Brian Fellows
Pete Carroll Owns Me
BertramCooper said:There's also quite a lot of anti-Catholic sentiment behind it, though few will admit it.
I'll admit it.
BertramCooper said:There's also quite a lot of anti-Catholic sentiment behind it, though few will admit it.
StoOgE said:Yes, because everyone hates Army and Navy.
ND is hated because they are ND not because they are independent.
claviertekky said:Really? I thought people hated teams that could just pick their opponents and have all their games televised nationally.
BertramCooper said:There's also quite a lot of anti-Catholic sentiment behind it, though few will admit it.
BYU's religious stigma is even more severe.
BertramCooper said:There's also quite a lot of anti-Catholic sentiment behind it, though few will admit it.
suaveric said:I wonder if that's just for football or everything. MSU got real lucky if that's the break down for basketball.
Ok... that's awesome.ConfusingJazz said:The Big 10 has been renamed the Big Zen:
![]()
It looks like we'll have the Elephant Division and the Whale Division.ConfusingJazz said:The Big 10 has been renamed the Big Zen:
![]()
BertramCooper said:Sources: Big Ten to reveal alignment
Here's the split, according to Katz:
Michigan, Nebraska, Iowa, Michigan State, Northwestern and Minnesota.
Ohio State, Penn State, Wisconsin, Purdue, Indiana and Illinois.
People on Bucknuts are saying that OSU and Michigan will still be playing the last game of the regular season. As long as that's true, I guess I'm okay with it. Still, I hate that they're going ACC-style with the split. There needs to be some geographic logic to them, and this doesn't have any.
Fucket and Dipper will be thrilled.bucknuticus said:Wait guy, the best news of this conference split. Now OSU and Illinois get to play every year for the Illibuck! VICTORY!
Bolden baby, BELIEVE!jakncoke said:I hate em just because they are bitches and schedule like such and NCAA rewards them with easy BCS bowl paths.
Sidethought: Seriously Joe PA, give the starting QB already -_-
ChiTownBuffalo said:I had to go look up Illibuck.
So many things I expected before a wooden turtle.
I was personally thinking it was a politically corrupt deer.ChiTownBuffalo said:I had to go look up Illibuck.
So many things I expected before a wooden turtle.
ChiTownBuffalo said:How is it pronounced?
Ill-Eye-Buck?
Or
Ill-ee-buck?
This is not chronological, but here's an overview of what teams will be moving over the next couple of years (most take effect in 2011 or 2012).Feep said:So guys (I'm serious), I have not given a flying fuck about all this offseason conference bullshit. Can someone give me a quick rundown of the final changes that have happened between last season and this season, conference-wise?
That's about it. Might also add that the Pac-10 becomes the Pac-12, and that the Pac-12, the Big Tenwelve, and the Big Xii will all be playing 9 game conference schedules. The Pac-12 and Big Tenwelve will add CCGs, the Big Xii goes round-robin.BertramCooper said:This is not chronological, but here's an overview of what teams will be moving over the next couple of years (most take effect in 2011 or 2012).
-Colorado will leave the Big 12 for the Pac 10
-Utah will leave the Mountain West for the Pac 10
-Nebraska will leave the Big 12 for the Big Ten
-Boise State, Fresno State and Nevada will leave the WAC for the Mountain West
-BYU will leave the Mountain West to become independent (football only, will join West Coast Conference in all other sports)
Please correct me if any of this is wrong, or if I missed anything.
BertramCooper said:This is not chronological, but here's an overview of what teams will be moving over the next couple of years (most take effect in 2011 or 2012).
-Colorado will leave the Big 12 for the Pac 10
-Utah will leave the Mountain West for the Pac 10
-Nebraska will leave the Big 12 for the Big Ten
-Boise State, Fresno State and Nevada will leave the WAC for the Mountain West
-BYU will leave the Mountain West to become independent (football only, will join West Coast Conference in all other sports)
Please correct me if any of this is wrong, or if I missed anything.
Yeah, it's much less exciting with all the drama excised.chuckddd said:That's a whole lot of fun boiled down into five boring bullet points.
Perhaps I'll expand it into an opera starring Dan Beebe (Castrato).chuckddd said:That's a whole lot of fun boiled down into five boring bullet points.
Cyan said:Yeah, it's much less exciting with all the drama excised.
