The Best Story of 2009 Debate – SEC No Longer An Urban League

December 31, 2009

Read the arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan about which story they believe had the best 2009.



As Bleacher Fan noted on Monday, rarely, in sports, are seasoned fans or media surprised. We all crave the unexpected in some manner, but rarely do we experience it. Thanks to Florida head football coach Urban Meyer, not only has he allowed us to experience the unexpected here at the end of 2009, but he has gifted us the best story of the entire year. I’ll let my colleagues battle it out about who gets to write about Jon and Kate Plus Eight.

When the news initially broke – that Urban Meyer was stepping down as Florida head coach – details were sketchy. Sometimes in the media when details are sketchy, that is because reporters are sorting through conflicting reports, and building up anger about forced speed and the mandate of bring the FIRST to report something, rather than the most accurate. In this case, the clouds around the details appear to have originated with Meyer. For some reason, the media was informed of his decision to step down before the university was prepared to make a statement or deal with the aftermath.

As details slowly emerged, and Meyer was reported to be stepping down for stress related health issues – which he stated gave him the opportunity to properly align what he values most in life as his faith, his children, and his wife – it was surprising but understandable. In fact, I will go one step farther – it was admirable. Professionals know how easy it is to let a job consume your life. It is hard to say no because you want the job. You need the job. The family needs you to have the job. Priorities start to get muddy. Even though Meyer made millions, he still had a lifestyle and family to support, one that was accustomed to and built around the provisions he earned.

Then, overnight, everything changed. Supposedly after one practice – where the seniors gave a substantial effort (you know, the players that will not be with the team any more after the upcoming bowl game) – Meyer decided he would not take a leave of absence, with his “gut” feeling that he would be the head coach next season. Overnight the virtues of family life and preserved health again took a back seat to coaching – the aspect of his life that is apparently creating health problems. An NPR interview with Orlando Sentinel beat writer Jeremy Fowler revealed that Meyer visited an area hospital several times with tightness in his chest, and recently visited more frequently. With real health issues staring Meyer in the face, it is difficult to understand his reversal. Rather than stepping down, he is taking a supposed “indefinite” leave of absence from the team.

The cynic in me was tough to quiet down upon hearing Meyer’s “gut feeling” remark (that he has a “gut feeling” he’ll be coaching the Gators next season). Cynics speculate in dangerous ways. “Meyer is trying to keep a sex scandal quiet” … “Meyer is trying to engineer an exit from Florida” … “Meyer was just trying to motivate his team and it got out of hand.” What could have been a revelation of virtue from a principled person, or a reality check from an admired person, crumbled back to reality, and tarnished the legacy of a brilliant, still young coach. Right now, the optimist in me is being tamped down by the cynic. Can it really be true that Meyer is just struggling in getting his priorities in life aligned with what he believes? Are these health issues overblown? Could the entire story really be that simple? I’m not sure. Yet.

Not only does this story for Urban Meyer have the element of surprise, it also has the most impact of any story this year. The action of a single person in sports has likely transformed an increasingly less competitive recruiting battle in the state of Florida and the SEC into a free-for-all once again. In fact, his indecision is a real gift to competitive recruiters because it finally – FINALLY – gives those coaches a way to create a compelling counter to the Gator recruiting pitch.

“Urban Meyer is indecisive.” “I’m not sure he’ll stay for your entire eligibility, do you want that?” “Are you prepared to have to play for a coach that didn’t recruit you if Urban Meyer steps down – again?”

Suddenly those sure-win recruiting battles do not look as assured. It is fair and proper to ask, if Tim Tebow were being recruited now, would he want to play for Urban Meyer?

The SEC is primed for a real talent shift. Florida has enjoyed the lion’s share of talent not just from the state, but from the entire country. Florida is a championship program. But, introduce a measure of instability into that program, and the paradigm shifts. It is plausible that the talent will be more evenly spread around the SEC, and the return to a tenuous parity may be in development, all launched by this single indecisive coach.

The story of Urban Meyer is a prime example of the sad case of college football coaching from a real, human perspective – the job is the coach’s life, no exceptions. There is no doubt in my mind that, if Meyer says he has some health issues resulting from stress, then he has health issues resulting from stress. It is true that coaches get paid huge sums of money, but the job is a year-round, 80-hour a week, all-consuming vacuum where the culture of sustainable success seems to require a person to turn their entire life over, wife, kids, religious faith, and priorities included… no exceptions. If a coach does not go all in, he ends up on the unemployment line. Even a coach like Meyer.

