Post Bowl Playoff Rant
Yet another year of crappy BCS games (only KU v. Va Tech was worth watching). Yet another year of the ratings tanking on the Championship game. Yet another year of my Sooners falling to pieces in a BCS Bowl. Time to rant.
I feel like before I begin my rant, I should at least mention a few decent non-BCS bowls.
1. Capital One Bowl (Formerly known as the Florida Citrus Bowl). Michigan 41 - Florida 35. This was arguably the best of the lot. Florida gave the Wolverines everything they could handle; mostly due to four turnovers, Tim Tebow, and Percy Harvin. The Big Blue seniors pulled it out for Lloyd Carr for the first time in their four years in Ann Arbor. Big, emotional win. Positive: Michigan seniors finally winning a bowl game. Negative: Incoming Michigan head coach Rich Rodriguez (formerly of alma mater WV) stating that he and his wife could keep the same color scheme in their house, thanks to the similarity between the colors of WV and UM. Sort of an insult to injury thing, don't you think there, coach?
2. Gator Bowl. Texas Tech 31 - Virginia 28. Tech managed to do what it has done many other times before: overcome. The Raiders were down 28-14 in the fourth quarter to the Cavs, but managed to overcome that deficit, some critical penalties, and a fumble to pull it out on a last second Alex Trlica Field Goal. Positive: Tech pulling out a last second victory over a more talented UVA team. Negative: Howie Long's kid (Chris Long, who had his number retired in the last home game of the season against Va Tech) lost a heartbreaker in his last collegiate game.
3. Pointsettia Bowl. Utah 35 - Navy 32. Surprisingly, this game was very exciting, with a 50 point second half, coming down to the final minute, and suffering from a questionable call. With Utah up 28-25, Jerome Brooks caught a 3-yard pass from QB Brian Johnson and fumbled while diving for the corner of the end zone. The ball bounced off the pylon out of bounds. The Refs could have (and probably should have) called it a Navy touchback, but the call on the field withstood review. Not that it mattered too much. Navy stuffed Ute RB Darrell Mack on the next play to turn the ball over on downs. But instead of the 20, they were on the 1. Which led to Navy turning the ball over on downs four plays later at their 9. Which ultimately led to a Utah TD anyway. Navy scored a TD in response. They even recovered the onside, but Kaipo-Noa Kaheaku-Enhada threw a pick to Ute safety Joe Dale to seal it. Positive: What an exciting end to a hard-fought game! Negative: As new Navy coach Ken Niumatalolo said after the game, ''More than anything, I feel for our seniors. I'll coach again.'' So while the Navy seniors lost their second straight Bowl (2005 Car Care Bowl), the Ute seniors won their 4th straight bowl (some of them, the redshirt seniors have 5 bowl rings).
4. Armed Forces Bowl. Cal 42 - Air Force 36. Tedford benched DeSean Jackson and Robert Jordan for a quarter for an unknown team disciplinary problem. Gee, that'll teach 'em coach. Air Force proceeded to build a 21-0 lead in that same expanse of time. As soon as Jackson hit the field he caught a 40 yard acrobatic TD, and Jordan finished with a team-leading 148 yards and a TD on 6 catches. Air Force rallied late, but failed to score a 2 point conversion (not really sure why 4 points is better than 6) and recover a late onside kick. The game nearly ended brilliantly, especially after starting AF QB Shaun Carney (also the Falcons' leading rusher on the day) went down with a knee injury on a play that could have put the Falcons ahead. Positive: Tedford punished his leading receivers for team disciplinary issues. This shows courage. Negatives: Tedford only punished his leading receivers for a quarter. This shows that he was only doing it for the press. Air Force QB Shaun Carney got injured.
5. Independence Bowl. Alabama 30 - Colorado 24. No, it wasn't for anything particularly grand. A winning record, perhaps, but not much else. But the Buffaloes, down at one point 27-0, rallied inspiringly behind QB Cody Hawkins, only to fall short in the end. With enough time left, who knows? Maybe Colorado would have even ended the season with a winning record. Positive: Two mediocre teams really managed to make it a battle in the closing minutes. Negative: Colorado started the game as flat as a pancake.
So, now that you've heard about the good bowls, let me rant about the abomination called the BCS. As I see it, the other bowls match teams of perceived equal strength, in an effort to produce the best game possible. This year, it worked for the most part. The BCS, on the other hand, took the best bowls and turned them into a disgrace, all for the sake of creating a big money 'championship game' which pits the beauty pageant winner of the #1 vote vs. the beauty pageant winner of the #2 vote. The rest of the so-called major bowls get one headliner and one crap-shoot of a team. So we saw Illinois get dismantled by a good USC team instead of a good UGA team playing a good USC team. We saw UGA dismantle Hawaii, when UH and Illinois would have matched up well. I'm not sure what to say about OU, and that Fiasco Bowl against WV, but KU and WV deserved to play, as did (in my opinion) OU and Va Tech. Ohio State got trounced in what amounted to a home game for LSU, but I expected that, as I noted in my post before the bowls. LSU's BCS games consist of 4 Sugar Bowls, all four of them wins. So what do I think should happen? An 8 team playoff. I really don't care how you do it. Take the top 8 from the BCS, take all of the 6 major conference champs and the two highest ranked wildcards, whatever. Maybe take the top 8 conference champs. All I know is, we need to have a playoff like every other real sport, with the higher seed hosting the game, and determine bowl matchups and a championship matchup from that format. For those that missed it, here is the plan I proposed out of boredom before the bowls started:
The champions of all Major Conferences are invited to play (ACC, SEC, Big 10, Big XII, Big East, Pac 10).
