Exit 4
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- Joined
- Feb 3, 2012
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How would you decide what qualifies as a bad team? You apparently don't want to use winning percentage because that "incentivizes losing."all the Professional sports leagues you reference have a compelling interest in ensuring the competitiveness of all the teams in the league. I Do not believe that the NCAA feels that there is a compelling interest in insuring that Rutgers is propped up at the expense of Alabama, or MTSU at the expense of Ohio State. I think that if the NCAA wants to see the power five conferences drop out and form a new organization, the quickest way to do it would be to start letting the bad teams poach the good teams of their talent.
Obviously the NCAA doesnt feel competitive balance is an issue yet, however as football becomes ever more like a pro league and the schools become more entrenched as either a loser, middling or winning program, the issue of competitive balance has a decent chance of entering the discussion in the years ahead. TV $ is driving the bus and the next decade the TV $ might have something more to say about increasing competitive balance so that their TV $ can stay lofty since lopsided football with the same 3-6 programs winning is starting to become a bore.
A draft is never coming to NCAA football. The simplest tool would be to let the losers accept more transfers with immediate playing eligibility and exempt the losers from the 25 man cap rule and conversely tighten it a bit on the winners (permitted fewer inbound transfers with immediately playing eligibility).