I admire Urban Meyer for his initial noble intentions. But I am disappointed in him for reneging. He has the opportunity to make a statement bigger than the game of college football itself… that family matters. That health matters. Instead he allowed himself to be sucked back in to the vortex of college football coaching. I am sure he was “convinced” by more than just a healthy practice from the players. There are future recruits to think about, the university’s “brand” and image to uphold, the current players, and the many sponsors and boosters have opinions, too.

In the end (if this is the end of this interesting story in sports and humanity), Meyer chose between coaching and his family and health. With his “gut feelng,” he picked coaching.

No other story from sports in 2009 has created such a short-term furor, or will have as large of a long-term impact as Urban Meyer’s decision to coach or not. The balance of power is shifting in Southern – and national – college football as a result – provided competing coaches and recruiters prioritize football over everything else.

Story’s teach lessons. This story has only begun to teach, making it the best of 2009.

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The Notre Dame Job Envy Debate – Still a Marquee Job But Not The Best

December 17, 2009

Read the debate intro and the arguments from Bleacher Fan and Babe Ruthless.



Notre Dame has one of those football teams most fans just love to hate. They bring passion out of fans that do not normally show much passion. When Notre Dame is winning, excuses are made as to why. “Their schedule is easy” or “NBC has it rigged” often come up. When they are losing or are inconsistent the haters come out in full force. “Notre Dame can’t compete with the big boys anymore” and “even with NBC money, they still can’t produce a winner.” These are comments I often hear out amongst the public.

Off the record, Bleacher Fan has not been shy about his dislike for the Golden Domers. That really comes across, in a respectful way, in the argument with a comparison of the Fighting Irish to the likes of Ohio State, Southern Cal, and the entire SEC (notice Bleacher Fan’s affection for the SEC). According to Bleacher Fan, it is still a marquee job… but it is not THE best job.

Babe Ruthless, on the other hand, believes the job still is the best in college football. Babe writes that while it is a challenging job, it is also a job that has many rewards. To an extent, I do agree with Mr. Ruthless when that, “The words ‘Notre Dame’ are synonymous with football.” Notre Dame has had decent basketball teams in the past several seasons while playing in the Big East, but everyone knows Notre Dame for one thing. Football.

While I appreciate Babe bringing up “Rudy,” as it’s one of my favorite sports movies, I have to side with Bleacher Fan on this one.

Mr. Fan successfully illustrates the success other programs have had in the past several years. While not discounting the history and tradition in South Bend, the numbers presented by Bleacher Fan prove the head coaching position at Notre Dame no longer reigns as the best.

I am not a Notre Dame hater. But even the most passionate Irish fans have to believe that there are many other head coaching positions that are better jobs. After all, hasn’t Urban Meyer defied Notre Dame on two separate occasions, first to become head coach at Florida and then remain at Florida? This is despite all of his ties to Notre Dame.

Supporters of a football program like Notre Dame demand success. Unfortunately, those demands have not been made recently. Thus, while still one of the top head coaching jobs in college football, it is not THE top job.

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The Football Feast Winner Debate – SEC Recruits Future Wins From the ACC

November 30, 2009

Read the arguments from Bleacher Fan and Loyal Homer about which teams or conferences won the Thanksgiving football feast over the long weekend.



It’s good to be the SEC right now. National title hopes? Check. Multiple spots in the highly-lucrative BCS games? Check. Dominate the other regional conference? Check. Winner of Thanksgiving 2009’s Football Feast? Check!

Every rabid college football fan knows how important recruiting is. Sure, some college football writers like Sports Illustrated writer Stewart Mandel have indelicate names for these rabid fans, but I call them smart. These types of fans are tuned in; they understand not just how to win game to game but how to build a sustainable program. True fans believe in program building. Fair weather fans worry about games or select seasons. It’s the difference between rooting for a football team and rooting for a football program.

Every rabid college football fan knows that the SEC wiped the floor with the ACC over the Thanksgiving holiday, further complicating the ACC’s attempt to climb back to national relevance with powerhouse recruiting. Most importantly, all of the recruits that were visiting those home SEC games, those intrastate rivalry games, would be fools to choose the ACC school.

