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If you total up the percentage chance of winning each game according to their metric, you come up with 7.393 wins. That is interesting, considering each of them is predicting 9 wins or so. Whatever. Play the games.
If you total up the percentage chance of winning each game according to their metric, you come up with 7.393 wins. That is interesting, considering each of them is predicting 9 wins or so. Whatever. Play the games.
Georgia Tech players, fans, and friends... I present to you Brock Huard. Brock has graciously volunteered his neck and is willing to be this year's poster boy for fan outrage and locker room motivation. Let's all thank him for his time and effort.
11.28 vs. Georgia: 36.6%*
*BROCK HUARD, ESPN analyst: The option demands tremendous confidence, trust and timing, and coach Paul Johnson's new starters will climb a steep learning curve this year. In a rivalry game (especially this one), anything is possible, but this game feels out of reach for the Jackets.
ESPN 2015 season preview: No. 20 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
That's a bit harsh. Herbstreit is right, that the SEC got the PR because it won. That is the secret to football, and the secret to life. Al Davis was ahead of the curve. Kind of invert Harry Truman: want to see your name in the paper? Do it.There is no SEC bias. Just ask Herbstreit. He's definitely a company man.
No. They got the publicity long before they "won." There is no secret to this and I can't figure out why we have these conversations over and over again. The SEC has always gotten the lion's share of coverage, win or lose. The reason has to do with the number of rabid fans. To be sure Ohio State has great fans, as does Michigan, and we could name other schools in other regions. But no place like the South has the saturation level of rabid fans who buy stuff, read stuff, watch stuff and practically call off all Saturday activities not related to football to invest their substance in it. The SEC is promoted more than any other conference for a simple reason. Follow the money.Herbstreit is right, that the SEC got the PR because it won.
That's a bit harsh. Herbstreit is right, that the SEC got the PR because it won. That is the secret to football, and the secret to life. Al Davis was ahead of the curve. Kind of invert Harry Truman: want to see your name in the paper? Do it.
As the man once said, one year does not a season make. Or something. The ACC has to man up and do this without it being a huge surprise. I am just not into the paranoia of the SEC and while delighted with last season, the rest of 'em speak for themselves.Won what? Out of conference games against the weakest roundup of non-P5 cupcakes you will ever see? When it came to games against real non-conference opponents last season, the SEC was awful. Oooh, they beat themselves up in-conference...guess what—every conference does that. The measure that tests a conference's true mettle is how they do against comparable out of-conference opposition. The SEC—and in particular the vaunted SEC-West—showed the size of their cohones (get a microscope) by mostly avoiding any real OOC challenges until Bowl Season forced their hand—and please remind me, how well did they do in the bowls?
It only takes a few minutes looking at statistics to realize that the SEC was actually one of (if not the) worst P5 conference in terms of their competitiveness against other P5 teams, and that they established their "OOC reputation" by beating sub-P5 teams that were not even competitive within their own conference. How is this observation so difficult for ESPN to stumble upon? (Rhetorical question...we all know that it is in their economic interest to bury this fact...)
The SEC "got the PR" because that's ESPN wanted, NOT because their actual performance deserved it.
That's a bit harsh. Herbstreit is right, that the SEC got the PR because it won. That is the secret to football, and the secret to life. Al Davis was ahead of the curve. Kind of invert Harry Truman: want to see your name in the paper? Do it.
Brock Huard watched and studied GT a lot last year. CPJ is downplaying expectations. We could be better on both sides and have 7-8 wins. We had a lot of lucky breaks last year.
Good research and a lot of work. But by chance were you a debater in school? That is, by changing the terms, one wins. By removing all the other winners you reduce the SEC to two teams, when the more reasonable argument is that several teams in the SEC can and have won, and have for several years. Two teams in the ACC since 1990 have and could win, Miami and FSU. Save for one fling by GT 25 years ago and Virginia that I can barely recall, nobody else save VT has even been in the hunt. Surely you would not argue that the SEC's now reduced-to-two and the ACC's historical two are comparable. And look what happened to the ACC when FSU and Miami swooned. (Maybe we should throw in Notre Dame, that mugwump of a pretender that was in the playoffs two years ago, but since ND isn't willing to give up its money and its considerable national sway to actually be in the ACC, then to heck with 'em. Never liked them anyway.)The problem I have with the SEC bias is that it's not the conference that was overly successful, but rather mainly two teams:
...
