NationStates College Football: Difference between revisions
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Since NSCF season 2, the league has operated in a multiple conference format. Originally, a series of games between the top two ranked sides in each conference determined the conference champions, and these games doubled as the playoff quarter-finals. This practice was discontinued after one season, however. Since season three, the team with the best record in each conference – according to official NSCF standings calculation procedure – at the end of in-conference play, has been crowned conference champion. | Since NSCF season 2, the league has operated in a multiple conference format. Originally, a series of games between the top two ranked sides in each conference determined the conference champions, and these games doubled as the playoff quarter-finals. This practice was discontinued after one season, however. Since season three, the team with the best record in each conference – according to official NSCF standings calculation procedure – at the end of in-conference play, has been crowned conference champion. | ||
Since the beginning of the multiple conference format, only two conferences have been active every season: Horizon and Woodlands. In addition, the Celestia, Mineral and Zephyr conferences have also been active every season since they were established. Every other conference has been suspended at least once. | Since the beginning of the multiple conference format, only two conferences have been active every season: Horizon and Woodlands. The two conferences also account for half of all NSCF Championship winning teams. In addition, the Celestia, Mineral and Zephyr conferences have also been active every season since they were established. Every other conference has been suspended at least once. | ||
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Revision as of 07:24, 25 January 2017
NationStates College Football or NSCF is an international collegiate american football league. The league was founded by a Churchmanian organisation linked to Colden University, and has experienced a steady growth in reputation throughout its existence. The initial season was contested by ten teams in a single round-robin format, with a four team playoff. The team from Osarian school Utica University emerged victorious, beating the representatives of the University of Arkinesia 23-17 in the final. In the seasons that followed, conferences were established, and a procedural list written to govern administrative and legislative features of the league.
The most recent champions of NSCF are the Ramusok Capital University Dragons, who claimed their second championship with a 44-30 win over Universite St. Croix in the NSCF 15 Championship game.
History
Beginnings
Originally the brainchild of a group of Churchmanian media correspondents, the concept of an international collegiate league for american football was floated in discussions with various nations across the multiverse. The initial format and logistics were still uncertain at this point, but interest was high enough for those involved to move forward with trying to arrange something concrete.
After months of discussion and compromise – notably, the involved nations had differing ideas on how to decide which team would represent them, and when in the year the competition would take place – the initial season was opened for applications. Soon there would be nine confirmed participants, and a temporary "headquarters" from which the league would be governed, was established in Lexington, Churchma.
Weeks before the inaugural season kicked off, a tenth team was admitted to the competition, and the competition format was clarified. The teams would all play each other in a single round-robin league, for nine regular season games. The four teams with the best records would then progress to a seeded playoff bracket to determine the champions. The season would play out with some high attendances and reasonable media viewership, culminating in the championship game between the league's two best records from the regular season. The Utica Tigers would prevail, beating the Arkinesia Wyverns 23-17.
Expansion
After a modestly successful first season, NSCF established a committee of experienced figures in the world of sport from various nations in the multiverse, and began the application process for a second season. When it became clear that the number of entrants had ballooned from the previous year, the committee came to the consensus that the league should be split into conferences. Four conferences were established for season two; Big Eight, Horizon, Woodlands and Sequoia. The league also changed to a double round-robin regular season format, with the top two in each conference contesting conference championship games. The conference champions would then be seeded and contest the playoffs to determine a champion. Eirikssonia University emerged victorious in season two, the first champions of NSCF under the multiple conference format. Since that year, NSCF has been contested by at least thirty teams per season, and a total of eight conferences have been established, though only once (NSCF 7) have all eight been contested in the same year.
Season three saw yet another expansion, with the creation of the Mineral conference, though conferences shrunk in size to seven teams each, rather than eight in season two. The playoffs would also expand, with sixteen teams making it to the post-season. That same year, the Utica Tigers would become the first program to win multiple NSCF titles, defeating the newcomer Frbiba State Firebirds 37-26 in the championship game, and setting a record for highest scoring NSCF championship game that is yet to be beaten.
