ROOFTOP LIKE WE BRINGIN’ 88 BACK: SPOTTY DOTTY BCS RAMBLING
Rooftop like we bringin’ ‘88 back. That’s the line originally ringing through our brain while considering the new BCS pimp’s comments about bringing back the original bowl system. Fine, if you’re going to be a colossal dick right out of the gate and threaten us with straw men, then bring froth the body and make that fucker dance. It’s an idle threat, a straw man, and further proof of the odd insecurity felt by the BCS power structure as a whole. The checks are too big, the money too good, and conference already too far down the path of establishing championship games to eventually funnel up champions into something that will eventually be a playoff or playoff-like substance.
Just teach your kids the simple rule of “Authority figure says be afraid=be totally calm/authority figure says be calm=freak out and run to the bunker,” and they’ll be fine.
Gettin’ big money, playboy your time’s up: The thoughts over at Sporting Blog sprout a thousand tangents, all of which Matt Hinton carefully calculated, weighed, analyzed, and dismissed as unnecessary. We were IM’ing back and forth yesterday, a frustrating experience for us because he has this way of using “Facts” and “rationale,” while we prefer “blind prejudice” and “anger.”
One point of contention that remained unresolved: does the current system produce better matchups than the old bowl system? Our sense is no, not necessarily: the choice of matchups and their outcomes between the top ten or fifteen teams is a largely randomized process no matter what happens. Choosing them based on BCS rankings or on the whims of the bowls generates fairly consistent and random results. Sometimes you get the 2005 Orange Bowl, and sometimes you get the 2009 BCS Title game. Big old predictable bell curve in terms of points spread, we’re guessing, and in terms of subjective quality.
Like Pun said/You ain’t even en mi clasa: The one nagging feeling, though, re: the current BCS system: the conference tie-ins with bowls. If everyone is bothered by the Utah/Boise State category not getting its fair shake, then one simple wrinkle by elimination would vastly improve the BCS: eliminate conference affiliations with bowls. The only defense for these is tradition. The same could be said of female circumcision or our unfortunate habit of celebrating being in a new city by ordering the rankest porno we can find on the pay-per-view. (Or, in a drunken fit once, ordering “Housewifes And Garbagemen Ass Orgy” seven times. Don’t drink, kids.)
If a conference doesn’t belong in the top five bowl games, why continue to foist them on system, or worse still, putting two of them together in the same bowl game? (The Orange Bowl has been particularly slammed by this.) If teams aren’t in the same class by the feeble objective measures we have to lean on, they don’t deserve an automatic bid. Also worthy of elimination: the two team limit on conference. Be it the Pac-10 or the SEC or the Mountain West, if the numbers add up and the general consensus is that the teams deserve a BCS bowl–and the bowls deem their crowd as likely to show up and spend money–then let ‘em go.
Balla convention, free admission. There is no substitute for a playoff, but freeing up the requirements for the bowls does allow better matchups to happen. Open it up, and you mitigate situations like the recent string of putrescent Rose Bowls (aka The Pete Carroll Snuff Film Festival) and whatever the Orange Bowl has become. This is all completely imperfect in lieu of a playoff, which would be the ultimate balla convention where your record and quality was admission, and not a web of conference affiliations defensible only by tradition and other hobgoblins of of the past.
It’s not an open market by any stretch of the imagination, but it’s getting closer to it. And in the cartel situation we’re in, it would go a long way toward throwing the Orrin Hatches of the world off the trail of the BCS, if that’s what they want.









1
ohiodawg says:
I don’t agree with the dick-headed approach, but I am all in favor of going back to the original bowl system.
We are no closer to knowing who the best team is at the end of the year; all of the alternative suggestions have major flaws that would leave them open to the same criticisms the current structure receives; and a major net impact of the BCS is to strengthen the hand of bureaucratic ass hats like the one complained about, a phenomenon that would be strengthened under a “tournament” system.
July 2nd, 2009 at 12:31 pm
2
Rockabye Reggie Nelson says:
Ether.
July 2nd, 2009 at 12:44 pm
3
Counter Trap says:
Are we talking the bowl slate with say, 16 games, or the situation today? Florida Atlantic vs. Central Michigan or even better, Maryland vs. Nevada…YEE EFFING HAW!!!!
I believe the “best” way under the BCS system involves a relatively easy change–no rankings before October 15…from anybody…about anything.
July 2nd, 2009 at 12:44 pm
4
Orson Swindle says:
Dunno about the creeping bureacracy: you essentially want a balance of power between all parties. The bowl officials are more than happy to pick potentially lopsided, uninteresting matchups as long as the teams bring ratings and fans on the road.
July 2nd, 2009 at 12:51 pm
5
gosouthgohard says:
No love for the plus-one? Combine that with eliminating the bowl tie-ins and you’ve got a system that produces interesting games and a defensible champion, without the difficulty of staging a 8/16/64 (hi Mike Leach!) playoff.
July 2nd, 2009 at 12:54 pm
6
stevechas says:
The best way to avoid rankings before 10/15 is for those who don’t like them to ignore them. Everybody else – have fun.
