
FanHouse is counting down the ten best, ten worst, and ten weirdest moments in the history of Big Ten football.
Oh, like you didn't know this was coming. Come on. How could the single most disastrous game in the history of the conference not be the next item on this list?
You know the particulars already. Michigan was #5 in the country; Appalachian State was supposedly just another
The day after, the Grave Dancers Union got a record number of applications for membership. "Overrated!" "End of an era!" "Fire Lloyd Carr!" Gosh, it's hard to argue with people when they're right.
My concern, though, is not with what this game meant to Michigan. My concern is with what this game meant to college football in general.
Though I am but a lone voice crying out in the wilderness, I'm convinced that good Division I-A Football Bowl Subdivision teams have no business slumming among the Not Ready For Prime Time Players. Competition creates competitors. The teams with the toughest schedules usually seem to be in the mix at the end of the year, while the teams that spend September snacking on cupcakes invariably spend November puking pastry all over their pants. Heading into last season, I decided that I would no longer pick these silly slumlord games in Pickin' On the Big Ten. That policy lasted all of one week, thanks to this game.
Spare me your "any given Saturday" pieties. Appy State was known to be a rock-solid program. Most of the big boys don't pick the top-notch FCS teams for their exhibition games. They pick overmatched teams willing to come to the Great Big Stadium and play dead for three hours in exchange for a large check which almost certainly won't bounce. The big-timers get a win that, inexplicably, counts towards bowl eligibility. Some teams (I'm looking at you, Illinois) even have the temerity to schedule two of these stinkwad games, meaning the Illini could go 4-6 against real competition and still make it to a bowl game.
And now, thanks partly to Appalachian State's once-in-a-lifetime performance and partly to Michigan's early-2007 incompetence, these games are less ridiculous than they should be. "You never know," says the fan. "Remember Appalachian State?"
Fine. I promise to remember Appy State, just as long as you promise to remember, when you're watching your team's third-string quarterback light up Eastern Delaware's secondary, or you're watching a true-freshman defensive end dominate a Saint Appolonia tackle who is four inches shorter and 80 pounds lighter, that your team could be proving something today, but isn't.




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
5-14-2008 @ 2:48PM
Jeff said...
Not to nitpick, but only one I-AA game can count towards bowl eligibility, so the Illini would have to go 5-5 at least to make a bowl.
Reply
5-14-2008 @ 3:27PM
Mark Hasty said...
Well, at least they kept that rule, Jeff. I still think it's pretty weak that Illinois is playing two I-AA teams this season.
(If you can't guess, I don't think I-AA wins should count at all.)
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5-14-2008 @ 6:34PM
Joe said...
I hate to nit pick, but in fact Illinois is only playing 1 opponent from 1AA this year, Eastern Illinois. Louisiana Lafayette is a Div 1A, or FBS whatever it is called now, and a member of the Sun Belt Conference. I am a fan of Illinois and am in no way apologizing for the schedule, but I dont want people to think we would have sunk that far. Our non conference sched is bad, but not that bad!
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5-14-2008 @ 6:35PM
Mark Hasty said...
*I* hate to nitpick, Joe, but Illinois is playing Eastern Illinois on Sept. 6 and Western Illinois on Nov. 8.
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5-14-2008 @ 7:34PM
Joe said...
no, we are playing western michigan on nov 8. which is a MAC team.
http://fightingillini.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/sched/ill-m-footbl-sched.html
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5-14-2008 @ 7:36PM
Mark Hasty said...
Okay, you might want to tell these guys:
http://goldfan.com/bigten_football_schedule.shtml
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