While I have no problem moving away from permanent divisions with a 16-team conference, there should be a more balanced scheduling format to avoid the ridiculous tiebreaker scenarios we just witnessed.
My suggestion: Split the conference teams up into 4 pods.
Texas Pod: Baylor, TCU, Houston, Texas Tech
Mountain Pod: BYU, Utah, Arizona, Arizona State
Big 8 Pod: ISU, KSU, KU, Oklahoma State
Crossover Pod: Colorado, Cincy, West Virginia, UCF
If you want to switch out Colorado and ISU, be my guest. But with Colorado being one of the latest additions, I just chose them to be the sacrificial lambs instead of ISU, as one team will have to be somewhat inconvenienced geographically.
The concept: A team plays its other pod teams annually (3 games), then one other pod each year (4 games). You would then play one team from each of the other pods (2 games), bringing a team's conference games to 9 total, which is the same as it is now.
With this format, you would still have mini-divisions each year, where 2 pods all play one another. The two mini-division winners would then play each other for the title.
Makes the most sense, as it simplifies potential tie-break scenarios.
The mini-divisions could change annually, or you could simply keep the schedules the same for two years at a time, which would ensure that every team plays a conference member both home and away during a 4-year span.
Hopefully this is something that is considered in the future.
My suggestion: Split the conference teams up into 4 pods.
Texas Pod: Baylor, TCU, Houston, Texas Tech
Mountain Pod: BYU, Utah, Arizona, Arizona State
Big 8 Pod: ISU, KSU, KU, Oklahoma State
Crossover Pod: Colorado, Cincy, West Virginia, UCF
If you want to switch out Colorado and ISU, be my guest. But with Colorado being one of the latest additions, I just chose them to be the sacrificial lambs instead of ISU, as one team will have to be somewhat inconvenienced geographically.
The concept: A team plays its other pod teams annually (3 games), then one other pod each year (4 games). You would then play one team from each of the other pods (2 games), bringing a team's conference games to 9 total, which is the same as it is now.
With this format, you would still have mini-divisions each year, where 2 pods all play one another. The two mini-division winners would then play each other for the title.
Makes the most sense, as it simplifies potential tie-break scenarios.
The mini-divisions could change annually, or you could simply keep the schedules the same for two years at a time, which would ensure that every team plays a conference member both home and away during a 4-year span.
Hopefully this is something that is considered in the future.