Kyle on FootballThe 'Dawgs, the Sport, and the Rest of Life
tkyleking
read my profile
sign my guestbook

Name: T. Kyle
Country: United States
State: Georgia
Metro: Atlanta


Interests: When not spending time with his family or concentrating on Georgia Bulldog football, T. Kyle King is actively involved with the Henry County Bar Association, the Hampton United Methodist Church, the Southlake Kiwanis Club, the South Metro Bulldog Club, and the Phi Kappa Literary Society.
Expertise: Kyle doesn't know as much about college football as he thinks he does, but he tries to make up for it by offering creative statistical observations and obscure cultural references---sort of Bill James meets Dennis Miller. Professionally, Kyle is engaged in the general practice of law with Hodges, McEachern & King in Jonesboro, where he concentrates in the areas of estate planning and probate matters, civil litigation, general business and family law, and real estate matters. Kyle has no official connection to the University of Georgia or its athletic association and the opinions expressed in his weblog reflect only his own views. Kyle retains the copyright on all original material contained herein.


Message: message me


Member Since: 7/16/2005

SubscriptionsSites I Read

Posting Calendar

|<< oldest | newest >>|
view all weblog archives

Get Involved!

Suggest a link

Recommend to friend

Create a site


Thursday, February 23, 2006

I HAVE MOVED! 

You can find me now at http://www.dawgsports.com

The weblog formerly known as "Kyle on Football" has changed websites and taken a new name . . . sort of like a mob informant enrolled in the witness relocation program. 

While this site will remain up and running for the foreseeable future (at least until I can get seven months' worth of my previous postings moved over to my new site), all new content will be found at my new internet home. 

If you had Kyle on Football bookmarked or linked, please note the change and update accordingly. 

The name of the new site is "Dawg Sports."  I hope you'll check it out and leave me a comment to let me know what you think of my new site. 

Go 'Dawgs! 


Wednesday, February 22, 2006

If you added up the total amount of moral culpability involved in every stupid thing a University of Georgia athlete has done since the day after Jasper Sanks was kicked off of the team, you wouldn't get half the amount of moral culpability of Reuben Houston . . . allegedly, of course. 
 
That having been said, one player arrest is one player arrest too many and, while Mark Richt has never put up with anything like the degree of malfeasance tolerated at his previous coaching stop (Florida State) or at his alma mater (Miami) on a regular basis, we simply have to put a stop to this sort of stupid nonsense
 
Yes, I know it's largely boys-will-be-boys tomfoolery, the results of dumb moves like letting your driver's license get suspended or having the misfortune of being well-known when, as a 21-year-old college kid, you happened to head downtown in Athens, where liquor licenses are handed out more freely than diplomas at Auburn. 
 
Youth, celebrity, liberty, and opportunity often combine in dangerous ways and Georgia doesn't have anything like the culture of lawlessness that prevails in Knoxville, Tenn., and Columbia, S.C.  Nevertheless, I expect the Bulldogs to adhere to a higher standard.  The fact that almost all of it is foolish rather than felonious is not a mitigating factor in my eyes; when you're a high profile athlete, even your childish mistakes are going to have high profile consequences and, although that reality may not be fair, it is the reality. 
 
If, while I was in college in the Classic City, a buddy of mine had gotten drunk and passed out in the men's room while using the facilities, the result would have been a funny story we would continue to kid him about to this day. 
 
However, none of us were offensive linemen for the defending Southeastern Conference champions.  Most students only embarrass themselves through their own stupid escapades.  Athletes at major universities make us all look bad when they behave irresponsibly. 
 
When you accept a scholarship to play football at the University of Georgia, you are accepting the obligation to represent the institution and the program in the most favorable light.  That obligation is not limited to a player's conduct between the hedges.  These idiotic offseason antics drive me up the wall. 
 
On a more positive note, recent news out of Norman, Okla., lends further support to The Movement.  The Sooners have agreed to a home and home series with Miami. 
 
How does this help the argument in favor of a two-year series between Georgia and Michigan?  Since one of the arguments against scheduling such a series is Georgia's annual neutral site contest with Florida, a partial rebuttal may be found in the fact that O.U. is willing to schedule tough out-of-conference opponents, despite the Sooners' annual game against the Longhorns at the Cotton Bowl. 
 
Oklahoma and Texas have met in Dallas each fall, without fail, since 1929.  Bevo and the Sooner Schooner haven't hooked up on one another's home fields since meeting in Norman in 1922 and in Austin in 1923. 
 
