Could It Be the National Sportswriters Have College Football All Wrong?
| Big 12's Kansas State plays in the last bowl game of the year Tuesday evening |
My gosh, reading Twitter after Cincinnati lost to Alabama, you'd have thought they were blown out 70-0. One of my favorites was a self-described B1G (Big 10) fan who kept throwing shade at the Bearcats until his conference's Michigan kicked off an hour later against Georgia. Oops.
I wish I had saved all of them. They are fun reading.
I'm primarily writing about the sportswriter who commented (paraphrasing and referring to Cincy and the AAC) the Power 5 are a "different level of competition" and that the rest "should have a championship of their own" as well as all of the others who were so quick to criticize the American Athletic Conferences' football programs.
| "Sports Illustrated" couldn't wait until the game was over to criticize Cincinnati |
Really? Is this conventional wisdom (CW) among sportswriters correct?
The statistics point to the CW being wildly wrong.
The "Power Five" are:
- SEC
- ACC
- Big 12
- Big 10
- Pac 12
Since the bowl game contestants are more or less matched by quality of team (Toledo plays Middle Tennessee rather than, say, Georgia), the bowl results are not a bad proxy for conference quality. With one bowl left -- my Big 12 Kansas State Wildcats versus the SEC's Louisiana State -- here are the conference by conference results.
Meanwhile, since everyone was complaining about Cincy, their American Conference has the second best winning percentage of the bowl season -- 75%. The Mountain West was #1 with 83%.
Among the Power Five conferences, the Big 12 (so far) is #1 with a winning percentage of .666. That will increase to 71% when (and if) K-State wins tomorrow night. The mighty SEC won less than half of their games at 45%. One can say, with tongue partially in cheek, that Texas and OU want to move to the SEC to have a lesser level of competition. Remember: the SEC isn't just Alabama and Georgia -- it includes such 'powerhouses' as Missouri and Vanderbilt.
So, take what the national sportswriters write with a grain of salt. They seem to suffer not only from conventional wisdom and but inertia.
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