The Morning After: Alabama Outlasted Georgia, Wisconsin Smoked Nebraska, Stanford Just Getting Started
FBS football played its first playoff game. It was magnificent. This was not the “Game of the Century.” It was better. In the Alabama/LSU series the intensity resulted in a muted staring contest. Alabama vs. Georgia percolated into a dynamic rap battle. The line clashes were epic. The skill players showed on both sides. This game was passionate, well played and well coached. Unlike some Big 12 games, this was a true shootout, not merely a succession of blown coverages. We would claim the game lived up to the hype, but few expected it would be that competitive. Credit Georgia.
The Bulldogs entered the season with a forgiving schedule (Only .500 FBS wins were Florida and Vanderbilt). For much of the season, they played like it, letting inferior teams linger and run on them. We saw flashes – the Florida win and the second-half against Missouri, but seldom the comprehensive performance befitting a team with so much NFL talent on defense. On Saturday, they gave it.
Slowing down Alabama’s running game with that line may be impossible for a college defense, but with third-down stops Georgia did just enough to stay in the game. Todd Gurley muscled 122 yards against the nation’s No. 1 run defense. Aaron Murray made some great throws into good coverage. Had the Bulldogs clocked it and taken a deep breath with 15 seconds left, they might be headed to Miami.
Despite falling to 2-10 against Top 10 teams the past few seasons, Mark Richt, his staff and his players did not lose control of this game. Alabama was just a little bit better and a little bit more fortunate.
Bielema’s Revenge: Wisconsin was better than its 7-5 record. Losing five games by a combined six points, they had some frustration to vent. Nebraska was the unwitting victim. The Cornhuskers defense could neither plug gaps nor seal the edge. The offensive line could not protect Taylor Martinez. The result was 60 minutes of pure beat down. The Badgers carried the ball 50 times, running up 539 yards and nine touchdowns. Calling a running back pass to go up 42-10 in the first half was vintage Bielema. Nebraska managed little offense when it counted, besides an improbable Taylor Martinez touchdown run.
Wisconsin was the better team. They scored 70 to emphasize that point. Whatever questions Bo Pelini appeared to have answered will return right to the forefront.
The Badgers will go to their third-straight Rose Bowl. One might claim they gamed the system. In 2010, the Badgers lost to Michigan State but did so early, vaulting them ahead of Ohio State and Michigan State in the BCS rankings to win the tiebreaker. Michigan State would have won in such a format in 2011, but the Big Ten switched to a divisional alignment, permitting Wisconsin a second chance at them. This year, the Badgers would have finished sixth in a single table conference, but won the title game bid with Ohio State and Penn State ineligible and seized the opportunity.
Sending an 8-5 Wisconsin to the Rose Bowl might be a fitting ending for a sorry Big Ten season. That said, the Badgers may be the Big Ten team with the best shot to take out Stanford.
Only the Beginning: We won’t say UCLA tanked in the final regular season game, though they showed far more Friday Night. After getting beaten up on both lines the first game, UCLA ran all over the nation’s best run defense. Jonathan Franklin had 194 yards and two touchdowns on 19 carries. Brett Hundley added another 83 and a touchdown on the ground. The Bruins also manned up on defense, limiting Stepfan Taylor to 3.3 per rush. It might have been enough for a win, had Stanford not outlasted them with a standout effort from Kevin Hogan.
How did the Cardinal fare without Andrew Luck? They reached the Rose Bowl. Had Kevin Hogan been playing the entire year, they might have won at Washington and Notre Dame to push them into the BCS Title Game. The scary thing is this was supposed to be the down year. Kevin Hogan is a freshman. The five-star offensive linemen they recruited in 2012 were freshmen. Some kid named Barry Sanders Jr. they recruited was redshirted. Shaw has inherited what Harbaugh built and is expanding it. The program may have a trifling number of fans, but, in the television revenue era, who cares?
Change is Needed: The SEC has embraced its title game. It produces the atmosphere one would anticipate finding at a major sporting event. The rest of these games stink. Stanford, playing a home game, had its lowest attendance since the 2010 opener for the Pac 12 title game. Nebraska and Wisconsin had little interest in travelling to Indy for the Big Ten game. The ACC was de facto giving away tickets and could not get fans in the seats.
We’re going to be stuck with them in the super conference era. How do we fix them? One method would be to move to an eight-team playoff with conference title auto bids. A playoff place at stake would be more enticing to fans than the prospect of a lame BCS bowl bid. Another would be for the other conferences to stop trying to emulate the SEC. The Pac 12 acknowledged reality and opted for home games, getting sort of screwed this year by the host venue being Stanford and the weather being bad. The ACC and the Big Ten might want to do the same.
In the Big Ten, atmosphere is what sustains the conference. You have some of the best home venues in college football, not to mention some of the best NFL venues and you play your title game in front of an empty crowd in the Lucas Oil Climate-Controlled Dome?
So Close: The BCS Busted Orange Bowl between Kent State and Georgia Tech almost happened. The Golden Flashes lost the MAC Title Game 44-37 in overtime. Florida State, in now classic Jimbo Fisher fashion, came close to coughing up a lead against overmatched Yellow Jackets in a 21-15 win. There is still a chance a Dave Doeren-less Northern Illinois sneaks into the BCS ahead of Oklahoma, but it woudn’t be the same.
