Next weekend is the play in round to the quarterfinals
You know what I mean. I meant like when March Madness went to 68 teams. Those barely in get a seat, but they have to win the play in game.
Also feels fitting to make the non CG teams have to play that weekend. That’s the aim - allow a few more in, let the G5 have a seat (play in), but start the tournament the weekend or two after that.
Forgot an important point - these are bowl games. Saves the bowl games from dying too by adding a few more to the equation.
Honestly I don't. Walk me through your ideal scenario using this years teams, rankings, standings or whatever so I can see what you mean. Who gets a guaranteed bid?
Admittedly it's imperfect in my head, so afford me a little grace there. The trickiest part is how to handle the smaller schools and their conference championships, but I'd argue if they want a seat at the dance, inconveniencing their schedule is the price they pay or we just go big boys only in this thing.
Participants
Tournament Auto Bids (8) : SECCG participants & Big Ten CG participants, ACCCG participants, Big XII CG participants
Play-in participants (8) : Highest ranked G5, at-large Committee ranked non-CG teams
Games
Play-in games (12/6) = Oregon vs. Tulane , Ole Miss vs. Notre Dame , Texas A&M vs. Miami , Oklahoma vs. Alabama
Tournament Process
Committee re-ranks after all 12/6 games for final seeding. I am JUST using higher rankings from 12/7 to the above to demonstrate round 1 would have been come 12/7, but play-in game results obviously would be important.....
1. Indiana (bye)
2. Ohio State (bye)
3. Georgia (bye)
4. Texas Tech (bye)
5. Oregon vs. 12. Duke
6. Ole Miss vs. 11. Virginia
7. Texas A&M vs. 10. BYU
8. Oklahoma vs. 9. Alabama
Result
I also toyed with saying maybe only the SEC and Big Ten participants got auto-bids to the 12/7 final rankings, but not sure the ACC or Big XII would like that much. Fundamentally the committee stops participating one week earlier than we have them now for tournament selection. They help affirm the play-in teams, the G5 can participate but eliminate earlier to allow for more teams in, but the regular season still matters and every entrant wins a spot in the formal tournament on the field where the committee's final job is to align seeding after 12/6 games.
What it does is add 4 total games and I'd honestly probably start the formal tournament itself as off-campus and at bowl games. So 5/12, 6/11, 7/10, and 8/9 games start the bowls instead of one week later. The final on-campus games are for play-in games only unless we'd want to move them to neutral locations and use bowls there too to move it to 8 neutral games beyond the current format.
If you only include winners of ACC and Big XII CG games for auto-bids, you'd have 6 auto bids, and then you'd want to have 6 play-in games instead of 4, so you'd be adding teams like Texas, Vanderbilt, Utah, and USC into the mix to exclude teams who lost like Virginia and BYU.
If you did my alternative scenario of only guaranteeing SEC/B1G CG participants a seat and treating ACCCF and Big XII CGs as elimination games....
Play-in games (12/6) = Oregon vs. Tulane, Ole Miss vs. Arizona, Texas A&M vs. USC, Oklahoma vs. Utah, Miami vs. Vanderbilt, Notre Dame vs. Texas
Tournament (based on final 12/7 rankings to assume play-in winners....)
1. Indiana (bye)
2. Ohio State (bye)
3. Georgia (bye)
4. Texas Tech (bye)
5. Oregon vs. Duke
6. Ole Miss vs. Notre Dame
7. Texas A&M vs. Miami
8. Oklahoma vs. Alabama