The ACC had three opportunities over the weekend to assert itself as a conference that rivaled the talent level and energy of the SEC, and all were extremely important within each state. At each of these games the cream of the recruiting crop in each state was in attendance and observed an SEC whooping.

The first game took place in South Carolina where a 6-5 South Carolina team was hosting an 8-3 Clemson team that already clinched its division and has an opportunity to take a run at a BCS. Clemson had the record, the momentum, and the star in running back CJ Spiller. But the entire team laid a massive egg in a 34-17 loss. The inability to stop the run (223 yards allowed on the ground) and the inability run the ball (net 48 rushing yards) taught an important lesson to lineman and skill player recruits in attendance – if the game is won in the trenches, one team can win and one team cannot. South Carolina’s finest no doubt took note. A seemingly down and out SEC team with a bad record beat an ACC division winner.

Virtually a carbon copy of the South Carolina game emerged in Georgia. The seventh ranked Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets saw senior night ruined at the oldest stadium in college football in the famed rivalry, “Clean, Old Fashioned Hate.” Georgia racked up a 30-24 victory and gave Tech a taste of its own medicine, limiting the Jackets to just over 200 yards on the ground – well below the team’s average – and amassed 339 against the Jackets’ defense. Georgia is one of the premier recruiting states for high school football with two established and elite programs in the state. As good of a coach and a recruiter as Tech head coach Paul Johnson is, it is a tough sell sitting in the homes of some of the elites in Georgia when a clearly inferior Georgia team dominated a supposedly superior Tech team.

Last, in a game I actually believed would be good, Florida dismantled a bad Florida State team. Yet another talent-rich recruiting state – probably the best of the three – saw the SEC team in the rivalry completely destroy the ACC counterpart, this time 37-10. In keeping with the running theme, Florida ran for 311 yards to FSU’s 83.

In all three cases the SEC had a more dominant offensive and defensive line than the ACC did. For the ACC to catch up with the SEC in terms of talent, it has to show improvement between the hash marks, not just at the skill positions. The ACC showed it still has a long, long way to go.

It does not matter that the ACC is better than the Big East, or that some teams in the ACC are better than others as we learned last weekend. There are few weekends – few opportunities – each football season for the ACC to prove to the SEC and the world that it is equal or better than the SEC, and begin balancing out the one-sided recruiting contest. The ACC had a massive opportunity in important, in-state chief rivalry games, and the entire conference blew it. Know the lesson that was taught now, see the results of the lesson on the first Tuesday in February.

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The Best Game To Watch THIS Weekend Debate – Key Battle Takes Place Between The Hedges

October 2, 2009

Read Sports Geek’s argument that Oklahoma-LSU is the best game and Bleacher Fan’s unique choice on what he thinks is the best game.

We are approaching the first Saturday in October. All of the non-conference cupcakes are off the schedule for the most part and it’s time to get serious. It does not get any more serious than it does in the Southeastern Conference. This weekend, a big match up takes place between the hedges in Athens as the Georgia Bulldogs welcome the LSU Tigers to town.

Despite being ranked fourth in both polls, the visiting Tigers (4-0) come in as a slight underdog to the Dawgs for some reason. The Tigers have struggled, especially on offense, and were fortunate to escape Starkville with a win over Mississippi State last week. UGA (3-1) has not exactly lit the world on fire either, as they are coming off a narrow home win over Arizona State themselves.

I stated earlier this year in a previous debate that I thought LSU could be a sleeper and sneak up on people. Did I anticipate them being at number four this quickly? No! Do I think they are the fourth best team in the land at this point? Definitely not! But they still have some playmakers on offense and I am still waiting for quarterback Jorden Jefferson to bust out.

Georgia comes in on a three game winning streak after opening the season with loss in the land of T. Boone Pickens (Oklahoma State Cowboys). The defense has been average, at best, though they appeared to play a little better last week against the Arizona State Sun Devils. The offense, which has been great against South Carolina and Arkansas, has struggled against the Cowboys and the Sun Devils. UGA comes in minus in the turnover battle, making it all the more amazing that they have three out of four games to start the season.