July 2nd, 2009 at 12:59 pm
7
Brizzle says:
How about we get rid of Notre Dame in that equation, too? As much as I love seeing them get their asses handed to them, I’d rather see them receive their asses in a lesser bowl game. Also, just for the record, fuck the Big 10.
July 2nd, 2009 at 1:20 pm
8
SpartanDan says:
gosouth: The plus-one wouldn’t have solved 2004 (five unbeatens going into bowl season – and yes, unbeaten non-BCS conference teams deserve a shot or you’re telling them that no matter what happened during the season, they were eliminated from contention beforehand).
stevechas: That’s not an option when those September rankings play a huge factor in determining the champion. (See 2004 again: yes, Auburn might have legitimately lost out on strength of schedule arguments as well, but they could have probably substituted a beatdown of Ohio State for that Citadel game and still been left out in the cold because USC and Oklahoma started light-years ahead in the rankings.)
For a sport that cares as much about tradition as college football does, the BCS is the worst of both worlds: it wrecks the “traditional” bowl matchups in the name of providing an undisputed on-field champion, yet fails to deliver one. I’d rather go back to the pre-BCS days when everyone knew the championship was bullshit than continue with the system as-is. (An eight-team playoff is ideal, I think, so long as you do not guarantee any particular conference’s champion a spot – which, of course, means that this will never happen in a million years.)
July 2nd, 2009 at 1:30 pm
9
Ray says:
Don’t say my car’s topless. Say the titties is out.
July 2nd, 2009 at 1:53 pm
10
ohiodawg says:
#3 and #6 cancel each other out. #8 takes out #5 and #6. In other words, whatever change is made, it seems as though we’re still going to have legitimate gripes; and probably a lot of them.
Unless the mid-major conferences are taken out of the equation, there can’t be equal bargaining amongst conferences, and probably shouldn’t be. Conferences v. NCAA may have some equality, but it seems to reek of inside poker as often as not.
If you set the major bowl games in advance (as the old bowl system did), a lot of the BS seems to go out the window (e.g. who’s ranked where, when). And it seems as though we end up with BCS championship games that look a lot like the old bowl games anyway.
July 2nd, 2009 at 2:25 pm
11
Houston's Nutts says:
In the spirit of rap songs, I present you with another:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xofz0Cp_XCQ
July 2nd, 2009 at 2:30 pm
12
Coop says:
Phil Steele has it right. Incorporate a 4 team playoff into the BCS and let the rest carry on as before. You get one more game, and Florida, Texas, USC, whomever fans can afford to travel to an extra bowl game. The Big 10/Pac 10/Rose Bowl will play ball, and the Rose Bowl will have only itself to blame when they pit Ohio State vs. 3rd place Cal because USC and Oregon are playing in the playoff, one season.
July 2nd, 2009 at 2:41 pm
13
sb says:
While I enjoyed reading O.’s wonderfully worded missive, I find it difficult to worry/care/think about the above topic…there is nothing I can or will do to change it, it will just “do what it do” (I think that is the appropriate phrase). Some things are simply not capable of holding my attention and puzzles without solutions are a prime example.
Then there is “…our unfortunate habit of celebrating being in a new city by ordering the rankest porno we can find on the pay-per-view.” Now its snippets like this that I find actually funny, entertaining and worthy of my time, and I’ll leave the continuing soap opera of “To BCS or Not To BCS” to the pros.
July 2nd, 2009 at 2:58 pm
14
Conjunction says:
playoffs. limit to 8 teams. first games played at higher seed’s home. bowls the rest.
this is the only way that makes sense. Why? Who knows? Who Cares?
Just do it. Now.
July 3rd, 2009 at 7:11 am
15
Shins says:
OS, you let me down. You missed the obvious “where them gangstas” fulmer cup ref, and then the even more obvious “where them dimes at” erin andrews photo op. Nice reach for Nas however.
July 3rd, 2009 at 9:41 am
16
headsigh says:
Nas wants us to know the BCS is dead. Or hip-hop. Or something.
July 4th, 2009 at 2:20 pm
17
Vandy J says:
Every year I sit down and hammer out what the likely big-ticket matchups would have been if this were still 1990. Invariably, the results are no worse than what the BCS produces and frequently better.
The flaw in the BCS is that it smears an uneven coating of logicability and scientiferousness over a process that is ultimately as manipulated and corrupt as anything that went before. If you’re going to have chicanery, ham-handedness, schedule-puffing, vote-rigging and general foolishness, then do it right out in the middle of the pool hall where we can all see it, but don’t pretend that the BCS has somehow brought sunshine and even-handed opportunity to the process. Or if you must, at least ask Oregon about it. Put your welder’s glass on first.
As an aside, I recognize that the number of major conferences would seem to dictate at least 8 seats on any notional playoff starship, but let’s be honest: how often are there really more than four teams legitimately contending for the title in December? Four should be enough to get the job done; if you’re going to go more than that, something has to be done to make strength of schedule much more rigorous a factor in selection.
July 6th, 2009 at 10:29 am