College Football Week 2 Awards (2016) September 12, 2016
Posted by intellectualgridiron in Sports.Tags: Akron, Alabama, Arizona State, Arkansas, Auburn, Baylor, Bob Stoops, Brett Bielema, Brian Kelly, BYU, Cincinnati, Clemson, college, Darrell Hazell, Florida, Florida State, football, Gamecocks, Gary Patterson, Iowa State, Kalani Sitake, Kent State, Kentucky, Kyle Whittingham, Louisville, Mark Dantonio, Mark Stoops, Michigan, Michigan State, NCAA, Nebraska, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Ole Miss, Oregon, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Purdue, SEC, South Carolina, Stanford, TCU, Tennessee, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, UCLA, USC, USF, Utah, Virginia Tech, Wildcats, Will Muschamp, Willie Taggert, Wisconsin, Wyoming
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(Note: All rankings are current AP [week 2] unless otherwise noted.)
COACHES Wish I were him: Kyle Whittingham, Utah
Glad I’m not him: Kalani Sitake, BYU
Lucky guy: Brett Bielema, Arkansas
Poor guy: Gary Patterson, TCU
Desperately seeking a wake-up call: Pat Fitzgerald, Northwestern
Desperately seeking a P.R. man: Willie Taggert, South Florida
Desperately seeking sunglasses and a fake beard: Mark Stoops, Kentucky
Desperately seeking … anything: Darrell Hazell, Purdue
TEAMS Thought you’d kick butt, you did: No. 3 Florida State (defeated Charleston Southern 52-8)
Thought you’d kick butt, you didn’t: No. 2 Clemson (defeated Troy 30-24)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you did: Akron (lost to No. 10 Wisconsin 54-10)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you didn’t: Nicholls (lost to Georgia 26-24)
Thought you wouldn’t kick butt, you did: Nebraska (defeated Wyoming 52-17)
Dang, they’re good: Michigan
Dang, they’re bad: Kentucky
Can’t Stand Prosperity: Oklahoma State
Did the season start? Northwestern
Can the season end? Miami, OH
Can the season never end? Wisconsin
GAMES
Play this again: Arkansas 41, No. 15 TCU 38
Play this again, too: Utah 20, BYU 19
Honorable Mention to play again: South Carolina 13, Vanderbilt 10
Never play this again: No. 20 Texas A&M 67, Prairie View A&M 0
What? East Carolina 33, N.C. State 30
Huh? Arkansas 41, No. 15 TCU 38
Are you kidding me? Illinois State 9, Northwestern 7
Oh – my – God: Central Michigan 30, No. 22 Oklahoma State 27
Told you so: Arizona State 68, Texas Tech 55
NEXT WEEK
(rankings are current AP (post-week 2, pre-week 3)
Ticket to die for: No. 2 Florida State @ No. 10 Louisville
Also: No. 3 Ohio State @ No. 14 Oklahoma
Best non-Power Five vs. Power Five matchup: UCLA @ BYU
Best non-Power Five matchup: No. 6 Houston @ Cincinnati (Thurs.)
Upset alert: Auburn @ No. 17 Texas A&M
Must win: Iowa State @ TCU
Offensive explosion: No. 22 Oregon @ Nebraska
Defensive struggle: No. 1 Alabama @ No. 19 Ole Miss
Great game no one is talking about: Pitt @ Oklahoma State
Intriguing coaching matchup: Mark Dantonio of Michigan State vs. Brian Kelly of Notre Dame
Who’s bringing the body bags? South Carolina State @ No. 3 Clemson
Why are they playing? Ohio U @ No. 15 Tennessee
Plenty of good seats remaining: Monmouth @ Kent State
They shoot horses, don’t they? Georgia State @ No. 9 Wisconsin
Week 2 Take-aways:
After such a spectacular opening week in college football the previous Saturday and surrounding days, this weekend was a considerable let-down. The noon timeslots were mediocre, save for the decent matchup of Penn State vs. Pitt. The 3:30 timeslots were positively atrocious, where the best game was arguably Kentucky vs. Florida, and that game turned out to be a 45-7 blowout in favor of the Gators. All the good games were crammed together in the evening, where I found myself wearing out my TV’s remote by switching around to the games of Arkansas @ TCU, Tennessee vs. Virginia Tech (at the Bristol, Tenn. Motor Speedway), BYU @ Utah, and occasionally South Carolina @ Mississippi State.
After this mediocre lineup of games for this week, one thing that has festered for a while has become even more clear. Two teams that continue to suck with overpaid coaches who are out of their depth are both Darrell Hazell of Purdue and Mark Stoops of Kentucky. The latter is another case, apparently, of where the only Stoops brother who has the skill set to be a legit head coach at the big boy level is Bob, not brother Mark. We might recall that the other brother, Mike, flamed out at Arizona. Concerning brother Mark, who apparently has had all these great recruiting classes while at UK, lost to lowly Southern Miss last week and this week was demolished by a recovering Florida, 45-7. His predecessor, Joker Philips, went 13-24 (4-20 SEC) after three seasons. Stoops is currently 12-26 (4-21 SEC) after the second game in his fourth season of tenure at UK. The Kentucky faithful would do well to ask themselves: is this progress?
The former had only one good year at a middling MAC program (Kent State), and the powers that be at Purdue were suckered in by this limited success to offer him the Purdue job, paying him $2.2 Million annually, or about $1 Million more than his predecessor, Coach Danny Hope. Hazell is thus far 7-30 since the 2013 season at Purdue, while Coach Hope went 22-27 in four seasons there. Doing that math, that amounts to paying an addition $4 Million for 15 fewer wins. For an athletics department that ostensibly prides itself on operating in the black, those numbers simply do not add up. Moreover, it makes one wonder how much better Hope would have performed had he been given those extra resources that Hazell currently enjoys (meager as they still are compared to true big boy programs).
Meanwhile, on a totally unrelated note, Mississippi State gave the impression that they have righted the ship after their embarrassing upset at home last week to South Alabama. They defeated South Carolina this week, 27-14. Conversely, the loss on the part of the Gamecocks’ gives those who doubt the wisdom of the hire of head coach Will Muschamp further credibility.
All this aside, there are some outstanding matchups awaiting us this upcoming weekend, namely:
Michigan State @ Notre Dame; Texas A&M @ Auburn; Pittsburgh @ Oklahoma State; Oregon @ Nebraska; Alabama @ Ole Miss; UCLA @ BYU; Houston @ Cincinnati (Thurs. evening); USC @ Stanford; Ohio State @ Oklahoma; and of course, Florida State @ Louisville, which could potentially be the best game of the year thus far. I for one am already chomping at the bit, especially for the latter game!
College Football Week 1 Awards (2016) September 6, 2016
Posted by intellectualgridiron in Sports.Tags: Alabama, ANZ Stadium, Arizona, Arizona State, Arkansas, Army, Auburn, Bob Stoops, Bronco Mendenhall, Butch Jones, BYU, Charlotte, Clemson, college, Colorado, Derek Mason, Florida State, football, Georgia, Hawaii, Houston, Kansas State, Kentucky, Louisville, LSU, Mark Helfrich, Michigan, Mike MacIntyre, Mississippi State, NCAA, North Carolina, Northern Illinois, Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Ole Miss, Olympics, Oregon, Penn State, SEC, South Carolina, South Dakota State, South Florida, Stanford, Sydney, TCU, Tennessee, Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Tigers, Tom Herman, Troy, Tulane, UCLA, UConn, USC, Vanderbilt, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest, Will Muschamp, Wofford
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Texas defeated visiting No. 10 Notre Dame in a wild game, 50-47. The game was one of many excellent games to kickoff the 2016 college football season (photo by Getty Images)
(Note: All rankings are current AP [week 1] unless otherwise noted.)
COACHES Wish I were him: Tom Herman, Houston
Glad I’m not him: Bob Stoops, Oklahoma
Lucky guy: Will Muschamp, South Carolina
Poor guy: Derek Mason, Vanderbilt
Desperately seeking a wake-up call: Butch Jones, Tennessee
Desperately seeking a P.R. man: Mike MacIntyre, Colorado
Desperately seeking sunglasses and a fake beard: Les Miles Desperately seeking … anything: Willie Fritz, Tulane
TEAMS
Thought you’d kick butt, you did: No. 19 Louisville (defeated Charlotte 70-14)
Thought you’d kick butt, you didn’t: No. 13 TCU (defeated South Dakota State 38-31)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you did: Hawaii (lost to No. 7 Michigan 63-3)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you didn’t: Appalachian State (lost to Tennessee 20-13).
