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Showing posts with label Big XII. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big XII. Show all posts

Monday, February 27, 2012

Didn’t We Almost Have It All?

On Saturday afternoon, Missouri and Kansas took part in an epic battle, the latest and possibly last in a century old rivalry. The championship of the Big XII hung in the balance. The Missouri Tigers won the first contest between these rivals earlier in the month. The Kansas Jayhawks’ backs were against the wall coming into this game in their own building.

Missouri had the regular season tiebreaker over Kansas. Missouri took an early lead that they would not relinquish for the remainder of regulation. Missouri led by 19 points in the second half. Missouri lost.

4
LIVE BY THE SWORD…DIE BY THE SWORD

By “sword”, I mean the three point shot. In the first meeting, Missouri trailed Kansas late in part because of missed jumpers. They came back with late three point shots and missed free throws by Kansas. This afternoon, Missouri surged far ahead early in the game. The Tigers attempted 29 three point shots, making 11 (six in the first half).

Senior Marcus Denmon, who finished with 28 points, nailed a three point shot to put Mizzou up 19 points. Denmon was 6 for 10 from downtown. The rest of the team didn’t fare so well from behind the arc.

After going up by 19 points, Missouri would go 1 for 8 on three pointers. Missed jump shot after missed jump shot allowed Kansas to climb back into the game. Kansas senior Tyshawn Taylor (24 points) and Thomas Robinson (28 points, 12 rebounds) steadily chipped away at Missouri’s defense. Robinson seemed to be Johnny on the spot, grabbing rebound after rebound following a missed shot by the Tigers. Robinson tied the score with 16 second remaining in the second half, sending the game into overtime.

Robinson: and one! 3
ONE MAN SHOW

Missouri’s Marcus Denmon was spectacular in the extra five minute period. Denmon made three of the Tigers’ four field goals in overtime, including two three pointers and two shots to give Missouri the lead. However, Denmon, who played 44 minutes, appeared to be the only Tiger who was not gassed by the end of regulation. The momentum had completely shifted to Kansas and Missouri could not stop them.

Taylor and Robinson of Kansas would combine to score all 12 of the Jayhawks’ overtime points, with only one field goal coming from beyond the perimeter. Taylor, Robinson, and the Kansas crowd appeared to overwhelm Missouri, who offered little resistance to Kansas’ penetration. The ultimate irony, Marcus Denmon made what would have been a game winning shot for Missouri with no time on the clock. Unfortunately for Denmon and the Tigers, the ball left his hands with no time on the clock.

Denmon helped put Missouri ahead early and keep them in the game during overtime. 2 

CLOSE BUT NO CIGAR

For the second year in a row, Mizzou reached the 25 win plateau in the regular season. For the second year in a row the Tigers began a conference losing streak in late February that began with a loss to Kansas State and included a loss to Kansas. Conversely, Kansas, for the second year in a row, had a winning streak of five or more after beating Missouri. Last year Missouri was one and done in the NCAA Tournament, cleaned out Cincinnati in the round of 64 after limping into the Big Dance. This year?   

The picture says a thousand words. 1
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The Daily Hat Trick is sponsored by Sports N Stuff. For great deals on jerseys, shirts, cologne, and other guy stuff, visit http://www.sportsnstuff.biz/.

1) Image from http://www.stltoday.com/
2) Image from http://www.kansas.com/
3) Image from www2.ljworld.com
4) Image from http://www.kansascity.com/

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Death of the NCAA

Who among us likes to hear someone, correctly, tell us, “I told you so,”? None of us, I would presume. Even when the person reminding us of how wrong we were all along is a trusted friend or a family member, at best, the statement does little more than beg to original question. Often, that expression serves of a source of annoyance and a reminder of the downside of our stubbornness.

The NCAA appears to be very close to a point which its members, fans, and business partners can tell it that. For years, fans, journalists, and countless other people have called for a playoff system in college football. The NCAA has insisted upon not implementing a postseason tournament for football. Every logistical excuse is available. The bowls are rooted in college football tradition. There are travel considerations. There is not a clear set of fair criteria.

I have witnessed sports journalist after sports journalist, over the years, come up with a logistically sound playoff system including as few as three and as many as 16 playoff spots. I always found such columns to be interesting, creative, and fun to read. I also thought often, “This will never happen.”

