Archive for category FBS (aka I Couldn’t Help Myself)

The People vs Oklahoma State.

In the wake of Saturday’s brutal murder of the entire Savannah State football team at the hands of notorious serial killer Ted Gundy (Mike Bundy? I don’t know), it’s time for the annual bitchfest from people who are appalled, appalled I say, at the very idea that top-level colleges should sully themselves by scheduling the poors.

Look.  I say this with all love and respect, and indeed the match that lit this post’s fuse was wielded by one of my bestest innernet bros.  There are a bunch of words I can use to describe that mindset.  “Idiotic” is one.  “Paternalistic” is another.  I might even go with “pompous”, “arrogant”, and/or “smug”.  In a certain context, even “imperialistic” works.

I realize that many people with this mindset have legitimate arguments, and aren’t necessarily making the mistake of turning their team into a blithely ignorant and uncaring Mitt Romney (whereas poor West Texas A&M is Bob the electrician, working 40 hours a week to keep a roof over his family’s head and trying to get his kids into a decent college, and Valley City State is that homeless guy on the corner, only able to survive because there’s a free clinic down the street and a soup kitchen on the next block).  They want their team to play a strong schedule, they don’t want to watch their team club baby seals to death.  Sadly, though, they mostly don’t want to find themselves undefeated and ranked #3 in the BCS poll at the end of the year.  It’s really no surprise that the most vocal proponents of this entire idea are SEC fans and fans of other schools which have been left just outside the door for the crime of having played a “soft” schedule.

However, the intersection between FBS and FCS (and between FCS and D-II, and so on) is a vitally important part of the college landscape.  There are traditions involved in many cases, and in other cases there is even the force of law (Arizona and Arizona State are required by law to alternate playing Northern Arizona, for example).  Cross-divisional play makes it possible for computer formulas to give us guidance as to just how good those lower division schools are compared to the folks above them.  And, of course, there’s the most important reason these games need to survive: the survival of football itself at those lower division schools.

Read the rest of this entry »

Roundup, 9/1/12

TOG Game of the Night: Upper Iowa has struggled mightily in the years since moving up to D-II. Last night, they had a shot at unranked but always lurking Bemidji State, and the game came right down to the wire. Things looked perfectly normal, albeit with Bemidji struggling to score, through three quarters; the Beavers led 19-7, and seemed in control. Then the Peacocks erupted, with two Cole Jaeschke touchdown passes sandwiching a 35-yard Steven Sandoval field goal. The last of those three scores came with 2:28 to play and gave Upper Iowa a four-point lead, and the upset watch was on.

It was not to be, however. Bemidji stormed down the field, and Lance Rongstad dropped a 5-yard TD pass to Brett Kondziolka. Matters weren’t settled, though, as the PAT failed, leaving Bemidji up 25-23 with 40 seconds left on the clock. Upper Iowa managed to get in position for a game-winning 46-yard field goal try, but a bobbled snap led to a desperate heave into the arms of Bemidji’s Dylan Valentine, and boom, game over. The question now is whether this close call will give the Peacocks the confidence to put together a reasonably decent season, which they’ve desperately needed for some time.

So Close, Yet So… Ugly: We were this close to the third FCS-over-FBS upset of the weekend. Florida Atlantic was very bad in Howard Schnellenberger’s final sally last year, and I don’t think they’re any better now under Carl Pelini. The evidence: a miserable 7-3 win — at home, no less — over Wagner, a mediocre FCS program. Wagner took a 3-0 lead in the second quarter and held it until early in the fourth when FAU finally got on the board with a 39-yard pass from Graham Wilbert to Byron Hankerson. And that only happened because after thirty whole minutes as a head coach, Pelini already made a change at quarterback.

Blowout of the Night: The D-II Northeast-10 Conference got their league action started with a visit to Bentley by the always dubious Pace Setters. It ended with the night’s most comprehensive victory, as the Falcons spread the wealth around their entire offense on the way to a 42-0 rout.

American Football in Ireland, Part the First: Right around the time I publish this, Notre Dame will be taking on Navy over in Dublin, but that will be the second college football game on the Emerald Isle this weekend. The first one? It was a blast… for John Carroll, anyway. After spotting Saint Norbert an early field goal Blue Streaks QB Mark Myers got to work, and 457 yards and five TD passes later John Carroll had wrapped up a 40-3 win over the Green Knights.

