On Wednesday, January 8, 2014, the Baseball Writers Association of America (BBWAA) vote for the 2014 Major League Baseball Hall of Fame will be revealed.
Holding the keys to such an elite fraternity must be a daunting task.
You're voting on players to proverbially sit next to Ruth, Aaron, Mays,
Mathewson and the like.
Click here for the list of 2014 candidates
The
pervasive theme the past several years remains the specter of performance enhancing drugs
that infiltrated the league during the so called "Steroid Era". On the
bubble now are the first generation "users", ones that presumably were
clean earlier in their career but found a "fountain of youth" late which
contributed significantly to jaw-dropping numbers. Many, by all
counts, were no doubt Hall of Famers before their transgressions. But
how do you handle this? In my opinion, with little mercy.
If I
were asked to vote (and of course I believe I should be), below
reflects my ballot. It looks very similar to last years' ballot, since nobody got in. Except with the new bumper crop of first time candidates. The players on the ballots these days usually span
my late childhood through young adulthood. I watched and attended a lot
of games and have memories of all these players. I don't think I would
be alone in allowing my personal (but not biased) "feeling" about a
player influence the vote. What I mean by that is, when this player
came to the plate or pitched, what was my feeling of how they would
perform? Did they always seem to get the big hit, pitch their team to
victory, make the heartbreaking defensive play, etc.? Were they a feared entity anytime they stepped between the lines?
This years crop features one 3000 hit club member, three 300 win club members, four 500 HR club members, another three with 400 HR.
Players I would put on my ballot (in order of credibility)
1) Greg Maddux - The whisper around media circles is that Maddux "may" be a unanimous vote. It just takes one to not vote for him so I'm guessing that won't be the case. But 355 wins, 3.16 ERA, 4 Cy Young Awards, 18 Gold Gloves, 6 All-Star games, and a World Series Championship are a strong resume. Probably the greatest pitcher of his generation (Clemens could argue, although his career seemed to resurge about the time he was accused of using PEDs).
Factors against him: 11-14 in Postseason play, "only" one World Series title, .610 winning percentage is middle of the pack for Hall of Fame candidate pitchers
Maddux will get in with somewhere between 92% and 98% of the vote.
2) Tom Glavine - One of three 300 win club candidates (with Maddux and Clemens), a five-time 20-game winner (Maddux only twice), two Cy Young Awards, and 10 All-Star games (more than Maddux). He also won a World Series (with Maddux) in 1995, there just aren't a lot of holes in the resume.
Factors against him: 14-16 in Postseason play, "only" one World Series title (sound familiar). A .600 winning percentage and mediocre ERA (as compared to other greats) at 3.54
Glavine will likely get in, I don't think that much above 80%.
3) Craig Biggio
- The biggest cred Biggio brings is his membership in the 3,000 hit
club. Only Rafael Palmiero (positive PED test), Derek Jeter (still
active, sure-fire first ballot) and Pete Rose (lifetime ban from the
game) are members of that club, but not the Hall of Fame. His batting
average (.281 lifetime) or power numbers (291 home runs) won't wow you,
but another feather in his cap is playing three (defensively
challenging) positions as a regular in his career (C, CF, 2B). He also
has seven All-Star nods, three Top 10 MVP finishes, and four Gold
Gloves. Finished his career 5th in doubles all time.
Factors against him: Ordinary batting average, playing in a small market, lack of postseason success
There may have been some that didn't vote him first ballot in principle,
with 68.2% of the ballot in his debut, he's likely to get the nod right near 78%.
4) Mike Piazza
- He is probably the best power hitting catcher in history not named
Johnny Bench. He smacked 427 career home runs and a .308 batting
average while playing all but 70 games behind the plate. Both those
numbers far exceed Bench (albeit in a different era). He played in
14 All-Star games (over a 15-year span) and finished in the Top 10 in
MVP voting seven times.
Factors against him: Perceived use of PEDs, below-average defensively
Piazza got 57.8% of the vote in his ballot debut, with the PED suspicions, I don't expect that to bump up significantly, his numbers are clearly worthy, those voting against PEDs won't budge.
5) Frank Thomas - The Big Hurt was big when he came into the league, and wasn't just about power, with a career .301 average. I mention big when he came into the league, because he's largely escaped any PED accusations (and even criticized heavily those who used). He got to the 500 career home run plateau (521) and had a .419 career OBP with 1704 career RBI. He was a 2-time MVP and made five All-Star games. The numbers are there.
Factors against him: Never played in a World Series, and voters sometimes do not like to vote in big offensive numbers for a player who accumulated them as a DH (his last season over 90 games at 1B he was 29 years old).
Thomas was very popular with the media, his peers, and fans. He may be close to the cut off because of the deep ballot and because of the first-time voter bias. I think he gets in around 80% of the ballot.
6) Jeff Bagwell
- He was an offensive machine in the mid-1990's, career numbers reflect
that (.297, 449, 1529 RBI). Only Palmeiro, Bonds, Sosa, Thomas, and McGriff on the ballot
have more RBI. More walks than anyone else on the ballot besides Thomas and Bonds (fear factor
and eye), .409 OBP. He also stole 200 bases and was an above average 1B
(Gold Glove in the closet). No hard evidence of PED's, he was a
weight-lifting machine and didn't see anything late in his career that
would lead one to believe he was juicing.
Factors against him: Perceived use of PEDs, playing in a small market, lack of postseason success.
He
moved from 41% of the vote in his first year to 56% in year two to 60% last year. He seems to be trending up, but 15% more would be a stretch. I think he hits low 60% this year and languishes.
7) Larry Walker
- He was another 5-tool player, finished his career with a .313 batting
average, higher than anyone else on the ballot. Let me repeat that, highest batting average of anybody on the ballot. Also stole 200 bases,
also hit 383 home runs. He has so many gold gloves he probably had to
build an extra wing on his trophy case. Like Bagwell, he won one MVP.
He's also a member of the .400 OBP club (he, Bagwell, Thomas, Bonds, and Edgar Martinez
the only four on the ballot).
Factors against him:
Perceived higher numbers due to Colorado, soft-spoken personality,
injury-prone (only 4 seasons of 140+ games).
He only received 22% of the vote last year (regressing), that needs to trend up significantly for people to start noticing. I don't think it will.
8) Edgar Martinez
- He's of the mold of the previous two players. Hit for high average,
good (but not awe inspiring) power, gets on base all the time. While I
am not a fan of the DH, if MLB has it as a position, you can't hold that
against him. With the previous two, defense pushes their case, for
Edgar it can't but he still deserves it. Career .312 hitter, .418 OBP,
slugged .515 (more than McGriff). He's also a member of the 300 HR club
for a guy who didn't try to lift the ball as much as others.
Factors against him: Primarily a DH, played in small market, lack of speed.
He
was voted for the affirmative on 36% of last years ballots flat year-over-year. He needs
to get closer to 50% to continue the momentum, now in his fifth year and not moving much.
9) Lee Smith
- The Hall of Fame is still figuring out how to accommodate closers,
it's my opinion that they are indeed a key element to the game and the
best of the best should be included. With Smith, it's not about the
numbers (ERA, W-L) as much as the raw pile of saves he accumulated. No
matter where he played, he never seemed phase by a momentary lapse of
success. Fourteen seasons in a row of 25 or more saves shows a level of
consistency matched by few. If there are going to be closers in the
HoF, Smith should be there.
Factors against him: Voters don't trend toward closers, wasn't overpowering, lacks team identity.
Received 47.8% of the vote last year, is trending flat or down in his 12th year. Half the people isn't enough!
10) Jeff Kent - Quietly one of the top offensive second basemen of all time. His line across the major stats is .290, 377, and 1518. He has an MVP in his closet, and three other Top 10 finishes. Add to that six All-Star appearances. His numbers dwarf Ryne Sandberg and Roberto Alomar, there's no reason he shouldn't get the vote eventually.
Factors against him: Very average on defense, played in a power era in which his home run numbers aren't considered extraordinary. He was also very cold with the media, just didn't like that part of his job.
I think he will probably follow the Bagwell trajectory, getting near 50% the first few years as his legacy is more discussed and people realize how strong his offensive production really was.
First four out
11) Tim Raines - Rock falls just short on the numbers. Besides
SB's (of which he is more than deserving), his average and power are lackluster, no Gold Gloves. He did accumulate the most
hits of anyone on the ballot (besides Palmeiro, Bonds, and Biggio) playing to the age of
40.
Factors against him: Played in Montreal during his prime, average defense, never was higher than 5th in an MVP vote, not a feared hitter.
At 52.2% now in his seventh year, he made a decent 4% leap last year, but can the momentum continue?
12) Mike Mussina - Without 300 wins, I have trouble putting Moose on my first ballot. No Cy Young Awards, a one-time 20 game winner, five All-Star games. Career ERA is 3.68, again, higher than his peers discussed above. I might come around, but first ballot is way too soon.
Factors against him: Doesn't have 300 wins, wasn't THAT dominant (ERA mediocre), played on winning teams but never won a World Series.
13) Jack Morris
- He was a gamer who was consistent, just not consistently great. A
three-time 20-game winner, but 3.90 ERA shows me he outlasted a lot of
opponents for those wins instead of dominating them. Never had an ERA
below 3.05 in a single season. I probably hold starting pitchers to the
highest standard when considering Hall of Fame, if you start to take
250 game winners and folks with ERA's near 4.00, you start to let in a
lot of slightly better than average pitchers.
Factors against him: ERA, lack of dominating presence, allowed a lot of baserunners (WHIP).
At 67.7% last year, it's 50/50 whether or not that last ballot mojo carries him. I lean toward it not.
14) Fred McGriff
- You can't ignore the near 500 home runs, but he hung on a while to
get so close and wasn't elite enough in his prime to warrant the Hall.
Average defense, below average speed, not an outstanding OBP. He also
never broke 110 RBI in a season.
Factors against him: Low average, lack of dominating seasons, lack of speed.
At
only 20.7% last year, he had a drop from the year before. Numbers are inferior when
compared to the seven hitters I would vote in, I doubt many voters put 8 hitters on their ballot given the talent. He may fall off the ballot.
The remaining repeat
candidates fall into two categories, steroid specter or double digit
ballot opportunities, the numbers aren't there.
