I believe we should be in the playoffs.
I believe in Santa Claus, too, but I'm pretty damn sure he isn't showing up this year either.
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I believe we should be in the playoffs.
Alright, Ill just let the players do the talking.I believe in Santa Claus, too, but I'm pretty damn sure he isn't showing up this year either.
The Buckeyes had 12 games. They played good to really well against VT, Penn State, and Rutgers. They looked like a playoff team in their last game. But they were underwhelming in 7 games, and pathetic in a late-season loss. Sparty had to play in the same weather as the Bucks, and they found a way to win. That was the season right there for both teams, but only Sparty got it done. And didn't you recognize what led to that Sparty win? Winning on a FG at the end was exactly what they were prepared to do. It was classic Tressel-ball. Looking great in a couple of games and good in two more, but mediocre in 7 more, and awful in 1 is not a description of a playoff team.If we play remotely like we did against M******n I believe we should be in the playoffs, we played our worst game the game we lost and it was a field goal int he last seconds. Michigan State didn't play our team once we clicked, M******n did, and you know what happened to them.
What would you call it if they let past outcomes while wearing a particular color jersey dictate what color jersey they wear?
Maybe, just maybe, a non-sell out of a game with two of the VERY biggest names in college football will get the Big Ten off it's ass to produce an IMPORTANT bowl game in a north-of-the-mason-dixon-line site. It's time to let Alabama, Clemson, Texas, USC fans pay to travel and take the time away from home. Chicago, Chicago, that toddlin' town...TICKET, TRAVEL COSTS RESULT IN EXCESS OF OHIO STATE TICKETS AVAILABLE FOR FIESTA BOWL AGAINST NOTRE DAME
Ohio State fans travel well to watch their football team play, but sales for this season's final game aren't going as they normally do for big-time road affairs.
The Buckeyes are set to take on Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl New Year's Day in Glendale, Arizona. With the matchup being a glorified exhibition game—in the sense that the winner doesn't advance to a national title game—having to travel from Ohio across two time zones to watch a game you could see on television is keeping some fans away.
Buckeye fans have only scooped up around 9,000 of the schools' allotted 12,500 tickets for the Fiesta Bowl, Ohio State spokesman Brett Scarbrough told Eleven Warriors Friday.
"On top of filling all of the priority orders for season ticket holders, we opened seats up to the public and pushed through social media as well as email marketing to the alumni database and previous single game ticket buyers," Scarbrough said.
He added that at the request of the Fiesta Bowl, Ohio State has returned "the majority" of its unsold tickets to them for distribution in local charitable organizations.
The Buckeyes won the first-ever College Football Playoff in 2014, capping an improbable postseason run with victories over Alabama and Oregon. In 2015, expectations for a repeat ran rampant among the fanbase, but were dashed after a 17-14 loss to Michigan State Nov. 21.
No Big East Division championship. No Big Ten championship. No national championship—at least this season.
Round-trip flights to Arizona are hovering north of $800 to Arizona from Columbus and as a result ticket sales have shifted to those Buckeye fans on the west coast.
The majority of ticket sales for the game on StubHub as of Thursday—32 percent—are from the state of Arizona, according to Communications Manager Cameron Papp. The next highest state for sales is California at 15 percent, followed by Ohio (13 percent) and Indiana (2 percent).
Ohio State is still selling tickets for the matchup on its school website—seating in the lower areas of University of Phoenix Stadium cost $165, while upper deck runs you an even $100—but finding fans willing to fly across the country is proving difficult.
Entire article: http://www.elevenwarriors.com/ohio-...-ohio-state-tickets-available-for-fiesta-bowl
Any other year it probably would be great to get this bowl game; however, this year it is a disappointment as our expectations all year was the CFP.
Maybe, just maybe, a non-sell out of a game with two of the VERY biggest names in college football will get the Big Ten off it's ass to produce an IMPORTANT bowl game in a north-of-the-mason-dixon-line bowl. It's time to let Alabama, Clemson, Texas, USC fans pay to travel and take the time away from home. Chicago, Chicago, that toddlin' town...
My biggest concern at this point is the time between now and kickoff. We've already lost Washington, leaving a big hole to fill in the line. Hopefully we won't lose anyone else.
Chicago, Chicago, that toddlin' town...
Lambeau would be amazing,
AmenI'm surprised Indy doesn't have a bowl game - even a "lower tier" bowl game.
And should we start the whole "homefield advantage should be given to the better seed" debate again? I still haven't heard a good argument for playing them at bowl sites, other than "blah blah blah weather blah blah blah bowls will lose 2 top-4 teams blah blah blah."
1. They play in Chicago, Green Bay, New England, Buffalo, Cleveland, etc. through December, and except for Cleveland, most of those teams sometimes get to play in January. If you don't like the weather, stay in the hotel.
2. Eff the bowls. I like watching the bowls as much as anyone. And I mean ALL the bowls. But if you're going to do a real playoff system, you need to give homefield to the higher seeds. Don't half-ass this. Use your whole asses, guys!
Hallelujah! Holy shit! Where's the Tylenol?I'm surprised Indy doesn't have a bowl game - even a "lower tier" bowl game.
And should we start the whole "homefield advantage should be given to the better seed" debate again? I still haven't heard a good argument for playing them at bowl sites, other than "blah blah blah weather blah blah blah bowls will lose 2 top-4 teams blah blah blah."
1. They play in Chicago, Green Bay, New England, Buffalo, Cleveland, etc. through December, and except for Cleveland, most of those teams sometimes get to play in January. If you don't like the weather, stay in the hotel.
2. Eff the bowls. I like watching the bowls as much as anyone. And I mean ALL the bowls. But if you're going to do a real playoff system, you need to give homefield to the higher seeds. Don't half-ass this. Use your whole asses, guys!
I'm surprised Indy doesn't have a bowl game - even a "lower tier" bowl game.
And should we start the whole "homefield advantage should be given to the better seed" debate again? I still haven't heard a good argument for playing them at bowl sites, other than "blah blah blah weather blah blah blah bowls will lose 2 top-4 teams blah blah blah."
1. They play in Chicago, Green Bay, New England, Buffalo, Cleveland, etc. through December, and except for Cleveland, most of those teams sometimes get to play in January. If you don't like the weather, stay in the hotel.
2. Eff the bowls. I like watching the bowls as much as anyone. And I mean ALL the bowls. But if you're going to do a real playoff system, you need to give homefield to the higher seeds. Don't half-ass this. Use your whole asses, guys!