Oklahoma gives up an additional home game every other year by facing a bitter division rival clad in orange at a neutral site in the opponent's home state for a game so famous, it has a nickname as well as a permanent off-campus home dating back to the Depression.  Does that scenario sound familiar to anyone in Bulldog Nation? 
 
Despite facing a significant scheduling constraint that mirrors one faced by Georgia, O.U. has been willing to go on the road to face quality opposition.  Even if we omit future Big 12 rivals and mid-major teams from the list, we find an impressive roster of non-conference foes the Sooners have visited over the years. 
 
Oklahoma faced Alabama (in 2003), Arizona (in 1989), California (in 1997), Kentucky (in 1982), Miami (in 1975 and 1986), Minnesota (in 1985), North Carolina (in 1988), Notre Dame (in 1968 and 1999), Ohio State (in 1977), Pitt (in 1965, 1971, and 1984), Southern Cal (in 1973, 1981, and 1988), Stanford (in 1978 and 1983), Syracuse (in 1994), U.C.L.A. (in 1990), Vanderbilt (in 1976), and Wisconsin (in 1969)---all on their home fields and all since 1965, the last season in which the 'Dawgs played a road game outside the South. 
 
Now O.U., while working to keep the Red River Shootout in Dallas, has agreed to travel to Coral Gables once again.  Oklahoma's neutral site game with Texas hasn't hampered the team's ability to schedule tough opponents . . . or to compete for national titles.  With Georgia's national stature having been restored by Mark Richt, that final hurdle is the only one yet to be cleared. 
 
The willingness to schedule top quality out-of-conference opposition like Michigan would enhance the Red and Black's reputation and permit the inevitable undefeated Bulldog squad to compete for the national championship at which Auburn cost itself a shot by scheduling weak teams in 2004. 
 
High profile victories and solid strength of schedule are important ingredients in a run at No. 1 and Georgia has to come to that realization . . . Sooner or later. 
 
Go 'Dawgs! 


Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Yesterday, in defense of the proposition that Georgia and Michigan should schedule a home and home series in football, I contrasted the Wolverines' out-of-conference slate with the regular season opposition taken on by other Big Ten teams. 
 
I subsequently stumbled across a snippet in the intercollegiate athletics blogosphere that has bolstered my argument:  Ohio State weblogger Around the Oval cited a recent speech given by Jim Tressel in---of all places---Macon, Georgia. 
 
The Wolverines' nemesis came into the Bulldogs' back yard and unwittingly lent his support to The Movement by underscoring my recent points regarding Big Ten scheduling. 
 
The Buckeyes' head coach made note of O.S.U.'s upcoming out-of-conference slate, which includes a visit to Texas this fall, followed by a visit to Washington, as well as home and home series with Southern Cal and Miami, in future seasons. 
 
For those of you keeping score at home, that means Ohio State's next non-conference showdowns with major powers will involve two trips into Pac-10 country and a couple of treks into the South. 
 
 
Gutsy scheduling by the Buckeyes gives the squad from Columbus a leg up on its rival in Ann Arbor and no self-respecting Michigan fan could stand to concede that O.S.U. has outperformed the Maize and Blue in any arena.  If for no other reason than keeping up with the Joneses, U.M. should answer the call and schedule the series with the 'Dawgs. 
 
Having had the correctness of my position confirmed by Coach Tressel's speech in my home state earlier this month, I was due to be dealt a dash of humility, which Paul Westerdawg has been conscientious enough to provide. 
 
My initial reaction to the hiring of Tony Ball to coach the Georgia tailbacks was cautious and tepid, but that was before Paul went out and gathered some actual facts to contradict my first impression. 
 
Paul contacted Joe Kendall, a Virginia Tech weblogger, and requested Joe's assessment of Coach Ball.  Joe's response was extremely positive. 
 
I would encourage you to visit the Georgia Sports Blog and read the entire interview, but Joe characterizes Coach Ball as "truly a class act and a great coach," "a very thorough very results oriented coach," "extremely well thought of," and "a fierce competitor" with "tenacity and vigor" who "should help tremendously in [Georgia's] northern [recruiting] pursuits." 
 
Joe's evaluation of Coach Ball is consistent with some of the comments I have received about Georgia's newest assistant, so, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, I will defer to the opinion of the majority and welcome Coach Ball to the Bulldog Nation. 
 
Go 'Dawgs! 


Monday, February 20, 2006

My recent examination of the non-conference schedules of S.E.C. squads lends itself to a natural segue back to the advancement of The Movement
 
Bill Martin's response to my e-mail and The M Zone's analysis of my proposal both raised this question:  "Can Michigan afford to schedule a quality out-of-conference opponent of Georgia's caliber?" 
 
