Your response exhibits a fundamental misunderstanding of the issue at hand that both you and King seem to share -- conflating the pursuit of competitive equity with rewarding mediocrity. The critique of the 4-team College Football Playoff isn’t about coddling underachievers or inflating self-esteem; it’s about dismantling a system that structurally entrenched a handful of elite programs at the expense of the sport’s broader health.
The data is clear: from 2014 to 2023, just 14 unique teams claimed 40 playoff slots, with Alabama, Clemson, and Ohio State gobbling up 19 of them. This wasn’t a meritocracy; it was an echo chamber where the same powerhouses leveraged their visibility to hoard top recruits—Alabama alone secured eight No. 1 recruiting classes between 2011 and 2020 -- widening the talent gap and stifling parity.
Additionally, your point about FCS games and bowl eligibility is a red herring. The issue isn’t coaches padding resumes with cupcake wins; it’s that the four-team system created a feedback loop where elite programs’ repeated exposure fueled their dominance, leaving others—even strong Group of 5 teams like 13-0 Cincinnati in 2020—on the sidelines unless they could miraculously crack a four-slot fortress.
Expanding to 12 teams (and possibly now 16) wasn't about handing out participation trophies; it’s about giving more programs a shot to compete, earn exposure, and disrupt the aristocracy of a few. Suggesting fans just want their teams in to “feel good” dismisses the legitimate call for a structure that doesn’t rig the game for the same old titans. If you think that’s rewarding mediocrity, you’re missing the forest for the trees—the sport thrives on competition, not coronation.