Wait a second…THAT’S REALIGNMENT’S MUSIC! *cue NWO theme*

Yes we have some realignment news…wait, don’t run away!  Yes realignment was done to death a few years back and especially with the Big XII Deal Or No Deal type expansion process.  I get it.  However, it’s the reality of college sports, especially at the football level.  But this time around it is more geared towards the basketball end of things.  In the end though, it will effect football (potentially) in a myriad of ways.  So let’s begin.

The Mountain West wants Gonzaga.  There, I said it.  Gonzaga has dominated the West Coast Conference better than any team has dominated their conference in college basketball ever.  Period.  They are the West Coast Conference basically.  So let’s be honest: the Zags are leaving the WCC for the MWC.  Whether that happens for the next season I don’t know but they have three months to decide (and will probably want to do it before then).  The Mountain West is also talking to some other schools to see if they should expand further.  One school that may or may not be in this mix (depending on what you read) is BYU.  Ah, the Cougars.  Independence looked great for them.  They were a solid #2 behind Notre Dame in college football’s Independent ranks up until recently.  Now, Army may have reached their level (debatable) or BYU has dropped below them (also debatable).  Either way you slice it, BYU’s football has taken a downward trend recently.  But the rest of their sports are in the WCC.  This is where this all really comes into play.  BYU might not want to be stuck in the WCC without Gonzaga (and potentially Saint Mary’s who may also be getting a look).  The WCC without Gonzaga is not a good conference.  At least now.  It may be a decade from now but not now.  So would BYU want to go back to the Mountain West?  Here seems to be the options for BYU:

  1. Stay as a college football independent and in the WCC for basketball (and all other sports).  Being an independent is hard these days, especially with the New Year’s Six not giving them access to the G5 spot (which sounds like mid-major porn).  They would be a big fish in a much smaller WCC pond but could continue to struggle with football.
  2. Go back to the MWC in football only and keep all other sports in the WCC.  They might prefer this option but will the Mountain West accept that or force BYU’s hand.  All or nothing?
  3. All.  Everything back to the Mountain West.

In my opinion, I believe BYU has to swallow its pride and at least discuss a return to the Mountain West, even if it’s just for football.  Otherwise they will be stuck out in no-man’s-land so to speak with no bowl tie-ins and no NY6 possibilities.  The other issues that come up with this are the potential for UTEP and New Mexico State to also join the MWC.  If that’s the case, they would have their 14 football schools and wouldn’t need BYU.  At that point, BYU would have to be paired with yet another football school for it to make sense for the Mountain West.  Somewhat confusing but hopefully soon enough (maybe as early as the Final Four) we will get more news on this…at least it pertains to Gonzaga.  Then the dominoes can fall in some way after that.

Now this whole realignment talk makes me look back at a subject I have wanted to tackle for a while and never did until now because it’s a lengthy one.  Yep, it’s another What-if Post!  This time: What if the Southwest Conference never disbanded?  Oof.  Alright then.

The math here is basically 2+2=5 but no matter.  The Big 8 invited four members of the old SWC to form the Big XII.  That’s what we know.  But the entire demise started way before that.  Really it begins in the 80s and peaks with the death penalty given to SMU.

That penalty (which, let’s be honest, should have either not been given as harshly or been given to a few other programs in recent memory) essentially killed the Southwest Conference.  It just took another decade to finally bury the corpse.  So let’s say SMU doesn’t get the death penalty but a fairly harsh one.  Enough that it makes for a difficult 1987 and puts the other conference teams on notice.  What this wouldn’t have done is keep Arkansas.  The SEC wanted to expand as soon as the Big Ten was making a play for Penn State.  And Arkansas was one of the six options for SEC expansion and pretty much at the top of the list.  So Arkansas is gone and the SWC is down to 8 teams.  Making the conference stronger, however, could have done one of two things:

  1. Kept these eight together for a long time with perhaps an expansion or two in the decade or two following, or
  2. Had the best from the SWC merge with the best of the Big 8 to create a conference but probably not with 12 teams or not in the way they ended up merging in the first place.

