College Football Update | Full Coverage When It Counts the Most

College Football Update      |      Full Coverage When It Counts the Most

12.06.2007

CFU, Bowl Edition: "College Football Armagedon!"


Some call it a popularity contest. Some call it fuzzy math. Others call it plain ol’ bullshit. But, however you characterize the BCS, its forces have spoken once again. This week, read about CFU's reaction to just what the BCS had to say. Did they get it right? Of course not! And CFU has the solution. Also, watch highlights from some of last weekends games and see analysts' picks for all 32 bowl games.

All this and more this week in CFU, Bowl Edition!

BCS 101: It's Broke, Fix It!

I'd never been one of those people screaming for a playoff.

That is, until now.

Look, this season has been thrilling. That's for sure. And it speaks to a shift in college football. Gone are the days where a handful of programs dominate the sport. And that's a good thing. These days, the game has much more parity (or mediocrity). That's obviously great for competition and, if it's even possible, it makes the sport that much more attractive.

But this new era of college football practically begs for a change in how college football crowns its champion. Of course, no one likes change, and new ideas are often met with great skepticism. The tradition of the Orange, Sugar, Fiesta and Rose Bowls is deeply rooted in college football history. And, that’s fine, but there are compelling reasons to make changes to the framework of this fine game, and there may even be ways to compromise tradition and the topsy-turvy nature of the modern era of the game.

While the BCS is by no means responsible for this turbulent season, it is, however, responsible for crowning a legit champion of this sport. Come January 8 there will be a lot of college football fans who will not be comfortable with who was crowned national champion the night before. I know I’ll be screaming the loudest if it’s Ohio State.

Which teams “deserve” to play in the national title game ought to be simple, but instead it is as complex of an inquiry as anything anyone ever could imagine.

Two “Best” Teams
I take this opportunity to remind fans that the national championship matches No. 1 versus No. 2—not the two best teams. In no other game do people talk about the two “best” teams playing for it all, and that’s probably because they all have a playoff. I don’t hate the current system. In fact this is the first time that I’ve ever objected to it (this objection would’ve come a year earlier had I not been a Gator fan), and if voters of the polls were consistent, I wouldn’t object to it now.

But if you’re going to be wrong, fine, but at least be consistently wrong. Inconsistent, blow-with-the-wind voting is the real problem in college football. Too many cooks spoil the soup, and there are far too many voters subjectively deciding the college football champion, i.e. ruining the soup. But, however subjectively, the voters do vote. And, if the two best teams shall play for the title at the end of the season, vote the two best teams No. 1 and No. 2 throughout the season. “Best” in week one means “best” in week 14.

In the words of Les Miles, LSU is a "damn strong” football team. I take nothing from them. But how they moved up all those spots, jumping Georgia, only after winning a game they were always supposed to baffles me. Sure LSU beat Tennessee who beat Georgia, but Georgia did beat Kentucky who beat LSU. And, of course, nowhere in the rules does it say that a team must win its conference to get a ticket to the big show.

And how Ohio State moved up in the polls while Georgia and Kansas moved down when all were idle is as clear as mud. It must not be because the Buckeyes had only one loss; Kansas is a one-loss team, too. Sure, Kansas didn't play anybody all season, save for Missouri (I guess), but Ohio State's schedule wasn’t exactly grueling either. And you can’t talk about wins and losses without talking about strength of schedule.

Having beaten the No. 1 team in the nation, only Oklahoma could make a case for jumping Ohio State or Georgia. Save for that, had voters voted consistently the title game would be Ohio State-Georgia. But Georgia was snubbed because it didn’t take the SEC.

Didn't voters realize that Georgia wouldn't be playing in the SEC title back when they voted them as the fourth best team in the nation, higher than both teams that would be playing for the SEC?

How’s that for inconsistency.

(Personally, I’m not all that opposed to letting the computers decide the match-up. That may not be the best solution, but at least it is an objective one. FYI: the computers voted Virginia Tech-LSU No.1 and No. 2, respectively)

Wins & Losses and Strength of Schedule
These things go hand-in-hand but never has this concept been equally applied to all teams in college football, especially this year. As always, the national title match-up inquiry probes wins and losses, and so will I.

Hawaii is the only undefeated team, but no one would put them in the national title because they don’t play anyone. Same thing for once-beaten Kansas.
Now, who does Ohio State play?

