ThePiombino
The OG "TP"
- Messages
- 16,476
- Reaction score
- 6,245
It's a very popular sentiment actually. It's all about the grass being greener.Who in God's name said that?
It's a very popular sentiment actually. It's all about the grass being greener.Who in God's name said that?
Its*
And in other news, SEC tears are the most delicious tears!
#23 LSU LOSS Notre Dame... previous game Notre Dame got jail sexed by a relatively meh USC team.
#19 Auburn LOSS Wisconsin... previous game Wisconsin got destroyed 59-0 by Ohio State with their third string QB making his first start.
#9 Ole Miss EMBARASSED by TCU 42-0 in the first 35 minutes of the game...
#7 Mississippi State EMBARASSED by Georgia Tech down 3 TDs in 4th and needed a Hail Mary for it to even be that close...
Call me crazy, but I'm actually starting to sense that Ohio State could beat Bama tonight. Bama struggles to defend spread offenses, and Ohio State has the personnel on defense to slow down their ordinary offense. People thought Bama had a good offense but it just turns out that SEC defenses are total garbage.
Since the turn of the century, the national champions are as follows:
B1G - Ohio State (1)
Big 12 - Oklahoma (1), Texas (1)
PAC - USC (2*)
ACC - Miami (1), FSU (1)
SEC - Florida (2), LSU (1), Auburn (1), Alabama (3)
The SEC is clearly above all with seven total champs, represented by four teams. But like LAX pointed out, alot of those championships came during an obvious shift in favoritism as other deserving teams were left out.
Here's the biggest take away (and it's already been mentioned by Cack): The SEC has a recent history of championships.They schedule cupcakes. They get ranked high in the preseason. They get credit for winning against each other. They don't drop far when losing to each other. They literally schedule no one outside the conference on a regular basis. And then they pump their chests because literally every media member has crawled up their ass over the last ten years to create this money machine that is semi-pro football.
Something I would love to see (but don't have the time for at the moment) is the regular season and bowl records for each conference going back to 2000. I'd be willing to bet that the SEC, as a whole, has better records BUT I truly believe it's because they play no one outside their conference on a regular basis. Are they a great football conference top-to-bottom? Yes. But are they leaps and bounds better than other conferences? No. And it's time for everyone to start acting accordingly and stop with this biased madness. This bowl season has been FANTASTIC for college football.
What chaps my ass is how the entire division was ranked by the committee at some point and even had 4 teams in the top 15 at one point (???). All because they played, and lost, to each other.
Start with an arbitrary high preseason rank. Check.
Remain highly ranked after beating an arbitrarily high-ranked division rival. Check.
Don't fall in rankings because you lost to an arbitrarily highly-ranked division rival. Check.
Dominate lowly FCS teams. Check.
#SECLoL
This has been discussed here before. The bowl records for the SEC, beyond their championship contender each year, is VERY mediocre. That is why people have been questioning the 'SEC juggernaut' argument for several years now.
I argued with T3 on this board that outside of 1-2 teams every year, the SEC is overrated and the only time we get to see this, because of their scheduling, is during bowl season. He didn't have a good retort other than to point to the championships. For which I responded in much the same way: other teams were left out of the mythical national championship game to favor the SEC, which gave them an advantage in racking up more wins in the NC game.
I'll say what I have been saying all season long here (and outside this board for several years): Establish a legitimate playoff and settle it on the field. Also, establish a consistent OOC scheduling program across all of college football that requires all 'power' (contender) conferences to adhere to so we get more realistic poll results year in and year out.
This has been discussed here before. The bowl records for the SEC, beyond their championship contender each year, is VERY mediocre. That is why people have been questioning the 'SEC juggernaut' argument for several years now.
I argued with T3 on this board that outside of 1-2 teams every year, the SEC is overrated and the only time we get to see this, because of their scheduling, is during bowl season. He didn't have a good retort other than to point to the championships. For which I responded in much the same way: other teams were left out of the mythical national championship game to favor the SEC, which gave them an advantage in racking up more wins in the NC game.
I'll say what I have been saying all season long here (and outside this board for several years): Establish a legitimate playoff and settle it on the field. Also, establish a consistent OOC scheduling program across all of college football that requires all 'power' (contender) conferences to adhere to so we get more realistic poll results year in and year out.
You can check out the bowl record for the SEC the last 15 or so years for yourself. I posted out the W/L for every conference in our prior discussions. That can speak for itself.
As far as this year's bowl season. A major disappointment for sure for the SEC. But I wouldn't be too quick to dismiss the SEC. One bad bowl season in the last 10-15 years doesn't mean the conference is in decline. They will be back again next next fall. I would expect most of the teams in the conference will be better than this year outside of the Miss schools who lose a lot of players.
Crap!
I shouldn't post after midnight when I've had liquids that contain water.
I tank you fer yur crecction. I kneads & deservers it.
Their bag men layning low for a while to be safe?
no italics
You can check out the bowl record for the SEC the last 15 or so years for yourself. I posted out the W/L for every conference in our prior discussions. That can speak for itself.