So let’s be perfectly honest here: there is no way they keep the eight they had unless they expand heavily since Rice was never going to be able to compete (and never really did being the Vanderbilt of the group and that is even stretching it).  SMU is another story.  Since they are in the Metroplex, I think the lack of death penalty would have at least kept them competitive for bowl games for a while.  And remember: at various times, Baylor and Houston were Top 25 teams in the decade after the death penalty occurred.  So let’s say they expand.  The question is when and where.  This is when it becomes super complicated.

So probably through 1996, everything happens the way it would have.  The big realignment of 1997 would not have happened…at least at this point; however, it would have been a matter of time before the SWC did something since they knew with the way TV contracts were going, having such a small conference footprint would have been the death of the conference eventually.  What they would have done is two-fold.  First, get rid of the dead-weight schools.  Rice would have been a goner.  No way they can continue to compete.  Plus with Houston already in the conference, they have that area covered.  One of TCU or SMU is probably also gone.  You can make a case for either one to stay but both couldn’t stay because really the Metroplex barely needed one major conference team so two would have been out of the question.  So let’s drop SMU for this exercise.  That leaves this:

  • Texas
  • Texas A&M
  • TCU
  • Baylor
  • Houston
  • Texas Tech

Honestly…not bad.  In the late 90s would have been the time to be aggressive before some former WAC-offs decided to meet in a (probably) sleazy Motel 6 and start a new conference.  So the choices to join the new “super-sized” Southwest Conference would have been:

  • BYU.  Yes it’s not southwest in any sense but BYU at the time was still a hot ticket for football.
  • Tulane.  To keep that (somewhat) southwest feel by including a state that is beside Texas.
  • New Mexico and UTEP.  I think these two would have been kind of joined at the hip at this point.
  • Wyoming and Colorado State.  This is more of the bridge (of sorts) from Texas to BYU through these two schools.

A fairly decent conference that probably would have seen at least two of these teams (BYU and one other) become fairly prominent Power Five-like football teams.  It also keeps the Big Eight from doing anything and pushes the WAC and Big West, possibly, into some sort of unholy alliance.  I also believe this would have kept some conferences’ footprints (I am looking straight at you WAC) from getting totally out of hand…at least until ESPN came along and threw a bunch of money at someone and we then have San Diego State to the Big East or something else as foolish.  Otherwise, this probably turns out better for many schools involved.  So this is what it would look like as of the start of the new millennium for the effected conferences (I excluded the ACC, Big East, Big Ten, MAC, Pac-10 and SEC since they would not have changed from what they were before the 2000 season):

SWC WAC Conference USA Big West Big 8
Texas Air Force Louisville Boise State Kansas State
Texas A&M UNLV East Carolina Utah State Nebraska
Texas Tech Utah Cincinnati Idaho Iowa State
Houston San Diego State Southern Miss New Mexico State Colorado
Baylor Fresno State UAB North Texas Kansas
TCU San Jose State Memphis Arkansas State Missouri
BYU Tulsa Army Oklahoma
Tulane Rice Oklahoma State
New Mexico Hawaii
UTEP SMU
Wyoming Nevada
Colorado State

That’s…that’s quite a bit different than what actually happened.  I honestly wouldn’t know what to do with the WAC and Big West at this point.  My guess is, potentially a few years later, the Big 8 or SWC would pick up two members and force these conferences to merge.  Also remember that the Sun Belt was on the brink of sponsoring football at the Division 1-A level in a couple of years which would provide a whole other wrinkle.  In the end, the ACC, Big Ten, Pac-10 and SEC would look at this and stay as far away as possible (for the time being).  OK so maybe realignment isn’t so bad…sometimes.  I’m lying…it almost always sucks these days.

