by Arnaldo
Here
is a comprehensive bowl schedule that's easy to read and all in one
place, for those of you that are like me and hate having to go to
ESPN.com every time I want to know when there's a game on and who's
playing and have to click on a 8 different places. Enjoy! (click on
picture, right-click and save, so you get the high-resolution version.)A blog about football, pure and simple. With occasional emphasis on the Florida Gators and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, we're especially here to answer questions about schemes, rules, terminology, plays, and those details broadcasters and coaches seem to think are too "complicated" for the average fan. This is "Bruce & Albert's Playbook": for fans, by fans (slightly more knowledgeable ones).
Showing posts with label College Football. Show all posts
Showing posts with label College Football. Show all posts
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Friday, December 2, 2011
Conference Realignment: What It Means for the SEC and Florida
by Arnaldo
A conference
is like a party. You go where your friends go, that is after all, the
whole point of the party, being with your friends. If one person wants
to leave to go to another party, chances are, they'll take someone with
them. Two less people there give a third person less reason to be there
instead of another party. A chain reaction ensues and before you know
it, said party is over and the keg is still full. Now I don't know what
the keg is in this metaphor but the rest should be pretty clear, and
that's exactly what's been happening the last year of college football.But how does it affect us?
First of all, it really shouldn't. The SEC scheduling looks like this (as of before the realignment): there are 12 teams and 2 divisions. Each school plays the five other divisional schools, one permanent school from the other division, and two rotating home-away basis schools from the other division. The four remaining games are out of division and up to the school itself to schedule. I say this because intraconference scheduling is up to the conferences and not the NCAA. Each conference schedules differently. The Pac-12 plays a 9 game conference schedule with 12 teams.
So does this mean the SEC needs to move to a 9 game conference schedule? Not necessarily, but it isn't a bad idea. The problem here is that removing one of those slots removes the SEC's much needed "padded match-ups". Coaches will tell you they need these games, especially in the beginning of the season. The SEC is obviously the toughest conference in the NCAA; that's no longer a point of contention. Each match-up has the potential to be unforgiving and disastrous.


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Trust me, we NEED this game. |
Where do we go from here?
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But we JUST made this cool new logo. |
However, I see no problem with the constant changing of conferences for teams scattered around the map; not only is it happening now, it's been happening for years. This holds with me as long as the party scenario doesn't happen again. Conferences were already nicely set geographically across the map, rivalries were well established, and scheduling was simple. The sad news is that despite adding TCU and West Virginia, the Big 12 is still not stable. Less stable than them is the Big East. Losing their BCS automatic qualification is looking inevitable, and hopefully this may make them less desperate to add more significant teams and help them to stabilize.
What's most important to remember is the SEC is looking indestructable. Five consecutive national championships (six soon), the addition of two teams that should be growing back to prominence (new management at Texas A&M with an SEC budget should help), and a sweet TV deal with CBS that should (God willing) be opting for an ESPN upgrade in the near future makes the SEC party look like New Years at the Playboy Mansion.
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This actually looks kind of awesome. |
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
3 Reason Why We Can't Live Without the BCS
by Arnaldo
1. There's No Going Back.The BCS was specifically designed to pit the No.1 and No.2 teams together in a national championship game so there would be no uncertainty about which teams is truly the nation's best. You may think this is obvious but it really didn't start happening until the BCS was formed in 1998. Its predecessor, the Bowl Alliance, and its predecessor, the Bowl Coalition, set out to do just that but couldn't get the Pac 10 or the Big 10 involved, which left the Rose Bowl to screw things up for everyone. The result was the opposite of the goal.
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...AM I RIGHT?! |
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The game of the century... |
Loyal Gator fans may remember that in 1996, No.3 Florida played in the Sugar Bowl against No.1 Florida State because No.2 Arizona State was locked into the Rose Bowl with No.4 Ohio State. Because of the Rose Bowl's refusal to lose one of its big money-making tie-ins, the national champion would have to be somehow sifted out of that mess. Luckily, Arizona State fell to the Buckeyes while the Gators exacted revenge over Florida State for its embarassing loss just a month before, leaving no ambiguity as to whom should be crowned national champions.
College football wasn't always so lucky however. Just the following year, No.1 Michigan was locked into the Rose Bowl against No.8 Washington State while the Bowl Alliance dubbed their "national championship match" No.2 Nebraska versus No.3 Tennessee. No matter how decisively Michigan beat Washington State, they would still have to share the national championship with Nebraska. Six years after setting out to match up No.1 and No.2, these systems only accomplished such match-ups three times. Naturally, this left way for the BCS to form, kick the Rose Bowl in the ass and tell them to cut it out, and introduce computer formulas as part of their ranking system.
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I bet Power T misses those days. |
2. Coaches Can't Be Trusted, but Computers Can.
If you don't know the following names, you probably should: Jeff Sagarin, Jeff Anderson and Chris Heston, Richard Billingsley, Wes Colley, Kenneth Massey, and Peter Wolfe. They're the seven most important men in college football, I don't care what ESPN says. If the BCS were a medieval secret society, these men would be the council of elders.
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Like this, but nerdier... ok, less nerdy. |
They are the creators of the six computer formulas that make up a third of the BCS rankings and when compared to the other thirds, the Harris Interactive Poll, which is made up of a randomized 115 voters, or the USA Today Coaches' Poll, which is comprised up of only 59 of the 120 FBS head coaches, they clearly hold the most power. Of course, however, they don't actually pick which teams they think are best. Instead, these men create the six (two are a duo; adorbs, I know) formulas and algorithms that determine which teams are. Needless to say, they are incredibly smart; two of them hold Ph.D.s (one in astrophysical sciences from Princeton).
But don't worry, they're not actually hell-bent on dominating college football with lairs of super computers and lab equipment (a disappointment, I'll admit). Most of them haven't even met each other. The egos alone would be too much to handle, claims Billingsley, and all of their formulas have fundamental disagreements, such as home field advantages, particular effects from strength of schedule, and how exactly to calculate early season versus late season game significance. The point is that these formulas level one another out. Also, keep in mind that the highest and lowest score for each team is thrown out. What they do best is keep those cynical coaches in line.

