The Confidential

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Critiquing the Bilas Proposal

Duke alum Jay Bilas has a good opinion article on ESPN.com about why the NCAA tournament should eliminate the automatic bids.  It is a good opinion article because it is well written.  Like any good lawyer, Bilas lays out a cogent argument in support of his opinions.  In the end, however, the Confidential believes that Bilas is fixing something that is not broken.  And there are better reasons not to chance the system.

The Bilas proposal 

It is a pretty simply concept–eliminate the automatic bids: “In fact, the more I consider how the automatic bid affects the fairness of the NCAA tournament, the more I am convinced that automatic bids should be eliminated altogether.”  As Bilas accurately points out–the bubble is replete with teams every year that are mid-majors.  But, instead of allowing the 22-8 mid-major to enter the tournament, we allow a team that is 13-18, but won its Mid-Delaware-Valley conference tournament to have keys to the Big Dance.  A team like Murray State could be excluded because a team that lost most of its games got hot for a weekend in March.   And as Bilas also points out, no team from outside the AQ football conferences has won a national title in 20+ years.  Finally, Bilas notes that a 1-64 game, where team #64 was the sixty-fourth best team in the country at least presents the chance for a first-day upset.  That does not exist now.

The Analysis

The Confidential believes that Bilas makes a great point about how the automatic qualifier system harms mid-majors.  It is true that a team that runs away with its conference–but plays in a one-team conference–will be excluded for the inferior team that did win its conference.  It places an onerous burden on a team that was good from November to early March to not have a slip up on one weekend.  So while the Bilas proposal may favor some teams in power conferences, it will also benefit the best teams that would currently be on the bubble.

But here are the problems.  First, for better or worse, the conference tournaments are a reason for every team in every conference to have a chance of mattering.  While these tournaments may be money-making schemes, one cannot discount the value to students and fans.  And the coaches and players also deserve a chance to compete in high pressure situations that they will remember forever.  Even if the end reward might be a play-in with Dayton, rather than #1 Duke.  There is no reason to take away all of that excitement.

Second, Bilas misses a huge point.  While the power conferences have provided all the national champions recently, the lowest seed to ever win the National Championship was a #8 seed, Villanova.  At best, Villanova was the 32nd best team in the country that year.  A fair argument can be made that only the top 32 teams have a realistic chance of winning a national championship.  If Bilas is correct that the only reason to be in the Big Dance is to win it all, then the NCAA should eliminate the automatic bids and scale back to 32. Anything beyond 32 already includes teams that have no chance of winning.  That is what history suggests anyway.

And if the at-larges from 32 through 37 have never won it all, how likely is it that 38 through 64 will?  Will a 5-11 team from the Big East have a real chance to win it all?  Better to give that spot to a 25-5 team that dominates its conference and won its tournament.  That actually gives more reward for the season by rewarding teams that beat more foes.  Any team that finds itself from 38 to 64 has already lost enough games to question whether they can actually win it all anyway.

Bilas notes that Kentucky/Pitt would be an interesting first round game between a #1 and #64.  But Pitt lost to Wagner.  At home.  For this year, Pitt is more name than game.  You cannot lose seven in a row in a non-daunting part of your Big East schedule and think that a deep March run is even possible.

Besides, there are lots of great things about the Big Dance that do not have anything to do with winning it all.  Ask Butler.  Ask Virginia Commonwealth.  How about the upsets by the #15 seeds–teams that would be excluded under Bilas’s scenario?  Without the automatic bids, Richmond never beats Syracuse and Belmont never beats Iowa State.  And whomever Kansas loses to in the first round every few years.  And think of the coaches that have worked their way through the ranks by being given a chance to perform well in a mismatch.  It does not take a win to get noticed.  At many places, “success” is broader than cutting down the nets in April.  There is no reason to change that now.

Finally, college basketball is different from college football in that the Big Dance allows everyone in.  The trade-off is that the regular season is downgraded.  You can be .500 after December, but still rally to win it all.  Look what UConn did last year.