My own answer to that question was a resounding "yes," but, after I contrasted Georgia's non-conference scheduling with that of a comparable S.E.C. team, I thought it might behoove The Movement to offer similar comparisons of the Maize and Blue to their conference brethren. 
 
The Big Ten expanded to eleven members in 1993.  Set forth below is a list of the quality non-conference opponents faced by the 10 Big Ten teams not located in Ann Arbor, Mich., since that time.  For purposes of this discussion, I have defined "quality non-conference opponents" as "teams from B.C.S. leagues in contests that are not regularly recurring rivalry games." 
 
For instance, although Penn State's intermittent clashes with Pittsburgh were included, Michigan State's and Purdue's series with Notre Dame, Iowa's in-state rivalry with Iowa State, Indiana's and Kentucky's clashes of basketball schools (which have been perennial affairs each autumn since 1987), and various teams' showdowns with legitimate opponents from mid-major leagues like Louisville (in the Cardinals' pre-Big East days) and Southern Miss all were excluded, not because such games do not matter but because I am trying to illustrate the Wolverines' ability, vel non, to schedule a series with Georgia, even if the Maize and Blue still have the Fighting Irish on their schedule. 
 
1993
Sept. 4 - Purdue at N.C. State
Sept. 11 - Illinois at Missouri; Kansas at Michigan State; Washington at Ohio State; Southern Cal at Penn State
Sept. 18 - Arizona at Illinois; Kansas State at Minnesota; Boston College at Northwestern; Ohio State at Pitt; Iowa State at Wisconsin
Sept. 25 - Oregon at Illinois; Wake Forest at Northwestern; Rutgers at Penn State
Oct. 2 - Penn State at Maryland
 
1994
Sept. 1 - Illinois v. Washington State (Chicago, Ill.) 
Sept. 10 - Missouri at Illinois; Michigan State at Kansas; Stanford at Northwestern; Ohio State at Washington; Southern Cal at Penn State
Sept. 17 - Pitt at Ohio State; Wisconsin at Colorado
Sept. 24 - Iowa at Oregon; Minnesota at Kansas State; Rutgers at Penn State
Oct. 1 - Penn State at Temple
 
1995
Aug. 27 - Ohio State v. Boston College (East Rutherford, N.J.) 
Sept. 2 - Purdue at West Virginia; Colorado at Wisconsin
Sept. 9 - Illinois at Oregon; Nebraska at Michigan State; Texas Tech at Penn State
Sept. 16 - Arizona at Illinois; Washington at Ohio State; Temple at Penn State; Wisconsin at Stanford
Sept. 23 - Minnesota at Syracuse; Ohio State at Pitt; Penn State v. Rutgers (East Rutherford, N.J.) 
Sept. 30 - Boston College at Michigan State; Notre Dame at Ohio State
 
1996
Aug. 25 - Penn State v. Southern Cal (East Rutherford, N.J.) 
Sept. 7 - Southern Cal at Illinois; Arizona at Iowa; Michigan State at Nebraska; Northwestern at Wake Forest
Sept. 14 - Illinois at Arizona
Sept. 21 - Syracuse at Minnesota; Pitt at Ohio State; Penn State v. Temple (East Rutherford, N.J.); West Virginia at Purdue; Stanford at Wisconsin
Sept. 28 - Ohio State at Notre Dame; N.C. State at Purdue
 
1997
Aug. 23 - Northwestern v. Oklahoma (Chicago, Ill.) 
Aug. 24 - Wisconsin v. Syracuse (East Rutherford, N.J.) 
Sept. 6 - Indiana at North Carolina; Northwestern at Wake Forest; Pitt at Penn State
Sept. 13 - Iowa State at Minnesota; Duke at Northwestern; Temple at Penn State
Sept. 20 - Washington State at Illinois; Arizona at Ohio State
Sept. 27 - Ohio State at Missouri
 
1998
Aug. 30 - Purdue at Southern Cal
Sept. 5 - Illinois at Washington State; Michigan State at Oregon; Ohio State at West Virginia
Sept. 12 - Duke at Northwestern
Sept. 19 - Iowa at Arizona; Missouri at Ohio State; Penn State at Pitt
 
1999
Aug. 28 - Arizona at Penn State
Aug. 29 - Ohio State v. Miami (East Rutherford, N.J.) 
Sept. 2 - Oregon at Michigan State
Sept. 4 - Nebraska at Iowa
Sept. 11 - North Carolina at Indiana; U.C.L.A. at Ohio State; Pitt at Penn State
Sept. 18 - Northwestern at Duke; Penn State at Miami
 
