Is this for Div I or Div II?
Was going to say the same thing. The teams who've been fortunate enough to be "good" in the playoff era have been advantaged and as a result, the separation of top tier has grown over other traditionally strong programs. If you're LSU, UGA, Bama you're recruiting pitch has been "come here and you'll be in the playoffs at least a few times in your career. This will bring more competition to CFB...which it desperately needs. Even though UT's a non factor, I've gotten tired of starting the season knowing the playoff mix will be pretty much made of same teams...Bama, UGA, LSU, OSU, OK...maybe UF, Aub, NDI think its healthier for CFB to have more teams. We have seen the rich get richer with 4 (Clempson, Bummer, Jawja, OSU)
The only benefit would be playing for one of the byes in the first round. I assume they will have four byes, so teams 5-12 will play in playoff week 1 and then teams 1-4 would play the remaining teams in reverse order of seeding (team 1 plays the lowest rated remaining team, etc.).If this passes, the SEC needs to drop the championship game. It would serve no purpose under this system and could only be a detriment if players get hurt.
The only benefit would be playing for one of the byes in the first round. I assume they will have four byes, so teams 5-12 will play in playoff week 1 and then teams 1-4 would play the remaining teams in reverse order of seeding (team 1 plays the lowest rated remaining team, etc.).
It was never a "series". It was a National Title Game. When they expanded it to add another bowl game then a national title game it watered it down even more.the Bowl Championship Series ended effectively when the College Football Playoff started during the 2014 season for Football Bowl Subdivision [The FBS is the most competitive subdivision of NCAA Division I, which itself consists of the largest and most competitive schools in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)].
I'm not aware of a BCS for DII. As far as I know it has always been a playoff system.