Alright we are done with that.  That post was kind of long and meandered a bit.  In the end I think I determined the Southwest Conference deserved to die.  Don’t know why though.  All I know is it may have caused less problems by dissolving.  Next up will be my final mock draft sometime in April.  Then it’s the actual draft and I can start posting semi-regularly again.  Ugh I hate this time of year.  Enjoy your short work week everyone!

A new mock draft after the Kreepy Kombine

I did not watch the Combine.  I saw a few tweets about certain players like Lamar Jackson (who is a QUARTERBACK) and Shaquille Griffin (who is a DEFENSIVE BEAST) among others.  Other than that, nope.  The Combine is just fucking weird.  I go to the gym and see people work out.  Because people work out there and I am also there to work out.  I would never watch those people work out on TV so there’s no way I would do the same for football players.  I get the idea behind it but a guy going up and down a draft board because of his speed in the 40 is ridiculous.  How often does someone go 40 yards, untouched, and in a straight line?  Maybe a few times a season?  Anyway, it’s bizarre.

What the Combine does do is allow me to do a Mock Draft V.3. since there would have been some movement afterwards because GMs and Assistant GMs and scouts need something to do.  So here’s the next iteration of the mock draft followed by some random info:

FIRST ROUND

1 cleveland browns Sam Darnold, QB (USC)
2 ny giants Saquon Barkley, RB (Penn State)
3 indianapolis Bradley Chubb, DE (NC State)
4 cleveland browns Denzel Ward, CB (Ohio State)
5 denver Josh Rosen, QB (UCLA)
6 new york jets Josh Allen, QB (Wyoming)
7 tampa_bay_buccaneers-primary-2014 Minkah Fitzpatrick, CB (Alabama)
8 chicago bears Tremaine Edmunds, LB (Virginia Tech)
9 san francisco 49ers Quentin Nelson, G (Notre Dame)
10 oakland Orlando Brown, T (Oklahoma)
11 miami_dolphins-primary-2013 Baker Mayfield, QB (Oklahoma)
12 cincinnati Derwin James, S (Florida State)
13 washington Roquan Smith, LB (Georgia)
14 green bay Marcus Davenport, DE (UTSA)
15 arizona Connor Williams, T (Texas)
16 Baltimore Derrius Guice, RB (LSU)
17 los_angeles__chargers-primary-2017 Leighton Vander Esch, LB (Boise State)
18 seattle.png Joshua Jackson, CB (Iowa)
19 dallas Vita Vea, DT (Washington)
20 detroit_lions-primary-2017 Isaiah Wynn, G (Georgia)
21 buffalo Rashaan Evans, LB (Alabama)
22 buffalo Mason Rudolph, QB (Oklahoma State)
23 Mike McGlinchey, T (Notre Dame)
24 carolina James Daniels, C (Iowa)
25 tennessee titans logo Harold Landry, DE (Boston College)
26 atlanta Maurice Hurst, DT (Michigan)
27 new orleans Billy Price, C (Ohio State)
28 pittsburgh Malik Jefferson, LB (Texas)
29 jacksonville jaguars Courtland Sutton, WR (SMU)
30 Will Hernandez, G (UTEP)
31 Kolton Miller, T (UCLA)
32 Philadelphia Carlton Davis, CB (Auburn)

