IRVING -- After four days of meetings, College Football Playoff executive director Bill Hancock wasn't talking change or putting out fires or trying to fix what had gone off the rails last season.
"It's been a good four years," Hancock said Thursday after what he described as the annual big-picture review at the CFP meetings in Irving.
Yes, the CFP is much different than its predecessor. The discarded and unmourned BCS always seemed to be spawning some controversy before finally giving way to the four-team playoffs.
While the CFP hasn't always pleased everyone -- led by Baylor and TCU in 2014 -- the debate hasn't really risen to national levels.