Steroid
specter (stats more than deserving, even before they might have juiced, but would not get my vote): Barry
Bonds, Sammy Sosa, Roger Clemens, Rafael Palmeiro, and Mark McGwire
Vets with short stats: Alan Trammell, Don Mattingly, Curt Schilling
Newcomers that might stay on the ballot: Moises Alou, Luis Gonzalez
Much discussion of the 10 vote limit, those who want to vote in PED users (for legit reasons, they're not banned from the game, baseball didn't do it's job, I get it) will certainly hurt those guys who are close (Edgar, Biggio, Bagwell, McGriff, Kent) and might be enough to keep them out. But with a 15 year window, the bubble will get through and if you're deserving, you will eventually get the call.
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Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 12/29/2013
It was a very busy football week, with NFL playoff push coming to an end and the first round of college football bowl games. We lean toward the latter and an 18-year-old freshman running back that led his team to an upset in the Little Caesar's Bowl. Pittsburgh Panthers RB James Conner toted the rock 26 times for 229 yards and a touchdown, as the favored Mid-American Conference Champion Bowling Green Falcons had no answer. Conner had 26 carries one game before, another big win against the Duke Blue Devils (that game 173 yards). Conner shows up for big games, and the Panthers coaching staff will enjoy his performances another three years, or if he turns pro.
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
2013 BCS vs. Playoff analysis, which would be the most fair?
Have you ever heard the expression "be careful what you wish for?" This season, college football narrowly avoided much more controversy than it ended up with in the BCS Championship Game, in which there are few doubts that the two teams belong and should be playing for a title. A few weeks ago, I analyzed how a four-team, and eight-team would have stacked up with the BCS (two-team) playoff the past three seasons, and four-team did the worst (as measured by controversy of excluding teams and being the most equitable) as compared to two-team and eight-team. I think 2013 would have just piled on that conclusion.
For reference, here were the final BCS Standings (recognizing these won't be used exclusively going forward, but provide some reference to how teams rank in human and computer polls).
Final BCS Standings Top 10
1. Florida State (13-0) .9957
2. Auburn (12-1) .9638
3. Alabama (11-1) .9061
4. Michigan State (12-1) .8600
5. Stanford (11-2) .8191
6. Baylor (11-1) .7722
7. Ohio State (12-1) .7705
8. Missouri (11-2) .7256
9. South Carolina (10-2) .7152
10. Oregon (10-2) .5811
Nobody can argue Florida State, as the only undefeated team in college football, is the clear #1 seed no matter what playoff system we use.
Few are arguing that Auburn isn't the clear #2. As much as Alabama wants to argue they have style points over the whole season, a win on the field prevails and Auburn is the best one-loss team (despite a 2 TD loss earlier in the season).
Now things get more complicated. The next five teams are either a one-loss conference champion (Michigan State, Baylor), a one-loss non-champ to a team above them (Ohio State and Alabama), or a two-loss Stanford team that played the toughest schedule (according to Sagarin, all SOS going forward will reference this).
The case for each:
Alabama - one loss in the last second, on the road, to a rival. Despite playing in the SEC, the out of conference schedule wasn't too challenging, plus they played the two worst teams from the East (Kentucky and Tennessee), leading to a 46th overall strength-of-schedule. The team only played four road games (lost to Auburn, great game at Texas A&M, then easy wins at Mississippi State and Kentucky). They more than passed the eye test by only allowing more than 17 points twice (Texas A&M and Auburn). They seemingly put up points with ease when they needed to, but didn't register video game numbers like others.
Michigan State - Nobody was talking about this team all year, because of their conference rival Ohio State's seemingly foregone conference title. The Spartans struggled early in the season with offense, but found a rhythm late, including plenty against the Buckeyes. Michigan State's SOS is 56, but not real big wins outside of the Big 10 Conference Championship Game. Their only loss was narrow (and low scoring) at Notre Dame, oh to have that game back. This team isn't big on the eye test, but the win over OSU helps (see a theme here). Their biggest win BESIDES that one would probably have to be, uhhhh, Iowa?
Stanford - Two losses is the condemning factor here. But they won the Pac 12, the highest rated conference according to Sagarin. And finished with the 4th toughest schedule in the country, far and away the best in the BCS Top 10 (Auburn #20 is closest). Their biggest win was Oregon, then Arizona State twice, UCLA, and Notre Dame (much better than Michigan State down the line). Oh but the two losses, both on the road by a combined 9 points, but to enigma USC (forgivable) and then Utah (unforgivable). Without the Utah loss I think it's clear cut. With it, I have trouble putting them above the stiff competition discussed here. They eye test is solid, when they're good, they look like they could beat anybody.
Ohio State - After Auburn beat Alabama, the Buckeyes had the inside track to the BCS Championship Game. Then lost (and was really beaten) by the above Michigan State. With a similar SOS to Michigan State (#57), they fit the same bill. An impressive win against Wisconsin, but after that, once again, Iowa looks like their best quality opponent. And they almost lost to Michigan but for a 2-point conversion stop. The eye test is what carries them, lots of athletes on the field and they can score with ease. Suspect defense causes some trepidation if they were to play a team like FSU or Auburn.
Baylor - Nobody gives the Bears near as much credit for their 11-1 run vs. the above resumes. Maybe it's their SOS at 61, the worst among the group. But they did win their conference (two of the above didn't). Their loss was the ugliest of the lot, blown out (and exposed) on the road to Oklahoma State in a game that was never close. Their most impressive wins were blowout wins over Texas and Oklahoma (who would have thought we would be saying that ten years ago). The eye test is valid, they put up points in a hurry and can run or pass and play better defense than given credit for. It's just a matter of how much one bad day penalizes you.
So two of these five would make the four-team playoff. If it's conference titles you lean toward then it's two of Michigan State, Stanford, and Baylor. If you want the best eye test, it's probably Stanford and Alabama. If you want the best TV ratings or fans that travel, it's probably Alabama and Ohio State. If you're drinking the SEC punch, it's Alabama and Missouri (or South Carolina).
What I think the committee would do: Add Alabama and Michigan State. Stanford's two losses eliminate them, and Baylor's SOS eliminates them. Ohio State can't get in over Michigan State and wouldn't over Alabama. The committee keeps sword-rattling that SOS is important, though, would that carry Stanford? Either way, tough questions for the committee at the presser after the decision was made.
What I would do: All conference champions. Stanford is in because of SOS in the best conference. Then Michigan State because of closer loss (than Baylor) and slightly better best win (Ohio State vs. Oklahoma).
Who I think are the best four teams in the nation: Florida State, Auburn, Alabama, and Stanford.
It will be interesting who the committee reconciles that.
If there were an eight team playoff, who I would add: Story for another blog. Next two up are Missouri and South Carolina, the latter beat the former, but the former won the SEC East. Would also be a third SEC team, is that fair? Oregon suffered a BAD loss to Arizona. Off that Top 10 is Oklahoma (ugly losses to Texas and Baylor). And American Athletic Conference Champion Central Florida, just one loss, but to the aforementioned South Carolina. I'd just give FSU a first round bye. But if I had to pick, South Carolina by virtue of head-to-head over Missouri (and quality out-of-conference wins vs. Central Florida, ACC powerhouse Clemson, and bowl participant North Carolina in addition to an SEC schedule).
So going back to the rankings I gave the fairness of the systems in the previous blog
BCS: A (not perfectly clear, but pretty close)
4-team: C- (there are good teams not in)
8-team: B- (just the eighth team is hard to rectify).
As I said, be careful what you wish for. Anybody who thinks a four-team playoff will be better may not have thought it through.
For reference, here were the final BCS Standings (recognizing these won't be used exclusively going forward, but provide some reference to how teams rank in human and computer polls).
Final BCS Standings Top 10
1. Florida State (13-0) .9957
2. Auburn (12-1) .9638
3. Alabama (11-1) .9061
4. Michigan State (12-1) .8600
5. Stanford (11-2) .8191
6. Baylor (11-1) .7722
7. Ohio State (12-1) .7705
8. Missouri (11-2) .7256
9. South Carolina (10-2) .7152
10. Oregon (10-2) .5811
Nobody can argue Florida State, as the only undefeated team in college football, is the clear #1 seed no matter what playoff system we use.
Few are arguing that Auburn isn't the clear #2. As much as Alabama wants to argue they have style points over the whole season, a win on the field prevails and Auburn is the best one-loss team (despite a 2 TD loss earlier in the season).
The BCS gave us a clear-cut two teams, will we be as lucky to avoid controversy next year? |
Now things get more complicated. The next five teams are either a one-loss conference champion (Michigan State, Baylor), a one-loss non-champ to a team above them (Ohio State and Alabama), or a two-loss Stanford team that played the toughest schedule (according to Sagarin, all SOS going forward will reference this).
The case for each:
Alabama - one loss in the last second, on the road, to a rival. Despite playing in the SEC, the out of conference schedule wasn't too challenging, plus they played the two worst teams from the East (Kentucky and Tennessee), leading to a 46th overall strength-of-schedule. The team only played four road games (lost to Auburn, great game at Texas A&M, then easy wins at Mississippi State and Kentucky). They more than passed the eye test by only allowing more than 17 points twice (Texas A&M and Auburn). They seemingly put up points with ease when they needed to, but didn't register video game numbers like others.
Alabama but for one play would be playing for their third straight title |
Michigan State - Nobody was talking about this team all year, because of their conference rival Ohio State's seemingly foregone conference title. The Spartans struggled early in the season with offense, but found a rhythm late, including plenty against the Buckeyes. Michigan State's SOS is 56, but not real big wins outside of the Big 10 Conference Championship Game. Their only loss was narrow (and low scoring) at Notre Dame, oh to have that game back. This team isn't big on the eye test, but the win over OSU helps (see a theme here). Their biggest win BESIDES that one would probably have to be, uhhhh, Iowa?
Michigan State finally got a signature win against the Ohio State Buckeyes to win the Big 10 |
Stanford danced all over tough competition, but lost to a bad Utah team |
Ohio State has the same problem as Alabama, wrong loss at the wrong time to lose the conference |
The high-flying Big 12 Champ Bears resume may not stack up against other conference champs |
What I think the committee would do: Add Alabama and Michigan State. Stanford's two losses eliminate them, and Baylor's SOS eliminates them. Ohio State can't get in over Michigan State and wouldn't over Alabama. The committee keeps sword-rattling that SOS is important, though, would that carry Stanford? Either way, tough questions for the committee at the presser after the decision was made.
What I would do: All conference champions. Stanford is in because of SOS in the best conference. Then Michigan State because of closer loss (than Baylor) and slightly better best win (Ohio State vs. Oklahoma).
