Why do powerhouse college football teams schedule cupcakes if they are SO good?

Aren’t уου tired οf powerhouse college football teams scheduling cupcakes јυѕt ѕο thеу саn mаkе sure thеу gеt іn a BCS game? If thеу аrе ѕο ехсеllеnt, whу don’t thеу prove іt bу having a strong out οf conference schedule? Whο еlѕе hаѕ disgust fοr thіѕ way οf scheduling іn college football?

8 Comments

  • Earle of Bruce says:

    They don’t get a preseason like the pros, so I don’t mind teams that schedule a couple of cupcakes. It’s when they refuse to play even one tough game out of conference that I get annoyed.

  • Mike K says:

    $$$
    Getting that cash money for scheduling cupcakes.
    Also, no huge team like Ohio State is gonna schedule out of conference games against teams like Texas or USC (University of Disfigured Children) or Florida because both teams know the penalty of losing. And neither team wants to take that risk. Kinda wimpy if you question me, but hey, that’s why I’m just a fan and they’re on the sidelines on Saturdays.

    Also, to mark on the BYU/Oklahoma game. Excellent for BYU, but it’s too terrible they’ll never sniff a national championship hope. They better wish that every BCS conference team finishes with 2 losses.

    That’s been scheduled far in advanced even if, at least 2 years in advanced. If you take a look at wikipedia and their NCAA football schedule, you’ll see that there are games scheduled for the 2011 season already. I’m sure both programs knew they would be excellent, but I’m sure they didn’t envision this huge of a game.

  • ramswo85™ says:

    they do it so that they can build confidence into their team. a perfect example is Oklahoma. they lose and their confidence sky rockets down. In college its all about momentum, and u can’t build that by playing a top 25 team evry week and expect to win evry time

  • The Dude Incarnate says:

    You’re really right dude, but it’s us fans who are also guilty. We continue to pay for tickets to mind Florida beat Small Sisters of Mercy by 70 points and then we go around and brag about how fantastic the team is (and base rankings on it???). If we stop buying tickets maybe they’d change, but that’s not likely.

    One way to partially solve the problem would be at least to make them play teams in their own division (like no Division IAA opponents, or whatever the screwed-up NCAA calls that division now.

  • 1-0 says:

    I don’t reckon it’s that huge of a deal. And every powerhouse team does it. It’s not like it’s just a few teams or one conference in particular…every single “Huge 6″ team schedules these games, so in that way it’s kind of honest. And if a team were to play too many cupcakes and make it to a BCS bowl, they would likely lose to the other team that played better teams, thus the whole situation works itself out anyway. Not to mention that “might of schedule” is one of the 3 major seminal factors is making the weekly AP rankings & bowl selections…

  • deacon_frost06 says:

    dude.. try playing 9 games vs SEC teams then 3 other games vs other teams with an 85 player limit and see how long you can go before depth kills you

    and while u may not like it.. it’s excellent for college football as a whole.. see when Jackson State took on Miss State and got romped.. the Jackson state program took home a $600,000.00 paycheck

  • Way Smarter Than You says:

    The small answer in most cases is money. Schools make huge bucks for each home game. The more home games they play the more money they make. The more trying the opponent the more likely it becomes that the opponent will require a home and home arrangement. Scheudling is about two things: revenue and recruiting. Those two factors are doubtless the main consideration in 90% or more of all scheduling decisions.

    Frankly, I find it comforting. If Michigan doesn’t schedule App State we never have that kind of upset. Kids from small schools have an opportunity to make a huge play in front of 60K+ fans and get on Sports Center. Small schools get to earn money that essential for the survival of their program. It works out for best in my opinion.

  • Jeremy S says:

    Unlike basketball or baseball where one victory means a relatively small quantity to the entire season, just ONE single loss can ruin an entire season. This becomes an even larger problem when you schedule a semi decent team and come out flat. Losing that game can be extremely hard to recover from. So to battle this problem, as shown by this last weekend you see games where Florida is a 73 point game pet (in effect a preseason for the major programs).