SECOND ROUND

33 cleveland browns Jamarco Jones, T (Ohio State)
34 ny giants Isaiah Oliver, CB (Colorado)
35 cleveland browns Ronald Jones II, RB (USC)
36 indianapolis Sam Hubbard, DE (Ohio State)
37 new york jets Sony Michel, RB (Georgia)
38 tampa_bay_buccaneers-primary-2014 Arden Key, DE (LSU)
39 chicago bears Calvin Ridley, WR (Alabama)
40 denver Brian O’Neill, T (Pittsburgh)
41 oakland Taven Bryan, DT (Florida)
42 miami_dolphins-primary-2013 Nick Chubb, RB (Georgia)
43 Chukwuma Okorafor, T (Western Kentucky)
44 washington Da’Ron Payne, DT (Alabama)
45 green bay Anthony Miller, WR (Memphis)
46 cincinnati Dorance Armstrong Jr., OLB (Kansas)
47 arizona James Washington, WR (Oklahoma State)
48 los_angeles__chargers-primary-2017 Ronnie Harrison, S (Alabama)
49 new york jets Jaire Alexander, CB (Louisville)
50 dallas Dallas Goedert, TE (South Dakota State)
51 detroit_lions-primary-2017 Harrison Phillips, DT (Stanford)
52 Baltimore Christian Kirk, WR (Texas A&M)
53 buffalo Trenton Thompson, DT (Georgia)
54 D.J. Moore, WR (Maryland)
55 Mike Hughes, CB (UCF)
56 carolina D.J. Chark, WR (LSU)
57 tennessee titans logo Hayden Hurst, TE (South Carolina)
58 atlanta Terrell Edmunds, S (Virginia Tech)
59 new orleans Lamar Jackson, QB (Louisville)
60 pittsburgh Justin Reid, S (Stanford)
61 jacksonville jaguars Mark Andrews, TE (Oklahoma)
62 Duke Ejiofor, DE (Wake Forest)
63 M.J. Stewart, CB (North Carolina)
64 Philadelphia Kyzir White, S (West Virginia)

Random Info

  • Gone to two rounds!  I would say it means double the chances to get things wrong but that’s a lie.  It easily quadruples it.  Which makes me on par with Mel Kiper.
  • I can’t see the Giants passing on Barkley now.  This means the Browns lose the opportunity to get a top QB and THE top RB in the first four picks.  It means, chances are, their pick at running back will come later in the draft (which I have them doing on their second 2nd round pick).
  • This may now work out great for the Broncos.  They just got Case Keenum so whoever they draft at QB can at least sit and watch and be mentored for a season, which we know is definitely the way to go (most of the time).  See Rodgers, Aaron.
  • I don’t put trades in at all.  I know they will happen but it’s difficult enough to pick two rounds of the draft let alone throw in trades.  But something tells me the Bills, after trading Tyrod Taylor to the Browns, will be moving up in the draft to get a QB.  As of right now I have them getting Mason Rudolph (which isn’t a bad pick at all) but they could move up to get one of Darnold, Rosen, Allen or Mayfield.
  • Both Edmunds boys (Tremaine and Terrell) I expect to go in the first two rounds.  That should change I am sure since mock drafts, I realize once again, are a fool’s game.
  • Yes the Saints just signed Drew Brees again.  But Lamar Jackson would do well to go there, watch a pocket passer like Drew who throws the ball approximately nine thousand times a game, and mesh that with his ridiculous athleticism.  This guy could very well be Michael Vick 2.0…without the bad shit.

So there you go.  Another mock draft.  Impressed, right?  Yeah, I’m not that impressed either.  And I still can’t believe the draft is like a month-and-a-half away.  Didn’t it always used to be early March/late April?  A quick online tells me the last time it was even as early as mid-April was the 2000 draft.  I must be hallucinating then.

Hey, remember my “I will try to post once a week” comment?  Yeah that got flushed down the toilet.  What else can I talk about without sounding like I am forcibly creating a post for no other reason than to create a post.  I will have at least one more mock draft…maybe two.  And perhaps another What-if post since they are SO popular (as in I assume they aren’t popular at all).  Other than that?   Crickets.

I am working on the college schedule now that it is out.  Mapping it out and such.  It takes a while so I never do more than a bit at a time because even I would get bored with it.  Once the draft is upon us, I should start getting back into things.  So let’s consider this a season finale of sorts.  Like on TV.  Except way worse.  Enjoy your week everyone!

Drum roll please…….It’s time for another What-If Post! Is this mic on?

