Harumph!

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Oliver Barry
Sent: Wednesday, July 01, 2009 10:25 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gatortalk] FW: [gatornews] [SUN]: Big 12 appears ready to
surpass SEC in football (Dallas News)

 

After falling down laughing at the headline, I also had plenty of laughs
at this article.

It's not just a little strange that since Nebraska joined the Big 12
they haven't been the football powerhouse they used to be. 

Mack Brown: "You can loose to anybody in this league?"  Is he kidding?
Does he ever see what happens in the SEC?

Let's see, who won the NC last year, and who did we beat?  Cotton Bowl?
Keep in mind the Big 12 took the cream of the old SWC and the Old Big 8
and let the wannabes go to the Mountain West.  Even with that they're a
distant second to the SEC.

They may "appear ready" from the perspective of Dallas, but, in the
words of Tony Barnhart, "Texas A&M ain't Texas A&M and Nebraska ain't
Nebraska"...and the Big 12 ain't ready to beat the SEC !

 

Oliver Barry CRS,GRI

Real Estate Broker

Bob Parks Realty

1517 Hunt Club Blvd

Gallatin TN 37066

Phone: 615-826-4040

Fax: 615-822-2027

Mobile: 615-972-4239

 

 


Big 12 appears ready to surpass SEC in football 


02:35 PM CDT on Monday, June 29, 2009


Column by CHUCK CARLTON / The Dallas Morning News |
[email protected]


 

Fifteen years after its creation, the Big 12 stands on the brink of
fulfilling all the great expectations predicted at its birth. 

Back in February 1994, the combination of the Big Eight and many of the
top programs from the Southwest Conference seemed like solid football
synergy. 

Texas. Oklahoma. Nebraska. Texas A&M. Colorado. While the conference has
been more than competitive since its inception - producing three
outright or shared national champions since it began play in 1996 - its
best may be directly ahead. 

There's just one obstacle: the Southeastern Conference. 

Florida's 24-14 win gave a factual basis to the perception that the Big
12 wasn't ready to leapfrog the SEC. Ole Miss' 47-34 win over Texas Tech
in the AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic also didn't help the Big 12's case. 

That said, Texas coach Mack Brown believes the Big 12 has never been
more competitive. 

"The difference is that the entire league is better," Brown said.
"Everybody talks about the SEC. You can actually lose to anybody in this
league. That wasn't the case 12 years or probably not even four years
ago." 

So 2009 might be the year when the Big 12 takes the final step in
performance and perception. 

"We could be there," said Nebraska athletic director Tom Osborne, who
went 255-49-3 and won three national titles as a coach. 

He understands the conventional wisdom about the SEC. 

"But I tell you it [Big 12] is going to be comparable this year," he
said. 

Working in the Big 12's favor: 

* Three teams - Oklahoma, Texas and Oklahoma State - will probably open
next season in the top 10. And excellence hasn't been limited to a few.
Since the conference's formation, eight of the 12 teams have been ranked
in the Associated Press poll's top five during November. 

* The conference featured four of the five vote-getters for the 2008
Heisman Trophy, including winner Sam Bradford of Oklahoma and runner-up
Colt McCoy. Both return this season. 

"The offensive firepower and the quarterback capability in the last
three years have been tremendous," Osborne said. "It seemed like every
team had a great quarterback and really moved the ball." 

* Seven Big 12 players were selected in the first round of this year's
NFL draft, a high-water mark. That total might just be the beginning. 

Todd McShay's 2010 mock draft for ESPN, released in late April,
suggested the waiting area in New York could resemble a Big 12 media
day. His projection: a jaw-dropping nine of the first 10 picks coming
from the conference. 

Steve Hatchell, the first Big 12 commissioner, remembers the early
optimism in the mid-'90s. 

"I don't think there was one doubting voice for the present and future
strength of the conference," Hatchell said. 

For now, the SEC holds the bragging rights with wins in the last three
BCS title games and unmatched fan fervor. Even Osborne acknowledged that
he had never seen anything as intense as an in-state recruiting battle
between Auburn and Alabama. 

"The Big 12 has done great things," said Tony Barnhart of CBS and the
respected Mr. College Football blog. "But they aren't there yet. The top
of the league - Texas and Oklahoma - is very competitive." 

But the conference has a couple of problems in Barnhart's opinion. One
involves the struggles of some traditional powers. 

"Texas A&M ain't Texas A&M, and Nebraska ain't Nebraska," he said. 

The bottom of the conference could be stronger, Barnhart said, although
he noted Baylor's recent improvement. 

Echoing a complaint frequently heard in SEC country, he thinks the
defenses need to improve. Texas, at 51st nationally, possessed the Big
12's best defense. 

The conference will get a chance for an early on-the-field statement
this season. Oklahoma State hosts traditional SEC power Georgia in its
season opener. 

It will give a glimpse at how much the conference has evolved since
1996. 

Back then, Nebraska and Texas A&M were dominant. 

Then Texas hired Brown away from North Carolina in 1998 after a 10-1
regular season by the Tar Heels. A year later, Florida defensive
coordinator Bob Stoops replaced John Blake at Oklahoma. And two historic
programs began resurgences that would lead to national titles. 

Stoops' first offensive coordinator in Norman, an untraditional coach
named Mike Leach with an untraditional offense, became the godfather of
the passing game that has transformed the conference. 

The success of Oklahoma and Texas has caused other teams to increase
their resources for football. Texas high school recruits who had
bypassed the old Southwest Conference because of its NCAA issues began
returning to state schools. If they left Texas, the primary destinations
became other Big 12 schools. 

Case in point: The recent revivals at Missouri and Kansas have been
fueled by Lone Star recruits. 

Then, as now, the ingredients were in place. 

"We had a lot of like-minded institutions making the heavy commitment to
football," Hatchell said. "No one is surprised given how good the
athletic directors are, how good the coaches, how good the facilities
are." 

MEASURING FAVORABLY 

BCS TITLE GAME (SINCE 1998 SEASON) 

A look at how the Big 12 compares to its fellow BCS power conferences
since it began play in 1996: 

Conference 

Apps. 

Won 

Lost 

SEC 

5 

5 

0 

Big 12 

6 

2 

4 

ACC 

3 

1 

2 

Big East 

3 

1 

2 

Big Ten 

3 

1 

2 

Pac-10 

2 

1 

1 

 

HEISMAN WINNERS (SINCE 1996 SEASON) 

Conference 

Winners 

Big 12 

4* 

Big Ten 

3 

Pac-10 

3 

SEC 

2 

ACC 

1 

*Sam Bradford in 2008, Jason White 2003, Eric Crouch 2001, Ricky
Williams 1998. 

 

ATTENTION GETTERS 

Since the Big 12 began play, eight member schools have been ranked among
the nation's top five football teams in November or later by The
Associated Press. Here's how the Big 12 compares with other BCS power
conferences since 1996, with numbers based on current membership since
joining the conference: 

Conference 

Members 

Top 5 

Pac-10 

10 

9 

Big 12 

12 

8 

Southeastern 

12 

7 

Big Ten 

11 

5 

ACC 

12 

4 

Big East 

8 

2 

 



 


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