But the other trade-off is that it is single-elimination.  Is it unfair that a team from a one-bid conference could lose its shot at the Big Dance by losing in the tournament?  Perhaps.  But it is equally “unfair” when a top 4 seed is upset in the first round and has to go home early.  A team with outstanding national championship potential is eliminated for one bad game.  A team with high hopes is eliminated.  That is the nature of the one-and-done tournament.  It might as well start a week early in the conference tournaments.  If the champion is being crowned by a tournament (rather than the college football model), there is only so much fairness that can be built in.  And it is very fair right now.

So, while Bilas deserves a lot of respect for presenting a logical argument, the Confidential believes that there is no reason to fix what is not broken.

Playoffs for College Football?

The Big 10–long an adversary to any type of college football playoff–appears to be coming around.  In a recent article, it was noted that more and more Big 10 leaders are opening up to the possibility of a playoff.

To be sure, the contemplated playoff would involve 4 teams.  And two of these teams would play at their home stadium.  That this would help the Big 10 is obvious.  If a Big 10 school like Ohio State or Penn State made it that far, they would get to host a team in potentially snowy conditions.  Advantage, Big 10.

That being said, if this is the only way to get to a four-team playoff, then so be it.  Of course, the Confidential is far from persuaded that a 4-team playoff is the best solution.  Instead, it will likely just lead to complaints about how:

  • The system is unfair because Team A was a home team and Team B should have been.
  • The 5th team was so much better than the 3rd and 4th teams.
  • The system is pointless because “Undefeated MidMajor Program” went undefeated and was left out.

There is no perfect solution.  But rest assured that the powers that be are noticing those aspects of the present system that appear to be failing.  Bowl attendance is down.  Viewership is, at best, flat.  More recently, the idea of limiting bowl-eligibility to 7 wins was floated.  It sure looks like change is around the corner.  Hopefully, it will be something that at least the majority of football fans consider an improvement.

#7 Duke Defeats Virginia Tech

At 12-9 when it hosted #7 Duke last night, the Virginia Tech Hokies had a chance to get a crucial victory.  Instead, the Blue Devils rolled to a 75-60 victory, dropping Virginia Tech to 12-10.

Although the game was tied at 21, Duke led handily for most of the game.  In fact, Duke led at the half 38-28, and that score required a three-pointer by Erick Green at the buzzer to make it that close.  Duke went on a 24-12 run to open the second-half and make the game a no-doubter.

Erick Green led Virginia Tech with 17 points and 7 rebounds.  Victory Davila added 16 points and 7 rebounds.  With the loss, Virginia Tech is now 1-6 in conference play.  Only Georgia Tech at 1-7 has a worse record in conference play.  Virginia Tech hosts Clemson on Saturday.

Duke was led by Austin Rivers with 18 points. But three other players scored in double-figures: Ryan Kelly (15), Seth Curry (11), and Mason Plumlee (10).  Plumlee added 6 rebounds.  Duke hosts Miami on Sunday,

With the win, Duke moves to 6-1 in conference play and 19-3 overall.  This puts Duke in a three-way tie with North Carolina and Florida State at 6-1.  North Carolina is 19-3 overall, while Florida State is 15-6.  However, the Seminoles have beaten both Duke and North Carolina on the season.  Duke will travel to North Carolina on Wednesday evening for the first game of the season between the two rivals.

The Infinity Coaches’ Charity Challenge on ESPN.com

The Confidential is proud to note the inclusion of several ACC coaches in the Infinity Coaches’ Charity Challenge being held over on ESPN.com: The Challenge.  The coach with the most votes will have $100,000 donated to the charity of choice for that coach. Like any good (pick political party you do not like), vote early and often.

Among the current and former ACC coaches are:

To learn more about any of the coaches’ chosen charities, links are provided.

Also, former Duke player Johnny Dawkins, coach of Stanford, is competing for the Boys & Girls Club of the Peninsula.  Former North Carolina player, and coach of SMU, Matt Doherty is competing for the Dallas Area Habitat for Humanity.  Both players are in the West Region.

If any former players or coaches have been omitted, please let us know.

Again…vote early and often.

