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They are tweaking the formula to make it more SOS driven and less a popularity contest. The Big East will always lose a popularity contest, but a more objective driven standard will help.
4 is temporary. It will be 8 or 16 teams before the end of the decade, if not sooner. The bowls are dead, and will continue to decline in relevance and viewership when they need to compete with a playoff.
I agree that with a playoff, the phenomenal number of 30-35 bowl games a year is dead. The number of bowls will begin shrinking back to the dozen or so games that are financially viable on their own through television, gate counts, etc.
I think that retaining an invitation bowl system, for the exact reason that it already exists - to reward winning programs - should be a continued part of the college football post season. Absolutly. What will have to happen, is that bowls will need to be set up regionally, yes, even in cold climates, (New York) such that local teams make the games viable without the guaranteed ticket sales model.
Right now, some 65-70 teams or something fill post season spots. I think 7-5 should be the cut off, and in addition to a 16 team playoff field for a national champion - no reason not award another 24-30 teams with 12-15 bowl games.
It makes the regular season - THAT much more relevant, when you know you aren't going to win our conference title come november, or something, but still have the opportunity to play in a bowl.
