Good Morning Generation

Yesterday was an early contender for the best sports day of 2012.  There was a fantastic amount of action to be consumed on television, whether it was the surprising amount of close bowl games, outdoor hockey, or even my new-found guiltiest pleasure in life—the free preview of NBA League Pass which lasts until January 8th.  I even slipped in a couple of replays of English Premier League soccer for good measure. 

As I sat there flipping furiously through the channels yesterday afternoon–somewhere in the time right before the Rose Bowl–it hit me.  This is a sports revelation that is going to blow your mind.  Read no further if you find yourself unwilling or unable to have your life philosophy completely altered.  Ready?

Sports are a hundred thousand times more enjoyable to watch when you have absolutely zero rooting interest in the games.

Who knew?

It struck me some time in between watching a Philadelphia Flyer earn, and eventually miss, a penalty shot with 19 seconds left in the Winter Classic and watching Mark Richt completely bungle a very winnable overtime against Michigan State.  I don’t know why I did it, but I tried to imagine putting myself in the shoes of a Rangers fan or a Flyers fan after that very questionable call and the sneaking suspicion that Gary Bettman had ordered it up David Stern-style.  And the ensuing nineteen seconds were no doubt among the longest any of those fans has experienced. It couldn’t have possibly been enjoyable to experience that stress.  And there I was, smiling on my couch without a single team going in any sport.  It was glorious.

Then there was the matter of Georgia intercepting a Michigan State pass to start overtime.  You know how this drill works.  Your team scores and the ball game is over.  You accomplish this by at least trying to get one first down to make life easier on your kicker.  Except Mark Richt apparently trusts his quarterback less than the Denver Broncos trust Tim Tebow to throw the football.  Georgia called for a run on first down, had their guy center the ball on second down, and then trotted out their kicker on third down to boot a 42-yarder for the win.  This kicker was 19 for 31 on the year.  He of course missed and Georgia would go on to lose the game in heart-breaking fashion in three overtimes when, and you’re never going to believe this, their kicker had his attempt blocked.  I would have died if I was a Georgia fan.  I would have immediately taken to facebook to slam Mark Richt and wonder about a season that should have been.  For those who have forgotten by now, Georgia was supposed to be a national championship contender this year.  Instead I laughed and flipped the channel.

Next up was the Rose Bowl where Wisconsin coach Bret Bielema extended his streak to two consecutive years of losing a Rose Bowl due to Andy Reid-like mental errors.  For those who may have forgot, Bielema wasted several time outs last year in the second half against TCU that ultimately cost them, but his biggest blunder by far came when he called for a pass on a two point conversion attempt that would have tied the game.  Wisconsin had been gaining at least six yards per attempt during the game against a smaller TCU defense that couldn’t handle the Badgers’ size.  Bielema promptly called for a pass that was blocked by TCU linebacker Tank Carder to win the game.  This year was no exception.  Bielema wasted two timeouts before five minutes had transpired in the third quarter, one of which was especially bad in trying to get the officials to review a touchback.  Well wouldn’t you know it, the Badgers could have used a couple of timeouts as they drove the field in the final minute of the game.  They ultimately lost when Wisconsin QB Russell Wilson couldn’t spike the ball in time with :02 remaining.  Once again, if I’m a Wisconsin fan I would have gone to bed all pissing and moaning about my head coach’s incompetence.  Instead I laughed again and waited for the Fiesta Bowl.

And finally there was the Fiesta Bowl, which put the cap on a day of questionable coaching decisions.  Let’s say your the head coach of a college football program.  Let’s say you find yourself in the Fiesta Bowl.  Let’s say you’re in overtime.  And finally let’s say you have the greatest talent at quarterback in the last fifteen years on your squad.  You let him go out there and win you the game, right?  Wrong!  If your Stanford coach David Shaw, you hand the ball off twice for no gain and then leave your all-universe QB hung out to dry on third down.  How do you not have Andrew Luck throwing there, at least on second down?  How do you not trust him to win you the game on a night in which he was 27/31?  Ridiculous, all of it.  But somehow it was enjoyable because again, I had no rooting interest.  I dwelled on the game for approximately zero seconds and read a book until I went to sleep.

This all may sound groundbreaking, or it might not.

I think I’m onto something though.

Generation Y, where I actually think the Broncos are going to win and would like to apologize in advance for the ESPN firestorm that will ensue as a result.

The BCS Backed Off The Threats To Eliminate The Fiesta Bowl Last Night

And it’s for exactly the reasons you would think.  Remember how one of the committee members I told you about yesterday had received a free cruise from the Orange Bowl?  It turns out another one of these “investigators” let the Fiesta Bowl pay his resort golf habit.  The committee is basically sticking the finger to the American public and the IRS, daring them to come after them.  Check out this remarkable arrogance, from the Arizona Republic (still doing the damn thang):

A top official of the Bowl Championship Series softened his stance Wednesday on expelling the Fiesta Bowl amid disclosure that he and other members of a BCS task force accepted gifts from the Fiesta and Orange bowls.

Bill Hancock, executive director of the coalition of college football’s top bowls, said in an interview that discussion of eliminating the Fiesta Bowl from the BCS was “way premature.” He called it “irresponsible” for media to speculate which bowls, if any, would replace the Fiesta Bowl in the four-bowl BCS.

