Irish in SEC country
Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2013
- Messages
- 106
Irish - you have a short memory. So the ACC is #3 this year, they were #6 behind the Big East at portions last year. What you are seeing is a aberration not the norm. Over the past 10 years how many years has the ACC been better than the BIG? Right, 2013 is the only year. You are basing your assumption on the fact one years results show a larger trend. Show me 3-4 years of sustained ACC dominance and you may have a point, but as of now, the ACC is still the Atlantic Choke until they prove otherwise.
So Florida produces a ton of talent, yes, but so does Ohio and Pennsylvania. New Jersey and Maryland are on the rise too.
The cloud of probation will always be with Miami, its part of who they are. They have been on probation for one thing or another 3-4 times since the late 80's. They got off lightly now because the NCAA screwed up the investigation.
Ultimately, your argument is equivalent to someone pushing the stock on Pets.com before the bubble burst. Look the ACC is on the rise, we look good in the press but has not really done anything on paper and ultimately has no results.
The argument for the Big 10 is that it may not be the #1 conference right now or even the #2 conference but over the last 10-15 years has consistently ranked in the top 3 conferences in America. The acc over that same horizon has ranked as he 5th best conference. Even in a year where they are up and the next big thing, they behind the SEC and PAC.
Again, when the ACC does something worth noting, let me know and I will take notice, Until then, your argument is weak.
So which long term Big Ten football results are you touting? 2 national titles over the past 40 years? Is that the Big Ten gridiron excellence that boggles your mind?
If I didn't have a soft spot for Texas, your nonsense, which sounds like the garbage vomited repeatedly by various Big Ten fans, would be something I would like to see come to fruition. I would like to see Texas join the Big Ten, because within 20 years of making that move, Texas would be the rather definite #2 football program in TX behind TAMU.
The reason it would happen is that the SEC is exciting to the Nth degree while the Big Ten is bland defined. If the Longorns get tied to the midwest while the Aggies are tied to the southeast, the Aggies win huge over time.
Your lack of knowledge is amazing. For one thing, GA produces more football talent than OH and PA combined, and FL almost doubles GA. NC and VA each produce more than PA. The major talent is in the southeast, Texas, and California. OH and NJ are fine, but per capita both produce less than Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi.
The problem for the ACC in securing that talent that the SEC does not have is the smaller schools, most of them private. But as NFL rosters show, the ACC already holds its own in sending players to the NFL. And that is before the ND factor kicks in.
Yes, I have faith in what ND brings to the table. So does the Big Ten, which is so scared of what ND playing just 5 ACC games per year will mean to both ND and ACC football that it made a wild attempt to destabilize the ACC by taking Maryland.
10 years from now, I hope I remember to remind you and this board of your views.