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Univesity of Oklahoma = OU? |
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You mean this powerhouse? |
The point is that the computers serve as a check and balance for the human voters, much like the American Constitution does for our government, and you support America don't you?
3. To Play-off or Not to Play-off . . . The Answer's "Not".
The simplest way to settle any multiplayer competition is with a tournament, there's no disagreement there. The problem is that college football isn't at all simple, and the road to simplicity is paved with millions and millions of dollars that aren't yours and aren't going anywhere.
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Like this, but green and not as happy. |
In theory, with 120 FBS teams, you could have a seven game play-off with a few first round byes and then EVERYONE has a shot for the naitonal championship (I'd like to see President Obama's bracket then). But doing so means teams would have to travel across the country every other week, fans would have to follow them, and rivalries would diminish. After all, you can't sustain a rivalry if you don't play that team often. Of course, some rivalries have been established for over a century, so diminishing said rivalries could result in a hot steaming mess of hostility.

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You mad, bro? |
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You mean the Franklin American Mortgage Company Music City Bowl will keep its prestige? Thank God! |

The reason I don't agree with (even my own) play-off system is mostly because of the potential for a loss of pageantry. Any team should be excited to be in a major bowl game. It should be hard to get there. The idea of making them a loser's game changes the entire perception for hungry teams. If you don't believe me see 2008 Alabama. They lost to Florida in the SEC Championship and entered the usually prestigious Sugar Bowl with nothing to play for and lost to a non-automatic qualifier, Utah (as I mentioned before). Sure Florida went into the same scenario the next year and won by quite a margin, but not all teams are coached the same, and not all teams play just for the sake of playing the game. Also, there's the clinch problem. Now, because there isn't a guaranteed clinch in this system, this shouldn't be a big or frequent problem, but it could still happen. This year's LSU team could sit their starters, lose to Georgia, and they wouldn't drop below No.8. Experts are saying they have such a bump over everyone else, they could lose and still go to the national championship at No.2. Not only is the pageantry of college football being diminished, the conference championship would become completely insignificant in this scenario.

The moral of the story, kids, is that the BCS isn't evil; it's not even a bad idea. Quite frankly, it's still the best idea we've had in the entire history of college football for crowning a national champion. Any changes would just bring us closer to the No Fun League (good closing joke, huh?).
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