donovan wrote:Everyone here is so interested in going back in history and making some convoluted statement of team superiority. Fact is, Florida State has been playing Florida and Miami for many years, long before the BCS. So we can assume that scheduling was not for the purpose of SOS or any other acronym assuming the characteristic of a palindrome. So what was the motivation. I have not idea...but I would suggest...travel may be one...and more likely regionalism. Fans want to see close by schools of similar size compete. Rivalries form. Kids from towns choose one school and some others a different one. The fact that Florida has a bunch of powerhouses has nothing to do with it. So if this is historically the case...and if these are not the reason...suggest some ante-BCS, then let us know. That being the case...does anyone not believe all regions would like the same competition? You think BYU and Utah are not going to play each other regardless of affiliations? Boise is going to play Idaho, no matter what. The civil war will happen in Oregon. Pick an era. So all of this historical revision as to motivation and moral superiority is a bunch of hooey. (Now that some football trivia site has become this site's bible...someone that cares can look it up.)
Well, then;
tell that to So Florida, who has recently petitioned the NCAA to get rid of, then dumped UCF from their yearly schedule, because, as they claimed, the rivalry with the Knights was holding them back, by weakening the USF SoS... and the Bulls, wanted to be taken seriously; in that, they want to be considered one of the top four Florida Power houses...
How's that working out for them, again?
Also, nd used to rotate with Indiana before the Hoosiers decided that football was more of a past time, and basketball was the sport of choice... once Indiana fell from being a regular decent opponent, the irish dropped `em for Purdue...
That is, both, recent & past history...
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