cincibuck
You kids stay off my lawn!
TS10HTW;1658171; said:Only difference is, OSU has played Toledo twice in twenty years and LSU has played Tulane 9 times...I'd say that's a whole lot of difference.
And half a game per year over two decades = 9 or 10 games, that's every other year. And like I said most those years were not playing Tulane or Toledo.
And in 20 years Ohio State played Indiana 16 times and LSU played Vandy, I don't know, at least 10 with similar results.
I'm of the opinion that what both sides are proving is that it doesn't make sense to play anybody dangerous outside your conference and thus no one in either conference does it very often.
One example that hasn't been brought up is when Alabama invited USC to Tuscalusa (sp) in the mid sixties. They got their ass kicked for the effort, but some historians have pointed to it, as well as the Texas Western shellacking of the Cotton Nash Kentucky wildcats in the NCAA finals, as major determining factors in ending segregation at SEC schools.
To be perfectly fair, Big 10 colleges were hardly any better. Bill Willis is the first black to play football for the Buckeyes in 1941 and Jesse Owens was not permitted to live in a dorm when he arrived on campus in 1934.
It was that segregation policy which had created a history of SEC teams seldom playing outside of the old Confederacy and I wonder if perhaps that history created a sense that they didn't need to play outside the region. Within a year of losing to USC Bear Bryant had tapped into the local talent pool. The same was true for Adolph Rupp.
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