Let’s take a look at what I can blog about:

  1. The upcoming NFL draft.  Well, I will do at least four mock drafts and want to spread them out.  I mean it’s a little less than two months away from the draft and it’s not like Josh Allen will fall from surefire first rounder to out of the draft.  Unless he does something really bad.  And even then…
  2. Spring games.  Not a chance.  I think these are dumb anyway.
  3. Off-season NFL news.  Why?  I don’t care which player said something smart, which one said something dumb, which one beat his wife, which one had his wife beat him…I don’t care.
  4. News from the CFL, CIS (U Sports), arena football, etc.  Also, not a chance.

So I have to come up with something so I don’t let this blog go dormant or hibernate like a grizzly bear.  So I figured it’s time for another What-If post.  You know, the ones where I don’t do too much research, yet still come to a conclusion that seems reasonably respectable so let’s begin.

This time around I will be doing a trio of what-if scenarios about the two graphics above: the College Football Playoff and the New Year’s Six.  I will look into what would have happened if this setup had been around for three of the strangest seasons of college football in my lifetime: 1984, 1990 and 2007.  I will have to take some liberties with some of the tie-ins but will use the same rotation that is in use now for the bowl games (i.e. 2014 had Rose and Sugar as semis so 30 years previous to it would have been the same because of the 3-year rotations).

1984

This is the year that BYU (yes, THAT BYU) was crowned national champion.  The only undefeated and untied team left in the nation won it by default.  I was only 6 at the time so knew none of this but I can guarantee if this had happened even ten years later, the outcry would have been huge…and this is pre-internet by quite a few years.  The Cougs had a somewhat easy schedule that year, looked dominant throughout most of the season, but then struggled and just got by a not-so-good Michigan team in the Holiday Bowl to clinch the title.  Yep…the Holiday Bowl.

So if the CFP and NY6 existed back then, this is what we would have seen (and of course I will use AP Poll rankings since even the BCS was a decade-and-a-half away at this point):

Rose Bowl (Semi-Final #1): #1 Brigham Young (12-0) vs. #4 Washington (10-1)

Sugar Bowl (Semi-Final #2): #2 Oklahoma (9-1-1) vs. #3 Florida (9-1-1)

Orange Bowl (Big 8 champ vs. at-large): #5 Nebraska (9-2) vs. #6 Ohio State (9-2) – Nebraska in here because Oklahoma in CFP

Fiesta Bowl (at-large vs. at-large): #11 LSU (8-2-1) vs. #12 Maryland (8-3)

Cotton Bowl: (SWC champ vs. at-large): #10 SMU (9-2) vs. #9 Oklahoma State (9-2)

Peach Bowl (at-large vs. at-large): #7 South Carolina (10-1) vs. #8 Boston College (9-2)

As you can see the Big Eight was pretty stacked at the top (3 teams in the top 9).  This is also pre-death penalty SMU we are talking about so they had the Pony Express in full force here.  Finally, I don’t know how I could include a “Group of Five” representative since they wouldn’t come close to being in the Top 25.  I guess if you want to include a mid-major that works but in this case that would be BYU.  Problem solved!

There is no rating system I can find that goes back that far (Sagarin ratings started in 2000 from what I can see) but I can take a good guess is to what probably would have happened in that first semi-final.  I have a feeling we get a Washington-Oklahoma championship with this setup.  Some interesting games also in the NY6.  South Carolina-Boston College would be one of two programs having program-defining years.  Either way, we wouldn’t have a BYU championship and chances are BYU would be in the Mountain West right now instead of thinking they are the Notre Dame of the west or something like that.

1990

OK 1984 was a pretty easy fix.  1990 was a different story altogether though.  It ended up with Colorado and Georgia Tech splitting the national championship.  This despite the fact Colorado won the Fifth Down Game over Missouri, five different teams had been in the #1 spot by Thanksgiving and one of those was Virginia of all teams.  And Georgia Tech was never #1 in the AP Poll at any time of the season even though they were the only unbeaten team in the land (no team was unbeaten AND untied).  They were the Coaches Poll pick to win the title by only three first place votes over Colorado where, again, they were never #1 (until that final poll).  Phew!  OK let’s get to how the games would have looked.