Conference sizes would increase back to eight teams per conference in season four, with the playoff format staying the same as season three. That season's championship game would be the first to go into overtime, as the Arkinesia Wyverns overcame the Utica Tigers. At the same time, Utica set a record for number of appearances in NSCF championship games. After season four, the NSCF committee deferred to a de facto Commissioner from among their ranks – former Osarian international gridiron defensive back, Jonathan Hardison – who produced the initial version of the NSCF procedural list, which has governed how the competition is run ever since.
Season five saw the establishment of the Equinox conference. This season was also the first to allow games between teams in different conferences, made possible thanks to the development of OSPI by the Oracle team at Osarius Sports Network. This necessitated changes to the tiebreaking procedure in NSCF, and non-conference games were decided to not affect conference standings. This has remained the case since the introduction of non-conference games and OSPI. Season six saw another expansion conference established, as NSCF headquarters ratified the creation of the Celestia conference. The eighth conference, Zephyr, would be created in response to record participation numbers in season seven.
Season eight saw the Alzburg-Dyka Royals equal Utica's record of two championship wins, when they beat the Netteingen Tech Hyenas 30-17. Alzburg-Dyka, in the process, also became the first program – and only, to date – to contest the NSCF championship game three years in a row. They had become the first to win by shut-out in season six, beating the Freedom's Altar Flames 20-0, before becoming the first team to both win and lose by shutout when they fell 13-0 to the Port Salem Anchors the following year. Season nine saw the University of St Augustinus claim the championship with a 10-7 win over the Port Salem Anchors, becoming the first team to win the championship in their first year of NSCF competition since Eirikssonia University in season two.
Recent
Season ten saw the first change of commissioner since the role was formalised in season five, and the NSCF returned after a short hiatus. Despite fresh beginnings off the field, two veteran teams – both ever-present in NSCF since its founding – competed in the championship game, with the Utica Tigers becoming only the second team to lose multiple championship games as the Ramusok Capital Dragons claimed their first title, winning 27-13. The game took place in Klyde, Cosumar, making the Dragons the first team to win the NSCF championship in their own nation. The following season, the Stoneshore Bruins would win the championship, beating Army Academy 10-0, making Cosumar the only nation to produce multiple NSCF championship winning programs. In Season twelve, St Michael University became only the third team to win the championship in their debut season, following Eirikssonia and St Augustinus, and the second team to win the championship in overtime.
Season thirteen saw yet another change of commissioner, and Utica reclaimed the record for most championships outright, defeating season eleven's champions, the Stoneshore Bruins, 3-0 in the record lowest scoring championship game. The following season saw Harbor College (then known as South Seas University) become the only team in NSCF history to play in multiple championship games without winning one, after their defeat to the Loyola-Istria Blue Thunder.
The reigning champions would become only the second to not enter the following season, though they had simply missed the registration deadline rather than disappearing from international circles, as St Michael had previously. In their absence, Ramusok Capital returned to the top of the pile, beating St Croix – themselves riding a wave of confidence after knocking Utica off top spot in the Woodlands conference and then eliminating the storied Osarian school in the playoffs – in a record high-scoring championship game. With this victory, RCU became the only team to have played multiple championship games without losing, and Cosumar equalled Osarius for most championship-winning programs produced.
Competition format
Conferences
Culture
Recruiting
Curse of the Runner-up
A running theme in NSCF is the "Curse of the Runner-Up", which dictates that the team losing in the Championship game will have a poor season the following year. Prior to NSCF 7, no team finishing a season as runner-up picked up a single win in the playoffs the following season. In the history of NSCF, only four runner-up teams have won a playoff game in the following season, and only one has returned to the championship game for a second year running.
