An Honest Attempt to Communicate, Concluded with Malicious Ramblings
An Honest Attempt to Communicate, Concluded with Malicious Ramblings
This is simply my attempt to explain and in some ways justify the anti- PAC-10 sentiment expressed by a large contingent of college football fans and to a certain extent, the sportswriters and most certainly, me. It is motivated by my recent reading of the MANY posts regarding the bias against the PAC-10 that have appeared here in the last several months.
Before we start, let?s get one thing clear ? the football team from the private university on the edge of Watts is Southern Cal. The students might attend USC, but in football terms, USC is where the Gamecocks catch the bus ? just ask Keith Jackson if you don?t believe me.
Now that I?ve got you riled?
The reason that the PAC-10 tends to get little respect has absolutely nothing to do with the talent of the teams this year, nor last year, nor any year in particular. I think it is the result of 4 things.
1. The PAC-10 has never produced an undisputed National Champ. When a conference cannot produce clear champions, it may get less respect than it deserves. Now it?s true that that PAC-8 produced 3 champs, and guess what ? they were all Southern Cal. Picky, I know, but important because it shows that perspective in this argument MUST pre-date MTV.
2. When a conference is dominated by one team, that conference might tend to lose a little respect. Okay, okay, UCLA (of the Pacific Coast Conference) did win it all in 1954, and before that, Cal (also of the PCC) had strong teams in 1920 and 1921. But other than those 2 schools in those 3 years, it has been Southern Cal or bust as far as undisputed titles go for the teams that currently make up the PAC-10. Remember, the Big East of the 1990?s did not get a lot of respect either, in spite of how dominating Miami was during those years.
3. When a conference puts itself in a position of not having a chance for its champ to play the other top teams during the bowl season, it tends to get overshadowed. This is exactly what the PAC-8/10 and the Big 10 did with their (pre-BCS) Rose Bowl agreement for so many years. For whatever reasons, for years the Rose Bowl match-ups seemed largely irrelevant. I didn?t get the parade, I didn?t get the weather and (in the glory days when the big bowls were played on New Year?s Day) I usually found more compelling and important game on a different channel. And if you want to talk about a team getting robbed, look at what happened to Penn State right after they joined the Big-10, simply because of that stupid Rose Bowl agreement.
4. When a conference has multiple teams that win it all, it will probably tend to get a lot of credit. Since 1970 (I have to pick some date, and I don?t think this one unfair since it includes several popular choices for the greatest teams of all time, does not favor the SEC, and does bring in Southern Cal. 1980 would make the SEC look better, but give the PAC-10 no undisputed championships), the SEC has produced 5 different National Champs, for a total of 7 undisputed titles. Only Southern Cal in the PAC-8 won an undisputed title (2, in fact). The other conferences faired about the same. The Big East produced champs with 1 program (Miami ? Pitt wasn?t in the football Big East when it won), the ACC had 2 teams (Florida State and Clemson), the Big-8/12 won with 2 teams (Nebraska and Oklahoma). Even the WAC managed to sneak 1 in with BYU. Independents pulled in a couple with Penn State and Notre Dame. The Big 10 was able to produce one (Michigan).
These are the 4 major reasons that I think that the SEC tends to get so much hype as being The Conference and why the PAC-10 (and Big East and Big 12 and the ACC of a few years ago) tends to not get as much credit as they might deserve in any particular year. As we all know, the SEC has its perennial bottom feeders, but it also has a group of 6 teams that anyone legal in Vegas can remember as having Top 10 teams for sustained periods. That is hard to do for other conferences.
Now, once we get to the bowl season, it?s hard to say that the PAC-10 doesn?t get more than its fair share of respect. Since 2000, no one has received more BCS bowl invites (6, along with the Big-10 and Big-12). And only the SEC has won as many BCS bowls ? 4 (for an eye-opener, take a look at ACC performance in BCS bowls over the same period). But here, we run into the same old problem of PAC-10/Big-10 inbreeding. Three of the 4 PAC-10 BCS wins have come against the Big-10 and half of the games have been at the Rose Bowl. This hardly invalidates the performances, but it does play to existing prejudices.
So here is what I think. I think that if we randomly choose some future season, the SEC will be more likely to produce the National Champ than the PAC-10. I have no idea what the teams or conferences will look like then, but based on the only info I?ve got, I?ll take the SEC. Would anyone really want to (unemotionally) take the PAC-10 at even money? Here?s another bet, this time only considering PAC-10 teams that win the National Championship in future years (say, after the current Southern Cal squad has graduated). I?ll take Southern Cal and my opponent can have the rest of the conference. Maybe not quite as good a bet, but you get my point.
This brings to an end my semi-lucid comments. I know I feel better now. Except if I have to correct an error or defend my mother?s honor, I?m done with this. If I offended anyone, I?m sorry and was only trying to give certain poor souls a glimpse at THE TRUTH that apparently only I have access to and which becomes clearer to me and louder to others with strong drink.
I will now conclude with non-lucid, mean-spirited rantings that are my opinions only and that I may take back at any time that it appears that I might have been wrong or hasty. 1. Virginia Tech is not any better than we thought they were last Friday, even though they seemed to be able to play with Southern Cal. They are middle of the pack in the ACC. 2. Southern Cal is okay and so is Matt Leinart, but if their vaunted coaching staff insists on wacky game plans like the VaTech one, they may not get a chance to defend their PAC-10 title, much less their ?championship?. 3. In the coming months, Southern Cal will become more and more successful on offense, protecting Leinart and rushing impressively. This will be hailed as the offensive line gelling. Do not be fooled ? it will simply be the product of who they are playing. 4. Before the BCS, there was no sanctioned mechanism to decide who the Div I-A Champ was. Polls were all we had, so we followed them, and in recent years, the AP and UPI/ESPN/COACHESetc polls were our favorites. Now we have a mechanism that all of the conferences agreed on ? the winner of the BCS championship bowl. For the same reason that Al Gore winning the popular election didn?t make him President, Southern Cal winning the AP poll doesn?t make them National Champs ? that?s just not how we choose our winners these days (in spite of what the tee-shirts and the sportswriting voters in the AP say).