College Football Team Analysis

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How many of you enjoy college football, specifically the college football playoffs? Well if you do, you are not alone, last year, in the college football playoff debut, the semifinal games averaged 28 million viewers per game, and the final had 33.4 million viewers. Not only that, the playoff final also earned the highest ESPN ratings, for a sporting event ever. So it's safe to say that the college football playoff with four teams was successful and knocked socks off many US citizens. For starters, the Number 1 overall seed, Alabama was considered unbeatable and played a distraught yet encouraging Ohio State buckeye squad, and to all sports fans surprise the buckeyes defeated the crimson tide, showing that a number 4 overall team is just as good as a number 1 overall team. …show more content…

Fans and sports critics believed they could extend the number of teams in the playoff, to 16, not 64 like March Madness in college basketball. In 2014 the buckeyes showed us that the number 1 overall team really wasn't he number overall, so then fans and critics say why not give 12 more teams a shot at the title, to give 16 total teams a chance. In 2014 TCU was left out of the playoff, ranked number 5, one spot out of the playoffs, and in their bowl game, routed number 9 Ole Miss 42-3, displaying their case to prove that they should have made the playoff. You see upsets all of the time in March Madness, you caught a glimpse of that in the first college football playoff, but fans want more. Upsets are what make sports fun, if the better team always won, why would we watch sports. In fact if there were no upsets not many people would watch sports. To give fans what they want, we need to extend the college football playoffs to 16 teams, to provide fans with a greater chance at upsets. Right now the college football playoff is successful and contains 4

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