To Care or Not to Care: KC Keeler and the Importance of Week 1

The opening week of the college football season will always hold a special place in my heart. Aside from providing a usually welcomed and much-needed break from a whole three or four days of classes, it has always managed to indulge that innate sports fan desire in me to see an upset. David vs. Goliath matchups? Week One always provides plenty of them, and that’s not likely to stop anytime soon. Sure, fans of BCS conference teams may moan ad nauseum about playing the Little Sisters of the Poor (who, it turns out, don’t actually field a team), but with the state of television contracts and ticket sale revenue being what they are, the incentive to play an FCS team isn’t the opportunity cost loss some people would like us to think it is.

Good for people like me who enjoy watching the ACC take its annual nose dive or two against Colonial Athletic Conference teams, but good for the FCS teams playing? According to Delaware head coach KC Keeler, maybe not. That, at least, if you’re going off of what Keeler said in the weekly CAA teleconference on Monday:

My preference is to not play any I-A teams. The goal of our program is not to win a I-A game, it’s to win a national championship. It’s really difficult to make the playoffs and we need to put ourselves in the best position possible to do so. We need to have enough wins to get into the playoffs.

Interesting comments, no doubt, especially when you factor in the history of the Navy-UD series. As Bill Wagner points out in his blog, the series has been going back to 1984 and is currently sees Navy with an 8-7 series advantage. Hardly the kind of one-sided stomping that certain SEC or Big 10 schools unload on their FCS “rivals” on a yearly basis, and by and large good football to watch regardless of the week the game is being played in.

While I don’t presume to actually define what’s good and what’s not good for the Delaware program, I can’t help but question what is behind Keeler’s comments, and if they’re really meant to be taken at face value. True, his team is among dozens fighting for 10 at-large spots in the playoffs if they don’t win the CAA – but I’m sure Keeler would tell you that winning the CAA is the first goal of his program each year, if only because it would include a bye in the playoffs and a possible streamline to the National Title Game. Likewise, if we’re to believe recent history, then beating an FBS team – especially a perennial bowl team like Navy – carries quite a bit of weight with the NCAA committee when considering at-large bids. So wouldn’t it help Delaware to keep playing a game against an FBS team like Navy? My inclination says it would, especially now that one of the CAA’s best teams - Massachusetts – is heading up to the FBS.

Smoke and mirrors? I’m not saying it is, but something tells me to take these comments with the suspicion of coach speak. Keeler’s program is established enough that it’s always going to be in contention for an at-large spot in the playoffs even if his team doesn’t win the CAA, and given the demanding CAA slate and the incentives of upsetting Navy, it seems a productive use of a game to travel down to Annapolis. The real reason for the comments? Economic, perhaps, but also to deflect attention from the matchup, and to downplay media attention for the upset that he and his players are banking on.

He cares. His team cares. They just don’t want you to know how badly they do.

ANNOUNCEMENT

You would be surprised how time-consuming a blog can be. I haven’t been able to devote as much time to it as I used to. After basically taking last season off, I felt like I had to make a decision. I should either shut down for good, or acknowledge my time constraints and find someone else willing to paddle this electronic canoe. I chose the latter, and would like to introduce Adam Nettina as a contributor to The Birddog.

Not that Adam needs any introduction to most internet-conscious Navy fans. You’ve seen his work on GoMids.com and have heard him on the In The Bleachers podcast. This might be the only Navy sports blog I know of, but it isn’t the first; that honor belongs to Adam’s first project, Pitch Right. He recently graduated from Utah State, where he wrote several excellent pieces for the USU Statesman. (Seriously, they’re good). You already know him and trust him, and now you have one more place to read his work. This is probably something that should’ve happened a long time ago if for no other reason than to give you hyenas a new target to distract you from me.

So everyone say hi to Adam, and make sure to follow him on Twitter.

THE BASKETBALL SCHEDULE

It’s out. Some thoughts:

  • 8 of the first 12 games will be on the road. Eek. Tough way to start the season.
  • One of those four home games will be against Tulane on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving. Sort of a neat game for Alumni Hall, and might have a shot to be televised by CBS Sports Network as a matchup between two conferences for which they own broadcast rights. Fingers crossed.
  • The Mids travel to play Missouri on the same day as the Army-Navy game. The time is still TBA, but it would be awesomesauce if it ended up as a football-basketball doubleheader. Unless I actually go to the Army game this year, in which case I’ll need plenty of time to get the hell out of Landover so I can get back to Annapolis to watch the game somewhere.
  • One game I won’t be missing is against Mercer, which is two days after the Military Bowl. I’ll be disappointed if Alumni Hall isn’t packed with fans who made the trip to the area for the bowl game. In other words, I’ll be disappointed.