Both teams have a shot at making the SEC championship game (LSU more so than UGA) so that makes this is a critical game. A loss tomorrow and the loser is already under the gun with both teams still having to face Tebow and Co. The Gators come down to the Bayou next weekend while the Dawgs have their annual battle with the Gators on October 31st. LSU needs to be careful about overlooking the game this week in anticipation of next week’s battle with Florida. The Gators whipped the Tigers last year down in the swamp. Lose between the hedges, and that game loses a lot of significance. Somehow, I think LSU head coach Les Miles will not let his team lose focus. The Bulldogs put up a 52 spot on the board last year when Georgia came to Baton Rouge. How is that for motivation?

Nothing beats a fall showdown between two ranked teams from the BEST conference. This game could be one of the best of the year in the SEC. And it is most definitely the best game this weekend!

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The Best Game of THIS Weekend Debate – SEC Versus Big XII Continues!

September 4, 2009

Read Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan’s argument about which game they feel is the most important game of the upcoming weekend.



I have already spent some time this week researching and writing about how I believe the Big XII is a better overall conference than the SEC. Surprisingly, many of our readers did not agree (please take note of the heavy sarcasm). College football fans do not have to wait long to recharge this conference debate, as high rankings and expectations invade Stillwater, Oklahoma Saturday as #13 Georgia visits #9 Oklahoma State in the best game of the upcoming weekend.

This game is important for many reasons. First, one of the biggest stories for college football this season involves which conference is the best conference, and the only two legitimate participants in that debate to begin the season are the SEC and the Big XII. Last season the SEC was a touch better than the Big XII, especially in bowl games as Ole Miss defeated Texas Tech in the Cotton Bowl and, of course, Florida crushed Oklahoma in the BCS national title game. But, 2009 is a new season and fans and pundits alike are focusing on this game as the first impression and benchmark to judge if the balance of power in college football has begun to shift.

But this game is more than just conference versus conference. Each team is also struggling for recognition within their respective divisions and conferences. Georgia is living in the shadow of their cocktail cohorts, Florida. Oklahoma State is overshadowed not only by their intrastate rival Oklahoma, but by virtually every other team in the Big XII South (sorry, Baylor). A win for either team changes the way their opponents and the media perceives them. For Georgia, it would be a significant road win against a tough opponent to start the season. There may be more pressure on Oklahoma State to win this game since it is a home game, and since the Cowboys return a powerhouse trio of skill players in junior wide receiver Dez Bryant, senior quarterback Zac Robinson, and junior running back Kendall Hunter.

While Oklahoma State returns important skill players, Georgia is looking to replace several. Gone are starting quarterback Matthew Stafford and starting tailback Knowshon Moreno. Enter Joe Cox and the oft-injured running back Caleb King battling with the impressive new name running back, Richard Samuel.

In short, Oklahoma State – and by extension the Big XII – is expected to win the first big contest of the season. The most pressure is on the Cowboys, and it is becoming obvious. Head coach Mike Gundy this week banned his players from speaking to the media. While I believe sometimes the media gets more bent out of shape that they should about a coaching decision that limits their access, the story does give some insight into the mindset of the coach steering the program. Sports Illustrated’s Andy Staples called Gundy’s decision a “classic pucker move.” The decision places even more public pressure on Gundy. Fans do not mind odd behavior from their coach – as long as the team is winning.

Each team shares the spotlight on the first afternoon of college football in the 2009 season. A win is important for the immediate future of each program. If Oklahoma State wins, they are considered legitimate contenders in the Big XII, and Oklahoma is a little more concerned about Bedlam. If Georgia wins in an upset the team gains much needed confidence, not only in more experienced offensive in defensive lines, but also in a new starting quarterback. Winning an important road game against a major conference opponent is a big deal, and a very good way to start the season.

Each program has the opportunity this Saturday to set the tone for their teams, their conferences, and their seasons. Not only will this be the best game of the weekend, it will be the most interesting when considering the far-ranging conference versus conference implications.

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The 2009 Best College Football Conference Debate – All Conferences Bow to the Superiority of the Big XII

September 2, 2009

Read the debate intro and Loyal Homer’s argument that the SEC is college football’s best power conference.



Continuing with the theme of football week here at The Sports Debates, we bring another compelling topic to the America’s collective football fan conscience – college football power conference supremacy. This is an argument heard all around the country, from noisy drunks in your backyard to the casual conversation between friends over email… “MY team’s conference is BETTER than YOUR team’s conference.” Instead of ending another battle royale in fisticuffs or worse – Tom Cable style – we shall settle the matter more humanely. We hope.

