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POTENTIAL PLAY OFF MODEL

PERHAPS ANSWERING MY OWN QUESTIONS:

SORRY ABOUT THE PRESENTATION OF THIS ARTICLE...


INDIANAPOLIS -- Just as it looked like College Football Playoff expansion was heading towards finality, conference realignment started by Texas and Oklahoma jumping to the SEC put the entire process on hold. Last month's meeting of the FBS commissioners in Park City, Utah, went so well that those who spent the last year battling over CFP expansion seem to be edging closer to settling on a format.
"We didn't solve anything, but we had a really good meeting," one of the participants at the gathering told CBS Sports. "I came out of that meeting pretty optimistic. Then, five days later, boom. I don't know what kind of effect we had on it. We had the best meeting we had in over a year."
That "boom" moment came June 30 when word leaked that USC and UCLA were joining the Big Ten. But even since then, commissioners have been optimistic about CFP expansion to the point that Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren recently expressed interest in a 16-team model.
"I do want to look at 16," Warren told CBS Sports at the Big Ten Media Days. "I want to look at all of them. I want to look at everything but four."

As proposed last year, a 12-team playoff would have included the six highest-ranked conference champions plus six at-large bids. Warren voted against that model because he wanted a guaranteed spot for the Big Ten champion.
(Spoiler alert: The Big Ten champion would have been a virtual lock to be among those top six conference champions every year.)
Warren was joined in that "no" vote by Pac-12 commissioner Georgia Kliavkoff and ACC commissioner Jim Phillips. At the time, passage required unanimous consent.

On Tuesday, Warren said he was "100%" in support of expansion. He then told The Athletic that he was "going to soften [his] stance" regarding the top six highest-ranked champions.
That may have something to do with the Big Ten and SEC being in the process of separating themselves from the rest of college football. It may also be the realization that, after the current CFP contract expires following the 2025 season, a unanimous vote will no longer be necessary to change the structure.
Mississippi State president Mark Keenum, chair of the CFP Board of Managers, said earlier this summer that he hoped the presidents would have expansion resolved by next summer. An expanded bracket would be in place for the 2026 season.

Last week, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey indicated he would support a bracket including the best teams available regardless of whether they are conference champions. Sankey was part of a four-person subcommittee that took two years modeling everything from four- to 16-team playoffs before settling on the proposed 12-team format.
The sudden interest in 16 might best be explained by, "Why not?" Still, one high-profile industry called the idea "lunacy" saying Sankey's original subcommittee got it right at 12 teams.
A 12-team bracket is valued at approximately $1.2 billion annually, industry sources told CBS Sports.

Support for the 16-team bracket may have hatched while commissioners were in Park City for the annual Collegiate Commissioners Association meeting. Among those eligible to attend the meeting, only Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick was absent because of a previous commitment.
"I don't have a problem with 16," said Barry Alvarez, Big Ten senior advisor for football. I think we need more access. College football needs more access to the playoffs. It used to be every game was important. Now, you see people lose interest when someone loses a game early. Well, they're out of the playoff."
Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby, one of those expansion architects along with Sankey, explained that up to 30 teams would be in contention up until November if a 12-team bracket needed to be filled out.

WATCH: Day 4 practice interviews w/ Dillingham, Caleb Chapman, Patrick Herbert & Jackson Powers-Johnson

Latest practice interviews for you here including media sessions with OC Kenny Dillingham, Caleb Chapman, Patrick Herbert and Jackson Powers-Johnson after the fourth day of work for the Ducks.

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Height/Weight Frustration

Is anyone frustrated that the goducks roster no longer lists players’ height and weight? It was always interesting to follow growth and development. Am I correct in assuming that it is now considered personally private information in the same vain as are medical records or IQ scores? Is it considered body shaming to list a human being’s weight as 340 lbs?

Observations and takeaways from practice Monday (Aug. 8)

Jacob Hamre was out there today for us and will have a story coming afterward as Kenny Dillingham and players are made available. Here were the takeaways from the 20-minute media viewing window.

Flock Talk: Divided Light

So - the song inspiration in the subtitle this week is Tori Amos. (For what it's worth, IMO, her first album, Little Earthquakes, is breathtakingly brilliant in just about every way).


Today in Flock Talk, I took a look back at the long, dark, cold offseason that seemed to start in November with a horrific loss at Utah.

Here is an excerpt:

Getting past that kind of darkness can be difficult. I once wrote the line “weary is the man whose path is unknown for he must travel in the darkness of life.” But the reality is that you do not have to travel in the darkness of life. You do not have to be weary. Those days are over, and you have found a path no longer dark and lonely. That is the feeling I get of the difference between the end of last season and the beginning of this one.

As the sun set on the last night of a long offseason, I noticed the sky. Drifting clouds, fading light, colliding from nothing into the brilliance of a fire raging in the minds of children. Sunset brought out the magnificence of the sky for a moment of perfection all too brief; a moment of perfection which could remain so in my mind. It was gone too soon, yet its beauty would live forever. She smiled. The wind blew.

And with that light gust, the 2022 season officially begins with a practice today. The Dan Lanning era begins and the magnificent sunset leads to a new feeling. There will be more joy in Mudville in 2022. B.B. King once sang that The Thrill is Gone. That is sort of what 2021 felt like. So, what will be the theme of 2022?

I am going with Summer Days (Kerosene Dream). What about you?

https://oregon.rivals.com/news/flock-talk-divided-light

Kiko Retires

After signing a new contract. It sounds as if that may have been somewhat ceremonial. When Kiko was healthy, he was sooo good. I wonder if J. Flowe could talk to him. His Dad used to be a member, so congrats to him and Kiko for an amazing comeback story.


And take that, MR Wilson, lol.

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KT Impresses in Practice

Sounds like he's making a living in the backfield and drawing double teams, holding penalties. I forgot Shane was a Giant too. Other news, another rookie Giants guard just tore his ACL and is out for the season, so Shane should get some chances.

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