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I've read here various theories about why the playoffs work as they do. One guy says the goal is the fairest system possible. This is incorrect: 8-8 teams go, 11-5 teams stay home. Not fair. Another guy says it is to get the best Conference representative in the SB. This is also incorrect. Again, the 8-8 team is unlikely to represent the Conference well.
The correct answer is that weights are given to divisions and far less so, to conference, of origin. Obviously they would be purely titular designations if we simply did away with winners and wild-cards, and ranked the teams 1 to 16, then picked #s 1-6, applying some tweaked version of our current playoff logic thereafter. Perhaps head-to-head, then common opponents, then margin of victory, all games? Whatever you consider the best way is to determine which team is best in tied tiers of teams. That would be fair. The playoffs are not exclusively designed to be fair, nor to reward solely the best teams (theoretically coming up with the best way to represent the conference.)
So, one goal is to get generally good teams. A second goal is to reinforce division and conference rivalries. This is evidently deemed good for the league; the AFC and NFC don't totally disappear this way.
A third goal being served here is parity. The idea of parity is for sorry-ass teams not to stay that way too long, so people can live and watch football in Kansas City without slitting their wrists. We all know the idea: On any given Sunday, any given team can beat the Detroit Lions. No, I mean any given team can beat any other team. Everybody has a shot at the big show.
Well, our current schedule-making-machine pits 1s against 1s, 2s against 2s, etc., in interdivisional games (going by the previous year's records.) So it is likely that our opponents will be tougher than Miami's. That is by design, as is the Draft order.
The goal of Parity is to keep dynasties from forming, gelling, and taking over. A lot of people say a few excellent teams this decade, most of all the Pats, disprove the whole idea of Parity. Well, this season was an example of Parity in action (with a big assist from the Injury Bug.)
It is what it is. The Pats did not go to the dance, but it was a hell of a hard-fought, adversity-overcoming type of season. And we got to see a very good young QB talent develop before our eyes (not to mention a ROY-contender LB, and some other young talent stepping up.)
Come on people. Let's not go to woulda-shoulda-coulda-land. Let's not whine about how unfair the playoffs are. We knew the system before this year, and we'll know it before next year (whether it's tweaked or not.)
PFnV
The correct answer is that weights are given to divisions and far less so, to conference, of origin. Obviously they would be purely titular designations if we simply did away with winners and wild-cards, and ranked the teams 1 to 16, then picked #s 1-6, applying some tweaked version of our current playoff logic thereafter. Perhaps head-to-head, then common opponents, then margin of victory, all games? Whatever you consider the best way is to determine which team is best in tied tiers of teams. That would be fair. The playoffs are not exclusively designed to be fair, nor to reward solely the best teams (theoretically coming up with the best way to represent the conference.)
So, one goal is to get generally good teams. A second goal is to reinforce division and conference rivalries. This is evidently deemed good for the league; the AFC and NFC don't totally disappear this way.
A third goal being served here is parity. The idea of parity is for sorry-ass teams not to stay that way too long, so people can live and watch football in Kansas City without slitting their wrists. We all know the idea: On any given Sunday, any given team can beat the Detroit Lions. No, I mean any given team can beat any other team. Everybody has a shot at the big show.
Well, our current schedule-making-machine pits 1s against 1s, 2s against 2s, etc., in interdivisional games (going by the previous year's records.) So it is likely that our opponents will be tougher than Miami's. That is by design, as is the Draft order.
The goal of Parity is to keep dynasties from forming, gelling, and taking over. A lot of people say a few excellent teams this decade, most of all the Pats, disprove the whole idea of Parity. Well, this season was an example of Parity in action (with a big assist from the Injury Bug.)
It is what it is. The Pats did not go to the dance, but it was a hell of a hard-fought, adversity-overcoming type of season. And we got to see a very good young QB talent develop before our eyes (not to mention a ROY-contender LB, and some other young talent stepping up.)
Come on people. Let's not go to woulda-shoulda-coulda-land. Let's not whine about how unfair the playoffs are. We knew the system before this year, and we'll know it before next year (whether it's tweaked or not.)
PFnV











