Only they did. In the old days when Ohio State lost a couple early games that just recalibrated things and the goals became the same for us as @betarhoalphadelta 's goals for Purdue, see above. A 4-2 tOSU in the old days could potentially still:
- Beat rivals
- Win the Big Ten
- Go to the Rose Bowl
- Win the Rose Bowl
- Finish in the top-10 (maybe top-5).
Right. And I don't know how this topic (which IMHO had more to do with the transfer portal and NIL) keeps coming back to the playoff.
It seems like college football has to solve for two things:
- How to best crown a champion.
- How to keep the game interesting for the fans of the 80% of schools that are out of the NC picture.
And constraints placed on both come from realignment, conference structure, the transfer portal, and NIL.
I personally believe that if you're going to have a playoff, you need an objective way to gain entry. So whether it's 12 teams or 8 teams, you need auto-bids for the
P5 P4 conference champs, plus an autobid for at least one G5 so you have access.
But let's look at what has happened, through the eyes of a school like my alma mater, Purdue.
@MaximumSam says "hey, you should be super excited about this playoff--all you have to do is win the B1G and you're in!"
Well, the last time Purdue won the B1G, there were only 11 schools in the conference and no CCG. Starting next year, there will be 18 teams and a CCG. Immediate dilution of chances.
The last time Purdue won the B1G, there was no transfer portal nor NIL. Purdue was helped by a generational talent at QB who was overlooked due to a HS injury (and probably not being tall enough). In the transfer portal / NIL world, it's entirely possible that a helmet who was light at QB for whatever reason might try to lure a QB like that away. (Not that I think Brees is the type who would take them up on it, but it wouldn't be from Purdue's boosters having the firepower to compete.) NIL is going to destroy whatever parity we wanted to have in the sport, and the transfer portal will whittle the rest away.
The last time Purdue won its division and made it to the CCG, they did so with 3 conference losses and was clearly not the #2 team in the conference. Which is why there's been a lot of discussion that the B1G should scrap divisions and select the top two schools for the CCG. I"m not going to call it the "anti-Purdue rule", but it's clear that the purpose of the rule would be to keep teams like 2022 Purdue out of the CCG.
So as Sam talks about the door being opened for schools like Purdue, an 18-team conference with a top-two CCG in a transfer portal / NIL dominated world means this is what our path to the playoff ACTUALLY looks like:

And then what happens? Winning the B1G and going to the Rose Bowl was a destination. A culmination of a beautiful season, win or lose. The playoff, for a team like Purdue? Well that's just a chance to enter the meat grinder and be exposed for not having the talent that the helmets have in round 1. Which we knew going into the season.
Yeah, exciting
