2009 Bowl Tournament Series Bracket Announced
Posted by deaconcat08 on December 11, 2009
With this week’s approval of the playoff bill, I thought it would be a perfect time to post my mock playoff bracket for this year onto the blog. I have also spend some time tonight listening to the ignorant/humorous remarks of BCS Executive Director, who claims he goes around asking people how they would handle a college football playoff and no one can give him a good answer. Well Bill, try this one on for size. I laid out the guidelines for my system in a blog entry a couple of months ago, but for those who didn’t see them then, I have re-posted those guidelines below this year’s schedule. Anyone that would like to see this playoff in an excel bracket format then just let me know and I’ll send you a copy. Also, I plan on simulating each of these games on NCAA College Football 2010 using X-Box, and I will provide a recap of each playoff game on this blog as it would happen based on the schedule below.
The Field: Georgia Tech (ACC Champ), Cincinnati (Big East Champ), Ohio State (Big 10 Champ), Texas (Big 12 Champ), Oregon (Pac-10 Champ), Alabama (SEC Champ), TCU (MWC Champ), Boise State (WAC Champ), East Carolina (C-USA Champ), Central Michigan (MAC Champ), Troy (Sun Belt Champ), Florida (at-large, # 5 in BTS standings), Iowa (at-large, # 10 in BTS standings), Virginia Tech (at-large, # 11 in BTS standings), LSU, (at-large, # 12 in BTS standings), Penn State (at-large, # 13 in BTS standings).
South Regional
(1) Alabama vs. (4) Troy, Saturday December 19th- 3:30 (ABC/ESPN), Tampa, FL
(2) Ohio State vs. (3) Georgia Tech, Saturday December 19th- 12:00 (ABC/ESPN), Memphis, TN
Winners play Saturday December 26th at 8:00 in Atlanta, GA (ABC)
West Regional
(1) TCU vs. (4) Penn State, Saturday December 19th- 3:30 (ABC/ESPN), Albuquerque, NM
(2) Florida vs. (3) Virginia Tech, Saturday December 19th- 3:30 (ABC), Las Vegas, NV
Winners play Saturday December 26th at 3:30 in San Diego, CA (ABC/ESPN)
Midwest Regional
(1) Texas vs. (4) East Carolina, Saturday December 19th- 8:00 (ESPN), San Antonio, TX
(2) Oregon vs. (3) Iowa, Thursday December 17th- 8:00 (ESPN), Houston, TX
Winners play Saturday December 26th at 3:30 in Phoenix, AZ (ABC/ESPN)
East Regional
(1) Cincinnati vs. (4) Central Michigan, Friday December 18th- 8:00 (ESPN), Washington D.C.
(2) Boise State vs. (3) LSU, Saturday December 19th- 12:00 (ESPN), Charlotte, NC
Winners play Saturday December 26th at 12:00 in Dallas, TX (ABC)
Final Four/Championship
South Champ vs. West Champ, Saturday January 2nd- 8:00 (ABC), Pasadena, CA
Midwest Champ vs. East Champ, Saturday January 2nd- 3:30 (ABC), New Orleans, LA
Championship Game, Saturday Jan 9th- 8:00 (ABC), Miami, FL
Basic Format:
- 16 teams (11 conference championships and 5 at-larges chosen by the top 5 in the BTS Standings, which is the functional equivalent to the BCS. My rationale is for this is that it’s something computer/poll-related to keep the pro-BCS folks happy)
- 4 regions (teams seeded 1-4 based on committee)
- Bowl sites will become tourney sites. See further explanation below.
- Selection Sunday will be held the day after conference championship day and the first game will be played two weeks after that. This gives teams time to rest/heal up after the regular season and for the players to complete their exams, which is always a gripe from the anti-playoff crowd.
- A couple of special stipulations are that two teams from the same conference can’t play in the same region, and each conference is limited to three total playoff teams.