Ohio State’s opponents are a combined 73-71 (.507) this season. Four of those opponents had losing records, and three of which are not in the Big Ten. By record, the best teams Ohio State faced were 9-3 Wisconsin and Illinois. They lost to Illinois. LSU’s opponents are a combined 88-70 (.557). The Tigers defeated teams with eleven, nine and eight wins on the season. Not to mention, LSU plays in the toughest conference in college football. That, and The Tigers beat six top 20 schools, including defending national champion Florida. Georgia, of course, also plays in the SEC. Its opponents are a combined 75-69 (.521). Only three of Georgia’s opponents finished with losing records, two are in the SEC. Georgia’s schedule, while not as grueling as LSU’s, was not as soft as Ohio State’s.

With that, just try to justify Ohio State’s No. 1 ranking.

Stop. You can’t.

The current system rewards playing fewer games and soft schedules. That’s bad for college football.

The only reason they are in the big show is because of their storied program that makes voters feel comfortable about putting the Buckeye’s as No. 1. That shouldn’t be; Ohio State, like anyone else, has got to earn that spot. And earning that spot starts with scheduling tough games; that’s something the Buckeyes do not do.

The Solution: 16-team playoff
The thing about all of this is there's too much speculation. Let the teams play it out on the field. That translates to this: a playoff is now in order for college football. And CFU is here to show the BCS just how to fix things

Playoff
To protect the significance of the regular season, a playoff system shouldn't go too deep. Sixteen teams is a good number; it doesn't include too many teams while including just enough to make the playoffs diverse, exciting and, of course, unpredictable.

Playoff games are played weekly as teams advance and culminate in the BCS National Championship Game.

8 Conference Champs
Each conference champ from the six major conferences gets an automatic berth into the BCS playoffs, as will the highest ranked team from a non-major conference that is the champion of its conference. The other four conference champions will play a 4-team "play-in" playoff, the winner of which joins the other conference champs in the BCS playoffs.

Click here to see what this year's play-in bracket would look like

8 At-large Bids & Seeding
With 8 conference champs already in the BCS playoff, the remaining 8 teams will be selected as "at-large" berths chosen by a BCS Committee. Once the eight "at-large" berths are decided upon, all sixteen teams will then be seeded from one to sixteen and placed in a division. The division receiving the No. 1 seed will rotate annually.

A conference champ from a non-major conference who did not win the play-in playoff and is ranked in the top twelve may receive an at-large berth into the BCS playoffs.

Four Divisions
The 16 teams will be divided into 4 divisions: the “Home Depot” Orange Bowl Division, the Allstate Sugar Bowl division, the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl Division, and the Rose Bowl by Citi Division. The winners of the second round will be champions of their divisions, e.g. Sugar Bowl Champions. The champions of the Orange Bowl and Sugar Bowl Divisions play each other in the third round or semi-finals, as will the champions of the Fiesta Bowl and Rose Bowl Divisions. The winners of the third round will meet in the BCS National Championship Game.

BCS Bowls
Teams in the “Home Depot” Orange Bowl Division play in the Capital One Bowl and the Chick-fil-A Bowl. Teams in the Allstate Sugar Bowl Division play in the Cotton Bowl and Champs Sports Bowl. Teams in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl Division play in the Outback Bowl and the Pacific Life Holiday Bowl. Teams in the Rose Bowl Division by Citi play in the Toyota Gator Bowl and the Valero Alamo Bowl. This preserves, and even adds to, the most significant previously non-BCS bowls.

To accommodate the semi-final round, two new BCS Bowls are added. (I made up two new bowls: the “FedEx Bowl” and the “Champions Bowl by Coca-Cola.”)

Click here to see what this year's 16-team playoff bracket would look like

Remaining non-BCS Bowls
The remaining bowls may still exist as does the NIT in college basketball.

Issues With a Playoff System
Implementing a playoff system isn’t at all easy. Many issues arise. The first—and it is huge, even fatal—is the way a playoff will effect the revenue generating ability of the bowl games. Quite frankly, few fans, especially students, have the money to travel between games as their team advances. College basketball games don’t draw the 60,000 plus (in many instances 100,000) fans that college football does. The two teams that reach the BCS National Championship Game in a 16-team playoff will have played four games in four or so weeks in four different parts of the country. That isn’t easy on the pockets of the average student.