I probably wouldn't mind hearing "I Told You So" directly from Carrie Underwood, but that may be the only exception. 1

DEATH BY A PAIR OF CUTS

Over this past weekend, Syracuse University and the University of Pittsburgh announced their intentions to leave the Big East and join the Atlantic Coastal Conference. The ACC accepted. Within the past month, Texas A&M University announced its plans to leave the Big XII and join the Southeastern Conference. Rumors have already surfaced that the Big XII (which is already down to 10 teams) is in danger of losing two more big names in Oklahoma and Texas. These schools are rumored to be eyeing a move to the Pac-12.

Meanwhile, schools such as Texas Christian University, who recently announced its intention to join the Big East Conference in 2012, may be left holding the bag for several years. TCU joined the Big East, in part, as an effort to improve its status for Bowl Championship Series bowl games and greater access to an opportunity to play for the BCS National Championship. With the exodus of Syracuse and Pittsburgh, in addition to rumors swirling about a possible departure by the University of Connecticut, the Big East appears to be following a similar road as the Big XII: major-conference extinction.

The super-sized expansions of the Pac-12, Big Ten, ACC, and SEC are setting up the stage for a college football world with four super conferences and a playoff system revolving around those conferences. The NCAA appears to have zero say-so or influence on conference affiliation. It has made no effort, whatsoever, to set up a college football playoff system and has elected to allow the bowl system and the media to dictate an unofficial champion of its most popular sport. If the NCAA has so little influence or concern about the structure and postseason of its member schools in football, then what, exactly, do these four super conferences need the NCAA for?

Like I said, TCU may be left holding the bag. 2
PEACE OUT

The NCAA has drowned its member institutions with rules, regulations, sanctions, and probation for every possible misstep imaginable, and some that one could not have imagined before reading about it in the news. I would wager that the organizing body is very unpopular among college football fans and that major college football program institutions would prefer the absense of an environment in which non-compliance is an inevitability, considering the number of people, directly and indirectly, connected to a big-time college football program.

This thought crossed my mind last year when the first wave of conference musical chairs, involving TCU, Utah (Pac-12), and Nebraska (Big Ten) began last year and has only been reinforced by some of the recent speculation I have heard on sports talk radio: Once the super conferences are formed and finalized, those members’ football programs will secede from the NCAA and form their own body, their own rules, and their own playoff system in football.

Ten years ago, such an idea would be inconceivable, to the point of laughter. As it stands, the NCAA has neutered itself in football to the point where member institutions are unilaterally deciding membership alignment. I think, barring an intervention or compromise, that it is only a matter of time before the NCAA is plucked from the affairs of major football programs. Once that happens, what is to stop those institutions from doing the same with their revenue-neutral and loss-leading sports such as basketball, baseball, and track?

I am sure this could make an interesting historical attraction one day. 4

I TOLD YOU SO

The NCAA has come under fire for decades for failing to take steps to draw a fair and definitive conclusion to its college football season for major programs. The conference shuffling of heavy hitting, major schools, is the beginning of a massive power shift in college football from a confederation of major conferences, mid-major conferences, bowl committees, and the BCS to four super conferences possessing the lion’s share of the decision making in college football.

The NCAA deflected, rationalized, and compromised on a means of deciding a champion in college football while being heavy handed with institutions failing to dot “I”s and cross “T”s properly. If it does not act very quickly, decisively, and in a manner that is friendly and accommodating to member schools and fans, its day of reckoning will come sooner than later. The NCAA could be on a road to becoming part of the past of major college football and possibly the past of major college sports altogether.

I wonder how Mr. Finebaum really feels. I doubt he's alone. 3

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To advertise with The Daily Hat Trick, or to submit a guest column, please contact the editor at eric@thedailyhattrick.info.

The Daily Hat Trick is sponsored by Sports N Stuff. For great deals on jerseys, shirts, cologne, and other guy stuff, visit http://www.sportsnstuff.biz/.

1) Image from amazon.com
2) Image from seaton-newslinks.blogspot.com, altered by The Daily Hat Trick
3) Image from jefflail.com
4) Image from travelpod.com

Friday, August 26, 2011

Micro Takes

There is a lot going on in the world of sports. The dozen of you who have read the Hat Trick before know that I have no problem discussing a sports topic at length. Today, however, The Daily Hat Trick is going to experiment with a new angle. I only have a few words to say about the following, among the laundry list of hot sports topics.


