The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

CFP still needs a lot more than 4 (try 8)

Three weeks of playoffs would determine a true national champion.

- Michael Cunningham Only In The AJC

What I think about some things I saw over the weekend …

This is one of those years that some people seem to believe the College Football Playoff is fine with four teams. LSU, Ohio State, Clemson and Oklahoma are in and those left out aren’t worthy, anyway. That includes three teams that lost their conference championsh­ip games (Georgia, Wisconsin and Baylor), Pac-12 champion Oregon and American champion Memphis.

I still don’t see it that way. Eight is the logical size for the playoff field. Six automatic bids would include the Power Five champions and the best team from the Group of Five. The committee awards two at-large bids and determines playoff seeding. Three weeks of playoffs to determine a true champion, like every other major North American sports league.

This year’s top four wouldn’t change much under my proposed format. But an eightteam CFP field would include Memphis, the highest-ranked Group of Five team. It would include two from among Georgia, Wisconsin, Baylor or Utah, or any other team that the committee deems worthy.

One objection to that outcome is that it could set up rematches of Power Five conference championsh­ip games. That’s an easy fix: Just drop the conference title games. That solution also dispenses of another possible objection: too

many games in a season.

That’s one reason an eight-team playoff is unlikely. The Power Five leagues like the money from the conference championsh­ip games. The exception may be the Pac-12, which is moving its game to Las Vegas next year because of poor attendance in Santa Clara, Calif.

Another obstacle to an eight-team playoff is that a shorter regular-season schedule could mean major programs must drop one of their so-called guarantee games. They make money by paying an overmatche­d opponent to take a beating. That’s assuming it doesn’t backfire, like Tennessee vs. Georgia State.

I think those objections and others could be papered over by an even more lucrative windfall for an eight-team playoff. ESPN is paying $7.2 billion over 12 years for the rights to broadcast CFP games. Former CBS Sports president Neal Pilson once predicted that an eight-team CFP could be worth $10 billion over the same time period.

An eight-team CFP would have more national appeal for ESPN. It’s been dominated by teams from the South over five years, and Clemson and LSU are favored to advance to the championsh­ip game this season. Former Big 12 commission­er Chuck Neinas told CBS Sports that low ratings for the LSU-Alabama BCS championsh­ip game in 2012 spurred executives to begin discussing a playoff.

ESPN’s current CFP deal expires after 2026. Here’s hoping that competitiv­e pressures and greed lead to an expanded playoff before then.

Weak NFC South gives Falcons some hope for 2020

The schedule was one good reason to think the Falcons might make the playoffs this season. It was plausible that if they were even marginally better they could win at least three games against NFC South foes Carolina and Tampa Bay while finding six or seven wins among their other 12 games.

It didn’t turn out that way because the Falcons (4-9) regressed. It could be worse. They could be the Panthers (5-8). Carolina’s five consecutiv­e losses include one to awful Washington and two to the Falcons by an aggregate score of 69-23. Quarterbac­k Cam Newton’s future is uncertain because of injuries and replacemen­t Kyle Allen isn’t the answer. Carolina’s expensive defense has become a sieve.

The Falcons have their own issues. But they can find some hope for 2020 in winning three of their last five games with significan­t contributi­ons from young players. That’s key because of their tight salary cap for 2020.

And the Falcons have good players among their highly paid veterans. Two are at important positions: quarterbac­k Matt Ryan and wide receiver Julio Jones. Grady Jarrett is a force at defensive tackle and Deion Jones is among the league’s best linebacker­s.

The Panthers have a better cap situation than the Falcons because they can gain about $19 million in relief by moving on from Newton. They’ll have a new coach after firing Ron Rivera last week. But Carolina has the league’s worst run defense despite four players in the front seven accounting for about 20% of its cap: defensive end Gerald McCoy and linebacker­s Luke Kuechly, Mario Addison and Shaq Thompson. The projected 2020 salaries for Kuechly and defensive end Kawann Short will take up about 17% of the cap.

The Falcons could find a soft division again in 2020. The Saints (10-3) will be good for as long as Drew Brees is good, but I suspect they aren’t as good as they seem this season ( just plus-48 in point differenti­al). This bad Falcons team earned a season split with the Saints, who got dominated in New Orleans and weren’t sharp while winning the rematch.

The Buccaneers have won three straight games, including a 35-22 road victory over the Falcons, but they also won’t be going to the playoffs. They’ll need a new quarterbac­k if they finally move on from Jameis Winston. It’s hard to find a good one. If the Bucs stick with Winston then the turnover machine will keep churning.

A weak division was one reason to think the Falcons could make the playoffs this season. It didn’t work out that way. But the so-so South could be a reason to believe the Falcons will be back in the postseason again next year.

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 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Carolina quarterbac­k Cam Newton’s future is uncertain because of injuries and the Panthers have lost five straight — and their coach.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Carolina quarterbac­k Cam Newton’s future is uncertain because of injuries and the Panthers have lost five straight — and their coach.

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