Who I think are the best four teams in the nation: Florida State, Auburn, Alabama, and Stanford.
It will be interesting who the committee reconciles that.
If there were an eight team playoff, who I would add: Story for another blog. Next two up are Missouri and South Carolina, the latter beat the former, but the former won the SEC East. Would also be a third SEC team, is that fair? Oregon suffered a BAD loss to Arizona. Off that Top 10 is Oklahoma (ugly losses to Texas and Baylor). And American Athletic Conference Champion Central Florida, just one loss, but to the aforementioned South Carolina. I'd just give FSU a first round bye. But if I had to pick, South Carolina by virtue of head-to-head over Missouri (and quality out-of-conference wins vs. Central Florida, ACC powerhouse Clemson, and bowl participant North Carolina in addition to an SEC schedule).
How would this Eight-team playoff look to you? |
So going back to the rankings I gave the fairness of the systems in the previous blog
BCS: A (not perfectly clear, but pretty close)
4-team: C- (there are good teams not in)
8-team: B- (just the eighth team is hard to rectify).
As I said, be careful what you wish for. Anybody who thinks a four-team playoff will be better may not have thought it through.
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Monday, December 23, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 12/22/2013
Not often a kicker stars above and beyond all other Sportsmen (and Sportswomen) but this week is an exception. Justin Tucker of the Baltimore Ravens single-handedly kicked his team back into playoff contention by connecting on six field goals, the last over 60 yards as time expired, to lift the Ravens to an improbable 18-16 victory over the Detroit Lions (putting a dagger in their post-season hopes). Tucker connected from 29, 24, 32, 49, 53, then 61 as the clock expired. Totaling 248 yards (and roughly 23 fantasy points), Tucker gets the nod for Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week!
Saturday, December 21, 2013
Six Keys to picking the 2013-14 Bowl season (and BCS Title Game Preview)
Beginning today, there will be 35 Division 1 Football Bowl Subdivision Bowl games in 16 days as the 2013-2014 College Football season ends with a flourish. All the games are more or less set up to match similarly talented teams, giving analysts a field day in their predictions. Much like March Madness, experts and novices alike love to fill out their bowl picks, compare, contrast, cheer for teams they've never cheered for before, and maybe gamble a little money in the process. Well if it's gambling, then J.R. Ewing (that's me) has you covered. Here we look at six major factors that don't usually figure into picking regular season games, analyze the BCS Championship Game in Pasadena, then go into a Top 5 "Best Bets." Remembering that this year is the before a four-team playoff begins next season.
1. How did we end up here?
When the dust settles and bowl invitations are distributed, there's always a few teams excited at the opportunity, and more than a few who didn't want to be there. Whether they lost a game they shouldn't have, or to a rival, or just got a raw deal, this factors into teams' performance. Three teams that immediately come to mind in the latter category are the Ohio State Buckeyes, Alabama Crimson Tide, and Oregon Ducks.
Ohio State was 60 minutes and a slight favorite to win the Big 10 Championship, but was upset in the title game by a tough Michigan State Spartans squad. Interestingly, Michigan State was probably Pasadena-bound (Rose Bowl) win or lose, But they won if nothing else to spoil their rivals hopes of a BCS Title game shot (Conference Title games are still a good idea, right)? Now the Buckeyes are headed to the Orange Bowl in Miami instead to face a hungry Clemson Tigers team who just two years ago were humiliated in this same venue when they lost to West Virginia giving up 70 points. On top of that, this is the first Ohio State loss in two years and the first under Urban Meyer. Will they come out hungry? I think not. Despite being a two - three point favorite, I go with the Tigers (+115) straight up.
Alabama likewise were playing for their own fate to punch their ticket to Pasadena. In fact, the were just an overtime away from an SEC title game berth as they saw their hopes slip away on that improbable 100+ yard field goal attempt return derail their push, this time, with no recovery with one-loss as in the past two years. Now at home and stewing, how will they respond to a plain old Sugar Bowl berth against the Oklahoma Sooners? Nick Saban has consistently coached this team to success after losses, twice to win National Championships after the season settled out. Saban gets his teams attention after losses. I look for the Tide to bounce back behind A.J. McCarron and easily cover the 15 points spread.
The biggest obstacle experts thought might keep Oregon from the BCS Championship Game were if there were too many undefeated teams. Oregon should have kept their heads down and taken care of their own business, but suffered two defeats to the eventual Pac 12 Title game participants. They looked attractive as a potential BCS at-large, but fell all the way to the Alamo Bowl in San Antonio to play an unranked (and lame duck coach, no pun intended) team in the Texas Longhorns. How excited are they going to be after playing in the BCS for four straight seasons? I'm not sure, nor am I sure how Texas will respond to their circumstances, so I'm calling the Alamo Bowl a "no play".
2. My Kingdom for a healthy QB
Despite the month or longer break to get healthy, several teams are without season-long starting quarterbacks headed into their bowl game. The good news is that they have two full practice weeks to adjust their plays. The bad news is that the other team gets two weeks to look at tape and perhaps throw in some defensive wrinkles to test that inexperience. This is not as big a deal as you might expect, over one game, good QBs can play badly, mediocre QBs can excel. Garrett Gilbert almost led the Longhorns to victory after Colt McCoy was hurt in the 2009 BCS Championship game. Heisman winners Geno Toretta and Chris Weinke both pitched duds in title games. So all is not lost, but three teams that fit this description are LSU, Georgia, and Texas Tech
LSU senior QB, and NFL prospect Zach Mettenberger went down at the very end of the Tigers regular season finale against rival Arkansas. Anthony Jennings jumped right in to lead the Tigers to a last minute thrilling victory. LSU has talent all over the offensive field, particularly at skill positions. They'll face an Iowa team in the Outback Bowl that is physically overmatched. I expect Jennings to keep it steady and do just enough for the Tigers. Against the 8 points, I'd probably take Iowa, but probably a "no play" on this one.
The Georgia Bulldogs lost the SEC's all time leading passer (yes, more than all Mannings, Tebows, Wuerffels) Aaron Murray to a knee injury late in the season. The Bulldogs overcame a slow start to defeat rival Georgia Tech with Hutson Mason at the helm throwing for nearly 300 yards and 2 TD. Now he faces an unsteady Nebraska defense that struggled to resemble the black shirts of years past. Much like the LSU Tigers, I see Georgia winning but would probably see Nebraska covering. Another "no play" here.
The Texas Tech Red Raiders started off the season 7-0 and a Top 10 ranking with what seemed (at the time) to be impressive wins against West Virginia and TCU. Then they played the other five bowl teams from the Big 12 and lost all five all by a TD or more as West Virginia and TCU both scuffled to disappointing seasons. While their QB for most the season, walk-on freshman Baker Mayfield, is healthy, he's seeking a transfer after rotating a lot during their final stretch of losses and feeling out of place in Lubbock. There are two QBs in Kliff Kingsbury's stable, but it's not going to matter. Pac 12 South winner Arizona State will roll over the Red Raiders in the Holiday Bowl. Two touchdowns are not near enough, take the Sun Devils all the way to the bank!
3. Show me a QB with experience and I'll show you a winning QB.
A long delay between the final regular season (or conference title) game and the bowl game can lead to rust, uneven play, or mental mistakes in the bowl game. These can steamroll quickly if not for on-field leadership to calm the tide. I like experience QBs, particularly those playing in their final college game, as something reliable to play on in the bowl season. Look no further than seasoned veterans John Manziel, A.J. McCarron, and Jordan Lynch.
John Manziel, a.k.a. Johnny Football, has only played two season but has a ton of experience. Two epic battles against Alabama, huge comeback wins, some injuries, yet no defense behind him. And, of course, a Heisman. Texas A&M has a more formidable opponent than most people realize in the Duke Blue Devils in the Chick Fil-A Bowl in Atlanta. Note that Duke has 10 wins and won the ACC Coastal Division. With coach David Cutcliffe at the helm, the Blue Devils will be innovative on offense and test the porous Aggies defense. But Manziel, with a month to heal from some bumps and bruises he had late in the season, should be able to answer. At a point spread of fewer than two TDs, I take the Aggies here, behind Manziel. The Chick Fil-A bowl is used to big crowds because of its geography near the ACC and SEC participants, it will be interesting to see if Duke travels for a bowl game, and if Texas A&M fans (a bit further than a Georgia or Auburn or South Carolina) storm Atlanta to see their QB play his final game (presuming he turns pro).
A.J. McCarron has done just about nothing but win his entire career at Alabama as he currently sits at 36-3 as a starter. As the Heisman runner-up, he'll wrap up his career in the Sugar Bowl against the Oklahoma Sooners. A leader like he is just the guy to help the Tide rebound from their only loss of the season and easily Roll over the Sooners. As stated above, take Alabama and give the points.
Northern Illinois could also qualify as a team disappointed in their bowl destination. Having dropped the MAC Championship Game, instead of getting the Big 12 Champion Baylor Bears in Glendale, they'll draw a tough Utah State squad in the Poinsettia Bowl in San Diego. The game is a near Pick'em, but I'm putting my faith in the Heisman finalist Lynch to put his team on his back and rebound from their only regular season loss. Take them straight up (near pick'em anyway).
4. My Conference is better than yours!
Pundits usually use the Bowl season as their litmus test for conference strength. It's not quite as easy as wins and losses, but you certianly want to know which conferences led to teams with records not indicative of a potential record in other conference. Here we look at the SEC, Big 12, and ACC and how they stack up.
The Big 12 had a down year. Last year they had nine bowl teams (out of ten), this year only six, and a couple are suspect (I'm talking about you Texas Tech and Kansas State). TCU, West Virginia, and Iowa State took huge steps back. The conference has a very tough draw, with their champion Baylor facing the fifth best opponent (out of six) per the final BCS standings (UCF, #15). They also face #3 Alabama, #8 Missouri, #10 Oregon, and #14 Arizona State (unranked Michigan the other). All are double digit underdogs except Oklahoma State facing Missouri in the Cotton Bowl. The former Big 12 (and Big 8) rivals are familiar with each other and will be out to prove conference strength. At the end of the day, Oklahoma State didn't play as tough a schedule as Missouri and will likely get exposed. At a near pick'em, take the Missouri Tigers. The Big 12 has only won one Cotton Bowl against the SEC in the last nine contests, and that was no team other than Missouri.