The involvement of LSU quarterback Jordan Jefferson, among others, in a bar fight that led to the arrest of Jefferson and another LSU football player –

Kids, don’t fight. Fighting is bad, m’kay? And if you fight, you could go to jail. Jail is bad, m’kay?

Fighting is BAD! M'kay? 1

Los Angeles Lakers forward Ron Artest, whose petition to legally change his name to “Metta World Peace” was delayed because of Artest’s failure to pay outstanding traffic tickets –

No justice, no “Peace”

The Clerk of Court to Ron-Ron: "Peace!" 2

The three grand slam performance of the New York Yankees, yesterday, the first ever in the 142 year history of Major League Baseball, in a comeback from a 7-1 deficit against the Oakland Athletics –

My message to any of the fans who left early, either because of the 7-1 score or the 89 minute rain delay following the third inning: “You know you done f____d up, right?”

"Now, you see there? You know your done f____d up, right?" 3

The Texas A&M athletic program seeking greener pastures than the Big XII conference –

1) Shouldn’t the conference have swapped names with the Big 10 after the it lost two members and the Big 10 gained its 12th member in former Big XII school, Nebraska?

2) If A&M leaves, would the remaining schools be “seventy five percenters”?

3) Perhaps the Big XII should become the “Dear John Conference”, with its rash of breakups with long time member universities.



Jim Thome accepting a trade from the Minnesota Twins back to the Cleveland Indians –

I am assuming Thome’s goal is to get into the playoffs. The way the Indians are playing, and the way the White Sox have juuuust missed turning the corner, several times this year, I think he is returning to the wrong former American League Central team.


Criticism of team captain Fred Couples adding Tiger Woods to the President’s Cup team –

If any of you have ever bought a lottery ticket, you have no room to criticize. The odds of Tiger catching lightning in a bottle and catapulting the team is far greater than anyone winning a lottery prize. He did just finish fourth in this year’s Masters.


Ohio State University quarterback Terrelle Pryor, embattled in a scandal that resulted in Head Coach Jim Tressel’s resignation and pressure on Pryor to leave school and enter the NFL Supplemental Draft, selected by the Oakland Raiders –

Can anyone think of another franchise that could better embrace Pryor, given his situation?


Baltimore Ravens rookie receiver Tandon Ross, who broke up a fight on Thursday afternoon in which a restaurant manager was attacked by two other men at a restaurant, one of which produced a knife and cut the manager –

Ross caught two balls later that evening in a game against the Washington Redskins. Two balls…coincidence? I think not!


Danica Patrick joining NASCAR full time –

I’m looking forward to the champagne baths when she wins.

Get your minds out of the gutter, fellas! 4

Don’t forget to vote in the fan polls!


To advertise with The Daily Hat Trick, or to submit a guest column, please contact the editor at eric@thedailyhattrrick.info.

The Daily Hat Trick is sponsored by Sports N Stuff. Visit www.sportsnstuff.biz for great deals on shirts, jerseys, cologne and other great stuff for guys!

1) Image from jimsfear.blogspot.com
2) Image from vlsportssexycoll.com
3) Image from xbox360gamersforlife.blogspot.com
4) Image from indystar.com

Monday, August 15, 2011

Texas A&M and the SEC Play Musical Chairs

1
Much speculation took place over this past weekend about the possibility of Texas A&M joining the Southeastern Conference. For the past year, several big conference schools have changed conferences and several schools, formerly in mid-major conferences, have joined the ranks of the major, Bowl Championship Coalition conferences. Texas A&M would be the latest in a growing number of schools migrating for greener conference pastures.


I would never pretend to have inside information. From my vantage point, however, it appears that an A&M move to the SEC is inevitable. The question is, “When?”

I read multiple rumors and headlines over the past weekend suggesting that A&M would announce that it would join the SEC. I then witnessed a number of “can neither confirm nor deny,” quotations attributed to influencers and decision makers involved in a possible conference move. Where there is smoke there is fire. In sports, it is often a four alarm blaze.


SO WHAT?

Should the speculation of a Texas A&M move to the SEC prove to be correct, there will be a number of ramifications. First, it will expand the SEC’s footprint to the state of Texas, a state with more than 20 million people. This will add enormous value to SEC television contracts and increase the presence and influence of the SEC in Texas, a recruiting hotbed.