The curse currently holds a 73% "success" rate, claiming 11 victims from a possible 15; notably including Utica University, University of Arkinesia and South Seas University each on two separate occasions. The trio all rank among the top ten highest rated schools in NSCF history according to OSN.
Beat the curse (returned to the championship game) Survived the curse (advanced beyond the first round of the playoffs)
Season | Runner-up | Performance in following season |
---|---|---|
NSCF 1 | University of Arkinesia | Eliminated in Conference Championship round of NSCF 2 |
NSCF 2 | University of St. John's Island | Eliminated in First round of NSCF 3 playoffs |
NSCF 3 | Frbiba State University | Eliminated in First round of NSCF 4 playoffs |
NSCF 4 | Utica University | Eliminated in First round of NSCF 5 |
NSCF 5 | University of Arkinesia | Did not make the playoffs in NSCF 6 |
NSCF 6 | Freedom's Altar University | Eliminated in Quarter Finals (second round) of NSCF 7 |
NSCF 7 | University of Alzburg-Dyka | Won NSCF 8 Championship |
NSCF 8 | Netteingen Tech | Eliminated in Quarter Finals (second round) of NSCF 9 |
NSCF 9 | University of Port Salem | Eliminated in Quarter Finals of NSCF 10 |
NSCF 10 | Utica University | Eliminated in Quarter Finals of NSCF 11, after a first round bye |
NSCF 11 | Army Academy | Did not make the playoffs in NSCF 12, but won the Lei Bowl |
NSCF 12 | South Seas University | Did not make the playoffs in NSCF 13, but won the Lei Bowl |
NSCF 13 | Stoneshore College | Eliminated in Semi Finals of NSCF 14 |
NSCF 14 | South Seas University | Eliminated in Quarter Finals of NSCF 15 (as Harbor College) |
NSCF 15 | Universite St. Croix | To Be Determined |
Unofficial College Football World Championship
- Full article: Unofficial College Football World Championship
While the champions of each season of NSCF are considered College Football World Champions, often they will not have had to face the previous season's champion.
In response to criticism over this, Oracle devised a system of tracking a lineal championship, like in combat sports, known as the Unofficial College Football World Championship (UCFWC). The basic premise goes as follows:
- The first NSCF Championship game was the first title game; the winners of that game were the first holders of the UCFWC
- If the titleholder loses a game, the title passes over to the winner
- Final results of title games are counted regardless of overtime
Oracle have since added more rules and regulations to govern what happens in cases where the titleholder does not make the playoffs, ceases to exist, or simply fails to enter the following season of NSCF. As a result, there are four recognised "world titles", though Oracle seeks to see the other three unified with the lineal championship whenever possible.
Offshoots of the concept also exist, tracking the lineal champions of each of the NSCF conferences – only counting regular season, in-conference play – though these are seldom mentioned in Oracle's promotional material.
As of the NSCF 15 Championship game, the recognised (world) titleholders are as follows
Title | Holders |
---|---|
Lineal[1] | Loyola-Istria University |
Interim[2] | Ramusok Capital University |
Silver[3] | Stoneshore College |
Legacy[4] | University of Konigsberg |
^ Loyola-Istria did not enter NSCF 15, but have not been beaten as lineal champions
^ In the absence of any other titleholders in the NSCF 15 playoffs, Oracle awarded an interim title to the NSCF 15 champions
^ In the absence of the lineal champions at the start of NSCF 15, Oracle awarded a silver championship to the last holders of the lineal title
^ In the absence of the lineal champions at the start of NSCF 15, Oracle awarded a legacy championship to the then-highest-ranked team in NSCF
NSCF Committee
NSCF Commissioner
Rules
NSCF operates under the internationally accepted rule set for college-level american football, also known as IFAF rules. These differ slightly from the rule set commonly used in the professional game, or in the different national variations that exist of the sport. Most notable is the lack of sudden death overtime.
As a league, NSCF does not enforce any specific on-field rules which alter the way the game is played. Nor is there a hard limit on roster size – though for all intents and purposes, a program cannot name more than one hundred players, due to jersey numbering restrictions – or recruiting.