The SEC probably was a little weaker than expected (sky high expectations, but still). With Florida, Georgia, Ole Miss, Texas A&M, Mississippi State, and LSU not reaching preseason expectations. That, and the combined conference record of 2-22 for doormats Arkansas, Kentucky, and Tennessee and it wasn't as hard for teams like South Carolina and Missouri to emerge as the beasts of the East. An intriguing matchup is Vanderbilt Commodors vs. Houston Cougars in the BBVA Compass Bowl; how does a 4-4 Commodore team (SEC tested) without their starting QB match up with a 5-3 AAC opponent in Houston? Houston hung tough with teams like BYU, UCF, Cincinnati, and Louisville in close losses. They might have a surprise for Vandy, I'm picking the Cougars straight up (+120). The last time we saw the Cougars in postseason action they beat Penn State so they're not intimidated by higher profile foes.
The ACC is finally looking like a conference worthy of the same conversation as the SEC, Big 12, Big 10, or Pac 12. Mostly considered the 5th out of those in the last decade (no title game appearances in forever and very few BCS wins). We'll get to the title game (and FSU) in a minute, I touched on expected Clemson success and Duke challenges above. Another bellwether game is Georgia Tech against Ole Miss in the Music City Bowl. Georgia Tech can't beat an SEC team to save their lives. Georgia Tech was 5-3 in the ACC, Ole Miss 3-5 in the SEC. Vegas calls it a 3 point favorite for Ole Miss. I think they handle Georgia Tech with ease, book this one for the Rebels and give the 3 points.
5. I recognize these people, they are my fans!
Bowl games are always likely to try to pull a local team in to guarantee some ticket sales and keep up local interest. An example where this didn't happen was the Houston Bowl, featuring Minnesota and Syracuse (sellout unlikely). Where it did work well, was the Texas Longhorns playing within 100 miles of campus in San Antonio, the North Carolina Tar Heels playing in state at Charlotte, and Rutgers playing at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, New York.
The Texas Longhorns play at the Alamo Bowl for the second straight year. For the third straight year, they come into their bowl game at 8-4 or 7-5. This is not their expected success, and as a result Mack Brown is stepping down after 16 seasons. As mentioned above, Oregon has a lot of motivation questions but way more talent than the Longhorns. At the end of the day, as mentioned above, there are too many non-football factors to play. But expect more orange on the River Walk than green.
North Carolina is one of the hotter teams in college football. They went 5-1 after October 17 with just a narrow defeat to Coastal Division Champion (and arch rival) Duke Blue Devils. They'll face a Cincinnati Bearcats team in the Belk Bowl that is good, but not that great. Carolina scores a lot of points and is from a better conference and will win this one with ease. As mild 2 point favorites, give the points and chuckle that bettors are scared off by a 6-6 record (all losses were to bowl teams).
Notre Dame could easily qualify as a team that could say "I thought we would go somewhere warm this winter, why are we in New York City?" But the Fighting Irish love big city games, like their upcoming matchup vs. Boston College at Fenway Park. Brian Kelly is a great motivator coach and will certainly have his team up. Across the field will be the Rutgers Scarlet Knights, just a short 50 miles and a tunnel drive from their Piscataway , NJ. Since Notre Dame has a national following (not to mention a strong Catholic population in greater New York) there isn't that much of a home field advantage. In fact, it might be more 50/50 by the time the dust settles. It's 2 TDs for a point spread, I take the superior talented Irish. My only concern is that Notre Dame frequently plays down to inferior opponents, but Rutgers really isn't that good.
6. Who is my coach?
Part of the bowl season is the fact that some programs have coaches that have left their program, others fired theirs because the bowl they are in isn't enough. We've covered Texas enough, but Boise State, Washington, and Bowling Green have coaching shifts of this kind. Obviously Southern California falls in this category, but is playing their game as I write this.
Boise State head coach Chris Petersen has moved on to coach Washington, (whose coach moved onto USC). They'll bring back former offensive coordinator Bryan Harsin (most recently head coach at Arkansas State) but in the meantime have a manageable draw in the Hawaii Bowl against Oregon State (who endured a season in which they had a very tough schedule and lost most games they were supposed to lose). Boise State is a system. It has had good coaches, but the system and program gets them by. I'm not sold on Oregon State, who hasn't won since October 19 in facing a gauntlet of Pac 12 powerhouses the second half of the season. Oddly, Oregon State is giving points here, probably because of their effort against the Oregon Ducks. Boise State loves playing bigger programs and will be focused, head coach or not. Take the Broncos straight up at +130.
Washington Huskies are a good 8-4 team in a very good conference. Losses were to outstanding teams as they will face BYU in the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl. As an Independent, BYU played a very solid schedule, including Notre Dame, Texas, Boise State, Wisconsin, and Georgia Tech (in all, eight bowl teams). I feel like the Huskies aren't going to miss a beat without their coach and have a bright future with the Petersen hire. I'm taking the Huskies and giving the 3 to 3.5 points.
Bowling Green changed the entire landscape of the BCS with their upset win over the Northern Illinois Huskies to win the MAC (Oklahoma Sooners give thanks). Their reward is a Little Caesar's Bowl matchup with ACC middling Pittsburgh Panthers. Poor Pitt, many will think. But then Bowling Green's head coach leaves for the ACC's Wake Forest and I'm not sure this team can win two straight big games. Pittsburgh played 9 bowl teams, including wins against Notre Dame and Duke. Their worst loss might be Navy, not bad. I think Pitt plays inspired against a so-so Bowling Green squad. At +175, I'm taking the Panthers straight up.
7. BCS Championship Game: Auburn Tigers (+250) vs. Florida State Seminoles (-8.5)
So in all of the above, we didn't touch on the BCS Championship Game. It turns out that teams that make the title game do not have coaching or QB issues, are playing in the exact bowl they want to be playing in, and in this case, nowhere near home. Certainly conference strength and matchup has to be factored, but Florida State ran roughshod through the weaker ACC (closest game was 14 points) with barely a challenge while Auburn played a number of close games throughout the year plus lost one game by 14 points against a decent, but not outstanding LSU. Both teams score a ton of points, it's Florida State's game to lose. The recipe for Auburn to win is to get up early on Florida State (since they're not used to coming back, Auburn is). Or get in a 4th quarter shootout, Auburn will believe it can win, Florida State and their freshman QB (albeit a Heisman winner Jameis Winston) might falter. Plus the SEC consecutive title streak, there is something to it. But I see FSU jumping out ahead and their defense is better than advertised. Florida State 41, Auburn 28. Give the points and take the Noles.
Here are the Top 5 "Best Bets":
Arizona State (-14) vs. Texas Tech
North Carolina (-2) vs. Cincinnati
Clemson (+115) vs. Ohio State
Missouri (PK) vs. Oklahoma State
Pittsburgh (+175) vs. Bowling Green
Here's wishing all college football fans a fun and relaxing bowl season!
1. How did we end up here?
When the dust settles and bowl invitations are distributed, there's always a few teams excited at the opportunity, and more than a few who didn't want to be there. Whether they lost a game they shouldn't have, or to a rival, or just got a raw deal, this factors into teams' performance. Three teams that immediately come to mind in the latter category are the Ohio State Buckeyes, Alabama Crimson Tide, and Oregon Ducks.
Michigan State sent Ohio State to their first loss under Urban Meyer |
Alabama likewise were playing for their own fate to punch their ticket to Pasadena. In fact, the were just an overtime away from an SEC title game berth as they saw their hopes slip away on that improbable 100+ yard field goal attempt return derail their push, this time, with no recovery with one-loss as in the past two years. Now at home and stewing, how will they respond to a plain old Sugar Bowl berth against the Oklahoma Sooners? Nick Saban has consistently coached this team to success after losses, twice to win National Championships after the season settled out. Saban gets his teams attention after losses. I look for the Tide to bounce back behind A.J. McCarron and easily cover the 15 points spread.
The biggest obstacle experts thought might keep Oregon from the BCS Championship Game were if there were too many undefeated teams. Oregon should have kept their heads down and taken care of their own business, but suffered two defeats to the eventual Pac 12 Title game participants. They looked attractive as a potential BCS at-large, but fell all the way to the Alamo Bowl in San Antonio to play an unranked (and lame duck coach, no pun intended) team in the Texas Longhorns. How excited are they going to be after playing in the BCS for four straight seasons? I'm not sure, nor am I sure how Texas will respond to their circumstances, so I'm calling the Alamo Bowl a "no play".
2. My Kingdom for a healthy QB
Despite the month or longer break to get healthy, several teams are without season-long starting quarterbacks headed into their bowl game. The good news is that they have two full practice weeks to adjust their plays. The bad news is that the other team gets two weeks to look at tape and perhaps throw in some defensive wrinkles to test that inexperience. This is not as big a deal as you might expect, over one game, good QBs can play badly, mediocre QBs can excel. Garrett Gilbert almost led the Longhorns to victory after Colt McCoy was hurt in the 2009 BCS Championship game. Heisman winners Geno Toretta and Chris Weinke both pitched duds in title games. So all is not lost, but three teams that fit this description are LSU, Georgia, and Texas Tech
The LSU Tigers will be without their NFL-bound QB Zach Metternburger in the Outback Bowl |
The Georgia Bulldogs lost the SEC's all time leading passer (yes, more than all Mannings, Tebows, Wuerffels) Aaron Murray to a knee injury late in the season. The Bulldogs overcame a slow start to defeat rival Georgia Tech with Hutson Mason at the helm throwing for nearly 300 yards and 2 TD. Now he faces an unsteady Nebraska defense that struggled to resemble the black shirts of years past. Much like the LSU Tigers, I see Georgia winning but would probably see Nebraska covering. Another "no play" here.
The Texas Tech Red Raiders started off the season 7-0 and a Top 10 ranking with what seemed (at the time) to be impressive wins against West Virginia and TCU. Then they played the other five bowl teams from the Big 12 and lost all five all by a TD or more as West Virginia and TCU both scuffled to disappointing seasons. While their QB for most the season, walk-on freshman Baker Mayfield, is healthy, he's seeking a transfer after rotating a lot during their final stretch of losses and feeling out of place in Lubbock. There are two QBs in Kliff Kingsbury's stable, but it's not going to matter. Pac 12 South winner Arizona State will roll over the Red Raiders in the Holiday Bowl. Two touchdowns are not near enough, take the Sun Devils all the way to the bank!
