Over the course of the off-season, I embarked on a little project,
inspired by this
website.
FootballGeography.com listed every school in FBS that has ever
been on probation, bowl bans, or the one Death Penalty.
The website only goes to the end of last calendar year, but it's a
good starting point to show the abject farce of the BCS. I also add
incidents that I know of from this year, and a couple of pending
situations as well.
Anyhow, this is to demonstrate just how poorly college football is
run.
A caveat before I begin:
There are several games I openly call illegally-played. Some of
them have the result recognized, some do not. The difference is
whether the result has been functionally vacated by the NCAA and/or
other relevant parties. Though I am not afraid to say that some
games SHOULD have been vacated, those that are illegally-played (and
known as such) will be noted.
Teams not listed were not sanctioned for conduct that season, to
the best of knowledge. Some teams are listed which are not
sanctioned, their appearances being notable for one reason or
another.
We begin with the start of the BCS Era:
1998-99:
Rose Bowl: Wisconsin illegally defeats UCLA 38-31.
Sugar Bowl: Ohio State defeats Texas A&M 24-14
Orange Bowl: Florida defeats Syracuse 31-10
National Championship/Fiesta Bowl: Tennessee wins the first BCS
National Championship over Florida State 23-16.
Wisconsin: Improper extra benefits over a seven-year
period (1993-
summer 2000). Assessed five years NCAA probation (2001-2005), no
bowl ban, no vacated games (though discussed), Rose Bowl win stands.
1999-2000:
Rose Bowl: Wisconsin (again illegally) defeats Stanford 17-9.
Orange Bowl: Michigan defeats Alabama 35-34 in overtime, in an
illegally-played game.
Fiesta Bowl: Nebraska defeats Tennessee 31-21.
National Championship/Sugar Bowl: Florida State wins the national
title over Virginia Tech, 46-29.
Wisconsin: See above. This was the final year of the
covered misconduct.
Alabama: Massive recruiting violations, including
impermissible benefits, over a period 1995-2000.
The Death Penalty was considered for the Alabama program when the
hammer came down in 2002, because they were a repeat offender from a
1993 sanction. (Oh, how college football would've changed if that
occurred!) Five years additional probation (2002-2006), with the
first two years having a bowl ban slapped on top of it. Apparently,
the appearance in this game still stands.
They, according to the chairman of the Infractions Committee,
probably came as close as any school post-SMU to the Death Penalty.
2000-2001:
Rose Bowl: Washington illegally defeats Purdue, 34-24.
Fiesta Bowl: Oregon State defeated Notre Dame, 41-9.
Sugar Bowl: Miami (FL) defeated the University of Florida, 37-20,
in an in-state clash.
National Championship/Orange Bowl: Oklahoma defeats Florida State
in the Seminoles' third consecutive title game appearance, 13-2.
Washington (becoming the third consecutive Rose Bowl winner
to win the game illegally in the BCS Era): The 2000-2001 season was
the
first of four in which the NCAA identified the Huskies for
recruiting violations and impermissible benefits from almost
literally the day coach Rick Neuheisel took the job. Not only were
the Huskies put on two years probation in 2005, but the penalty was
extended when Neuheisel was accused of gambling on the 2003 NCAA
Men's Basketball Tournament in violation of the NCAA guidelines. For
these offenses, Neuheisel was going to be banned from the NCAA for
two years (but apparently acted improperly themselves, forcing a
financial settlement while Neuheisel was in the NFL), and Washington
got two more years of probation. However, as with Wisconsin the two
years previous, the participation and result, unfortunately, stand.
Additionally, at least a dozen players were arrested for what
would be considered felonies just in that season alone, according to
a special report by the Seattle
Times. It was routinely known that football trumped all, as
most punishments and investigations, that season, were withheld until
the season ended.
Notre Dame participated legally: The Fighting Irish were
under probation at the time for illegal benefits from a criminal
booster and improper use of tickets for a player who was thrown off
the team from 1995-1999. This was the second and final year of Notre
Dame's probation.
Miami participated legally: Miami was two years removed
from it's third bout with a bowl ban/probation situation with the
NCAA, this one basically covering the entire “The U” era:
1985-1994. Nevin Shapiro does not become a booster with the
University of Miami until later in 2001. Hence, no known violations
for this Miami appearance, shockingly, unless something comes up in
the Shapiro reports (hearings wrapped up in mid-June of 2013, with
much wrangling as a result of the scope of the misconduct (on both
Miami's part and the NCAA's!) in progress).