Decided Schematic Advantage: It gets repeated often, but the sheer arrogance of that claim remains unappreciated. Playing Kansas proved a panacea for West Virginia, who found their early season form in a 59-10 win. Geno Smith completed 23/24 for 404 yards and three touchdowns. Dayne Crist entered his final college game and went 1/5 with a pick.
[Photos via Presswire]

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26 Responses to “The Morning After: Alabama Outlasted Georgia, Wisconsin Smoked Nebraska, Stanford Just Getting Started”
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December 2nd, 2012 at 11:36 AM
The scary thing is this was supposed to be the down year. Kevin Hogan is a freshman. The five-star offensive linemen they recruited in 2012 were freshmen. Some kid named Barry Sanders Jr. they recruited was redshirted. Shaw has inherited what Harbaugh built and is expanding it.
Where have I heard this before?
December 2nd, 2012 at 11:44 AM
No they weren’t. It was Nebraska who was worse than its 10 wins, needing massive referee help to beat both MSU and PSU.
Looking forward to an embarrassing bowl season for Jimmy Delany.
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:13 PM
Cry about it, Richt.
/Unsuccessfully trying to think of decided schematic advantage fat joke
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:17 PM
Had Hogan been playing all season, is this team in the BCS Title Game instead the Irish? More scarily, this was supposed to be the down year. Quarterback Kevin Hogan is a freshman. The five-star offensive linemen they recruited in 2012 were freshmen. Some kid named Barry Sanders Jr. redshirted. David Shaw has inherited what Harbaugh built and is expanding it. The Cardinal might not have a huge fan base, but with television revenue that matters little.
How did the Cardinal fare without Andrew Luck? They reached the Rose Bowl. Had Kevin Hogan been playing the entire year, they might have won at Washington and Notre Dame to push them into the BCS Title Game. The scary thing is this was supposed to be the down year. Kevin Hogan is a freshman. The five-star offensive linemen they recruited in 2012 were freshmen. Some kid named Barry Sanders Jr. they recruited was redshirted. Shaw has inherited what Harbaugh built and is expanding it. The program may have a trifling number of fans, but, in the television revenue era, who cares?
What are you trying to say here, Duff?
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:18 PM
Very glad the moment of silence will not mention belcher
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:21 PM
Rewrote paragraph. Forgot to delete first one. Sorry. Fixed.
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:21 PM
Nobody cares. That’s the point.
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:25 PM
Anyone seen Killing Me Softly yet? Going tonight
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:25 PM
Stanford can only function as a strong program when SC is very, very down. Though I suppose that could be said of nearly any PAC12 program that doesn’t have Phil Knight buying them recruits on a national scale. UCLA, ASU, and UW have a tad more self-determination than the rest, but not much.
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:38 PM
Stanford can only function as a strong program when SC is very, very down.
This! … is not true. There is enough talent in the state for UCLA, USC, and Stanford to all be PAC contenders every year. Oregon and UW can also be strong, at the same time. Theoretically, so could Colorado.
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:49 PM
9 of Stanford’s 13 games were against teams that were ranked this year… 4 of Georgia’s were (that includes Tennessee).
fuck the SEC
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:52 PM
No. Stanford doesn’t get that many of their players from California. It is one of the few national recruiting programs, but they only have serious appeal when they can compete to win the PAC12, which can NEVER happen when SC has a legitimate coach in place. UCLA can compete at a respectable level, and I don’t dispute that. UW is one of the few naturally strong programs in conference as well. Oregon and Colorado however, are both dependent on having excellent coaches and weak programs in the out of state areas they recruit. Oregon now is a cheating anomaly.
December 2nd, 2012 at 12:55 PM
I should also say SC gets all the top players from Washington, Oregon, Arizona, Colorado, and of course California when they are up.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:03 PM
Oregon is operating in a different manner than they have historically. Phil Knight is the ultimate super-booster. They aren’t dependent on a weak anything anymore. Ever since Rich Brooks rode Dino Philyaw to a flukey Rose Bowl, Phil Knight has had it in his head that his alma mater, Nike U, has got to be a super-power. He spends on the facilities there like he’s a pro owner. There is no reason to think that will end any time soon.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:03 PM
So does NIU all depend on the computer polls and whatnot now?
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:07 PM
Stanford currently has 42 players on their roster from California.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:08 PM
Look where Florida and Norte Dame are now, Weis goes through you’re program and you’re an instant powerhouse. We’ve had our time with him, I think Colorado might buy him out for next season before sending him somewhere else…I’ll see you all at the title game next year.
/noticed a pattern
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:09 PM
That’s a low number. Compare it to SC, UCLA, and Cal.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:11 PM
I understand this. That isn’t a durable model though. The program will die with Knight.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:12 PM
Sweet jebus you’re right, USC has over 80 CA players.
And still fucking sucks though.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:12 PM
Oregon still won’t be able to compete with SC when SC is right. They don’t have the fan base, recruiting ground, history, location, quality of school, or quality of girl to do so.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:13 PM
Lane Kiffin. That is all.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:13 PM
Eugene isn’t surrounded by ghetto, though. Also has better drugs.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:14 PM
As soon as the Nike flow ends the NCAA takes Oregon out back and shoots it.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:17 PM
First part is true, second most certainly is not.
December 2nd, 2012 at 1:20 PM
All of Oregon’s shady financial and cannibolical advantages aside, agreed that when USC is off the scholarship reduction there is zero reason why they shouldn’t be a level above Oregon still.