But in a lot of ways this happens each week of the regular season; die-hard fans travel long distances to support their team. Keep in mind, though, that one of the two teams is playing at home, drawing the student body and local fans. Sure, there are loads of students who would give an arm and a leg to follow their team as it advances in the playoff, but they only have so many arms and legs. Whether a playoff can fill stadia with capacities upwards of 70,000 is not so clear.

Another issue that comes to mind is the relevance of the regular season. Unlike any other sport, in college football each and every game matters. A playoff, though, introduces a margin of error, however slight, that has always been a stranger to this game. Suddenly, that loss to Duke (yeah, right) will not send your season to hell, because “there’s always the playoffs!”

A playoff system will hardly make the regular season any, and certainly not significantly, less relevant. The reason why each game matters would be the only thing that would change. In a playoff (particularly CFU’s system), the goal is to reach the playoffs. In fact, where teams such as Tulsa (who knows!?) have the opportunity to win a BCS Championship—something they could never do in the current system—there may be even greater incentive in a playoff system. Then, in college football, you get the excitement of a possible George Mason-like run in the 2006 NCAA tournament for Tulsa in the BCS Playoffs. Any reason why the regular season is so relevant now will remain in a playoff system. Teams will strive to reach the playoffs. Of course, one way for them to do so is to win their conference (automatic berth in playoffs for major conferences; appearance in the play-in for non-major conferences). So, with each game relevant to getting to the playoff—the only avenue to winning the BCS championship—the relevancy of the regular season of a playoff system will not be noticeably lessened.

And then there’s the drama that keeps up watching this game. Might a playoff make college football less dramatic? ESPN.com’s Heather Dinich said it best:

“C'mon, let's hear it. Georgia got hosed. But LSU has two losses! Why is Illinois in the Rose Bowl? The best team is not playing in the national championship. Who is the best team? They all lost! This is why a playoff should never exist. For the next month, argue over the matchups. Argue over the BCS. Argue over Christmas dinner. It's as entertaining as the games themselves. Which you'll watch no matter who is playing. And when LSU beats Ohio State for the national championship, and that sense of finality sets in, you'll already be longing for the chaos of next season. Because this year, your team got hosed.”

Listen, I don’t know if there will ever be a playoff in college football, but I do know that a playoff won’t change the fact that I watch every regular season game I can find on tv. It won’t change the passion. It won’t change the excitement. It won’t change the drama. And it won’t change the rivalries.

The only thing that a playoff will do is add to all of these things.

Randall Cooper

Games To Watch: Bowl Edition

Every single one. That’s right, on December 20, do yourself a favor and pull up your favorite chair in front of your gargantuan gazillion inch LCD HDTV, grab your remote, point it, and flip between ESPN, ESPN2, CBS, ABC, and FOX for the next 4 weeks. All of these games may not call your name, but I can't think of a good reason to miss any. You know how boxing schedules a slew of match-ups between boxers you’ve never heard of before the main event? Same thing here. Some of those matches turn out to be pretty good, and so will some of these. So, kick back. Relax. Order some pizza. Drink a beer. Or two. Or three. Argue over who should be playing for the title. After all, for college football fans this is the most wonderful time of the year, and with how this season has turned out anything goes.


BCS National Championship Game: #1 Ohio State v. #2 LSU
Ohio State plays your traditional Big Ten football: defense, defense, and more defense. They aren’t strangers to big games either, and this is a big as it gets. It’s a home game for the Tigers, who sport two dynamic, mobile quarterbacks, and QBs that can move are a problem for the Buckeyes. Ohio State’s only loss was to Illinois whose QB, Juice Williams, can certainly move around. Plus, Ohio State will have to be ready for both Matt Flynn and Ryan Perrilloux. Les Miles will use each as necessary. The Tigers average more total yards per game, more passing yards per game, more rushing yards per game, and they score more points per game. While they’ll be ready, 51 days will have passed since the Buckeyes played their last game. And by the time they play off that rust, the Tigers will be up by 21.
Picks—Randall: LSU Chris: LSU



