A Trip Down Football's Memory Lane
Before
kicking off another season, let us take one last look at the season
past to remember the good times. And to put the bad ones to a dignified
end. Lessons of the past may be useful in preventing failures in the
future. Unfortunately, many of the schools that appeared in the 2006
FirstWorst Futility rankings seem destined to stay there.
There
are some perennial powerhouses that live among the FirstWorst. The Bleu
Devils of Duke know this place well. Although Army and Navy have a
fabulous record turning out people who can blow things up and take
things from other people, Army can rarely manage to produce more than a
3-and-out on the gridiron. Perhaps this is because their graduates are
expected to achieve things and so the best high school recruits go
elsewhere. The Army Mules are still trying to convince each other that
a victory over Kent State counts as a win.
Losers deserve
respect. Without them, Nebraska’s Cornhucksters would have no schedule.
Eastern, Western, Southern, Central, Lower and Upper Michigans would
have no way to fund their sports programs. Troy State (who?) financed a
good chunk of its athletic budget by sending eleven poor sods to
Lincoln in September to bend over for a 56-0 pasting by the Big Red.
Nebraska charged admission for this. Big Red fans actually paid.
Being
cannon fodder by playing against a top school has its rewards, although
winning isn’t usually among them. The Sage acknowledges that although
Montana State’s Bobcats whipped up on the Colorado B’lows in their
season opener in Boulder, most underdog schools grit their teeth, take
the beating and the paycheck. The underdog players and coaches, though,
need to question their self respect. Still, the Sage bets that Montana
State had fewer players arrested in the offseason than did CU – unless
you can get arrested for shooting rabbits in Bozeman.
Losers
deserve respect because they may not always be among the best of the
worst. The Sage will miss Rutgers. The Knights destroyed years of
school tradition last year by sinking to a dismal 11-2 record. The
campus still hasn’t recovered. The monkey wrench the Knights threw into
predictions at the start of last year has prognosticators twirling
their Cross pens wondering how they got it so wrong. And now
sportswriters from CA have to learn to spell ‘Piscataway.’ By building
a legitimate program, Rutgers has failed fans nationwide and has
relegated their program to respectability. A worse fate the Sage cannot
imagine.
Losers have their place in this world. They balance
everything. The Sage loves finding tidbits of wisdom and irony in
losing football. To these small bits of fun, this column is officially
dedicated.
Presented here are the original picks for the ten
worst of College Football. Before proceeding, the Sage points out that
this list: · Is devoid of any scientific process · Focuses on but is
not limited to BCS teams · Is developed completely at the whim of the
Sage of College Football · May contain inappropriate references for
underaged readers · May require literate adults to explain the finer
points to children or people who paid to see Troy State play Nebraska ·
Might not have anything to do with an actual football game
Number One - The Poor Blew Devils of Duke
This
one is a no-brainer. Basketball schools shouldn’t attempt football;
dunking the ball over the goal posts doesn’t score any points. Besides,
that ball bounces funny. The BDs rose to lofty status of number one on
the FirstWorst list by virtue of it’s sparkling 0-12 record last
season. Capped by a season finale loss to rival powerhouse North
Carolina, the Bleu Devils stole defeat from the jaws of defeat by
coming back to have an extra point blocked late in the fourth quarter
to seal the one-point loss. This solid record and the strong finish
sets up the Duke coach – whomever loses and gets the job. - for another
splendid recruiting season.
Included in the head coach job
description is: “Study, evaluate and recommend innovations in football
strategy and equipment. Required Qualifications at this Level:
Education/Training N/A”
At least the University is realistic. The
Sage wonders if it is possible to produce a winner by designing new
pants. In any event, the University capped it’s celebration of the
perfect season by adding new stadium parking for over 500 cars. The
occupants of said vehicles can anticipate another spectacularly futile
season.
2- Temple Owls
After coasting through
their challenging schedule, facing down and losing to teams such as
Buffalo (not the Bills) in which neither team scored a touchdown, the
Owls fought hard to close the season with a five game losing streak,
including losses to Toledo and Akron. The pitiful Owls also had to play
Ohio State and survived by losing 35 -7. That seven points were scored
in Temple’s favor was cause for celebration. Pennsylvania produces
hundreds of star high school recruits each year. Unfortunately for
Temple, they all choose other schools.
3-Illinois
The
forces that be in Chambana recently declared a second “St. Patrick’s
Day.” When Spring Break coincided with alcohol’s holy day, the local
bars let out a howl that they were losing business with students
soaking up suds in Florida. So to prop up local barkeeps, the
university introduced a second St. Patrick’s Day celebration. It is
this kind of visionary leadership that has earned Illinois third place
in the FirstWorst rankings. The (D)UI leadership also showed foresight
and strength in retiring Chief Illiniwek this off season. The
whimpering Illini then had an extra reason, as well as an extra day to
drown their sorrows in green beer consumed from Gatorade cups. The
orange and blue finished the 2006 season with wins against Eastern
Illinois (yes there is such a place and they do play football), and
were dealt an upset by winning at Michigan State. If the Illini can win
at home this year against a Big Ten school, the University has promised
to declare a third St. Patrick’s Day.
