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Reply | Forward Message #8026 of 17302 |
TV deal among hot topics at this week's BCS meeting
http://www.sportsline.com/collegefootball/story/7282809
April 25, 2004
By Dennis Dodd

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- The Bowl Championship Series commissioners
will take the first baby steps here this week toward fixing their
controversial system -- again.

Not that it will stop any of the crying that resulted from the most
contentious season in BCS history in 2003.

None of the major issues are expected to be resolved at the annual
BCS meetings that begin Monday and run through Wednesday. But the
clock is ticking. A new TV deal has to be negotiated. The viability
of a fifth BCS bowl must be decided. Both would begin with the 2006
season as part of what could be a 10-year contract.

The commissioners from the six power conferences most likely will
begin the process of tweaking the BCS formula that produced a split
national champion last year for the first time in the six-year
history of the system. BCS chairman Mike Tranghese is leading a push
to reduce the computers' influence on the formula. Last year, the
human polls agreed before the bowls Southern California was No. 1,
but the Trojans were No. 3 in the BCS and were edged out of the
Sugar Bowl by the BCS ratings.

Tranghese said earlier this year he would like to eliminate the
computers altogether, but that isn't likely to happen. The computers
were added when the BCS began in 1998 because the Associated Press
didn't want to have such a big influence on determining a national
champion.

"I don't anticipate that we're going to go to just a system based on
the human polls," said Big 12 commissioner Kevin Weiberg, the
incoming BCS chairman. "I think the human polls do have some
weaknesses, including the preseason selection of teams. ... There
will have to be some formula that continues to be used that factors
in computer polls in some ways."

The commissioners could decide to give more weight to the polls. One
suggestion has been to follow the polls if they have identical 1-2
teams at the end of the season.

Preliminary discussions will begin here on the viability of a fifth
BCS bowl. The 24 non-BCS bowls were contacted by e-mail last week
soliciting their interest in becoming the fifth bowl. That bowl was
agreed upon in February, if there is a market for it. The idea is so
new, the commissioners aren't close to deciding where the bowl will
be, how much it will pay or which teams will play in it.

A formal agreement for the bowl has not even been signed. The bowl
was created to provide better access for the 54 non-BCS schools.

Tranghese has said any formal announcements probably won't come
until June. The Rose Bowl, in negotiations with ABC on a new
contract, needs to know by then the structure of the new BCS
contract beginning in 2006.








Mon Apr 26, 2004 12:43 pm

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TV deal among hot topics at this week's BCS meeting http://www.sportsline.com/collegefootball/story/7282809 April 25, 2004 By Dennis Dodd SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. --...
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Apr 26, 2004
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