Thought you wouldn’t kick butt, you did: Western Kentucky (defeated Rice 46-14)
Dang, they’re good: Alabama
Dang, they’re bad: Tulane
Can’t Stand Prosperity: LSU
Did the season start? Oklahoma (also: Mississippi State)
Can the season end? Hawaii Can the season never end? Louisville
GAMES
Play this again: Wisconsin 16, No. LSU 14
Play this again, too: Texas 50, No. 10 Notre Dame 47
Honorable Mention to play again: South Carolina 13, Vanderbilt 10 Never play this again: No. 7 Michigan 63, Hawaii 3
Say what? Southern Miss 44, Kentucky 35
WHAT? Texas A&M 31, No. 16 UCLA 24
Huh? No. 15 Houston 33, No. 3 Oklahoma 23
Double-huh? Texas 50, No. 10 Notre Dame 47, 2OT
Are you kidding me? South Alabama 21, Mississippi State 20 Oh – my – God: Wisconsin 16, No. 5 LSU 14
NEXT WEEK
(rankings are current AP (post-week 1, pre-week 2) Ticket to die for: Arkansas @ No. 12 TCU
Best non-Power Five vs. Power Five matchup: BYU @ Utah
Best non-Power Five matchup: Northern Illinois @ South Florida
Upset alert: Virginia Tech @ No. 14 Tennessee
Must win: (take your pick)
Offensive explosion: Texas Tech @ Arizona State
Defensive struggle: South Carolina @ Mississippi State
Great game no one is talking about: Penn State @ Pitt
Intriguing coaching matchup: Bronco Mendenhall of Virginia vs. Mark Helfrich of Oregon
Who’s bringing the body bags? Troy @ No. 2 Clemson
Why are they playing? Nicholls State @ No. 9 Georgia
Plenty of good seats remaining: Army @ UConn
They shoot horses, don’t they? Wofford @ No. 18 Ole Miss
Week 1 Take-aways:
What a fantastic opening week for college football. It was billed going in as the greatest opening week in the history of the game, and the games themselves did not disappoint. Two Top Five teams went down to defeat, the most teams where that has happened at the season’s onset since 1972.
On paper alone the matchups were very intriguing. To wit: No. 15 Houston played No. 3 Oklahoma at home – in NRG Stadium, no less. No. 22 North Carolina played No. 18 Georgia in the Georgia Dome in Atlanta (Peach Bowl preview, anyone?). No. 16 UCLA journeyed to Texas A&M to play the Aggies. No. 5 LSU made the trek up to Wisconsin to play the Badgers – in historic Lambeau Field. Indeed, this was the first time his legendary venue hosted a college game. Later in the day, No. 1 Alabama faced off against No. 20 USC in AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. Later still, No. 2 Clemson came to Auburn to throw down with the [War Eagle] Tigers. While those two big game were going on, out west, BYU journeyed down to Glendale, Ariz., to play a neighbor to the south in Arizona.
On Sunday, Notre Dame played the Texas Longhorns, in Austin (nominally ACC vs Big XII), and on Monday, No. 11 Ole Miss played No. 4 Florida State (SEC vs ACC), thus adding two more highly marquee matchups two an incredible, extended opening weekend.
If that’s not enough, the previous week, Hawaii played Cal…in Sydney, Australia. The venue for this game was ANZ Stadium, the new name of the stadium used to host the opening/closing ceremonies and the track and field events for the 2000 Summer Olympics.
Whom do we have to thank for this magnificent opening to the 2016 season of college football? Most likely we have the Playoff Committee to thank. They re-worked the formula for selecting teams. The BCS formula left teams way too cautious. One loss likely meant being out of the hunt for a national title. Better therefore to pad the record with an easy win. We the fans suffered with lousy non-conference matchups as a result. When the switch was made from a BCS selection to a four-team playoff, the formula was modified to the point where one loss would not mean the end of the season for those who were in the national title hunt. Conversely, the new formula put a stronger emphasis on strength of schedule. It was a win-win-win. The first “win” is in the form of teams being more free to schedule good games before the conference portion of their season than during the BCS era. The fans reap the second win with great games (see: this weekend). The third win is, as mentioned before, if you have a tough, strong schedule, one loss will not necessarily dash your season’s aspirations.
Good thing, too, because many commentators have dubbed this Saturday the “Day of the Dog”…the underdog, that is. Texas A&M knocked off No. 16 UCLA in overtime at home. Fifteenth-ranked Houston beat No. 3 Oklahoma by 10 points. Even more stunning was Mississippi State missing a last-minute field goal…at home…to lowly South Alabama. Of course, the unranked Wisconsin Badgers upset the No. 5 LSU Tigers in a close game, 16-14. The following evening, the unranked Longhorns knocked off the 10th-ranked Fighting Irish at home, 50-57, in a second overtime, no less.
Apropos of nothing, here is a philosophical question for you: which is more pathetic; that Tulane could only score seven points on Wake Forest, or that Wake Forest could score only seven points on Tulane?
Regardless, what a stupendous weekend for college football. Fans should treasure it for a long time to come!
On the Future of the Olympic Games July 28, 2016
Posted by intellectualgridiron in Sports.Tags: Athens, Atlanta, Australia, Beijing, Berlin, boondoggle, Brazil, Calgary, Canada, commerce, culture, de Janeiro, developed, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Israel, Japan, London, Los Angeles, Munich, Olympics, Park City, Rio, rule of law, Salt Lake, Seoul, Sochi, Summer Games, superior, Sydney, Third World, Tokyo, United States, Vancouver, waste, Whistler, Winter Games
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One example of the ruins of the Olympic venues in Athens from the 2004 Summer Games. This is what happens when the hosting of the Olympics are awarded to countries that are not First World/commerce-oriented.
The train wreck in Rio de Janeiro that continues to unfold as the Summer Olympics are but days away has exposed two large, systemic problems. The obvious one is with Brazil itself. Its economy may have been on the rise in 2009 to the point where it gave enough people the impression that it was becoming part of the developed world. Not long afterwards, political corruption, lack of infrastructure, and a glaring lack of sanitation exposed Brazil as still being Third World and still having a long way to go before it deserves to sit at the grownups table of world affairs (along with the United States, Great Britain, Germany, Japan, Canada, Israel, Australia, possibly France, and the like).
The other systemic issue at play is with the Olympic Games themselves. Simply put, they are huge, and very expensive to stage. Even 40 years ago, things almost reached a tipping point. The city of Montreal hosted the 1976 Summer Olympics, only to be $1.5 Billion in debt afterwards. It took that city almost 30 years to pay it off. Indeed, few cities wanted to host the Games after that. Sure, Moscow jumped at the chance four years later, because to a Communist nation, money is no object when it comes to propaganda.
Peter Ueberroth and the Los Angeles organizing committee for 1984 revolutionized how the Games were financed when he persuaded the International Olympic Committee to allow corporate sponsorship. It saved the Games for another 30 years.
Now, the Games have grown even bigger still, to the point where they are too expensive for new cities to host the Games. Sure, Putin and the Russian government seemed more than willing to turn Sochi into a $51 Billion (with a ‘B’) boondoggle, because, again, at what price propaganda?
Beijing was the only viable city that wanted to host the Winter Olympics for 2022. The IOC was certainly were not going to give the Winter Games to Kazakhstan, for goodness sake. It is a sad commentary on the susceptibility of the IOC to a bribe that so few viable countries and cities thereof even put in bids for the 2022 Winter Games in the first place.
That aside, one thing is for certain: the Olympics are so huge and such a big deal that only commerce-oriented (read: First World, developed) countries are built and, indeed, fit to host the Games.
Yet, there is this politically-correct mantra out there, saying that everyone deserves a chance, but grownups will tell you that is pure poppycock. The truth is, most nations and even whole continents are not built to handle and host the Olympics. That includes Africa (with the possible exception of Johannesburg), South America (as we are currently seeing now), the Middle East (outside of Israel), and central and Southeast Asia.
