It doesn`t have to be so complicated. If you do automatic bids, that guarantees someone will get it that shouldn`t and someone will be left out that shouldn`t. Why do they try to make it so complicated? Good thinking Lane!
I would assume so. I'd prefer computers do it all. They can dispassionately assess every necessary requisite, and who could say that politics played a role?Are we talking the College Football Playoff Committee Poll?
How about a weighted pole of 50% computer and 50% humanI would assume so. I'd prefer computers do it all. They can dispassionately assess every necessary requisite, and who could say that politics played a role?
Sounds about like the BCS.How about a weighted pole of 50% computer and 50% human
It doesn`t have to be so complicated. If you do automatic bids, that guarantees someone will get it that shouldn`t and someone will be left out that shouldn`t. Why do they try to make it so complicated? Good thinking Lane!
This is what is fascinating to me. One of the main reasons the BCS was scrapped is because folks didn't like computers having as much input on the decision. They wanted the human element to weigh the intangibles. Now people want to scrap the intangibles and go back to computers.I'm ok with 5 + 11 model. It appears the SEC is pushing in this direction. I do agree the 11 should be computer generated. At the very least, 75% computer, 25% human.
This is what is fascinating to me. One of the main reasons the BCS was scrapped is because folks didn't like computers having as much input on the decision. They wanted the human element to weigh the intangibles. Now people want to scrap the intangibles and go back to computers.
In with it 100%!! I’ve been saying this all along - Top 16 - screw automatic bids. The tallest midget shouldn’t be in the CFP at the expense of deserving teams who may be 3rd or 4th in a strong, meat-grinder conference.It doesn`t have to be so complicated. If you do automatic bids, that guarantees someone will get it that shouldn`t and someone will be left out that shouldn`t. Why do they try to make it so complicated? Good thinking Lane!
Just don't use LLM-based "AI".I would assume so. I'd prefer computers do it all. They can dispassionately assess every necessary requisite, and who could say that politics played a role?
Reality is that everyone takes it MUCH too seriously. It's just college football. People treat it like we're trying to achieve peace in the Middle East.There's another complication.
With conferences going to 9 game schedules, how much inter conference play is there going to be?
The SEC will play primarily SEC opponents and cupcakes with this change. How to argue a 9-3 SEC team vs a 9-3 big 10 team if there's no common opponents or cross conference play?
It'll be whoever was ranked higher in the completely subjective, at best a guess, preseason polls.
There are way more pretenders in the playoff than there used to be. But it's possible to get the best 16 teams in there if the right tools are used. The human bias factor is the weak link.Any conceivable system is going to leave certain teams/conferences out in the cold. Just the way it is.
I'm not seeing the computers as subjective.The push for auto bids is an effort to remove the subjectivity of computers or committees and decide the playoff on the field.
No.How about a weighted pole of 50% computer and 50% human
The computers are subjective based on what formula they're programmed to analyze the different teams.I'm not seeing the computers as subjective.
Computers loaded with consensus requisites by which all teams are dispassionately judged are the opposite of subjective. Auto bids are subjective to the extent that people politically decide which conference champions get them. Auto bids are also fallacious in that teams that get them are not necessarily stronger than teams that don't. I say digitize this process all the way.The computers are subjective based on what formula they're programmed to analyze the different teams.
Auto bids are not subjective whatsoever. Everyone knows what they have to do to make the playoff, no guesswork involved.
There's definitely an argument about fairness though.
Reality is that everyone takes it MUCH too seriously. It's just college football. People treat it like we're trying to achieve peace in the Middle East.
Besides that, it's an unfixable problem for the very problem you mention. No matter what they do, there's simply no way to get a truly objective analysis due to the overall lack of interconference play. There are simply too many teams to get any real comparison of relative conference strength based on head-to-head matchups. Any system will, of necessity, be highly subjective because of that.
Any conceivable system is going to leave certain teams/conferences out in the cold. Just the way it is.
And the computer formula is created by people who determine which factors should be given which weight. The BCS used several different computers to rank teams and it made nobody happy.Computers loaded with consensus requisites by which all teams are dispassionately judged are the opposite of subjective. Auto bids are subjective to the extent that people politically decide which conference champions get them. Auto bids are also fallacious in that teams that get them are not necessarily stronger than teams that don't. I say digitize this process all the way.
Whatever requisites are chosen would be applied the same to everybody when using computers. That isn't direct subjectivity. Auto bids ensure pretenders to a greater extent than computer ratings, especially when they throw a fifth manifestly substandard conference's winner in there based on that team's human ranking.And the computer formula is created by people who determine which factors should be given which weight. The BCS used several different computers to rank teams and it made nobody happy.
An auto bid is open and easy to understand. It doesn't weigh strength of schedule, strength of record, scoring margin, injuries, FPI, etc.
The auto bid says at the beginning of the season, do this and you make the playoff.
Again, I'm not saying that should be how the playoff is determined, but it's definitely the least subjective process.