This post out of necessity, is going to be a little long, but here goes...
There is a solution to finding out who's the best college football team in the country, but the Grand Poobahs at BCS headquarters don't want to accept it. What is needed plain and simple, is a playoff system.
I've heard all the arguements against this, but none of them stand up to further scrutiny. If every other division in NCAA College Football can make a playoff system work, then so can Division 1-A.
The most often mentioned excuses for why a playoff system won't work, can be boiled down to these three:
1) A playoff system would make the season too long.
2) A playoff system would interfere with acedemics/semester finals.
3) A playoff system would cause a loss of revenue for the colleges.
Here's the reality that seems to elude the brain trust at the BCS (and some universities):
1) Almost every team has at least two chump games a season. It's like the college version of the NFL's pre-season. Drop the two chump teams from every schedule. Sorry, the chump teams will just have to find another way to increase their revenue other than by suffering their annual beating-for-cash at the hands of a major conference football team. And for all of those major conference schools who've used these chump teams to enhance their rankings, tough luck, that won't factor in any more. Even the conferences with a conference championship playoff game won't be affected any more than they are now.
2) Well, the season is now two games shorter because we've dropped the unnecessary and meaningless games. So, there's now room for a playoff without further encroaching on acedemics/semester finals, as I'll illustrate further down the line.
3) A playoff system would cause a loss of revenue for the colleges? And here I thought that colleges were institutes of higher learning. The truth is that every playoff game would be a sellout, and very much like a bowl game in and of itself. Just the mere chance that any team in the playoff could go all the way to the big game, would draw fans like flies to garbage. And if the team happens to win in the first round, they advance to the next level, and the frenzy only increases. Keeping in mind that most teams will be eliminated from the playoff rather quickly, there's no reason why there still can't be bowl games to play. Remember, the season has been shortened by two games already, and all but two of the teams will be out of the playoff within those two weeks.
Then there's the logistics of a playoff system. It's pretty simple, actually.
There are currently six major 1-A conferences recognized by the BCS. That has been a point of heated debate as long as there have been ranking systems in 1-A college football - under the BCS and before as well. So, here's their chance to make the system more equitable. Take the six major conferences:
The Big East
The ACC
The SEC
The Big 10
The Big 12
The PAC 10
And add to that list, the two best teams by record from this list of remaining 1-A conferences:
The Mid-America
The Mountain West
The WAC
Conference USA
The Sun Belt Conference
You now have an eight team playoff. Four games first, then two games, then the national championship game. In reality, the non-major 1-A conferences are not really of the same caliber as the six majors. At least not from top to bottom. However, they do seem to produce one or two surprises each year, and allowing these teams a shot at the playoff is the right thing to do. This way a team like Boise State of last year, or Hawaii this year, would have a chance to prove that they belong in the competition. Another solution would be to let the five non-major conference teams have a mini-playoff that would produce the two teams for the national championship playoff. And should these non-major conferences raise the level of play within their conferences in the future, the system could be adjusted to accomodate that reality.
Oh yeah, I forgot to mention this...
Join a conference Notre Dame. It is the height of arrogance to think that special accomodations should be made for just one team. It's time to trade in the attitude for a conference membership, or enjoy the national championship playoffs from the stands.
OK, so I'm sure that there will still be objections to a playoff system like the one I've illustrated. But it's still light years ahead of the quagmire we currently have to suffer through.