8 is too many games... You might as well erase the history of college football as all records would be broken. Players would be playing too many games..... The extra game a 4 team playoff would add is already too much. It had nothing to do with Studying, it has to do with history and wear and tear on the body.
I'm with Jared. You need 8 teams. And how on earth is even 10 games too much? You have freakishly developed athletes at Div. 1 programs these days, many of whom will be playing 16 game seasons in the immediate future.
I do agree that none of this discussion should include reference to studying, as we should all be realists here.
Likewise the regular season would have less meaning. A loss in the season might not be so bad under a playoff system. However, its almost the death sentence now. Some people will say "but Boise went undefeated so the regular season does not mean much anyways." Hogwash! It just shows you how important the regular season is. Its not only if you win, how much you win by but WHO YOU PLAY. Just look at college Basketball, does anyone realy care before March?
There have been several one-loss National Champions. And seeing as how only 8 teams are getting tourney bids, I can't imagine how that would de-value the regular season in the least. Every game is still enormously important.
As for who cares about college hoops before March, I'd say pretty much every fan who isn't just an office pool playing dilettante. I don't know about down there in SEC country, but Big 10 games are hard-fought and closely followed all season long.
Next argument, DIV I-AA has a playoff..... sure they do, and how much money does DIV-AA make again? College football is the backbone of our collegiate educational system. Without it most people would not be able to afford to goto college.
That last statement is wildly overbroad, as there are thousands of students at non-Div I schools where athletic revenues are minimal or non-existent. Moreover, the recent trend is to pour more and more money back into the athletic programs rather than easing budget problems by spreading the money around like in the pre-title IX days especially.
I daresay that American higher education would continue to lumber forward even in the absence of college football.
And the argument that Div I-AA doesn't make money BECAUSE it has a playoff is
post hoc ergo procter hoc. It doesn't make money because there is virtually no national interest in the product, not because it has a playoff.