And that isn’t why they went to the rose bowlPurdue beat the other two that year.
They went to the rose bowl because Michigan and northwestern both had more recently
And that isn’t why they went to the rose bowlPurdue beat the other two that year.
Link?And that isn’t why they went to the rose bowl
They went to the rose bowl because Michigan and northwestern both had more recently
And that isn’t why they went to the rose bowl
They went to the rose bowl because Michigan and northwestern both had more recently
Link? That’s literally how the rose bowl north was decided for decadesLink?
Regardless, I already conceded that there would be a couple exceptions. Doesn't really matter
there were literally years where a vote by conference presidents sent a team. If you think it was historically by record and tiebreaks, you’re mistakenUntrue. Purdue won the head-to-head tiebreaker that year against the other two.
About the only time the "who hadn't been there last" scenario was used was when team(s) tied but had no concrete head-to-head result, or some teams didn't play head-to-head.
Agree. It's something someone would do out of their garage. Not professional at all. I like Pat from back in '19, but that guy and his sidekick hurling insults that way is just a horrible way to live a life.As to the original post here, that is some lame sports talk. Dropping F bombs and throwing insults is not clever or entertaining. I don't know much about McAfee other than he was has generally been a PJ Fleck fan over the years. That segment was strange all the way around. Is that Iowa dipshit a co-host, or was he just a guest on the show that particular day? What is his role on the show?
there were literally years where a vote by conference presidents sent a team. If you think it was historically by record and tiebreaks, you’re mistaken
Link? That’s literally how the rose bowl north was decided for decades
I have no idea what year it changed to what. Pre BCS which is 99 or 98? It was decided all kinds of ways. At various times there have been various rules that were completely arbitrary.I know the history of the Rose Bowl, trust me. First off, Big Ten teams didn't start going to the Rose Bowl on an annual basis until 1947. Since then, in most years, yes, the Big Ten Rose Bowl rep was based on conference champion, record, and head to head tiebreakers. That is especially true after 1972, when they dropped the rule that there would be no repeat teams, which had been in place for a few years prior. That rule came into play for the Gophers in 1967.
There have been years where the "last to not go" was used as a tiebreaker when there was no head-to-head result or three teams all beat other in a three-way tie, etc. There were a couple of years where presidents or ADs voted, but there were no clear head-to-head winner those years, either. But, almost always, head-to-head has determined who goes to the Rose Bowl in case of ties or co-championships. In other words, the "last no to go" or when presidents or ADs votes, came in years where there was no head-to-head result, or a three-way tied resulted in everyone beating everyone. So, no, I'm not mistaken.
And, to the specific point, the 2000 season, head-to-head was used for Purdue to go to the 2001 Rose Bowl.
What do you mean the Rose Bowl north? How was it decided for decades? He was specifically asking for a link showing Purdue was awarded the 2001 Rose Bowl based on the fact they were the last to not play in the game, which was your claim. And, I'm quite sure that you will find no such link, because that was not why they got the bid.
I have no idea what year it changed to what. Pre BCS which is 99 or 98? It was decided all kinds of ways. At various times there have been various rules that were completely arbitrary.
For a time it was decided by presidents vote
For a time there was a rule against a team going back to back years.
I was responding to a post saying it was always decided by normal tiebreaker rules so he only recognizes titles of teams who go to the rose bowl. I could be wrong about Purdue in 2000.
The no repeats rule superseded head to head AND conference record when 6-1 Purdue went to the 1967 Rose Bowl over 7-0 Michigan state and the loss Purdue has was to Michigan stateAll of that is true. However, NONE of that superseded conference record and/or head-to-head.
It was only decided by presidents vote (1973) or AD vote (1967) when there was no clear head-to-head. Not yearly, not even close.
It has almost always been decided by normal tiebreaker rules. The rules that you are citing only came into play if the normal tiebreaker rules could not determine a Rose Bowl bid.
Because of one time?So to say none of that superseded conference record is just flat wrong
I mean when someone makes sweeping statements like “never” and it isn’t true, it is wrongBecause of one time?
Relax, my friend.
The no repeats rule superseded head to head AND conference record when 6-1 Purdue went to the 1967 Rose Bowl over 7-0 Michigan state and the loss Purdue has was to Michigan state
So to say none of that superseded conference record is just flat wrong
Are you aware of what gophers4_life and I were talking about?I acknowledged that, there was a no repeat rule for about 7 years in the late 60s and early 70s. Yes.
There was a stretch of the 1960s where teams could not go back-to-back years. That came after Minnesota went in both 1961 and 1962. That rule was eliminated in 1972.
Ohio state winning the tiebreak in 96 over northwestern without playing them is relevant to the conversation.
Indiana going in 67 because Purdue went in 66 and Minnesota went in 60 is relevant to the conversation.
Are you aware of what gophers4_life and I were talking about?
Because that’s pretty important in the context of what we are talking about.
Ohio state winning the tiebreak in 96 over northwestern without playing them is relevant to the conversation.
Indiana going in 67 because Purdue went in 66 and Minnesota went in 60 is relevant to the conversation.
The gophers would have goneThe 1967 season was an interesting one. Purdue, Indiana, and Minnesota all tie. All had beaten each other. Purdue went the previous year so they were eliminated. That left Minnesota and Indiana fighting for the bid. Minnesota killed Indiana in the regular season, but head-to-head didn't factor in. So, the Big Ten ADs voted and chose Indiana to go, as they had never been to the Rose Bowl.
Oddly enough, had Purdue just beaten Indiana on the final Saturday of the regular season, the Boilers would have been all alone in first, Minnesota all alone in second, and Indiana would have been third. The Gopher would have gone.
back to the original point of the thread -
this continues to amuse me.
When Fleck was hired, one of his first comments was "I'm not for everyone." Fleck said that up front. He understands that some people are not going to like his style.
and yet, when people criticize Fleck's style, his defenders jump up to object.