As far as this year's bowl season. A major disappointment for sure for the SEC. But I wouldn't be too quick to dismiss the SEC. One bad bowl season in the last 10-15 years doesn't mean the conference is in decline. They will be back again next next fall. I would expect most of the teams in the conference will be better than this year outside of the Miss schools who lose a lot of players.
Who in God's name said that?
You can check out the bowl record for the SEC the last 15 or so years for yourself. I posted out the W/L for every conference in our prior discussions. That can speak for itself.
As far as this year's bowl season. A major disappointment for sure for the SEC. But I wouldn't be too quick to dismiss the SEC. One bad bowl season in the last 10-15 years doesn't mean the conference is in decline. They will be back again next next fall. I would expect most of the teams in the conference will be better than this year outside of the Miss schools who lose a lot of players.
I have checked out the bowl record for the last decade. The SEC typically has 1-2 very good teams every year with respect to OOC schedule results (including the bowls), but beyond that, they are very mediocre against the other conferences. The records have been, in fact, posted to this board in earlier threads this year. No need to rehash the same statistical facts that are still true.
I can't find that information. Care to repost please?
You can check out the bowl record for the SEC the last 15 or so years for yourself. I posted out the W/L for every conference in our prior discussions. That can speak for itself.
As far as this year's bowl season. A major disappointment for sure for the SEC. But I wouldn't be too quick to dismiss the SEC. One bad bowl season in the last 10-15 years doesn't mean the conference is in decline. They will be back again next next fall. I would expect most of the teams in the conference will be better than this year outside of the Miss schools who lose a lot of players.
You've been hanging around us on these boards for too long bro. The unfortunate part is that tomorrow never comes.
I have checked out the bowl record for the last decade. The SEC typically has 1-2 very good teams every year with respect to OOC schedule results (including the bowls), but beyond that, they are very mediocre against the other conferences. The records have been, in fact, posted to this board in earlier threads this year. No need to rehash the same statistical facts that are still true. You lost that argument before and you are going to lose it again.
edit: And none of this changes the fact that until college football establishes a legitimate scheduling regime that forces compliance for all power conferences (ala the NFL), the polls are going to be suspect every year which makes the playoff suspect. CASE IN POINT: TCU. (And I would also argue, Auburn from two previous seasons in the last 10)
Since the suppossed start of SEC "dominance" from about 2004 on, what's their record against the Power Five? Pretty easy. It is miles away better than the other conferences. And, the SEC has played more games against Power Five opponents during that timeframe as well. The SEC has played 111 total regular-season games against Power 5 schools since 2004. Its 69-42 record is the best of the all Power 5 conferences, ahead of the Pac-12 (53-42), the Big 12 (42-42) and the Big Ten (36-45).
Over that time, the SEC has gone 42-23 against the ACC, 12-7 against the Pac-12, 9-8 against the Big 12 and 6-4 against the Big Ten.
Bowl games?
Since 2000, the SEC is 26 games above .500 in bowl games, which is a better win-loss differential than the ACC (minus-5), Big 12 (even), Big Ten (minus-23) and Pac-12 (plus-5).
As far as bias, preseason ranking vs where a team actually ended ranked. From 1989 to present the bottom teams were the following - the number represents total number of positions gained/lost in the polls during that timeframe:
9. Miami (-61)
8. Florida (-69)
7. Fla St (-76)
6. Notre Dame (-78)
5. Oklahoma (-87)
4. Michigan (-88)
3. Nebraska (-88)
2. Southern Cal (-95)
1. Texas (-112)
Conference overall- Power Five + Ind. (1993-present):
6. Pac 12 (+45)
5. Big 10 (-21)
4. SEC (-53)
3. Ind. (-61)
2. ACC (-108)
1. Big 12 (-185)
Based on this data, the SEC had one team that made the top nine teams as being overrated to start the season from 1989 to the present. Don't know if we can say there is an SEC bias when it appears the only team that consistently got "overrated" were the Gators.
On the conference side, it appears the Big 12 and ACC get a lot more bias when it comes to preseason rankings vs where they actually end up.
Alabama was +24 over the timeframe... meaning they finished a total of 24 positions higher over the timeframe than they were actually ranked to start the season.
SEC years in which the conference failed to deliver:
2009 (-24)
2008 (-18)
2004 (-19)
2002 (-20)
2000 (-36)
1995 (-15)
If anything, the data shows that recently the SEC is actually doing better than their preseason rankings are reflecting.
Don't know if I quoted all this correctly, but here is the bowl data for each conference along with a list of teams in relation to their preseason rankings vs their end of season rankings. To state that the SEC has been mediocre on bowl games outside one or two elite teams is simply not accurate. To state that the SEC is overrated each year is also not accurate. (Fla is the only team that fell in the top 10 in that category.)
Exactly what I was thinking. Now TTT sounds like an ND fan
I can't find that information. Care to repost please?
Here is one big flaw in these statistics. What if the final ranking is SEC biased?
We definitely saw that occur in the post-season rankings by the Committee this year.