Posts Tagged ‘BCS’

What Is The Big 12 Missing? Nebraska and Texas A&M

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

nebraska-cornhuskersIn 2008, the Big 12 scored points and put quarterbacks in New York for the Heisman Trophy Ceremony.  With obscene offensive numbers, the media jumped on the bandwagon as the Big 12 barked at the heels of the SEC as the dominant conference in college football.  How can the Big 12 shake its reputation as the second-most dominant conference?  The answer lies in two places: College Station, TX and Lincoln, NE.  The Big 12 needs Black Shirts and a Wrecking Crew.  The Big 12 needs Nebraska and Texas A&M to be good again. 

Certainly, OU and Texas can play with Florida and Alabama, but the Gators and the Crimson Tide are just a little better.   Texas Tech and Missouri can play with LSU and Georgia, but the Bayou Bengals and the ‘Dawgs are a lot better. Year-in, year-out, from top to bottom, the SEC has more depth than any other conference, and it looks like that will continue in 2009.

The past few years the Big 12’s second tier has been Texas Tech, Missouri and Kansas.  While this is great for the Red Raiders, Tigers and Jayhawks, the Big 12 as a whole isn’t really getting any better.  It doesn’t need anymore second-tier teams.  It would be an added bonus for the second tier to maintain their success, but the conference needs two more top-tier teams.

Unlike the second tier, the Aggies and Huskers have the resources, facilities, tradition and fan support to get there.  In other words, Tech, Mizzou and KU are all tapped out; they’ve reached their maximum upside.  We all know what Nebraska can be, and Texas A&M has an upside capable of competing with OU and Texas.

OU, Texas, Texas A&M and Nebraska should be mainstays in the Top 10-15, year in, year out.  Right now, only OU and Texas are carrying their weight.  It’s time for the Huskers and Aggies to pull theirs and help carry the Big 12 torch.  

Relative to the SEC, the current state of affairs in the Big 12 is not good:  it’s OU, Texas, and the rest.  On the other hand, the SEC has Florida, Alabama, LSU and Georgia–all teams worthy of serious national consideration.  And Tennessee will be back soon if Lane Kiffin can adjust to the cut-throat recruiting culture of the SEC.

Both Nebraska and A&M made mistakes with their previous coaching hires with Bill Callahan and Dennis Franchione but seem to be happy with their current regimes.  It won’t be 2009, but in the next couple of years we’ll see if the former defensive mastermind Bo Pelini and former NFL Head Coach/GM Mike Sherman have recruited and developed well enough to become more than just a blip on the schedules of OU and Texas.  The Big 12 needs it.  Otherwise, no matter how many points they score or how many of its quarterbacks are invited to the Heisman ceremony, the Big 12 will be looking up at the SEC–again.

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Hey Congress, Stay The Hell Out Of Sports

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

BCS Hearings - NCAA FootballThis week, the Senate Judiciary subcomittee’s Senator Orrin Hatch (R, Utah) pushed for hearings to ‘rectify’ the fairness of the BCS system.  Why are our elected representatives involved in things like the Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Miguel Tejada, and now the BCS? Don’t we have more pressing matters to address?

After months of hearing doom-and-gloom over the housing issue, corporate bailouts at tax payer expense and a weakening dollar, I had high hopes that our elected officials were burning the candle at both ends to fix this country’s economic problems and address the growing budget deficit.  But sure enough, Senator Hatch and his colleagues have put yet another sports issue on the docket–this time to ‘rectify the situation’ as it pertains to antitrust concerns over the BCS.

It’s like being given a traffic ticket while there are murderers & rapists running around on the next block.  Wouldn’t time be best spent catching those guys?

Frankly, I find watching sporting events as a distraction from the 6 o’clock news of murders, job losses, a shrinking economy, and corporate bailouts.  When I watch ESPN, I want to see a monster dunk, a clutch grand slam, or a game-winning catch.  Usually, the worst news on is that some stupid GM signed a no-name .220 hitter for $8 million, that Plaxico Burress shot himself in the foot again or a powerhouse college football program is under NCAA investigation.

The last thing I want to see is a ‘highlight’ of another congressional hearing with athletes in suits being grilled by some jock sniffing Senator.

Our tax dollars hard at work!

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Nice Win Utes But Knock Off The National Title Talk

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Congratulations to the Utah Utes.  Very impressive win over the Crimson Tide.  Like every other college football fan out there (other than Utah fans), I was shocked that the Utes were ahead 14-0 before ‘Bama even knew the game had started.  The Utes were extremely well coached,  executed flawlessly, and took out a Nick Saban-coached Alabama squad.  Convincingly.  The Utes deserve all the credit in the world for bringing the wood, and a surprisingly large contingent of fans to New Orleans.

