Get ready for a playoff system

For you true college football fans out there, what I’m going to tell you will sound like sweet music to your ears. College football is considering a playoff system.

The most influential people among the Football Bowl Subdivision elite in Division I college football met last week in Hollywood, Fla., to discuss the future of the sport. Among those in the meeting were the eleven FBS conference commissioners and Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick, among other officials. There were numerous ideas floating about in the meetings that have been discussed relating to changing the current Bowl Championship Series system.

Under the BCS system, the two highest-ranked teams at the end of the season will play each other for the chance to call themselves the National Champions. The BCS is hardly fair, giving six conferences (the ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and the SEC) an automatic bid to play in the highly regarded BCS bowls. Then, it gives at-large spots to teams both from within and outside the six “automatic qualifying” conferences. Continue reading

Saints no more

I love the New Orleans Saints. To be honest, the Saints are not my favorite team, but it is hard not to love the Saints and their story: winning the franchise’s first Super Bowl just two seasons ago after the city was rocked by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

When it came out several weeks ago the Saints and former defensive coordinator Greg Williams paid defensive players bounties for hits on offensive players, it shook the foundations of the National Football League. It was particularly frightening to NFL commissioner Roger Goodell. But I, along with several current and former NFL players was not surprised this news broke. Why? Because it happens everywhere, not just with the New Orleans Saints. It’s just a matter of bad timing. Continue reading

Collegiate Darwinism

For shame, college sports, for shame.

Conference USA and the Mountain West Conference announced last week the two conferences will form a brand new “super conference,” although it is hardly composed of “super” schools. After the power conferences in college sports like the SEC, Big 12, Big 10, Pac-12 and the Big East have had their pick of C-USA and MWC schools, the remaining 16 teams are Air Force, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Colorado State, East Carolina, Fresno State, Hawaii (football-only), Marshall, Nevada, New Mexico, University of Nevada at Las Vegas, Southern Miss, Rice, University of Texas at El Paso, Tulane, Tulsa and Wyoming.

This new conference stretches across five time-zones and reaches from South Carolina to Honolulu. The merger, to me, makes about as much sense as throwing a toaster into a bathtub. So why did the two conferences choose to make such a decision? The answer is survival. Continue reading

Eli Manning: a QB for all time

The forty-sixth installment of the NFL Super Bowl was no disappointment. The Super Bowl between the New York Giants and the New England Patriots on Feb. 5 was the epitome of how a championship game should be played, which took the full 60 minutes for the game to be decided. The season and the championship hinged on the dramatic final play: a Hail Mary pass from Patriots quarterback Tom Brady to the end zone as time ran out. The spectacle was the perfect way for the championship game to play out.

When the pass fell incomplete, the Giants beat the Patriots 21-17. Giants Quarterback Eli Manning snagged his second Lombardi Trophy in five years and denied Brady his unprecedented fourth trophy. With the win, Manning joins an elite fraternity of quarterbacks who have won two Super Bowls. Manning is now the 11th quarterback in history to win at least two championships. Continue reading

Peyton’s Future: Stay with Indy

Jim Irsay, the owner of the Indianapolis Colts, is trying to rebuild his team from the top down. So far, it’s not going too well.

Vice chairman Bill Polian, general manager Chris Polian, head coach Jim Caldwell and most of Caldwell’s assistant coaches were relieved of their duties by Irsay after the Colts finished the 2011 season with a dismal 2-14 record. Not to mention, the Colts’ four-time NFL MVP quarterback, Peyton Manning, did not play the entire season due to a neck injury.

With the finish this season, the Colts own the first pick in the April NFL Draft. Many reporters, analysts and fans believe that the Colts will take Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck with their top pick.This raises the question of what the Colts should do with Manning, the only quarterback besides Johnny Unitas to lead the Colts to a Super Bowl win.

Adding Luck to the roster will not only create a stiff quarterback competition when training camp begins, but will also put pressure on the Colts’ expenses. Manning is due a $28 million bonus on March 8. In order for Luck to sign, the rookie will most likely require a pretty-penny for his services. Even though the NFL has instituted stricter pay scales for rookies, Luck will look at the contracts of the previous three top picks when negotiating his contract with the Colts. The contracts for those last three top picks, all quarterbacks, averages $68 million. Paying two players astronomically high salaries is not economically feasible for the Colts.