Even some countries in otherwise developed regions are more than suspect. Remember Athens in 2004? The Greeks built all those state-of-the-art facilities only to let them go to ruin a decade later. Yes, it sounded wonderful for the Olympics to be hosted in the ancient birthplace of the Games themselves, but the huge problem was that Greece is anything but commerce-oriented, which speaks to a culturally systemic problem in Greece itself.
One aspect of this systemic issue is that a city that wants to host the Games for the first time has to spend billions of dollars to build new facilities from scratch. In this day and age, even with corporate sponsorship and in some cases, state-supported funding, that is no longer economically viable.
The solution is to start cycling the Games around to cities that meet certain criteria. They are:
1.) Be situated in a commerce-oriented country (i.e., one of the aforementioned “grownup” countries). Not all cultures are equal. Some cultures are superior to others. A hallmark of this cultural supremacy is a culture that itself is commerce-oriented, that respects the rule of law and property rights of the individual, that frowns on black markets, and puts a premium on democratic governments and transparency within. Not to mention, superior cultures minimize corruption in government, at least compared to more corrupt Third World nations. These sorts of countries also have free presses (to varying extents; France is suspect in this regard) that can call wayward politicians into account for any malfeasance.
Commerce-oriented countries also have the necessary infrastructure for such massive undertakings as the Games. This includes transportation (e.g., airports and expressways), not to mention a sufficient amount of clean, comfortable, available hotel rooms to handle the crush of spectators attending said Games.
2.) Be a city big enough that it already has the aforementioned infrastructure in place. This applies to cities that have never hosted a previous Olympics.
3.) This is the big one: ideally, be a city that has already hosted the Games, and has proven to do so exceptionally well.
Indeed, for the Olympics to remain doable in the future, the way to go is to starting cycling them around to cities (and, by extension, their countries) that have proven capable of hosting the Olympics well. The IOC seems to be inching towards this already, however gradually. London just hosted its Olympic Games for the third time, most recently in 2012. Tokyo — another excellent choice on the part of the IOC — will host the 2020 Summer Games. Los Angeles is currently bidding to host the Summer Games for 2024.
For these cities, the venues/facilities are already built. Maybe a little renovation or generally sprucing up might be in place, but such expenditures pale in comparison to building everything from scratch. Los Angeles, for example, has but one additional facility to build (for rowing and kayaking) and it’s all set.
Think about it from the Winter Games perspective. Sure, a nearby, mountainous ski resort town can handle the alpine skiing events (Salt Lake had Park City, Vancouver had Whistler), but you still need to build a sliding sports track. That alone costs between $50-100 Million, and then there is the necessary ski jumping tower, etc., etc. Economically, it makes sense to host the Games in cities have already hosted them, and hosted them well.
One could cycle the Winter Games from Salt Lake City to, say, Munich (they have a sliding sports track at nearby Koenigssee), then Calgary and/or Vancouver. What’s not to love?
Similarly, a Summer Games cycle of Los Angeles, London, Sydney, Atlanta, Tokyo, and Munich/Berlin would work just fine. Seoul would be a viable cycle candidate as well.
Either we start doing this, or we encourage cities to continue to engage in multi-billion-dollar boondoggles to build athletic venues that rarely get used again, like those in Athens (indeed, what shall become of Rio’s many facilities after these upcoming Games are concluded?).
So, which is it going to be? Cycling the Games around to proven cities/countries, or more wasteful boondoggles?
On the Problems with the Rio Olympics July 27, 2016
Posted by intellectualgridiron in Sports.Tags: 1936, 1980, 2008, 2014, 2016, Berlin, Christine Brennan, corruption, Dilma Rousseff, International Olympic Committee, IOC, Moscow, Olympics, Petrobas, Rio, Rio de Janeiro, sewage, Sochi, Summer Games, The Herd, Third World, tropical, violence, Winter Games, Zika
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Does this look like a venue fit for Olympic sailing and swimming?
Has the IOC learned its lesson yet (I’ll pause for laughter)? Frankly, I would not hold out hope for this. This is, after all, the same IOC that gave the Olympics to Nazi Germany in 1936 (both Winter and Summer Games). That awarded the 1980 Summer Games to Moscow, the epicenter of the slave society bent on taking over the entire world (I mean Communism, of course). They also awarded the 2008 Summer Olympics to Beijing despite the decades-long, grotesque train of human rights abuses on the part of Red China.
Then there was the disaster that was Sochi in 2014. Leave aside the fact that Vladimir Putin has made every effort to cast himself in the mold of a Soviet Premier.
Focus instead on the grossly inadequate lodging; the issues with the available food; the $51 Billion overall boondoggle of hosting the Games; the subtropical climate (keep in mind these were Winter Olympics); the putrid water supply; the state-sanctioned killing of stray dogs, and, not to mention, the state-sanctioned doping of the Russian athletes (no wonder Russia came out of nowhere to win so many medals after so many mediocre performances in recent Winter Games).
Now the world is turning its attention to the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, and the train wreck it is rapidly becoming. Granted, Rio holds a special mystique for people all over the world: a megacity in beautiful, tropical surroundings, and miles of warm, sexy beaches. Sounds great to host the Olympics there, right? That is, it all sounds great until reality is considered. To wit:
Economically, the Brazil is in its worst recession since the 1930s, partly because of the declining oil prices on the world market. Locally, Rio de Janeiro has declared a financial state of emergency. Falling oil prices alone cannot be totally blamed for this crisis. Indeed, a much larger factor is government corruption, a hallmark of Third World politics. To that point, a major investigation into the state-controlled oil corporation Petrobas has already forced several government officials to step down. That is good, but will their replacements be reform-minded? The cynical side of me says, “don’t hold your breath.” Still, the political corruption scandals leading up to the Games have already had considerable fallout, for even Brazil’s president, Dilma Rousseff, faces impeachment. That may be good for justice, but not good timing for a country to have a political crisis when it is about to host something as mammoth as the Summer Olympic Games.
As a side note, why does an oil company need to be state-controlled in the first place? The free market, coupled with sensible regulation, has proven to be an effective means of governing, say, Chevron and ExxonMobil. But this is what helps make the developed world the developed world.
In any case, health-wise, things are no better. Yes, the tropics are lush and beautiful, with nice, sunny weather and gorgeous palm trees swaying to and fro. The bad news is that all that nice weather helps breed pathogens and vectors thereof that are non-existent in the non-tropical latitudes of the developed world. Yellow fever and malaria are two classic examples, but what has recently made news is the presence of the Zika virus in Brazil. Did the IOC consider this when they awarded the Games to a country that is A) tropical, and B), still mostly Third World?
But that’s not the half of it. Another hallmark of Third World countries is a much greater degree of pollution than in the developed world. Outdoor aquatic venues for sailing and open water swimming are contaminated with trash and (drum roll, please) raw sewage. Let that sink in for a moment or two.
Violence, of course, is another Third World problem (spare me the talk about developed world exceptions like Chicago and other inner cities where bad, warped values in those locales rule the day so as to provide Third World situations in an otherwise developed region). A human foot and other body parts have recently washed up on a beach at Rio. That’s bad enough. Worse is that this particular beach is the same venue slated for beach volleyball events. Speaking of violence, armed robberies on the street are up 24 percent. Some athletes who have already shown up in preparation for the Olympics have sadly experienced this first-hand. In May, an Olympic gold medalist from Spain and two other fellow member of their sailing team were robbed at gunpoint in Rio. More recently, the same thing happened to two Australian paralympians. Oh, and recently, a group of armed men stormed a hospital.
This rise in violence coincides at the same time with city police resources in Rio being strained to the breaking point. They are so cash-poor that they have had to beg for basic office supplies and toilet paper. Because of the lack of resources brought on by Brazil’s economic crisis, the police have had to ground their helicopters and have had to park half of their fleet of cars to save fuel. Not what you want when hundreds of thousands of visitors, athletes and spectators alike, are about to count on police protection in that city. Some policemen in Rio have threatened to shirk their duties on account of their paychecks being delayed as well.
The athletes themselves, many of whom have been gradually filing into the Olympic village in advance of the Games, have also borne the brunt of Rio’s many problems. The village, which consists of 31 17-storey towers, has been plagued with leaky pipes, exposed wires, and blocked toilets. Keep in mind that this is brand-new construction, not some dilapidated public housing tower. Gotta love those Third World construction standards. Already the Australian, Italian, and even Argentinian teams have rented hotels and/or apartments until the contractors can fix these issues.