Procedure
- Main article: NSCF Procedural List
The NSCF Procedural List was written by then-Commissioner, and former Osarius international gridiron defensive back, Jonathan Hardison prior to season five. Since then it has been adapted and updated multiple times, to address changing concerns within NSCF. All amendments to the procedural list require a majority vote from the NSCF Committee to be officially implemented.
The procedural list details, among other things:
- NSCF committee regulations, including voting procedure,
- NSCF competition entry requirements and restrictions,
- ranking calculation procedure,
- conference alignment rules,
- standings calculation and playoff seeding procedure,
- rules for non-conference games, including games for independent schools
Honours
Champions
Champions by nation
Nation | Wins | Team(s) |
---|---|---|
Osarius | 3 | Utica (x3) |
Cosumar | 3 | Ramusok Capital (x2), Stoneshore |
Mytannion | 2 | Alzburg-Dyka (x2) |
Buffalostan | 1 | Eirikssonia |
Arkinesia | 1 | Arkinesia |
Michael VII | 1 | Frbiba State |
West Guiana | 1 | Port Salem |
Saintland | 1 | St. Augustinus |
The Isles of Azoria | 1 | St. Michael |
Banija | 1 | Loyola-Istria |
Champions by conference
NOTE: The below figures do not count Utica's win in season one for Woodlands conference, as conferences did not yet exist in NSCF.
Nation | Wins | Team(s) |
---|---|---|
Woodlands | 4 | Utica (x2), Frbiba State, Arkinesia |
Horizon | 3 | Ramusok Capital (x2), Stoneshore |
Sequoia | 2 | Alzburg-Dyka (x2) |
Mineral | 2 | Port Salem, St. Michael |
Celestia | 2 | St. Augustinus, Loyola-Istria |
Big Eight | 1 | Eirikssonia |
Conference champions
Since NSCF season 2, the league has operated in a multiple conference format. Originally, a series of games between the top two ranked sides in each conference determined the conference champions, and these games doubled as the playoff quarter-finals. This practice was discontinued after one season, however. Since season three, the team with the best record in each conference – according to official NSCF standings calculation procedure – at the end of in-conference play, has been crowned conference champion.
Since the beginning of the multiple conference format, only two conferences have been active every season: Horizon and Woodlands. The two conferences also account for half of all NSCF Championship winning teams. In addition, the Celestia, Mineral and Zephyr conferences have also been active every season since they were established. Every other conference has been suspended at least once.
Season | Big Eight | Celestia | Equinox | Horizon | Mineral | Sequoia | Woodlands | Zephyr |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NSCF 2 | Eirikssonia | RCU | St John's | Utica | ||||
NSCF 3 | DPU | Port Salem | RMU | FSU | ||||
NSCF 4 | Scott City | Colden | Alzburg-Dyka | Utica | ||||
NSCF 5 | Bugny A&M | Farstate | FAU | |||||
NSCF 6 | Tim City | NU-Mardi | West TaQud | |||||
NSCF 7 | Scott City | Fair Haven State | FAU | SCC | RMU | Loyola | ||
NSCF 8 | St. Croix | West TaQud | Port Salem | Alzburg-Dyka | Jagoza | St Michael Archangel | ||
NSCF 9 | St. Augustinus | St. Martin's | Reimsburgh | Utica | St. Thomas | |||
NSCF 10 | Stoneshore | Port Salem | Murin | |||||
NSCF 11 | Army Academy | RCU | Valor Coast | Yuma | St. Croix | Ceneisis | ||
NSCF 12 | NMU | Stoneshore | St. Michael | Utica | ||||
NSCF 13 | Mar Sara | |||||||
NSCF 14 | Loyola-Istria | South Seas | Raynor | Imperial | ||||
NSCF 15 | Angelwood-Aprilia | RCU | Mount Maris | St. Croix |