Ideal CFB Season Version 4.0

College football has always been the Wild West compared to other big time American sports and that is a true as ever. Does the NCAA have any real power over CFB? What will the conferences look like in ten years? What is going on with the transfer portal, NIL, and paying players? The answers change every day.

This chaos is part of what makes CFB so great. Below I have mapped out what I think an ideal CFB season would look like. It maintains what is great about CFB, but also cuts out some of the ridiculous and unnecessary things. This isn’t a prediction and I’m not naive enough to think everything below will happen. It is simply a vision that I believe would benefit the sport.

1. Say Goodbye to Week Zero

Let’s simplify things: eliminate Week Zero. Instead, have Week 1 be the actual start to football season in America. And what better way to start it than by having the ONLY game be Army vs Navy. Put all eyes on this game to start the year instead of throwing it in the middle of December right before the CFP is about to start. This would be such an awesome way to still celebrate this game and the players, while also having it kick off football season.

Week 1 will be 15 weeks before Thanksgiving (more on that later) and every other team will start playing on Week 2. For reference, if the CFB season I am laying out occurred this year, that would mean Week 1 would have been August 23rd while Week 2 would have been August 30th.

2. Rest of the Regular Season: 11 Games in 12 Weeks

Currently, teams play 12 regular-season games with variable conference schedules (8-9 conference games depending on the league). Here’s the ideal adjustment:

  • Schedule: 11 games over 12 weeks, allowing one bye week per team (This would be 11 games in 13 weeks for Army and Navy)
  • Conference Play: Every team plays 9 conference games. Uniformity across Power Four and Group of Five conferences is better for determining the best teams in each conference.
  • Non-Conference Games: Power 4 teams must play 2 non-conference Power Four/Notre Dame matchups. This helps maintain traditional rivalries (like Florida vs. Florida State or West Virginia vs Pitt) and ensures high-caliber matchups early and late in the season.

Why this change?

  • Eliminate Irrelevant Games: No more Alabama vs. Mercer blowouts. These games don’t help determine playoff-worthy teams. Now Power Four teams will only be playing other Power Four teams in the regular season.
  • Tougher Schedules: A more rigorous slate helps identify the truly elite programs.
  • Easier to Compare Teams and Conferences: Let’s imagine a scenario where SMU were to be 9-2 and Tennessee was 8-3. Instead of arguing who has more wins, we could look at non-conference evidence. If SMU played Ole Miss and had their doors blown off, losing by 21 points, while Tennessee beat Ole Miss by 10, that helps us determine who is better. And in general, if the SEC played the ACC 20 times and went 16-4, then we clearly know the SEC is better than the ACC and that should go into determining the CFP teams. Or, if the ACC went 11-9 vs the SEC, we can say “Oh, wow, the ACC and SEC were pretty even and the ACC even has the edge. So a nine win ACC team may be more impressive than a 8 win SEC team.” More non-conference games gives us more evidence of which teams and which conferences are better.

3. Rivalry Week, Conference Championships, and Playoff Timing

  • Rivalry Week: Two weekends before Thanksgiving
  • Conference Championships: Held the weekend before Thanksgiving.
  • Bye Week: Thanksgiving weekend serves as a universal bye, giving players and coaches a well-deserved break.
  • Playoffs: Begin the weekend after Thanksgiving weekend (more on that below).

This schedule maintains the rhythm of weekly games while still providing players time to recover for the CFP.

4. The Ideal College Football Playoff Structure

  • 16 Teams Total
  • All At-Large Bids: Open to the 16 best teams, regardless of conference.

Key Principles:

  • No Amount of Guaranteed Bids: No guaranteed spots for conferences. If the Big Ten deserves six teams, they get six. If they deserve two, they get two. If the Big 12 and/or ACC has just one deserving team, so be it.
  • Seeding Based on Performance: Teams are seeded 1-16 based on merit.
  • Reseeding: After each round, teams will be reseeded just like in the NFL playoffs. For those who aren’t familiar with how the NFL does it. After Round 1, there will be 8 teams left heading into Round 2. The highest remaining seed will play the lowest remaining seed, the 2nd highest remaining seed will play the second lowest remaining seed and so on. This will continue throughout the playoffs.