 

 

 

 

 

ACC Football: The Need for Florida State and Miami

The formula is pretty simple for the ACC.  It needs Miami and Florida State to play like kings.  It needs Virginia Tech and Clemson to be the next closes thing to a king.  And it needs a few other schools to rise up every few years and/or win impressive out-of-conference games, including bowl games.  But none of that works unless Miami and Florida State can return to something closer to the glory days.  They are the schools that need to carry the conference in football.

The Kings

Football is an elitist sport.  No matter how bad Ohio State and Florida might be, a win over those schools means a lot and a loss to these schools is respectable.  In contrast, losing to Iowa State is an unacceptable result.  Nevermind that Iowa State had the same regular season record as those schools in 2011, Oklahoma State was punished substantially for its loss to Iowa State.  Iowa State is simply not Ohio State or Florida, regardless of the record.

Once upon a time, Miami and Florida State were kings.  From 1987 to 2000, Florida State went 11-1, 11-1, 10-2, 10-2, 11-2, 11-1, 12-1, 10-1-1, 10-2, 11-1, 11-1, 11-2, 12-0, and 11-2.  From 1983 to 2003, Miami had more than a dozen 10 win seasons, including three undefeated seasons. That is how you become a king–you win 10 or more games more often than not (or consecutively) for so long that people do not even know what it is like for you to not be in the top 10, much less unranked.

But that all ended in 2004, when Miami joined the ACC.  Perhaps not because of the move to the ACC.  But the move has certainly coincided with the fall from the top.  Since then, Miami has not had a 10-win season.  Florida State had one–in 2010.  Instead of playing like kings, these schools have played like princes.  Or worse.  Boston College won 10 games in both 2006 and 2007.  Wake Forest won 11 in 2006.  Obviously, it is not impossible to win 10+ games in the ACC.  The Florida schools just have not been able to do so.

For 2011, it was more of the same.  Miami went a pedestrian 6-6.  Good enough for a bowl, but the looming scandal persuaded the administrators to prudently pass that up.  Florida State did better, going 9-4.  But that is still not king territory.

What Went Wrong

The easiest answer is to blame the coaching situation.  Bobby Bowden might have stayed a bit too long–past his prime.  And Miami fired Larry Coker for having the audacity to not win 10 games and did not replace him.  Unlike the pros, college sports is dominated by coaches.

But the Confidential thinks it goes deeper than that.  In recent years, many schools have taken to recruiting Florida heavily.  When Greg Schiano moved up to Rutgers, he kept his Florida ties and established a pipeline from Miami to New Jersey.  The Louisville coaching staffs have consistently focused on Florida, from John L. Smith to present.  Wherever Rich Rodriguez was during the 2000’s, he recruited top athletes from Florida.  Add in the usual suspects, such as all of the SEC and ACC, as well as Notre Dame, and Florida talent is not slipping by.

Meanwhile, South Florida and Central Florida have arrived on the scene.  These schools have the ability to siphon off some of the great talent, while also keeping some of the good talent at home.  South Florida has made great strides toward converting Florida into a Big Four.

Will it Change?

Well, this is two straight 9-4 seasons for Florida State.  And it is a young team that can legitimately be projected to get over the 10-win barrier next year.  They have continued to stockpile talent via recent recruiting classes.  If it can translate into on-field performance, then Florida State will be back.

Miami is a different story.  While the scandal from last summer has died down, the NCAA is likely to dole out some sort of punishment.  So it is going to get worse before it gets better.  But Al Golden seems like the right fit to get the job done.  He kept that team together for most of the season.  Take away the head-scratching losses to Maryland (suspension-filled) and BC (already announced it was not bowling), and Miami was only beaten by Virginia, Va Tech, Kansas State and Florida State.  Four games by a total of 18 points.  If the sanctions are not too significant, Miami can rebound in a few years.

The bottom line is that the ACC needs things to change.  Virginia Tech and Clemson may win a national title some day, but failing to do so when Miami and FSU were reeling suggests otherwise.  As the bowl losses and national-reputation hits mount, it is going to take one or both of the Florida schools to state the ACC’s case on the national picture.  The sooner, the better.

