Today, USA Today makes sure you don’t:
Endorsement is expected Tuesday for an historic four-team major college football playoff – only there’ll be more to the new system than that.
It likely will entail a total of seven games each year, including four top-tier bowls apart from the playoff, according to two officials involved in the discussions. They spoke to USA TODAY Sports on the condition of anonymity because those details haven’t been publicly released.
All told, the system would incorporate six bowls. Two would rotate each year as playoff semifinal sites, and the other four would serve as attractive landing spots for the best non-playoff teams.
The playoff final – the national championship game – would be put up for bid.
Conference commissioners endorsed the concept of a four-team playoff last week, and will meet Tuesday in Washington, D.C., with an oversight committee of university presidents and chancellors. Those CEOs have final say.
Coming out of meetings in Chicago last week, many of the details of the playoff and bowl plan remained to be worked out.
The “most likely” overall format, one of the officials told USA TODAY, would complement the three-game playoff with four bowls. Among other things, those bowls would accommodate teams that win conference championships but don’t make the playoff or can’t play in their affiliated bowl – for instance, the Rose in the case of a Big Ten champion – because the bowl is serving as a semifinal.
The system would allow the top-tier bowls and conferences to maintain their ties and continue to give marquee-league champions access to high-profile, high-paying postseason games.
This all is separate from the national championship game. An existing bowl could bid for it separately.
The full story online is here.
Ah. Here it is in narrative form, with historical context. Actually pretty simple.
http://www.everydayshouldbesaturday.com/2012/6/26/3119506/we-claim-this-for-spain