” and Ohio State’s with “Northwestern,” this wouldn’t have happened. Ohio State is a national brand that drives ratings. What do fans in Chicago, New York, and Los Angeles want to watch? Alabama versus TCU or Alabama versus Ohio State? The answer is easy. Is it justified? No, but college football is a business, and this was a business decision.
A conference championship game is an excuse the committee will bring up, but having one wouldn’t have bumped either private school ahead of the Buckeyes. Ohio State was always going to trump the small school with a Big Ten championship.
This game also renders the week-by-week college football playoff rankings meaningless. TCU beat Iowa State, a team whose only power-five win came on the road against a bowl-eligible Big Ten team, by 52 and dropped three spots. Ohio State beat an unproven Wisconsin team and jumped into the playoff.
If the four-team college football playoff is a placeholder for something bigger, then maybe small schools have nothing to worry about. But if this is the most “playoff” that college football is going to see, then small schools will never have a chance to compete.
So, if you’re a college football fan at a small school who wants to see his team play for a national championship, transfer. The college football playoff is just a repackaged version of the Bowl Championship Series, and it isn’t going to get better..
Image via Twitter
Look, everyone knew when they created a 4 team playoff with five power conferences that at least one conference was going to get boned. Ohio State just happened to take an 82-Couric dump on a pretty good Wisconsin team and shutout the best RB in the country on the final night. Certainly this result is more fair than the previous system. If there is any silver lining to this, it’s that it will likely hasten the expansion to an 8 team playoff.
10 years ago at 2:57 pmThe girls at TCU will somehow help me get over this atrocity.
10 years ago at 2:59 pmDon’t care how. Go Bucks
10 years ago at 2:59 pmFor all you inbreds, the point of the TOP 4 teams in the playoffs is to pick the TOP 4 teams in the country. You simply can’t say that OSU isn’t a top 4 team after shutting down a Heisman-caliber running back and #2 defense in the country…with a 3rd string quarterback.
10 years ago at 3:31 pmI’m really disappointed that the ITT Tech Huskies didn’t make it in this year…
10 years ago at 3:53 pmI am a die hard Longhorn fan so I’m not bias for Baylor or TCU. I will say ohio state did NOT deserve the 4 spot. Baylor is a better team & beat a higher ranked opponent. They should hop ohio state for that. Furthermore the committee ranked TCU third knowing they would play Iowa state. A team should not be moved down after winning 55-3. Wether it’s money or bias or ratings, Baylor & TCU were at a disadvantage & the committee seriously needs to rethink what they’ve taken away from those kids at Baylor or TCU. it’s a damn shame
10 years ago at 4:25 pmI think the big question with the playoff, is whether or not the point of it is to declare a more “true champion” (4 team playoff), or give every team a chance (8 team). In my opinion, it is the former. It would be hard to argue that Alabama and Oregon aren’t playing the best football in the country. Whether you consider Oregon the lucky one for the playoff this year or FSU, the playoff will help in that aspect. But the playoff isn’t in place to give two one loss teams (Baylor and TCU) a chance at a championship. It would be for teams such as Boise State’s 06 or 09 seasons. 8 team playoff would be lame. Michigan state in? No. Please stop.
10 years ago at 4:30 pmLeft out the stat that OSU played 9 bowl eligible teams during the season, only other team playing that many was Bama
10 years ago at 4:32 pmOkay I just want to throw some facts out here about all three teams.
10 years ago at 4:38 pmBaylor: 1-A opponents’ record of 62-69(.437). Had one win over a ten-plus win team and 6 bowl eligible teams. Colley Matrix SOS of 78th, Bradley-Terry SOS of 53rd.
Ohio St: 1-A opponents’ record of 77-66(.538). Had two wins over ten-plus win teams and 9 bowl eligible teams. Colley Matrix SOS of 29th, Bradley-Terry SOS of 22nd.
TCU: 1-A opponents’ record of 65-67(.492). Had zero wins over ten-plus win teams and 6 bowl eligible teams. Colley Matrix SOS of 71st, Bradley-Terry SOS of 43rd.
Maybe it was about the money but Ohio State is more deserving of the spot as Baylor or TCU is.
OSU’s opponents averaged 6.6 wins, TCU and Baylor’s both averaged less than 5.
10 years ago at 5:59 pmSize of the school doesn’t mean size of the fan base dickhead. People aren’t huge fans of Duke football because they sucked for years before 2013 not because they’re small. If that were true Duke wouldn’t have any basketball fans which isn’t the case
10 years ago at 4:43 pmI’ve said it before, I’ll say it again NO ONE GIVES A SHIT ABOUT DUKE FOOTBALL.
10 years ago at 11:40 pm