Porterville Recorder

No change to college playoff format

- By RALPH D. RUSSO

THURSDAY, JAN. 4, 2018

ATLANTA — Unlike the Bowl Championsh­ip Series, the College Football Playoff was built to withstand criticism instead of shifting to respond to yearly griping.

That structure is standing strong despite some blowback.

Two Southeaste­rn Conference teams playing for the championsh­ip on Monday night in Atlanta? Not a problem. Two Power Five conference­s left out of the final four, including Big Ten champ and bluest of blue bloods Ohio State? That’s OK. Undefeated UCF never getting serious considerat­ion for spot in the playoff? Congratula­tions on a great season, but that’s just the way it goes, Knights. www.recorderon­line.com AP PHOTO BY

Despite this storm, the playoff is what it is for the foreseeabl­e future. No one in position to fight for changes has given any indication tweaks are coming. Especially not expansion.

“The CFP was built on a more long-term foundation than the BCS was,” College Football Playoff executive director Bill Hancock said Wednesday.

The playoff management committee is made up of the FBS conference commission­ers and Notre Dame’s athletic director, but the architects were mostly the commission­ers of the Power Five conference­s. Final approval was given by a panel of university presidents representi­ng each conference. The system was locked into place with a 12-year television contract with ESPN. This is year four PAGE 1B of that agreement.

“The BCS contracts were four years,” Hancock said. “After two years of every agreement it was time to begin thinking about the next agreement.”

The reality is if the commission­ers wanted to expand, ESPN would not stop them, but the contract showed a commitment to the CFP that was often lacking in the BCS. Frequently with the BCS, debates about which teams did or did not make the championsh­ip game or the other BCS bowls led to changes to the selection process.

Good intentions, but not good optics.

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MIKE STEWART Workers place signage on a hotel announcing the NCAA national championsh­ip football game, Wednesday in Atlanta.
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