REAL LIFE

I have a lot of readers in Annapolis and in the Norfolk/Virginia Beach areas. If you guys are reading this, I assume you decided not to get out of dodge ahead of the storm. My parents live in Virginia Beach, and I offered to drive up to help them hunker down and for the inevitable cleanup. My father said no. I’m pretty sure he’s going to climb the flagpole on the end of his dock and ride this one out Lieutenant Dan-style. For the rest of you, don’t forget to fill your bathtub and stay away from windows.

Stay safe. By the time you get power back, I might even have the Delaware preview posted.

EXTRA CREDIT

Some homework for you after yesterday’s post…

Forget joining a BCS conference. Instead, create a service academy all-star team. Cherry-pick the best players from all three. Put THAT team in a BCS conference. How would they do? I mean as a program year after year, and not just in 2011.

Discuss.

ON AIR FORCE, THE BIG 12, AND STUPID HYPOTHETICALS

Last week we talked about the rumors that Army and Navy might be in the running for membership in an expanded Big East. They aren’t alone among service academies when it comes to conference expansion rumors; Air Force has been mentioned as a candidate for Big 12 membership should Texas A&M defect to the SEC. Like the Navy-Big East talk, it’s just wild speculation at this point. Whenever one of these situations comes up, various media elements start making guesses with the hope that one of them will stick.

You can find people talking about a dozen or so schools that the Big East might consider, including the likes of Marshall, Temple, and Memphis. None of those schools have a chance in hell of getting into the Big East. Similarly, in addition to Air Force you can find people talking about Louisville, Houston, SMU, and Boise State for Big 12 expansion. Are any of these any more viable? I doubt it; the first (and second and third) call the Big 12 would make if A&M left would almost certainly be to BYU. One thing we do know is that the source of the rumors suggesting any of these schools isn’t anyone with any say in the matter from the conference itself. It’s all meaningless conjecture; fun to talk about, but lacking substance. Not unlike this blog!

I’m not sure what Air Force would offer the Big 12 anyway, other than a geographic fit. Sure, it would get the conference back to an area that it lost when Colorado left. There’s a big difference between delivering a media market and simply being located there, though, and outside of Colorado Springs proper I don’t know if Air Force has much draw within the state. Maybe they do. And you have to take into account that service academies have a national following as well. But would that be enough to add value to the conference’s television contract and offset the loss of Texas A&M? No chance. Remember, we aren’t talking about the Big East here; we’re talking about the Big 12, which has contracts with FOX and ESPN that reportedly pay the conference $130 million per year. That’s a lot more to live up to. The only school among the usual suspects that has the kind of clout even in the same ballpark as A&M is Brigham Young. The conference could take a school with less mass appeal, but doing so only decreases the conference’s selling power. Texas and Oklahoma would be motivated to look for a league where they could maintain their income. If the Aggies leave, the Big 12 needs to land a whale. SMU, Houston, and Air Force probably don’t fit the bill.

It’s unlikely that Air Force will be going anywhere, but let’s say that for whatever reason, the Big 12 decides to invite them. Would Air Force accept the bid? That depends on what their goals are. If it’s more money, then joining the Big 12 is pretty much like winning Powerball. Air Force has different considerations than Navy does; the USAFA athletic department loses money, and that’s even with an obscene amount of government funding (an amount that has nearly tripled over the last 7 years). They don’t want to stay that way; they’re trying to follow the Navy model of creating a 501(c)(3) corporation for their athletic association, but they aren’t there yet. The money they would get from leeching off of Texas and Oklahoma joining the Big 12 would certainly help them get there.