A&M will no longer be “the other” major Texas school in its own conference. Beyond institutional pride, this will differentiate Texas A&M from the University of Texas (and any other Texas school) regarding the profile of its athletic programs. Recruits and potential hires to Texas A&M athletics would be electing to compete in the SEC, as opposed to the Big XII at Texas. A football recruit from Texas, wanting to remain in Texas and compete with SEC caliber competition, will have one option in Texas A&M.

Spencer Ware Spencer Ware #16 of the Louisiana State University Tigers is tackled by Michael Hodges #37 of the Texas A&M Aggies during the AT&T Cotton Bowl at Cowboys Stadium on January 7, 2011 in Arlington, Texas.
The once great LSU vs Texas A&M rivalry may soon be renewed on a permanent basis. 2

THE BIGGEST LOSER

In the past year, the Big XII Conference contended with the defections of Nebraska to the Big Ten Conference and Colorado to the Pac 12. Should Texas A&M move at some point in the near future, I think it is probable that the SEC would add a 14th team to balance its divisional alignments. This would mean another school, possibly another Big XII school, would also defect. The domino effect of a Texas A&M relocation to the SEC cold strip significant assets from other conferences.

Some of the speculation that I read about includes the possibilities of either Texas Tech or Missouri, both Big XII schools, following A&M to the SEC. I also observed speculation about Florida State University, of the Atlantic Coastal Conference, being an addition to the SEC to balance a Texas A&M acquisition. Either of these moves will weaken the conference suffering the departure, possibly crippling to the Big XII.

The 2012 Big XII logo? 3

WHAT’S NEXT?

While the SEC issued pacifying soft denials of a possible move, anyone on the outside looking in can see the possible benefits for the SEC of adding Texas A&M. I think the pros would far outweigh the cons. For that reason, I think A&M to the SEC is a “when” question and not an “if” question.

I believe that an A&M move would be the next step in a long line of steps, which will eventually lead to the NCAA having four super conferences for football, with the Big XII and Big East being either dissolved or on the outside looking in. Ultimately, having four super conferences could pave the way for the elimination of the BCS and its concept and the use of a 4, 6, or 8 team playoff system to decide the national champion in football.

Stay tuned! I am sure this story has a number of exciting chapters to come!

This trophy may be a relic if present alignment trends continue. 4

Don’t forget to vote in the fan polls!

To advertise with The Daily Hat Trick, or to submit a guest column, please contact the editor at eric@thedailyhattrick.info.


1) Image from fotosearch.com
2) Image from zimbio.com
3) Image from big12journal.com
4) Image from bleacherreport.com

Friday, February 4, 2011

Must See Sports - First Weekend of February, 2011

Due to some unavoidable obstacles, The Daily Hat Trick could not publish Must See Sports on its usual Thursday spot. Have no fear! The Daily Hat Trick is back in the saddle!


Thursday, February, 3, 2011

Miami Heat at Orlando Magic

Obviously, I am a tad late on this one, but it was all it was cracked up to be. This game is becoming a fierce rivalry and LeBron is pulling his weight in these battles. The Eastern Conference is back, folks.

Heat 104
Magic 100
FINAL

LeBron James: 51 points

Superman and The King: brining the relevance back to the East 1

Friday, February 4, 2011

Dallas Mavericks at Boston Celtics

The Mavs and Celtics battle in this nationally televised match. While not probable, it is a possible preview of the NBA Finals. The Mavericks appear to be back on track after experiencing a slump last month in the absence of forward Dirk Nowitzki. Nowitzki recently surpassed the 20,000 career points plateau and there is no reason to think he will slow down by tonight.

That said; the Celtics are healthy. They are hot. They are very tough to beat at home. While not a game breaking player, forward Peja Stojakovic is not traveling with the team and is not expected to make his debut with the Mavericks until Monday, at the earliest. When at a disadvantage, a catch and shoot guy on the perimeter could make a difference. Barring poor execution, I do not see Dallas ripping this game away in Bean Town.

Advantage: Celtics


Saturday, February 5, 2011

Los Angeles Lakers at New Orleans Hornets

Yes, I am getting my homer on. I am getting my Hornets on, too, tomorrow night. Yours truly stops at nothing to bring you close to the action and the Hat Trick will be on location for this Western Conference showdown. Alright...I bought tickets and I may as well take some notes and pictures. I fessed up. Happy?