4-Army
It
pains the Sage to declare Army a member of the FirstWorst club. The
only “Shock and Awe” delivered by the Mules in 06 was that people kept
coming to see them. The Black ‘Nights’ of Army just can’t produce a win
against a quality team. Beating VMI, Kent State and Baylor doesn’t
qualify as a stellar season. The Sage wishes Army the best this year,
but the brass at West Point may have to call in close air support to
complete a pass. We’ll see if Air Force can help out.
5-Boise State
The
Sage can hear it now.. ‘How can a big time win in the Fiesta against OU
on New Years Day qualify a school for among the worst in College
Football? The simple reason is the hideous blue football field they
play on. Just because it is possible to create blue grass doesn’t mean
that it should be done. A quality team deserves to play in something
other than the Tidy Bowl. A blue football field doesn’t exist in nature
for a reason. The Sage doesn’t know what that reason is, but is sure it
is a good one. BS alums must be smoking something different in their
pipes before home games to make the thing look real. BSU showed that it
doesn’t need a blue field for any competitive advantage and can win in
a big-time game. Lose the blue field!
6-Oregon
A
team called the Fighting Ducks should find it’s way onto the FirstWorst
list. But that isn’t the reason for the Ducks inclusion this year.
Oregon puts a good team on it’s two-toned field, but each year, it
displays an incredible lack of taste in putting its team in – properly
descriptive wording eludes the Sage – those God-awful yellow uniforms
with tire tracks on the shoulders. The Ducks look like highlight pens
against green felt. The Psych Department TAs must have come up with
some kind of experiment to see if a football team so awfully clad, can
generate a competitive advantage. The Sage thinks that a state where
the other University is called the Beavers, would insist on putting a
team on the field that could look as good as it’s record. Frequently,
the Ducks appear looking like cheap office supplies.
7-North Carolina
The
aforementioned Bleu Devils of Duke nearly caused the Heels to re-think
appearing in those baby blue uniforms last year. NC couldn’t pull off
the loss in it’s season ending game against the Duke, but made it close
enough to earn a place in the FirstWorst list. Blocking an extra point
in the closing minutes against the Dukers blew the Heels’ chance at a
top five finish. Perhaps Duke and NC should play football on the
basketball court. How can two southern schools have such poor football
programs?
8-Colorado
The Buffalos of Colorado
started last season strong at home with a solid loss to the Division II
Bobcats of Montana State. Then the B’low’s season went quickly
downhill. CU was in contention for a top tier finish and had a real
shot at number one in the FirstWorst rankings before falling from form
and failing to lose to conference foes Texas Tech and Iowa State.
Former Boise State coach Dan Hawkins is going to dye the Folsom Field
grass pink in 2007 to go with the red noses of those in the CU student
section.
8-Stanford
The Stanford ‘Cardinal’
nickname was declared after school admin-types threw out the “Indians”
moniker in 1972. At least “Indians” was plural and implied that there
would be more than one person on the football field clad in red. (Yes,
the Sage acknowledges that “Cardinal” is technically plural, but
without an ‘s,’ the ghosts of college football tradition have abandoned
the kids from Stanford and cast their curse upon the red eggheads.)
Although
producing some good teams in the past, Stanford is a perennial favorite
in the losers bracket. The school is still best known for sending its
band onto the field to stop a Cal kickoff return in ‘82. Even that
failed and Stanford went on to record history’s greatest final-play
loss. The 2006 season produced a single win against PAC-10 foe
Washington. Stanford has always had trouble finding people who can pass
for first downs as well as pass the entrance exam. The plan for 07 is
to multi task the tuba players into playing offensive line between
tunes.
9, 10 and more-The Western Pathetic Conference
If
losers all play each other in the same conference, some will come out
winners. The boys that play home games in the toilet bowl in Boise
turned in a respectable season. The rest of the conference is
successful at losing. Four WAC teams combined for a whopping total of
seven conference wins in 2006. The Sage can only imagine the WAC
Skywriters Tour in July, starting in Hawaii, followed by visits to
garden spots such as Boise, Louisiana Tech, Fresno and Las Cruces, NM.
Hawaii, despite it’s winning record deserves honorable mention.. any
team named the Rainbow Warriors qualifies. Imagine being assigned to
cover the New Mexico State – Idaho game. The Sage shudders.
The
Sage wishes these schools the best of fortune in 2007. Check
http://firstworst.com weekly for wit and wisdom from the Scholarly Sage
as well as updates to the FirstWorst College Football Futility Rankings.