The question for Air Force would then become whether or not that money is worth being slaughtered on the field. Let’s not fool ourselves into thinking that they wouldn’t be. Air Force gets drilled in the Mountain West in every sport other than football. Let’s take last year, for example. Outside of football, Air Force didn’t have a single team with a winning record in conference play. Only one team (women’s tennis) had a winning record overall, but they were still 2-6 in conference. Their counterparts on the men’s team went winless in the MWC. Some other lowlights include baseball (19-36, 4-20), women’s basketball (9-22, 3-13), and women’s volleyball (4-25, 1-15). Of the teams that don’t generally compete in head-to-head competition, the cross country teams finished a respectable 3rd (men) and 4th (women) at the conference championship. The men’s indoor track team finished 2nd at the conference meet. That was the high water mark. The rest include swimming & diving (men 6th, women 9th), women’s indoor track (8th), outdoor track (men 3rd, women 8th), and golf (8th). (Keep in mind that only 6 MWC schools have men’s track & field programs). Putting these programs up against Big 12 competition would be one step short of a war crime.

The football team wouldn’t be in much better shape. They hold their own in the Mountain West, but they’ve had at least two conference losses every year since the league was formed (and even that they’ve only pulled off twice). Half the conference is mediocre to downright awful in any given year, which gives Air Force a built-in slate of winnable games. The service academies are even matchups (in theory), and they schedule a lousy I-AA program over parents’ weekend. That means there are only 3-4 games each season that are a genuine stretch. Their schedule sets them up for success, which is a good thing. That goes away if the team is playing a Big 12 schedule. Air Force doesn’t play a ton of BCS programs, but when they do, they usually don’t fare so well. Over the last 20 years, they’re 12-19 against BCS-caliber competition (including Notre Dame). For a service academy that isn’t bad at all;  joining the Big 12, though, means that they’ll be playing those teams almost every week. They won’t be any more successful. Think about it; all the service academies recruit Texas more than any other state. They get a ton of players from there, but they get them after Texas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech, Texas A&M, TCU, and most Big 12 schools have their pick. That isn’t going to change if Air Force joins the Big 12. You aren’t going to be competitive playing in a conference with players that almost everyone else in the conference passed on. What reason other than pep talk rah-rah would anyone have to think that Air Force, being a military school with strict admissions requirements, would do better in the Big 12 than Baylor has?

That leads to the most ironic part about this scenario: joining the Big 12 would actually make Air Force less likely to ever appear in a BCS bowl game. They would never come close to winning the conference, and if they can’t finish a season with less than two losses in the Mountain West then there’s no way they’re going to get an at-large bid out of the Big 12. Air Force isn’t going to win the Mountain West either, but at least the very thought of it isn’t completely insane. Army and Navy would also have a better chance at a BCS game than a Big 12 Air Force. With the scheduling control that comes from being independent, it’s a lot more likely for either of them to go undefeated and get a BCS at-large bid. You don’t need some ridiculous schedule, either. Marshall finished 12th in the BCS standings in 1999 playing a MAC schedule. Tulane finished 10th in 1998 against a slate that wasn’t much more daunting. Hawaii’s 2007 schedule included two I-AA teams, and they also finished 10th in the final BCS rankings. Under the current BCS selection criteria, that is enough to be eligible as an at-large selection. That isn’t a guarantee, but it’s a lot more likely than a service academy winning the Big 12.

Texas A&M has officially informed the Big 12 that they’re looking around. The speculation is only going to intensify. I can’t imagine that they’d seriously consider inviting Air Force, and I can only barely imagine Air Force accepting.

OK NATURE YOU WIN

Sorry about that hurricane post. Truce?

IT’S ALMOST HERE

It’s funny how bewildered some BYU writers

It’s funny how bewildered some BYU writers seem to be about the whole independent thing. “Wins and losses” should work:

Salt Lake Tribune

GTFO IRENE

I SWEAR IF I MISS ONE FREAKING SNAP OF EVEN THE MOST POS UMASS VS HOLY CROSS OR WHATEVER THURSDAY NIGHT GAME BECAUSE YOU BLEW OUT ALL OF JACKSONVILLE’S SATELLITE DISHES I WILL HUNT YOU DOWN AND CUT YOU, JOSE, KATIA, LEE, AND YOUR WHOLE FAMILY. NOBODY WILL BE SPARED, NOT EVEN THE DEPRESSIONS. GO BEAT THE PISS OUT OF BERMUDA LIKE YOU’RE SUPPOSED TO. THEY DON’T GIVE A CRAP ABOUT FOOTBALL.

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