 

The Penn State Coaching Search: Really?

Anyone else getting tired of the Penn State head coaching rumors?  After all, the University trustees fired Joe Paterno nearly two months ago!  In the interim, just about everyone has been suggested by the media, bloggers, and/or delusional Penn State fans as the next head coach.  A few coaches with current or former ACC experience have been part of the discussion too.  But, as the calendar turns to 2012, it appears that Bill O’Brien is the latest “favorite” to become the next head coach in State College.

Who?

You know.  Bill O’ Brien.  Of the New England Patriots.  Not ringing a bell?  Here is his biography and relationship to PSU:

O’Brien has no immediately apparent ties to PSU and has no head coaching experience.

He does have extensive college experience, however, which has become something of a rarity among reported Nittany Lions candidates. He’s coached at somewhat nearby Brown and Maryland, plus Duke and Georgia Tech — the latter stint included being Chan Gailey’s assistant head coach for one year.

For Penn State fans, this would have to be a major disappointment.  The right-hand-man to Chan Gailey.  For one year.  Ugh.

Even worse, just take a look at all the coaches that were previously speculated, rumored, projected, or merely hoped for as the next coach:

  1. Urban Meyer (link)
  2. Tom Bradley (link)
  3. Al Golden (link)
  4. Mike London (link)
  5. Kevin Sumlin (link)
  6. Pat Fitzgerald (link)
  7. Kirk Ferentz  (link)
  8. Dan Mullen (link).  Deemed a favorite on November 29, 2011.
  9. Chris Petersen (link)
  10. Greg Schiano (link)
  11. Jon Gruden (link)
  12. Tom Clements (link)
  13. David Shaw (link)
  14. Tim Murphy (link)
  15. Tony Dungy (link)
  16. Mike Munchak (link).  Deemed a favorite on December 26, 2011.
  17. Jay Paterno (link)
  18. Darren Perry  (link)
  19. Kyle Whittingham (link)
  20. Mark Richt (link)
  21. Larry Johnson, Sr. (link)
  22. Bo Pelini (link)
  23. Brian Norwood (link)
  24. Mario Cristobal (link)
  25. Nick Saban (link)
  26. Eric Mangini (link)
  27. Bob Stoops (link)
  28. Bill O’Brien (link)

Again, while there are some absurd names above , there are also some very unimpressive names.  Nevertheless, you don’t need Wikipedia to know who 90% of them are.  Bill O’ Brien?  Not a name by any stretch.

And this is not personal to Mr. O’Brien.  Frankly, is it even fair for someone’s coaching debut to be at this current version of Penn State?  The Nittany Lions should be looking at someone with college head coaching experience from an AQ program that can adjust to Penn State’s unique situation.  Someone who knows what it takes to be a successful college coach, but is going to have to step up just to adapt to the challenge of dealing with the post-Paterno, post-scandal, PSU world.   That will be challenging enough.  Having it be your first head coaching job is just insane.

Moreover, the Patriots coaching tree has not exactly been successful.  Of the coaches that have left recently, all have failed in their first head coaching gig.  Romeo Crennel?  Fired.  Charlies Weis?  Fired.  Josh McDaniels?  Fired.  Eric Mangini?  Fired.  Not sure this is a tree worth picking these days.

Maybe O’ Brien can pull it off.  Nothing is impossible. But for the neighboring ACC schools that compete for recruits with Penn State, relying on “nothing is impossible” is just fine.

Holiday Break: December 27, 2011

Basketball resumes as a few ACC teams take the hardcourt today!

Virginia hosts Maryland-Eastern Shore.

Pittsburgh travels to Notre Dame.

And then the Belk Bowl kicks off tonight!

 

Holiday Break: December 26, 2011

No ACC hoops games for today.   No bowl games either.  Enjoy the time off.

Holiday Break: December 25, 2011

No ACC hoops games for today.   No bowl games either.  Enjoy the time off.

Holiday Break: December 24, 2011

No ACC hoops games for today.   No bowl games either.  Enjoy the time off.

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