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Fuel for the Fire

For anti-playoff advocates, that is: with Green Bay, a team that would have entered the Bowl of an Extreme or Excessive Degree as a division champion with a 15-3 record that tied for the best in its conference, there would have been few eyebrows raised to the legitimacy of the process if the Packers managed to upset New England.

Not so the Giants. Under no criteria can New York's season, one that ended with NY three full games behind the winner of its own division, with six reglar season losses - the last of those defeats to New England - be described as "better" than the Patriots'. New York beat three NFC division champions on the road, including both of the top two seeds, but the argument about the "best team," if it wasn't over a month ago, is certainly finished now. This is not like Pittsburgh's wild card run in 2005, when the Steelers finished the playoffs with the same number of wins as every team ranked in front of them at their start; ditto the Broncos in 1997. The Patriots have been something else, which can't be accounted for. If the NFL decided anything by polls, New England right now would take first, second and third place, just to accurately represent the distance. But it still has a chance, after clearly the greatest single season performance in league history, to not be the champion.

I, for one, am fine with this, and will be rooting hard for the Giants in two weeks for the first and only time in my life, in the same way I whooped and hugged Bostonians in a New Orleans Hooters six years ago when the underdog Pats knocked off the hated, near-invincible Rams. I want them to make Tom Brady cry like a little girl in front of the world. Hit him low. Hit him late. Nobody will ever say, "You know, we could have used computers and opinion polls to match the Patriots and Colts..."

For those who argue playoffs undermine the regular season, though, they've won this round. I don't take a step back in my advocacy (a six-loss champion that won its way through the league's best is still preferable to opinion polls), but the upcoming Super Bowl is the worst-case cross to bear with a playoff format, and it must be faced. As a cautionary tale, this is more proof the coming college football playoff needs to set the bar as high as reasonably possible to keep out the riffraff - no two teams as far apart in accomplishment as the Giants and Patriots should be competing for the same trophy. New York finished tied with a half dozen other outfits for the seventh-best record out of 32 teams, meaning roughly 18.75 percent of the league had a better regular season; compared to Division I-A, that's the equivalent of the No. 22 or 23 team in the nation making the championship (last year, according to the BCS standings that would have been 9-3 Cincinnati or 8-4 Auburn). No proposal I have ever encountered advocates letting any team that far down the list anywhere near a playoff in college, and for good reason: when one team sails so far over the bar it's barely even in sight, the competition should at least be clearing it with ease.

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I take your point...
...and yet I don't know that I am convinced. Are you really concerned that the NFL bar for the post-season is set too low for revenue purposes? Or reacting to the relatively large mass of " average" teamswho can take an NFL playoff in a given direction, though not necessarily a good one.  

by DC Trojan on Jan 21, 2008 2:10 AM EST reply actions   0 recs

Giants present no problem for me
The purpose of competition is to determine a winner.  Identifying the best team is irrelevant.  Two teams playing for the NFL title despite significantly different records is an exception rather than the rule especially considering the Patriots' unbeaten season.  Furthermore, a 10-6 NFL team faces competition much more capable of beating them weekly than the best college teams.  Therefore, playoff opponents that might turn up their nose at a 10-6 team making the playoffs are either being disingenuous in order to pretend this example helps their cause or they have no concept of context.  Imagine a college team going 10-6 versus the top 32 college teams and tell me that is nothing special.  Even then, I don't think the Giants making it undermines the regular season.  It is not as if they would have taken a 5th seed if offered to them before the season.  They had to win three straight road games to get a second chance at the Patriots.  They are the first team to beat the #1 NFC seed in the divisional round and if I'm not mistaken, they are the second team to win three road games to reach the Super Bowl.  Teams like the Giants are uncommon.  Besides that, my preferred 16 team format would make it much more difficult for the college equivalent to overcome their competitive disadvantage due to their regular season performance.  I like the idea of a flexible bracket where the highest remaining seed is paired against the lowest in each round.  Assuming no upsets but their own, a 16 seed would have to win at #1, at #2, and at #3 in succession before facing #4 in a neutral site for the title.  Given that only a dozen or so teams have beaten four top 16 teams in a given year during the past 30 seasons, I would hardly be bothered if, worst case scenario, an 8-4 Sun Belt team managed to pull off that feat despite not being the best team.    

by Scoreboard on Jan 21, 2008 2:48 AM EST reply actions   0 recs

Playoffs undermining the regular season!?!?!?
The hell you say SMQ!

Did you by chance miss the ferocious intensity with which the Cowboys played their last four games?

Surely you're not suggesting that the last six quarters of the Buccaneers' season were alone worth the price of Sunday Ticket?

And oh those Colts, alway keeping it in 5th gear.  

by marcillac on Jan 21, 2008 12:10 PM EST reply actions   0 recs

Wait. WAIT.
I thought the point of this was that Jeremy Shockey has a shot at a Super Bowl ring.  THA U, BABY!!!!!1

by Holly Anderson on Jan 21, 2008 5:54 PM EST reply actions   0 recs

On the Bench
Their fortunes went up when he left the lineup, didn't they? Without his preening, scowling and whining after every play, I almost forget how much I really detest the Giants.

by SMQ on Jan 21, 2008 7:11 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

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