#1 plays #2, #3 plays #4. So does winner of #1 Vs. #2 play winner of #3 #4?
If not how is this any different than years past?
tailin junkie
SBR MVP
02-06-10
1409
#2
What? 1 plays 4, 2 plays 3
Winner 1/4 plays winner 2/3 for title
Years past was 1 vs 2 and that's it
Gives 2 more teams a chance but more is needed
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Eddy Munny
SBR Posting Legend
08-13-13
15768
#3
Just pick up the book "FBS College Football Playoffs for Dummies" at your local bookseller, and give yourself a crash course into this rocket science. I know it involves four teams, and believe you have to win to advance, but after that it gets a little fuzzy.
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recon1
SBR MVP
08-13-12
2579
#4
Originally posted by tailin junkie
What? 1 plays 4, 2 plays 3
Winner 1/4 plays winner 2/3 for title
Years past was 1 vs 2 and that's it
Gives 2 more teams a chance but more is needed
Thanks, for clarification. I just didn't look into it at all.
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Eddy Munny
SBR Posting Legend
08-13-13
15768
#5
Yeah, no problem. Don't forget to read the foreword. I believe it was written by Captain Obvious.
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jtoler
BARRELED IN @ SBR!
12-17-13
30967
#6
Anytime you have 4 teams/players like that the 1 will play 4 and 2 play 3 in just about any scenario I can think of.