Spence wrote:You say the rankings are subjective and they are to a point, but measuring teams by how well they do in the conference they play in without considering the other OOC teams is more subjective. I could take any 1-AA or 1-AAA team and they would be competitive in their conference. It doesn't mean they should be considered among the best in the country. If you want to compare teams nationally, then how they do regionally can't be the major factor in the comparison. With 119 teams in the country you have to have a better way to compare them then "they won every game in their conference." If a team wins every game in their conference, but loses to all the ranked teams they play, how can you say they should take their place among the best teams in the country? There is good reason to believe that they are not among they best in the country. The fact that they lost to other teams that are among the best in their conference would be good evidence of that. Judging them by how well they do in their conference is a lot more subjective then judging them by how well they do against other top teams around the country.
Spence I think that's a fairly unsubstantiated claim, at best. I think how you do in your conferece is the 'best' way to size your team up, competitively-speaking.
First of all, those teams play each other every year, so there is less 'doubt' as far as how good they are. Secondly, how often do teams play against 'non-conference' teams. There are the occasional 'regulars, I think Miami, OH and Cincinnati play every year. W. Virgnia and Virginia Tech likely square off every year, so it's possible, but not altogether likely. And you are devoting as many as 4 games to teams that likely won't play each other twice in the same decade! Sorry to have to tell you, it's not likely to happen anytime soon. So, whether or not you 'like' how teams schedule, is irrelevant.
Personally, I like how teams can make their own agreements. They have 'flexibility' with respect to who they play, and when. Your proposal might work on paper, but its probably not a good idea in practice.
If a team wants to schedule 'heavyweight's they can, S. Mississippi did.
But that's a catch-22 if there ever was one. For one thing, S. Mississippi didn't win C-USA, so they maybe ought to make that their priority, most teams would. If you can't win your conference you don't deserve a BCS bid, remember TCU 2003? Knocking on the BCS door until they lost to S. Mississippi, and any hope they might have had for a C-USA title. That wasn't a conference 'championship' but for all intents and purposes it amounted to one. TCU lost. S. Mississippi won, 'earned' the right to represent C-USA in the Liberty Bowl.
The 'beauty' of my proposal, is in the details. If a team (TCU say) wins their 'division' they necessarily have to play in a conference championship to 'advance' to the BCS. And I'm applying that to every team, anywhere. Win, you're in. Lose, you're out. It works a lot better than you're admitting. What was TCU's SOS in 2003? I'd be interested.
If they beat S. Mississippi they likely play in a BCS game. But they didn't. It's fair, Spence, whether or not you agree with me, it works.
This year, you argue, somehow that Virginia Tech was 'more deserving'.
Their ranking was pretty good, but they lost, twice, to teams they were favored to beat, both times they knew it likely would determine their fate. You want to give a team a 3rd chance? May I ask why?
As it was, they played Louisville, a team one year removed from being C-USA champions, and barely won. I think Virginia Tech wasn't nearly as good as their ranking implied. A similar argument can be made for Miami, FL. FSU 'won' the ACC. They did it the hard way, but they did it.
Boston College had a chance, lost.
Actually any team you want to mention had a chance. Even Virginia had a chance, since they beat FSU, but they also lost to a lot of teams.
They even blew a chance to go to the Liberty Bowl. The BCS worked, by-and-large, in terms of which teams went, and which teams didn't.
I give it an 'A' in terms of getting the right teams where they needed to be. I might have preferred TCU play Oregon, but was a year too early.
Iowa St, was a 'quality' opponent, and TCU had to play their best to win.
OSU beat Notre Dame, in a good paring of teams, talent wise.
It all came out in the wash.