Cyan said:That's about it. Might also add that the Pac-10 becomes the Pac-12, and that the Pac-12, the Big Tenwelve, and the Big Xii will all be playing 9 game conference schedules. The Pac-12 and Big Tenwelve will add CCGs, the Big Xii goes round-robin.
The MWC remains the strongest non-BCS conference, but still has no hope of getting the auto-bid they've been chasing.
And the WAC is all but done. They've lost their three best teams, and have only six members, two less than is required to remain a going concern.
ConfusingJazz said:Stupid MDC not being formed.
Oh well, I have to look forward to ESPN paying us 30 million in a year or two to be able to broadcast our games.
BertramCooper said:Sources: Big Ten to reveal alignment
Here's the split, according to Katz:
Michigan, Nebraska, Iowa, Michigan State, Northwestern and Minnesota.
Ohio State, Penn State, Wisconsin, Purdue, Indiana and Illinois.
People on Bucknuts are saying that OSU and Michigan will still be playing the last game of the regular season. As long as that's true, I guess I'm okay with it. Still, I hate that they're going ACC-style with the split. There needs to be some geographic logic to them, and this doesn't have any.
Fisticuffs said:so at this point what do you think MWC needs to do to get back into position to get an auto-bid? I'm just curious im not against what you say or anything. I actually agree.
Cyan said:Ok... that's awesome.
Fisticuffs said:so at this point what do you think MWC needs to do to get back into position to get an auto-bid? I'm just curious im not against what you say or anything. I actually agree.
ConfusingJazz said:A formula does exist:
1. The conference must finish among the top six in a listing of the average of each conference's highest ranked team at the end of each regular season.
2. The conference must finish among the top six in a listing of the average computer rankings of every conference's full roster of teams at the end of each regular season.
3. The conference must accumulate a score of at least 50 percent of the highest ranking conference's score in the Adjusted Top-25 Performance Ranking, which measures how many teams each conference placed in the BCS top 25 and adjusts for conference size.
ConfusingJazz said:A formula does exist:
1. The conference must finish among the top six in a listing of the average of each conference's highest ranked team at the end of each regular season.
2. The conference must finish among the top six in a listing of the average computer rankings of every conference's full roster of teams at the end of each regular season.
3. The conference must accumulate a score of at least 50 percent of the highest ranking conference's score in the Adjusted Top-25 Performance Ranking, which measures how many teams each conference placed in the BCS top 25 and adjusts for conference size.
They actually fit into 1 and 3, but fail at point 2.
Fisticuffs said:i call it the Jim Crow law of the BCS![]()
Yeah, Wisc. seems to lose the most in all of this as far as losing traditional rivalries. At the same time Wisc. gets OSU & Penn State EVERY YEAR along with two gimmes with the Indy teams for giving up Neb. and Mich. As a Penn State fan, I'm really pleased to have 2 easy games vs 4 trip up games Neb. and Mich. now have every year.BJK said:As a Badger fan....it kinda sucks. Since the two schools that Wisconsin has long-standing rivalries with (Minnesota & the Axe, and they've been playing Iowa long before the Heartland trophy started up) and the school they wanted to start a football rivalry with (Nebraska) are all in the other conference.
If you were to seed the 12 schools by winning percentage (since Penn State joined the BT in 1993)
Division A
1) Ohio State
4) Penn State
5) UW
7) Purdue
11) Minnesota
12) Indiana
Division B
2) Michigan
3) Nebraska
6) Iowa
8) Michigan State
9) Northwestern
10) Illinois
Source: J-S Online Badgers blog.
The proposed alignment flips Minnesota and Illinois, taking away the only rivalry the Badgers would have preserved with the conference formatting. So we go from 3 potential rivalries, down to one annual rivalry game.
...and I would throw up a little if these divisions were to be used in Mens basketball.
jstevenson said:Sept. 1, 2010
BIG TEN ANNOUNCES FOOTBALL DIVISION ALIGNMENTS
AND 2011 AND 2012 CONFERENCE SCHEDULES
Big Ten division winners to meet in inaugural Big Ten Football Championship Game
Park Ridge, Ill. ? The Big Ten Conference office announced football division alignments beginning with the 2011 season as recommended by conference directors of athletics and reviewed and supported by the Big Ten Council of Presidents/Chancellors. Nebraska will officially begin conference competition in 2011, giving the Big Ten 12 football programs for the first time in conference history.