2001-2002:
Fiesta Bowl: Oregon defeated Colorado, 38-16.
Sugar Bowl: LSU defeated Illinois, 47-34.
Orange Bowl: Florida trounced Maryland, 56-23.
National Championship/Rose Bowl: Miami (FL) defeated Nebraska
37-14.
Colorado: Neuheisel was sanctioned
(a year and a half into his stint with Washington) for similar
illegal conduct at his previous job – at the University of
Colorado!
Miami: According to an
extensive timeline of Nevin Shapiro's involvement with the Miami
(FL) program, Shapiro had met with at least two players before this
BCS National Championship Game, and gave at least one of them a
big-screen television set and Miami Heat game tickets. This would
begin an eight-year period in which over 100 Miami players are
alleged to have been given illegal gifts by Shapiro. The only
information the timeline provides is that the gifts were given “after
the season” and that he met with the relevant player in December,
before the victory over Nebraska. It is not known at this time
whether the illegal benefits came before or after this game, but,
should the NCAA find the player ineligible and the allegations stand
(even with improper conduct by the NCAA), look for this National
Championship to be nullfied.
2002-2003:
Rose Bowl: Oklahoma (the Big Ten champion was in the title match)
defeated Washington State 34-14.
Sugar Bowl: Georgia over Florida State (in it's 4th
BCS bowl, three losses) 26-13
Orange Bowl: USC defeats Iowa 38-17.
National Championship/Fiesta Bowl: The classic Ohio State
double-overtime victory over Miami (FL) 31-24.
Rose Bowl/Oklahoma: This is the first time in the BCS Era
(the FOURTH year of it) that the Rose Bowl was won by a team which
was not sanctioned for actions in the season in which they won it.
USC participated in this one legally: It would be two
further years before the Reggie Bush fiasco blows up. This Trojan
team was in the second
year of probation for another set of offenses, however, stemming
from academic fraud from 1996-1998 involving three students.
Miami: It is almost certain, however, that, unless the
entire Shapiro case is thrown out, Miami's participation in the
Fiesta Bowl/National Championship Game will almost certainly be
revoked. The player Shapiro gave benefits to after the previous
season completed his career in Miami with this game, so he's clearly
ineligible unless the case is thrown out. Over a period starting in
2002, Shapiro buys a stake in an agency recruiting players for the
Miami team and lavishing the team with money, gifts, prostitutes, and
parties on his yacht.
2003-2004:
Rose Bowl: USC defeated Michigan 28-14.
Orange Bowl: Miami (FL) defeats Florida State in another Florida
clash, 16-14.
Fiesta Bowl: Ohio State defeats Kansas State, 35-28.
“National Championship”/Sugar Bowl: LSU only wins a share of
the national title, creating much controversy, after defeating
Oklahoma 21-14. USC would gain the AP National Title.
Miami: See above.
USC and Ohio
State participated legally this year: But both schools would get
in trouble starting the NEXT season.
2004-2005:
Rose Bowl: Texas defeats Michigan 38-37.
Fiesta Bowl: Utah became the first team outside the BCS (I
consider Notre Dame to be inside the BCS) to break into the formula,
and trounced Pittsburgh 35-7.
Sugar Bowl: Auburn defeated Virginia Tech to join Utah as
undefeated, 16-13.
The National Championship Game is the only BCS Championship to be
fully nullified. The game was illegally played, and no BCS champion
will exist for that season.
Texas participated legally, but Colt McCoy's wife may
have said differently in 2011. Nothing has come of it, though,
at least to my understanding.
Utah: Utah was in the second year of a three-year
probation period for “Extra benefits, recruiting, including
impermissible observation of recruits in athletically related
activities; continuing eligibility; playing and practice season
limits; unethical conduct (academic fraud) and a lack of
institutional control”. Took a while to find it, but there
it was. Given this list of violations, one might question
whether Utah could've been bowl-banned for the 2004-2005 season,
preventing them from this historic event.
USC: The Reggie Bush fiasco would cost USC dearly. They
would become the first team in history to lose a top-flight
recognized National Championship in football, would lose recognition
of participation in both this and the next BCS title game, four years
of probation (this 2013 season being the last one), and two years
banned from bowls, from which the USC program has still not
recovered, being replaced in what I refer to as the “BCS Family”
by the University of Oregon.
2005-2006:
Fiesta Bowl: Ohio State 34 – Notre Dame 20
Sugar Bowl: West Virginia beat Georgia, 38-35.