This is a game that both teams need as both teams, strong contenders in the West, have dropped games in the past week that they had within their grasps. The Lakers lost a game to the league-best San Antonio Spurs on an Antonio McDyess put back with 0.3 seconds remaining as time expired. The Hornets dropped games to a then conference-worst Sacramento Kings.

Kobe appears frustrated to a point bordering on anger and the Hornets are banged up, with point guard Chris Paul playing on a tweaked ankle and center Emeka Okafor out with a strained oblique muscle. The Black Mamba always seems to, for whatever reason, step his game up and bite the Bees at The Hive, no matter how well or poorly the other nine players are performing on the court.

Advantage: Lakers
I love watching Kobe play in person but I hate how he impacts the final score when I see him in New Orleans. 2

NCAA Men's College Basketball
Kentucky Wildcats (11) at Florida Gators (23)

The Florida Gators are in first place in the SEC East and, at this point in the season, it would be unfair of me to call Florida's standing "smoke and mirrors". But as I look at the record, the schedule, the statistical rankings, and the results, I cannot help but think Florida's bubble is going to burst. They hook up with the division rival Kentucky Wildcats in a late, 9:00 EST start on ESPN.

The Gators earned a quality win at Vanderbilt earlier this week. However, Florida only has one win over an opponent with a winning SEC record (the Bruce Pearl-less Tennessee Volunteers). The Gators are ranked lower than 100 in the NCAA in points, assists, and field goal percentage. Their second leading scorer, guard Kenny Boynton, is shooting 36% from the field.

In contrast, Kentucky is a game and a half back of Florida in the East. The Wildcats have had some questionable losses, dropping games to Ole Miss and Georgia, but it also has had impressive out of conference wins against Washington, Oklahoma, Notre Dame, Indiana, and Louisville. "Diaper Dandy" freshman guards Terrance Jones and Brandon Knight are ready for the NBA now and as the calendar inches closer to March, Kentucky coach John Calipari's teams get increasingly focused. I think the Gator's bubble bursts and the Cats get on track.

Advantage: Kentucky
Dear Gators: Good luck keeping up with Jones. Regards, Reality
Dear NBA: Thanks for the 19 year old age requirement. Regards, Kentucky Coach John Calipari 3

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Sunday offers the following host of must-see sporting events:

National Hockey League
Pittsburgh Penguins at Washington Capitals

PGA Golf
Final Round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open

Rugby (Scrum)
Rugby Union - Anglo-Welsh Cup

Dragons vs Scarlets at Newport


Rugby between the Dragons and Scarlets is "must see" for Sunday? C'MON, MAN! 4

YEAH RIGHT, BABY!!!

Super Bowl XLV - Pittsburgh Steelers vs Green Bay Packers

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The Pittsburgh Steelers and the Green Bay Packers: to quote NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, "THAT is FOOTBALL!"

Neither of these teams had had the glamorous level of media exposure enjoyed by the New York Jets, New England Patriots, Indianapolis Colts, Chicago Bears, or Philadelphia Eagles in 2010. Regardless, I think the football gods got this one right. I think, all factors considered proportionately, the Steelers are the best of the AFC and the Packers are the best of the NFC. That is not always the case with the Super Bowl.

The Daily Hat Trick will go into greater depth of the game itself over the weekend. What I find most intriguing about this Super Bowl is the apparent lack of intrigue. I have heard more about Steelers rookie Pro Bowl center Maurkice Puncey'sRoethlisberger scandal questions do not count), the coaches, the fans, the journey of the teams, or any human interest stories.

The 21st century, 24 hour media knows how to sell. This pattern of coverage tells me that people really are not as interested in the two teams involved as they typically are for a Super Bowl. The Steelers are not sexy. But if you are a true football fan, they are very relevant, whether you like them or not. The Packers are not sexy. But their QB is going to bring the "sexy back" to Titletown that left with Brett Favre. Then again, perhaps it was just "sexual harassment" that left Green Bay with the Ol' Gunslinger?
Yes, I'm reaching, here. But the sands of Favre's time on this blog are slipping as I think he is really retiring this time around. No Favre...no Jenn. Men, you want more Jenn; admit it. Ladies: thank you for tolerating Jenn this season. You can count on your hands the number of times you'll see this young woman again. Okay, maybe your fingers.... Maybe a toe or two.... 6
Las Vegas likes Green Bay, but I think the QB battle is what will tip the nearly even scales. Roethlisberger has been there and done that. A-Rodg is JUST beginning to emerge from the shadow of #4, who we are still discussing even though he and his team have long since been out of this year's Super Bowl picture.

