Slate magazine has a great story on the BCS College Football Bowl Championship. An earlier post on this blog discussed the error in all Sports’ playoff systems.

Here is an excerpt from the Slate article:
“No. The fact that the Wolverines are probably the second-best team in the country doesn’t mean they’ve earned the right to play in the national championship game. In fact, it means the exact opposite: Michigan’s No. 2 status is why they shouldn’t be playing for the title.

Playoff systems are designed to determine, in a fair manner, which is the single best team in a particular sport. Their purpose is not to pit the two finest teams against each other in a season-ending game. The Yankees and Red Sox do not play annually in the World Series. The Indianapolis Colts will never be given a chance to play the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl. When the two best college basketball teams in the country face off, as they routinely do, in a Final Four semifinal or even in the round of eight, does anyone think that the loser deserves a rematch?

Take this example: Does anyone think the Seattle Seahawks were the No. 2 team in the NFL last year? No. Likewise, will anyone think the NFC champion who makes it to this year’s Super Bowl is the second-best team in football? Of course not. Will the best team in the NFL still win the Super Bowl? Yes. Even if it’s an NFC team!

Unlike TV commentators and sports columnists, the college-football voters understand, at least implicitly, that the season-long playoff that is the college football season should determine the single best team, not the best two teams. That’s why the voters in the Harris poll and coaches’ poll have consistently voted against a Michigan-Ohio State rematch. The voters cast their ballots for “not-Michigan” when they voted for USC, and they’ve cast their ballots for “not-Michigan” by voting for Florida.

Do we know if Florida is the second-best team in the country? Of course not. Here’s what we do know: Michigan is not the best. How do we know that? By the traditional criterion: They scored fewer points in a football game than Ohio State did. The only team that has the “right” to play in the BCS championship game is the best team, Ohio State. And the only teams that should be scratched without question are teams that have already been determined to be “not the best,” like Michigan.