BAMANEWSBOT
Staff
You say we don't need any more bowl games? You say three more is three too many?
You say we already had too many, and adding bowls in Austin, Orlando and Tucson to bring the total to 42 postseason games - playoff included - is just the latest sign of our everyone-gets-a-trophy culture?
Tell that to J.J. Nelson and Kennard Backman.
Tell it to Bill Clark.
Tell it to any player, coach or staff member of the 2014 UAB football team, which could be the last football team in UAB history.
That team could've made history, could've been the second UAB team ever to play in a bowl game, could've and should've been rewarded for putting together the school's best season in a decade.
Instead the Blazers got shut out of the postseason and the program got shut down.
You think those players and coaches wouldn't have enjoyed a bowl trip? You think, under normal circumstances, the university wouldn't have benefited from a 3 ½-hour TV commercial?
Ask Joey Jones and South Alabama what it meant for the 6-6 Jaguars to play Bowling Green in the inaugural Raycom Media Camellia Bowl in Montgomery, the first bowl game in USA history. The Jags didn't win the game, but they won in so many other ways.
Even Power 5 Conference teams can get a boost by breaking even and reaching the postseason. Look at last season's Texas Bowl where 6-6 Arkansas met 6-6 Texas.
A cynic might've looked at that game as an insult, the next step in turning college football into T-ball, with juice boxes all around. In truth, it was an appetizing meeting between two former Southwest Conference rivals on the rebound, two tradition-rich programs under relatively new head coaches in need of a sign that better days were ahead.
That 31-7 Arkansas victory has a lot to do with the optimism surrounding a program that won exactly two SEC games last season. Bret Bielema has been to multiple Rose Bowls, but none of them may have meant more to his Wisconsin program at the time than that Texas Bowl did to the Hogs.
We already know the arguments against this bowl boom. None of them holds up in the court of public opinion.
If many of these bowl games came to life as nothing more than programming for ESPN, so what? You got something against watching football on TV in December? If you do, I hear TBS and TNT may show "A Christmas Story" a time or two.
If many of these matchups include teams that finished 6-6 or 7-5, big deal. For some programs, that's a major accomplishment. Not everyone can be Alabama.
If you're concerned about the decline and fall of Western civilization because college football is rewarding mediocrity instead of excellence, hey, that's why they now have a playoff.
College football is a big tent with plenty of room for the Sugar Bowl and the Birmingham Bowl. Nick Saban and his 2014 Alabama team earned their trip to New Orleans. It would've been just as gratifying to see Clark and his 2014 UAB team travel across town one more time to Legion Field.
Continue reading...
You say we already had too many, and adding bowls in Austin, Orlando and Tucson to bring the total to 42 postseason games - playoff included - is just the latest sign of our everyone-gets-a-trophy culture?
Tell that to J.J. Nelson and Kennard Backman.
Tell it to Bill Clark.
Tell it to any player, coach or staff member of the 2014 UAB football team, which could be the last football team in UAB history.
That team could've made history, could've been the second UAB team ever to play in a bowl game, could've and should've been rewarded for putting together the school's best season in a decade.
Instead the Blazers got shut out of the postseason and the program got shut down.
You think those players and coaches wouldn't have enjoyed a bowl trip? You think, under normal circumstances, the university wouldn't have benefited from a 3 ½-hour TV commercial?
Ask Joey Jones and South Alabama what it meant for the 6-6 Jaguars to play Bowling Green in the inaugural Raycom Media Camellia Bowl in Montgomery, the first bowl game in USA history. The Jags didn't win the game, but they won in so many other ways.
Even Power 5 Conference teams can get a boost by breaking even and reaching the postseason. Look at last season's Texas Bowl where 6-6 Arkansas met 6-6 Texas.
A cynic might've looked at that game as an insult, the next step in turning college football into T-ball, with juice boxes all around. In truth, it was an appetizing meeting between two former Southwest Conference rivals on the rebound, two tradition-rich programs under relatively new head coaches in need of a sign that better days were ahead.
That 31-7 Arkansas victory has a lot to do with the optimism surrounding a program that won exactly two SEC games last season. Bret Bielema has been to multiple Rose Bowls, but none of them may have meant more to his Wisconsin program at the time than that Texas Bowl did to the Hogs.
We already know the arguments against this bowl boom. None of them holds up in the court of public opinion.
If many of these bowl games came to life as nothing more than programming for ESPN, so what? You got something against watching football on TV in December? If you do, I hear TBS and TNT may show "A Christmas Story" a time or two.
If many of these matchups include teams that finished 6-6 or 7-5, big deal. For some programs, that's a major accomplishment. Not everyone can be Alabama.
If you're concerned about the decline and fall of Western civilization because college football is rewarding mediocrity instead of excellence, hey, that's why they now have a playoff.
College football is a big tent with plenty of room for the Sugar Bowl and the Birmingham Bowl. Nick Saban and his 2014 Alabama team earned their trip to New Orleans. It would've been just as gratifying to see Clark and his 2014 UAB team travel across town one more time to Legion Field.
Continue reading...