Your arguments are completely irrelevant. Whether a conference has been the "best" by some arbitrary measurements over some period of time has no bearing on if it is the best in a given season or if it is actually top heavy or even in overall decline. The point of bias is that it constrains the bigot from understanding present or continuing phenomenon in accord with the reality of the situation.It is hard to argue with a lot of the points made in both articles, but it is also hard to argue with the SEC's success record. As I pointed out in another thread, according to a 2012 article, their success has been more significant in bowls than in the regular season (LINK). Over that time, they actually had a losing regular season record against a couple of the conferences. However, if this article is accurate (LINK), over the last 10 years, the SEC does in fact have a much better record against other power conferences, especially the ACC:
SEC 112-65
ACC 60-101 (ugh)
They have also won 7 of the last 8 national championship games. While there may be some bias in getting there, you also have to win it once you do, and they have at an admittedly high rate.
While I do believe there is some bias at issue here, the other conferences really need to just step it up and start winning against them more, particularly the ACC. Lord willing, we will start the reverse of that trend in November.
And all of this is completely relevant to the non sequitur claims of GTRX7 above. Since the bias exists the polls follow the bias and that leads to the designation and placement of teams in favorable positions at the end of past seasons as far as bowl games and mythical national championships go (it isn't called "mythical" for no reason at all).Great article. One great point it makes is the point about several of the teams in the top 5 building their way up there by beating Texas A&M. Earlier in the season Texas A&M and a couple of other teams pushed their way up by beating South Carolina. Both of those teams aren't very good football teams yet they were the catalyst for the rise of other teams in the polls. The SEC and ESPN have basically perfected the art of over hyping the SEC teams to the point that if they do lose, then they are just replaced by the teams that beat them who are obviously great teams because they beat the other great team. Teams like SC and Texas A&M move into the top 10 and then are just replaced by teams like Ole Miss and Miss St when they lose to them. People think the SEC is so great because they always have so many top 5 or top 10 teams when in reality, it is nearly impossible for them not to when half their conference starts off there.
Amen, brother! The real problem here is that the playoffs have one round. There should be at least 8 teams in there. True, that means another week of football, but I doubt the players or coaches would be too upset about that. College administrators, oth, are another story. But they brought that on themselves, after all.Here is the bottom line. Playoffs need to be expanded. Champ of every power 5 conf +1. Sec will get more than their fair share of the +1s but that will go very far toward crowning the best team every year.
Great article. One great point it makes is the point about several of the teams in the top 5 building their way up there by beating Texas A&M. Earlier in the season Texas A&M and a couple of other teams pushed their way up by beating South Carolina. Both of those teams aren't very good football teams yet they were the catalyst for the rise of other teams in the polls. The SEC and ESPN have basically perfected the art of over hyping the SEC teams to the point that if they do lose, then they are just replaced by the teams that beat them who are obviously great teams because they beat the other great team. Teams like SC and Texas A&M move into the top 10 and then are just replaced by teams like Ole Miss and Miss St when they lose to them. People think the SEC is so great because they always have so many top 5 or top 10 teams when in reality, it is nearly impossible for them not to when half their conference starts off there.
It's funny I was just talking with my friends this weekend.
Imagine at the beginning of the year if we thought NC State was a legit top 10 program in the country. What would that say about the ACC? How would we perceive teams like BC, Louisville and Clemson. They would all be giant killing juggernauts...
Hopefully we'll get to the ideal (IMHO) of 16 teams at some point. Then it would be 14 SEC teams plus 2? (tic)
To really know who is playing the best football at the end of the season, you need a much deeper playoff. Hopefully we'll get to the ideal (IMHO) of 16 teams at some point. Then it would be 14 SEC teams plus 2? (tic)
Yeah, but Herbstreit, Desmond, Eddie George, they have jumped in with both feet to be the shills for the SEC. It is the company line.I was watching game day this past weekend and Chris Fowler went on a little rant about how stupid everyone sounds saying that ESPN has a bias towards the SEC and how they have no say in the playoff system. He got a little heated and Desmond had to calm him down.
I think there is some bias to ESPN, and I agree that some of the Key SEC schools have not played as tough a strength of schedule.
However, football outsiders, imo, has one of the best algorithms for ranking teams based on opponent-adjusted offensive, defensive, and special teams efficiency. Here's there current top 25:
View attachment 480
16 team playoff means 5 additional games for the final two. That's an 18 game season counting conference championship games. I don't see that happening..... ever. I'd be thrilled with an 8 team playoff with conference champions mandatory plus a few wild cards. Make the championship playoff a contest of champions like it should be or don't do it at all.
Your arguments are completely irrelevant. Whether a conference has been the "best" by some arbitrary measurements over some period of time has no bearing on if it is the best in a given season or if it is actually top heavy or even in overall decline. The point of bias is that it constrains the bigot from understanding present or continuing phenomenon in accord with the reality of the situation.
When did FSU and Miss St. lose a game?