P
Priceless
Guest
Re: College Football 2009: Where Championships are won by a majority vote
The final AP poll is out. Guess where Boise State finished.
The final AP poll is out. Guess where Boise State finished.
The final AP poll is out. Guess where Boise State finished.
I never said they didn't deserve to win based on the circumstances, just that the circumstances should be forever explained so those idiots in the SEC can't get all self-righteous and act like they totally dominate the football world.
I love that rationale, don't you?Is the Twins' 1987 World Series victory over the Cardinals tainted because Jack Clark, easily the best player on St. Louis, was injured and didn't play?![]()
Yup. I love one man TEAMS. They're so easily beaten. Knock the guy out and Texas should have folded like a cheap folding chair at fat camp.But if McCoy were playing, Bama might have called their plays slightly differently, too, no? There's just no way to win the what-if game - the only game you can win is the one that is actually played on the field.
It's a team sport. If Texas builds their whole team around one guy, then that's a risk they chose, very deliberately, to take.
Seeing how McCoy played vs. Nebraska isn't very good... because Nebraska could have won it if they had a field goal kicker that was clutch.Based on how Texas and Mccoy played against Nebraska, it is not a given that if he played the entire game last night Texas would have won. Granted he gives Texas the best shot to win, but there is no way anyone can state that the result would have been different had he not been injured.
No tainted victory, no asterix, just a National Championship for Alabama.
Which must explain why no mediocre quarterbacks have ever won a national championship? You can't seriously be arguing that LSU 2004 was "built around" Matt Mauck (who? I had to look that up) or OU 2001 was built around Josh Heupel or Tennessee 1998 was built around Tee Martin. Those were strong teams with better-than-competent quarterbacks, but they were not built around their quarterbacks by any stretch.It's your quaterback, you kind of have to build your team around him.
Which must explain why no mediocre quarterbacks have ever won a national championship? You can't seriously be arguing that LSU 2004 was "built around" Matt Mauck (who? I had to look that up) or OU 2001 was built around Josh Heupel or Tennessee 1998 was built around Tee Martin. Those were strong teams with better-than-competent quarterbacks, but they were not built around their quarterbacks by any stretch.
Or even last night - McElroy was 6/11 for 58 yards. I think Alabama would have been just fine without him.
Alabama runs a very conservative offense but if Greg McElroy goes down in the first quarter Alabama struggles, it changes the game.
The center quaterback exchange changes, the hand off points change, the tempo of the game changes.
McElroy still had to read the defenses and make adjustment accordingly, McElroy managed the game for Alabama. Most importantly McElroy goes down Texas has no respect for their passing game whatsoever and they play 9 men at the line of scrimmage to make sure they can't run the ball at all.
More importantly we're not talking about a mediocre quarterback who is usually asked just to manage the game. We're talking about a quarterback that runs a high speed pass first spread offense who completes 80% of his passes and is the leading rusher on his team. But more importantly Colt McCoy is the leader of that team mentally.
Could you imagine the Colts trying to play for the Super Bowl after Peyton Manning goes down.
For that matter could you imagine the Vikings playing after Brett Favre go, or the Saints, Packers, Cowboys, or even the Ravens.
Losing your quarterback is monumental. If you can name me one team that has won a championship game after their starting quarterback left early in the game with a injury I will admit that I'm wrong.
I promise you there are a lot more stories of teams going down in flames after losing their quarterback then there are success stories.
Losing your quarterback is monumental. If you can name me one team that has won a championship game after their starting quarterback left early in the game with a injury I will admit that I'm wrong.
You've said so much, and yet you've failed to impart exactly why it is that Alabama's victory is flawed in any way, shape, or form.
So what if the team lost its QB? They had a decent backup and they still lost. Football is still a team sport last time I checked, and the QB is 1 out of 22 players on the field. His role is most important obviously, but it's still a team sport. You don't win championships on the back of one person alone. The greatest QB of all time could play with a swiss cheese line and his team wouldn't be going anywhere.
Apparently, it's Alabama's fault that Texas didn't have another All-World QB to step in for McCoy. Therefore, their win is tainted. What a stupid remark. You don't think Texas had enough QB depth, maybe? Did they (or you) think that injuries aren't supposed to happen in football?
Jesus.
So then Texas' victory over Oklahoma is tainted right? If so that means Texas should have never been in the BCS Title game anyways. There ya go, Alabama still is your BCS Champion.
I stated early that given the circumstances Alabama deserved to win. I just said that if McCoy didn't get hurt the game would have been drastically different, and personally not only do I feel cheated for seeing the matchup I was promised, but I also think Texas with McCoy has a exponentially better chance of beating Alabama for then Texas without McCoy. This is a opinion that I have justified, and really I don't even see why I have to.
Yes a quarterback is just one part of a team, but in football he is the most important part, just like in hockey your goalie is the most crucial part of your team. Except in football because the season is so short and every game matters backup quarterbacks rarely ever get any significant playing time.
So then Texas' victory over Oklahoma is tainted right? If so that means Texas should have never been in the BCS Title game anyways. There ya go, Alabama still is your BCS Champion.
That win deserves an *
He sat for two series and was ineffective for the couple of series before that.
He never had to leave the sideline.
The Texas team had to watch the centerpiece of their team and their leader leave the field and not come back. I'm sure there's a reason the entire team started playing better when he got to the sideline.
It's a tainted victory, it just is.
I stated early that given the circumstances Alabama deserved to win. I just said that if McCoy didn't get hurt the game would have been drastically different, and personally not only do I feel cheated for seeing the matchup I was promised, but I also think Texas with McCoy has a exponentially better chance of beating Alabama for then Texas without McCoy. This is a opinion that I have justified, and really I don't even see why I have to.
Yes a quarterback is just one part of a team, but in football he is the most important part, just like in hockey your goalie is the most crucial part of your team. Except in football because the season is so short and every game matters backup quarterbacks rarely ever get any significant playing time.
Unless there were specific rules broken, the game stands regardless of who got hurt and who didn't. Now, whether this game should have solely determined who won the national championship is another issue. But playing multiple levels of what-ifs is asinine.
Basically. This championship is a fraud because there are two undefeated teams with excellent resumes left at the end of the year, not because Texas apparently had a suspect backup plan.
Boise St. may be undefeated but their resume is hardly what one would call excellent.