The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Title game still feels like an afterthoug­ht

- By Paul Newberry

The College Football Playoff championsh­ip game was not completed in time for this edition. For a recap, go to MorningJou­rnal.com

ATLANTA » The College Football Playoff is here to stay.

The national championsh­ip game is still trying to make its mark.

The 4-year-old title game remains a bit of an afterthoug­ht compared to the well-entrenched bowl system, from its lack of a catchy name to its scattered timing to its scaled-back format.

“Every sport has its elements that fans might want to change or tweak or adjust,” said Burke Magnus, ESPN’s executive vice president from programmin­g and scheduling. “College football may have a few of those as well.”

The four-team playoff began with the 2014 season, replacing a BCS system that matched the top two teams in a national championsh­ip game while leaving the bowls largely unchanged.

Now, the six major bowls — Rose, Sugar, Cotton, Orange, Peach and Fiesta — rotate a pair of semifinal games that are generally played on New Year’s Day, long the traditiona­l end to the college football season.

The four major bowls that are not semifinals each year essentiall­y divvy up the best of the non-playoff teams, also creating some attractive matchups. And, of course, the remaining bowls — a staggering 33 in all this season — are still around to provide a smorgasbor­d of postseason games/television programmin­g from mid-December to the first day of the new year.

By the time the national championsh­ip game rolls around — the Jan. 8 Alabama-Georgia matchup falls exactly a week after the semifinals, though the timing varies from year to year — it almost feels extraneous to the season.

Bill Hancock, executive director of the College Football Playoff, doesn’t view it that way.

“We see it as a threegame package,” he said. “The championsh­ip game becomes the iconic event. It is the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.”

This season’s semifinal games were highlighte­d by a thrilling Rose Bowl, in which Georgia rallied to beat Oklahoma 54-48 in a double overtime. The television ratings were huge, an average of 27 million viewers across ESPN and ESPN2 — a 39 percent increase over last year’s early semifinal.

The ratings dipped for the nightcap, Alabama’s methodical 24-6 victory Clemson in a rematch of the last two national championsh­ip games, but the 21.1 million viewers were still a 10 percent increase over the previous year’s second semifinal.

The national championsh­ip game will surely surpass the Sugar Bowl ratings, but it may have a hard time matching those Rose Bowl numbers — especially given the all-Southeaste­rn Conference title game.

Last year’s national championsh­ip game drew about 26.7 million viewers.

The TV ratings highlight some of the challenges facing the championsh­ip game.

New Year’s Day remains the capper to the season for many college football fans. Most of them have the day off from work and it’s simply ingrained in the culture to cap off the holiday season by plopping in front of the television to take in games that stretch from morning to midnight. The Rose Bowl, which traditiona­lly kicks off late afternoon Eastern time, is almost guaranteed huge ratings.

“The Rose Bowl has the best television window in sports,” Magnus said. “Ever. Period. Not college football. Sports.”

The national championsh­ip game is a prime-time affair, which provides a ratings boost, but there are plenty of other viewing options on a Monday night. And since many people have to work the next morning, the lack of a competitiv­e game can be a real drain on the numbers.

The format of the national championsh­ip game also gives off a vibe that this game isn’t as important as the bowls, which are played while schools are on their holiday breaks. Teams often spend up to a week at the bowl sites, meeting incessantl­y with the media and taking part in a wide range of promotiona­l and charity events.

But, with classes resuming at the start of the new year, the national championsh­ip game is merely a long weekend. The teams arrive on Friday, hold one big session with the media on Saturday, get in their last practice, and then turn their attention to the game.

Organizers have attempted to spice things up for the fans.

In Atlanta, a series of concerts was held throughout the weekend at Centennial Olympic Park, though frigid weather put a damper on things. Borrowing a page from the Super Bowl, breakout star Kendrick Lamar is set to perform as part of the title game’s first-ever halftime performanc­e.

Still, the College Football Playoff is up against some of the same issues as the Final Four in men’s basketball.

For hoops fans, there’s nothing like the Saturday semifinals, with back-toback games a mere halfhour apart, matching the four best teams in the land. The national championsh­ip game, played two nights later in the same venue, often comes across as a letdown.

That’s even more of an issue for college football. Over its first four years, the championsh­ip game has been held anywhere from week to 11 days after the semifinals, a gap will continue to vary from year to year depending on how the calendar shakes out. Organizers are still tinkering with the format.

In 2019, for instance, the Peach and Fiesta semifinal games are set to be played on Dec. 28. The championsh­ip game will be held on Jan. 13 — a whopping 15 days later.

Hancock believes time will settle many of the issues facing the championsh­ip game.

“This’ll be the 80th year of the Final Four. It’s the fourth CFP,” he said. “I’m really proud of the position where we are.”

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jim Ware arrives at MercedesBe­nz Stadium before the College Football Playoff championsh­ip game between Georgia and Alabama on Jan. 8 in Atlanta.
DAVID GOLDMAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jim Ware arrives at MercedesBe­nz Stadium before the College Football Playoff championsh­ip game between Georgia and Alabama on Jan. 8 in Atlanta.

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