Orange Bowl: Game vacated and declared illegally-played due to
Jerry Sandusky child-rape coverup at Penn State University.
National Championship/Rose Bowl: Texas would win the
illegally-played National Championship game, and, since Colt McCoy's
wife's claims have come to nothing, are still recognized as 2005-2006
BCS National Champions.
West Virginia: This would be the first year in which West
Virginia used managers and other parties to illegally practice
players on technique and other such matters. This took place over a
five-year period under two head coaches (2005-2009).
In 2011, the Mountaineers self-imposed two years' probation for
these offenses, but this win, unfortunately, stands. One of the
coaches involved? Rich Rodriguez.
Penn State: Jerry Sandusky.
The four-year bowl-ban given to Penn State is only the second time
in NCAA history that a football team has been bowl-banned for four
seasons. The first? Indiana! Indiana had either just gotten off
probation in 1958 or was still on it when it committed a second set
of violations, openly paying athletes and providing them with free
airplane tickets. (Sounds like the Hoosiers were ahead of their
time!!) In fact, the football offenses were so severe that ALL
Indiana Hoosier sports were banned from the NCAA post-season.
Various forms of the Death Penalty were in place by that time, but
Indiana football (it appears unjustifiably) did not receive this
penalty.
USC: Reggie Bush.
2006-2007:
Rose Bowl: USC (in the interim between the Reggie Bush scandal
and the penalties) actually does legally defeat Michigan, 32-18.
Fiesta Bowl: Boise State wins an utter classic, 43-42 over
Oklahoma, in an illegally-played game.
Orange Bowl: Louisville defeated Wake Forest, 24-13.
Sugar Bowl: LSU defeats Notre Dame 41-14.
National Championship: In the first separate BCS National
Championship Game, the SEC began it's run of titles to the current
one, Florida defeating Ohio State 41-14.
Boise State: Unfortunately, the entire Boise State run was
almost certainly an illegal farce. Over the course of the five
seasons where it really appeared the Broncos could've destroyed the
BCS by forcing their way into the title game (2005-2009),
Boise State was systematically giving illegal benefits to 75 current
and prospective student-athletes, 63 of them in football. Many of
these benefits came from illegal summer housing.
It would be very difficult for me to believe, at this juncture,
that this storybook-tale win should not be vacated (unless none of
the 63 players played for Boise State in that season), but the NCAA
did not do so, even though most parties admit that the meteoric rise
of the Broncos from Division II to FBS/BCS Crasher was done illegally
– that there was no way it could've been done under NCAA rules.
Boise State, seen by many as one of the top 10 or so preseason
teams in 2013, will do so in the third year of four years of NCAA
probation as a result of these violations.
Oklahoma: In fact, both teams in that Fiesta Bowl classic
were illegal that season. Later in 2007, the season previous to this
(2005-2006)
had to be vacated for Oklahoma due to illegal monetary benefits,
including the starting quarterback. The team was already under two
years probation at this time for violations in the basketball
program, and got two more years tacked on.
So this game (one of college football's “classics”), feasibly,
never should've taken place at all!!!
Orange Bowl/Wake Forest and Louisville: In the entire
history of the BCS, this Orange Bowl game is the ONLY game in the BCS
Era contested between two football programs never sanctioned at
probation-level or above.
2007-2008:
Rose Bowl: USC over Illinois, 49-17.
Sugar Bowl: Georgia, in a game many felt finished the non-AQ's
from championship consideration, destroyed Hawaii 41-10.
Fiesta Bowl: West Virginia over Oklahoma, 48-28
Orange Bowl: Kansas over Virginia Tech 24-21.
National Championship: LSU defeats Ohio State 38-24.
USC was still awaiting to pay the piper for Reggie Bush.
Hawaii became the first BCS Crasher to legally gain that
status.
West Virginia: See above – year 3.
Oklahoma participated legally: The players involved in the
previous incident were tossed at the previous season.
Kansas: Kansas was in the first full year of three seasons
of NCAA probation for violations culminating in 2003 across their
athletic programs, including
significant academic fraud and illegal payments. Ironically, the
Jayhawks were given the 2003 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball
Championship after violations ruled Syracuse ineligible.
Though an audit had revealed significant violations through 2001,
the NCAA was not satisfied anything was being done to deal with them
until 2003.
This win, very easily, could have and should have been vacated.
It was not.