2000
Aug. 26 - Iowa v. Kansas State (Kansas City, Mo.) 
Aug. 27 - Penn State v. Southern Cal (East Rutherford, N.J.) 
Sept. 9 - N.C. State at Indiana; Duke at Northwestern; Ohio State at Arizona; Oregon at Wisconsin
Sept. 16 - Cal at Illinois; Michigan State at Missouri; Minnesota at Baylor; Penn State at Pitt
Sept. 23 - Iowa at Nebraska
 
2001
Aug. 25 - Virginia at Wisconsin
Sept. 1 - Illinois at Cal; Miami at Penn State; Wisconsin at Oregon
Sept. 6 - Indiana at N.C. State
Sept. 22 - Northwestern at Duke; Ohio State at U.C.L.A. 
Dec. 1 - Missouri at Michigan State; Penn State at Virginia
 
2002
Aug. 24 - Texas Tech at Ohio State
Aug. 31 - Illinois v. Missouri (St. Louis, Mo.) 
Sept. 7 - West Virginia at Wisconsin
Sept. 14 - Cal at Michigan State; Duke at Northwestern; Washington State at Ohio State; Nebraska at Penn State
Sept. 21 - Wake Forest at Purdue; Arizona at Wisconsin
Nov. 9 - Virginia at Penn State
 
2003
Aug. 30 - Illinois v. Missouri (St. Louis, Mo.); Northwestern at Kansas; Washington at Ohio State; Temple at Penn State; Wisconsin at West Virginia
Sept. 6 - Indiana at Washington; Rutgers at Michigan State; Boston College at Penn State
Sept. 13 - Illinois at U.C.L.A.; N.C. State at Ohio State; Penn State at Nebraska; Purdue at Wake Forest
Sept. 20 - California at Illinois; Arizona State at Iowa; Northwestern at Duke; Arizona at Purdue; North Carolina at Wisconsin
 
2004
Sept. 4 - Michigan State at Rutgers
Sept. 5 - Syracuse at Purdue
Sept. 11 - U.C.L.A. at Illinois; Indiana at Oregon; Arizona State at Northwestern; Penn State at Boston College
Sept. 18 - Iowa at Arizona State; Kansas at Northwestern; Ohio State at N.C. State; Wisconsin at Arizona
 
2005
Sept. 3 - Rutgers at Illinois; South Florida at Penn State
Sept. 10 - Texas at Ohio State; Cincinnati at Penn State
Sept. 17 - Illinois at Cal; Northwestern at Arizona State; Purdue at Arizona; Wisconsin at North Carolina
 
The Wolverines' in-state rival offers an instructive example.  Like the Maize and Blue, the Spartans annually face a Big Ten schedule and an out-of-conference home and home rivalry with Notre Dame that (except for 1995 and 1996) has been played year in and year out since 1959. 
 
Travel distances from East Lansing to other regions of the country are approximately the same as they are from Ann Arbor.  Add to that the fact that Michigan State's historically has been the "little brother" program of the Great Lakes region and it becomes clear that, anything the Spartans can do, Michigan should be able to do better. 
 
Since Big Ten expansion brought Penn State into the league, Michigan State has gone on the road to play at Kansas (in 1994), at Louisville (in 1995), at Nebraska (in 1996), at Oregon (in 1998), at Missouri (in 2000), and at Rutgers (in 2004).  Before that, the Spartans traveled to face N.C. State at Raleigh (in 1976), Southern Cal at Los Angeles (in 1978), Oregon at Eugene (in 1980), Miami at Coral Gables (in 1982), Colorado at Boulder (in 1984), Arizona State at Tempe (in 1986), Florida State at Tallahassee (in 1988), Syracuse at Syracuse (in 1990), and Boston College at Chestnut Hill (in 1992). 
 
In the last three decades, M.S.U. has ventured into warmer climes numerous times and, even excluding Kentucky and Missouri as border states, Sparty has scheduled three regular season road games in the South since the year Jimmy Carter was elected president.  Meanwhile, Michigan's arch-rival, Ohio State, has played an away game against a Southern opponent in September as recently as 2004 and will do so again as soon as next fall. 
 
As I have noted previously, the Wolverines have not shied away from facing tough non-conference competition, although they have been steering clear of the Old Confederacy for the last two decades.  The Maize and Blue cannot fall back upon heat, humidity, and a tough conference slate as excuses when both Michigan State and Ohio State have done recently the very thing I am asking Michigan to do. 
 
