Meh, the NBA and MLB do it with Five.And the entire "championship" thing about a 4 team division is freakin' lame. We don't even use that rather goofy word-game for kids in little leagues.
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Meh, the NBA and MLB do it with Five.And the entire "championship" thing about a 4 team division is freakin' lame. We don't even use that rather goofy word-game for kids in little leagues.
Meh, the NBA and MLB do it with Five.
I believe the people advocating for a .500 record to make the playoffs realize their team could make the playoffs this year because it doesn't work that way.[QUOTE
Yeah, let me know how this works out When your team gets booted from the playoffs because of it
Having Seattle's "12th man" homefield advantage likely had something to do with that. Which makes a good case for not giving the division champ an automatic home game (New Orleans was a 11-5 wild card). Still, this stuff is rare, and probably not worth making rule changes for.The Seahawks went 7-9 and made the playoffs. Then they beat the Saints.
Don't care if we make the playoffs at 6-10, gives us a punchers chance at a championship.
Would be awesome to forever be remembered as 'that' team.
Sweet! I can maintain false hope for another few weeks.
Yep. Not the first time a team with less than 8 wins won their playoff game either. As shocking as this may sound to some, each year there are only a couple of really great teams and a couple of really bad teams. Everyone else is a lot closer than people think. From 2000-2010 the NFC West was a complete joke record wise. Yet during that span a team from that division made 4 out of 10 Superbowls, tied for the most trips to a Superbowl with the AFC East or more specifically the Patriots. That's 3 different teams from a single division playing in the Superbowl in just one decade. Bad division doesn't mean bad team.
Let's also keep in mind that entire divisions play each other, so one division may be feasting on another. For every division having an abnormally down year, some beneficiary will be having an abnormally high year. TK's point about the NFC South's success this year isn't a coincidence to me since that's the division playing the AFC South.
Man that Bengal's QB looks familiar...
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That Thorn is a prince of sarcasm.Tied for first place at the bye week. I told you guys we had a 1st place team. But no, you wouldn't listen. You tried pointing out the obvious, like we don't have very much talent and the head coach is a complete buffoon and the owner is dumber than a retarded lizard. But I didn't listen, and why should I when we are tied for 1st place!
Yes my fellow fans, we are headed for someplace special this season!
hahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
Notice how the greatest QB's have high foreheads?You want sad?
What if the playoffs started today?
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Look at the far right.
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It was destiny....Somehow Ricky Bobby blew it up.![]()
How did Eagles fans feel last season with a 10-6 record but no playoffs because a 7-8-1 team won a division "championship"?
Same in 2010 when a 10-6 Giants were out because a 7-9 Seahawks won a division "championship".
I personally think it's a lame policy by the NFL and awards mediocrity over wins.
And the entire "championship" thing about a 4 team division is freakin' lame. We don't even use that rather goofy word-game for kids in little leagues.
So a 10-6 record against the two weakest divisions is better than a 7-9 record against two of the toughest divisions?
Had the 7-8-1 team got blown out, then I'd have an issue with it.
I will make this so simple that even my first grader can understand: 10 > 7
Do you understand? TEN wins is MORE than seven wins.
I did not realize that the NFL had adopted the arbitrary strength of schedule mentality of the NCAA in quality over quantity. Oh wait, they don't...except for this goofy idea of "champions" of a four team crap division.
They did get blown out by the Seattle Seahawks 31-17 on January 10, 2015.
Okay, so keep the lame "champion" thing of divisions and let them in the playoffs. Home field should be awarded by record. It seems like giving away too much to crappy division winners.
But, I have higher expectations for professional sports, so that's just me. I'm not from the participation trophy generation.![]()
2 - 17 team conferences. Give LA one expansion team in each league or to any city losing a team to LA.Yeah, the division "champion" thing is a little watered down now, especially since there's a 1 in 4 shot at getting one every year, and there are 8 of them a season, but there's not really a better way to do it. Not to mention that with 4 team divisions a sub .500 team making the playoffs is more likely to happen. Sure, you can eliminate divisions and just go with the top 6 or whatever but then schedule making becomes even more difficult than it is now.
Not a problem if you had enough games where you at least played everybody, but that's not possible in the NFL so the schedules will be unbalanced no matter how you do it.
