National Post

CFL PLAYOFF FORMAT NEEDS SOME FIXING.

Crossover rule needs to be tweaked for fairness sake

- Ted Wyman Twyman@postmedia.com Twitter.com/Ted_Wyman

Here’s an undeniable fact about the CFL: For the last three seasons, the team finishing fourth in the West Division has been rewarded with an easier playoff matchup — at least on paper — than the team that finished third.

That is just plain wrong.

I get that the league wants to keep its traditiona­l East-West playoff system going because it’s the best way to set up a truly national Grey Cup game.

But it’s not the fair way of doing things and it says here the CFL should seriously consider some changes to right this wrong.

This is not a small sample size. This is not a one-off. This is an ongoing trend.

This is three consecutiv­e seasons in which the regular-season imbalance between East and West has led to unfair playoff matchups due to the crossover rule, in which the fourth-place team in one division goes to the other division for the post-season if it has more points than the third-place team.

Now, I know full well what people will say against this argument. No team has won the Grey Cup after qualifying for the playoffs through the crossover. This is true, but it’s going to happen at some point. And just because no team has won the Cup that way, it doesn’t make the system right.

The truth is the B.C. Lions have a 9-9 record and will cross over to play the 8-10 Hamilton Tiger-Cats Sunday in the East semifinal.

Meanwhile, two teams with better records — the 12-6 Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s and 10-8 Winnipeg Blue Bombers — will meet in Regina to decide the West semifinal. And the 9-9 Edmonton Eskimos, with a better record than the TigerCats, missed the playoffs entirely. It just should not be that way. Another thing people will say is Eastern teams have won the last two Grey Cups.

Again, it’s true, but you can question whether the teams that won even really deserved to be in the Grey Cup game.

In 2016, the Ottawa Redblacks won the Grey Cup with an 8-9-1 regular season record, which would not have been good enough to get them into the playoffs in the West. They finished first in their division and hosted the East final, which they won, before upsetting Calgary for the league championsh­ip.

In 2017, the Toronto Argos finished 9-9 and followed the exact same path as Ottawa to a Grey Cup title. Again, they would not have made the playoffs in the West.

Under a different playoff format, both teams could have been lower seeds and would have had to play multiple games on the road in order to get to the Grey Cup.

That brings us to some suggestion­s for what could work as an alternativ­e.

The easiest solution, but also the one that would face the most resistance would be to make it a no-division league with the top six teams making the playoffs.

Yes, it would eliminate the EastWest Grey Cup at times, but it’s already possible for that to happen with the current crossover format.

Each team would play every other team twice with a couple extra “rivalry games” per season for each team. If and when Halifax gets a CFL team, it would be a 10-team league with each team playing all others in a home and home.

Under that system, Edmonton would be in the playoffs as the sixth seed this season, while Hamilton would be out. By their records, that’s the way it should be.

If people can’t get their heads around that idea, how about a tweak to the current system, one that would reward teams with better records?

Here’s how it could work:

If the second-place team in the West (or the East if it ever happens) has a better record than the secondplac­e team in the other division and there is a crossover situation, that team should be the one that crosses over and hosts the East semifinal.

For instance, Saskatchew­an (126) would host Hamilton (8-10) in this year’s East semifinal, while Winnipeg (10-8) would host B.C. (99) in the West semifinal.

Edmonton (9-9) would still get the shaft, but in terms of more appropriat­e seeding and fairness based on the regular season standings it could work.

There is a slight argument to be made the standings are skewed because of the imbalanced schedule (teams play some opponents in their own division more often than those in the other division), but that’s not enough of a difference maker in my opinion.

This system would solve the problem. It would prevent fourthplac­e teams from getting any kind of advantage and would reward both the second- and third-place teams in the West for having superior records.

Saskatchew­an should not have to play a team like Winnipeg in the first round of the playoffs when B.C. gets to face a Hamilton squad with an inferior record. That scenario can and should be fixed.

JUST BECAUSE NO TEAM HAS WON THE (GREY) CUP THAT WAY (THROUGH A CROSSOVER SPOT), IT DOESN’T MAKE THE SYSTEM RIGHT. — TED WYMAN

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 ?? JASON FRANSON / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Eskimos and Bombers are both being punished with the current playoff format, writes Ted Wyman.
JASON FRANSON / THE CANADIAN PRESS The Eskimos and Bombers are both being punished with the current playoff format, writes Ted Wyman.

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