Playoff Schedule:

  • Round of 16: The weekend after Thanksgiving weekend. Games will be played on campus.
  • Quarterfinals & Semifinals: Consecutive weekends thereafter. Games will be played on campus.
  • National Championship: Always held on December 31st at the Rose Bowl.

Why the Rose Bowl? It’s the most iconic venue in college football. The “Granddaddy of Them All” deserves to host the sport’s biggest game annually, preserving tradition while adding prestige to the championship. And the final day of the season will be the final day of the year, which lines up well. Then we can give everyone January 1st off and January 2nd will be when the next season starts to kick off.

All CFP games will be held on campus with the exception of the Rose Bowl. Why? Because home CFP games are so much better than a bunch of bowl games. I understand that bowl games and especially the New Year’s Six bowl games hold a special place inside the hearts of CFB fans. In this modern era of CFB, they don’t need to be front and center (other than the Rose Bowl). Those and every other bowl can still exist, but it will be outside of the playoff.

On campus CFB games have such a better atmosphere than bowl games. It also gives higher seeded home teams a much better advantage, similar to the NFL. It benefits the fans and local communities too. Fans of the home team do not need to spend thousands of dollars traveling around the country to different bowl games. And local economies will be bolstered by the all the people coming into town for the games.

5. Addressing Coaching and Transfer Portal Chaos

One of the current challenges in college football is the distraction caused by coaching hires and transfer portal decisions during the postseason. To maintain focus on the games, there will be no official coaching changes or transfers allowed until January 2nd and the transfer portal will be open from January 2nd-31st so players and teams will have a whole month to decide what to do.

This will be the one transfer portal window all year. Players will also be allowed one free transfer during their careers. If they transfer again, they will have to sit out a year. Exceptions to this are if a players graduates or their head coach leaves, they get a free transfer. This still reasonably gives players the ability to play for up to three schools in their CFB career, while not encouraging them to transfer a million times on a whim.

The early signing period for high school students will cease to exist and we will just keep the regular signing period starting early February each year. This keeps head coaches, assistant coaches, and players focused on their current teams during the playoffs.

6. The Long-Term Vision: Super Conferences?

Looking ahead, it’s hard to ignore the possibility of college football evolving into two super conferences:

  • The Big Ten: Dominating the North and West.
  • The SEC: Reigning supreme in the South.

While expansion may not be over, the flexibility built into this ideal system allows for adjustments as the sport continues to shift.

Final Thoughts

College football is beautiful in its chaos, but that doesn’t mean it can’t be improved. This vision seeks to balance tradition with progress.

Top 10 QBs of All Time

1 Tom Brady

Numbers. Awards. Super Bowls. He has done it all and done it better than anyone else we’ve ever seen. The one and only GOAT.

2 Joe Montana

A guy who played his best during the biggest moments. His Super Bowl stats: 4-0, 3 Super Bowl MVPs, 11 TDs-0 INTs, and a QB rating of 127.8. Oh yeah and he wasn’t too bad in the regular season, winning 2 MVPs and being a 5 time All-Pro.

3 Peyton Manning

A super likable guy off the field, but a killer on it. A ten time All-Pro, 5 time MVP, and he won 2 Super Bowls.

4 Patrick Mahomes

Probably the most talented QB to ever play. He is about to turn 30 and still has a lot of his legacy left to write. He will make a run for the top spot on this list.

5 Aaron Rodgers

He probably throws the greatest ball in NFL history and doesn’t even look like he’s trying. It’s no surprise he’s won 4 MVPs and put up a ridiculous TD-Int ratio of 507-116. He can still build on his insane resume.

6 Brett Favre

The ultimate gunslinger. Favre would improvise like no one else and was never afraid to make any throw, which led to many interceptions, but also 3 MVPs and a Super Bowl.

7 John Elway

One of the most hyped QBs coming out of college and he delivered with 2 Super Bowls and an MVP.

8 Johnny Unitas

Unitas was putting up big numbers in the passing game well before most QBs were. His 3 MVPs and 7 All-Pro selections show how dominant he was.

