Vic Da Baron LooGAR Wrote:
Yail Bloor Wrote:
Rick Derris Wrote:
The thing I love most about college football is it's traditions. These have slowly been eroding over the last 15 years due to the almight dollar influencing tv times, scheduling, etc.
But those are
your traditions that are eroding--The status quo is always changing (Georgia Tech used to be in the SEC for example).
Stop holding the world hostage with your halcyon memories of 1993, Derris.
Zeier years. Fixed.
But Bloor is right: to wit - Dooley marched the Dawgs to Michigan and won the first SEC non bowl game north of the Mason-Dixon since pre WWII I believe. Maybe ever. He said people sent letters fir years after that saying how he made The South proud.
And I know you wouldn't turn down tix to Boise st in the dome.
I've already got my Boise tix and I said I have no problems with these types of games. Home/home series' as well so I'm not sure what the Michigan story has to do with what I was saying or how that makes Bloor "right".
All I'm saying is the people that make these decisions for change sometimes take things that are special and make them ordinary. Every time UGA loses in Jacksonville or the contract with the stadium comes up, some of the power brokers put the idea of nixing the cocktail party altogether and going home/home. Why? You've got a special commodity that you're just going to make another game in the SEC slate. (funny Bloor mentioned '95. We got housed by Florida in Athens when they were renovating Alltel. Hated it then and hate it now. We also played Clemson that year, another game that should still be played more than twice a decade IMO)
The only way the NFL could have something like that would be like if Falcons/Saints played a mid-season game in Puerto Rico or something (how insane would that trip be). Remember the Nebraska/Oklahoma rivalry? It's all but extinct now with realignment. There was even talk last year of moving Michigan/OSU to mid-season. It's not just
my traditons that are eroding. It's college football fans and it's usually for some relatively short term revenue.
Since realignment, I can't even tell you who all is in the "former" Big 12 without looking. How is that good for college football? I get the business side of things but there are always going to be other opportunities. At what cost?
Bloor, how about stop taking any defense of tradition as some misguided faux-nostalgia?
(As for Tech, fuck 'em. They pulled themselves out of the SEC. Bad move then, and a monumentally bad move now)