....OK, so the whole conference basically gets credit for what two teams did. In the mid-90's was everyone saying that the Big 12 was the most dominant conference in America because Nebraska won three out of four national titles?
It's just a mess. If Florida State had won the NC last year after all those ACC teams knocked off SEC teams in the final week, would everyone be saying that the ACC dethroned the SEC? ...nope
But here's the good news. If we keep doing it, eventually the media will take notice.
And that is precisely my beef with SEC hype. Whenever they have a good season they can usually count on that for good PR for the next five years. Other conferences not so much.As the man once said, one year does not a season make.
I think that the way we were playing at the end of last year we would have had a chance to beat anyone had there been a fair playoff. 8 or 16 teams is all I'm asking to make it fair but ESPN nor the SEC want that. Herby and Huart are just toeing the company line.Good research and a lot of work. But by chance were you a debater in school? That is, by changing the terms, one wins. By removing all the other winners you reduce the SEC to two teams, when the more reasonable argument is that several teams in the SEC can and have won, and have for several years. Two teams in the ACC since 1990 have and could win, Miami and FSU. Save for one fling by GT 25 years ago and Virginia that I can barely recall, nobody else save VT has even been in the hunt. Surely you would not argue that the SEC's now reduced-to-two and the ACC's historical two are comparable. And look what happened to the ACC when FSU and Miami swooned. (Maybe we should throw in Notre Dame, that mugwump of a pretender that was in the playoffs two years ago, but since ND isn't willing to give up its money and its considerable national sway to actually be in the ACC, then to heck with 'em. Never liked them anyway.)
Where we wholeheartedly agree is that the whole thing is a mess, and I don't think it can be unmessed because like all political races influence and money are at play, and that if "we keep doing it" the media will notice. That was exactly Herbstreit's point. I suspect with no evidence at all to support it that most of us judge people in Herbstreit's place by what we fear we would do in the same situation. Pontificators need a stage and right now that is owned by the SEC. While last year was delightful a whole new season is careening toward us, so let's talk in four months and see were we are. I hope for the best, beginning first with GT and then to worry about the rest of the league.
FIFY.No. They got the publicity long before they "won." There is no secret to this and I can't figure out why we have these conversations over and over again. The SEC has always gotten the lion's share of coverage, win or lose. The reason has to do with the number of rabid fans. To be sure Ohio State has great fans, as does Michigan, and we could name other schools in other regions. But no place like the South has the saturation level of rabid fans who buy stuff, have stuff read to them, watch stuff and practically call off all Saturday activities not related to football to invest their substance in it. The SEC is promoted more than any other conference for a simple reason. Follow the money.
I don't disagree at all with the first part and I would bet my house several big time coaches agreed and counted their blessings. I do think ESPN gets too much credit, though TCU surely made a playoff case at the end. But the cynicism directed at Herbstreit and Huarte is unwarranted. I think Herbstreit is without peer on any network -- and a long time admirer of Johnson's offense, by the way -- though Huarte is kind of so-so for my taste. It says little for their character, and I wonder if the same criticism leveled at Roddy Jones or Sean Bedford would be an endorsement for a GT education or football career. After all, a traditional justification for football is that it builds character, not -- excepting Lou Holtz and Lee Corso -- that it produces carnival barkers. As an addendum, make no mistake that college football programs are corporations. Johnson probably has more "executives" reporting directly to him than any other department. Everything sold in gift shops or concession stands is all about "branding", and all TV and radio about exposure to get more business. There's a reason the SEC coaches stay mum when some programs are buying players wholesale, and it has to do with wrecking the brand. That they won't do.I think that the way we were playing at the end of last year we would have had a chance to beat anyone had there been a fair playoff. 8 or 16 teams is all I'm asking to make it fair but ESPN nor the SEC want that. Herby and Huart are just toeing the company line.
What happened to the other 10%?Yes, well, 62% of sports analysts don't understand statistics, and the other 26% don't care...