2008-2009:
Rose Bowl: Southern California won an illegally-played game.
Orange Bowl: Virginia Tech over Cincinnati, 20-7
Sugar Bowl: Utah over Alabama 31-17.
Fiesta Bowl: Texas over Ohio State, 24-21.
National Championship: Florida makes it three in a row for the
SEC, over Oklahoma 24-14 in what, as time goes on, we should consider
an illegally-played game.
Penn State: Sandusky.
USC: The seventh consecutive BCS bowl for USC, the last
four (at least) under some degree of questionable circumstances.
Alabama: Alabama was in the middle of yet another NCAA
investigation! The school would be forced to vacate 21 wins over the
previous three seasons (2005-2006 through 2007-2008) for the illegal
acquisition of textbooks for athletes in at least sixteen sports.
The penalties would be imposed (three years of probation – and
Alabama's track record with the NCAA was so completely slammed that,
for the second time, the Death Penalty was, at least, mentioned)
after this season. Again, how history could've changed!!
Ohio State: According to a timeline from the Cleveland
Plain Dealer, the violations which would fell the program and
coach Jim Tressel started after this season. Terrell Pryor sold
basically everything he had from this season (his gold pants, the
sportsmanship award from this game, his ring from the Big Ten
Championship from that year...).
Oklahoma: See above. Oklahoma's probation started here.
Florida: The truth is coming out – after the Aaron
Hernandez arrest in July of 2013.
With what we know now, it is clear that SOMEONE should've stepped
in and stripped this championship.
A July
2013 New
York Times
investigation brings up a startling point. No less than 16
players (first or second-string), including nine starters, the
punter, the kicker, and a return specialist, have been arrested at
some point in the equation, either in college and/or afterward. Of
the 121 players listed on the roster for this team, a third have been
arrested.
Then-coach Urban Meyer: “Relating or blaming these serious
charges to the University of Florida, myself or our staff is wrong
and irresponsible.”
2009-2010:
Rose Bowl: Ohio State 26 – Oregon 17.
Sugar Bowl: Florida creams Cincinnati. 51-24.
Fiesta Bowl: In the only BCS game to date not to be for the title
and involving two undefeated teams (not coincidentally, also the only
BCS game to date to involve two non-AQ programs!), Boise State
illegally defeated TCU 17-10.
Orange Bowl: Iowa won an illegally-played game.
National Championship: Alabama over Texas, 37-21.
All five BCS games for the 2009-2010 season were
illegally-played, in one form or another. Only three teams, Iowa
(who has never been sanctioned to this level), Texas, and TCU were
legally in these games.
Ohio State: Ohio State, as stated above, was clearly
illegal and using ineligible players. The only vacation of wins from
this period, though, was self-imposed for only the next season
(2010-2011), which illegalized two BCS bowls. Pryor was shown to be
ineligible before this season started. This season, too, should've
been wiped out!!
Oregon: Oregon shouldn't have been in this game either.
The violations recently sanctioned by the NCAA, and largely-agreed to
have been committed by the program, date
back to this season in the football program and the previous
season elsewhere in the athletic program, through 2011.
The (affirmed by the NCAA in June of 2013) self-imposed penalties
for Oregon would be 2013-14 and 2014-15 probation and a small
scholarship reduction for those two seasons and 2015-16, which the
NCAA tacked a third year of probation for as well. The then-head
coach was banned from the NCAA for two years, but he's now safely
coaching the Philadelphia Eagles – as if by design.
Game never should've taken place. Both teams were irretrievably
dirty.
Florida: See above. Can't think this season was much
better.
Cincinnati: Cincinnati was (a smaller degree of) dirty,
though, though it reported the violations itself. Impermissible
telephone recruiting calls, to a smaller extent involving the
football program. Far below anything in the Ohio State-Oregon game,
but still worthy of mention. Two years probation for the athletic
program and small recruiting contact restrictions on the football
end. (Larger violations were found in women's basketball.)
Boise State: See above. This was the fifth year of the
illegal practices.
TCU would become only the second team to legally crash the
BCS.
Georgia Tech (Iowa's opponent) was forced to vacate all
wins after November 24, 2009, meaning it could not have been
recognized as the ACC champion, hence, ineligible for the Orange Bowl
in 2010. A player was discovered to be receiving illegal benefits
from a former Rambling Wreck player who was an agent. This
ineligibility cost Georgia Tech four years of probation (two left to
serve), and the 2009 ACC Championship, which means they are out of
the 2010 Orange Bowl.
