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BULL CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES - NCAA Division 1-A Football is Sports' Biggest Fraud
January 8, 2007 | L.N. Smithee

Posted on 01/09/2007 2:27:09 AM PST by L.N. Smithee

It's the major college football conferences' morbid fear of the equity the nation embraces and celebrates every March that makes NCAA Div 1-A football the biggest fraud in American sports. College basketball fans fondly remember the Davids that slew the Goliaths, even though most of those teams didn't win it all; Valparaiso, Hampton, Gonzaga (now recognized as a perennial power), George Mason, an 11th-regional seed that defeated TWO 1-seeds to make it to the Final Four last year, and Villanova, which did defeat mighty Georgetown (led by Patrick Ewing) to win a real national championship. Villanova won ON THE COURT IN A REAL TOURNAMENT, not on some stupid, labyrinthian, deliberately obtuse amalgam of computer data, regional bias, and politics (Urban Meyer this year, Mack Brown in 2004).

If you could read the minds of the Presidents and ADs of the football factory schools, they are probably ruing the day they allowed Boise State (under pressure) to play a BCS bowl instead of simply disrespectfully relegating the Mountain West champion to the Pioneer Purevision Las Vegas Bowl, which is the template. Don't argue with me about that, just check the NCAA football website. It's there in black-and-white; under normal circumstances, the Mountain West champion plays the college that finished fourth in the Pac-10. That's a fair fight, right? Ha! The Mountain West champion defeated the Big 12 champion!

Here's the dirty little secret the NCAA won't discuss: Under the current system, of the 112 Division 1-A college teams, 52 of them can't possibly win a national championship no matter what. All teams in the Mountain West, MAC, WAC, Conference USA, and the Sun Belt conferences are just playing for the chance to play in a bowl against one of the runners-up in the monolithic conferences: the SEC, the Big Ten, the Big 12, the Pac-10, the Big East, the ACC or Notre Dame, the 1000 lb. gorilla that sleeps anywhere it wants. (Think the Irish really deserved to be in a BCS bowl this year? What a joke.) The so-called National Championship game is a private party for the elite. No George Masons, no Villanovas. There are guards at the gate to make sure Cinderella won't crash the ball.

The stupidest thing about 1-A grid is that if there was a REAL tournament like there is for every other level of college football, the Road to the National Championship would rival the Super Bowl. Don't buy the nonsense about how a playoff would hurt the schools financially. It's a crock. According to a New York Times story on December 31, 2006 (italics mine):


The bowl system is not a financial boon, compared with the potential yield of a playoff. Although the bowls have poured hundreds of millions into college coffers, teams have turned down multibillion-dollar offers for a tournament-style postseason. In the most recent television negotiation, the Plus One model [that is, holding the National Championship game after the five BCS bowls, which would determine the participants] would have been worth an extra $40 million.
There is near-paralysis in the fatcat conferences regarding progress toward a playoff. The article goes on to say the Big Ten and Pac-10 schools' presidents are against a playoff because it might permanently do away with their traditional places in the Rose Bowl. Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany and Oregon University president Dave Frohnmayer said the Big and Pac 10s "would prefer to return to the old bowl system -- which had no mechanism for matching No. 1 vs. No. 2 -- rather than have a playoff." It's not surprising that the Big 10 honcho wouldn't be adaptable to change. After all, this is the conference that kept the name "Big Ten" after an eleventh college joined it. Jeez Louise, even Andy Katzenmoyer can count to eleven, but the college presidents can't?!

The college presidents, by the way, know they're full of it. But because they are who they are -- the heads of institute of higher learning -- they get away with not giving real flesh-and-blood reasons why they won't agree to a football tournament while having no complaints about the fact that their schools participate in every other NCAA tournament. Especially outrageous is the notion that Division 1-A athletes would be academically disadvantaged by a playoff, missing study time and exams in that month in-between the conference season and the December and January bowls. Dispensing with this is easy. For a moment, forget the fact that many of the best teams are made up of scholarship players that limped out of high school and/or junior college GPA-wise (hello again, Mr. Katzenmoyer); some of those young men have a shot at making a living in the NFL playing for more money than a valedictorian might dream about (whether of not they have the smarts to manage the money is another issue entirely). On the other hand, what about the guys at schools like Appalachian State, who won the Division 1-AA title ON THE FIELD? Some of them might make the cut at a pro camp, like Jerry Rice from Mississippi Valley State, Walter Payton from Jackson State, or Tony Romo from Eastern Illinois. But when you get down to Division II and III schools, only once in a blue moon does anyone emerge from the playing field to NFL glory. Once those fellows have played their last game for their alma maters, it’s time to go to work doing something that ain’t football. Those guys need to study more than the 1-A guys, right? And yet, their institutions still decide who’s the best on the gridiron.

