While I appreciate the sentiment and agree with what you said, please don't 
address it to me.  I didn't make the comments that ran him off.  Those who did 
may want to express similar sentiments.  


I know he is still lurking, and I am sure he still cares, but I don't blame him 
for his actions/reactions/decisions.  Sometimes it is VERY hard to have an 
opinion counter to the majority and swim against the stream.  It became almost 
a 
mob mentality with many attacking the few.

Unfortunately, it appears that more and more people here are starting to agree 
with what we were saying all along, but when Woody first brought it up they 
were 
just not ready to hear it.  Being right won't bring him back... doing what is 
right just might.


 



________________________________
From: Jerry Belloit <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, October 14, 2010 9:05:40 AM
Subject: RE: [gatortalk] FW: [gatornews] AJC.com: Would you vote for a 16-team 
playoff?


Scott,
 
Perhaps Woody’s absence should remind us all that we should be a little more 
courteous and civil in our discourse with each other.  After all we are family 
here on GatorNet and we should be more considerate of each other.  We are 
“entitled” to be a great gator family!
 
Jerry
 
From:[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of 
Scott Lucas
Sent: Wednesday, October 13, 2010 6:00 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [gatortalk] FW: [gatornews] AJC.com: Would you vote for a 16-team 
playoff?
 
The commenter was Woody... I guess he found an outlet since he doesn't post on 
GT anymore.

 
 

________________________________

From:Oliver Barry <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wed, October 13, 2010 4:03:23 PM
Subject: [gatortalk] FW: [gatornews] AJC.com: Would you vote for a 16-team 
playoff?
This is all good and well to debate, but really, who here thinks a playoff will 
happen in the next 10 years?  20 years?
Maybe, maybe it could happen the way Tony Barnhart says here with the first 4 
team playoff.  That would be the humble beginning.  That’s coming right along, 
in say 30 years?
I like the commenter’s remark at the end.  Any team could be great one day.  If 
Boise St hadn’t beaten Oklahoma in 2006 the discussion would be less further 
along than it is.  Boise St couldn’t hang in the SEC, probably not even in the 
ACC, like they’re doing.  They had the opportunity to move conferences.  Where 
did they go?  They left the WAC and went to the Mountain West!  Don’t even tell 
me they want to be competitive with Oklahoma .  It’s absurd.
 
Oliver Barry CRS,GRI
Real Estate Broker
Bob Parks Realty
1517 Hunt Club Blvd
Gallatin TN 37066
Phone: 615-826-4040
Fax: 615-822-2027
Mobile: 615-972-4239
 
 

________________________________

From:[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of 
Woody
Sent: Wednesday, October 13, 2010 10:10 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gatornews] AJC.com: Would you vote for a 16-team playoff?
 
