Boilermaker Rick wrote:
That isn't what I'm saying. You are creating a very narrow criteria based on a completely unsubstantiated criteria. Your point is basically "UCF had a two year run as a top team and therefore for the rest of time every school should want to play home and homes with them" when it just doesn't fit with the reality of how college scheduling goes and that UCF wasn't any more disrespected by the offer than the many other schools who were nationally elite and still have to accept that the financial implications of a 1 and 1 stop those scheduling.
I don't think pointing to UCF's actual status at the time of the offer is the least bit arbitrary or unsubstantiated. And at no point have I come anywhere close to suggesting some nonsense about "the rest of time."
Again, you're simultaneously trying to say UCF's status as a non-P5 school is extremely relevant and justifies practically any 2 for 1 deal a P5 school like Florida could ever make while waving away their actual ranking and recent track record as completely irrelevant and arbitrary.
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Florida offered them a chance to play them three times, one of which was at home. To turn that down because you feel you deserve to schedule on an equal level with a team that has 2 national titles in the last 15 years is unbelievable.
So Florida winning a title 10 years ago is extremely relevant and makes any negative assessment of their offer "unbelievable," but my bringing up UCF's actual position relative to Florida in the present is arbitrary and unfair. Got it.
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Boise State: Still having to sign 2 for 1 deals with Pac 12 schools even after being arguably the best Non-P5 program of all time.
Not with Washington State, Florida State, or Oregon State. Also at the height of their relevance during the Peterson era, they'd still get neutral site games against P5 schools and home and homes with places like Washington.
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TCU: Joined the Big 12 so similar to Utah that makes it tough.
Had a "neutral site" game in Arlington with Oregon State before they joined the Big 12. They likewise had secured a home and home with LSU before they joined the Big 12, but that was switched to a one shot deal at Cowboy Stadium too.
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WMU: They did get a home and home with Syracuse but otherwise they can't even get a P5 school to go there without a 2 for 1 and it is unlikely to change.
Their deal with Syracuse strikes me as more evidence for my position more than yours, particularly since Syracuse agreed to that 1 and 1 at the height of WMU's comparatively shorter period of success than UCF. Now if WMU had continued undefeated through the entirety of the regular season last year and was still getting hit with 2 for 1s, maybe you'd have a point.
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So, basically, outside of BYU, who kind of operates as like a poor mans Notre Dame of the West Coast, it isn't very often that a non-P5 who is really good at the time can demand top programs schedule them a 1 and 1. That's just the reality. Most Big Ten schools couldn't get a home and home with Florida either.
It seems to me then an obvious conclusion to draw could be that Florida is just full of crap when it comes to scheduling nonconference opponents, not that UCF was especially in the wrong for turning down the offer they did make. If anything, this entire exercise has simply reinforced my position that Florida's offer, however common it may be for P5 schools to throw around their weight, was not particularly fair at all.
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So, there I gave you a pretty good history of it, including many similar examples. I look forward to the reply of "Yeah, but none of those schools you mentioned are in the state of Florida!".
No if anything I believe Florida's offer was far too generous to UCF. They should have offered a 4 for 1 because Tim Tebow played for them and that's far more relevant than anything either school has done lately.