Earlier, in reaction to an internal Fiesta Bowl report detailing misconduct by bowl executives, Hancock had told The Arizona Republic that “the BCS group takes this matter very seriously and will consider whether they (Fiesta Bowl) keep a BCS bowl game, and we will consider other appropriate sanctions.”

The BCS created the task force Tuesday to examine a 276-page report by Fiesta Bowl investigators detailing a culture of excessive spending on Fiesta Bowl employees, politicians and business associates. The BCS will review the report and decide whether and how to punish the Fiesta Bowl.

Its seven-member task force includes a member who for years let the Fiesta Bowl pay for his golf at a resort, and another who took a free Caribbean trip last year from the Orange Bowl, The Republic has learned.

In addition, Hancock said Wednesday that for at least five years, while attending Fiesta Frolic, he let the Fiesta Bowl cover his golf tab and accepted free gifts from Nike.

The Frolic is an annual, multiday spring gathering the bowl stages for college-football officials at a Phoenix resort.

Hancock called the Frolic, which costs the Fiesta Bowl several hundred thousand dollars a year, a “remarkable business opportunity” for college-football executives to network. However, the Fiesta Bowl Special Committee’s investigative report noted that it recently changed its name to Fiesta Bowl Spring College Football Seminars at the request of attendees “to make the event sound like less of a ‘boondoggle.’ “

Sweet Jesus.  The IRS and DOJ are watching this, right?  They’re going to go after a couple baseball players for taking some silly little steroid pills but they’re going to let these assholes in orange blazers compeltely neglect the tax code and hide behind their not-for-profit status?

[Arizona Republic]

Orange Bowl Official Who Accepted A Free Cruise As A Gift Is Among Those BCS Officials Investigating Fiesta Bowl Infractions

Jesus this day gets better and better.  Dan Wetzel for Yahoo! Sports has been on the forefront of taking down the BCS’s hypocrisies for years, even publishing a book about it all this past season.  To add to the NCAA’s embarrassment this morning, Wetzel dropped this bomb on them too!  There are big things going on, so glad Wetzel was able to join in on the party with another strategically aimed dagger to the NCAA’s heart.  From Yahoo! Sports:

The Bowl Championship Series is so troubled by the graft exposed in Tuesday’s Fiesta Bowl corruption report that it appointed a special “task force.” Among the members is an athletics director who accepted a free Caribbean cruise from the Orange Bowl just last summer.

Yes, there’s nothing like having a guy – in this case, Southern Mississippi’s Richard Giannini – who takes lavish gifts from one bowl game to judge another bowl game for giving out lavish gifts.

The obvious news from Tuesday’s 276-page Fiesta Bowl report is that longtime CEO John Junker was fired and is in major legal trouble, in part because of the eye-popping way his bowl game was run – $1,200 strip-joint bills tend to generate news interest. The real issue is that the BCS is doing what the Fiesta Bowl originally tried to do: conduct a shallow investigation and hope the party is allowed to rage on.

As a person who follows sports news religiously, I can freely attest that I have never witnessed anything like has happened today.  The NCAA is getting completely hammered from all angles and it’s like the journalism community today decided to fight back against the collective NCAA bully by bodyslamming them the way that fat kid did a couple weeks ago in the now famous video. 

Anxious to see where this goes.

[Yahoo! Sports]

The Fiesta Bowl Could Lose Non-Profit Status, BCS Role After Investigation Finds Major Violations By Employees

Good for the Arizona Republic for doing the damn thang on the Fiesta Bowl and exposing the hypocrisy of the BCS system.  I’ll give you the short details and a preview in here but this is another MUST READ report this morning and couldn’t have been timed any better with March Madness, the PBS report, and the HBO special tonight.  This particular investigation found that officials for the Fiesta Bowl seriously abused their non-profit status by using funds from the bowl to spend excessively (including strip club runs and lavish personal birthday parties), reimburse political donations (a big no no for non-profits), and several contract irregularities (huge deals were made that seemed to be cash payoffs to various individuals and organizations with close relations to the bowl and its employees).  From the Arizona Republic:

An investigation by the Fiesta Bowl has found evidence of potentially illegal employee conduct and spending irregularities that could jeopardize the bowl’s non-profit status and prestigious role in college football’s national-championship series.

As a result of the five-month internal probe released Tuesday, the bowl fired its longtime public face, CEO John Junker, and accepted the resignations of two other top bowl officers.

The 276-page report, commissioned by a Fiesta Bowl Special Committee in October, details a culture of excessive spending on bowl employees, politicians and business associates despite rules barring the bowl from using its money to benefit individuals; a system of campaign contributions that could run afoul of state and federal campaign laws; and accounts of efforts by bowl staffers to mislead government investigators.

Junker declined comment. However, his lawyer said the Fiesta Bowl had posted the report on its website before it had given a copy to Junker, and that Junker would not comment until reviewing the report in detail.

The big sham of college football right now is that all of the bowls do stuff like this and that’s the biggest reason we can’t get a damn playoff implemented.  There’s too many rich dudes who get to become the CEO of the “insert coporate sponsor here” Bowl and then get paid $800,000 to wear a funny colored blazer once a year.  This could be a tipping point towards eliminating the BCS.

That or the Cotton Bowl is about to enter the BCS rotation.

[Arizona Republic]