5 ways to fix the College Football Playoff

If you watched college football this season and followed the saga that was the weekly College Football Playoff selection show…

If you watched college football this season and followed the saga that was the weekly College Football Playoff selection show, you know the system is a broken one.

I would argue, even, that it’s more broken now than it was during the 2-team BCS era.

The idea was a good one: create a play-in championship structure that would get rid of the annual arguments surrounding who should play in the championship game. But what it’s done, and it didn’t take long for this to happen, is continue the same “who should get in arguments,” elevate the top programs in the country even further and allow for the committee to change its criteria every season in order to confirm their own biases of who are the nation’s best teams.

It’s a mess right now, and nobody summed up the mess better than The Athletic’s Nicole Auerbach back in mid-December.

So how can it be fixed? How does the sport move towards a real “playoff” and away from a yearly invitational?

Here are five steps to make that happen:

 

A look at the 15 Modern-Era Finalists who could make the Hall of Fame

Five Modern-Era Players will be named to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2020 following the Selection Committee’s meeting on Saturday.

It’s the day before the Super Bowl – “Selection Saturday” – when the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Selection Committee meets to determine the five Modern-Era Players to be named to the Class of 2020.

The 15 Finalists were initially whittled down from a list of 122 nominees named in September and further reduced to 25 Semifinalists in November.

Two former Seahawks have made the cut, guard Steve Hutchinson and running back Edgerrin James.

Here’s a look at the 2020 Modern-Era Player Finalists:

Steve Atwater, Safety – 1989-1998 Denver Broncos, 1999 New York Jets

Tony Boselli, Tackle – 1995-2001 Jacksonville Jaguars

Isaac Bruce, Wide Receiver – 1994-2007 Los Angeles/St. Louis Rams, 2008-09 San Francisco 49ers

LeRoy Butler, Safety – 1990-2001 Green Bay Packers

Alan Faneca, Guard – 1998-2007 Pittsburgh Steelers, 2008-09 New York Jets, 2010 Arizona Cardinals

Torry Holt, Wide Receiver – 1999-2008 St. Louis Rams, 2009 Jacksonville Jaguars

Steve Hutchinson, Guard – 2001-05 Seattle Seahawks, 2006-2011 Minnesota Vikings, 2012 Tennessee Titans

Edgerrin James, Running Back – 1999-2005 Indianapolis Colts, 2006-08 Arizona Cardinals, 2009 Seattle Seahawks

John Lynch, Free Safety – 1993-2003 Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 2004-07 Denver Broncos

Sam Mills, Linebacker – 1986-1994 New Orleans Saints, 1995-97 Carolina Panthers

Troy Polamalu, Safety – 2003-2014 Pittsburgh Steelers

Richard Seymour, Defensive End/Defensive Tackle – 2001-08 New England Patriots, 2009-2012 Oakland Raiders

Zach Thomas, Linebacker – 1996-2007 Miami Dolphins, 2008 Dallas Cowboys

Reggie Wayne, Wide Receiver – 2001-2014 Indianapolis Colts

Bryant Young, Defensive Tackle – 1994-2007 San Francisco 49ers

The Hall of Fame Class of 2020 will be officially announced later on Saturday. Be sure and follow Seahawks Wire for the latest breaking news.

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UGA Wire’s Jackson Fryburger predicts the College Football Playoff Rankings for 11/26/19

Jackson Fryburger of the UGA Wire breaks down how he thinks the selection committee will rank the Top 25 on Tuesday night

Guess who’s back, back again. Jax is back, tell a friend.

It’s rivalry-week folks and boy, do we have a treat for you. Due to the Georgia basketball game going on in Maui earlier today, we weren’t able to put together a full playoff rankings preview like last week, but we’ll go ahead and give you our expected Top 25 list before the committee reveals theirs.

Remember, just like last week, this method of ranking is based on how we think the committee will evaluate teams and not just our own personal opinion on the nation’s best.

For record’s sake, we’ll try to be as objective as possible, but this is how we see the committee ranking the Top 25 in just under an hour.

You ready? Here we go.