9 Dan Marino

He was dominant and put up modern day numbers in the 80s. The fact he’s on this list despite not winning the big one shows how good he was.

10 Drew Brees

He put up huge numbers year after year and brought NOLA a much needed Super Bowl.

Ideal CFB Season Version 3.0

I have talked about this on my podcast and want to have this in blog form too.

College football has always been the Wild West compared to other big time American sports and that is a true as ever. Does the NCAA have any real power over CFB? What will the conferences look like in ten years? What is going on with the transfer portal, NIL, and paying players? The answers change every day.

This chaos is part of what makes CFB so great. Below I have mapped out what I think an ideal CFB season would look like. It maintains what is great about CFB, but also cuts out some of the ridiculous and unnecessary things. This isn’t a prediction and I’m not naive enough to think everything below will happen. It is simply a vision that I believe would benefit the sport.

1. Say Goodbye to Week Zero

Let’s simplify things: eliminate Week Zero. Instead, have Week 1 be the actual start to football season in America. And what better way to start it than by having the ONLY game be Army vs Navy. Put all eyes on this game to start the year instead of throwing it in the middle of December right before the CFP is about to start. This would be such an awesome way to still celebrate how amazing this game and the players in it are, while also having it kick off football season.

Week 1 will be 15 weeks before Thanksgiving (more on that later) and every other team will start playing on Week 2. For reference, if the CFB season I am laying out occurred this year, that would mean Week 1 would have been August 23rd while Week 2 would have been August 30th.

2. Rest of the Regular Season: 11 Games in 12 Weeks

Currently, teams play 12 regular-season games with variable conference schedules (8-9 conference games depending on the league). Here’s the ideal adjustment:

  • Schedule: 11 games over 12 weeks, allowing one bye week per team (This would be 11 games in 13 weeks for Army and Navy)
  • Conference Play: Every team plays 9 conference games. Uniformity across Power Four and Group of Five conferences is better for determining the best teams in each conference.
  • Non-Conference Games: Power 4 teams must play 2 non-conference Power Four/Notre Dame matchups. This helps maintain traditional rivalries (like Florida vs. Florida State or West Virginia vs Penn State) and ensures high-caliber matchups early in the season.

Why this change?

  • Eliminate Irrelevant Games: No more Alabama vs. Mercer blowouts. These games don’t help determine playoff-worthy teams. Now Power Four teams will Noel be playing other Power Four teams in the regular season.
  • Tougher Schedules: A more rigorous slate helps identify the truly elite programs.
  • Easier to Compare Teams and Conferences: Let’s imagine a scenario where SMU were to be 9-2 and Tennessee was 8-3. Instead of arguing who has more wins, we could look at non-conference evidence. If SMU played Ole Miss and had their doors blown off, losing by 21 points, while Tennessee beat Ole Miss by 10, that helps us determine who is better. And in general, if the SEC played the ACC 20 times and went 16-4, then we clearly know the SEC is better than the ACC and that should go into determining the CFP teams. Or, if the ACC went 11-9 vs the SEC, we can say “Oh, wow, the ACC and SEC were pretty even and the ACC even has the edge. So a nine win ACC team may be more impressive than a 8 win SEC team.” More non-conference games gives us more evidence of which teams and which conferences are better.

3. Rivalry Week, Conference Championships, and Playoff Timing

  • Rivalry Week: Two weekends before Thanksgiving
  • Conference Championships: Held the weekend before Thanksgiving.
  • Bye Week: Thanksgiving weekend serves as a universal bye, giving players and coaches a well-deserved break.
  • Playoffs: Begin the weekend after Thanksgiving weekend (more on that below).

This schedule maintains the rhythm of weekly games while still providing players time to recover for the CFP.

4. The Ideal College Football Playoff Structure

  • 16 Teams Total
  • 5 Automatic Bids: Power Four conference champions + highest-ranked Group of Five champion.
  • 11 At-Large Bids: Open to the best remaining teams, regardless of conference.

