Well Gameday is like the “pageantry” and “amateurism” of college football….As you get older you have this nostalgic perception of how things used to be… but you realize that they pretty much were always the same to begin with just with tweaks to the system. People complain about change and want to point to one instance that “ruined” the sport. I mean I listened to Josh Pate complain about the playoffs ruining major bowl games. I’m thinking to myself “have you actually seen some of these 2000-2013 BCS bowl games that no one wanted to go to? The only difference really is the opt outs and transfers in the playoff era.I don't have strong feelings on any of them. I don't watch much game day. I don't think I ever watch it start to finish but I do turn it on for the picks sometimes.
I think Pat is fine sometimes good sometimes a little much but whatever.
It would also be entertainingI have no problem with PMcA. He brought some life back to the show and has folks talking about it. That's his job. What I don't get is the guy who replaced Bear. A blind squirrel can make more correct picks.
(somber music plays with pictures of fallen leaves crossing a church yard)I heard that Rinaldi will be profiling D.A.Baxter in the coming weeks. Your name comes up frequently.
Pollock being canned was wonderfulFirst, I am definitely on the side of those who think Pat McAfee is a no talent butt clown. But as awful as he is, and he is awful, he's amazing compared to the laughing hyena Desmond Howard.
McAfee is at least entertaining in a "dude, I am so embarrassed for you" way. Howard is just horrible. He has a voice made for newspaper and a knowledge of the game that appears to be near zero. Why they kept him and let Pollock go, I have no idea. But they need someone else like Herbstreit to balance off the clowning of McAfee.
I’ll never forget Rinaldi after being let go goes to Fox NFL and has to cover the postgame trophy ceremony for the NFC Championship for the Bucs. He tries to ask Tom Brady ten billion questions and Tom interrupts him mid sentence and says “how about you get someone else up here”. Ronaldo’s face in disbelief was epic.(somber music plays with pictures of fallen leaves crossing a church yard)
He comes and goes like the wind. His appearance is rare and unannounced, almost like Deity.
Nobody has seen him, but everyone has heard about him. Is he a fan? Or an advocate?
I never understood why anyone cared that he was canned in the first place.Pollock being canned was wonderful
As they say, touchéYes, but you end up paying attention to both...
Yes and no.I mean I listened to Josh Pate complain about the playoffs ruining major bowl games. I’m thinking to myself “have you actually seen some of these 2000-2013 BCS bowl games that no one wanted to go to? The only difference really is the opt outs and transfers in the playoff era.
Bowls were meant to be rewards anyway for almost all teams that participated. They were never meant to be an extension of the season. Yes, they served that purpose for a few decades, but before and after that era, they are and were just rewards.Yes and no.
I agree the BCS funneled the bowl games into "less meaningful" than when you had the potential for 2-3-4 of them to play an outsized role in the championship vote. However, when you had the two teams in the final game, you still had a fantastic New Year's Day with the so-called "BCS" bowls that paired some interesting matchups. One thing that diluted that was the buyoff of the G5s by promising them one spot in the BCS bowls, ensuring an Oklahoma plays a Boise State.
The expansion to four teams, however, had a much more major effect because:
a) you took two bowl games away from the teams
b) you ensured any team not selected was going to finish 5th or worse (virtually)
c) it closed off the route of the 2003 USC team and a split title
You're not wrong in the abstract, the dilution was much more gradual than folks want to admit and definitely there, but it's also correct that anything below the NY6 was ho hum and TV filler, too. In essence, the advance to the BCS diluted all the lower bowls (of which they kept adding more, enhancing the dilution), and the advance to the CFP turned all non-CFP bowls into entirely diluted products void of meaning even to the teams in them.
I didn't care until his disrespect of CNS during the UGA TCU game.I never understood why anyone cared that he was canned in the first place.
I hope I see him picking up cans on the side of the road. Yes he’s a former UGA player but the way he disrespected CNS on set last year was just ridiculous.Pollock being canned was wonderful
Correct.Bowls were meant to be rewards anyway for almost all teams that participated. They were never meant to be an extension of the season. Yes, they served that purpose for a few decades, but before and after that era, they are and were just rewards.
I wonder if he was trying to be edgy and it backfired big time?I didn't care until his disrespect of CNS during the UGA TCU game.
But here is what I’m getting at. Everyone wants to say “the NY6 bowls don’t matter” well how much did the non national championship BCS bowls really matter either. I mean how many times did major powers like Oklahoma and Florida get screwed by playing UConn and Boise in them? How many times were Miami and ND just boatraced in them and constantly hyped up the next year like it never happened. And how many times did you have teams like 2004 Auburn,2008 Alabama, and 2013 Alabama who clearly didn’t want to be there and either got beat by a far inferior team or toyed around in a widely boring game?Yes and no.
I agree the BCS funneled the bowl games into "less meaningful" than when you had the potential for 2-3-4 of them to play an outsized role in the championship vote. However, when you had the two teams in the final game, you still had a fantastic New Year's Day with the so-called "BCS" bowls that paired some interesting matchups. One thing that diluted that was the buyoff of the G5s by promising them one spot in the BCS bowls, ensuring an Oklahoma plays a Boise State.
The expansion to four teams, however, had a much more major effect because:
a) you took two bowl games away from the teams
b) you ensured any team not selected was going to finish 5th or worse (virtually)
c) it closed off the route of the 2003 USC team and a split title
You're not wrong in the abstract, the dilution was much more gradual than folks want to admit and definitely there, but it's also correct that anything below the NY6 was ho hum and TV filler, too. In essence, the advance to the BCS diluted all the lower bowls (of which they kept adding more, enhancing the dilution), and the advance to the CFP turned all non-CFP bowls into entirely diluted products void of meaning even to the teams in them.
I think you nailed it. I believe he was trying to be edgy and get people talking and instead it came off as disrespectful.I wonder if he was trying to be edgy and it backfired big time?
Contrast his disrespect of Coach Saban with how Pat Macafee does respect Saban. That is one reason I like Macafee.
And if you put some Gold Bond on them they go away.Yes, but you end up paying attention to both...
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