Twitterati to BCS: ‘We hate you. Signed, Everyone’

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Say you’re a college football fan who still can’t make up your mind. Then one day you discover your hair is on fire. When you pick up the phone, do you call:

a.) The nearest fire department; or

b.) your hairdresser?

If you chose b.), congratulations! The folks who run the Bowl Championship Series are dying to meet you.

Ever since hijacking college football’s postseason in 1992 by forming the Bowl Coalition, they’ve had a tough time making friends and influencing people. They’ve thrown money around, tweaked the rules a dozen times and twisted themselves into a stadium’s worth of pretzels trying to explain why the sport doesn’t need a playoff.

Yet almost two decades later, only one out of every 10 fans agrees—and the number of coaches and players is only slightly higher.

The fact is there’s no good way to sell a bad idea. But that hasn’t stopped the BCS from trying. And trying. Even so, this latest scheme might be the most hare-brained ever.

First, they hired Ari Fleischer, the PR veteran who established his bona fides in damage control while trying to make George W. Bush look good. Next, armed with a Twitter account and Facebook page, the conference commissioners who run the cartel and the college presidents who enable them launched a charm offensive.

Early reports from the front were not encouraging. The Twitterati virtually carpet-bombed (at)insidethebcs. Even if you discard the over-the-top comments, there were so many stinging rebukes left that it was difficult to compile a list of the best. But here are excerpts from five personal favorites, collected on huffingtonpost.com:

“We hate you. Signed, Everyone.”

“We especially hate you. Signed: Utah.”

” … not getting enough venom via the traditional media?”

“Do they also send themselves hate mail?”

“You are like a black, ichorous boil on the sporting world that should be lanced with rusty nails.”

The Facebook page hasn’t fared much better. For starters, it threatened to undo the smartest decision the BCS had made since its inception: convincing Bill Hancock, one of the most-respected and best-liked administrators in college sports, to sign on last week as the first executive director and new face of the organization.

Instead of generating goodwill, as Hancock’s appointment did among the BCS’ legion of critics in the media, his foray into the social-networking world was greeted with catcalls of “stooge” and worse.

Fortunately, Hancock was his usual calm, collected self during a telephone conversation Tuesday. The personal attacks haven’t made a dent, because he never takes himself too seriously. On top of that, the conversations have become more civil with each passing day.

“We just thought it was time to take our place on the field, so the critics don’t have it all to themselves. We have a story to tell,” Hancock said, finally, “and we’re going to tell it.”

Good luck with that, since the narrative still has more holes than Notre Dame’s defense.

Fewer and fewer people buy the line about the regular season being a playoff, now that unbeatens from conferences both large (Auburn) and small (Utah) have been denied a chance to play for the increasingly mythical national championship. Almost no one believes, either, that a playoff would spell the end of the existing bowls, their pageants and traditions, let alone the junkets that players, coaches, their families and boosters demand as their due.

And even some BCS coaches (see: Paterno, Joe; and several others) refuse to mouth the party line about how a playoff would rob their kids of much-needed classroom time. They know that dozens of schools participating in the lower divisions that do stage playoffs would clobber their programs if the game was College Bowl instead of a college bowl game.

None of this is new, of course, and the people in charge of the BCS have tabled discussion of a playoff until the current TV contract runs out in 2014. In the meantime, they’ll continue praying that the TCUs and Boise States lose and fade away, along with the congressmen who keep threatening them with antitrust hearings every time they don’t.

Oh, and they’ll be regularly updating their Facebook page and Twitter account.

“People should not be afraid of their critics,” Fleischer said during a telephone interview later Tuesday. “Playoff advocates have had it easy up to now. They’re dealing in a hypothetical world.”

True enough—if by “hypothetical” he means a world in which the national champion is determined on the playing field, as opposed to being anointed by a cartel that exists to control who doles out all those Benjamins every postseason generates, and to whom.

Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org.

Updated Nov 25, 3:54 am EST
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6 Comments

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    Hoops Fan Wed Nov 25, 2009 09:14 am PST Report Abuse
    Post number 1.....I guess that means Carolina and Duke should drop out of the ACC tournament as well....since they could so often make the NCAA a moot question???? Are you a plant from the BCS using ann assumed name or something?

    C'mon.....let 'em play!
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    BGator Wed Nov 25, 2009 08:58 am PST Report Abuse
    The BCS is well regarded. well known, and overwhelmingly obvious to all as being nothing less than an absolute JOKE! The BCS is about maintaining the flow of money to the OLD guard and has nothing to do with the sport of College Football. Only the BCS themselves think otherwise. It is coruption in its purest form....

    Get us a DIVISION 1 (not FBS Bullcrap!) Playoff. Everything else is just noise...
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    Gift2Women Wed Nov 25, 2009 08:35 am PST Report Abuse
    On a somewhat related note: As long as the BCS exists, does anyone else feel that teams that don't have a conference championship game should not receive a automatic BCS-bid? I'm sick of seeing teams play powderpuff schedules and land a better bowl game than more well-deserving teams.
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    PC Wed Nov 25, 2009 08:31 am PST Report Abuse
    Playoffs work in EVERY single major sport in the world, but someone how not for D1A football? It's unreasonable to have more than an 8 team playoff for CFB, so yes, every year someone would be the 9th team looking from the outside in (or 5th team if it's a +1), but it's a lot easier to justify than 2 teams that are anointed practically from the start of the football season. Didn't start in the preseason top 15? No chance for you this year. How is that fair?

    And how does a +1 "playoff" change everything you're saying is right with the existing system?
  • 0 users liked this comment Please sign in to rate this comment up. Please sign in to rate this comment down. 0 users disliked this comment
    Bob Evans Wed Nov 25, 2009 07:30 am PST Report Abuse
    The playoff is a nightmare for "powerhouse" teams in mediocre conferences that have managed to convince the world that they are the toughest conference around. That's the only way you can justify scheduling at least one 1AA team per year, and sometimes even 2, or by picking on the weakest teams of the weakest conferences.

    As long as you have a "name" and can finished undefeated you are golden.

    Even better if your coach averages 3 years per school. You never have to stick around long enough to prove you can really coach.

    Feel sorry for the better teams in the "lesser" conferences that can't get a name opponent from the "Big 6" to schedule them. See: http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/football/news?slug=dw-boise110709&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

    Better to spend your time talking about how good you are without actually proving it against competition.

    At least the college football fans may be treated to one or two good games every year while we spend the rest of the season watching squash games.

    There are few "elite" teams in the college world - sadly we most likely will never get to see them play each other.
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    Hali Wed Nov 25, 2009 01:41 am PST Report Abuse
    I suppose "everyone" doesn't apply to me somehow.

    The playoff is a dream for schools from cupcake conferences that play major conference homecoming foes as part of their conference schedule. It's the way to sneak in without earning and and hopefully play a worn out team that just got done with their conference championship game (which might very well have been #1 vs #2 anyway).

    A playoff will not be fair or make sense unless it incorporates conference championship games. Even then, either the BCS becomes even more heavily in favor of major conferences (how about 6 of the teams being from 3 conferences in a playoff?) or they toss out conference championship games entirely. Any playoff that starts with #1 vs. #2 is pretty pointless is it not? Likewise any game that features #1 vs. #2 and then tosses then back into a playoff as though that game didn't count is ridiculous as well.

    Then again teams from the WAC and Mountain West won't have to worry about that because their conferences will never produce a match up of that caliber. They just want to have a shot without earning it during the regular season.

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