HJS {l Wrote}:If we include the inbound schools, the ACC is 6-2 in bowls (assuming Louisville continues its bitch slapping of yet another overrated SEC team). We still have to wait out Pitt for the final record.
Dick Rosenthal {l Wrote}:In light of the utter shitastic performances by Florida, South Carolina, LSU and Georgia, I am liking the 10.5 points I am getting for the BCS Championship Game. Vaunted SEC defenses sure look shitty when confronted with running QBs.
And I think Lousisville just killed Purefoy on that kick return.
whalepants {l Wrote}:I should add that BC fans should not be in favor of an 8 or even 16 team playoff if you expect to see the Eagles play in the tournament more than once or twice in a generation. The 8 team tournament will return football to the days when there were 5 bowls. So a 9-3 BC team would be at home. Look at some of Yukica's teams-- they won 8 or 9 with a 10 or 11 game schedule and never played in a bowl. That's what playoffs will do.
PhillyandBCEagles {l Wrote}:The shitty bowl games don't HURT anybody. They usually give you unusual matchups, which can be fun to watch, and from a fan's perspective even many of the shitty ones can make for fun trips (Nashville, SF, etc.) I'd eventually like to see a 16-team playoff, with the top 8 conference champs and top 8 at-large teams. Play the whole thing except the final at campus sites and give conference champs the higher seed no matter what (say independents can get seeded as a conference champ if they finish in the top 6). The shitty bowls can still be played and if you play the first round of the playoffs the second weekend in December the BCS bowls could still take the 8 losing teams....they could even keep the current tie-ins whenever possible (ie highest-ranked B1G and Pac-12 teams that lose their first-round game go to the Rose, etc.). Yeah it might diminish those bowls somewhat but when you're watching an 8-5 Wisconsin team in the Rose Bowl the bloom is already pretty much off. Under my system, this would've been your first round of the playoffs this year (note that no B1G teams would've qualified):
16 Oregon St @ 1 Notre Dame
15 Oklahoma @ 2 Alabama
14 South Carolina @ 3 Kansas St
13 Texas A&M @ 4 Stanford
12 LSU @ 5 FSU
11 Georgia @ 6 NIU
10 Oregon @ 7 Boise State
9 Florida @ 8 Louisville
Marquee games in prime time (LSU at FSU on Thursday night, A&M at Stanford on Friday night, Oklahoma at Alabama and Oregon St at ND on Saturday night). Then projecting some winners, here are your national quarterfinals:
South Carolina @ Notre Dame
Georgia @ Alabama (!!)
Oregon @ Stanford (!!)
Florida @ FSU (!!!!!!!)
And your BCS bowl games:
Sugar - LSU vs. Louisville
Rose - Oregon St vs. NIU
Fiesta - KSU vs. Texas A&M
Orange - Oklahoma vs. Boise State
hansen {l Wrote}:Going into the game I thought UF was the best team in the country.
Dick Rosenthal {l Wrote}:If Louisville had a better than high school kicker, we would be at the corpse-raping phase of the game. The good news for Louisville is that Florida has an SEC offense, which means it would take them five plays to score if Louisville left the field.
HJS {l Wrote}:I wonder what the Gator fans are thinking watching their former assistant go all "7th Floor Crew" on their supposed-#3 team in the nation?
Speaking of which... Urban Meyer has sprouted a pretty decent coaching tree: Dan Mullen, Charlie Strong, Kyle Whittingham, Gary Andersen, Tim Beckman. I don't know where Daz fits on that list (likely towards or at the bottom). But, 6 assistants currently coaching in the SEC, B1G, P12 and ACC is damn impressive.
HJS {l Wrote}:I don't know... I like Beckman. He did a very good job at Toledo and has served under Tressell and Meyer. Big 10 or no Big 10, Illinois is a pretty terrible program and has been for quite some time. Let's see how he does next year. That said, folks on other boards may be saying the exact same thing about BC fans wanting to fire their AD who is only in his second year, if we too go 2-10 in Daz's first season.
RegalBCeagle {l Wrote}:If AngryDick's analysis and prediction regarding the outcome of the BCS NC Game are anything like that of political races, ND is going to get trounced!
Big Ten, ACC in discussions with Pinstripe Bowl
April 3, 2013 9:32 pm ET
The Big Ten and ACC are in discussions with the Pinstripe Bowl on a commitment after the 2013 season, according to a league source that expects a deal to happen eventually.
The two-year-old Pinstripe, sponsored by New Era and paying out around $2 million per year, currently pits the Big East's No. 4 team vs. the Big 12's No. 7 team in Yankee Stadium. Syracuse bounced West Virginia 38-14 in last season's snow-fest.
Bowl agreements expire after 2013, prompting conferences and bowls to get creative with an already-stale national bowl lineup.
With the Big 12 likely focusing on other states such as Florida, the Big Ten can explore its new-found East Coast presence with incoming members Maryland and Rutgers. The ACC has a natural tie-in with Syracuse and also Notre Dame, which has a big East Coast alumni base. Notre Dame has committed five football games per year to the ACC starting in 2014 and joins the league's bowl lineup should the Irish miss out on a BCS bowl.
claver2010 {l Wrote}:Looks like the Pinstripe Bowl will now be between the ACC & B10/11/12/14
http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/blog/jeremy-fowler/22001576/big-ten-acc-in-discussions-with-pinstripe-bowlBig Ten, ACC in discussions with Pinstripe Bowl
April 3, 2013 9:32 pm ET
The Big Ten and ACC are in discussions with the Pinstripe Bowl on a commitment after the 2013 season, according to a league source that expects a deal to happen eventually.
The two-year-old Pinstripe, sponsored by New Era and paying out around $2 million per year, currently pits the Big East's No. 4 team vs. the Big 12's No. 7 team in Yankee Stadium. Syracuse bounced West Virginia 38-14 in last season's snow-fest.
Bowl agreements expire after 2013, prompting conferences and bowls to get creative with an already-stale national bowl lineup.
With the Big 12 likely focusing on other states such as Florida, the Big Ten can explore its new-found East Coast presence with incoming members Maryland and Rutgers. The ACC has a natural tie-in with Syracuse and also Notre Dame, which has a big East Coast alumni base. Notre Dame has committed five football games per year to the ACC starting in 2014 and joins the league's bowl lineup should the Irish miss out on a BCS bowl.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 239 guests