Zorn76 wrote:It ain't saying much, but I think we'd crush any of those teams in the playoffs on the road.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I've been ribbing the Saints fans down here in Baton Rouge for weeks now about their division. It really would be sweet to see them win their division at 7-9; they were the biggest cry babies after that loss in 2010. All of them told me how the game should have never been played, which I assume means they think they would have fared better against a 10-6 team.
Still, Cbob's caution is noted; like we did in 2010, a 7-9 NFC South division winner could play one of their best games of the season at home in the wild card. As always, can't take any team lightly.
Futureite wrote:Of course this will start a firestorm here and everyone will take it personal, but the playoffs are suppose to be about matching the best teams in the NFL against one another. A record of below .500 is by definition "suck". It is below average. I wonder how deserving a 6-10 team will be of a playoff slot on this board if the Hawks go 10-6 and don't make the playoffs. If that happens they'll have been shafted just as several other teams were in 2010. This rule should have been changed after 2010.
And btw the idea that by setting some sort of standard for teams to qualify will lessen the importance of the Div structure will be diminidhed is just hokey. A minimum standard of 8 wins to qualify would keep the current structure in tact but would also remove the rare outliers that should not be there. It would also force teams like the Panthers and Saints to do what the 49ers and Hawks are now doing by playing with some urgency, making additional transactions to win, etc instead of coasting as they are.
If the hawks were to go 10-6 and not make I would say they should have won more games, that's just the way it is.
NorthHawk wrote:Some years the records are vastly different because the teams they play are either weaker or better than in other divisions.
You could have teams that in some divisions have a barely winning record, but their schedule turns out to be one of the toughest in the NFL.
Take our Division, we could possibly have all 4 teams split with each other - that's 3 losses. If we also ended up playing the toughest AFC Division and other toughest NFC Division for the rest of the schedule our teams could have lesser records than the talent would suggest. Conversely, teams that are otherwise average and play 'weak' schedules could have better records than if they were in tougher Divisions.
So the winner of each Division should get a playoff berth in my mind. After all, it's the first goal of every team.
Zorn76 wrote:As long as we have divisions, there will always be some kind of reward (playoff spot) for winning one.
There's any number of ways they could make a change. One possibility is to have a 3 game discrepancy rule, if you will.
That means if a division winner finishes under .500 (8-8. while sad, would not apply), and their W-L record is three games worse than that of their opening opponent, then a switch of home field would be made. That's a significant enough margin to merit a shift for home/away, IMO.
7-9 vs 9-7, for example, wouldn't be enough of a difference.
Regardless, this type of thing happens rarely. I understood the Saints and their opinion on the matter in 2010. It just is what it is - a rare occurrence that rears its ugly head once every few years.
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