If one of the biggest reasons to have a vastly sub-par postseason is to prop up massive regular season mismatches, then maybe something should be done about scheduling. Florida/Coastal Carolina or Tennessee/Western Kentucky are not going to be exciting games no matter the setup. Mismatches are not going to be exciting either way. I would bet that the reason there are so many extreme mismatches now, though, is because a team knows it can't lose more than (at most) one game to have a shot at a title. Thus, it schedules 1-AA and terrible 1-A teams so that it won't have the possibility of being knocked out of the title hunt by a non-conference game. If you put a playoff in and teams can lose a game or two and still be in contention for a playoff berth, you might see more competitive games as teams try to prepare for the playoffs. You don't want to play a bunch of patsies and then have to win four or so straight highly competitive games. For a team that enters the year with hopes of a national title, watching a team with 2 losses with the hopes of going to the Capital One Bowl or the Holiday Bowl just isn't that exciting. It's still fun to root on your team and hope for a good year, but it's not the same, nor is it even anywhere close. How much better would this season have been if LSU, TCU, Boise State, Ohio State, Penn State, Florida, Cincinnati, etc. still felt like they were playing for a title? The only regular season games that lose significant excitement in a playoff format are the very early season ones. Georgia Tech/Clemson or Oregon/Oregon State or BYU/Utah would have been so much more exciting, intense games if there was a realistic chance for some of those teams to make a playoff and compete for a title. Instead they were playing for a little bit better bowl. That'll never happen with the bowls because their only interest is to get fans into the seats and spending money in their city. They don't care about getting good team against good team unless it happens to fit within making their bowl more profitable. That's fine that they want to make money, but as a fan, my interest lies in getting the most entertaining and legitimate postseason format possible and that won't happen while we have bowls only considering the dollar amount their bowl will draw in. Also, it's not just the few weeks a playoff lasts that we'll have extremely exciting football. It's also all the weeks leading up to the playoffs and the big games in the middle and later parts of the season that can clinch spots or eliminate teams that will be exciting as well. Your looking at roughly the same time frame of exciting football, you're just adding some legitimacy to the postseason system that is the reason we're cheering for the teams in the first place.