Key Principles:

  • No Amount of Guaranteed Bids: No guaranteed spots beyond conference champions. If the Big Ten deserves six teams, they get six. If they deserve two, they get two. If the Big 12 and/or ACC has just one deserving team, so be it.
  • Seeding Based on Performance: Teams are seeded 1-16 based on merit, not conference affiliation.
  • Reseeding: After each round, teams will be reseeded just like in the NFL playoffs. For those who aren’t familiar with how the NFL does it. After Round 1, there will be 8 teams left heading into Round 2. The highest remaining seed will play the lowest remaining seed, the 2nd highest remaining seed will play the second lowest remaining seed and so on. This will continue throughout the playoffs.
  • Flexibility: Things can always change. If the Group of Five auto-bid keeps getting demolished, I have no problem with revoking their auto-bid and having it be the Power Four conference champions and 12 at-large bids. The same applies to Power Four conferences—if future realignments diminish certain leagues’ competitiveness, their auto-bids can be reconsidered. We could even switch to a completely at-large tourney with no conference auto-bids.

Playoff Schedule:

  • Round of 16: The weekend after Thanksgiving weekend. Games will be played on campus.
  • Quarterfinals & Semifinals: Consecutive weekends thereafter. Games will be played on campus.
  • National Championship: Always held on December 31st at the Rose Bowl.

Why the Rose Bowl? It’s the most iconic venue in college football. The “Granddaddy of Them All” deserves to host the sport’s biggest game annually, preserving tradition while adding prestige to the championship. And the final day of the season will be the final day of the year, which lines up well. Then we can give everyone January 1st off and January 2nd will be when the next season starts to kick off.

All CFP games will be held on campus with the exception of the Rose Bowl. Why? Because home CFP games are so much better than a bunch of bowl games. I understand that bowl games and especially the New Year’s Six bowl games hold a special place inside the hearts of CFB fans. In this modern era of CFB, they don’t need to be front and center (other than the Rose Bowl). Those and every other bowl can still exist, but it will be outside of the playoff.

On campus CFB games have such a better atmosphere than bowl games. It also gives higher seeded home teams a much better advantage, similar to the NFL. It benefits the fans and local communities too. Fans of the home team do not need to spend thousands of dollars traveling around the country to different bowl games. And local economies will be bolstered by the all the people coming into town for the games.

5. Addressing Coaching and Transfer Portal Chaos

One of the current challenges in college football is the distraction caused by coaching hires and transfer portal decisions during the postseason. To maintain focus on the games, there will be no official coaching changes or transfers allowed until January 2nd and the transfer portal will be open from January 2nd-31st so players and teams will have a whole month to decide what to do.

This will be the one transfer portal window all year. Players will also be allowed one free transfer during their careers. If they transfer again, they will have to sit out a year. Exceptions to this are if a players graduates or their coach leaves, they get a free transfer. This still reasonably gives players the ability to play for up to three schools in their CFB career, while not encouraging them to transfer a million times on a whim.

This keeps head coaches, assistant coaches, and players focused on their current teams during the playoffs. The way the transfer portal works now is terrible. Imagine you’re the backup QB at Ohio State and they are making a run to the national championship. You have been at Ohio State for three years and have not really played. You only have two years of eligibility remaining and you also know the guy in front of you will likely be here for two more years. You decide that you will transfer to another school in order to actually play. With the way it works now, you would have to decide between two options:

  • Option 1. You abandon your team during the CFP run when they may need you in case the starter gets hurt, in order to ensure you go to the best team in search of a QB. While this would set you up well for the next two years and help your dream of making the NFL, you also will carry the guilt of feeling like you abandoned teammates while not getting to partake in a National Championship run with guys you have spent the last three years battling with. Since you feel pressure to transfer ASAP, you may run the risk of rushing your decision.
  • Option 2. You opt to stay and help your team with their playoff run. You feel good about doing this, however, by the time the season ends with you losing in the National Championship game, all the good programs looking for QBs have been filled and now you have to transfer to a much worse team than you other wise could start for.

Why are we making these players go through these agonizing decisions? This new Transfer Window gives players plenty of time to make their decision and still allows them to start spring semester on their new team, so they’re there at spring practice. It also encourages them to stay at a school for at least a year, rather than transfer a couple months later in April.

