The Annual BCS Screw Up, 2006 Edition
Oh, the BCS is at it again! Michigan or Florida? Well, the BCS went with Florida. Now, I cannot say that Florida is undeserving of the chance to play for the National Championship. The problem is that I cannot say that Michigan is undeserving of that chance, either. Or a one loss Louisville team. Or an undeafeated Boise State team. The BCS' job is to give us a matchup between the two best teams in America. Its inherent problem is that, without letting the teams in that discussion play it out on the field, we have no way to determine who exactly that is.
Take Michigan and Florida. Both have very impressive resumes. Michigan throttled the perenially least deserving BCS team, Notre Dame, in South Bend, 47-21. The have another top 10 win against Wisconsin. They also have good wins over Penn State and Iowa. Their only loss was by three points at the number one team in the country. They were ranked #2 until the very last week of the season, where they dropped despite not even playing. A resume deserving of a NC appearance, no doubt.
Florida also has a very deserving resume. Two wins against top-10 teams: LSU and Arkansas. Wins at Tennessee, at Florida State and at Georgia. Only loss by ten on the road to the #11 team (Auburn) in the country. Widely regarded as playing the toughest schedule in the league. It is worth noting that they had one more game than Michigan to build that resume, but how do you leave that resume out of the NC game?
I also want to talk about Boise State. I know they play in the WAC. But those kids have done everything that has been asked of them. I have a fundamental problem with any sport that would allow you to go undefeated without having a chance to play for a championship. Sure, their only major conference win was against the Beavers, but its not like major conference teams were lining up to play them.
"But Dave", you're saying, "If all you had to do was go undefeated to play for a NC, then teams would just make a non-conference schedule of Temple, Buffalo, and Western Carolina." That is a problem. I have long advocated for central scheduling by the NCAA. However, since that would never happen in a million years, make it so that 2/3 of your nonconference games have to be either major confernce opponents OR on the road. Sure, some might try to take advantage and schedule Cincinnati and Vanderbilt, but there aren't enough of those schools to go around. We'd get a lot more matchups like Auburn-Washington State, and those are good matchups. We'd also give the smaller schools a more equal playing field to get home games against bigger competition. Would you like to see teams like Oklahoma and Miami play at places like Idaho and Central Michigan? Yeah, me too. Give the small teams those types of games at home, and they are at a much more equal playing field.
Here is my other problem with the BCS. How the hell did Notre Dame get in (again). Now, we will get to laugh when they are rolled by LSU in the Sugar Bowl. But their best win is against Georgia Tech. Their only other decent win is against an unraked Penn State team. Other than that, they have beaten up on the three service academies, North Carolina, Stanford, UCLA, Michigan State, and Purdue. That is one godawful resume. They lost to the two Rose Bowl teams (Michigan and USC), by a combined 46 points. This is a mediocre team that got by playing a bad schedule. They are in the Sugar Bowl because of money. While I believe that LSU fans are usually fairly obnoxious, I only have one thing to say: Geaux Tigers!
What also not talked about is voters manipulating polls to get the matchups they want. There is substantial evidence this happened this year to avoid a Michigan-Ohio State rematch. And who can forget 2004, when Cal mysteriously fell behind Texas on the last poll of the season, and out of the BCS?
So the BCS is rearing its ugly head again. A dispute over #2. An undefeated team not playing for a national championship. Notre Dame in undeservingly, and about to get rolled by a far superior team. This sounds like the BCS every year, right?
- Washington's only loss was to a top 10 Oregon team. Miami's only loss was to Washington. Florida State's only loss was to Miami. Florida State plays for the National Title. Huskies and Hurricanes screwed. ND gets in and gets rolled by the Beavers.
- Oregon ranked #2 in both polls, but somehow #4 in the BCS. Instead of Oregon, Nebraska, who didn't even play in their conference championship game, and got rolled by Colorado, plays for the NC. Miami destroys Nebraska, and Oregon slaughters Colorado. Yeah, I'm still pissed about that one.
- They actually got one right!