3. Show me a QB with experience and I'll show you a winning QB.
A long delay between the final regular season (or conference title) game and the bowl game can lead to rust, uneven play, or mental mistakes in the bowl game. These can steamroll quickly if not for on-field leadership to calm the tide. I like experience QBs, particularly those playing in their final college game, as something reliable to play on in the bowl season. Look no further than seasoned veterans John Manziel, A.J. McCarron, and Jordan Lynch.
Manziel led the Aggies to a laugher against OU last year in the Cotton Bowl |
A.J. McCarron has done just about nothing but win his entire career at Alabama as he currently sits at 36-3 as a starter. As the Heisman runner-up, he'll wrap up his career in the Sugar Bowl against the Oklahoma Sooners. A leader like he is just the guy to help the Tide rebound from their only loss of the season and easily Roll over the Sooners. As stated above, take Alabama and give the points.
Northern Illinois could also qualify as a team disappointed in their bowl destination. Having dropped the MAC Championship Game, instead of getting the Big 12 Champion Baylor Bears in Glendale, they'll draw a tough Utah State squad in the Poinsettia Bowl in San Diego. The game is a near Pick'em, but I'm putting my faith in the Heisman finalist Lynch to put his team on his back and rebound from their only regular season loss. Take them straight up (near pick'em anyway).
4. My Conference is better than yours!
Pundits usually use the Bowl season as their litmus test for conference strength. It's not quite as easy as wins and losses, but you certianly want to know which conferences led to teams with records not indicative of a potential record in other conference. Here we look at the SEC, Big 12, and ACC and how they stack up.
The Big 12 had a down year. Last year they had nine bowl teams (out of ten), this year only six, and a couple are suspect (I'm talking about you Texas Tech and Kansas State). TCU, West Virginia, and Iowa State took huge steps back. The conference has a very tough draw, with their champion Baylor facing the fifth best opponent (out of six) per the final BCS standings (UCF, #15). They also face #3 Alabama, #8 Missouri, #10 Oregon, and #14 Arizona State (unranked Michigan the other). All are double digit underdogs except Oklahoma State facing Missouri in the Cotton Bowl. The former Big 12 (and Big 8) rivals are familiar with each other and will be out to prove conference strength. At the end of the day, Oklahoma State didn't play as tough a schedule as Missouri and will likely get exposed. At a near pick'em, take the Missouri Tigers. The Big 12 has only won one Cotton Bowl against the SEC in the last nine contests, and that was no team other than Missouri.
The SEC usually gets to best of the Big 12, this trend is likely to continue |
The ACC is finally looking like a conference worthy of the same conversation as the SEC, Big 12, Big 10, or Pac 12. Mostly considered the 5th out of those in the last decade (no title game appearances in forever and very few BCS wins). We'll get to the title game (and FSU) in a minute, I touched on expected Clemson success and Duke challenges above. Another bellwether game is Georgia Tech against Ole Miss in the Music City Bowl. Georgia Tech can't beat an SEC team to save their lives. Georgia Tech was 5-3 in the ACC, Ole Miss 3-5 in the SEC. Vegas calls it a 3 point favorite for Ole Miss. I think they handle Georgia Tech with ease, book this one for the Rebels and give the 3 points.
5. I recognize these people, they are my fans!
Bowl games are always likely to try to pull a local team in to guarantee some ticket sales and keep up local interest. An example where this didn't happen was the Houston Bowl, featuring Minnesota and Syracuse (sellout unlikely). Where it did work well, was the Texas Longhorns playing within 100 miles of campus in San Antonio, the North Carolina Tar Heels playing in state at Charlotte, and Rutgers playing at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, New York.
Mack Brown is 2-0 in Alamo Bowls will he finish his Longhorn coaching career undefeated in SA? |
North Carolina is one of the hotter teams in college football. They went 5-1 after October 17 with just a narrow defeat to Coastal Division Champion (and arch rival) Duke Blue Devils. They'll face a Cincinnati Bearcats team in the Belk Bowl that is good, but not that great. Carolina scores a lot of points and is from a better conference and will win this one with ease. As mild 2 point favorites, give the points and chuckle that bettors are scared off by a 6-6 record (all losses were to bowl teams).
Notre Dame could easily qualify as a team that could say "I thought we would go somewhere warm this winter, why are we in New York City?" But the Fighting Irish love big city games, like their upcoming matchup vs. Boston College at Fenway Park. Brian Kelly is a great motivator coach and will certainly have his team up. Across the field will be the Rutgers Scarlet Knights, just a short 50 miles and a tunnel drive from their Piscataway , NJ. Since Notre Dame has a national following (not to mention a strong Catholic population in greater New York) there isn't that much of a home field advantage. In fact, it might be more 50/50 by the time the dust settles. It's 2 TDs for a point spread, I take the superior talented Irish. My only concern is that Notre Dame frequently plays down to inferior opponents, but Rutgers really isn't that good.
6. Who is my coach?
Part of the bowl season is the fact that some programs have coaches that have left their program, others fired theirs because the bowl they are in isn't enough. We've covered Texas enough, but Boise State, Washington, and Bowling Green have coaching shifts of this kind. Obviously Southern California falls in this category, but is playing their game as I write this.
'Tis the season for introductions of new head coaches (Petersen), bowl game of current team be damned |
Washington Huskies are a good 8-4 team in a very good conference. Losses were to outstanding teams as they will face BYU in the Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl. As an Independent, BYU played a very solid schedule, including Notre Dame, Texas, Boise State, Wisconsin, and Georgia Tech (in all, eight bowl teams). I feel like the Huskies aren't going to miss a beat without their coach and have a bright future with the Petersen hire. I'm taking the Huskies and giving the 3 to 3.5 points.
Bowling Green changed the entire landscape of the BCS with their upset win over the Northern Illinois Huskies to win the MAC (Oklahoma Sooners give thanks). Their reward is a Little Caesar's Bowl matchup with ACC middling Pittsburgh Panthers. Poor Pitt, many will think. But then Bowling Green's head coach leaves for the ACC's Wake Forest and I'm not sure this team can win two straight big games. Pittsburgh played 9 bowl teams, including wins against Notre Dame and Duke. Their worst loss might be Navy, not bad. I think Pitt plays inspired against a so-so Bowling Green squad. At +175, I'm taking the Panthers straight up.
7. BCS Championship Game: Auburn Tigers (+250) vs. Florida State Seminoles (-8.5)
Auburn tries to keep Florida State from being the first undefeated BCS Champ since themselves in 2010 |
Here are the Top 5 "Best Bets":
Arizona State (-14) vs. Texas Tech
North Carolina (-2) vs. Cincinnati
Clemson (+115) vs. Ohio State
Missouri (PK) vs. Oklahoma State
Pittsburgh (+175) vs. Bowling Green
Here's wishing all college football fans a fun and relaxing bowl season!
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Monday, December 16, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 12/15/2013
Video game numbers are supposed to be limited to video games, not the National Football League. Don't tell that to Kansas City Chiefs running back Jamaal Charles. He went all Techmo Bowl Bo Jackson on the Oakland Raiders scoring 5 TD's in a laugher over their division rival. When the video game went tilt, Charles had 5 TDs (1 rushing, 4 receiving), 195 yards receiving on 8 catches, 20 rushing yards on 8 carries. Over 13 yards per touch as the Chiefs racked up 56 points on the hapless Raiders and clinched their first playoff berth since 2010, and might make their first Super Bowl since 1970. For this effort, Charles wins the Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week!
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Monday, December 9, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 12/8/2013
An amazing finish to the 2013 college football season, and an amazing performance in what has become the marquee game on the first Saturday in December, the SEC Championship Game. Auburn running back Tre Mason put his team on his back, and ran them all the way to the BCS Championship Game, the second in four years for the Auburn Tigers. Mason gashed the Missouri Tigers for 304 yards and 4 TDs on the way to a video game-like 59-42 victory for Auburn. Remember when the SEC was all about defense? Well it ain't anymore, and LSU and Alabama are now playing catch up. Congratulations Tre Mason, you are the Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week!
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Monday, December 2, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 12/1/2013
It's crunch time for the NFL, and there was no game bigger in the AFC than the Denver Broncos visiting rival Kansas City Chiefs. As the winner had the inside track to a first round bye, the Broncos Eric Decker went all Jerry Rice on the Chiefs. The 4th year pro hauled in eight passes, four of them for touchdowns and tallied 174 yards in a monster effort to push the Broncos in a commanding driver's seat in the AFC West and the AFC overall. Decker was a big reason why, and the Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week!
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Thursday, November 28, 2013
BCS vs. Playoff, a 2010 - 2012 retrospective
As we head into the final two critical weeks of the college football season, all eyes will be on the weekly BCS standings released on the Sunday following. Most pollsters and computer geeks agree, if Florida State and Alabama don't lose, they will meet for the BCS Championship in Pasadena, CA, on January 6, 2014. However, they are not the only undefeated teams and fans of Ohio State are crying foul. But being undefeated has never (before or after the BCS) guaranteed a team a shot at playing for the National Championship.
Which brings us to the 2014 regular season, when we expand our current 2-team playoff (also known as the BCS) to a 4-team playoff. More impactful is probably that the teams will be decided by a committee, not a human-computer poll combination. Since 2013 isn't over yet, it's too early to call how that would shake out (maybe a blog for two weeks from today). But let's look back at the previous three football seasons, see how the 2-team BCS looked, as compared to a 4-team and 8-team playoff format. We'll comment on teams that probably don't belong, and those that are excluded. Each (the 2/4/8) format will get a subjective letter grade (A - F) and we'll see, is the 4-team the right answer?
2010:
Final BCS Standings Top 10
Auburn (13-0) 0.9866
Oregon (12-0) 0.9720
TCU (12-0) 0.9102
Stanford (11-1) 0.8356
Wisconsin (11-1) 0.8041
Ohio State (11-1) 0.7660
Oklahoma (11-2) 0.7297
Arkansas (10-2) 0.7274
Michigan State (11-1) 0.6922
Boise State (11-1) 0.6137
BCS Championship Game (two-team playoff)
#1 Auburn vs. #2 Oregon - played out as expected, came down to the end, both teams demonstrated that they belonged, if not for a couple of plays either way, Oregon might have pulled it out. As it was, Auburn finished as (currently) the last undefeated national champion.
Grade on how the BCS did its job? B-. With TCU also sitting undefeated, there is a level of unfair that they didn't get a chance to participate. They would go on to win the Rose Bowl over Big 10 Champion Wisconsin.
