Click on the Link below for the 2010-2011 Brackets. Print them out. Hand them to as many people as you can. Get the word out. This is how the College Football season should end.
http://atlanticcoastconcrete.net/ncaa2010playoff.pdf
We have taken the top 64 teams and seeded them accordingly.
The first round games will be played at the home stadium of the higher seeded team.
The final rounds can be played in different regions. North, South, East, and West. Bowl affiliation can be linked to each game. All advertisement and bowl deals can be kept. The games will have more meaning and will make alot more money. Everyone benefits!!
Thursday, December 16, 2010
NCAA Football 2010-2011 Playoff Seeds
We took the CBS College Football Rankings and have created seeds for each team.
Rank Team Seed
1 Oregon 1
2 Auburn 1
3 TCU 1
4 Wisconsin 1
5 Stanford 2
6 Ohio State 2
7 Michigan State 2
8 Arkansas 2
9 Boise State 3
10 Virginia Tech 3
11 Oklahoma 3
12 LSU 3
13 Nebraska 4
14 Missouri 4
15 Nevada 4
16 Oklahoma State 4
17 Texas A & M 5
18 Alabama 5
19 South Carolina 5
20 Utah 5
21 Mississipi State 6
22 West Virginia 6
23 Florida State 6
24 UCF 6
25 Hawaii 7
26 Connecticut 7
27 North Carolina State 7
28 Miami (Ohio) 7
29 Northern Illinois 8
30 Air Force 8
31 Maryland 8
32 Navy 8
33 Tulsa 9
34 San Diego State 9
35 Penn State 9
36 Notre Dame 9
37 Fresno State 10
38 Arizona 10
39 North Carolina 10
40 South Florida 10
41 Texas Tech 11
42 Florida 11
43 Michigan 11
44 Miami 11
45 Iowa 12
46 Pittsburgh 12
47 Northwestern 12
48 Baylor 12
49 Ohio 13
50 SMU 13
51 Georgia 13
52 Illinois 13
53 Toledo 14
54 Boston College 14
55 Southern Mississipi 14
56 Syracuse 14
57 Kansas State 15
58 Tennessee 15
59 Kentucky 15
60 Clemson 15
61 Georgia Tech 16
62 BYU 16
63 Washington 16
64 East Carolina 16
Rank Team Seed
1 Oregon 1
2 Auburn 1
3 TCU 1
4 Wisconsin 1
5 Stanford 2
6 Ohio State 2
7 Michigan State 2
8 Arkansas 2
9 Boise State 3
10 Virginia Tech 3
11 Oklahoma 3
12 LSU 3
13 Nebraska 4
14 Missouri 4
15 Nevada 4
16 Oklahoma State 4
17 Texas A & M 5
18 Alabama 5
19 South Carolina 5
20 Utah 5
21 Mississipi State 6
22 West Virginia 6
23 Florida State 6
24 UCF 6
25 Hawaii 7
26 Connecticut 7
27 North Carolina State 7
28 Miami (Ohio) 7
29 Northern Illinois 8
30 Air Force 8
31 Maryland 8
32 Navy 8
33 Tulsa 9
34 San Diego State 9
35 Penn State 9
36 Notre Dame 9
37 Fresno State 10
38 Arizona 10
39 North Carolina 10
40 South Florida 10
41 Texas Tech 11
42 Florida 11
43 Michigan 11
44 Miami 11
45 Iowa 12
46 Pittsburgh 12
47 Northwestern 12
48 Baylor 12
49 Ohio 13
50 SMU 13
51 Georgia 13
52 Illinois 13
53 Toledo 14
54 Boston College 14
55 Southern Mississipi 14
56 Syracuse 14
57 Kansas State 15
58 Tennessee 15
59 Kentucky 15
60 Clemson 15
61 Georgia Tech 16
62 BYU 16
63 Washington 16
64 East Carolina 16
Friday, January 1, 2010
Finally, Mark Cuban has a plan to put the BCS out of its misery
By Matt Hinton
Here's how the world works when you're as filthy, stinking rich as dot-com billionaire Mark Cuban: 1) You buy a basketball team; 2) You get a little bored after a few years; 3) You try to buy a baseball team; 4) You fail in your attempt to buy a baseball team; 5) You start reading a book about how terrible the Bowl Championship Series is.
And if you're as ambitious and impulsive as Cuban, 6) You take it upon yourself to use your fortune to personally fund a playoff system that will render the BCS obsolete. From ESPN Dallas:
Cuban, the outspoken owner of the NBA's Dallas Mavericks, told ESPNDallas.com on Wednesday that he is "actively interested but in the exploratory stage" of creating and funding a playoff system to crown a champion for major college football.
"The more I think about it, the more sense it makes as opposed to buying a baseball team," said Cuban, who tried to buy the Chicago Cubs and Texas Rangers within the last few years. "You can do something the whole country wants done."
Cuban said he has talked to two athletic directors from BCS conferences who were extremely enthusiastic about the idea. He intends to contact several school presidents and state senators in the coming weeks to determine whether the idea is worth pursuing.
Cuban called the BCS "an inefficient business where there's obviously a better way of doing it," and that puts him in pretty good company: Congressmen, senators, lobbyists, the Department of Justice, attorneys general, university presidents, the president of the United States, Sports Illustrated cover stories and more than a few big-name head coaches are way ahead of him. Let's make this happen!
Wait, how are we going to make this happen?
"Put $500 million in the bank and go to all the schools and pay them money as an option," Cuban said. "Say, 'Look, I'm going to give you X amount every five years. In exchange, you say if you're picked for the playoff system, you'll go.'" […]
"[The BCS is] an inefficient business where there's obviously a better way of doing it," Cuban said. "The only thing that's kept them from doing it is a lack of capital, which I can deal with. …"
Wait, money is standing in the way? You mean the television networks aren't willing to foot something on the order of the $11 billion deal the NCAA struck with CBS and Turner Sports earlier this year for rights to the basketball tournament?
That might come as news to Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany, anti-playoff enemy No. 1, who told Congress in 2005 that "an NFL-style football playoff would generate three or four times" more than "the current system does." It might surprise ACC commissioner John Swofford, too, who said last year "a playoff of some type would generate more money than the current BCS," and SEC commissioner Mike Slive, who told the Orlando Sentinel last summer that the opposition to a playoff has "never been about the money," and "it's not the money that will … drive [the] SEC's decisions about postseason football." That's coming from the guy who once proposed a "plus one" format to fellow BCS commissioners that was essentially a four-team playoff.
If "capital" was all that was standing in the way – with no regard to preserving current television contracts, lopsided revenue distribution and other traditions – it stands to reason that gap would have been filled by now by a network or other outside party that would see a return on its investment and then some in colossal TV ratings. But maybe not; I'm not in the board rooms. Maybe Cuban is the first guy, after all these years, with the will and the bank account to achieve the heretofore impossible dream. Hey, that's why he's an innovator. Godspeed, dude.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