University of Utah vs the University of Alabama in the Allstate Sugar Bowl

But to those who are now claiming that Non-BCS teams deserve a chance at the National Title, save your breath.  Put the Utes on the road in the SEC, Big 12, Pac-10 or even the Big 10, and they have at least one loss, if not more.  Seventeen-to-twenty-one year old college football players can play at the highest level maybe three or four times per year.   Florida wasn’t on their game against Ole Miss; USC didn’t have it against Oregon State, OU vs. Texas, Texas vs. Texas Tech.   Utah had to get up for Oregon State, TCU, and BYU–all home games.  Does anyone think the Utes would be 12-0 if they had to travel to Norman, Austin, Baton Rouge, Gainesville or Columbus?

To me, the most impressive thing about an SEC or Big 12 team is the road wins.  Even at home, SEC/Big 12 visiting teams aren’t intimidated by the home crowd in a massive un-friendly stadium.  Road wins in those leagues are ALWAYS tough to come by.  Utah, BYU, and TCU-type teams don’t have to face these kinds of road contests in their schedules, nor do hey have to face battle-tested opponents at home.

Every year, we hear the same old ‘BCS Buster’ hype.  Put these teams in an SEC, Big 12 or Big 10 stadium on a Saturday night, and the madness will stop.

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Bowl Buzz Kill

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

My second-favorite part of the college football season is here-bowl week.   A great matchup almost every night. Yes, I know they started last week, but how many of those did you really watch?  Here’s a few soapbox issues I need to bring to light:

Who is this again?

Southwest Central Michigan Tech at Eastern South Central Delaware in the ‘Is this really    a bowl game presented by name-your-dot-com’ bowl?  You know which one I am   talking about-the one with 15,000 spectators in an 80,000 seat stadium.  Watch your camera angles, guys! 

Poor Attendance

I tuned in to the TCU/Boise State Poinsettia Bowl, and it appeared that about 15,000 fans actually showed up.  How does a bowl make money with that?  Ever notice how the camera crew in those games tries to capture the players only-not the fans?  Because it looks pathetic! 

Halftime Shows

FedEx Orange Bowl

My pet peeve is these ridiculous halftime shows.  Back in the day, the Orange Bowl had a halftime entertainment spectacular-typically with some fireworks & a few local dance teams.

But it’s just gotten way out of hand. Nowadays, it seems that all the bowls appear to be trying to outdo each other, and for us hard-core football fans, we have to suffer through this nonsense-and it has to stop! 

 

Pre-Game: tailgating, cold beverages, souvenirs, talk some smack with whoever is wearing the wrong team’s shirt or hat. Check. 

First Half: Bone-crunching hits, fight songs, intensity. Check.

Halftime:   Ashlee Simpson & Kansas duet singing ‘Dust in the Wind’.  What?!!!  This is the problem; how do you get up for the second half after this?  Especially when the smoke from all the pyrotechnics hasn’t cleared yet.

Why can’t we just have the school’s bands play, and then start the 4th quarter?

 

Happy Bowl Week!!

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Eliminate Conference Tie Ins for Bowls

Monday, December 8th, 2008

The annual ‘BCS Selection Show’ was held yesterday, and I watched as the talking heads announced the participants in each of the BCS Games.   As I watched the selection for the Orange Bowl, I couldn’t help but think how badly Texas Tech and Boise State got the shaft.  Texas Tech at 11-1, and undefeated Boise State NOT in a BCS game?  Each of those teams EARNED the right to participate in one of the rotating BCS Bowls.  Tech plays in one of the two toughest conferences in all of college football, and certainly THE toughest division, with only one loss.  The Broncos again earned their way in with an undefeated season.  The Broncos have less of an argument with a weaker schedule–its lone victory vs. a ranked opponent over then-No. 17 Oregon, but has proven in the past that it can play with the big boys.

Back to the selection show…in the Orange Bowl, we’re stuck with Virginia Tech vs. Cincinnati.  First off, congratulations to both teams as each won their respective conference titles.   Before long, we may be hearing Cincinnati Head Coach Brian Kelly’s name mentioned with Bill Snyder for building a program with very little resources.  And Frank Beamer is one of the best coaches in the country–he always has his Hokies playing salty defense and aggressive special teams.  Each of those teams is deserving of a bowl trip–but not one of the BCS Games.

If we’re not going to have a playoff, at least let’s get the deserving teams into BCS bowls–and eliminate the following: conference tie-ins, and maximum participants from one league. 

If I had my pick:

BCS National Championship game: OU vs. Florida

Orange Bowl: Ohio State vs. Utah

Sugar Bowl: Texas vs. Alabama

Fiesta Bowl: Boise State vs. Penn State

Rose Bowl: USC vs. Texas Tech

Each of these contests would feature teams DESERVING of a spot in the BCS Games–regardless of how they are paired.  Conference tie-ins prevent the traditional ‘New Year’s Day Bowls’ from getting the best matchups from teams that earned their way to the big pay-day, and all the spoils that come from playing in those games.

If we’re not going to have a playoff, let’s at least match up the best, most deserving teams.  Virginia Tech and Cincinnati should be playing in the Music City Bowl–not on January 1.

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