Alabama: And Alabama was not bowl-banned this season for
at least two major run-ins in the BCS Era... why??? Illegal
acquisition of textbooks in 16 sports led to three years of
probation.
(Especially because they were under probation when the textbook
illegalities started!!)
2010-2011:
Rose Bowl: TCU won a game which effectively was illegally-played,
not to the fault of them or their opponents, Wisconsin, who finally
made their first legal BCS appearance, TCU winning 21-19.
Sugar Bowl: Illegally-played game.
Fiesta Bowl: Oklahoma over Connecticut, 48-20.
Orange Bowl: Stanford 40 – Virginia Tech 12.
National Championship: In one of the most farcical contests in
NCAA history, Cam Newton illegally leads Auburn to a 22-19
championship “win” over a similarly-illegal Oregon team.
Here's three more illegally-played games, though only fault can
be found in two of them.
Rose Bowl/Sugar Bowl/Ohio State fiasco: The BCS reached
it's ridiculous nadir when the Ohio State scandal blew up in the
faces of the BCS when five Buckeye players were found ineligible for
actions dating back at least two years, but still were allowed to
play in the 2011 Sugar Bowl.
Later, Ohio State would be forced to vacate the entire season,
including the Sugar Bowl, by the NCAA.
There was nothing on TCU, Wisconsin, or Arkansas that season. The
problem is that Wisconsin only gained entry into the Rose Bowl
because Ohio State was part of a three-way tie for the Big Ten
championship that season with Michigan State. (This was before the
institution of the Big Ten Championship Game. Under the rules then
in place, since Ohio State and Michigan State did not play that
season, Michigan State's victory over Wisconsin was ignored, and the
final BCS rankings of that season placed the Badgers in the Rose
Bowl.)
If Ohio State had properly been ruled ineligible for that game,
Michigan State would've gained a rightful place into the Rose Bowl
because of their victory over Wisconsin in the regular season.
(Wisconsin probably would've replaced Ohio State in playing Arkansas
in the Sugar Bowl.)
Auburn: The NCAA deliberately turned it's back on mounting
evidence that Cam Newton was bought and paid for to bring a national
championship to Auburn (even to the extent that, if Auburn had been
punished, that the “Stalker's Principle” would've applied – if
we can't have the BCS title, NO ONE CAN) through his father Cecil, as
well as numerous reports that the FBI was investigating many payments
and benefits to the Auburn football program, including casino
benefits, perhaps involving legislators in the area.
Oregon: See above.
2011-2012:
Rose Bowl: Oregon illegally defeated Wisconsin, 45-38.
Fiesta Bowl: Oklahoma State over Stanford, 41-38 in overtime.
Sugar Bowl: Michigan 23 – Virginia Tech 20 (overtime)
Orange Bowl: West Virginia breaks a BCS record, putting 70 points
up on Clemson, winning 70-33.
National Championship: Alabama defeats LSU in the only
intra-conference title tilt, 21-0.
Oregon: See above.
Michigan and West Virginia: Both on probation for
the misconduct of Rich Rodriguez.
This was the first full year of three years of probation (this
season being the last) for the Wolverines for practices under Rich
Rodriguez the previous two seasons. These were the same types of
violations Rodriguez committed at West Virginia! (Illegal practices
and coaching outside NCAA guidelines.)
Ironically, this was the first year (of two) of West Virginia's
probation – for the very same acts of illegal practices under Rich
Rodriguez that Michigan was also under probation for at the same
time!!
And this idiot is now still allowed to be coaching at Arizona!
Alabama and LSU: Honey Badger for LSU, Alabama's
continued probation... Yeah, that's a clean game for you!!!
2012-2013:
Rose Bowl: Stanford 20 – Wisconsin 14
Orange Bowl: Florida State 31 – Northern Illinois 10
Sugar Bowl: In one of the biggest FU's in history, Florida laid
down to Louisville because it believed it should've been where Notre
Dame was, 33-23.
Fiesta Bowl: Oregon over Kansas State 35-17
National Championship: Alabama rolls a clearly-unfit Notre Dame
side, 42-14.
Wisconsin: No fault of it's own, but it becomes the third
Big Ten team to lose at least three consecutive Rose Bowls.
Wisconsin had no right to be in the game, as the two best teams in
their Big Ten division (and probably in the conference at large) both
were ineligible, and both, IMHO, should've been Death Penalty'd.