What's really amusing, though, is going to the BCS website, which is an exercise in defensiveness. Check out the links in the upper right corner, which are a compilation of articles saying something -- anything -- good about the current BCS system. Usually, the links are to articles that have nothing to do with fairness, and more to do with the pageantry of the events and how half of a couple dozen teams get to finish their season dancing on the turf, even if a victory only means the team was saved from a .500 season (or, in the case of Florida State, a losing season). Never mind the fraudulent, dishonest, corruptible nature of determining a championship game by polls. It's all about the chillllldren.

The funniest of the defenses linked on the BCS website was published in the San Jose Mercury News on November 30, before the USC-UCLA game that knocked the Trojans out of the #2 spot. Written by Jon Wilner, it is entitled “BCS keeps a bracket away another year; System has worked, but there remain a few questions.” Bold is mine:


Three days from Bowl Championship Series selection day, and the biggest winner is not top-ranked Ohio State, surging USC or hanging-with-the-big-boys Boise State.

The biggest winner is the system. It's working -- again.

It delivered a pulsating November.

If USC beats UCLA on Saturday, the system will deliver the national-title matchup most of the nation wants: Ohio State vs. USC. And if USC loses, it will deliver Ohio State-Michigan, which might not be perfect but is hardly the doomsday scenario needed to push the lords of college football closer to a playoff.


Oh, heaven forbid.

Oops.

As we know now, USC lost, and we DIDN’T get Ohio State-Michigan, we got Ohio State-Florida. Here’s how Wilner characterized Florida’s shot at the title game as he was touting how well the BCS was “working”:


In anticipation of low-grade controversy, here's a selection day primer:

Is USC in the title game?

According to BCS analyst Jerry Palm, it's highly unlikely the Trojans would fall from the No. 2 spot if they win Saturday. They hold a 0.01 advantage over Michigan in the computers, a margin that could expand with a victory but certainly won't shrink, and also lead Michigan by 97 points in the Harris poll and by 46 points in the coaches' poll.

``Half the voters are going to have to change their mind between USC and Michigan,'' Palm said. ``That's not realistic unless USC wins on a bad call -- that's what would have to happen.'' No. 4 Florida, which plays Arkansas in the SEC title game, has even more ground to cover: 183 points in the Harris poll, 86 points in the coaches' poll, plus a deficit in the computers.


Oops. USC lost outright. And Michigan didn’t even play, but some voters in the poll decided that Florida, which won the SEC title game, somehow became better than the Wolverines, who only lost to the reigning #1, overnight. Florida poll-vaulted all the way to #2 despite being bogged down at #4 in all three determining factors.

One of the mysteriously selected Harris Poll voters, former Washington State coach Jim Walden, actually voted the Gators #1 over Ohio State, saying he didn’t think the Buckeyes could survive Florida’s schedule. Oh, yeah, “the schedule.” It doesn’t matter if you win all the games set before you, someone with a vote can still think to himself, “I don't care if they won all their games, that's not good enough!” If you don’t grasp the lunacy of this stance, consider if the batting champion in baseball was determined not simply by the percentage of at-bats resulted in hits, but also by the ERA of the pitchers that the batter faced. If you think that makes sense, you're beyond help.

Here’s what Wilner wrote about Notre Dame, who don't need no steenking conference:


Is Notre Dame in the BCS?

The Irish are No. 10 in the latest standings and have completed their regular season. As long as they're in the top 14 on Sunday -- bet the college fund -- they will receive an at-large berth to the Rose Bowl or the Sugar Bowl.


While Wilner was sure the Dame would be in one of the signature bowl games even if they were barely in the Top 15, this is what he had to write about the only other undefeated team in the nation:

Where's Boise State headed?

The Fiesta Bowl, in Tempe, Ariz., makes the most sense geographically. Plus -- there isn't a polite way to say this -- no one else really wants the Broncos. They're a nice story, but they aren't much of a TV draw and probably won't sell many tickets beyond the Idaho state line.

The Rose, which has the first two picks of teams in the at-large pool, won't take the Broncos. The Sugar, which picks third, won't take them, and the Orange, picking fourth, doesn't want them.

That leaves the Fiesta, where the Broncos will face the Big 12 champion (Nebraska or Oklahoma).


The way that Boise State was held at arm’s length shows that sometimes money and you-know-what talk at the same time.

So the system that was “working” fell completely apart just days later. Now, remember, not only was this posted on the BCS site in its own defense, it’s still there! I guess they figure you might miss it if they remove it, or hope you'll just read the headline and not the actual story.

Now, Florida won the game tonight fair and square. Congratulations to them, they beat the odds and proved their doubters wrong. Who knows, maybe if there was a legitimate tournament, they would have defeated Boise State to prove they were the best team. But they didn’t, and we'll never know, just like they don't want us to know -- they just say, "Take our word for it," and that's supposed to be good enough. Well, it's not good enough for me, and I know I'm not alone.

