I grew up in an era in which blowouts were common in Super Bowls. It never occured to me that such outcomes would be cause for calling for dumping the system! I think that as long as you have the best teams playing, it shouldn't matter what the margin of victory is. Of course, we live in a new era in which the Vice President, in running for the Presidency, has advocated for government engineering equivalent outcomes for all. It seems that the entire idea of having competitions, keeping score and crowning one team champion is antithetical to the pursuit of equal outcomes for all. It appears that this point has not been relaized by some.
Im surprised there is a mercy rule in championship games. Seems like there should be no mercy rule if you made it that far and you might have the firepower to actually come back?
Throwing this out for purposes of comparison. Here are some of the results of the high school football championship games (with point differential in parentheses):
STATE A:
6A 38-24 (14)
5A 56-35 (21)
4A 14-7 (7)
3A 20-7 (13)
2A 52-14 (38)
1AI 38-18 (20)
1AII 34-14 (20)
Private 3A-A 49-28 (21)
Average point differential for State A: 19.25
STATE B:
6A D1 50-21 (29)
5A D1 32-20 (12)
6A D2 24-17 (7)
5A D2 38-35 (3)
4A D1 55-21 (34)
4A D2 28-14 (14)
3A D1 48-14 (34)
3A D2 28-0 (28)
2A D1 30-28 (3 OT) (2)
2A D2 36-29 (7)
1A D1 70-24 (mercy rule 3rd quarter) (46)
1A D2 54-8 (mercy rule at halftime) (46)
Average point differential for State B: 22.42
STATE C:
1AA 28-26 (2)
2AA 35-28 (7)
3AA 18-14 (4)
4AA 25-23 (2)
5AA 48-7 (41)
6AA 27-21 ()T) (6)
7AA 42-8 (34)
1A 21-14 (7)
2A 55-19 (36)
3A 42-41 (OT) (1)
4A 52-34 (18)
5A 68-47 (21)
6A 38-21 (17)
7A 55-27 (28)
OPEN 37-15 (22)
Average point differential for State C: 16.4
By the way, State A is Georgia, State B is Texas and State C is California.
One other thing to consider is a lot of those championship teams had very tough semi-final games compared to their championship games. Perhaps it was the seeding process that was broken this year?