Advantage: Steelers
Say what you want about Big Ben (middle), but THIS hottie can NOT accuse him of doing anything unsolicited!

Other noteworthy events:
Orlando Magic at Boston Celtics

These teams hook up in a nationally televised game on ABC before the Super Bowl. If you tire of the day long pre-game Super Bowl coverage and need actual sports to get you through the day, this may get you by.

Boston is at home. They are almost impossible to beat there. Orlando appears to be a half step behind the elite of the Eastern Conference, in light of its recent home loss and surrender of 51 points to LeBron James and the Heat. Superman will need to be super to walk out of the TD Garden with a win.

Advantage: Celtics

NCAA Men's College Basketball
Ohio State Buckeyes (1) at Minnesota Golden Gophers

This is a big matchup in the Big Ten. The Buckeyes try to remain unbeaten in the house of a talented, but struggling Minnesota team, badly in need of a conference win. Good luck slowing down freshman forward Jared Sullinger (18 PPG 10 RPG) on his way to the Big Ten title (and the NBA). The game is nationally televised on ESPN at 2pm EST.

Advantage: Ohio State


Monday, February 7, 2011

NCAA Men's College Basketball
Missouri Tigers (15) vs Kansas Jayhawks (2)

Big battle in the Big XII. Kansas (2nd in Big XII) brings the "Morris Brothers" show, Marcus Morris (17 PPG 7 RPG) and Markieff Morris (13 PPG 9 RPG) back home to Lawrence to take on a Missouri team whose standing in the Big XII (7th place) is slipping quickly. Missouri is a good team in a tough conference and, prior to Wednesday, could rebut, to its critics, that it has several quality wins, in and out of conference, only losses were against tough competition. However, a loss to Oklahoma State (2-5 in the conference prior to Wednesday's game) not only put Missouri further back in the Big XII race, but, paired with a loss to Kansas on Monday, may jeopardize its Top 25 ranking and possible seeding in the Big Dance next month.

Advantage: Kansas

1) Image from theglobeandmail.com
2) Image from nationalgeographic.com
3) Image from sec.floridatoday.com
4) Image from rugbymeansdiamond.blogspot.com
5) Image from sportsosphere.com
6) Image from maximonline.com
7) Image from drunkathlete.com

Friday, December 17, 2010

Even the BCS Can't Smoke a Cuban

Do you like sports (probably so if you are reading this Pulitzer worthy material)? Do you enjoy following a sport all the way through the end of a season? Do you like to know who the champion of a sport is? Do you like college football? Were I on the radio, this would be the point at which you would hear the giant needle scratch and the music coming to a sudden halt. There is no champion of college football.

Sure, there are bowl games. There are multiple media polls, ranking the top 25 teams in FBS college football at the conclusion of each season. There has been a Bowl Alliance, a Bowl Coalition, and, of course, the ever-so-popular Bowl Championship Series, or BCS. However, there is no NCAA Championship in Football Bowl Subdivision (i.e. major schools) college football. It is a MYTH!

The end result is that politics, relationships, and business heavyweights in media and sports sponsorships ultimately decide who can and cannot have a seat at the dinner table in Club BCS. In 1984, Brigham Young University, quarterbacked by Heisman Trophy finalist Robbie Bosco and coached by the legendary Lavell Edwards, won the mythical consensus National Championship (Associated Press Poll and United Press International Poll). Proponents of the BCS view the arrangement as progress. Yet the 1984 BYU Cougars, under a BCS-like arrangement, may have never had an opportunity to be considered for the BCS Championship because of its membership, at that time, in the non-automatic-qualifying Western Athletic Conference.

Since 1984, schools such as Tulane, Utah, Texas Christian University, Boise State, and Auburn (member of a BCS conference) have posted perfect records (more than once, in some cases) yet never had an opportunity to play in any the mythical championship games. College football fans should consider this to be unacceptable! We watch, we attend games, we follow our schools, many of us follow other schools with compelling stories, and we get shafted with this corporately orchestrated production at the conclusion of each season. We deserve more.