In fact, the Wolverines' major conference rivals are not the only Big Ten teams to have ventured into my neck of the woods in recent years.  Michigan's last regular season contest in the South took place on September 21, 1985 . . . and every other Big Ten team has availed itself of our Southern hospitality since then. 
 
On September 29, 1990, Iowa faced Miami in Coral Gables, Fla.  On September 16, 1995, Michigan State faced Louisville in Louisville, Ky.  On December 1, 2001, Penn State faced Virginia in Charlottesville, Va.  On September 7, 2002, Illinois faced Southern Miss in Hattiesburg, Miss., and Minnesota faced Louisiana-Lafayette in Lafayette, La.  On September 13, 2003, Purdue faced Wake Forest in Winston-Salem, N.C.  On September 2, 2004, Northwestern faced Texas Christian in Fort Worth, Tex.  On September 18, 2004, Indiana faced Kentucky in Lexington, Ky., and Ohio State faced N.C. State in Raleigh, N.C.  On September 17, 2005, Wisconsin faced North Carolina in Chapel Hill, N.C. 
 
No other Big Ten team has gone as long as Michigan without playing an away game against a Southern school.  Seven of the other 10 conference squads have traveled to the region for a regular season contest in the 21st century, but the Wolverines haven't ventured below the Mason-Dixon line in September since the first year of Ronald Reagan's second term, at a time when the Berlin Wall still stood, the Soviet Union still existed, and the Cold War still continued
 
Put another way, U.M. took on the Gamecocks in Columbia, S.C., during my senior year of high school.  Last week, I received a telephone call from a high school classmate regarding the scheduling of our 20-year class reunion, but the Maize and Blue haven't been back in the meantime. 
 
As a Georgia fan, I have little room to criticize, of course; the Bulldogs have gone twice as long as the Wolverines without leaving their region and I would not want to be accused of being the pot calling the kettle red and black.  Nevertheless, when Michigan, which has a good argument for calling itself the most storied program in its conference, has gone longer than any other Big Ten team without playing a non-conference game in the South, it is time for the Maize and Blue to take a lesson from their league competitors. 
 
Indiana plays Kentucky, Iowa plays Iowa State, and Michigan State and Purdue both play Notre Dame, yet each of these Big Ten teams still finds time to travel to the South every once in a while.  With or without the Fighting Irish on their schedule, the Wolverines should step up to the plate and schedule a two-game series with the 'Dawgs. 
 
Georgia and Michigan each stand to benefit from facing one another and both schools should be leading the way, not lagging behind, in the league-wide efforts to upgrade the out-of-conference schedules of two of the nation's premiere conferences. 
 
Go 'Dawgs! 


Sunday, February 19, 2006

Recently, both Doug Gillett and I commented on the 2006 football schedules of the Southeastern Conference's member institutions
 
However, Paul Westerdawg subsequently called our attention to Paul Finebaum's criticisms of the league members' non-conference slates
 
While frothing at the mouth and with spittle flying from his lips as he ranted and raved with a maniacal gleam in his eye, Finebaum offered the following inartful hyperbole: 
 
"The SEC officially released the 2006 football schedules recently, and don't be surprised if season-ticket holders across the South start demanding their money back.  There ought to a [sic.] revolt.  There should be class action suits.  Yes, it's that bad." 
 
Could someone please tell Finebaum to calm down?  What's bad is Finebaum's proofreading; S.E.C. out-of-conference schedules are improving. 
 
Since I run a reputable college football weblog rather than a sports talk radio show or worse, I'm going to rely on actual facts to demonstrate my point. 
 
Are Southeastern Conference slates on the upswing in 2006?  To prove that they are, I am going to compare each league squad's non-conference schedule from five years before with that from the same team's upcoming slate. 
 
Beside each such foe, I will list that squad's record, final A.P. ranking (if any), and bowl game (if any) from the preceding years, 2000 and 2005, respectively.  Division I-AA teams simply will be designated as Division I-AA teams, since it is of little importance how many games a lower-tier team won or lost if it is taking on a team well outside of its weight class. 
 
Here is what we find when we give the schedules a look: 
 
Alabama
 
2001
Sept. 1 - U.C.L.A. (6-6; Sun Bowl)
Oct. 6 - U.T.E.P. (8-4; Humanitarian Bowl)
Nov. 29 - Southern Miss (8-4; Mobile Alabama Bowl)
 
2006
Sept. 2 - Hawaii (5-7)
Sept. 16 - Louisiana-Monroe (5-6)
Oct. 7 - Duke (1-10)
Oct. 28 - Florida International (5-6)
 
Admittedly, the Crimson Tide was not the best place to start, but the arrangement of the alphabet isn't my fault.  Alabama's 2001 non-conference schedule featured a trio of 2000 bowl teams with a combined record of 22-14, but the Red Elephants' 2006 slate features no out-of-conference opponents that made it into postseason play and their cumulative ledger is a woeful 16-29. 
 
