The Bowl Championship Series as college football fans have come to know it is going away.

Over the next six months, the people who oversee the much-maligned postseason system will talk about how to deconstruct the system for crowning a national champion. In the tumultuous 14-year history of the BCS, never has there been more of an appetite for change among college football’s leaders.

“It’s my impression that … there will be meaningful discussion about possible changes to the BCS,” Southeastern Conference Commissioner Mike Slive said.

What the changes will be is hard to say because nearly everything seems to be up for discussion, from eliminating automatic bids to top-tier bowl games to creating a four-team playoff — an idea that’s known as the plus-one model.

What’s not on the table is exactly what many football fans are clamoring for a full-scale playoff that would require numerous teams to play additional games.

Still, there is likely to be a BCS extreme makeover in the 2014 season.

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“There will be 12 people in the room making decisions and each one comes from a different perspective, but the unifying thing is to make this thing the best it can be,” BCS executive director Bill Hancock said. “I don’t think there is any leader in the clubhouse on these possible changes. I think there could be 50 things on the table, with no leader in the clubhouse.

“I think the reason for that is we are being more diligent to solicit ideas for change than the last couple times we went through this.”

The last time was 2008. That’s when Slive, with the support of Atlantic Coast Conference Commissioner John Swofford, made a push for the plus-one model to the nine other FCS commissioners and Notre Dame’s athletic director.

Slive’s proposal was unceremoniously shot down.

Simply put, the plus-one would match the No. 1 team in the BCS standings after the regular season against the No. 4 team in a bowl game, and No. 2 against No. 3 in another, creating two national semifinals.

The winners would play in a championship game the following week.

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It’s a format that Alabama coach Nick Saban has always liked.

“I just feel that only having two teams sort of takes a lot of teams out of it,” he said media day in New Orleans.

Currently, the top two teams in the BCS standings after the regular season, including conference championships, advance to the title game. It’s a format that’s led to frequent debates about whether the right teams were getting a shot to play for a national title.

This year’s controversy involved whether national champion Alabama (11-1) should get a second chance at LSU or if Big 12 champion Oklahoma State (12-1, including its bowl victory over Stanford) had earned a shot to play for the national title.

The BCS has often caused as many arguments as settled them, and drawn the ire of fans all over the country in the process. It’s also come under pressure from a political action committee called PlayoffPAC, and been the subject of a congressional hearing and a Department of Justice inquiry. Even President Barack Obama has said he doesn’t like it.

Apparently, all that consternation is starting to register with the decision-makers in the sport.

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Not tone-deaf?

“I sense that people who run college football and run the conferences obviously are not tone-deaf,” said Burke Magnus, ESPN senior vice president of college sports programming.

The structure in place, with four bowl games — the Orange, Sugar, Rose and Fiesta — each taking turns hosting the championship game, in addition to its bowl, could handle the plus-one.

Slive said that he will not be the one championing the plus-one this time around.

“I’m eager to hear from my colleagues about their views, but I fully anticipate that there will also be a meaningful discussion about the plus-one,” he said.

Standing in the way of the plus-one last time were the Big Ten, Pac-10, Big East and Big 12.

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Since then, the Pac-10 has become the Pac-12 and it has a new commissioner, Larry Scott, who has quickly established himself as one of the most forward-thinking leaders in college sports. Previous commissioner Tom Hansen was adamantly against a plus-one. Scott is willing to listen.

The Big Ten, Big 12, Big East, ACC, SEC and Pac-12 champions receive automatic entry into the BCS. One champion from the Mountain West Conference, the Western Athletic Conference, the Sun Belt Conference, the Mid-American Conference and Conference USA can potentially earn an automatic bid each season by reaching certain BCS standings targets.

That format has allowed teams such as TCU and Boise State to play in the BCS, but it’s also created a class system. A free-market system would ostensibly mean the most-deserving teams would play in the biggest games. But the free-market in college football is often more about earning potential for bowl organizers than performance on the field, which could lead to more opportunities for brand-name teams from the power conferences and less for upstarts such as Boise State.

It’s clear there is much work to be done before June, when BCS officials will need to have a new format in place to negotiate the next television contract. The current ESPN deal runs through the 2013 season and the network will get first crack at retaining whatever postseason system is created.



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