The winner of each Big Ten division will meet in the inaugural Big Ten Football Championship Game, to be played December 3, 2011, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. The championship game will determine the Big Ten Champion and the conferences participant in the Rose Bowl Game or Bowl Championship Series National Championship Game.
The Big Ten football division alignments will include a division featuring Illinois, Indiana, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue and Wisconsin, and a division featuring Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Nebraska and Northwestern. Each school will play the other five schools within its division and will also face three teams from the other division, including one cross-division matchup guaranteed on an annual basis. The guaranteed cross-division matchups are Illinois-Northwestern, Indiana-Michigan State, Ohio State-Michigan, Penn State-Nebraska, Purdue-Iowa and Wisconsin-Minnesota. Names for each Big Ten football division will be announced at a later date.
Over the past several months, Big Ten staff and directors of athletics have met on several occasions to discuss and finalize division alignments, said Big Ten Commissioner James E. Delany. We focused on competitive equality, traditional rivalries and geography. We considered multiple models and countless permutations in an effort to achieve the most competitively balanced divisions while at the same time respecting our traditions, preserving existing rivalries, and creating opportunities for the establishment and growth of new rivalries. We have listened to the feedback from our institutions, alumni and fans, and while we understand that no final alignments could possibly satisfy all of our constituents, we believe that we have achieved a very exciting result.
With the division alignments finalized, the Big Ten also announced updated conference schedules for the 2011 and 2012 football seasons. The 2011 and 2012 intraconference schedules are attached as PDFs.
The 115th season of Big Ten football kicks off Thursday, Sept. 2, as Indiana hosts Towson, Minnesota plays at Middle Tennessee State, and Ohio State welcomes Marshall. The conferences other eight teams open action on Saturday, Sept. 4.
Something inevitably wouldn't mesh nicely. Iowa and MSU get usually easy games that no one cares about. The rest of the protected games look really good.jstevenson said:Sept. 1, 2010
BIG TEN ANNOUNCES FOOTBALL DIVISION ALIGNMENTS
AND 2011 AND 2012 CONFERENCE SCHEDULES
Big Ten division winners to meet in inaugural Big Ten Football Championship Game
Park Ridge, Ill. ? The Big Ten Conference office announced football division alignments beginning with the 2011 season as recommended by conference directors of athletics and reviewed and supported by the Big Ten Council of Presidents/Chancellors. Nebraska will officially begin conference competition in 2011, giving the Big Ten 12 football programs for the first time in conference history.
The winner of each Big Ten division will meet in the inaugural Big Ten Football Championship Game, to be played December 3, 2011, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. The championship game will determine the Big Ten Champion and the conferences participant in the Rose Bowl Game or Bowl Championship Series National Championship Game.
The Big Ten football division alignments will include a division featuring Illinois, Indiana, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue and Wisconsin, and a division featuring Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Nebraska and Northwestern. Each school will play the other five schools within its division and will also face three teams from the other division, including one cross-division matchup guaranteed on an annual basis. The guaranteed cross-division matchups are Illinois-Northwestern, Indiana-Michigan State, Ohio State-Michigan, Penn State-Nebraska, Purdue-Iowa and Wisconsin-Minnesota. Names for each Big Ten football division will be announced at a later date.
Over the past several months, Big Ten staff and directors of athletics have met on several occasions to discuss and finalize division alignments, said Big Ten Commissioner James E. Delany. We focused on competitive equality, traditional rivalries and geography. We considered multiple models and countless permutations in an effort to achieve the most competitively balanced divisions while at the same time respecting our traditions, preserving existing rivalries, and creating opportunities for the establishment and growth of new rivalries. We have listened to the feedback from our institutions, alumni and fans, and while we understand that no final alignments could possibly satisfy all of our constituents, we believe that we have achieved a very exciting result.
With the division alignments finalized, the Big Ten also announced updated conference schedules for the 2011 and 2012 football seasons. The 2011 and 2012 intraconference schedules are attached as PDFs.
The 115th season of Big Ten football kicks off Thursday, Sept. 2, as Indiana hosts Towson, Minnesota plays at Middle Tennessee State, and Ohio State welcomes Marshall. The conferences other eight teams open action on Saturday, Sept. 4.