Clearly, 'Bama took a big step backward between 2001 and 2006 where out-of-conference scheduling was concerned. 
 
Arkansas
 
2001
Aug. 30 - U.N.L.V. (8-5; Las Vegas Bowl)
Oct. 6 - Weber State (Division I-AA)
Nov. 10 - Central Florida (7-4)
 
2006
Sept. 2 - Southern Cal (12-1; 2nd; Rose Bowl)
Sept. 9 - Utah State (3-8)
Oct. 14 - Missouri State (Division I-AA)
Oct. 28 - Louisiana-Monroe (5-6)
 
The Razorbacks continue to schedule Division I-AA opposition, which is embarrassing, and the overall ledgers of the Hogs' Division I-A non-conference opponents went from 15-9 to 20-15, but Arkansas took a huge step up in the quality of its competition when the S.E.C. West squad from Fayetteville went from opening the campaign against a Las Vegas Bowl team to starting the season by taking on a Rose Bowl team. 
 
Although Arkansas's out-of-conference games are a mixed bag, the addition of U.S.C. improves the Razorbacks' slate by leaps and bounds. 
 
Auburn
 
2001
Sept. 1 - Ball State (5-6)
Sept. 22 - at Syracuse (6-5)
Oct. 20 - Louisiana Tech (3-9)
 
2006
Sept. 2 - Washington State (4-7)
Sept. 23 - Buffalo (1-10)
Oct. 21 - Tulane (2-9)
Nov. 4 - Arkansas State (6-6; New Orleans Bowl)
 
It's a shameful admission to have to make, but four out-of-conference opponents with a combined 2005 record of 13-32 actually represents an upgrade for the Plainsmen.  Although Auburn's 2001 non-league slate was comprised of squads with a collective ledger of 14-20, the Cougars are a better B.C.S. conference opponent than the Orange these days and the defending Sun Belt co-champion Indians are an improvement upon the student-athletes from David Letterman's alma mater
 
It is a rarity for an A.U. out-of-conference schedule to be anything short of shameful, inasmuch as the Tigers rank right up there with Kansas State, Minnesota, and Texas Tech among the most notorious consumers of cupcakes, but this is a step in the right direction, however small. 
 
Florida
 
2001
Sept. 1 - Marshall (8-5; Motor City Bowl)
Sept. 8 - Louisiana-Monroe (1-10)
Nov. 17 - Florida State (11-2; 5th; Orange Bowl)
 
2006
Sept. 2 - Southern Miss (7-5; New Orleans Bowl)
Sept. 9 - Central Florida (8-5; Hawaii Bowl)
Nov. 18 - Western Carolina (Division I-AA)
Nov. 25 - at Florida State (8-5; 23rd; Orange Bowl)
 
In 2001, the Gators played three Division I-A teams from outside the S.E.C. during the regular season; during the preceding campaign, those three teams together made two bowl appearances, featured one final ranking in the sportswriters' poll, and went 20-17.  In 2006, U.F. will play three Division I-A teams from outside the S.E.C. during the regular season; during the preceding campaign, those three teams together made three bowl appearances, featured one final ranking in the sportswriters' poll, and went 23-15. 
 
Undoubtedly, Florida's out-of-conference matchups represent an improvement. 
 
Georgia
 
2001
Sept. 1 - Arkansas State (1-10)
Nov. 24 - at Georgia Tech (9-3; 17th; Peach Bowl)
Dec. 1 - Houston (3-8)
 
2006
Sept. 2 - Western Kentucky (Division I-AA)
Sept. 16 - U.A.B. (5-6)
Sept. 23 - Colorado (7-6; Champs Sports Bowl)
Nov. 25 - Georgia Tech (7-5; Emerald Bowl)
 
The worst Division I-A squad on Georgia's 2006 non-conference slate came within one win of being bowl eligible in 2005.  Compare that to a 2001 schedule including Arkansas State and Houston, who between them posted just four victories in 2000.  Overall, the 'Dawgs went from an out-of-conference schedule against teams with a combined 13-21 ledger and one postseason appearance to an out-of-conference schedule against Division I-A teams with a combined 19-17 ledger and two postseason appearances. 
 
