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AFSN Playoff Pool 2005
Rules
NFL Playoff Schedule | Scoring | Submitting Your Picks | Money

NFL Playoff Schedule

There are 2 conferences in the NFL, the AFC and the NFC. There are 4 divisions in each conference: North, South, East, and West. The teams that win their division get into the playoffs (seeds #1-4). Two other teams from each conference also get into the playoffs; they are the Wild Card teams (seeds #5-6).

Two division winners from each conference (seeds #1-2) get a bye in Round 1.

Scoring

This is a confidence pool with a twist.

Before the playoffs start, you assign a point value (1-12) to each playoff team. (This is the only time you assign points. You do not assign points at the beginning of each playoff round.) Each time that team wins, you get the number of points you assigned to that team multiplied by the round number.

So just like a regular season confidence pool, you should assign 12 points to the team you think is most likely to win the Super Bowl, and 1 point to the team you think is least likely to win the Super Bowl, right? The twist is that 4 teams get a bye in Round 1. You will not get any points for those teams in Round 1. Adjust accordingly.

Example

Using fictitious NFL Playoff teams...

Pts Team   Pts Team
12 Green Bay   6 Tampa Bay
11 San Francisco   5 Pittsburgh
10 Oakland   4 Miami
9 Philadelphia   3 New Orleans
8 San Diego   2 Atlanta
7 Indianapolis   1 New England

If Pittsburgh wins their Round 1 game, you get 5 points (5x1). If Pittsburgh wins their Round 2 game, you get 10 points (5x2).

Again, the twist is that you do not get points for the 4 teams with a bye in Round 1. So if Green Bay has a Round 1 bye, you cannot get the 12 points you assigned them during Round 1. But if they win in Round 2, you will get 24 points (12x2).

Another Example

Below are the partial results of the 2002 pool using the "points multiplied by round number" scoring system. (You can download the entire spreadsheet here.)

Tie-Breakers

In the event of a tie between players who are due money, the following tie-breakers will be used in this order:

  1. The team that assigns the most points to the Super Bowl winner. (Example: Bert and Ernie are tied at the end of the Super Bowl. The Minnesota Vikings won the Super Bowl. Bert assigned 9 points to the Vikings. Ernie assigned 5 points to the Vikings. Bert wins the tie-breaker.)
     
  2. The team that assigns the most points to the Super Bowl loser. (If Bert and Ernie had both assigned 9 points to the Vikings in the example above, this second tie-breaker would be used.)

Submitting Your Picks

Use the AFSN Playoff Pool Entry Form to submit your picks.

Only one entry per person. Please don't submit a second entry under your spouse's name (or anyone else's name) unless they actually make the picks. Don't hedge your bets by submitting two entries. Put your NFL knowledge on the line and submit the picks that you think will win the pool -- without hedging.

You can change your picks before the playoffs start by resubmitting the form. I will use the last form you submit as your official picks.

Money

The entry fee is $5. Send me an email and I'll email back payment options.

There were 46 people in the pool last year. The payout was:

Place Prize
1st $ 90
2nd 70
3rd 45
4th 20
Last 5
Total 230

  

   
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