Anybody with a healthy dose of common sense would quickly point out that when you give something as huge and important as the Olympic Games to a Third World country, even one as borderline and emerging as Brazil, that issues like these are par for the course. So how did the IOC foolishly decide to let Rio de Janeiro host the Summer Games anyhow?
Three possible reasons: One possibility is that the IOC is corrupt itself. How else does one surmise that it gave the Winter Games to Sochi? How else does one explain Russia not being entirely banned from these Olympics despite proven state-sanctioned doping at those Games? Over the past decade, one thing I have learned is to never underestimate the IOC’s susceptibility to bribes. The same thing could have happened in the Rio case.
A second reason is that political correctness clearly played a part in tainting the IOC’s collective judgment. There is this politically correct mentality out there that every major city/major region deserves to host the Games. Giving the Olympics to a South American country for the first time ever helped the IOC solidify their PC bona fides and thus they felt very good about themselves in the process for being so “inclusive”.
Third is that the International Olympic Committee was sold a bill of goods. Brazil’s economy was on the rise in 2009. Some observers at that time naively thought that Brazil’s economy would eventually surpass those of Britain and France. The folks from the Rio organizing committee played on that, as well as the sexiness of the city, along with the beauty of the geographical surroundings. Christine Brennan of USA Today, in an interview with Colin Cowherd on his FS1 radio and TV show The Herd, pointed out that this combination clearly played a factor when the IOC made their decision seven years ago. All that was before Brazil’s Third World hang-ups helped cause its economy to crash and is now behind those of Italy and even India.
Solutions to avoiding issues like these in the future shall be explored in another article shortly come. But for the time being, the economic crisis, the political crisis, the construction and infrastructural issues, the rampant pollution and the rising crime add up to a train wreck-in-the-making for these upcoming Olympic Games. Maybe it will take such a disaster for the aristocratic-wannabes in Lausanne, Switzerland to finally wake up and use better judgment to avoid such disasters in the future.
On Morgan Burke and Purdue February 19, 2016
Posted by intellectualgridiron in Sports.Tags: ad, Appalachian State, Arena, athletics, B1G, Big Ten, Brian Kelly, Danny Hope, Darrell Hazell, David Boudia, director, Drew Brees, EKU, Golden Flashes, James Franklin, Jim Harbaugh, Joe Tiller, Kent State, Mackey, Mark Dantonio, Morgan Burke, NCAA, Purdue, Ross-Ade, trustees, Urban Meyer
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Morgan J. Burke has been the Athletics Director at Purdue University for more than 20 years. On Thursday, Feb. 11, he announced that he would retire from this position, effective June of next year. During his lengthy tenure, he has garnered a reputation amongst his peers as one of the most competent AD’s in major college athletics, especially in terms of finances. With so many AD’s spending money as if their budgets were bottomless pits, Burke has been very fiscally sound, and has enjoyed the deserved reputation as a prudent business manager as a result.
When he took over as the top athletics administrator in 1993, Purdue had the absolute worst athletics program in the Big Ten. Hammer and Rails has an article that puts this in perspective, including that fact that the football program only had five (yes, five) bowl appearances total in its history, and was in year eight of a 12-year bowl game drought. The schools’ baseball, ahem, “stadium” would have been considered poor by high school standards. The swimming and diving teams’ home pool was in some hidden location underground at Lambert Fieldhouse. Ross-Ade Stadium was practically falling apart. In short, the department itself was operating on a shoestring budget with awful facilities and teams badly-performing as a result.
In the span of Burke’s tenure, Ross-Ade received much-needed renovations, including leading the way in building an aircraft carrier-sized press box on the side of one’s football stadium. The football team has enjoyed 12 bowl appearances between 1997 and 2012, including an elusive and prestigious Rose Bowl berth. Mackey Arena has also enjoyed major upgrades, along with being home to a men’s team that has delivered four men’s basketball Big Ten titles and a women’s national championship. For what it’s worth, women’s golf brought home the national title in 2010. A nice, more comprehensive list of all that Burke has done well can be found here.
Moreover, (again, for what it’s worth), women’s soccer, softball, baseball, and tennis all have new facilities. The new swimming and diving pool, opened up ca. 2000, is considered one of the finest college natatoria in the whole country. While not exactly on most people’s radar screens, Purdue has become a diving powerhouse (e.g., David Boudia, 2012 Olympic gold medalist).
And yet, to speak with the Purdue University faithful these days, the firm impression is that the athletics department is in an absolute shambles. Sure, it’s all well and good that the softball, baseball and soccer teams have wonderful facilities, and a fine reflection on the university that the swim teams have a jewel of a pool to call their own. But there are problems afoot with the two highest-profile programs, those being football and men’s basketball.
The latter has been performing very inconsistently as of late, what with promising recruiting classes that fail to live up to their potential. But even worse and more urgent is the absolute disgrace of the football team. Coach Joe Tiller’s teams’ performances started waning during his last few years, especially since the 2005 season. When former assistant coach to Tiller in Danny Hope took over (he had been the head coach at Eastern Kentucky University from 2003 through 2007), things kept declining further (5-7 in 2009, 4-8 in 2010). Coach Hope enjoyed only two bowl appearances after going 7-6 in 2011 and 6-6 in 2012. Ironically, he was fired despite a bowl berth in 2012.
Herein lies a symptom of a systemic problem. Purdue has been NOTORIOUS for not paying its coaches even average market value. Coach Tiller was one of the lowest-paid football coaches in the conference for one, and that did not change when the torch was passed to Coach Hope. In college football, it’s all about the coach and the kind of playing talent that coach is able to recruit. Just see what Brian Kelly has achieved at Notre Dame, in this era’s Sunbelt-dominated era of college football, or how Jim Harbaugh has been turning things around at Michigan to illustrate this crucial point.
Basically, Burke tried to make things work with Coach Hope while giving him a shoestring budget. Coach Hope in turn did what he could with such a dearth of resources, but his performance on the field reflected the fact that he was not getting the type of support he needed to compete effectively in major college football. Firing him became tantamount to killing the messenger.
But there are other dimensions to this problem. Before and during the Coach Hope era, Purdue’s reputation for under-paying its athletic personnel was well-founded and deserved. Even competent, ambitious people who worked on the administrative side of the department would leave for better pay at other schools, even to the intra-conference competition. That especially went for assistant coaches who were worth a thing in the sport; after a few years of building a reputation at Purdue, they would soon leave for greener pastures. As Fox Sports’ Colin Cowherd often reminds us, “[C]oaches do not care about your fight song: PAY them!”
Burke seemed to have gotten that memo when searching for a new football coach in the wake of Coach Hope’s departure. He announced that he was raising additional funds to try to attract a better coaching talent. Eventually, the searched settled on Darrell Hazell, then the head coach at Kent State who had a good year with the Golden Flashes (as an aside, snapping up a MAC coach who has had only one or two good years there into a Power Five Conference team is always a risky roll of the dice). Case in point: while Coach Hope’s base salary was $925,000 a year, Coach Hazell’s base salary was $1,750,000. Better, but still not enough to attract talent on par with, say, James Franklin of Penn State or Mark Dantonio at Michigan State, let alone Urban Meyer or Jim Harbaugh.
Moreover, when the bigger players in the B1G are searching for their new coach, they never seem to have to announce some fundraising effort to be able to offer a big-name, proven winner of a coach a competitive salary. Yet Purdue had to announce such an effort just to be able to pay its coach $1.75 million, which is still sub-average among the Power Five.
Before drilling even deeper to the root problem, let us keep things in perspective for now. Burke has been proven that he is among the best AD’s in the country in terms of two things. One is operations. Having attended the Big Ten wrestling championships, hosted in Mackey Arena on March 3, 2012, I can personally attest that they were carried out flawlessly.
The other is financials. The Big Ten is home to some gigantic athletics departments that include both Michigan and Ohio State, both of whom have a figurative license to print money. Purdue, meanwhile is at a systemic disadvantage in that its athletic department receives ZERO money from the university. Despite that handicap, Burke has led a very financially sound department, with each fiscal year ending in the black.