This, however, is where Irsay and Manning can lay the groundwork for the future of the organization. If I were Jim Irsay, I would look at the opportunity the Colts have. Irsay and Manning should realize that they can pick up a franchise quarterback when the Colts bring in Luck, a two-time Heisman Trophy runner-up.  The Colts should restructure Manning’s contract so that the team can afford to pay both Manning and Luck. This will allow Manning to teach Andrew Luck about the nuances in the NFL.

The last time the Colts had at least ten wins in a season before Manning arrived was in 1977.  Since the arrival of Manning in 1998, the Colts have finished with at least ten wins 11 times. Manning transformed the franchise, the city of Indianapolis and gave an entire generation of aspiring NFL quarterbacks a great role model. Now is the time for Manning to give back to the franchise and its future.

WTAMU Football team beats Central Missouri Mules

The WTAMU Buffalo football team closed out the season by traveling to Topeka, Kansas to take on the No. 23 Central Missouri Mules in the Lower Inc. Kanza Bowl. WT grabbed its second Kanza Bowl trophy in three years with a 26-7 win.

The Buffs started slowly after having a two-week layoff. As sophomore quarterback Dustin Vaughn threw an interception on the fourth play of the game, the WT defense was able to hold UCM to a three-and-out. Junior Khiry Robinson got the Buffs the first points of the game with a four yard run to put WT up 7-0 with 9:27 remaining in the first. Robinson carried the ball 24 times for 163 yards and the one touchdown on the afternoon.

“The offensive line made lanes for me to run through,” Robinson said. Continue reading

WT Buffs shutout TAMUC Lions in season finale

The WTAMU Buffalo football team hosted the Texas A&M-Commerce Lions on Nov. 12. WT’s seniors largely contributed to the 49-0 victory on their final game.

The Buffs took advantage of two interceptions by senior Caleb Randolph to take a 21-0 lead after the first quarter. After Randolph’s first pick, sophomores Dustin Vaughn and Lance Ratliff hooked up for an 82 yard touchdown to give WT a 7-0 lead with 9:13 remaining in the quarter. The Buffs took advantage of Randolph’s second interception when Vaughn hit Ratliff again, this time for a 19 yard score that put WT up 21-0 with 1:48 left in the first.

“They had a couple tendencies. [Randolph] watched some film and exploited them for two picks,” said defensive coordinator Colby Carthel. Continue reading

Buffs beat Greyhounds for a Wagon Wheel victory

The No. 24 WTAMU Buffalo football team hosted the Eastern New Mexico Greyhounds on Oct. 22 in the twenty-fifth installment of the Wagon Wheel rivalry. WT grabbed its sixth-straight Wagon Wheel win, defeating ENMU 52-21.

The Buffs struck early when sophomore Dustin Vaughn hit fellow sophomore Lance Ratliff for a 26 yard score to take a 7-0 lead just three minutes in. WT went up 14-0 on a two-yard run by senior Tommy Hampton with 6:36 left in the first quarter.

The Buffs started hitting big plays in the second, as senior Brittan Golden caught a Vaughn pass and took it 94 yards to pay dirt; giving WT a 21-0 lead with 9:09 remaining in the second quarter. Vaughn’s third touchdown of the first half came when he found sophomore Jeremy Watson for a 68 yard score, which gave the Buffs a 28-0 lead heading into the half. This was the second straight home game where WT held its opponent scoreless at halftime. Continue reading

Abilene Christian University Wildcats defeat Buffs

The No. 17 WTAMU football team traveled to Abilene on Oct. 15 to face off against the Abilene Christian University Wildcats for ACU’s Homecoming. The Wildcats overpowered the Buffs 28-18, dropping WT to 4-2 overall and 4-1 in Lone Star Conference play.

The first quarter was very defensively oriented. The Buffs stopped ACU on their first drive with two sacks. WT got the first points when sophomore kicker Sergio Castillo, Jr. hit a 44 yard field goal to give the Buffs a 3-0 lead. Continue reading

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