And yes, the 7-8-1 Panthers made it while the 10-6 Eagles sat at home last year. The Panthers however, played the toughest division in football last season, the AFC North (a combined record of 38-25-1), going 1-2-1, while the Eagles had the pathetic AFC South (25-39 combined record) that they went 4-0 against. Is that 10 win Eagles team really all that much better than the 7 win Panthers? The strength of your schedule does make a difference.
Look at the 10 win Colts last year. They were a .500 football team outside of the AFC South. Only 4 of their 10 wins were against teams with a winning record and 2 of those were against the 9-7 winning record Texans.
I get the division champion thing...well, like I said, being watered down, but there's not really a better way to do it. Yeah, you can do it by most wins but you'll still have the same problems with teams getting in with a soft ass schedule while better teams playing a much harder schedule get left out. And that does matter.
I don't really see a better way to do it.
Not for a 16 game schedule. But if you would rather eliminate two teams and go with a 14 game schedule and a 4 team conference playoff, that would work as well. 15 game schedule could work, though it cannot be as symmetric as an even numbered schedule.Adding two more teams would be absolutely terrible.
Not for a 16 game schedule. But if you would rather eliminate two teams and go with a 14 game schedule and a 4 team conference playoff, that would work as well. 15 game schedule could work, though it cannot be as symmetric as an even numbered schedule.
2 - 17 team conferences. Give LA one expansion team in each league or to any city losing a team to LA.
Every Team plays every other team alternating home field advantage from year to year making a 16 game schedule with 8 at home and 8 on the road and a bye week like it does presently.
Top 8 teams in each conference are seeded for their conference championships. The Superbowl never has a rematch from earlier in the season. no sub 500 team is likely to make it in this format.
It really isn't that hard to come up with a better way.
I will make this so simple that even my first grader can understand: 10 > 7
Do you understand? TEN wins is MORE than seven wins.
I did not realize that the NFL had adopted the arbitrary strength of schedule mentality of the NCAA in quality over quantity. Oh wait, they don't...except for this goofy idea of "champions" of a four team crap division.
Then you don't play the other conference ever. That's not going to work. So yeah, it is a little harder than you think.2 - 17 team conferences. Give LA one expansion team in each league or to any city losing a team to LA.
Every Team plays every other team alternating home field advantage from year to year making a 16 game schedule with 8 at home and 8 on the road and a bye week like it does presently.
Top 8 teams in each conference are seeded for their conference championships. The Superbowl never has a rematch from earlier in the season. no sub 500 team is likely to make it in this format.
It really isn't that hard to come up with a better way.
But, I have higher expectations for professional sports, so that's just me. I'm not from the participation trophy generation.![]()
So let's send the top six seeded teams from each conference to the playoffs, with this exception: .
Sooner or later, you're going to have a 10-6 team not make the play offs in their conference while an 8-8 in the other conference gets in.
They should just scrap the whole conference BS all together. Extend the season to 18 games & let the top 4 teams (by win loss record) play for the championship.
If you don't like conferences, then just eliminate it all and have an unequal schedule and just take your chances. ~Everybody knows those interconference matchups every 4 years are too important to give up for an equal strength of schedule.~Then you don't play the other conference ever. That's not going to work. So yeah, it is a little harder than you think.
If you don't like conferences, then just eliminate it all and have an unequal schedule and just take your chances. ~Everybody knows those interconference matchups every 4 years are too important to give up for an equal strength of schedule.~
Then you are STUCK on the status quo. Never to improve. So don't bellyache about sub 500 teams making it.The NFL is never ever going to come up with a plan where half the teams never ever play the other half. Try coming up with something a bit more realistic.
Then you are STUCK on the status quo. Never to improve. So don't bellyache about sub 500 teams making it.
Obviously I did confuse you with the other posters who wanted sub 500 teams removed from the playoffs. Those were the ones I had in mind when I offered alternative structures.Show me where I'm bellyaching about it. I don't have a problem with the way it is, so I don't know where you got that I did. You've obviously got me confused with someone else.
And not improving would be to implement your idea of watering the league down even more with 2 new teams and half the league never playing the other half. That's improvement? No thanks.
It pisses me off the way that Houston fans can find things to complain about, even when their team has a chance. Hell, the Houston Rockets went to the finals with a losing record, and beat a team in the conference finals with a losing record. Wars, fortunes, teams, relationships just need a spark to get going. Suck it up Houston, you are the biggest loser, and that can be ok.
