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  • Sounds like home games are basically off the table as are 6+ team models that have 3 rounds of playoffs. It'll be a 4-team playoff, sounds like they are just working on particulars.

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    • All of the Boise State fans who think that a playoff is going to solve everything are going to be really disappointed when they still don't get into a 4-team tournament.

      We'll be having this discussion again very soon, regardless of how long they plan on having this system.

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      • If they play a Big East type schedule, they'll need to beat a top 10 team or two if they want to play for the NT.

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        • I still say top 4 conference champions + semifinal on-campus sites.
          Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
          Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.

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          • Temple expected to be joining the Big East for 2012

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            • Originally posted by Dr. Strangelove View Post
              Temple expected to be joining the Big East for 2012
              every league or conference- no matter how weak - needs a doormat.

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              • Thing is, with the new Big East, Temple will be far from a doormat. In basketball or football.

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                • Missouri is getting sick of getting mistaken for Michigan and might change their logo from their block M.

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                  • They should be flattered.

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                    • Who the hell makes that mistake?

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                      • Originally posted by Mike View Post
                        Who the hell makes that mistake?
                        Jerrell Worthy?

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                        • Their block M is identical to M's, just a color difference... Not sure if true but I heard Missouri actually used it first but they pay M royalties to use it as M copyrighted it.

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                          • Royalties? That's hilarious. It's stupid but I love it.

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                            • If I understood this right, the University of Michigan pays royalties to its own athletic department in order to use it. I wonder if this is why there is so much small-scale variety in the block Ms on various things and vehicles around town.

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                              • After looking at the non-conference schedules found in the SEC, let’s turn our attention to the Big Ten, where every school but one, Nebraska, has filled out its dance card for the coming season. The Cornhuskers are close: three games down, one to go. And considering how Nebraska’s scheduled trio of games look, there’s little doubt that the program will look to fill that open date with the easiest, most cupcake-like opponent available on that particular Saturday — that would be Sept. 22, by the way, if you’re a lower-level program looking to plop a six-figure check in the school coffers. And the F.C.S. is certainly in the conversation: Nebraska has played one such school in each of the last two years after not doing so from 2007-9.

                                You’ll see a number of differences between the Big Ten’s non-conference schedule and that of the SEC, with the primary difference coming in the simplest way possible: it’s tougher. It’s more difficult, with far more road games, more B.C.S. conference competition and fewer cupcakes — though I suppose that the latter qualification lies in the eye of the beholder.

                                The MAC isn’t a great league, but it certainly trumps the Sun Belt, where the SEC typically dives in with both feet to fill its non-conference slate. And the MAC’s presence is felt throughout the Big Ten’s non-conference schedule, as it is every year, particularly with Big Ten programs who share a state’s borders with one of the MAC’s 14 programs.

                                Keep three important notes about the SEC’s schedule in mind: one, that the conference as a whole will play 13 road games altogether, 10 of which are true road games, not games played at a neutral site; two, that the SEC will play nine games against Sun Belt competition; and three, that on Nov. 17, the league will play more than twice as many games against F.C.S. competition, seven, as it does actual conference games, three.

                                More notes on the Big Ten’s non-conference schedule, along with a few comparisons to what the SEC will feature this fall, after the list:

                                Illinois
                                9/1 Western Michigan
                                9/8 at Arizona State
                                9/15 Charleston Southern
                                9/22 Louisiana Tech

                                Indiana
                                9/1 Indiana State
                                9/8 at Massachusetts (at Gillette Stadium)
                                9/15 Ball State
                                10/20 at Navy

                                Iowa
                                9/1 vs. Northern Illinois (at Soldier Field)
                                9/8 Iowa State
                                9/15 Northern Iowa
                                9/22 Central Michigan

                                Michigan
                                9/1 vs. Alabama (at Cowboys Stadium)
                                9/8 Air Force
                                9/15 Massachusetts
                                9/22 at Notre Dame