FedEx Orange Bowl: #3 Virginia Tech v. #8 Kansas
Yawn. There a few non-BCS bow games that’ll be tons more electrifying than this one, but oh well. Playing their first (maybe second) real opponent all season, Kansas will struggle mightily to hang with the Hokies, especially when they’ve got the ball. Kansas QB, Todd Reesing, faces without a doubt his toughest challenge. He’ll have trouble connecting with anyone in the secondary, other than VT’s cornerbacks who’ll look more like wide-receivers by the time this thing is over. As far as churning out yards on the ground, forget about it. The Jayhawks may average 44 points per game, but they haven’t played anybody like VT. But wait, hasn’t this been the season of upsets?
Picks—Randall: VT Chris: VT

Tostitos Fiesta Bowl: #4 Oklahoma v. #9 West Virginia
This will be good if West Virginia shows up. Trust me, the Mountaineers are better—much better—than the way they played against Pitt that kept them out of the national title picture. And as embarrassing as that loss was, expect Rich Rodriguez to have his boys ready. God knows they’ll need to be. The Oklahoma Sooners are serious. They just convincingly beat the No. 1 team in the nation and probably think they belong in the big show, something that may serve to motivate the Sooners. By the way, they only allow 92 yards per game on the ground, which means Steve Slaton won’t make the highlight reel. They also average 43 points per game. One thing about the Mountaineers, though, is that they’ve played some defense this year. If that defense can hold the Sooners and Pat White find some big plays downfield, the Mountaineers might redeem themselves in the Fiesta Bowl. Maybe Rich Rodriguez ought to put a “Statute of Liberty” play in his back pocket. You know, just in case.
Picks—Randall: Oklahoma Chris: Oklahoma


Allstate Sugar Bowl: #5 Georgia v. #10 Hawaii
Undefeated Hawaii has Georgia on its mind. And the Warriors aren’t just glad to be in the Sugar Bowl, they want to win it. One way to do it: keep Knowshon Moreno off the field. If Moreno gets loose, that’ll be all she wrote. Doing just that isn’t necessarily how the Warriors play football; behind Colt Brennan they run a fast-paced offense that scores quickly. I doubt that Hawaii will try to fix something that isn’t broken, so that means that to have a chance the Warriors have got to play defense. Ranked 30th in the country in total defense, the Warriors haven’t broken any records on that side of the ball. Certainly, this is something they’ll need to look at before playing in the Super Dome—4,000 miles from Honolulu. But we’ve seen David slay Goliath before, and this has been that kind of season.
Picks—Randall: Georgia Chris: Georgia

Rose Bowl by Citi: #7 USC v. #13 Illinois
Because they run a spread offense, Illinois is the anti-Big Ten. QB Juice Williams manages a balanced offense using the explosive Rashad Mendenhall, the Big Ten’s second-leading rusher and Arrelious Benn in the passing game. This trio tore apart Ohio State, the nation’s top defense. But USC is by no means untalented on defense. They’ve got speed and lots of it. The talent doesn’t stop there. On the other side of the ball, the Trojans are also loaded. These two squads are almost dead even on total offense, with the Illini ranking 45th in the country and the Trojans ranking 47th. Still, many feel like the Rose Bowl should’ve swayed away from tradition and selected Georgia, a better match-up. With that, the Illini have got to feel like they need to prove that they belong in this game. They, however, face no small feat. But, then again, they didn’t face small feat when they knocked of Ohio State either.
Picks—Randall: Illinois Chris: USC


Poinesstia: Navy; Navy
New Orleans: Memphis; Memphis
Papajohns.com: Cincinnati; Cincinnati
New Mexico: New Mexico; New Mexico
Las Vegas: BYU; BYU
Hawaii: Boise State; Boise State
Motor City: Purdue; Central Michigan
Holiday: Texas; Arizona State
Champs Sports: Boston College; Boston College
Texas: TCU; TCU
Emerald: Oregon State; Maryland
Meineke Car Care: Wake Forest; UConn
Liberty: Central Florida; Mississippi State
Alamo: Penn State; Penn State
Independence: Alabama; Alabama
Armed Forces: Cal; Cal
Humanitarian: Fresno State; Georgia Tech
Sun: South Florida; South Florida
Music City: Florida State; Kentucky
Insight: Oklahoma State; Oklahoma State
Chick-fil-A: Auburn; Auburn
Outback: Tennessee; Tennessee
Cotton: Arkansas; Missouri
Gator: Texas Tech; Virginia
Capital One: Florida; Florida
International: Rutgers; Rutgers
GMAC: Tulsa; Bowling Green

Key: Randall's Pick; Chris' Pick

THE PITTS: Pitt Turns WV Title Dreams Into Nightmares


Ah, the paradox of controlling your own destiny. If it’s your destiny how can you control it? And until last weekend the most commonly heard phrase on Sportscenter was: “West Virginia controls its own destiny."