But Burke’s weakness has been talent acquisition, which, frankly, is 90 percent of his job in the public’s eye. He lucked out with Coach Tiller, who in hindsight had a limited shelf life of effectiveness without Drew Brees. He tried going cheap with Coach Hope after Tiller, and that ended up crippling the program. Although he doubled the head football coach’s salary at Purdue, he has wasted it on Darrell Hazell. Granted, Hazell is a fine man who has raised outstanding kids and has done everything beyond reproach. Moreover, he has done wonderful, marvelous things in reaching out to football alums.
Yet despite being a fine gentleman off the field, Coach Hazell’s on-the-field record has been only 6-30 in three seasons. This dismal performance has led to a damaging effect on Purdue’s athletic and thus academic reputation to average people. It has in turn led to major frustrations on the part of the Purdue alumni and related faithful. Since Burke hired Hazell, a good bulk of this frustration has understandably been laid at the feet of the AD.
Thus, the initial reaction to the announcement of Burke’s eventual retirement: why wait so long when a changing of the guard appears to be in order? Sixteen months seems like a long time to wait to take the program into a new direction. More to the point, is the change desperately in order? Answer: yes and no. A two-decade tenure for an athletics director is long enough. After that lengthy span of time, new blood is needed, with new leadership to take the department in new directions. Given the current, disgraceful abyss of the football program and the inconsistent performance of men’s basketball, that new direction is obviously, desperately needed.
But will a changing of the guard at AD really help beget that? After extensive deliberation and searching of perspectives, I am led to conclude that a new AD alone might not help bring about the change Purdue desperately needs. Perhaps Burke’s ineptitude at hiring a proven, big-name coach was a symptom of his being hamstrung by the Board of Trustees.
Most universities “get it.” That is, they understand that college athletics, and football in particular, are front porches to their universities. Meaning, the trustees of most major universities understand that football is the primary marketing tool, and they thus see the football team as a way of leveraging and building the schools’ entire reputation in the eyes of the general public. Purdue, in contrast, sees athletics as a secondary mission, and has historically chosen to put academics first. While this is noble, it is also short-sighted, given the context of today’s society, where we accept the use of a school’s football team as the primary promotion tool as normal and indeed, expected.
When podunk Appalachian State was vying for three consecutive national titles as the FCS level in football last decade, it was a huge shot in the arm for that school. During a home game in the playoffs in 2007, the university’s president was on the sidelines wearing an ASU football jersey, joyously telling the sideline reporter for ESPN that applications for potential students to attend that university had skyrocketed. Enough said.
Thus we are led to the core problem at hand: why do the members of Purdue’s Board of Trustees fail to grasp this? As long as they fail to understand this basic, modern tenet of university promotion, it might not matter how capable Burke’s replacement at AD will be.
Which Team Wants It More? December 16, 2015
Posted by intellectualgridiron in Sports.Tags: Al Golden, Alamo, Auburn, B1G, Badgers, Baylor, BCS, Bears, Big Ten, Big XII, Birmingham, Bowl, Bronco Mendenhall, Bruins, BYU, Cardinal, Chick-Fil-A, college, Cornhuskers, Cougars, Florida, Florida State, football, Foster Farms, Georgia, Hawkeyes, Holiday, Houston, Iowa, James Franklin, Kansas State, Las Vegas, Mark Richt, Memphis, Miami, Mike Leach, NCAA, Nebraska, North Carolina, Peach, Penn State, Purdue, Rose Bowl, Russell Athletic, Seminoles, Stanford, Sun, Tarheels, TaxSlayer, Tigers, Trojans, UCLA, UNC, USC, Utah, Utes, Virginia, War Eagle, Washington State, Wisconsin
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Who wants it more? More to the point, which team is happier to be there? That is the most important question in determining the outcomes of the upcoming bowl games. It is not easy, but it will be the make-or-break factor. It affects the performance of the team. If they are not that motivated to be there, but the underdog team is, the actual odds favor the latter. Therefore, the real question becomes, which team will show up to play? To create a better understanding of this condition, allow me to offer Exhibit A:
The season was that of 1998. Kansas State was rising up in the polls throughout the year. They defeated mighty Nebraska (yes, the Cornhuskers were still very vaunted then) for the first time in three decades. The Wildcats went undefeated for the regular season, and were poised, at the No. 2 national ranking, to go to the first ever championship game of the Bowl Championship Series, which that year would be the Fiesta Bowl.
Kansas State’s only hurdle to clear to make that coveted berth was the Big XII Championship game, in which they were naturally favored. Yet underdog Texas A&M had other plans, and managed to upset K-State that game. Gone were the Wildcats’ national championship hopes, but it was worse than that: other teams had already secured major bowl slots, so K-State was demoted all the way down to the Alamo Bowl. Coincidentally, they would play Purdue, which was the team I was on as a freshman staff member. We were happy to be there: Kansas State, however, was disappointed to be there. Come game time (Dec. 29, 1998), it showed. Even though the Wildcats were still ranked at a feared No. 4 while we were unranked, we nevertheless led them throughout most of the game. Despite a late 4th-quarter touchdown that put them temporarily in the lead, we answered by marching right down the field for a game-winning score with only about a minute remaining.
On paper, K-State should have beaten us by at least two touchdowns. But the final, actual score said otherwise. Why? Though, the Wildcats were clearly the better team on paper, we wanted to be there more than they did, and by a considerable margin.
Such a scenario has played itself out many times in the years since then (and no doubt in the years before), which is what makes bowl game prognostication for more unpredictable than just comparing regular season records and major stats. The upcoming line-up of bowl games asks this very question more than a few times. To wit:
Royal Purple Las Vegas Bowl, Dec. 19, 3:30 PM EST, ABC
BYU (9-3) vs. No. 22 Utah (9-3)
The Utes are the higher-ranked team. At one point they were ranked as highly as No. 3 in the nation. Surely they must have had higher bowl aspirations. On the other hand, the Cougars are dealing with coaching turmoil since their head coach, Bronco Mendenhall, just bolted for the Virginia job. My conclusion is to therefore not out-think things, and go with the odds, which slightly favor the Utes.
Hyundai Sun Bowl, Dec. 26, 2:00 EST, CBS
Miami (FL) (8-4) vs. Washington State (8-4)
Beware the deception of identical records. For whereas the Cougars have had Mike Leach in place for a couple of seasons now, the Hurricanes are going through coaching changes, having fired Al Golden mid-season, leaving assistant coach Larry Scott to serve at the helm in his temporary stead. Incoming head coach Mark Richt will watch from the stands. The Miami players claim they’ll show up motivated, but can these kids overcome the coaching transitions while the Washington State players will enjoy stability?
Foster Farms Bowl, Dec. 26, 9:15 PM EST, ESPN
UCLA (8-4) vs. Nebraska (5-7)
The Bruins surely had much higher bowl aspirations as the season began, and at one point enjoyed a top-ten ranking. Getting upset at home to Arizona State did not help their campaign, though, neither did losing to Washington State, either. The losses to both Stanford and a resurgent USC can be excused. Be all that as it may, they’re in this particular bowl, which lacks the prestige of bowls in the days that follow. Meanwhile, the Cornhuskers are one of those lucky dog teams who, at 5-7, are very fortunate just to get a berth. Why? Because Big Ten fans travel in DROVES. Expect a sea of red in Santa Clara, Calif., and a closer game than the records suggest. You might even take the under on Nebraska.
Russell Athletic Bowl, Dec. 29, 5:30 PM EST, ESPN
No. 10 North Carolina (11-2) vs No. 17 Baylor (9-3)
On paper, this is a very marquee matchup between two very good teams. The problem? Both teams feel as though they deserved better bowl games. Last year, the Bears were in the Cotton Bowl, for goodness sake. Meanwhile, as strong as a team as the Tarheels have been, one would think they would have grabbed a more prestigious berth, too. What therefore makes this scenario unique is that BOTH teams will likely come in under-motivated (we’re dealing with 19/20 year-old kids, after all). The question becomes, which team will be less under-motived than the other? Since UNC started out with lower aspirations, they might end up making this game very, very interesting.