The Yellow Jackets' slight slippage in the expanded A.C.C. notwithstanding, the Bulldogs' non-S.E.C. slate clearly is better in 2006. 
 
Kentucky
 
2001
Sept. 1 - Louisville (9-3; Liberty Bowl)
Sept. 8 - Ball State (5-6)
Dec. 1 - at Indiana (3-8)
 
2006
Sept. 2 - at Louisville (9-3; 19th; Gator Bowl)
Sept. 9 - Texas State (Division I-AA)
Sept. 30 - Central Michigan (6-5)
Nov. 18 - Louisiana-Monroe (5-6)
 
The Wil_cats have gone from a 9-3 Louisville team that represented Conference U.S.A. in the Liberty Bowl to a 9-3 Louisville team that represented the Big East in the Gator Bowl, from a game against 5-6 Ball State to a game against 5-6 Louisiana-Monroe, and from a game against a 3-8 Big Ten team to a game against a 6-5 M.A.C. team. 
 
All told, U.K.'s transition from out-of-conference matchups against three Division I-A teams that went 17-17 to out-of-conference matchups against three Division I-A teams that went 20-14 seems to be no worse than a wash, even with Scott Bakula, Kathy Ireland, and Sinbad on the schedule. 
 
Louisiana State
 
2001
Sept. 1 - Tulane (6-5)
Sept. 8 - Utah State (5-6)
Nov. 10 - Middle Tennessee (6-5)
 
2006
Sept. 2 - Louisiana-Lafayette (6-5)
Sept. 9 - Arizona (3-8)
Sept. 23 - Tulane (2-9)
Oct. 21 - Fresno State (8-5; Liberty Bowl)
 
The Bayou Bengals went from scheduling no out-of-conference opponents of note to scheduling a B.C.S. conference team and a mid-major giant killer.  There are no Division I-AA squads on L.S.U.'s non-league slate, but there is a 2005 bowl team.  Granted, the opposition's cumulative won-lost record has gone from 17-16 to 19-27, but the Fighting Tigers renewed their one-sided in-state rivalry with Tulane in both seasons, faced a 6-5 Sun Belt team (M.T.S.U. in 2001 and U.La.La. next fall) each time, and traded up from Big West expatriate U.S.U. five years ago to opponents from the W.A.C. and the Pac-10 in 2006. 
 
The numbers alone don't tell the whole story.  Louisiana State kicked it up a notch when sending out invitations asking non-S.E.C. squads to visit Baton Rouge this year. 
 
Mississippi
 
2001
Sept. 1 - Murray State (Division I-AA)
Oct. 6 - at Arkansas State (1-10)
Oct. 20 - Middle Tennessee (6-5)
 
2006
Sept. 2 - Memphis (7-5; Motor City Bowl)
Sept. 9 - at Missouri (7-5; Independence Bowl)
Sept. 23 - Wake Forest (4-7)
Nov. 4 - Northwestern State (Division I-AA)
 
Please.  Leave aside the glorified scrimmages against Division I-AA guests; Ole Miss has gone from facing a pair of Sun Belt squads that went 7-15 to facing teams from the A.C.C., the Big 12, and Conference U.S.A. that went 18-17 and attended a pair of bowl games. 
 
The Rebels' schedule has improved markedly. 
 
Mississippi State
 
2001
Sept. 3 - Memphis (4-7)
Oct. 13 - Troy State (Division I-AA)
Dec. 1 - Brigham Young (6-6)
 
2006
Sept. 16 - Tulane (2-9)
Sept. 23 - at U.A.B. (5-6)
Oct. 7 - West Virginia (11-1; 5th; Sugar Bowl)
Oct. 14 - Jacksonville State (Division I-AA)
 
Once again ignoring the Division I-AA cream puffs, we find that M.S.U.'s out-of-conference opposition improved from 10-13 to 18-16 and now includes the defending Big East and (dang it all) Sugar Bowl champions. 
 
Mississippi State took a huge step up in weight class when the Western Division Bulldogs went from taking B.Y.U.'s best shot to accepting a game against W.V.U. 
 
South Carolina
 
2001
Sept. 1 - Boise State (10-2; Humanitarian Bowl)
Nov. 3 - Wofford (Division I-AA)
Nov. 17 - Clemson (9-3; 16th; Gator Bowl)
 
2006
Sept. 16 - Wofford (Division I-AA)
Sept. 23 - Florida Atlantic (2-9)
Nov. 18 - Middle Tennessee (4-7)
Nov. 25 - at Clemson (8-4; 21st; Champs Sports Bowl)
 
Is this how Steve Spurrier plans to revive his tarnished reputation as a coaching mastermind . . . by watering down the Gamecocks' schedule so much that their artificially inflated won-lost record will start to resemble that of the Gators during Darth Visor's heyday in Gainesville?  Wofford's presence on the schedule is an embarrassment, now as then, but the rest of South Carolina's out-of-conference schedule is now equally weak, as well.  The Palmetto State Poultry went from Division I-A opponents with a 19-5 cumulative ledger and two bowl appearances to Division I-A opponents with a combined record of 14-20 and one postseason berth. 
 
