Don’t Watch the CFB Championship Game

Submitted by Phaedrus on January 11th, 2021 at 7:42 PM

There’s a psychological concept known as “delayed gratification” and I want to briefly argue that, even though you may love college football and love watching it at its best and most competitive, that you will receive more gratification by boycotting the CFB playoffs than by watching.

The original experiment went like this: kids were placed in a room with a marshmallow. They could eat the marshmallow at any time and ring a bell, and they were done. Alternatively, they could wait an unspecified amount of time for the researcher to return and they would receive two marshmallows. Watching the CFB playoffs in its current form is analogous to eating a single marshmallow.

This Stupid System Persists Because we Keep Watching

Like its fans, the NCAA also does not get the concept of delayed gratification. It allows for a system that lacks parity, competitiveness, and fun to appease their top performing programs. OSU, ‘Bama, and Clemson have a lot of fans, but their dominance over the rest of the NCAA has led to apathy among other fan bases. We know a thing or two about ennui.

If the NCAA were to make reforms that allow for greater parity and competitiveness, more people would watch college football and it would make more money. There is a clear precedent for this in the forms of the NFL and the NCAA Basketball tournament. However, the guys in charge of NCAA football are clearly football guys, not economists. They see that marshmallow (big chunk of money) in front of them and they can’t help but to gobble it up. They don’t realize that they could easily wait fifteen minutes and receive two marshmallows.

Part of the problem is that we fans keep giving the NCAA a marshmallow. If fanbases outside the two championship teams refused to watch the championship game, then it would be a ratings dud and they would be forced to take a hard look at their business model. The stupid system persists because we allow it.

“But I’m just One Person”

This is the common argument given against boycotts and voting. You are just one person, just one data point out of millions, but it takes many people making the same decision to enact change. That’s what happened to Clinton’s “blue wall” in 2016 and Trump’s “solid south” in 2020 (please accept this analogy as politically neutral and do not debate its merits below). As well as boycotting the CFB playoffs, encourage everyone you know to do the same thing. If they’re not a OSU or ‘Bama fan, it probably sounds reasonable. Do weird things like write extended message board posts on your favorite CFB message board encouraging others to boycott.

What if a Miracle Occurs and Michigan Makes the Playoffs?

Watch that, obviously.

Perkis-Size Me

January 11th, 2021 at 10:01 PM ^

Haven’t watched an ounce. Started Narcos yesterday and haven’t regretted it. 

The playoffs are getting more boring when it’s the same 3-4 teams in it every single year.

MadMatt

January 11th, 2021 at 10:28 PM ^

No problem.  I don't get ESPN, so I wasn't watching anyway.

BTW, sports in general seemed determined to lock out eyeballs because they want to maximize immediate revenue.  The NCAA is now putting marquee games (not just second tier games with regional interest) and major Bowls on subscription channels like ESPN.  The NFL is now showing national telecasts like SNF and MNF on subscription channels.

I subscribed to the service TuneIn Radio, which live streams radio broadcasts from various teams, specifically because they advertised at the start of MLB season a couple of years ago.  I have listened in to my favorite MLB and NLF teams "on the radio" up until 2020.  Both MLB and NLF pulled out of their deal with TuneIn (and ZERO prior notice) in 2020 (thanks again 2020, even less sports for you during a quarantine).  Presumably, they want you to pay for their service offering TV and radio broadcasts.

It astounds me these organizations ignore the history of teams that gained national followings by showing LOTS of games on their flagship TV stations, the Cubs and the Braves.  Did CFB get big by showing fewer games on pay per view channels in the 80s and 90s?  What about professional boxing? How's their popularity now when you can only see it on PPV, as opposed to the mid-20th Century, when Friday Night Fights was a thing?

It's liked someone cloned Gordon Geiko in the 1980s, and then put them in charge of everything.

MaizeandBlueBleeder

January 12th, 2021 at 6:15 PM ^

Never put game on, to sleep at 9:30pm.  Went to work totally not even remembering there was a game and only heard about outcome when two co-workers started talking about it in the afternoon.  My day became better when they told me the outcome, then realized...we’ll not be getting that far in the foreseeable future.