In reply to: In 130+ years of college football, Wisconsin has literally posted by Tex Francisco
Correlation is not causation.
Plenty of the "little 8" teams made the Rose Bowl.
Iowa, Illinois , Wisconsin, Northwestern Michigan State all made it to the Rose Bowl in 80s and 90. They were national championship contenders for a for a brief moment. Such teams have less chance in this playoff system. That is not just correlation. They are not set up to compete with the heavy weights through a playoff
The 60s were even more balanced competitively.
Michigan was able to win a National championship too. Not likely to happen now.
Learn some history.
Who really gives a crap if there is an "undisputed" national champion? It made for more discussion and interest in the entire system. The bowls were more fun, New Years Day was more fun, the other bowls were more interesting. Hell, I don't even watch any bowl games anymore unless ND is playing. Give me the days when there was a split national champion. I have despised the BCS and playoff that added the final games to the mix.
* In the 20 years before the BCS started there were only 4 years when there was a so-called split national champion.
When TV coverage started to explode in the early 2000s, I thought it might be a really good thing for ND. I thought we were entering a world where due to almost infinite TV exposure the Ohio States of the world would become indistinguishable from the Iowas, which would make Notre Dame standout more as being a truly unique option for players. Instead, due to the NC focus, it's gone the other way. We have 3 super teams and then a big drop off to everyone else.
last 10 years, as you state, it started heating up in the late 90s and accelerated in the early 00's and is a train off the tracks now.
other than the additional money of the playoffs. Schools and conferences would have still sought as much money as possible. Coaches would still have sought higher salaries. Players would still be entitled to and look to maximize NIL.
What party wouldn't have done these things if there was an AP national champion rather than playoff? Schools wouldn't have tried to maximize TV deals? Assistant coaches wouldn't jump at million-dollar offers?
And stressed the primacy of academic mission and amateurism.
I was just wondering where it came from.
Which in turn caused the handful of elites to ramp up their operations and expenditures creating a lot of inequity.
Prior to BCS/playoffs, Alabama was never a measuring stick. You were mainly focused on your schedule , rival and conference bowl opponent . This National Championship or bust mentality wasn't as prevalent.
Saban just happened to arrive during the BCS/playoff era; he's demonstrated he would have been dominant in most any era.
And inequity has always existed. Big two and little eight ring any bells?
The ramp up of operations and especially expenditures is enabled by the the selling of television rights; the selling of year-round, 24-hour network subscriptions; ever escalating ticket prices; incremental, mandatory fees that are required to obtain the rights to purchase tickets, such as "contribution models" and "building funds"; and by boosters with deep pockets.
The arms race was not enabled by the playoffs, national championship, or BCS. The arms race is fueled by those gladly willing to part with their money. There's one born every minute.
for sports is really the driving force.
The playoff was instituted because there was money to be made, time slots to fill and networks in need of programming. The playoffs were a consequence of TV money and the forces at play today rather than a cause. Just another step down that road.
BCS and CFP were a continuation away from where the sport was, but I don't think it likely they would have been held off much longer even if delayed.
Of course, I don't know.
This is one reason why, for example, Nebraska holds way less sway than they did 30-40 years ago. Very few programs can sell out a bowl game the way Nebraska can. In the 80s and even the 90s that meant something. In today's world it's trivial compared to TV money, and Nebraska is only a middle of the road TV draw.