6. The Long-Term Vision: Super Conferences?

Looking ahead, it’s hard to ignore the possibility of college football evolving into two super conferences:

  • The Big Ten: Dominating the North and West.
  • The SEC: Reigning supreme in the South.

While expansion may not be over, the flexibility built into this ideal system allows for adjustments as the sport continues to shift. This structure can adapt without compromising competitive integrity.

Final Thoughts

College football is beautiful in its chaos, but that doesn’t mean it can’t be improved. This vision seeks to balance tradition with progress. Whether you agree or disagree with these ideas, one thing’s certain: the future of college football will be anything but boring.

The Jets’ Biggest Problem

The Jets main problem is that they assembled a team of great players who have no chemistry and expected them to be great right away. That isn’t how football works. Continuity is so important and guys need to play together for years and build a connection for a team to truly thrive.

The Jets basically did the college equivalent of the Colorado Buffaloes by bringing in a a lot of talented guys from the transfer portal and expecting to succeed right away. It reminds me of when the Pats lost Brady in the 2020 offseason and spent a record amount of guaranteed money for free agents and brought in Cam Newton to be their QB. They ended the season with 7 wins.

The Jets will likely be better by season’s end. But for right now, they are still learning how to play with each other. Aaron Rodgers, Tyron Smith, Mike Williams, and now Davante Adams are all talented players at important positions. However, you can’t just expect to bring them in and mesh with the team, organization, and city right away. It’s even harder when the Jets don’t have any established stars that have been there for a while or a strong, winning culture – which makes it easier for guys to adapt to.

To their credit, the Jets have drafted and developed a lot of talented young stars like Sauce Gardner, Quinnen Williams, Breece Hall, Garrett Wilson, and Alijah Vera-Tucker. They also have signed and acclimated good free agents in C.J Mosley and Quincy Williams. They need to be patient with letting the younger guys that have been here for a little bit mesh with the star veterans they have brought in. Firing Robert Saleh only hurts their growth because now they also need to combine a new coach with all of these other players.

I am no fan of the Jets, but fans should not panic yet. Brady and Stafford had slow starts in their first season with the Bucs and Rams, respectively. This basically is Rodger’s first year with the Jets. This team should end up having a much better 2nd half of the season than 1st.

NFL Week 6 Reaction

Washington Commanders (4-2) @ Baltimore Ravens (4-2)

The Ravens keep steamrolling along. Both QBs balled out in this game and both teams have bright futures ahead this season and beyond. Derrick Henry playing so good even at age 30 is so much fun to watch. He passed 10,000 yards rushing and is closing in on 100 TDs. He is a future Hall of Famer.

Houston Texans (5-1) @ New England Patriots (1-5)

Those red uniforms absolutely POP in Fall New England weather.

I don’t understand why the Pats continue to defer. They CANNOT play from behind. They need to be tied or have the lead so they can run the ball, grind out drives, and set the tone. It’s ridiculous. They let the Texans get the ball and score, then went 3 and out, then let the Texans score again. And the game was over after two possessions.

The Pats lack of discipline and penalties is absurd. You are bad enough as is, stop giving other teams more chances. So many good plays they make are negated by dumb penalties.

Drake Maye is so athletic and showed flashes of why we drafted him so high. That throw to Kayshon Boutte was Boutte-ful (sorry). We have not had a throw like that since Brady was QB and it feels so good to finally see a long, explosive play. His ability to keep plays alive with his feet and scramble is huge too and is helping our offense look more modern.

Yes, he had three TOs but had some deep passes, 3 passing TDs, and a handful of yards rushing. This was the first time we scored over 20 points and had a 200 yard passer. It feels so nice to have an offense again. It was a great debut overall and given how bad our O-line and skill players are and how good the Texans are, I’d give the debut an 8/10.

Sadly, the O-line is still terrible and we were dealt even more injuries today. Drake Maye and Antonio Gibson consistently never had a chance on passing and running plays.

Demario Douglas is showing flashes of becoming a good slot guy for the Pats. We haven’t had that since Jakobi Meyers was foolishly not resigned.

I would have liked to see the Pats run a mock two minute drill at the end of the game. You had 3 timeouts and plenty of time, why not use the timeouts and go for a score?

