HoustonAg2106 said:I get it, but if you are already locked up to be in the conference championship game and you have two regular season games left...you can literally lose both of those games and still have a chance to play for a national title. That is not/should not be college football. Period.Toptierag2018 said:HoustonAg2106 said:JJxvi said:
Why is it bad for one Florida-LSU game to lose some shine, in exchange for making other games more important to the regular season picture? Why is that one Florida game the measuring stick? The answer is that youve made your perspective as being viewed from only Florida's perspective not the persoective of the entire sport. This inherent viewing of individual games and deciding their importance by an "if we, as a team playing in this game, lose our season is over" as the be all, end all of the importance of games is flawed. Its especially odd when thats what types of games a large playoff explicitly adds more of.
I'm just using the Florida LSU game as an example, don't take it too literally. The point is if winning your conference because the only objective there will be scenarios leading up to the conference championship games where teams have nothing to play for if they have already locked up their division title
That's really the only point I'm making. They would benefit by resting their starters so they can be ready for the conference championship game which feels like week 16 and 17 in the nfl when teams are sitting starters to prepare for the playoffs
Smart coaches wouldn't bank on that. If they were one of the two highest non conference champs they are in. That's worth fighting for.
A team going unbeaten or even 11-1/12-1 without a chance is better?