The preseason AP Poll came out on Sunday, but national sports radio host Colin Cowherd thinks it’s bad for college football.

Here’s what Cowherd had to say on Monday’s show about the topic:

College football is trying to help their sport, but they’re hurting it. So, college football comes out with these preseason top 25s, the Associated Press top 25. They think it’s helping the sport. We get people talking about it. It’s a disservice to the sport.

College football and the Associated Press create a false belief system.

When you create a preseason belief system, a team in that top 5 can lose a game and drop to 8 because, hey, they’ve got good players. A team that’s 14 can win seven straight games and only get to 9.

Everybody agrees that the preseason top 25 really only serves the purpose of generating discussion. If the true intent were to rank the teams, the AP would wait until eight weeks into the season before releasing its first poll as the College Football Playoff (CFP) committee does.

But accuracy isn’t the AP’s primary goal.

Related: My takeaways from the AP Preseason Top 25 Poll

So, is the preseason top 25 bad for college football? I’d say it’s not good or bad. Instead, it’s just fun. It’s fun for fans.

I disagree with Cowherd in that it’s actually harmful. The CFP Committee has shown that they are willing to come up with their own ranking and change it each week regardless of where a team was ranked in the previous release. They say that they “start over” each week rather than simply tweak and adjust the previous week ranking.

As such, what’s the harm of having a preseason poll? Top 25 polls are unique to college sports. It’s part of the college football. Let’s embrace it, enjoy it, and yes, not take it too seriously.