The officials were absolutely awful. A bogus pass interference helped lead to the first TD. Then a missed facemask call preceded Drake Maye getting stripped sacked and the Texans scoring their third TD. It was an embarrassment of a performance by those refs. I don’t get why refs aren’t held accountable for being terrible. If you fine the bad refs that made awful calls and/or suspend them without pay for a game for consistently being awful they might actually be competent at their jobs.

The Texans are really good and might be able to topple the Chiefs in the playoffs.

Detroit Lions (4-1) @ Dallas Cowboys (3-3)

Blowout Central. The Lions are great this year and look like the best team in the NFC. They are such a well-rounded team and have so many weapons on offense plus the best offensive line in the league.

It just sucks to see what happened to Aidan Hutchinson. It’s awful whenever any player gets a gruesome and brutal injury. Especially so when he’s one of the best players in the league and a leader of a Super Bowl contender. I hope and pray he can make a speedy and full recovery.

Brady said it and it’s true: Why are the Lions pulling out all these great trick plays in a blowout? Save them for a big game that is close in score.

The Cowboys look lost. Outside of CeeDee Lamb, they don’t have another reliable option offensively. Defensively, they are so banged up. This looks like it might be Mike McCarthy’s last year in Dallas.

Buffalo Bills (4-2) @ New York Jets (2-4)

New coach, same old Jets. Another game lost they definitely could have won. Two missed field goals and a bad pick at the end of the game doomed this team.

Even though the Jets season seems close to combustion, they could easily be 4-2 and a top the AFC East. It’s just a matter if they can right the ship of they internally collapse.

The Bills have their ups and downs, but they consistently find ways to win games.

Game/Betting Picks Results

Game: 3-1 (15-6 This Season) (53-22 All-Time)

Spread: 2-1-1 (14-6-1) (53-20-2)

O/U: 3-1 (11-10) (40-34-1)

College Football Week 7

South Carolina @ 7 Alabama

Alabama has such a wide range of performance. At their ceiling, they can beat anyone, like when they put up a 28-0 lead on Georgia and beat them. At their floor, they can lose to teams they absolutely should beat, like Vanderbilt. With so many good teams in the SEC, that isn’t the consistency needed to win the conference and win the Natty.

Saturday was the perfect example of their floor where they let a much worse USC team hang around. USC failed on a 2-point conversion to tie the game, despite a wide open receiver their QB simply missed. That should have been the game. Instead, Bama botches the onside kick and gave USC another chance to win the game. If they keep playing this way in the SEC, they won’t make the conference championship.

I also do not see Jalen Milroe as a legitimate NFL prospect. He came into this week as Mel Kiper’s #2 QB which I think is crazy. He is not a consistent enough passer and makes too many poor decisions with the football to be great in the NFL. He is such a good athlete that he may eventually be able to develop into a good NFL QB with the right coach, but it’s a long shot. I think Shedeur Sanders and Quinn Ewers are the clear cut top two prospects and after that there is much more uncertainty.

1 Texas vs 18 Oklahoma

QB Quinn Ewers looked shaky early. He got better as the game went on, but will need to play better if they want to beat Georgia. If he was more settled, this would have been a bigger blow out. There will be noise this week about Arch Manning playing over Ewers. A bad performance against Georgia will only make those voices louder.

Texas’s defense led the way and played great the whole game. They put the offense in position to score so many times. The offense missed many opportunities to put the game away earlier.

Oklahoma’s defense is great, but the offense could not keep up. Their QB should be good once he develops more, but he could not handle Texas’s defense, especially with his top FIVE wide receivers out.

2 Ohio State at 3 Oregon

This game lived up to the hype. Both teams are so even, either could have pulled out the win. I believe these are the two best teams in the Big 10 and they will meet in the championship game, with Ohio State getting revenge.

9 Ole Miss at 13 LSU

Another awesome night game that was overshadowed by the Big 10 showdown mentioned above. LSU saved their SEC title hopes with the win and ended Ole Miss’s chance to make it. The SEC is super close right now and Texas A&M, Texas, and LSU are the only SEC teams without a conference loss.