Northern Illinois: And if there's any indication as to the
complete dominance of the SEC in present college football, Northern
Illinois actually qualified under the non-AQ rules for the BCS,
although no sane person actually believed they belonged.
This occurred because of two facts: First, they were ranked in
the top 16 (#15) and outranked at least one BCS conference champion
(in fact, they did two: Wisconsin (not in the BCS Top 25) and
Louisville (#21)). Second, the SEC had 6 of the top 10 rankings in
the final 2012 BCS rankings, making it impossible to feasibly fill
the required slots.
For the record, Northern Illinois has never been sanctioned to
probation or above. They are only the seventh school to get a BCS
berth in this manner (Stanford, Illinois, Iowa, Connecticut,
Louisville, and Wake Forest are the other six).
Oregon: See above.
--
I have always believed there were two purposes to the BCS.
One was to prevent another BYU or Alcorn State from sniffing the title, at minimum.
The other was to get rid of the NCAA entirely for the top level of college football.
The first has succeeded, and, if everything including today's Johnny Manziel fellatio-fest on ESPN is an indication, the second is soon to as well.
I used to be the 'Gary' commenting on your posts, I wanted to come back and give you a huge thanks for this. No one has detailed the B$C$ rigging better than you!
ReplyDeleteCollege football season started yesterday, and I am already sick of it. Living in Tide territory, it feels strange hearing about some of this for the very first time.
Believe it or not, Alabama fans still bitch about the probation that went down in the last decade. You never seen any of this in the newspapers though about the text books and violations! This is new to me mate, I don't remember ever seeing it, and they never bring this up! Even when Auburn was in trouble with Cam Newton, you seen more about that on ESPN than you read in the papers. (So much for local sports journalists!)
I totally agree with you on everything here. I remember the 2009-2010 National Championship game. Some writers locally even tried to say the game was rigged. Nothing was ever brought up about Bama illegally being in the game, they blamed it all on Colt McCoy's injury.
To be absolutely 100% brutally honest with you, ever since following your blog for the last year, and doing my own research and judging things critically, I have grown to not only hate the NFL, but also hate college football since I see it as it is. You might not believe that coming from an Alabama fan, but I am dead serious.
While everyone around me wants to drink and party to these blow out games and watching them run the score up on crappy teams, I really don't give a shit anymore. I have never met anyone from outside this state that likes either of our teams (count Auburn too, cause most of those die hard "fans" were rooting for them to beat Oregon) because they win it all the fucking time. They have become the Lakers or Yankees of college football, only they don't have the crazy bandwagon from out of state, and that is a good thing.
I hope with the Manziel scandal that more people wake up to this. I think overall it's the biggest proof you could ever dream of that says the NCCA has a hard on for the SEC. I am so glad that other people are starting to see this.
I don't care what any Alabama fans say, this has been rigged forever, but it's so obvious when the SEC wins it every year. I have grown to absolutely hate this crap, and the fans in general helped grow that hate. The whole undying loyalty to a team makes me sick. They never can admit ever when their team gets favored and off lucky, but they'll complain non stop when a non-SEC team is caught (they rooted for Florda and LSU in the championship before 2009, and they pulled for Auburn a year later, there's your "fans")
Keep up the good work, and continue this blog, you are one of the best on the net brother!
The first point I need to make before I might get interrupted is that the work wasn't mine. I just kind of collated everything together. Thank the people at Football Geography for doing all the legwork.
ReplyDeleteIf you want a real good idea as to how absurd that was, watch any ESPN game right around the time the second half kicked off with Texas A&M.
The rest of it:
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised you are even allowed to think that in "Roll, Tide, Roll" country! I mean, you want to talk about where that situation becomes, quite literally, a Religion?
It's no surprise that much of what was done by a lot of these schools has had to be ignored -- it's one of the reasons I wrote this article. I used to come from Wisconsin, and was very proud of the work Alvarez and the like did there...
That is, until...
It's not hard to believe that most people out-of-state want nothing to do with Alabama (state) football. I mean, I've done a number of articles about just how insane football is down there (I recall, at the moment, one article I did about a team that premeditated a post-game attack on another team in Georgia, and GOT AWAY WITH IT!!). So I can definitely see how people can get turned off from all of this.
As far as "hard on for the SEC", I'm not sure I can 100% agree, but it is a "hard on" for about 10-12 schools whom, without them, the entire lattice pretty much falls apart, and probably not just for football. Most of them, right now, are in the SEC.