Eric wrote:Not sure if this is the case or not. Obviously Urban whined to the media, but I'm not sure that effected the average pollster. You can't tell me the rematch-factor wasn't a concern for the pollsters.
Possibly, then again, possibly not.
But I can say for certain, that it wasn't until after Meyer whined, and started spouting maybe we need a playoff, that
florida was announced as OSU's opponent.
I can also say, that the coaches' Poll is reflective of the mind set of most Universities. And that University presidents are predominantly against a playoff.
I do not claim any idea of what the Harris poll's insight might be. Though, seeing as how the AP poll was no longer a determining factor as a BCS component at that time; the associated press had no influence over the decision.
And you can take from that what you will.
Eric wrote:Correct. They were down by two scores most of the game. But the game was decided on an onside kick. Plus they were the road team.
The game ended in regulation, and ended because Michigan did not come up with the ball.
The game was not necessarily decided by the onside kick. Because we don't know that even
had Michigan come up with the ball, whether or not they would have scored.
No, Michigan being down by two scores most of the game was the true deciding factor.
Alabama on the other hand, only trailed at one point of the game. Which is when they lost.
Eric wrote:And? If the second game sees Alabama win by a field goal then......Then what? They went 1-1 against each other. LSU's win means nothing while Bama's means the world as they'll go down in the record books as the final champion when in reality it was a draw.
So what if it does?
However, what if it doesn't.
What ifs work only in the sense of, "let's not do it, because I'm afraid of the outcome".
Eric wrote:And Alabama didn't have to play their game on the heels of a university tragedy. I don't know how that event factored into Oklahoma State's psyche, but we can speculate. The quality of loss is important I believe and it shouldn't be discounted at all. I don't think I ever suggested that Oklahoma State's loss was more forgivable than Alabama's.
By stating you would rather see Oklahoma St play for the Championship, instead of seeing a rematch between two teams who may very well be the best two teams, but also make a claim such as, "We put teams in the title game if they get the job done when it matters."
Remind me if I'm wrong about this, but, didn't Oregon, Oklahoma St, and Oklahoma all lose,
this past weekend?
How is that getting the job done when it matters?
Whose loss was more recent?
As for the psyche of Oklahoma St, I give them no excuses. They were up 17-7 @ the half. 24-17 @ the start of the 4th quarter. And they did not score in the 4th quarter. Which allowed ISU to tie things up with a touchdown.
Furthermore, the quality of opponent in Iowa State adversely affected Oklahoma State's strength of schedule, bringing it down, had the Cowboys won the game.
What then does that say about them, seeing as they lost it?
Eric wrote:I'm not defending the concept of conference championship rematches either. I think they are unfortunate since they're there to guard against top teams not playing each other in large conferences. I'd still prefer a 12-1 Va Tech to 11-1 Bama.
Obviously, you did not understand my comment; as I had intended to convey that I would not be opposed to seeing Virginia Tech vs ??? in the title game.
However, denoting that you do not advocate conference championship rematches, then say you would prefer to watch a team who won their conference championship in a rematch, play for the national title in place of a team who would be playing for a national title in a rematch, is arbitrary, contradictory, and hypocritical.
Eric wrote:No, that comment was not poorly thought through.
Yes it was, my point still applies.
Eric wrote: And no, we don't consider the most deserving teams precisely based on how good we think the teams are. Many people still feel that Oklahoma is better than a team like Virginia Tech, even with the two losses. Teams can lose fluky games and that has no bearing on how good the teams are perceived as being, but, that puts a damper on the "deservability" factor since they didn't get up for the game. We put teams in the title game if they get the job done when it matters. Obviously, your position about putting the two teams you happen to think are the best into the title game isn't immune from the criticism whatsoever. That's about as messy and subjective as anything else.
Oh no, then why is Southern Miss un-ranked? They are 9-2, the exact same record as Oregon. I can honestly say, I wouldn't give the Golden Eagles much of a chance vs the Ducks without ever having seen them play one another. Based purely on what I have seen on the field.
And that is the same formulation you use when allocating your preseason rankings; because you have not yet seen anyone play; that to me is messy & subjective.
Is my assumption of who the two best teams are, more so subjective than your assumption as to factor in some team's possible psyche? Hardly.
Eric wrote:If you ask the pollsters, none of them believe Houston is better than Oklahoma. But they rate Houston higher because they are getting the job done
Really, then explain #2 Alabama, #3 Arkansas, #4 Oklahoma State, #5 Virginia Tech, #6 Stanford, and #7 Boise State.
They all have 1 loss, which is 1 more than Houston.
I would say that is ranking based on those same assumptions as commented on above.
Eric wrote: We give Houston the benefit of the doubt, for the time being. If you rule them out beforehand from competing in the BCS and it turns out, counterfactually, that they would have done well in a BCS game, you shafted the Coogs. If they get blown out then...They get blown out. We learned something new.
And if they are not paired with anyone in a BCS bowl, then this point is moot. Because they didn't play in a BCS bowl and got left out. Which means, you cannot assume they would fair any better in said BCS without the same predetermined counter-logic that you leave Alabama or Arkansas out of the title game, simply because you are afraid of what might happen.
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