This is where I think you and goony and others that are arguing this case are losing your argument. You're dismissing the chances of upsets out of hand. The thing is, the big schools have absolutely nothing to lose here then! If Podunk State can't be Ultra-Mega University, than why not let them play in the first round of a tourney and be done with it? Half the reason for the excitement around March Madness is the opportunity for a George Mason or a Wichita State to upset big teams like UConn. I think it's especially absurd to dismiss the smaller schools when Boise State won the game they did. Do I think they would be Florida at this point. I doubt it. But again, that's not the point. The point is the opportunity. And you can't tell me that Florida-Boise State wouldn't draw an audience. Of course I'm dismissing the chances of upsets in college football and I do it for good reason. It's because they don't happen very often. That's why when UC Davis goes to Stanford and wins, it garners national attention. Same thing with Montana State beats Colorado. It's a big deal in football because it doesn't happen very often. There is a reason there is Division I-AA in football and not in basketball. They need separate divisions because the I-AA schools generally can't compete with the I-A schools. You don't see this in basketball. When UC Davis beats Stanford in basketball, the upset gets attention locally but it doesn't get national attention. When Butler gets victories over Notre Dame, Indiana, Tennessee, and Purdue, it's not surprising anymore. Gonzaga upsetting major schools? Not surprising anymore. And why is that? It happens all the time. People like March Madness because the small schools upset the major conference schools and it happens all the time. But if there was only one, maybe two, upsets by small schools in the tournament every year, do you think it would be as enjoyable to watch the first round? Of course not. If you had a playoff and included the likes of Middle Tennessee St, Troy, Houston, etc., nobody would watch the games that pitted those teams against the likes of Oklahoma, Florida, and USC because the games would be blowouts. 9 times out of 10 (at least) the big school would blow out the small school. This includes the new media darling Boise State as well. Look at last year. Boise State traveled to Georgia to play. The result? The Bulldogs outgained the Broncos 574-292 and were up 38-0 at one point and won 48-13. Georgia won the SEC and Boise State won the WAC last year. I don't know about you, but I wouldn't have wanted to see that matchup again. College basketball is completely different from college football and you can't say "well, a playoff works in college basketball so it should be used in college football as well". It doesn't work that way. I love college football and the main reason is because the regular season actually matters. The Cardinals this year lost 78 games in the regular season and even the best team will still lose 60. The Florida Gators finished tied for third in the SEC last year but caught fire in the tournament. The Pittsburgh Steelers were the last team in the playoffs last year in the AFC but won the Super Bowl. Were they the best team last year? No. But they were the best during a four game span in the playoffs. That's where college football is different. You can be assured that the team who wins the title is one of the top 3 or 4 teams in any given year. Compare this to my other examples of the Cardinals (13th best record), Steelers (tied for 5th with 6 teams so could be anywhere from 5th to 10th) and Gators (considering their 3rd seed in the tourney, somewhere between 9th and 12th though they got a higher seed than LSU solely because Florida won their conference tournament). I can go on if you would like me to. I like the fact that one of the top teams every year will win the college football national championship and not one that happens to get hot over a short stretch of the year. Every game matters. Don't get me wrong because I'm not saying I don't like the other sports. What I am saying is that I like college football's system because it's unique. I love that every game matters and it makes me want to watch every single Saturday because a team's National Title hopes could end every week. UCLA's victory over USC wouldn't have meant as much if there was a playoff because it wouldn't have ended the Trojans' shot at a National Title. It would have meant a ton because it's a rivalry game but the big national story was that it opened the door for Florida to make the title game. And that what makes college football different and that's why I love it.