Birmingham Bowl, Dec. 30, 12:00 PM EST, ESPN
Auburn (6-6) vs. Memphis (9-3)
Tigers vs. Tigers? That alone is intriguing. But the War Eagle variety surely had higher bowl aspirations (they started out the year ranked No. 6) than the variety from Memphis, who turned out to be a surprisingly strong team. Auburn likely views this bowl berth as both a come-down and a quasi-home game at the same time. But Memphis might be glad just to make it to a bowl game, since their postseason appearances have been far fewer than those of their opponent. The Vegas odds favor Auburn by 2.5. That is enough of a margin of error for Memphis to win by a close one, provided they appear with just enough motivation.
Holiday Bowl, Dec. 30, 10:30 PM EST, ESPN
No. 25 USC (8-5) vs. Wisconsin (9-3)
Late enough for you out east? Regardless, there are varying degrees of motivation with these two teams. If you’re Wisconsin for example, who would not be happy to spend late December in beautiful San Diego? If you’re USC, you’ll be glad to be there after all the coaching and leadership turmoil with which you had to contend earlier in the season. The kicker? That particular turmoil is now behind the Men of Troy. New head coach Clay Helton has clearly righted the ship, and the program is headed in the proper direction again. That’s good. But, he just fired 4 of his assistant coaches. That’s bad, especially when the Trojans only have a handful of practices to prepare for a game with a depleted coaching roster (using grad assistants to fill in some of the roles) while Wisconsin lacks this disadvantage. The Badgers, furthermore, always show up well to bowl games: they are one of the most reliable programs in that regard. The odds-makers in Vegas still give USC a 3-point advantage, meaning that there is potential for an upset.
Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl, Dec. 31, 12:00 PM EST, ESPN
No. 18 Houston (12-1) vs. No. 9 Florida State (10-2)
The Seminoles likely see having to play the lowly Cougars, while the latter will likely feel honored to play in such a relatively prestigious bowl game. Should this scenario play out, the respective motivational levels are to be adjusted accordingly, giving us potential for one of the biggest upsets of this bowl season.
Rose Bowl Game Pres. By Northwestern Mutual, Jan. 1, 5:00 PM EST, ESPN
No. 6 Stanford (11-2) vs. No. 5 Iowa (12-1)
Since when would a team show up to the Rose Bowl under-motivated? It is the Granddaddy of them all, folks! But in the case of Stanford, they likely had the goal to make it to the playoffs instead. Meanwhile, Iowa is going to their first Rose Bowl in 25 years. To the Hawkeyes, this is a once-in-a-generation Super Bowl. Granted, Iowa is a good team, but Stanford, on paper, is much better. Under normal circumstances, Stanford should win by two touchdowns. But with Iowa being especially focused and disciplined, expect a tough, close game that could go either way.
Taxslayer Bowl, Jan. 2, 12:00 PM EST, ESPN
Penn State (7-5) vs. Georgia (9-3)
This used to be the Gator Bowl, fyi. Georgia seems to be the stronger team on paper, but they just lost their head coach and will be coached by assistants in this bowl game, while Penn State has stable leadership in James Franklin. Expect the Nittany Lions to therefore pull off the upset, unless the interim head coach at Georgia can effectively rally his troops.
2015-2016 Bowl Games Preview December 15, 2015
Posted by intellectualgridiron in Sports.Tags: Appalachian State, Art Briles, Baylor, Boca Raton, Camelia, Central Michigan, Clemson, Connecticut, Cure, Florida State, Foster Farms, Georgia State, Hawaii, Iowa, Jim Harbaugh, Kevin Sumlin, Larry Fedora, Mark Dantonio, Marshall, Miami Beach, Military, Minnesota, Mississippi, Navy, North Carolina, Northwestern, Ohio U, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Orange, Oregon, Outback, Pasadena, Pittsburgh, Quick Lane, Rose, San Diego State, San Jose State, Sooners, St. Petersburg, Sugar, TCU, Temple, Tennessee, Tigers, Toledo, UCLA, UConn, Western Kentucky
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What used to be the “most wonderful week of the year” has become the most wonderful two weeks of the year. The bowl game lineup has reach an all-time high of 40. Diminishing returns, anyone?
But that aside, here are some upcoming highlights and low-lights (note that all times are EASTERN time):
Tickets to Die For:
No. 4 Oklahoma (11-1) vs. No. 1 Clemson (13-0) in the Capital One Orange Bowl, Dec. 31, 4:00 PM
The Tigers are the No. 1 team, while the Sooners are the hottest of the four teams in the playoffs. More intriguingly, this will be a rematch from the Russell Athletic Bowl of last year.
No. 3 Michigan State (12-1) vs. No. 2 Alabama (12-1) in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl, Dec. 31, 8 PM
The Crimson Tide has the postseason experience, but the Spartans have passed every major test over the past three years. Moreover, the two teams are practically a mirror-image of each other.
Best non-Power Five vs. Power Five matchup:
Auburn (6-6) vs. Memphis (9-3) in the Birmingham Bowl, Dec. 30, 12:00 PM
Auburn needs this win to validate their lousy season. Memphis needs this win to validate the best season arguably in the history of the program. Thus, this also doubles as a Must-Win.
No. 18 Houston (12-1) vs. No. 9 Florida State (10-2) in the Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl, Dec. 31, 12 PM
The Cougars are going to their first decent bowl game in decades, while the Seminoles might via the Peach Bowl as a come-down after recent BCS/playoff berths. Thus, this also doubles as an Upset Alert.
Best non-Power Five matchups:
San Diego State (10-3) vs. Cincinnati (7-5) in the Hawai’i Bowl, Dec. 24, 8:00 PM
Rocky Long has continued the deceptive strong program built by Brady Hoke in San Diego, while Tommy Tuberville’s Bearcats are never to be underestimated.
Western Kentucky (11-2) vs. South Florida (8-4) in the Miami Beach Bowl, Dec. 21, 2:30 PM
The Hilltoppers have proven to be strong all year, while the Bulls have performed very strongly as of late. The record comparison may look lop-sided, but let not that fool us, for it shall be a close game.
Intriguing Coaching Match-ups:
Kevin Sumlin of Texas A&M vs. Bobby Petrino of Louisville in the Music City Bowl.
One leads one of the most progressive offenses in the SEC. The other is one of the best offensive minds in the game. The irony? Do not expect an offensive explosion.
Mark Dantonio of Michigan State vs. Nick Saban of Alabama in the Cotton Bowl.
As mentioned previously, the two teams are practically mirror-images of the other.
Urban Meyer of Ohio State vs. Brian Kelly of Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl, Fri., Jan. 1, 1:00 PM
Two of THE best coaches in the game, going head-to-head? Yes, please!
Larry Fedora of No. 10 North Carolina vs. Art Briles of No. 17 Baylor in the Russell Athletic Bowl, Dec. 29, 5:30 PM
Potentially THE most underrated bowl game of the postseason, provided that both teams show up.
Rumble in the Phone Booth:
No. 6 Stanford (11-2) vs. No. 5 Iowa (12-1) in the Rose Bowl, Jan. 1, 5:00 PM
Both teams have great running games, meaning that this should be a dream for fans of old-fashioned, smash-mouth football. The question becomes, will we be “looking LIVE in Pasadena, Calif., folks”?
Rematches, Anyone?
No. 13 Northwestern (10-2) vs. No. 23 Tennessee (8-4) in the Outback Bowl, Jan. 1, 12:00 PM
Recall the 1997 Citrus Bowl?
No. 16 Oklahoma State (10-2) vs. No. 12 Mississippi (9-3) in the Sugar Bowl, Jan. 1, 8:30 PM
Recall the 2004 Cotton Bowl? This time, the results could be reversed.
Upset Alerts:
No. 18 Houston (12-1) vs. No. 9 Florida State (10-2) in the Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl, Dec. 31, 12 PM
The Cougars are going to their first decent bowl game in decades, while the Seminoles might view the Peach Bowl as a come-down after recent BCS/playoff berths.
Offensive Explosion:
No. 15 Oregon (9-3) vs. No. 11 TCU (10-2) in the Valero Alamo Bowl, Jan. 2, 6:45 pm
Ah, Alamo Bowl, you never fail to entertain!
Defensive Struggle:
No. 14 Michigan (9-3) vs. No. 19 Florida (10-3) in the Citrus Bowl, Jan. 1, 1:00 PM
The Citrus Bowl came back! That aside, the Gators have excelled at making games low-scoring, win or lose. Regardless, Jim Harbaugh’s Wolverines will be prepared, and should end up victorious in the end. Also, the matchup of first-year coaches Harbaugh and Jim McElwain is intriguing unto itself.