What makes the Big XII the best conference for the upcoming, here-before-you-know-it 2009 college football season is that it does not even need both divisions of the conference to be the best conference in college football. The Big XII South is loaded top to bottom, with two national title contenders in Texas and Oklahoma expected to battle for the division championship along with a perpetually dangerous Texas Tech and sleeper du jour Oklahoma State waiting to break through to the conference championship. A down but occasionally dangerous Texas A&M, followed by an offensively explosive Baylor team, round out the division.

Consider the Big XII North a sleeping giant. Missouri won the division last year on the strength of an excellent quarterback in Chase Daniel. However, the quarterback waiting to take the reins at Missouri is former Parkway West High School’s signal caller, Blaine Gabbert. Gabbert was widely believed to be the best quarterback recruit in the country two years ago… if not for that Terrelle Pryor fellow. An always dangerous Kansas team returns ANOTHER senior quarterback to the conference in Todd Reesing, and Nebraska is beginning to regain their storied form under now second year head coach Bo Pelini. (We do not have to pretend that Iowa State or Kansas State are any good.)

The Big XII is stacked as a conference in both divisions, from top to bottom. But, the SEC is a good conference, too. Why is he Big XII better? It comes down to coaching, recent history, and star power.

Coaching

Texas coach Mack Brown and Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops are national brands. All college football fans know their names and their reputations (somewhere Mack Brown is pointlessly clapping on the sidelines). However, it is important to acknowledge the other minds and up and coming coaching talent in this very competitive conference. Texas Tech coach Mike Leach, the mad scientist, is one of the more innovative minds in coaching today, and perfect for the Red Raiders. Likewise, Bo Pelini is ideal for the Cornhuskers to again instill the confidence and toughness Tom Osborne Nebraska teams used to have. Perhaps the fastest rising star in the Big XII coaching ranks is Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy. Known mostly for a tirade designed to protect a player, he is also the offensive coordinator and has recruited well enough to position his offense as one of the best in the country every season. Despite the recent dominance of the Oklahoma Sooners in conference play, they are never a sure bet to win Bedlam with Gundy stalking the opposite sideline.

Recent History (2008)

The top three teams in the strongest division in the SEC, the SEC East, lost a combined 10 games last season. The Big XII’s strongest division, the Big XII South, had only five total losses in their top three teams. The SEC had just three teams with 10 plus win seasons, while the Big XII had four… and another two teams that won nine games.

Sure, I get that 2008 is not 2009. But, while the SEC has seen a lot of turnover in the conference’s star power (the NFL’s number overall draft pick in Georgia quarterback Matthew Stafford, for one of many possible examples), the Big XII returns their best players.

Star Power

While Tim Tebow is the SEC’s undisputed best player (it is not even close), the Big XII boasts last year’s Heisman Trophy winner AND runner up. Sleeper Heisman candidate, wide receiver Dez Bryant, also plays in the Big XII at Oklahoma State. While the Big XII is primarily known for their offense – and it should be – it has excellent defensive stars, too. Baylor middle linebacker Joe Pawelek was in the top 10 in the country in tackles (he had 128 total) and interceptions (he grabbed six). Nebraska’s massive defense tackle, Ndamukong Suh, plays in a four point stance and wreaks havoc on opposing centers, drawing many double teams and still managing to pressure and sack the quarterback. Oh, and the dynamic Suh also returned two interceptions for touchdowns in 2008… and caught one as a fullback in the goal line package.

Traditionally college football conferences, if they have one good team, are top heavy. That is, they have one excellent team that dominates the conference competition, and the remaining teams accept the beat down (and the payday). The Big XII is an exception. The Big XII South ALONE is an exception.

The interesting thing to consider about these conferences is that they are largely different. While the SEC has historically built teams based on superlative defense, the Big XII dominates with unmatched offensive capabilities. While the Big XII is closing the gap on defense with standouts like Pawelek and Suh, the SEC’s collective offense is stuck in neutral (even with the great Tim Tebow… I mean, did Auburn even score an offensive touchdown last season?).

