cincibuck;1264754; said:
Logic? You want logic? Here's some logic; from 1890 to 1960 the dawgs never left Dixie. Now what would be the logic behind that? Perhaps the same logic that kept Jim Brown at home while the rest of his Syracuse teammates lined up for a Cotton Bowl game, or the logic that kept South Pacific from ever playing south of Washington DC.
I appreciate your sensitivity towards Jim Crow laws - but it's hardly an answer that pertains to this discussion.
Why not take it a step further and call me a bigot. Your tone certainly gives that vibe and its the easiest comeback in the world.
cincibuck;1264754; said:
You want more logic? How's this: No SEC team has ever won a National Championship playing outside Dixie.
This statement is almost Colin Cowherd bad.
2006 Florida
1998 UT - at the old site of the Fiesta Bowl
And every league champion prior to 1997 was slotted to play in the Sugar Bowl, just as every Big 10 champ was slotted to play in the Rose Bowl. My goodness, please remind me again how your players survived all that sunshine!!!1112
cincibuck;1264754; said:
Or this: the home team advantage is a consistent 7 to 10 points in Vegas. Hmmmm, I wonder what that could possibly mean (and please, Gator, don't try and tell us that Florida, playing in the Orange Bowl, would be disadvantaged if the opponent was from north of Kentucky and west of the Mississippi.)
I've already made my feelings clear on this. Ticket sales should reflect more of a 50/50 split.
And you were significant favorites in 2006.
cincibuck;1264754; said:
Logic tells me that geography is an advantage and therefore needs to be balanced out. If SEC and Miami fans just can't seperate themselves from where half of them were born, tough [censored]. Fair is fair. If Favre can play football in Green Bay so can the SEC.
You fail to explain yourself properly so I'll assume that you mean it's unfair you have to play in the Sugar Bowl when Baton Rouge is 2 hours drive.
If the game had been played in Seattle - you'd be complaining about time zones and similar geographic hardships.
Furthermore - I know that you know, deep down inside Big 10 coaching staffs, when breaking down film and going over opponents for the biggest of bowls games aren't saying "Damn, how are we gonna deal with this perfect weather??? What in the world are we gonna do??? It's such a huge disadvantage for us." They are focused on scheme and match ups. Not climate, as it should be.
And you fail to present a suggestion for where it could be held?
Chicago and New York are the only reasonable suggestions.
I'd say perhaps St. Louis or Minny or Detroit or Indy but then you'd beat your chest and stomp your feet and "ROAR! Real men play outdoors! yeahyeaI'mright hugeballsrealtoughgrrr!"