Great Games No One Is Talking About:
Ohio (8-4) vs. Appalachian State (10-2) in the Raycom Media Camelia Bowl, 5:30 PM
They play this in Montgomery, Ala., in case you were wondering. The Mountaineers are making their FBS bowl debut against a decent Bobcats team.
No. 24 Temple (10-3) vs. Toledo (9-2) in the Marmot Boca Raton Bowl, 7:00 PM
The Owls have proven to be a good team, while the Rockets did beat Arkansas. It’s not a wash, but it should be a close game.
Not Sure What to Make of This One:
UCLA (8-4) vs. Nebraska (5-7) in the Foster Farms Bowl, 9:15 PM
The Cornhuskers are the second team listed here with a 5-7 record. That said, they are better than their record suggests, and, more importantly as far as the bowl committee is concerned, their fans will TRAVEL.
Think there is enough dark blue and gold?
Pittsburgh (8-4) vs. No. 21 Navy (10-2) in the Military Bowl, Dec. 28, 2:30 PM
Why Are They Playing?
Connecticut (6-6) vs. Marshall (9-3) in the St. Petersburg Bowl, Sat., Dec. 26, 11:00 AM
UConn is bowl eligible? That alone is an insult to Marshall, which is actually a decent team.
Plenty of Good Seats Remaining:
San Jose State (5-7) vs. Georgia State (6-6) in the Cure Bowl, Sat., Dec. 19, 7:00 PM
As if Orlando, Fla., did not have enough bowl games, they came up with this one. The Spartans are one of three teams with a 5-7 record but are still going bowling. Meanwhile, the Panthers are only 6-6, meaning that this is a classic example of a garbage bowl game.
They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?
Central Michigan (7-5) vs. Minnesota (5-7) in the Quick Lane Bowl, Mon., Dec. 28, 5:00 PM
This is the latest iteration of what used to be the Little Caesars Bowl (still at Ford Field in Detroit). The Golden Gophers are the third team that is 5-7 and yet still bowl eligible. I can hear Fox Sports’ Colin Cowherd mocking this bowl matchup right now.
College Football Week 14 Awards December 7, 2015
Posted by intellectualgridiron in Sports.Tags: Army, Art Briles, Clay Helton, Clemson, Cougars, Georgia Southern, Georgia State, Houston, Iowa, Kansas State, Mark Dantonio, Rod Carey, Stanford, Tarheels, Temple, Texas, Tigers, USC, Willie Fritz
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A game where Michigan State was favored turned into a low-scoring, high-drama nail-biter that the Spartans had to win to earn their spot in the Playoffs. (Photo: Aaron Doster, USA Today Sports)
(Note: All rankings are current CFP [week 14] unless otherwise noted.)
COACHES
Wish I were him: Mark Dantonio, Michigan State
Glad I’m not him: Rod Carey, Northern Illinois
Lucky guy: Bill Snyder, Kansas State
Poor guy: Art Briles, Baylor
Desperately seeking a wake-up call: Willie Fritz, Georgia Southern
Desperately seeking a P.R. man: Rocky Long, San Diego State
Desperately seeking sunglasses and a fake beard: Art Briles, Baylor
Desperately seeking … anything: Dennis Franchione, Texas State
TEAMS
Thought you’d kick butt, you did: Troy (defeated Louisiana-Lafayette 41-17)
Thought you’d kick butt, you didn’t: Baylor (see below)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you did: Texas State (lost to Arkansas State 55-17)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you didn’t: Texas (see below)
Thought you wouldn’t kick butt, you did: Georgia State (defeated Georgia Southern 34-7)
Dang, they’re good: Stanford
Dang, they’re bad: Louisiana-Lafayette
Can’t Stand Prosperity: Baylor
Did the season start? Baylor
Can the season end? Texas State
Can the season never end? Clemson
GAMES
Play this again: No. 5 Michigan State 16, No. 4 Iowa 13
Play this again, too: No. 1 Clemson 45, No. 10 North Carolina 37
Never play this again: Troy 41, UL-Lafayette 17
What? Georgia State 34, Georgia Southern 7
Huh? Kansas State 24, West Virgina 23
Are you kidding me? No. 4 Michigan State 16, No. 4 Iowa 13
Oh – my – God: Texas 23, No. 12 Baylor 17
NEXT WEEK
Only one game, and it is the annual Army vs. Navy game. God Bless America!
Week 14 Random Thoughts:
Order seems to have triumphed over chaos this week.
Exhibit A: Michigan State vs. Iowa. What should have been a fete accompli for the Spartans turned out to be a knock-down, drag-out, high-drama affair. While that might not have been good for Sparty Nation’s collective ticker, it was certainly great for TV and for fan of good football nationwide. Plus, in the end, Michigan State triumphed, as well they should have, and have now earned their rightful place in the CFB Playoffs.
Exhibit B: Top-ranked Clemson had to work very hard to fend off a hungry, formidable North Carolina squad (no, really!). Despite the Tarheels threatening to win the contest at different points throughout the game, in the end, the Tigers triumphed by the equivalent of a touchdown and a two-point conversion. The Tigers are no in position to win their first national championship since 1981, when Danny Ford was the head coach.*
*But first, they must win their playoff semi-final game. Still, they’re in the Playoffs.
Exhibit C: Despite USC’s strong performance in recent weeks with new coach Clay Helton at the helm, Stanford played to form and potential, and won strongly over the recently formidable Trojans.
Exhibit D: The AAC championship game between Houston and Temple was poised to be one for the ages, at least within the context of the conference. The Owls, historically a gutter program, have become a respected team under head coach Matt Rhule. Let us not forget that they took Notre Dame to the wire this year. In the other corner was Houston, who became surprisingly formidable this year under head coach Tom Herman. While it was certainly a possibility that the No. 22-ranked Owls could have won the game, the No. 19-ranked Houston reigned victoriously in the end, 24-13, in a score somewhat commensurate with the respective rankings, if not a little biased towards the Cougars’ side.
Exhibit E: Given recent team performances over the past, say, three years, one would think that the SEC Championship game between Alabama and Florida would have been a rout in favor for the Crimson Tide. But first-year coach Jim McElwain has turned the Gators around to respectability already, allowing many to believe that the Tide’s triumph was not necessary a given. But was good as No. 15 Florida was, and as valiant as the team’s effort was, No. 2 Alabama won in convincing fashion, 29-15.
The verdict: With no major upsets for the top-ranked teams, no major chaos ensured for the CFP selection committee. Clemson, Alabama, and Michigan State all passed their tests, and now — along with Big XII champ Oklahoma — they will proceed to the playoffs, where they shall truly play for keeps.
College Football Week 13 Awards November 30, 2015
Posted by intellectualgridiron in Sports.Tags: AAC, Air Force, Arkansas State, Chad Morris, Florida, Florida State, Gary Patterson, Lousiana-Monroe, Marshall, New Mexico State, Notre Dame, Oklahoma State, Purdue, Stanford, Temple, Texas, Troy, UCLA, UNC, USC, Washington
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The Bedlam Series between OU and OKST was supposed to be one of the best games of the week but it turned out to be a rout instead. Photo by Mark J. Rebilas, USA Today Sports
(Note: All rankings are current CFP [week 13] unless otherwise noted.)