Scheduling:
- I’ve even drafted a mock game schedule that takes into consideration both the interests of the viewers and television providers. I’m going to assume that ABC/ESPN buy the rights to playoff coverage, since they have already purchased future BCS coverage rights. The ABC/ESPN splits will be conducted just like they are now with ABC providing everybody’s regional games, and ESPN showing the games outside the area.
- Week 1 (First Round): Game 1: Thursday 8:00- second best game of the week (ESPN); Game 2: Friday 8:00- worst game of the week (ESPN); Games 3 and 4: Saturday 12:00- two non-west region games (ABC/ESPN split); Games 5 and 6: Saturday 3:30- two games of any type (ABC/ESPN split); Games 7 and 8: Saturday 8:00- game of the week is on ABC; ESPN has other game.
- Week 2 (Elite 8): Game 1: Saturday 12:00- Third biggest game of the week but can’t be midwest/west regional final (ABC); Game 2: Saturday 3:30- Worst game of the week (ESPN); Game 3: Saturday 3:30- Second biggest game of the week (ABC); Game 4: Saturday 8:00- Featured game of the week (ABC).
- Week 3 (Final Four): Game 1: Saturday 3:30- Second biggest game of the week (ABC); Game 2: Saturday 8:00- Featured game of the week (ABC).
- Week 4 (Championship Game): Saturday 8:00 (ABC)
Bowl Sites:
- Lower-level bowl sites will become first round sites on a rotational basis. 2009: East Regional- Washington D.C. Charlotte; South Regional- Memphis, Tampa; Midwest Regional- San Antonio, Houston; West Regional: Albuquerque, Las Vegas. 2010: East- Birmingham, New York (site of new Yankee bowl); South- Mobile, Orlando; Midwest- El Paso, Shreveport; West- San Francisco, Boise. 2011: East- Toronto, Nashville; South- Jacksonville, Nashville; Midwest- Fort Worth, Detroit; West: San Jose, Honolulu.
- The current semi-major bowl sites of Dallas (Cotton), San Diego(Holiday), Phoenix (Fiesta), and Atlanta (Chick-Fil-A) will be annual elite 8 sites. Midwest Regional- Phoenix, East Regional- Dallas, West Regional- San Diego, South Regional- Atlanta.
- The Final Four/Championship games will be held at Pasadena, New Orleans, and Miami. The championship game will rotate between the 3 sites, and the two final four games will be played in the non-championship cities.
- Other notes: (1) New bowl sites coming into existence must replace old ones. (2) The first-round sites that are off of the playoff rotation will still hold bowl games. More explanation on that to follow. (3) I do realize that the Fiesta Bowl and the city of Phoenix are going to feel they got screwed here, as they are being demoted from a current BCS site to an elite 8 playoff site. They’ll just have to get over it because the Fiesta has without a doubt less tradition and prestige associated with it than the rest of the BCS bowls.
Remaining Bowl Games:
- This is time where things get tricky, as I try to accommodate the rest of the bowl eligible teams who do not make the 16-team playoff.
- There will be 16 bowl games held at all the first-round sites who are off of the playoff rotation.
- The names of the bowls can either change depending on which bowl is being played each year, or a bowl game can be played every year at different sites. It doesn’t really make a difference to me.
- The tie-ins for the bowls will try to replicate those for the current bowl games with the obvious omission of all tie-ins of conference champoins. Also, the number of bowl teams from each conference may fluctuate depending on how many teams it sends to the playoff in a particular season.
- Overall, in this system there will be 48 1-A postseason teams (16 in playoff, 32 in bowls), which is much more reasonable than the current number fo 64. Honestly, by taking out some of the garbage teams who currently squeak into bowl games, I think this system will actually make the bowl games more meaningful and watchable.
December 11th, 2009 at 9:55 am
That is pretty solid and very well thought out. Though I might only suggest 8 games because everyone is going to say that one extra game is too man. I would just do bcs 1-8. If you win a crap conference you need to prove yourself by going undefeated and playing better teams.