Explosions sometimes just need a spark, too. And blowing up this organization doesn't sound like such a bad idea.Wars, fortunes, teams, relationships just need a spark to get going.
Explosions sometimes just need a spark, too. And blowing up this organization doesn't sound like such a bad idea.
Well, when you get the sand out of your vagina, you can take it & your higher expectations & stick it up your ass.
It pisses me off the way that Houston fans can find things to complain about, even when their team has a chance. Hell, the Houston Rockets went to the finals with a losing record, and beat a team in the conference finals with a losing record. Wars, fortunes, teams, relationships just need a spark to get going. Suck it up Houston, you are the biggest loser, and that can be ok.
Man this thread...
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Some points I'd like to contribute.
First off, I question the extent of what people are asking is "fair." Not surprisingly, nearly everyone has a different definition. But do you guys really want what's fair or are you simply providing your own arbitrary definition of what "fairness" is when it comes to rewarding teams.
Here's a fact that many people are overlooking: the best team doesn't always win the Superbowl.
I don't say that in a condescending manner. It's the honest truth and there is no disputing that. There have been more non-1 seeded teams that have hoisted the Lombardi compared to the "best" teams. http://www.nfl.com/superbowlchamps/seeding
If you really want to reward wins, then I have the perfect solution, but nobody is going to like it...
No playoffs.
That's right. No playoffs. Whoever has the best record at the end of the regular season is the champion. There.
Boring, right? Again, not being condescending, but the fact is that sports fans love the idea of chance even if they don't publicly admit it.. It's what makes sports... sports. It's why we have "Wildcards" in almost every league. Wins should matter, but wins don't always matter. The last team standing isn't always the best team but the last team, and that is by design of how we like our sports. For those who do find themselves upset about a 7-9 or an 8-8 team making the playoffs, I think you're not seeing the forest for the trees.
Furthermore, no 8-8 team has won the Superbowl, much less a 7-9 team. But supposed a 7-9 team did go on to win the Superbowl. They'd have to win the wildcard round, then the divisional, then the conference, then the Superbowl itself. Suddenly they're 11-9 and no longer have a losing record.
Let's also say, hypothetically, that the Texans win the division at 7-9.They get the fourth seed and host the, oh, I dunno, Steelers at 10-6. That's a difference of three wins. And let's just keep the lollipops and sunshine going here and say Texans win and the people of Pittsburgh are sent into a state of shock. Meanwhile the, oh, I dunno, Jets have the sixth seed at 9-7 and go on to play the 12-4 Broncos, Bengals, or Patriots (Considering those 3 are still undefeated, a 12-4 team having the #3 seed is possible). If the Jets win, is there as much backlash? While the Jets would have a winning record, it's still a three game difference in both those games. Arguably the gap is just as large in terms of how good these teams are perceived to be. Is it anymore fair for the 10-6 Steelers to face elimination by the 7-9 Texans than it would be for the 12-4 Broncos to face elimination by the 9-7 Jets? Is a single game over .500 really as exact for rewarding as we're making it seem?
If you want to say the Texans shouldn't be able to host that game, that's a point I'm certainly open to change about. But even if you simply have Pittsburgh host the game but still have Pittsburgh risk elimination by a 7-9 Houston team, you'd still be doing what the NFL has done since forever: leaving the game up to chance.
McNair doesn't sound too upset here. He's ready to win the second half of the season and thinks that at least "We're tied for first".
Except for that pesky half game lead Indy holds on us. Classic McNair.
Does he know we just played the Titans who had a worse offense than the Texans?
Stop, Bob, please just stop. This is not a whole new season. This is a 3-5 team that is getting its ass handed to it by barely mediocre teams.
McNair doesn't sound too upset here. He's ready to win the second half of the season and thinks that at least "We're tied for first".
Except for that pesky half game lead Indy holds on us. Classic McNair.
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This is what I'm talking about: "The good news is that this is a new season"
Stop, Bob, please just stop. This is not a whole new season. This is a 3-5 team that is getting its ass handed to it by barely mediocre teams.
Your post was too long for me to read. But I gave you a like for best gif of the year. This exemplifies the Texans 2015 season in 5 seconds. Bravo!Man this thread...
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