The Warhawk Death Machine Marches On: For twenty minutes, the Bears of Washington University-Saint Louis stymied the Wisconsin-Whitewater offense, and although the upset alert wasn’t blaring since Whitewater was leading 3-0, it was still enough to attract attention. Except for one small problem: for the entire first half, Washington themselves failed to pick up a first down, and in fact ended the half with exactly zero yards of offense. By that time, Whitewater had managed to piece together a 17-0 lead. Thirty clock minutes later, it was 34-0. Washington ended with four first downs and 55 yards of offense. It’s Whitewater’s 46th straight win, and they’ve got the NCAA record for consecutive wins in their sights.

Wholly Unfamiliar Territory: Last year, the Eastern Collegiate Football Conference went 2-17 in the first two weeks of the regular season, and both of those wins came courtesy of New York Maritime. Two days into the 2012 campaign, they have already matched that win total, and Maritime’s not even playing this week. Becker scored a 13-3 win over Fitchburg State and Mount Ida squeaked past Mass-Dartmouth 24-21. Only Anna Maria’s 56-10 drubbing at the hands of Worcester State went to the conference’s detriment last night. Things are looking up for a league which saw an 8-2 Maritime squad — one of whose losses was to a D-II team — miss the playoffs last year largely because their compatriots were so awful.

Top 25 scores from last night: Only three games in the lower divisions featured ranked teams last night.

FCS: at #20 Stephen F. Austin 49, Southwest Oklahoma State [D-II] 14
D-II: #25 Bloomsburg 44, at Stonehill 28
D-III: #1 Wisconsin-Whitewater 34, at Washington (MO) 0

Tags: , , ,

It’s Football Time.

After a weekend of NAIA action, for most people the season really begins today.  Excitement abounds, the trolling has begun in earnest on Twitter and message boards, and we’re actually going to get to watch football that matters on our televisions.

Of course, we here at TOG aren’t really all about that stuff, even though we care about it deeply and will be helplessly channel-surfing.

Anyway, we’ll get into fun stuff after the weekend; for the moment, here are the spreadsheets I use — for all five divisions this time (yes, I’m including FBS here as well, because I may as well share it) rather than just the NAIA workbook.  And that has been updated with last week’s games.  Right-click and save.

FBS -247kb

FCS -277kb

D-II -289kb

D-III -369kb

NAIA -145kb

Note: there are a couple of minor errors relating to the postponed games due to Hurricane Isaac.  Specifically, I forgot to note Oregon/Nicholls State as postponed, and listed Louisiana Tech as “idle” this week.  They’ll be fixed next time around.  There may be other postponements before the weekend is over, but it mostly looks like everything that hasn’t been postponed is carrying on as scheduled.

Tags: , , , ,

Comparing the Divisions on the Field.

Since we’re actually (gasp) caught up, and I got all four previews up before a single game had been played at any level this week (oh, my), I actually have time to tinker with ideas.  So today, I thought I’d take a peek at the differences between the divisions on paper.  I’m using the Massey Ratings for this, since Richard includes every team down through the NAIA, and has a formula separate from the one he provides to the BCS in which he does include margin of victory.

Naturally, there’s not really anything surprising here.  I will argue as to the aesthetic superiority of the lower divisions in certain respects until I’m blue in the face, but none of those respects includes “quality of play”.  Mostly, this is just a fun look at how things compare both on average and on the margins.
Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: , , , ,

ICHM: The Narrative, It Sucks.

Yeah, I know this blog is intended specifically not to cover FBS or D-I basketball, but sometimes I just have to get something off my chest and my potential audiences in other venues aren’t the appropriate ones.  At least this audience is, even if the venue may not be.

What am I irked about this morning?  Well, I’m still irked about the fact that Bill Snyder didn’t leave Chris Cosh standing on the runway in Waco, but this is something of more national interest.  Generally, “The Narrative” as crammed down our throats by the Worldwide Leader; specifically, the fact that I think that if they were going to stick us with one for the season, they picked the wrong one.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: , , ,