(ridiculous)
Would you vote for a 16-team playoff?
7:51 am October 13, 2010, by Tony Barnhart
I promised myself I would read the book with an open mind and I did. There is a 
lot I don’t agree with in the book but Dan Wetzel’s “Death to the BCS” is 
required reading for college football fans.
Wetzel’s book, which hits the store shelves on Thursday, makes the case through 
exhaustive interviews and research that many of the accepted truths about the 
BCS are simply not true and have been perpetuated by the major conferences who 
want to remain in complete control of post-season football.
Example: That the BCS is “lucrative” because it receives about $125 million per 
year from ESPN to show the games. Wetzel points out through numerous interviews 
that the a 16-team playoff would generate well over $750 million per year. So 
conservatively, he argues, the power structure is willing to leave $500 
million on the table per year in order to stay in power.
Another example: If the BCS goes away, then the conferences will go back to the 
old bowl system: Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany has suggested that if the BCS 
is forced out of business, the major conferences will simply go back to the 
system of conference tie ins (SEC to Sugar, Big 12 to Fiesta, Big Ten to Rose, 
etc). The Big Ten might be able to afford to do that, but few others could. 
They 
could not go back to the pre-1998 bowl system because they don’t have pre-1998 
budgets any more. They need more money.
Wetzel says that while the entrenched power structure of the six major 
conferences and the bowls looks like an immovable object,  the inevitability of 
a playoff is an irresistible force being created by a new, better-informed, 
internet savvy, generation of college football fans. These fans have grown up 
with more information and more exposure to college football than ever before. 
Wetzel makes the case these fans see every institution around them evolving at 
warp speed while college football stays in a system that was created before 
24-hour news and sports was available on a handheld device. They want more from 
college football and are empowered to demand it.
Wetzel  proposes a 16-team playoff to determine the national championship with 
all 11 winners of the Division I-A conferences getting an automatic berth with 
five at-large teams.
 Here are his first-round pairings if the tournament had been in place in 2009:
No. 16 Troy (Sun Belt) at No. 1 Alabama (SEC)
No. 15 East Carolina (C-USA) at No. 2 Texas (Big 12)
No. 14 Central Michigan (MAC) at No. 3 Cincinnati (Big East)
No. 13 LSU (at-large) at No. 4 TCU (Mountain West)
No. 12 Penn State (at-large) at No. 5 Florida (at-large)
No. 11 Virginia Tech (at-large) at No. 6 Boise State (WAC)
No. 10 Iowa (at-large) at No. 7 Oregon (Pac-10)
No. 9 Georgia Tech (ACC) at No. 8 Ohio State (Big Ten)
A selection committee, not the BCS Standings made up of poll voters and 
computers, would pick the five at-large teams. And Wetzel makes the point 
that the competition for and the speculation about those five at-large slots 
would be riveting in the final month of the season.
The first three rounds of the tournament would be played in the home stadium of 
the highest seed. The championship would be on a neutral site. So the 
competition to be one of the top four seeds, and thus be guaranteed at least 
two 
home games, would be enormous, Wetzel argues.
Wetzel’s position is that the value of having all of the conference champions 
included outweighs the exclusion of a third or fourth team from one of the 
power 
conferences. It wouldn’t cheapen the regular season, he argues, because seeding 
would become so important. Having the little guy playing the big guy in his 
home 
stadium (Appalachian State at Michigan ) would add drama of the first two 
rounds 
of the football playoffs similar to the NCAA basketball tournament.
Again, it’s compelling reading. But here is my rebuttal to just a few of these 
points:
**–I have been involved in college athletics long enough to know that we can’t 
get from where we are right now (a two team playoff) to a 16-team playoff in 
just one step. College athletics does not do radical change. The NCAA 
basketball 
tournament started with eight teams in 1939 and grew in increments to its 
current 68. That is why the next step in the evolution of post-season college 
football in Division I-A will be a four-team playoff.
**–I remain unconvinced that enough presidents want something like this. 
Georgia 
president Michael Adams put an eight-team playoff on the table in 2007 and 
wasn’t able to get a whole lot of support. The presidents I talk to just don’t 
want to open up this can of worms. Wetzel, however, believes that when the 
economic reality of a playoff  and its value hits schools that are already 
strapped for cash, the presidents will change their minds. He also believes 
that 
the current power structure keeps the presidents from being completely informed 
on this issue. I don’t know about that. There are some pretty smart guys and 
ladies sitting in these president’s offices.
**–Using this 16-team format that includes all 11 conference championships, 
teams like Troy (No. 69 in Jeff Sagarin’s rankings), East Carolina (No. 51), 
and 
Central Michigan (No. 42) would have gotten in the tournament. Teams like No. 
14 
Nebraska, No. 15 BYU, No. 16 Pittsburgh, and No. 17 Oklahoma would have been 
left out.
**–College football and basketball are so different. It’s one thing to let the 
MAC champion into a 65-team basketball tournament. It’s another thing entirely 
to tell a 10-2 SEC team that it didn’t get into a 16-team playoff because 
Central Michigan beat  Ohio U.  on a Friday night in Detroit  before 23,714 
people. The economic difference between Duke and Butler basketball, who met for 
the NCAA championship last April, is not that great. The economic difference 
between Georgia football and football at Central Michigan has to be measured in 
light years.
If you put the best 16 teams in a playoff, some of the big conferences might 
listen. But I can’t see them going for a system like this. I could be wrong.
So what do you think? Do you like Wetzel’s 16-team playoff? If you were a 
college president, would you vote for it?
 
Woody Bass 
October 13th, 2010
11:07 am
Oh please. WE DO NOT NEED A PLAYOFF. A playoff doesnt solve the problem anymore 
than the current BCS system does. The PROBLEM is
the pre-season polls…
the fact that strength of schedule is determined too early..
the fact that every conference SHOULD have a championship game (stupid NCAA 
rule)… 

The BCS has gotten it right more often than not. And dont give me this crap 
about Boise State … yes.. they are impressive.. but as South Carolina has 
shown… 
any team can be great on any given day… but can they do so consistently?
        * Link 
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