Four-team playoff:
#1 Auburn vs. #4 Wisconsin
#2 Oregon vs. #3 TCU
I'm guessing the committee would have put the Badgers in as a Big 10 Champion, rather than the Stanford Cardinal as the runner up in the Pac 10. Either way, this is as big as TCU being left out, not fair.
Grade on how a 4-team playoff would have worked? B-. A worthy team left out in this scenario.
Eight-team playoff:
#1 Auburn vs. #8 Michigan State
#2 Oregon vs. #7 Oklahoma
#3 TCU vs. #6 Ohio State
#4 Stanford vs. #5 Wisconsin
I'm figuring Oklahoma in as Big 12 champs, plus Michigan State, which had just one loss to Wisconsin, in over a 2-loss Arkansas. Boise State in a weaker conference and a loss (Nevada).
Grade on how an 8-team playoff would have worked? B+. Not near the argument here for a team being left out. Three teams in from the Big 10 might raise eyebrows, especially in SEC country with only one. Otherwise, it would be an A.
2011:
Final BCS Standings Top 10
LSU (13-0) 1.0000
Alabama (11-1) 0.9419
Oklahoma State (11-1) 0.9333
Stanford (11-1) 0.8476
Oregon (11-2) 0.7901
Arkansas (10-2) 0.7687
Boise State (11-1) 0.7408
Kansas State (10-2) 0.6827
South Carolina (10-2) 0.6553
Wisconsin (11-2) 0.6374
BCS Championship Game (two-team playoff)
#1 LSU vs. #2 Alabama - This was a major fail in my opinion. These two teams had already played, the road team won, one team didn't win its Division, yet because of human pollsters (i.e. media hype), Alabama got in ahead of Oklahoma State. The game wasn't good, of course with Alabama winning. But Oklahoma State wasn't given a chance.
Grade on how the BCS did its job? D. I never advocated two teams from the same conference, mainly because you need that cross-play to truly determine a champion. The Big 12 may have been tougher than the SEC, but for lack of hype, we won't know.
Four-team playoff:
#1 LSU vs. #4 Oregon
#2 Alabama vs.#3 Oklahoma State
This would easily solve the #2 vs. #3, but the #4 is more murky. While Stanford decisively held the spot, they did not win their conference, getting blown out by Oregon. Oregon won the Pac 12 with a loss to LSU, but I'd give them the nod here. They earned it with a win over Stanford head-to-head. The next four teams didn't win their conference, Wisconsin not really in the discussion.
Grade on how a 4-team playoff would have worked? A-.Only the Oregon inclusion murks this.
Eight-team playoff:
#1 LSU vs. #8 Boise State
#2 Alabama vs. #7 Wisconsin
#3 Oklahoma State vs. #6 Arkansas
#4 Oregon vs. #5 Stanford
Arkansas only lost to the Top 2 teams, so a worthy inclusion. Kansas State had a bad loss to Oklahoma, and Wisconsin winning the Big 10 pushes them ahead. South Carolina also had a bad loss to Auburn. Moving Wisconsin ahead of Boise State in seeding because of better conference (Boise State only loss to a good TCU team).
Grade on how an 8-team playoff would have worked? A. There's not much indefensible here. Having Oregon play Stanford isn't ideal, but you'd have to put those two (at #4 and #5) ahead of Arkansas and the rest, and not ahead of Oklahoma State.
2012:
Final BCS Standings Top 10
Notre Dame (12-0) 0.9978
Alabama (12-1) 0.9441
Florida (11-1) 0.8984
Oregon (11-1) 0.8621
Kansas State (11-1) 0.8226
Stanford (11-2) 0.7683
Georgia (11-2) 0.7583
LSU (10-2) 0.7511
Texas A&M (10-2) 0.6756
South Carolina (10-2) 0.6604
BCS Championship Game (two-team playoff)
#1 Notre Dame vs. #2 Alabama - This was the clear logical choice. The SEC champion, despite a loss, against the only undefeated. With six of the BCS Top 10, no question Alabama had it over Oregon or anyone else.
Grade on how the BCS did its job? A+. Best two teams played, nobody else had a legit claim.
Four-team playoff:
#1 Notre Dame vs. #4 Stanford
#2 Alabama vs.#3 Kansas State
This would be a very VERY difficult decision. Anyone from #3 through #10 could make an argument to be included. My approach is that conference champs get a nod over non-conference champs, and so it's KSU and Stanford over Oregon (lost to Stanford) and Florida (didn't win SEC East).
Grade on how a 4-team playoff would have worked? D. About six teams have a right to be angry here.
Eight-team playoff:
#1 Notre Dame vs. #8 Florida State
#2 Alabama vs. #7 Oregon
#3 Kansas State vs. #6 Florida
#4 Stanford vs. #5 Georgia
By all means, more SEC teams get in after the Top 4. But not more than three. Oregon gets in by their one loss to Stanford, Florida State (finished BCS #12, behind #11 Oklahoma) only lost a conference road game, then to Florida, both good losses and were ACC champs. The Big 10 notably absent, 5-loss champs Wisconsin not near worthy, undefeated Ohio State ineligible.
Grade on how an 8-team playoff would have worked? B-. The SEC has some gripes, but you can't just say because the Top 6 teams only beat each other and the other 8 were so bad they didn't beat any of them, that they deserve more than 3 spots. The above has conference balance and good matchups.
So summary of grades by playoff team count:
2-team playoff: B-, D, A+. Average a B-
4-team playoff: B-, A-, D. Average C+
8-team playoff: B+, A, B-. Average B+
So the 8-team caused the least blow ups in terms of teams left out (at worst a B-). The best was 2-team or 8-team every year. My staunch opinion has been that we deal with a 2-team playoff and reward the regular season. I can see from the above that really there aren't any bad teams included in the 8-team format. By rewarding conference championships, you really make the regular season important and every game count. I'm thinking more and more that the 8-team will be here sooner than later and made the most sense. It's clear to me the biggest decision the new committee has is how to balance very good teams that didn't win their conference, vs. very good teams that did. The polls typically are blind to conference titles and you might have a lot of runners up in the Top 5. I think a playoff should include more conference champions.
For an 8-team, I would do it with first round on campuses in early December to make it more difficult for those in the second half of the bracket. Then the Final Four the weekend before New Years, and the final the weekend (or Monday) after. And release the first round losers to other bowls.
I do think sixteen-team is too burdensome unless you completely go away from the Bowl System.
- Longhorndave
Which brings us to the 2014 regular season, when we expand our current 2-team playoff (also known as the BCS) to a 4-team playoff. More impactful is probably that the teams will be decided by a committee, not a human-computer poll combination. Since 2013 isn't over yet, it's too early to call how that would shake out (maybe a blog for two weeks from today). But let's look back at the previous three football seasons, see how the 2-team BCS looked, as compared to a 4-team and 8-team playoff format. We'll comment on teams that probably don't belong, and those that are excluded. Each (the 2/4/8) format will get a subjective letter grade (A - F) and we'll see, is the 4-team the right answer?
2010:
Final BCS Standings Top 10
Auburn (13-0) 0.9866
Oregon (12-0) 0.9720
TCU (12-0) 0.9102
Stanford (11-1) 0.8356
Wisconsin (11-1) 0.8041
Ohio State (11-1) 0.7660
Oklahoma (11-2) 0.7297
Arkansas (10-2) 0.7274
Michigan State (11-1) 0.6922
Boise State (11-1) 0.6137
BCS Championship Game (two-team playoff)
#1 Auburn vs. #2 Oregon - played out as expected, came down to the end, both teams demonstrated that they belonged, if not for a couple of plays either way, Oregon might have pulled it out. As it was, Auburn finished as (currently) the last undefeated national champion.
Grade on how the BCS did its job? B-. With TCU also sitting undefeated, there is a level of unfair that they didn't get a chance to participate. They would go on to win the Rose Bowl over Big 10 Champion Wisconsin.
Auburn vs. Oregon was great, but TCU didn't get a chance to play |
#1 Auburn vs. #4 Wisconsin
#2 Oregon vs. #3 TCU
I'm guessing the committee would have put the Badgers in as a Big 10 Champion, rather than the Stanford Cardinal as the runner up in the Pac 10. Either way, this is as big as TCU being left out, not fair.
Grade on how a 4-team playoff would have worked? B-. A worthy team left out in this scenario.
Eight-team playoff:
#1 Auburn vs. #8 Michigan State
#2 Oregon vs. #7 Oklahoma
#3 TCU vs. #6 Ohio State
#4 Stanford vs. #5 Wisconsin
I'm figuring Oklahoma in as Big 12 champs, plus Michigan State, which had just one loss to Wisconsin, in over a 2-loss Arkansas. Boise State in a weaker conference and a loss (Nevada).
Grade on how an 8-team playoff would have worked? B+. Not near the argument here for a team being left out. Three teams in from the Big 10 might raise eyebrows, especially in SEC country with only one. Otherwise, it would be an A.
2011:
Final BCS Standings Top 10
LSU (13-0) 1.0000
Alabama (11-1) 0.9419
Oklahoma State (11-1) 0.9333
Stanford (11-1) 0.8476
Oregon (11-2) 0.7901
Arkansas (10-2) 0.7687
Boise State (11-1) 0.7408
Kansas State (10-2) 0.6827
South Carolina (10-2) 0.6553
Wisconsin (11-2) 0.6374
BCS Championship Game (two-team playoff)
#1 LSU vs. #2 Alabama - This was a major fail in my opinion. These two teams had already played, the road team won, one team didn't win its Division, yet because of human pollsters (i.e. media hype), Alabama got in ahead of Oklahoma State. The game wasn't good, of course with Alabama winning. But Oklahoma State wasn't given a chance.
Grade on how the BCS did its job? D. I never advocated two teams from the same conference, mainly because you need that cross-play to truly determine a champion. The Big 12 may have been tougher than the SEC, but for lack of hype, we won't know.
Four-team playoff:
#1 LSU vs. #4 Oregon
#2 Alabama vs.#3 Oklahoma State
This would easily solve the #2 vs. #3, but the #4 is more murky. While Stanford decisively held the spot, they did not win their conference, getting blown out by Oregon. Oregon won the Pac 12 with a loss to LSU, but I'd give them the nod here. They earned it with a win over Stanford head-to-head. The next four teams didn't win their conference, Wisconsin not really in the discussion.