Rose Bowl (Semi-Final #1): #1 Colorado (10-1-1) vs. #4 Miami (9-2)

Sugar Bowl (Semi-Final #2): #2 Georgia Tech (10-0-1) vs. #3 Texas (10-1)

Orange Bowl (Big 8 champ vs. at-large): #20 Oklahoma (8-3) vs. #6 Florida State (9-2)

Fiesta Bowl (at-large vs. at-large): #5 Notre Dame (9-2) vs. #8 Washington (9-2)

Cotton Bowl (SWC champ vs. at-large): #9 Houston (10-1) vs. #12 Michigan (8-3)

Peach Bowl (at-large vs. at-large): #7 Penn State (9-2) vs. #10 Tennessee (8-2-2)

Yikes.  You have a team that lost 2 and tied 2 in a New Year’s Six bowl.  Yes this was a year where everyone seemed to beat up on everyone else.  It was basically survival of the fittest at this point.  To be honest, I could see Texas and Miami pulling off the wins here and playing for the national championship.  So in this scenario, we would have seen, possibly, the first two-loss champion (years before LSU pulled it off).  I think any year going forward having a 2-loss team in the CFP is a recipe for disaster (although it may keep the 8-team playoff people at bay).  Again, the whole G-5 representative thing doesn’t work here considering there were still so many independents at this time.

2007

Alright this is the year where seemingly no team wanted to win the national championship.  Like it was kryptonite.  LSU won with two losses.  Kansas was the only BCS team with less than two losses at all.  Kansas.  And yes, seven #2 ranked teams lost that season.  So absurd yet so exciting!  So it wasn’t long ago that it was strange times in college football.  Anyway, let’s see how this shitshow would have looked (after the Grey Goose company ran out of vodka to give The Committee members):

Peach Bowl (Semi-Final #1): #1 Ohio State (11-1) vs. #4 Oklahoma (11-2)

Fiesta Bowl (Semi-Final #2): #2 LSU (11-2) vs. #3 Virginia Tech (11-2)

Rose Bowl (Pac-10 champ vs. Big Ten champ): #7 USC (10-2) vs. #13 Illinois (9-3) – Illinois in here because Ohio State in CFP

Sugar Bowl (Big XII champ vs. SEC champ): #6 Missouri (11-2) vs. #5 Georgia (10-2) – Missouri & Georgia in here because Oklahoma & LSU in CFP

Orange Bowl (ACC champ vs. at-large): #14 Boston College (10-3) vs. #10 Hawaii (12-0)

Cotton Bowl (at-large vs. at-large): #9 West Virginia (10-2) vs. #8 Kansas (11-1)

What a gongshow.  At least we can put in the G-5 representative since the BCS made sure of that as well.  This feels a lot like 1984 at least in terms of how it played out here.  One undefeated team only.  At least this time they were ranked much lower than 23 years previous.

Anyway, when you have teams like Illinois, Missouri, Boston College and Kansas in prestigious bowls you know something CRAZY has happened.  To have one or two fine.  Any team can have a program-defining year.  But to have four (or even five if you include Hawaii)?  That’s nuts.  At least now we have ratings that could tell us who would win these games (using a pretty good rating system).  So here are your “winners”!

Peach: Oklahoma

Fiesta: LSU

Rose: USC

Sugar: Missouri

Orange: Boston College

Cotton: West Virginia

LSU is actually the highest rated team according to those ratings so would still end up champion.  With two losses. Second best team overall?  Kansas.  My god.

Alright well that was, uh, interesting I guess.  I wonder if someone has gone back and done a bunch of these recreations of the CFP in different years.  Probably not since just tailoring it to specific years seemed like a bit of a nightmare.  Poll n’ Bowl along with at least two dozen independent teams every year doesn’t make for easy bowl tie-ins.

I will wait for the Kreepy Kombine to finish up before doing my next mock draft.  Not that I am going to watch it.  I will just read up on any major changes.  The combine is weird and watching it makes me feel weird.  Enjoy the rest of your week and the weekend (unless the weather sucks).