Postby Spence » Tue Mar 27, 2007 10:57 pm
Right. The tournament isn't about getting the best 64 teams (if that is even impossible. Billybud is dead on about the tourney being about inclusion. I could name several schools that would be favored over all the 15 and 16 seeds that didn't even make the tournament. You Mountaineers would be one of them. The NCAA isn't about finding the best 64 teams. It is about making all these fringe teams believe they have a chance when they absolutely do not. Sure every few years an 11 or 12, from some school only the most avid basketball fan has heard of, makes a mini run in the tournament. But tell me one time that one of those schools has won the whole thing? It hasn't happened. At least the BCS doesn't pretend. Very few schools have a shot to win a championship, playoff or no playoff. Football makes you prove you can win over time. It isn't always right either, but the teams who get left out in football usually only have themselves to blame. If they put together a schedule that proved to the voters they were better then the powerhouse programs, they would make it.
Boise State last year was a good example. I think they proved in the bowl game they were good enough to deserve a shot in the championship game, but they never proved it during the season. They beat a team who beat a team. It has nothing to do with how good they were, it has everything to do with them setting up a schedule that would be conducive to go undefeated and make the BCS at-large, which they accomplished. If that is the goal, then fine, but if the goal is to win a championship they need to play USC instead of Oregon St or beat Oklahoma during the regular season instead of the bowl game.
That doesn't mean that bias isn't part of the equation on football. Ohio State got in the championship because the were undefeated and they were Ohio State. The schedule strength of the Buckeye's wasn't as good as the experts thought. Texas wasn't the team people thought they were and neither was Iowa, Penn St., or Michigan. Certain teams will always get the benefit of the doubt, because of their past history. Notre Dame, Alabama, Florida State, Miami, Michigan, Ohio State,Penn St, USC, UCLA, Georgia, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Texas, and Nebraska. If any of these teams get on a run they will fly up the polls. I dog Notre Dame badly about this because they are the most favored team, but all of the above teams are teams who recieve special treatment in the polls. They don't have to do as much to be in position to play for championships as the other teams.
We often talk about the difference between mid majors and majors, but the truth is that only a few majors have the golden ticket up the poll ladder. The rest have to do more to be ranked in position to play for a championship. That isn't fair and even though I follow one of the teams involved, I know it isn't completely fair. On the other hand, if you look at historical performance, you would be hard pressed to find many schools that can match the history of winning that these schools own. I would wager to say that these schools combined championships would be more then all the others combined. So fair is in the eye of the beholder.
Until they actually come up with a system that would allow a real comparison of teams over the course of a season, I think the BCS is as fair a system as any. That isn't a shot at all the schools not mentioned above. It is just the way it is. If you had an employee who had a history of being more productive then everyone else, you are more likely to promote him. That doesn't mean that one of the others might be a better choice in that postion, but past history dictates that this guy has earned the first crack at the job.
"History doesn't always repeat itself but it often rhymes." - Mark Twain