mountainman wrote:colorado ..... ole buddy ...... that's the point ..... all these proposals and systems that are either in place or have been thought up have holes.
That's what I mean by correctness. Just trying to "pick the dog with the least fleas" that promotes excellence in college football.

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Edit:
Well, dag-gum colorado ...... you just edited out the most important point of these discussions and debates that have been going on for months and will continue for many more months.
You said it, you nailed it, you got it right ............. and you edited it out.

No, I didn't edit it out, I did a 'post-edit' which I've done frequently, and to address your scenario more 'fairly' I'm going to assign a 'probability' to it, my right, as a 'proponent' of a playoff, of BCS teams.
Your scenario, believe it or not has only something like a .02% chance of ever happening. I did the math, I'm not making this up.
The chance two teams from the same conference both qualify for the BCS is only around the order of 50%, if that. It happens infrequently, is my point, so unless you can find more 'appropriate' data I'm sticking to that number, 50% chance both teams make the BCS.
Then for those two teams to meet in a 'hypothetical' championship, they both necessarily have to win their games leading up to that, or in other words, 50% of winning each game, mutiplied by the number of games they play to get there, 3 for Ohio St, and 2 for Penn St.
So, if you multiply all those numbers together (that's how averages work), that gives you the likihood they both get to the championship game, or something around 1.5% but I'll make it 2% to make it 'fair'.
That means, the likelihood two teams from the same conference both make it to the BCS 'championship' should happen something like once every 50 years.
Now, your scenario also includes the provision one team win both games.
The probability of that happening is 1/4, statistically-speaking, but it's probably higher if one team is clearly superior to the other, but I'll stick with the 1/4 anyway. That actually favors the chance one team wins the third game, that is athletically 'inferior' so it evens out, statistically.
What that means, is you have to take the 1.5% divide it by 8 to get the likelihood one team wins the N.C. after having lost twice to the conference champion. If my math is correct that averages to something like .02 of 1% or in other words once every 500 years!
So, your scenario, although possible is very unlikely to happen, if at all.
That's statistics, not something I 'dreamt' up to support my side.
If you can find evidence that the probability that a two teams from the same conference both legitimately qualify for the BCS to be greater than 50-50, then I have to 'amend' results to reflect that.
But even if it happens every year, or 100% of the time, that still means there's only a small chance (something like 1/250) it will happen.
That's not very good odds, my friend, unless you plan to live to be 500 years old. Methusela might witness it, but it's not likely to happen in our lifetimes.