Grade on how a 4-team playoff would have worked? A-.Only the Oregon inclusion murks this.
Brandon Weeden and Oklahoma State had just one loss, but was left out of a chance at the title. |
#1 LSU vs. #8 Boise State
#2 Alabama vs. #7 Wisconsin
#3 Oklahoma State vs. #6 Arkansas
#4 Oregon vs. #5 Stanford
Arkansas only lost to the Top 2 teams, so a worthy inclusion. Kansas State had a bad loss to Oklahoma, and Wisconsin winning the Big 10 pushes them ahead. South Carolina also had a bad loss to Auburn. Moving Wisconsin ahead of Boise State in seeding because of better conference (Boise State only loss to a good TCU team).
Grade on how an 8-team playoff would have worked? A. There's not much indefensible here. Having Oregon play Stanford isn't ideal, but you'd have to put those two (at #4 and #5) ahead of Arkansas and the rest, and not ahead of Oklahoma State.
2012:
Final BCS Standings Top 10
Notre Dame (12-0) 0.9978
Alabama (12-1) 0.9441
Florida (11-1) 0.8984
Oregon (11-1) 0.8621
Kansas State (11-1) 0.8226
Stanford (11-2) 0.7683
Georgia (11-2) 0.7583
LSU (10-2) 0.7511
Texas A&M (10-2) 0.6756
South Carolina (10-2) 0.6604
BCS Championship Game (two-team playoff)
#1 Notre Dame vs. #2 Alabama - This was the clear logical choice. The SEC champion, despite a loss, against the only undefeated. With six of the BCS Top 10, no question Alabama had it over Oregon or anyone else.
Grade on how the BCS did its job? A+. Best two teams played, nobody else had a legit claim.
Few could argue that these two teams deserved the 2 spots on the BCS title game |
#1 Notre Dame vs. #4 Stanford
#2 Alabama vs.#3 Kansas State
This would be a very VERY difficult decision. Anyone from #3 through #10 could make an argument to be included. My approach is that conference champs get a nod over non-conference champs, and so it's KSU and Stanford over Oregon (lost to Stanford) and Florida (didn't win SEC East).
Grade on how a 4-team playoff would have worked? D. About six teams have a right to be angry here.
Eight-team playoff:
#1 Notre Dame vs. #8 Florida State
#2 Alabama vs. #7 Oregon
#3 Kansas State vs. #6 Florida
#4 Stanford vs. #5 Georgia
By all means, more SEC teams get in after the Top 4. But not more than three. Oregon gets in by their one loss to Stanford, Florida State (finished BCS #12, behind #11 Oklahoma) only lost a conference road game, then to Florida, both good losses and were ACC champs. The Big 10 notably absent, 5-loss champs Wisconsin not near worthy, undefeated Ohio State ineligible.
Grade on how an 8-team playoff would have worked? B-. The SEC has some gripes, but you can't just say because the Top 6 teams only beat each other and the other 8 were so bad they didn't beat any of them, that they deserve more than 3 spots. The above has conference balance and good matchups.
So summary of grades by playoff team count:
2-team playoff: B-, D, A+. Average a B-
4-team playoff: B-, A-, D. Average C+
8-team playoff: B+, A, B-. Average B+
So the 8-team caused the least blow ups in terms of teams left out (at worst a B-). The best was 2-team or 8-team every year. My staunch opinion has been that we deal with a 2-team playoff and reward the regular season. I can see from the above that really there aren't any bad teams included in the 8-team format. By rewarding conference championships, you really make the regular season important and every game count. I'm thinking more and more that the 8-team will be here sooner than later and made the most sense. It's clear to me the biggest decision the new committee has is how to balance very good teams that didn't win their conference, vs. very good teams that did. The polls typically are blind to conference titles and you might have a lot of runners up in the Top 5. I think a playoff should include more conference champions.
For an 8-team, I would do it with first round on campuses in early December to make it more difficult for those in the second half of the bracket. Then the Final Four the weekend before New Years, and the final the weekend (or Monday) after. And release the first round losers to other bowls.
I do think sixteen-team is too burdensome unless you completely go away from the Bowl System.
- Longhorndave
Labels:
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Big 10,
Big 12,
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Monday, November 25, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 11/24/2013
In the 100th week of honoring great sportsmen and sportswomen, we are proud to give a hat tip to a service academy. In a week in which we remembered Navy veteran John Kennedy, we acknowledge a Naval Academy superstar who carried his team to a road victory and set records in the process. Navy QB Keenan Reynolds rushed for 240 yards on 36 carries (6.7 YPC) and an NCAA record seven touchdowns in the Midshipmen's triple overtime victory against San Diego State. The Midshipmen are headed to the Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl in Ft. Worth. Proudly, Reynolds is our Longhorndave 100th Sportsman of the Week!
Saturday, November 23, 2013
Top Undefeated College Football Teams Denied a Title since 1970
BCS bashers have united that the college football title game system never worked and was unfair to someone. Thankfully for them (and most college football fans), 2013 marks the last time it will exist as college football moves to a 4-team playoff in 2014. Some are thinking it's one year too late, with six teams undefeated as of this post (Alabama, Florida State, Baylor, Ohio State, Northern Illinois, and Fresno State), none playing each other, and only two spots in the BCS Championship Game. History says that undefeateds drop off at seasons end (rivalry games, conference title games, etc.) but this year (everyone always says) will be different. However they were saying this with Oregon in the mix, and they lost a surprising game at Stanford (same Stanford team that lost to Utah).
But back to the matter at hand, fans get up in arms at the mere thought that an undefeated team is denied a chance to win a title. And they act like it's never happened before and a crime against humanity. These fans have short memories. During the BCS (and well before the BCS) we've had undefeated teams not included in the title game and it's part of the fabric of college football. With a limited sample of games and over 100 teams, some are bound to get through and get through in a manner that they do not demonstrate superiority to at least one other team (bigger conference, better bowl game, etc.). Here's a list (since 1970) of teams that ran the table but didn't get a shot at the title (excluding teams on probation):
1970 - Arizona State (11-0) - As members of the WAC (and the weaker schedule to go with it), the Sun Devils only got to play in the Peach Bowl (destroying North Carolina), while outscoring opponents 401-148 over the season. Three other powerhouses (Nebraska, Ohio State, and Texas) were awarded shares of the National Championship. Of those, Nebraska was the only other undefeated, however they had tied USC. ASU finished the AP #6
1970 - Toledo (12-0) -As members of the MAC, Toledo wasn't given serious consideration for a major bowl. Instead they played the Tangerine against William and Mary. The Rockets outscored their opponents 384 - 88 over the season finishing #12 in the final AP poll.
1973 - Penn State (12-0) - Okay, enough with the small conferences, Penn State played a major conference schedule (although was an independent) rolling over Stanford, Pittsburgh, Iowa, and LSU (Sugar Bowl). This run could only get them to #5, with #1 Notre Dame finishing undefeated, but the other three teams with a loss or a tie. Somehow Alabama with a loss claims a National Title as well, even with a loss to Notre Dame.
1975 - Arizona State (12-0) - Again, as WAC champions they didn't play a major conference schedule, but they did beat Nebraska in the Fiesta Bowl. Oklahoma, with one loss to Kansas at home, was awarded the National Championship as Arizona State finished #2 in the AP Poll
1982 - SMU (11-0-1) - Including a team with a tie here, because all other teams had a loss. SMU (from the powerhouse Southwest Conference) defeated Pittsburgh in the Cotton Bowl, their only tie was to Top 10 Arkansas. Instead, (independent) Penn State grabbed the National Title despite suffering a 3-TD loss to Alabama, which didn't even finished ranked in the AP.
1994 - Penn State (12-0) - Now a member of the Big 10, you figure the power schedule would carry the Nittany Lions to a title. However, locked into the Rose Bowl, they could "only" play Oregon while two other undefeateds, Nebraska and Miami, squared off in the Orange Bowl. Penn State had to settle for #2 while Nebraska won the National Championship.
1998 - Tulane (12-0) - The Conference USA champions ran the table, but lacked a marquee win and allowed 24 points a game, lacking that dominating swagger. This got them a Top 10 finish, but undefeated Tennessee took home the National Championship hardware.
1999 - Marshall (13-0) - Only three years removed from National Title at Division I-AA, the Thundering Herd stormed through the MAC on their way to a Motor City Bowl victory. Without a marquee win (Clemson and BYU the best, but both unranked) they finished #10 in the AP Poll, while undefeated Florida State won the title with a win over regular season undefeated Virginia Tech in the Sugar Bowl.
2004 - Auburn (13-0) - You would think an SEC team would get a guaranteed berth to the BCS Championship game, but you would be wrong. Not when two powerhouse teams (Oklahoma and Southern California) were also undefeated. This being the first year that USC could pass the Rose Bowl and go to the BCS Championship Game. USC rolled Oklahoma (a title later revoked due to the Reggie Bush scandal) leaving Auburn wondering what might have been, with the SEC winning 7 straight national titles beginning two years later (many of those teams with one loss).
2004 - Utah (12-0) - The Urban Meyer-led Mountain West Champions became the first "BCS Buster" in being invited to the Fiesta Bowl, but matched against a suspect Pittsburgh Big East Champion. Defeating Texas A&M, BYU, and Arizona along the way wasn't enough to get the Utes into the title mix, with the aforementioned USC, Oklahoma, and Auburn also undefeated. Utah finished #4 in the AP.
2006 - Boise State (13-0) - The Boise State empire begins as the WAC champions beat Oregon State, Utah, and Oklahoma on their way to a perfect season. Meanwhile 1-loss Florida leapfrogged the Broncos to face undefeated Ohio State in the BCS Championship Game, leaving Boise to languish at a #5 finish, even after the upset of Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl.
2008 - Utah (13-0) - For the second time in 4 years, Utah ran the table without much consideration for a National Championship. Defeating Michigan, TCU, and Oregon State, then Alabama in the Sugar Bowl wasn't enough. Even though both participants in the National Championship Game (Oklahoma and Florida) suffered a defeat during the season. Utah finished #2 in the final AP poll without a chance to prove their worth against Florida.
2009 - Boise State (14-0) - For the second time in 4 years, the Broncos finished the year undefeated without a sniff of a title chance. With Alabama and Texas as powerhouse undefeateds, the Broncos faced off with undefeated TCU in the Fiesta Bowl, edging the Horned Frogs, but only rising to #4 (#3 and #2 were one-loss teams to title winners Alabama).