- USC ranked #1 in both polls, yet LSU and an Oklahoma team that got rolled in their conference title game plays for the NC. Oklahoma gets rolled again, and LSU and USC split the NC.
- Oklahoma, USC, Auburn, and Utah all finish undefeated. USC kills Oklahoma, to win the NC. Undefeated Auburn never gets their chance. Talked about less, Utah doesn't, either. Cal mysteriously gets left out of the BCS for Texas after politiking by Texas coach Mack Brown. In the last poll of the season, Cal, despite winning, fell behind Texas.
- Notre Dame again gets in undeservingly, this time over a one loss Oregon team. Ohio State goes on to dismember Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl.
There is a reason that March Madness is the greatest event in all of sports. Win your conference--you get a shot at the NC, no matter who you are. They play it on the field. I suppose you could be the 64th best team in the country and not get in, but its a lot harder to whine about that than it is to be a top 4 team and not play for the title. It is obvious that college football needs a playoff as well. "But it will take too much time." BS. That's why they added a 12th game this year, huh? And I don't suppose the other divisions are missing too much school? Any playoff will do, but I propose a 16 team playoff. It would take four weeks, starting the second week of December, ending somewhere around the time that the current NC game takes place. Of course, smaller schools wouldn't go to the blowagoat.com bowl, but why should you be rewarded for mediocre seasons? All conference champions, regardless of conference get in. Here is how my tournament would play out this yea:
First Round, Campus Sites
#16 Troy State (Sun Belt Champ) at #1 Ohio State (Big 10 Champ)
#15 Central Michigan (MAC Champ) at #2 Florida (SEC Champ)
#14 Houston (C-USA Champ) at #3 Michigan (at large)
#13 BYU (MWC Champ) at #4 LSU (at large)
#12 Wake Forest (ACC Champ) at #5 USC (Pac-10 Champ)
#11 Notre Dame (at large) vs. #6 Boise State (WAC Champ)
#10 West Virginia (at large) vs. #7 Oklahoma (Bg 12 champ)
#9 Wisconsin (at large) vs. #8 Louisville (Big East champ)
Second Round: Traditional BCS sites
16-1 winner vs. 8-9 winner, Fiesta Bowl
15-2 winner vs. 10-7 winner, Orange Bowl
14-3 winner vs. 11-6 winner, Sugar Bowl
12-5 winner vs. 13-4 winner, Rose Bowl
Third Round: Cold Weather Sites
at FedEx Field, Washington
at Giant Stadium, East Rutherford, NJ
Fourth Round: National Championship Game, Rose Bowl
Sure, you could make the argument that Auburn or Arkansas should be in. But its much harder to be upset when arguing about the 17th team than about the 3rd team. And I probably would put Auburn in ahead of Notre Dame, but you know that they would never create a playoff without some kind of special Notre Dame provision. But look at this tournament. It would be four weeks of must see TV. It would be a freaking gold mine. You can even keep the damn minor bowls if you want to. But this playoff would be great. And I'd much rather watch that than the Poinsettia Bowl. Lets face it, I will watch two bowls this year: The Vegas Bowl, only because the Ducks are in it, and the National Championship game. I may tune into a bit of the Fiesta Bowl to see if Boise State really can hang with Oklahoma, but I will not watch the whole thing.
But have the playoff, and I'm glued to my TV.
It's like March Madness. It doesn't matter who is playing, I have to watch. The Emerald Bowl doesn't have that. The Meineke Car Care Bowl doesn't have that. Playoffs do. And, more importantly, the champion is decided on the field, not on a calculator. Makes sense to me. Why won't the powers that be come around?
GO DUCKS!!!
--Dave
0 recs |
9 comments
Comments
My BCS Playoff scenario
First of all, this isn't March Madness. If we want the best teams in for a chance at the championship, we can't have teams in just because they won their minor conference. I actually like the BCS computations as a method to help with seeding, and we would probably need BCS conference agreements to make any playoff happen. I have no problem with awarding a top seed to a 16-team torunament to each BCS conference champion.