As far I am concerned, the Florida Gators' “championship” is as hollow as that crystal football that serves as the trophy. And it will continue to be the Empty-AA championship game until the dinosaurs who keep Division 1-A college football a two-tiered society that rewards mediocrity, intellectual dishonesty, and fundamental provincialism get over their love affair with archaic traditions that prevent the sport from fulfilling its potential as a national cause celebre.


TOPICS: Sports
KEYWORDS: bcs; fraud; ncaa; playoff
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To: L.N. Smithee

BUMP for a later read.


41 posted on 01/09/2007 4:45:31 PM PST by Extremely Extreme Extremist (Why can't Republicans stand up to Democrats like they do to terrorists?)
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To: L.N. Smithee
The article goes on to say the Big Ten and Pac-10 schools' presidents are against a playoff because it might permanently do away with their traditional places in the Rose Bowl.

The Rose Bowl is the only non-Fox BCS bowl and has a HUGE contract with ABC til 2014.
Nothing will happen playoff wise until 2015.

42 posted on 01/09/2007 4:50:50 PM PST by PRND21
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To: Hawk1976

"The school president's won't bite because semesters end right about that time in December (finals). The president's and the AD's also like the money the bowls generate. I agree they could get more with a playoff system and parallel bowl games."

Probably won't even come close to the money they get now. The NCAA would claim it is an NCAA championship and most of the money would go to the NCAA to dole out as they see fit. You guys probably don't remember the old system. Used to be the NCAA told you how many times you got to be on TV and took half the TV money. That's why the schools and the conferences won't let the NCAA have a division 1a football team playoff.


43 posted on 01/09/2007 5:17:11 PM PST by DugwayDuke (Only children believe that they have any choice except the lesser of two evils.)
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To: L.N. Smithee

A playoff system will happen. It is not a question of if, but of when.

I am not an advocate of a playoff system. My reasons are irrelevant.

The playoff system will come to be as a result of the constant one-way dialogue coming from the electronic and print mediums. There is no substantive rebuttle permitted. You have a high percentage of loudmouth sports personalities constantly pounding the theme at every possible opportunity. They utilize nothing less than emotion to "legitimize" their argument. The result is that young (very young) people are being indoctrinated to the notion. At some point that growing voice, albeit an indoctrinated one, will prevail. And they will have money.

Money is a simple focal point. Nonetheless, add it to the mix and then follow the money (young $ spends like old $).


44 posted on 01/09/2007 5:47:20 PM PST by pilipo
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To: AxelPaulsenJr
Not exactly the toughest of schedules.

That is precisely my point. These folks who are idolizing BSU because they barely squeaked out an underdog win against an over-rated team in a marginal conference just can't seem to face reality.

If BSU played real teams, not New Mexico State or Sacramento State , they would have had their asses handed to them well before any thoughts of a bowl game entered the picture. Had they played a schedule as tough as Vanderbilt's they would have had some bragging rights. They didn't.

On the 'up-side', I hear they play Northwestern Idaho Agricultural and Mechanical Junior State College's "Fightin' Tater Tots" next year!

45 posted on 01/09/2007 7:45:00 PM PST by Triggerhippie (Always use a silencer in a crowd. Loud noises offend people.)
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To: DugwayDuke
Good point. I know the NCAA is the biggest sports fraud out there, but I had forgotten how the NCAA used to do things.
46 posted on 01/09/2007 7:49:17 PM PST by Hawk1976 (Vince Mcmahon '08)
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To: L.N. Smithee

Drop and run, eh? Apparently you haven't bothered to clean up the facts in your article or even to respond to those challenging you...

Yet, we complain about Dan Rather but expect so much less--in terms of accuracy--from our fellow freepers.

This article, and your lack of response to critics, displays the glaring problem of emotionally driven reporting and editorial writing that runs rampant throughout the written word, in every genre, from the MSM to the blogsphere.

Would you still feel the same way if you had all of the facts, I wonder?


47 posted on 01/11/2007 9:40:20 AM PST by TaxRelief (Wal-Mart: Keeping my family on-budget since 1993.)
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To: TaxRelief
Apparently you haven't bothered to clean up the facts in your article or even to respond to those challenging you...

I'll get to all of you in due time. Don't worry. And BTW, I corrected my errors regarding BSU's conference and the number of teams that can't possibly win the championship. Nobody has dared challenge those facts. You wanna take a shot? Of course you don't. I dare you.

48 posted on 01/11/2007 6:54:12 PM PST by L.N. Smithee (Bush/Fox Border Policy in a nutshell: "Rape is inevitable. Relax and enjoy it.")
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