COACHES
Wish I were him: Mark Dantonio, Michigan State
Glad I’m not him: Jim Harbaugh, Michigan
Lucky guy: Gary Patterson, TCU
Poor guy: Art Briles, Baylor
Desperately seeking a wake-up call: Mike Riley, Nebraska
Desperately seeking a P.R. man: Jeff Brohm, Western Kentucky
Desperately seeking sunglasses and a fake beard: Mike Gundy, Oklahoma State
Desperately seeking … anything: Chad Morris, SMU
TEAMS
Thought you’d kick butt, you did: Memphis (see below)
Thought you’d kick butt, you didn’t: Oregon (defeated Oregon State 52-42)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you did: Central Florida (lost to South Florida 44-3)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you didn’t: South Carolina (lost to No. 1 Clemson 37-32)
Thought you wouldn’t kick butt, you did: Western Kentucky (defeated Marshall 49-28)
Dang, they’re good: Ohio State
Dang, they’re bad: Purdue
Can’t Stand Prosperity: Oklahoma State
Did the season start? Baylor
Can the season end? SMU
Can the season never end? Oklahoma
GAMES
Play this again: No. 17 TCU 28, No. 7 Baylor 21
Play this again, too: No. 9 Stanford 38, No. 6 Notre Dame 36
Never play this again: Memphis 63, SMU 0
What? Washington 45 No. 20 Washington State 10
Huh? USC 40, No. 22 UCLA 21
Double-huh? Houston 52, No. 15 Navy 31
Are you kidding me? No. 9 Stanford 38, No. 6 Notre Dame 36
Oh – my – God: No. 17 TCU 28, No. 7 Baylor 21
NEXT WEEK
Ticket to die for: Michigan State vs. Iowa for the B1G Championship
Also: North Carolina vs. Clemson for the ACC Championship
Best non-Power Five vs. Power Five matchup: none
Best non-Power Five matchup: Temple @ Houston in the AAC Championship
Upset alert: USC vs. Stanford in the Pac-12 Championship
Must win: Baylor @ TCU (Friday, Nov. 27)
Offensive explosion: Washington State @ Washington (Friday, Nov. 27)
Defensive struggle: Alabama vs. Florida in the SEC Championship
Great game no one is talking about: Air Force @ San Diego State
Intriguing coaching matchup: Larry Fedora of UNC vs. Dabo Swinney of Clemson
Who’s bringing the body bags? Texas @ Baylor
Why are they playing? Texas State @ Arkansas State
Plenty of good seats remaining: New Mexico State @ Louisiana-Monroe
They shoot horses, don’t they? Troy @ Louisiana-Lafayette
Week 13 Random Thoughts:
Order seems to have been restored in the Big XII Conference, with Oklahoma having emerge from the recent carnage intact and the clear conference front-runner. Going into the Bedlam Series game against rival Oklahoma State, they were already ranked highly enough to clinch a playoff berth. After defeating the Cowboys on the road in a very convincing fashion, they ought to remain in that coveted spot.
Poor Art Briles. First Oklahoma derailed their championship aspirations, then they lost in the near-freezing rain to TCU. One cannot help but feel for him and his team’s inability to catch a break this year. Better luck next season.
Still, in Briles’ defense, when facing a foe in a constant monsoon of a rain (one where the ambient temperate is roughly 38 degrees), such adverse weather conditions tend to skew teams’ performances unpredictably. Witness unranked Louisville’s upset over then-No. 5 Florida State back in 2002.
Is it too early to point out that we do not know what sort of team we are getting from Texas week-to-week? This same team got off to an horrendous start, albeit to some tough teams, then when everyone left the Longhorns for dead, they upset heavily-favored Oklahoma – the same Oklahoma team that is now surely headed to the playoffs. Then the team turns around and lays a massive egg against lowly Iowa State, embarrasses themselves against West Virginia, and then makes just enough mistakes to lose at home to Texas Tech. This inconsistency is a matter of coaching, as sad as I am to say.
Even though Alabama was supposed to kick butt against Auburn, the Tigers nevertheless made it an engaging, entertaining game, because it was the Iron Bowl.
All that said, this was an excellent weekend for the sport, and the champion games next week are all poised to be entertaining and engaging.
Hello Nebraska. Remember how you fired Bo Pelini because he only went 9-3? How is his replacement, Mike Riley and his 5-7 record work out for you?
Week 12 College Football Awards November 23, 2015
Posted by intellectualgridiron in Sports.add a comment

With undefeated Oklahoma State dropping the game at home to Baylor, the Big XII outlook is officially in chaos. Photo by Tom Pennington of Getty Images.
(Note: All rankings are current CFP [week 12] unless otherwise noted.)
COACHES
Wish I were him: Mark Dantonio, Michigan State
Glad I’m not him: Urban Meyer, Ohio State
Lucky guy: Dan Mullen, Mississippi State
Poor guy: Bret Bielema, Arkansas
Desperately seeking a wake-up call: Mike Gundy, Oklahoma State
Desperately seeking a P.R. man: Willie Taggart, South Florida
Desperately seeking sunglasses and a fake beard: Tommy Tuberville, Cincinnati
Desperately seeking … anything: Les Miles, LSU
TEAMS
Thought you’d kick butt, you did: Alabama (defeated Charleston Southern 56-6)
Thought you’d kick butt, you didn’t: Florida (defeated Florida Atlantic 20-14, OT)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you did: Kansas (lost to West Virginia 49-0)
Thought you’d get your butt kicked, you didn’t: Florida Atlantic (lost to No. 8 Florida 20-14, OT)
Thought you wouldn’t kick butt, you did: South Florida (defeated Cincinnati 65-27)
Dang, they’re good: Oregon
Dang, they’re bad: Fresno State
Can’t Stand Prosperity: Houston
Did the season start? Utah
Can the season end? LSU
Can the season never end? Oklahoma
GAMES
Play this again: Michigan State 17, Ohio State 14
Play this again, too: Mississippi State 51, Arkansas 50
Never play this again: USF 65, Cincinnati 27
What? UCLA 17, No. 13 Utah 9
Huh? UConn 20, No. 19 Houston 17
Double-Huh? No. 22 Ole Miss 38, No. 15 LSU 17
Are you kidding me? The Citadel 23, South Carolina 22
Oh – my – God: No. 9 Michigan State 17, No. 3 Ohio State 14
Told you so: Georgia 23, Georgia Southern 17
NEXT WEEK
Ticket to die for: Oklahoma @ Oklahoma State
Also: Ohio State @ Michigan
Best non-Power Five vs. Power Five matchup: Georgia Southern @ Georgia
Best non-Power Five matchup: Navy @ Houston (Friday, Nov. 27)
Upset alert: Notre Dame @ Stanford
Must win: Baylor @ TCU (Friday, Nov. 27)
Offensive explosion: Washington State @ Washington (Friday, Nov. 27)
Defensive struggle: Missouri @ Arkansas (Friday, Nov. 27)
Great game no one is talking about: Marshall @ Western Kentucky (Friday, Nov. 27)
Intriguing coaching matchup: David Shaw of Stanford vs. Brian Kelly of Notre Dame
Who’s bringing the body bags? No. 1 Clemson @ South Carolina
Why are they playing? SMU @ Memphis
Plenty of good seats remaining: Louisiana Monroe @ Hawaii
They shoot horses, don’t they? Charlotte @ Rice
Week 12 Random Thoughts:
No, this was not quite the “Night of the Living Upsets,” not like last week. But as predicted earlier, more separation has taken place. In addition to all the upsets listed above (some consequential in the context of the CFP, others not so much), Baylor arose from the wreckage of last week to upset undefeated Oklahoma State (more on that later). Also, currently-unranked UCLA did defeat No. 13 Utah as well. To be sure, UCLA is far more formidable than the vast majority of unranked teams. Hence, it will be a tough game between the Bruins and crosstown rival USC this next weekend.
Notre Dame had a very close call against Boston College in Fenway Park. The Irish did triumph in the end, 19-16, but with such a low-scoring, close game, how well might they fare at Stanford? The Cardinal is far more formidable than the Eagles, and the Fighting Irish must venture all the way out to the west coast to play them. Hence, the matchup is ripe for an upset.
Way did you have to win, Baylor? After coughing it up to Oklahoma the other week, that already muddled the playoff outlook for the Big XII Conference. Only with Oklahoma State remaining undefeated and the Sooners coming on very strongly as of late, could clarity for the conference’s playoff hopes remain intact. All that ended with Baylor returning to form to upset the heretofore undefeated Cowboys, who, for the record, did NOT play like a playoff team against the visiting Bears.
So, will next week’s game between Baylor and TCU (fresh off two consecutive losses) still be consequential? It certainly could: the Horned Frogs will be playing to salvage something of their season, while the Bears will be playing to maintain as a high a ranking as possible, which itself ought to be well within the top ten after upsetting Oklahoma State last night.
Meanwhile, the latest installment of the Bedlam Series should still be memorable. The Sooners will be gunning for a Top Four CFP berth, and the Cowboys will be looking to play spoiler and to salvage their season in so doing.
As an aside, Art Briles might have become college football’s new Mark Richt. His team seems like a contender every year, but they always trip up somewhere, unexpectedly, derailing their championship hopes in the process.