                                Michigan State
                                8/31 Boise State
                                9/8 at Central Michigan
                                9/15 Notre Dame
                                9/22 Eastern Michigan

                                Minnesota
                                8/30 at U.N.L.V.
                                9/8 New Hampshire
                                9/15 Western Michigan
                                9/22 Syracuse

                                Nebraska (one game T.B.A.)
                                9/1 Southern Mississippi
                                9/8 at U.C.L.A.
                                9/15 Arkansas State

                                Northwestern
                                9/1 at Syracuse
                                9/8 Vanderbilt
                                9/15 Boston College
                                9/22 South Dakota

                                Ohio State
                                9/1 Miami (Ohio)
                                9/8 U.C.F.
                                9/15 California
                                9/22 U.A.B.

                                Penn State
                                9/1 Ohio
                                9/8 at Virginia
                                9/15 Navy
                                9/22 Temple

                                Purdue
                                9/1 Eastern Kentucky
                                9/8 at Notre Dame
                                9/15 Eastern Michigan
                                9/29 Marshall

                                Wisconsin
                                9/1 Northern Iowa
                                9/8 at Oregon State
                                9/15 Utah State
                                9/22 UTEP

                                The Big Ten has scheduled 47 of its 48 allotted non-conference games; it’s only a matter of time before Nebraska closes out its non-conference slate. As of today — and the Cornhuskers could skew this total — the Big Ten as a whole will play as many games against F.C.S. competition, seven, as the SEC has scheduled on Nov. 17 alone.

                                The Big Ten will play nearly as many non-home games against B.C.S. conference competition, including Notre Dame in this category, as the SEC will play true road games altogether. The Big Ten has eight such road games scheduled, a list that includes marquee dates like Nebraska traveling to U.C.L.A., Wisconsin to Oregon State and Penn State to Virginia.

                                In all, 14 of the 47 games currently scheduled come against B.C.S. conference competition. California travels to Columbus to take on Ohio State on Sept. 15. Each of Northwestern’s first three games come against B.C.S. conference foes: at Syracuse, home for Vanderbilt and home for Boston College. Indiana is the lone school that doesn’t take on any B.C.S. conference competition, though the Hoosiers do balance that out with two road games against teams from a non-B.C.S. conference. And as we know, Indiana could use some help.

                                Ohio State is the lone program to not play a game on the road outside of Big Ten play. This isn’t that common, believe it or not: the Buckeyes played at Miami (Fla.) last fall, for starters, and have played at least one non-home game in six of the last seven years, if we count a 2009 game against Toledo played in Cleveland.

                                In all, the Big Ten will play those 14 games against B.C.S. conference competition, with eight of those coming either on the road or at a neutral site — of the latter list, Michigan’s game against Alabama, at Cowboys Stadium, looks like the most highly-anticipated game of the season’s opening weekend. Another 12 games will come against the MAC, with two, Indiana’s trip to Massachusetts and Michigan State’s to Central Michigan, coming on the road.

                                Another 14 games come against other non-B.C.S. conference programs, with three coming on the road: Indiana goes to Navy on Oct. 20; Minnesota to U.N.L.V. on Aug. 30, a game recently moved up to Thursday from Saturday; and Iowa plays Northern Illinois at Chicago’s Soldier Field. And, as noted, there will be seven games played against F.C.S. competition.

                                Michigan seems the most likely to benefit from a beefed-up non-conference schedule, should push come to shove in the B.C.S. standings. If the Wolverines go undefeated — stay with me — against the Big Ten and also beat Alabama, Air Force and Notre Dame in September, there should be no team in the country with a stronger case for the B.C.S. title game.

                                And as a whole, the Big Ten’s entire non-conference schedule should put the league in a place to have more than one team making news in September, should everything go according to plan. That plan involves Michigan unseating Alabama on Sept. 1; Nebraska and Illinois doing the same to U.C.L.A. and Arizona State, respectively, a week later; and the Wolverines, Michigan State and Purdue taking care of business against Notre Dame.
                                Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

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