I did this last year, so it seems only fitting that I would do it again. And it wasn't even close. Louisville had five players drafted, while Pitt and West Virginia had three apiece. Rutgers, South Florida, Cincinnati, and Connecticut had two each. And for the first time since 1975, Syracuse did not have anyone selected.
That's 19 players drafted. And any way I slice it, that's just not all that good for a BCS conference. Looking at the distribution of what rounds the players were taken, it was pretty well spread out over the entire draft for the Big East. But that doesn't make it feel any better. It's especially bad if you look at a team like West Virginia that has had three 11 win seasons in a row along with three straight top ten finishes. They've had exactly four players drafted in the last three years. And Chris Henry and Pac Man Jones the year before that. So we won't even go there.
The ACC? Yeah, that conference we've been quietly laughing at after Miami, Va. Tech, and Boston College left. Yeah, they had 33 players drafted this past weekend. The coaching must really suck over there or something.
Pac 10? Oh, they had 37 players drafted. SEC? 35. Big 10? 28. Big 12? 27. Hell, C-USA had 11 players drafted! Patriot League? Never mind.
Even more upsetting for West Virginia fans, two players left early for the NFL and weren't drafted. Those two being Darius Reynaud and Johnny Dingle. Yeah, sorry folks. Those Dingle-Berry photo's won't be happening anymore. Those are definitely two players the Mountaineers could have used this year, though. I'm not saying that their stock would go up any with one more year of college. But it sure wouldn't go down.
Louisville will have the most holes to fill as well. You don't replace Brian Brohm, Harry Douglas, and Art Carmody. I know there are others, but those three were special at their positions. West Virginia won't be far behind with the loss of Slaton and most of the secondary and defensive line. Rutgers, well we don't know how bad it is because we haven't seen anyone but Ray Rice run the ball. The rest of the conference should be fine. And that's not a good thing if you think about it.
It's been a while since Manley Field House mattered for Syracuse sports. The last time was when then Georgetown coach
OMG! Football news! February is like the worst sports month in the world! Unless you like meaningless mid-season NBA and NHL games. Sure I love NCAA basketball. But that love has been tainted by
I (and
With an easy 30-7 win over Syracuse, UConn is actually the team that is in position to win the Big East next weekend. The Huskies are 5-1 in the Big East and 9-2 overall. They will finish their season next week against West Virginia.
My record as a blogger is somewhat iffy. I freely admit it. Some of my posts are widely viewed while others barely see the light of day. No biggie, that's the way it goes. But having said that, I can say this. Greg Robinson can't read!
From a #2 ranking to unranked with 3 straight losses, South Florida was reeling. Their BCS dreams, Big East championship goals all fell quickly. Of course nothing restores confidence and makes a team feel better than beating up on a bad team.
With Pitt and Syracuse having
It was a legitimate question at this point. The disparity between the two 1-A programs in New York, Buffalo and Syracuse, has never been narrower. [Editor correction: Army is also located in New York. Admittedly Army doesn't bill itself as New York's team as 'Cuse does, but no excuse for forgetting that they are based in New York and are a 1-A program] Under the stewardship of Greg Robinson, there would have been little surprise (but plenty of anguish) from the Syracuse faithful
Sure that could apply for the whole season, but this is just about the pasting they put on Syracuse. The Scarlet Knights spotted the Orange 14 points before reeling off 38 points of their own. Against a Syracuse team that was 1-5 and has a defense that allowed 35 or more points in all but one game, it's hard to be impressed.