It's not about fault or fairness. And somehow, in your advocating for their inclusion into the playoff, you cite them as a top-10 team. When did the playoff expand to 10 teams?
The point about their metrics was to show that on a measurement of football that isn't just "count the losses", they don't suck. And as I pointed out in the other thread, they're anywhere between 6th and 8th on those metrics. One of the team consistently ahead of them is Wisconsin, who isn't going to the CFP. Another pair ahead of them is OSU and Michigan, one of whom is going to basically be eliminated from CFP contention on Saturday. With two more wins, they could conceivably climb into the top 4 in those metrics.
Cincinnati is hardly the first team in this situation where they win, they're good, but due to a shit schedule, we don't know how good they are.
You're saying they should be given the benefit of the doubt and I'm asking WHY!?!
You say we don't know how good they are, but everyone is absolutely incensed by the very suggestion that we
find out.
I'm not saying that we should give them the benefit of the doubt, but I find it a bit strange that we have a sport where half of the entire field is eliminated from championship contention before a single snap is played in a season.
We've had people saying they'd rather see a 2-loss B1G or SEC team over Cincinnati, who also argue that the regular season should matter. I say Cincinnati deserves a spot over any 2-loss P5 team. They've forfeited their chance by losing two games.
One might say that it's not fair to this year's team/players, but again - where is it written that it's going to be fair?!? Why should this Cincinnati team get into the playoff and not last year's Coastal Carolina? Or 2008 Utah? Or 1998 Tulane?
All of the players on all of these teams knew when they signed that they were forfeiting any chance to play for a NC. They knew an undefeated season wouldn't garner anything but a shitty (now upgraded) bowl and a shiny, pretty record.
And the reason it's not fair isn't because they were valued as 2nd-tier players or their teams are 2nd-tier programs, but because their schedules would not produce a good-enough resume.
They didn't sign with the intent of forfeiting a chance at a championship. They signed because these were the best offers they had.
Now, it's true they were valued as 2nd-tier players and they're playing for teams viewed as 2nd-tier programs. Of course, the reason you keep them in the 2nd tier is that by your own words, "we don't know how good they are", but you refuse to actually give them a shot and find out.
In this case they scheduled a high-P5 program in Notre Dame and a low-P5 program in Indiana, and won both. They won their FCS OOC matchup (news flash, the SEC SEC SEC schedules annual FCS games too) and have a chance to go 9-0 in conference including the CCG. But in the end, it doesn't matter what they out of conference. Unless they're somehow able to schedule Alabama, OSU, Clemson and Oklahoma OOC and win all 4, people say it's not enough and "we don't know how good they are".
So here, in 2021, some of you want to accept a still-not-good-enough resume and hire the team for the playoff.
I simply don't understand what changed. This seems A LOT like the "give everyone a trophy" mindset so many here are against.
Nothing has changed. The system was fundamentally a beauty pageant in the poll-driven days. The BCS and now the CFP are striving to give the national championship real legitimacy. We're just pointing out that it's still a hypocritical beauty pageant system and has no level of objectivity involved.
Cincinnati is just the latest example. The most glaring example previously was 2009, when both TCU and Boise State finished the season and were included in the BCS bowl system--
playing against each other. Literally we could have seen "how good they are" by pairing them up against two P5 teams, but I think the powers that be REALLY didn't want to see both of them knock off P5 teams, lest it give these teams any legitimacy.
We have a system where the argument used against them is "we don't know how good they are" and it's a system where it will be impossible to ever find out "how good they are".
6+2 fixes that problem.