Posted on 12/13/2023 11:53:36 PM PST by where's_the_Outrage?
The final four-team College Football Playoff selection process has come under remarkable scrutiny after the controversial decision to include one-loss SEC champion Alabama over undefeated ACC champ Florida State, and now some powerful people in the Sunshine State are getting involved on an official basis.
State Attorney General — and Florida Gators fan — Ashley Moody has launched an anti-trust investigation into the College Football Playoff to see if it engaged in anti-competitive conduct.
"I'm a lifelong Gator, but I'm also the Florida Attorney General, and I know injustice when I see it," Moody said, via the Tampa Bay Times.
"No rational person or college football fan can look at this situation and not question the result. The NCAA, conferences, and the College Football Playoff Committee are subject to antitrust laws."
She added: "My Office is launching an investigation to examine if the Committee was involved in any anti-competitive conduct. As it stands, the Committee's decision reeks of impartiality, so we are demanding answers — not only for FSU, but for all schools, teams, and fans of college football. In Florida, merit matters. If it's attention they were looking for, the Committee certainly has our attention now.
(Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...
That gets my vote, as long as there are no federal loans for students and no federal monies going to them.
That’s kind of grey here. Yes MOST of the colleges are government funded. But not all of them. And the athletic section isn’t. And the NCAA isn’t. And playoff system isn’t. So for the most part it isn’t a taxpayer funded institution. And isn’t the government’s business.
Gee I sure am glad this new way of doing bowl games has ended all controversy
Every university in the playoffs is a public university. I’m sorry, I don’t believe that not one penny of public money is spent on the players, staff, or the infrastructure. You’re going to have to prove it to me.
What made the 2017 postseason so ludicrous was that all indications are that Alabama coach Nick Saban deliberately threw that “Iron Bowl” game by making a cynical calculation about his team’s postseason prospects. He figured that playing in the SEC title game wouldn’t gain Alabama anything in the final playoff selection process, and was just an opportunity for one SEC team to face another potential loss. So he took the loss to Auburn in the final week, rested his top players for that game and the next week when Georgia and Auburn played in the SEC championship game, and went into the playoffs in a better position than any of the other three teams that DID play in a conference championship game (Clemson, Oklahoma and Georgia).
Alabama never should have been allowed to play for the national title in 2017. If it were up to me, a team would be ineligible to contend for the national championship if it didn’t win its own conference championship.
It kind of depends on who you ask?
https://www.bestcolleges.com/news/analysis/2020/11/20/do-college-sports-make-money/
The NFL had the same problem until they introduced the wild card teams to address the injustice of having 10-6 or even 9-7 division winners make the playoffs while an 11-5 or 12-4 team would not qualify if it was in the same division as a dominant 14-2 (or better) team.
I don’t have to prove anything. We already know that in the big schools, the ones that make bowl games, football is self sustaining. Between tickets, merch, TV contracts, and boosters it pays for itself.
You’re right, you don’t have to prove anything to me. I also don’t have to believe you.
Good point. Hadn’t considered that angle.
And thus why I won’t bother. I already know, once you said it was the government’s business, you’re living in a world without facts. So presenting them to you, which I actually did, is a waste of time. You’re going to believe your wrong thing one way or the other. So we’re done. Bye
I agree with the notion that if you can’t win your conferenced, why are you playing to win the national title? Imagine in pro sports if someone said, “you lost your conference, but we still figure you’re more likely to win the Superbowl”!
OTOH, if a team rests its best players, I don’t take that as corruption. How often do pitchers start throwing 6 innings instead of 8 once they clinch? Or teams start letting pitchers take 5 days of rest between starts? I think they need to live with the consquences if they get burned, but even WITH that loss, I think both Georgia and Alabama clearly had ALREADY earned a national title chance.
If there were any evidence that Alabama only beat Clemson because of the extra time off, you might have a bit of a leg to stand on. But come on, everyone had multiple weeks to get ready, and they drubbed Clemson, which was no suprise. I mean come on, Clemson lost to Syracuse.
If there WERE someone that had a right to be angry, it was Central Florida, who didn’t have a chance to face many good teams but was undefeated.
The corruption in 2017-18 was that Alabama knew it would get a playoff spot among the top four teams in the country even if they didn’t play in the SEC title game. That should never happen. Rewarding teams for failure flies in the face of everything sports is supposed to stand for. Rewarding teams for DELIBERATE failure is even worse.
My bad...sorry...
Thats what I get for not looking to be sure...
North Alabama beat Chattanooga, who Alabama scheduled.
And the Crimson Tide was evidently able to impress the Committee with that impressive win (the week before they almost lost to 6-6 Auburn.)
That would be FSUs choice
Well...this type of rhetoric didn’t age well.
Correct. And now more than validated.
In fact, Kentucky defeating Louisville also helped it as it lowered FSU’s win over Louisville as a quality win.
Glorified exhibition games. It's like watching preseason games.
Georgia pummeled FSU in the Orange Bowl 63-3, it was a sad exhibition of football when FSU was missing a third of their team and most of their front line players including their top two QBs, the outcome doesn’t really prove anything about the season
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