Enter Mark Cuban

I have been an outspoken critic of billionaire Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks of the National Basketball Association. I perceive him as egotistical, inwardly focused, obnoxious, and megalomaniacal new money, having earned a fortune, and cashing out in time, during the dot com 1990s. I think he gets too involved in the day-to-day basketball operations of his team. I think words come out of his mouth far too often during games while he is seated courtside, instead of in an owner's box. I think that Mark Cuban is EXACTLY what college football fans need.

They should have never given this dude money. 3
For all of my criticism of Cuban, 52, there is little doubt that he is a smart businessman who knows how to take care of the people that work for him and give the fans a superior quality sports entertainment product. He is a visionary. In other words, he knows how to give people what they want for the purpose of achieving his desired ends.

Yesterday, Cuban stated, during a sports radio interview on the Dan Patrick Show, that he would invest his personal fortune into creating a playoff system in NCAA FBS football and eliminating the current BCS system. There is a fine line between madness and brilliance. Getting on nationally syndicated radio and stating that you single handedly plan to dismantle an institution that has controlled college football's postseason with hundreds of billions of payout dollars to conferences for over a decade, in spite of being very unpopular with fans, may sound like madness. When you are a relatively young billionaire with a proven track record of success, often through unconventional means, it may be brilliant.

Show Me The MONEY!!!!

I do not pretend to know the finer details and politics of sporting event financing. I have written, helped produce, and sold media. At the end of the day, the message is always...ALWAYS, "Get the money!" GET THE MONEY. Guess what? Mark Cuban has the money to make more money. The BCS pays out approximately $110 million to athletic conferences and universities for participating in a BCS bowl.

Cuban has guys like this shaking in their boots. 4
Having a net worth of $2.3 billion 2, Cuban has the resources to fund the BCS payouts himself, possibly with his Christmas money. I am also quite confident that Cuban is well acquainted with other super-wealthy individuals. I have little doubt that Cuban, between his own wealth and his contacts, is capable of arranging the financing necessary to lure the six major conferences (SEC, ACC, Big East, Big XII, Pac-12, and Big 10, which also has 12 teams - that's logical) away from the fascist BCS. The mid major conferences need little inducement to follow and its member universities may all award an honorary doctorate to Cuban should he succeed in his mission.   

Cash is King; Television Is It's Prince

Tickets sales and other stadium revenue are an important source of income for universities. However, the power brokers, the conferences, the NCAA, as well as university athletic departments, earn their bread an butter through the media, particularly television. I have read countless estimates of the amount of annual television revenue projected to be generated should college football implement a playoff system, upwards of $1 billion. Cuban and any investors he should choose to embark on his playoff mission need to reduce the risk and increase the profit potential for conferences and television networks.

If you buy into my premise that people want a playoff system in college football and do not like the current BCS system, then it follows that more people will support a playoff system (TV viewing, tickets sales, travel, etc.). If there is greater demand for a playoff system, then advertisers and sponsors will pay more to have placement in the playoff events. If sponsors will pay more for placement, then television networks will pay more for broadcasting rights for a playoff system. If there is more revenue available from broadcasting rights, then Cuban, et. al. can afford to invest more in payout money than the BCS currently offers to its member conferences. The details may be complicated, but the numbers are fairly simple. Cuban can make this happen, financially.

Common sense Always Wins in the Long Run

A true playoff system in college football: the fans want it; the coaches want it; the players want it. So why has it not happened? The decades-long legacy of the fragmented political structure of major college football is a perverse system in which the whole is equal to less than the sum of the parts. What does that mean, exactly? Each of the individual power brokers - the BCS itself, the bowl committees, the athletic conferences, and individual universities - have a good, profitable arrangement in place. To date, not enough of those power brokers have received enough inducements to offset the risk of scrapping the current system. Make no mistake; the BCS, as it is, is a gravy train for the BCS conferences and all of the other stakeholders in the BCS. And the axiom, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." is the gospel truth to these entities. It will take cold, hard cash, a bunch of it, to encourage the necessary stakeholders to act.

Cuban has the vision. Cuban can arrange the cash. Cuban has the people that make college football's profitability possible, the fans, on his side. The BCS is on borrowed time. Cuban may emerge as the ultimate "BCS Buster". Good luck, BCS. Because in America, it is very difficult to smoke a Cuban.

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Getcha popcorn ready! 5

1) Source: collegefootballpoll.com
2) Source Forbes.com: April, 2010
3) Image from cncpal.com
4) Image from orangejuiceblog.com
5) Image from thenextweb.com