HOLLYWOOD, FLA. - Mark this day on your calendar, college football fans: April 25, 2012.
It's when several major impediments to creating a college football playoff -- namely, protecting the Rose Bowl and concerns about devaluing the regular season -- appeared to dissolve.
Every conference commissioner who spoke after Wednesday's Bowl Championship Series meetings expressed some level of optimism regarding a playoff. The sport clearly is on the cusp of a new system that will please the vast majority of its fans.
"There is an expectation that there will be significant change," Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany said.
Officials hope to leave Thursday with two or three playoff proposals that commissioners will take to university presidents, chancellors, athletic directors and coaches.
Delany said he also will visit college campuses to get feedback from student-athletes, saying he wants "the perspective" of those who have and have not played in a Rose Bowl.
He called the Rose Bowl "a really important part of the Big Ten culture," likening it to other college sports institutions that have survived postseason format changes, such as the ACC basketball tournament and the SEC football title game.
Delany said the last major change, the creation of the BCS and a No. 1-vs.-No. 2 championship game in 1998, brought the favorable "unintended consequence" of adding interest and intrigue to the regular season.