If South Carolina's non-S.E.C. slate gets any more shameful, the 'Cocks will be required to relocate from Columbia, S.C., to somewhere in the Yellowhammer State. 
 
Tennessee
 
2001
Sept. 1 - Syracuse (6-5)
Nov. 3 - at Notre Dame (9-3; 15th; Fiesta Bowl)
Nov. 10 - Memphis (4-7)
 
2006
Sept. 2 - California (8-4; 25th; Las Vegas Bowl)
Sept. 9 - Air Force (4-7)
Sept. 23 - Marshall (4-7)
Sept. 30 - at Memphis (7-5; Motor City Bowl)
 
Largely because the Volunteers routinely have home state advantage in eight games a year, Tennessee has had one of the Southeastern Conference's best track records of scheduling tough non-conference opponents.  This fall will be no exception, as the Vols again face a legitimate slate from outside the league, going from three teams with a 19-15 record and one bowl appearance to four teams with a 23-23 record and two bowl appearances. 
 
Playing Memphis on the road today is a bigger deal than playing Memphis at home was five years ago.  Air Force and Marshall in 2006, like Syracuse in 2001, largely are spent volcanoes with better name recognition than talent, but the Falcons and the Thundering Herd are capable of pulling off the upset and the Volunteers have doubled their risk of being caught off guard by scheduling two such opponents.  Leaving aside the college football establishment's inexplicable love affair with the Fighting Irish, the Golden Bears are as good a team now as Notre Dame was at the turn of the century. 
 
At worst, Tennessee's 2006 schedule is as daunting as its 2001 slate and, because of the presence of a pair of non-traditional non-conference non-patsies from non-B.C.S. leagues, a fair argument could be mounted for the proposition that the Big Orange faces a tougher test this coming autumn than five years previously. 
 
Vanderbilt
 
2001
Aug. 30 - Middle Tennessee (6-5)
Sept. 22 - Richmond (Division I-AA)
Oct. 27 - at Duke (0-11)
 
2006
Sept. 2 - at Michigan (7-5; Alamo Bowl)
Sept. 23 - Tennessee State (Division I-AA)
Sept. 30 - Kent State (1-10)
Oct. 28 - at Duke (1-10)
 
Five years ago, the Commodores took on no non-S.E.C. bowl teams and their Division I-A opposition consisted of squads with a cumulative 6-16 ledger.  This year, although Vandy will tussle with Division I-A teams that went a collective 9-25, the 'Dores also open on the road against an Alamo Bowl participant and a traditional power with whom Vanderbilt has some history. 
 
On paper, going from 0-11 (Duke) to 1-10 (Duke and Kent State) and from 6-5 (M.T.S.U.) to 7-5 (Michigan) doesn't look like a significant upgrade, but, as someone who was present at the creation of The Movement, I believe it is clear that, when an S.E.C. team substitutes an away game at Michigan for a home date with Middle Tennessee State, that squad has improved its non-conference slate. 
 
Overall, S.E.C. squads may not yet be scheduling a quality of non-conference opposition worthy of a league of its stature, but at least eight teams (Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana State, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, and Vanderbilt) have upgraded their out-of-conference scheduling in the last five years and no more than two member institutions (Alabama and South Carolina) have regressed during that period. 
 
Paul Finebaum calls this state of affairs so "bad" that fans like me should be "demanding their money back," staging "a revolt," and filing "class action suits."  Even allowing for the requirements imposed by Finebaum's medium for sports talk radio hosts to utter outrageous and exaggerated nonsense for the sake of getting ratings, that bit of hyperventilation is ludicrous. 
 
While I am not pleased with where the S.E.C. is as a conference with regard to non-league scheduling, no one who is familiar with the facts could deny that, on the whole, the conference is headed in the right direction. 
 
Two out of every three S.E.C. schools face tougher schedules in 2006 than in 2001 while only one out of every six S.E.C. schools will face a weaker slate of games.  Instead of insisting upon refunds, we in the South are proud, pleased, and looking forward to some quality intersectional matchups next fall. 
 
Go 'Dawgs! 



Next 5 >>