Secondly, I would go with campus sites for the first two rounds. Your semifinal round in cold-weather cities is a nice idea, but first and (possibly) second round games in Columbus, Ann Arbor, and Boise should provide all of the weathertainment we would need.
My rules are as follows:
-BCS Conference Champions are guaranteed a top-eight (first round home game) seed
-Top 10 (BCS Poll) non-BCS teams (up to two) guaranteed a top-eight seed
-Any non-BCS team ranked 20 or higher is in
-No more than 2 teams from the same conference in the top eight
-No more than 3 teams from the same conference in the entire 16 team field
-No intra-conference matchups in the first round
Here is my BCS (the 'S' stands for Series) schedule:
#16 BYU at #1 Ohio State... I guess Oregon will have to find somebody else to play in Vegas.
#9 Wisconsin at #8 Wake Forest... If Wisconsin can win this game, they will finally get to play Ohio State this year.
#12 Notre Dame at #5 Louisville... Touchdown Jesus, meet Papa John.
#13 West Virginia at #4 USC... I would actually predict the upset in this game.
#14 Virginia Tech at #3 Michigan... I hope they don't whine about the #3 seed.
#11 Auburn at #6 Boise State... the SEC comes to Idaho! Revenge for the Georgia game last year?
#10 LSU at #7 Oklahoma... just like March Madness, the best games are the 7-10 matchups.
#15 Rutgers at #2 Florida... Rutgers was a darling earlier, but this looks like a first-round blowout.
First Round- On campus
Second Round- On Campus
Semifinals- BCS Bowl sites (New Years Day doubleheader)
BCS Championship Game- BCS site rotation
Yes, this is a BCS Conference dominated bracket, with only two non-BCS teams involved. But the Big East has a small-conference feel to it, and they have three teams in my scenario. Ang given the way everything played out, I don't think that the Pac 10 or Big 12 deserved any more than their one team.
And if the BCS Bowl sites don't like losing 2 prime games off of the schedule, they can take negotiate a better financial deal... since this torunament would be the biggest thing to ever happen to college football, money should not be that much of a hassle. And they can take their pick of the minor bowls
I would keep the minor bowls, as this can be a nice way for up-and-coming teams to end the season, and it would give all of us something to do during the week. And if a minor conference champion wants attention for next year... win the minor bowl game and hype it until next year.
That's how I would run it.
by engeljd on Dec 5, 2006 10:04 PM PST reply actions 0 recs
Yes, there are two ways to think about it...
I guess I just take issue with winning your conference but not being able to play for the NC. Granted, if you are very good, you will be ranked in the top 20 despite your conference (see BSU and BYU), so I'm not totally opposed to your way, either.
Campus sites for second round games would be fine with me. Then BCS sites for third and championship games. My thought with that was that one of the BCS sites would be left out every year-could you imagine the Rose Bowl committee being happy about that?
The sad thing is that a sixteen team playoff, which works so well in 1-AA, is for whatever reason so reviled by the 1-A schools. And I think we all realistically know that a "plus one" or four team playoff isnt the real answer.
We can debate all we want, and it certainly is fun. But until the NCAA listens to something except all the green that they have flowing in, we are stuck with the BCS.
by Addicted to Quack on Dec 6, 2006 7:10 AM PST up reply actions 0 recs
hello,
by Brucemezin on Mar 1, 2007 5:20 AM PST reply actions 0 recs
hello,
by Brucemezin on Mar 7, 2007 3:28 AM PST reply actions 0 recs
in my opinion
by Brucemezin on Mar 20, 2007 9:55 AM PDT reply actions 0 recs
replying to previous comment
by Brucemezin on Apr 5, 2007 3:51 AM PDT reply actions 0 recs
hello,
by Brucemezin on Apr 5, 2007 4:23 PM PDT reply actions 0 recs
in my opinion
by Brucemezin on Apr 12, 2007 1:20 AM PDT reply actions 0 recs
in my opinion
by Brucemezin on May 10, 2007 4:11 AM PDT reply actions 0 recs



