Whatever.
There is no destiny in college football. And if there is, no one can control it. There is, however, a little curse on the unfortunate squad that happens to be ranked #2. Now the Mountaineers have fallen victim to this curse, twice. And this one will sting for a long time.

All these guys had to do was win against 4-7 Pitt. Win by passing. Win by rushing. Damn it! Just win! It shouldn't have been hard. It was the 100th Backyard Brawl, a home game, and there was plenty of motivation. The Mountaineers were four touchdown favorites. A Pat White injury and three turnovers later, coach Rich Rodriguez and his team was left on the field speechless, watching their dreams tick off as the Panther sideline exploded.

Then again, it was a game that defied all logic. The Mountaineers could only rush for 104 yards, the lowest total since 2001, against a Pitt defense that has been less than stellar to say the least. Even before White went down, he struggled. The only points the mighty West Virginia Mountaineers could muster in the second half resulted from a safety on the final clock-killing play.

Twice West Virginia got the ball back in the last minutes of the 4th quarter, and twice they failed to score. The one thing that was not out of the ordinary was Pitt freshman sensation LeSean McCoy who rushed for 148 yards.
Pitt’s defense stepped up when they needed to.

As for any Mountaineer fan, what can you say? In a season where Michigan lost to Appalachian State, USC lost to 41-point underdog Stanford, and the No. 2 team has lost 6 times to unranked teams, this shouldn't be so shocking. Plus, you’ll still play in a BCS Bowl. That’s more than Mizzou can say. But after knowing they were so close to playing for all the marbles and coming short against bitter rivals, West Virginia fans now have a decision to make: self-immolation on the 50-yard line or on the university president's lawn.
A fan on a West Virginia blog said it best:

"This was the last straw. I am a 1984 grad of WVU and grew up 15 minutes from Morgantown in Preston County. I will never cheer for the Mountaineers again. Not ever. I hope they lose every freaking game they ever play from now on."

This guy has an idea how to make his newfound desire a reality that's almost as stellar as his WVU education. Apparently West Virginia couldn't do enough to control their own destiny.
Who knew the football gods were so cruel?


--Chris Nierman

My Two Yards: Week No. 15

Imagine a place where the 2nd place runner wins the race. Or where a kid who mispells a word wins the spelling bee. Or where two people can win an eating contest. Or where the guy who wins the fewest popular votes wins the presidency...wait, never mind that one.

This is the world of the current BCS. Every year some sort of controversy happens. This needs to be fixed asap. Here's my solution.

Every BCS conference gets 12 teams. Notre Dame, stop being arrogant pricks and join the freakin Big Ten already. Big East, add someone, anyone. Ditto Pac-10.Drop one nonconference game (to shorten the season) and eliminate divisions so every team in the conference plays each other round-robin style. Add a 6th BCS Bowl (another for mid-majors, etc.) and keep the Bowls the same so the same amount of teams get the benefits of the postseason.

Eliminate pre-season polls and rely more on the computers. 12 teams will get in to BCS Bowls. The winners of the BCS Bowls will move on to a 6 team playoff with #1 and #2 seeds recieving a bye. This would keep the Bowl tradition intact and eliminate split champions as desired. This way a team could lose the title game but still be the 2008 Rsse Bowl champions or whatever.

Not a bad consolation prize.

The financial benefits of the playoff games would be enormous and there would only be potentially 2 more games on the schedule because there is one less non-conference game. This way cupcakes like Appalachian State will be avoided (wait, never mind).

Of course there are still flaws such as the BCS system still deciding what teams will recieve BCS bids. Some quality teams will be out of the championship picture but at least this way there are still Bowls such as Capital One, Cotton, etc for teams left out to recieve the perks of a bowl game.

--Chris Nierman

Highlight Reel: Oklahoma v. Missouri

Highlight Reel: Pitt v. West Virginia