The Big XII has better teams, more depth, great coaches, the momentum of recent success, and tremendous personnel. It is clear that the best conference in college football for this season is the Big XII.

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The Heisman Trophy Sleepers Debate – Jevan Snead Is 2009’s Heisman Surprise Candidate

August 21, 2009

Read Bleacher Fan and Loyal Homer’s argument for who they believe the 2009 Heisman sleeper candidate is.

Every year there are surprise Heisman Trophy candidates. We have already debated which of the “Big Three” of 2009 will win the Heisman Trophy this season. Now it is time to debate which sleeper could spoil the year end party at the Downtown Athletic Club. There is a huge list of potential sleepers. The list includes Tennessee defensive back Eric Berry, Ole Miss quarterback Jevan Snead, Ohio State quarterback Terylle Prior, Penn State running back Evan Royster, Penn State quarterback Daryl Clark, Oklahoma State wide receiver Dez Bryant, California running back Jahvid Best, Clemson running back C.J. Spiller, and Georgia Tech running back Jonathan Dwyer. They are all good possibilities – but one stands above the rest, patiently waiting at the intersection of patience and ability. The award is easier for a quarterback to win, and the sneakiest of this sleepy bunch is Ole Miss’ Jevan Snead.

For Jevan Snead to get on the radar of the 870 Heisman Trophy voters, all he has to do is do something he has already done – win. Snead delivered a masterful performance in last year’s Ole Miss-Florida game, outdueling Florida’s Tim Tebow (a athlete Percy Harvin, perhaps a primary reason why Tebow has been as successful as he has been) by throwing for two touchdown passes and running for one more. In the 2008 season, Snead threw for 26 touchdowns in a pro style offense, and ran for three others. He enters this season no longer as the new kid on the block (he transferred out of Texas after losing the quarterback duel to that Colt McCoy guy), having gained the respect of his peers as the undisputed leader of the team.

Ole Miss has a favorable schedule, too. They host Alabama and LSU and play their toughest road game at a rebuilding Auburn. Early in the season they face their toughest road tests of the season against South Carolina and Vanderbilt. Ole Miss could be a surprise undefeated team. We all know how college football poll voters love surprise undefeated teams. The opportunity to play the underdog role in a nationally televised SEC championship – perhaps against Florida, again – is ideal. Then Snead would only need to do something ELSE he has already done – beat Tebow.

Besides his great statistics, Snead also has earned the respect of coaches within his conference. South Carolina head ball coach Steve Spurrier voted Jevan Snead as his top quarterback in the conference over Tim Tebow (… don’t tell me you believe that hogwash that Spurrier made a “mistake” on his ballot?).

Plus, Snead comes from a school that is no stranger to Heisman candidate quarterbacks… though he will be the first one with Manning on the back of his jersey. And, it sounds dumb, but Jevan Snead is a memorable name. The sound of it… it is one of a kind. The kind of name that is hard to forget.

It is much easier for a quarterback to win the Heisman Trophy. While Snead is facing an uphill climb against three other established quarterbacks in college football, there is a path for him to win the trophy. If he can outplay Tebow heads up (like he did last year), match him in statistics (despite Tebow’s softball schedule), and sit back and watch Same Bradford and Colt McCoy split votes, Snead could win the 2009 Heisman Trophy. It is not a sure thing – but I would not count him out.


The Big 10 Evolution Debate – The Verdict

July 3, 2009

Read Loyal Homer’s argument to add another team to the Big 10 and Bleacher Fan’s argument to avoid another team.



To me, it’s interesting how this debate has evolved. What began a strict question discussing the specific pros and cons and possibilities of the Big Ten conference adding another team for an even 12 evolved into a debate about the value of a championship game.

Being a traditionalist myself, I find Bleacher Fan’s argument to be very appealing. Like many other Sports Geeks out there, this Sports Geek loves the Big Ten and all of the crazy traditions that Bleacher Fan recounted so well. My favorite bizarre Big Ten tradition is the Illibuck Ohio State and Illinois fight over. That’s why it pains me to award the victory for this debate to…

LOYAL HOMER!!!!!

Loyal Homer made THE point of the debate, a point that I haven’t been able to shake while contemplating how to write this verdict: A championship game isn’t solely about money. A business professional will say it is a no brainer to add a team, and a championship game, because the opportunity to make gobs and gobs of money exists. However, is money alone reason enough to potentially change the longstanding, deeply beloved traditions unique to the Big Ten conference? No.