2010 - TCU (13-0) - Still members of the MWC, the Frogs didn't get consideration for the BCS Championship game with Oregon and Auburn both finishing undefeated in deeper conferences. TCU still beat Oregon State and Baylor. TCU was invited to the Rose Bowl to play Big 10 Champion Wisconsin, and outmuscled the Badgers to a BCS game victory. Enough to get them to #2 in the final AP poll behind the undefeated Auburn Tigers.
While many of these were from smaller conferences, several were from the big boys. Unfortunately, today's college football climate is built around National Championships instead of Conference titles, and finishing #2 (or not playing the BCS Championship Game) is considered a failure. The above situations are the fabric of college football to date, and a playoff will include more teams, but never enough, and in 30 years there will probably be another list like this one of those excluded from a title shot.
But back to the matter at hand, fans get up in arms at the mere thought that an undefeated team is denied a chance to win a title. And they act like it's never happened before and a crime against humanity. These fans have short memories. During the BCS (and well before the BCS) we've had undefeated teams not included in the title game and it's part of the fabric of college football. With a limited sample of games and over 100 teams, some are bound to get through and get through in a manner that they do not demonstrate superiority to at least one other team (bigger conference, better bowl game, etc.). Here's a list (since 1970) of teams that ran the table but didn't get a shot at the title (excluding teams on probation):
1970 - Arizona State (11-0) - As members of the WAC (and the weaker schedule to go with it), the Sun Devils only got to play in the Peach Bowl (destroying North Carolina), while outscoring opponents 401-148 over the season. Three other powerhouses (Nebraska, Ohio State, and Texas) were awarded shares of the National Championship. Of those, Nebraska was the only other undefeated, however they had tied USC. ASU finished the AP #6
1970 - Toledo (12-0) -As members of the MAC, Toledo wasn't given serious consideration for a major bowl. Instead they played the Tangerine against William and Mary. The Rockets outscored their opponents 384 - 88 over the season finishing #12 in the final AP poll.
1973 - Penn State (12-0) - Okay, enough with the small conferences, Penn State played a major conference schedule (although was an independent) rolling over Stanford, Pittsburgh, Iowa, and LSU (Sugar Bowl). This run could only get them to #5, with #1 Notre Dame finishing undefeated, but the other three teams with a loss or a tie. Somehow Alabama with a loss claims a National Title as well, even with a loss to Notre Dame.
1975 - Arizona State (12-0) - Again, as WAC champions they didn't play a major conference schedule, but they did beat Nebraska in the Fiesta Bowl. Oklahoma, with one loss to Kansas at home, was awarded the National Championship as Arizona State finished #2 in the AP Poll
1982 - SMU (11-0-1) - Including a team with a tie here, because all other teams had a loss. SMU (from the powerhouse Southwest Conference) defeated Pittsburgh in the Cotton Bowl, their only tie was to Top 10 Arkansas. Instead, (independent) Penn State grabbed the National Title despite suffering a 3-TD loss to Alabama, which didn't even finished ranked in the AP.
Eric Dickerson and the Pony Express ran over everyone they played. |
1994 - Penn State (12-0) - Now a member of the Big 10, you figure the power schedule would carry the Nittany Lions to a title. However, locked into the Rose Bowl, they could "only" play Oregon while two other undefeateds, Nebraska and Miami, squared off in the Orange Bowl. Penn State had to settle for #2 while Nebraska won the National Championship.
Kerry Collins could not pass his team into a National Title chance |
1999 - Marshall (13-0) - Only three years removed from National Title at Division I-AA, the Thundering Herd stormed through the MAC on their way to a Motor City Bowl victory. Without a marquee win (Clemson and BYU the best, but both unranked) they finished #10 in the AP Poll, while undefeated Florida State won the title with a win over regular season undefeated Virginia Tech in the Sugar Bowl.
2004 - Auburn (13-0) - You would think an SEC team would get a guaranteed berth to the BCS Championship game, but you would be wrong. Not when two powerhouse teams (Oklahoma and Southern California) were also undefeated. This being the first year that USC could pass the Rose Bowl and go to the BCS Championship Game. USC rolled Oklahoma (a title later revoked due to the Reggie Bush scandal) leaving Auburn wondering what might have been, with the SEC winning 7 straight national titles beginning two years later (many of those teams with one loss).
Auburn rolled over everyone in the SEC, but didn't play for the BCS Hardware |
2004 - Utah (12-0) - The Urban Meyer-led Mountain West Champions became the first "BCS Buster" in being invited to the Fiesta Bowl, but matched against a suspect Pittsburgh Big East Champion. Defeating Texas A&M, BYU, and Arizona along the way wasn't enough to get the Utes into the title mix, with the aforementioned USC, Oklahoma, and Auburn also undefeated. Utah finished #4 in the AP.
2006 - Boise State (13-0) - The Boise State empire begins as the WAC champions beat Oregon State, Utah, and Oklahoma on their way to a perfect season. Meanwhile 1-loss Florida leapfrogged the Broncos to face undefeated Ohio State in the BCS Championship Game, leaving Boise to languish at a #5 finish, even after the upset of Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl.
Boise State defeats Oklahoma in a memorable Fiesta Bowl |
2008 - Utah (13-0) - For the second time in 4 years, Utah ran the table without much consideration for a National Championship. Defeating Michigan, TCU, and Oregon State, then Alabama in the Sugar Bowl wasn't enough. Even though both participants in the National Championship Game (Oklahoma and Florida) suffered a defeat during the season. Utah finished #2 in the final AP poll without a chance to prove their worth against Florida.
2009 - Boise State (14-0) - For the second time in 4 years, the Broncos finished the year undefeated without a sniff of a title chance. With Alabama and Texas as powerhouse undefeateds, the Broncos faced off with undefeated TCU in the Fiesta Bowl, edging the Horned Frogs, but only rising to #4 (#3 and #2 were one-loss teams to title winners Alabama).
2010 - TCU (13-0) - Still members of the MWC, the Frogs didn't get consideration for the BCS Championship game with Oregon and Auburn both finishing undefeated in deeper conferences. TCU still beat Oregon State and Baylor. TCU was invited to the Rose Bowl to play Big 10 Champion Wisconsin, and outmuscled the Badgers to a BCS game victory. Enough to get them to #2 in the final AP poll behind the undefeated Auburn Tigers.
TCU stood up to Big 10 Champion Wisconsin |
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Monday, November 18, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 11/17/2013
Going a little off the typical sports for this time of year, but the United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas is planting it's Stars and Stripes flag to become the equivalent of the Monaco Grand Prix, or any other major country attracting the absolute best in Formula 1. Austin, Texas, hosted the second annual USGP and about 250,000 fans took notice over the 3-day weekend (some maybe repeat customers). Sebastian Vettel of Germany took the checkered flag in his eighth straight F1 victory, more than demonstrating dominance in this motor sports for the well financially backed. Vettel is 26 years old, has already won four World Championships, and showed Americans what the elite of the F1 circuit is about. He is a worthy Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week!
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 11/10/2013
Sticking to the NFL and another unlikely Sportsman of the Week, we turn our attention to St. Louis. The Rams rookie WR Tavon Austin seemingly took every ball he touched to the house. Not quite true, but three out of eight ain't bad. Austin scored on both receptions, plus a punt return to tally 3 TD's in the Rams surprising 38-8 demolishing of the AFC South leading Indianapolis Colts. Austin totaled 314 all-purpose yards, averaging 36 yards per punt return and 69 yards per reception. The West Virginia speedster looks to be an elite return man of the future, and is the Longhorndave Sportsmand of the Week!
Labels:
Football,
Indianapolis Colts,
LHD_PotW,
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St. Louis,
St. Louis Rams,
Tavon Austin
Monday, November 4, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 11/03/2013
As we turn the corner past baseball season, there have been some video game numbers put up in the NFL this year, so for the second week this season, we honor a 7 TD passer. Nick Foles has been playing musical chairs at QB for the Philadelphia Eagles, but he gave his coach reason to stop the music. This week he assaulted the Oakland Raiders defense for 408 yards and 7 TD, it's like he was playing against air. This over only 3 quarters before he was replaced by Matt Barkley. This blog loves unlikely stars, and Foles is a deserving Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week!
Labels:
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LHD_PotW,
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Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 10/27/2013
It's the crunch time for baseball, and once again a Boston Red Sox hitter is our Sportsman of the Week. David Ortiz had a week that has all of baseball scratching their heads...how to get him out. Over the first four games of the World Series, Big Papi was 8 out of 11 (.727), with 2 HR and a double. He scored 5 and knocked in 5. He also tied a World Series record by reaching base on nine straight plate appearances (counting Monday's effort, in which he was 3/4 and raised his .727 average if that's possible). It was a very tough decision given Calvin Johnson's unbelievable effort, but it is the World Series, so David Ortiz is your Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week!
Monday, October 21, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 10/20/2013
An amazing week of League Championship Baseball ended with the Boston Red Sox and St. Louis Cardinals emerging as Pennant Winners. Last week we honored a Cardinal, this week a Red Sox. Mike Napoli pretty much single-handedly (offensively at least) won two of the four games the Red Sox needed to advance. On Tuesday, Napoli hit a solo shot in the 7th inning for the Red Sox 1-0 win. On Thursday, he went deep in the 2nd inning to stake the Sox to a 1-run lead, which ended up being that margin. Over the week, he went 6-16, 2 2B, 2 HR, 2 RBI. He was 6-12 for the 3 games in Detroit, with an O-fer the series finale in which the offense had enough without him. But his is a worthy recipient of the Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week!
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Monday, October 14, 2013
Sportsman of the Week Ending 10/13/2013
This week's sportsman has emerged from rookie obscurity to be a playoff difference-maker in a matter of months. Michael Wacha of the St. Louis Cardinals burst onto the baseball scene with a near no-hitter on September 24 in his final regular season start, then has been occasionally tapped by manager Mike Matheny throughout these playoffs. This week, he delivered two key wins for the Red Birds as they surge toward their second World Series in three years. Wacha pitched brilliantly in delivering a must-have Game 4 NLDS victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates (in a Cardinals elimination game), then followed it up with a dominant NLCS Game 2 performance against the Los Angeles Dodgers. For the week (and postseason), Wacha sits at 2-0, 14 IP, 6H, 1 ER, and 17K. Amazing numbers and worth of the Longhorndave Sportsman of the Week!
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