Two at-large teams (who must be either independant or the champion of their respective conference) are invited to play.
The games are played at the home of the higher ranked team (based on the BCS poll). Two weeks of games seed the teams for the bowls, with the championship alternating among the four BCS sites. Games start after everyone takes their final. So you have something like this in 2007:
15 December 2007
Game 1 BYU (Mountain West Champs, BCS #17) @ Ohio State (Big 10 Champs, BCS #1)
Game 2 Hawaii (WAC Champs, BCS #10) @ LSU (SEC Champs, BCS #2)
Game 3 West Virginia (Big East Champs, BCS #9) @ Va Tech (ACC Champs, BCS #3)
Game 4 USC (Pac 10 Champs, BCS #7) @ Oklahoma (Big XII Champs, BCS #4)
22 December 2007
Game 5 BYU/tOSU winner v. USC/OU winner
Game 6 UH/LSU winner v. WV/Va Tech winner
1 January 2008
Game 5 loser v. Game 6 loser in Orange
Game 4 loser v. Game 2 loser in Fiesta
Game 3 loser v. Game 1 loser in Rose
2 January 2008
Game 5 winner v. Game 6 winner in Sugar
The pageantry continues, because the Major Bowl game matchups are decided before Christmas (also allowing hype).
You are only talking about 2 more games than what teams already play and the home crowds get to see an extra big matchup or two.
It won't mess with the bowl games we already have in the dead period (between 20 december and 1 January), except that you have two games in addition to the three bowls on that day (and the major networks get two big matchups to air).
It doesn't mess with the academic integrity, given most schools have finals before these playoffs would start.
Everyone still makes a ton of money and it is more evenly distributed (ie; no TWO BCS games for the BCS conferences...but the little guys get a shot at the dough if they manage to make it up high enough AND win their conference).
Fans get a real champion.
I felt like it bore repeating, especially after the results of the BCS Bowls. Yes, you might have some blowout opening round games. Big deal. At least it would allow you to seed out the bowl games to have something more competitive. And it would allow a champion. After the bowls, I think I can see how it might have played out:
Ohio State probably would have romped on BYU in the shoe
LSU would have probably clobbered Hawaii in Baton Rouge
West Virginia would have probably beat Va Tech in Blacksburg (great matchup, though)
USC would have probably clobbered OU even in Norman (at least from the way the Sooners played West Virginia)
So in the second round, I figure
USC beats Ohio State in the shoe in a close one (100,000 bucknuts make it close)
LSU beats West Virginia in Baton Rouge
1 January Bowl matchups (in my opinion):
Ohio State v. West Virginia in the Orange
Oklahoma v. Hawaii in the Fiesta
Va Tech v. BYU in the Rose
LSU v. USC in the Sugar for the championship
If it makes better sense to everyone to keep the Pac 10/Big 10 matchup in the Rose (which, contrary to popular opinion has only been around since 1947 -- before that it was the Pac 10 vs. all takers*), we can do that. The Cotton Bowl can host the fourth BCS bowl. I just can't imagine why the Rose has to be so selfish in all this. The grandaddy may have been the first bowl, but the game wasn't even played there from 1902-1916 in favor of chariot races. Yippee. From 1916-1947, one Big 10 team (Ohio State in 1921) played. With that in mind, Illinois could have played Arizona State in the Rose Bowl, and BYU and Va Tech could have played in the Cotton. Believe me, once Jerry World is complete in Arlington, the Cotton Bowl will seem like a pretty nice venue for a bowl game. Maybe the nicest out there.
I'd be okay with just taking the top 8 of the BCS, too (although that means some non-conference champs in the mix for the national title). My bottom line is just that I want to see a real system to determine a champion, and a real matchup in the bowls. Look at the matchups in round 1:
By the BCS,
#8 KU @ #1 tOSU
#7 USC @ #2 LSU
#6 Mizzou @ #3 Va Tech
#5 UGA @ #4 OU
Wow. How can we not go for a playoff like this? These would be EXCITING games to watch. Who's on board?
*The matchup of the Big 8 in the Orange existed since 1954, but that was broken in favor of the ACC in the Orange and the Big 8 (now Big XII) in the Fiesta by the BCS. I'm still miffed about that, but don't get me started.
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