However, Loyal Homer is not making an argument for another team and a championship game solely on the grounds of financial gain. I agree that it’s not a money issue but a respect issue.

For the Big Ten conference to earn the national respect Loyal Homer argues they’ve forfeited because of several consecutive poor BCS showings, adding a championship game helps. One of the benefits for the SEC, for example, is that it is clear in the national picture which team is the conference’s best and belongs in the BCS. Sure, the Big Ten has had at least two teams in the BCS for two consecutive years, and that has earned them a significant payday. Last season, the first team to make it to a BCS game in the Big Ten, Penn State, earned a fat $18 million bucks. The second team to make it to the BCS in the Big Ten, Ohio State, earned a $4.5 million dollar award. That’ll buy a lot of buckeye candy. But money is something the Big Ten has. Respect is what it needs.

In the end, the Big Ten is not forced to abandon all of their traditions, as Bleacher Fan intimates. In reality, some concessions will have to be made. Some jugs and bucks and buckets will not be contested EVERY year, but they won’t be completely forgotten and phased out, either.

The most important aspect of adding a team and a championship game for the Big Ten is supremacy. Not only will a supreme champion receive national publicity and the full efforts of a conference’s marketing power as they enter the BCS, the conference will remain relevant at the end of the season. A major drawback to the current construction of the Big Ten football season is the fact that they disappear as the other major conferences begin to play their most interesting, relevant games. The last Big Ten game of the season is before Thanksgiving with THE Game, while the SEC, ACC, and Big XII all play national, heavily hyped championship games in early December. The Big Ten gains nothing by being absent from the national dialogue, but they gain a lot by playing their bowl game 20-30 days after their season ends, instead of the now customary 40+ day layoff BCS teams have been forced to endure.


The Big 10 Evolution Debate – Should the Big 10 Add Another Team?

July 2, 2009

Read Loyal Homer’s argument to add another team to the Big 10 and Bleacher Fan’s argument to avoid another team.



Another year of exciting college football is nearly upon us. We’re also just starting to hit the peak of the “the Big 10 should add another team to the conference” season, too. It, like the bowl games, is an annual tradition everyone in the Midwest has come to know and love.

This year’s version of the topic was started by none other than the venerable Penn State head football coach Joe Paterno. In between stories about first-hand encounters with dinosaurs and how he consoled Adam after Eve offered him an apple, he said Division I football’s oldest conference deserves its own time in the spotlight with a championship game to decide who wins the conference, rather than the current system of an imbalanced schedule and a litany of tiebreakers (Penn State litany Lions?).

Of course, one of the bigger issues with this topic is what the heck to call the conference if they do add another team. I have a sneaking suspension it would be completely creative, out of the box thinking. Something fancy like, “Bigger 10” or “Big Dozen.” Marketing geniuses over there.

Truthfully, there are schools willing and able to play in the Big 10 from other Midwestern conferences like the MAC, who boast at least one good team pretty much every year… and even have two automatic bowl bids (but, who doesn’t?). The seemingly perfect option of adding Notre Dame is off the table, according to JoePa (and it’s wise to believe him… or he’ll chase you down as you run off the field like a ref who made a bad call).

Adding another team to the Big 10 does have some obvious advantages. For example, the conference can add a lucrative conference championship game and make some extra cash for the conference as a whole. The Big 10 has always been a television ratings draw, and would probably sell out a championship football game, unlike their counterparts in the ACC (though I’m guessing the 28,000 that attended last year had a great time).

But, of course, this issue is more complicated than just getting a championship game. If only there was a website that offered smart fans the chance to understand both sides of a complex sports issue and forecast how that issue might be logically resolved? WAIT A MINUTE!! Have you heard of The Sports Debates??? That is a great site. Tell your friends.

For today’s debate, our friend the Loyal Homer will argue that the Big 10 must add another member to the conference – no matter who that is – because the upside is too great to ignore. Loyal Homer is an SEC expert, too, so there’s good precedent to cite.

Our other good friend, Bleacher Fan, will argue that the Big 10 must avoid the temptation of adding another team to the conference – no matter who it is – because they simply do not need to do it.

Make a good case, and pay attention to the details – trust me.


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