Someone should be fired. Somewhere, there is an idiot, or group of idiots, responsible for the field conditions at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando.
I don't know much about planting things or growing things. I've had fake office plants shrivel up and die on me. But I'm reasonably certain that I could have kept the Citrus Bowl turf in better condition than it was for the Champs Sports Bowl and the Capital One Bowl.
Nobody should have to play a football game on terrain more suited for trench warfare.
It is not safe for the athletes, and, in this case, I think it may have affected the outcome. Is it just a coincidence that the slower, plodding teams won both of the games played there? Would Wisconsin have beaten Miami on a pristine field? Maybe. Could Penn State have kept up with LSU? I doubt it.
After the game, LSU reciever Brandon LaFell said, "That was by far the worst football field I've ever seen in my life."
Now the city of Orlando has more than just turf to repair. The image of a vacation mecca is certainly damaged too. At least for fans of the four teams that had to watch the turf peel away in clumps. This is a city that knows how to do amusement parks, but athletic fields are another matter entirely.
Broncos Bucking the System
After finishing the season unbeaten for the second time since 2006, Boise State now appears ready to muscle their way to the front of the line in college football. They should start next season in or near the top five in the preseason polls, which gives them a chance to climb higher if teams in front of them stumble.
Here's the scary part, they return 21 starters from this year's squad, including quarterback Kellen Moore, who finished second in the nation in passing efficiency.
They are doing everything they can to bolster their schedule. The perception is that the WAC doesn't offer them enough competition, even though Idaho, Nevada and Fresno State went to bowl games this year.
Boise State opened the 2009 season by dominating eventual PAC 10 champion Oregon, and ended it by defeating unbeaten Mountain West champion TCU. In 2010, they will play Oregon State at home on the famous Smurf Turf, and Virginia Tech in a (sort of) neutral site game at FedEx Field in Landover, Md.
But, now, the big boys are a bit squeamish about scheduling a game with the Broncos. They have a reputation for playing with reckless abandon that makes their opponents nervous.
In the 17-10 win over TCU, the key play was an amazing fake punt that Boise State ran on a 4th and 9 from their own 33 yard line. The play gained 30 yeards. Gutsy? Absolutely. Typical of Bronco football? Without a doubt.
Boise State's win over Oklahoma in the 2007 Fiesta Bowl has rapidly become the Woodstock of college football. If as many people actually saw it as are now claiming to have seen it, the broadcast would have had about a 50 rating.
The Three Plays That Shocked the World - the Hook and Ladder on 4th and 18 from midfield that went for a touchdown to send it to overtime, the halfback pass for the overtime touchdown, and the Statue of Liberty on the two point conversion that won the game - captured the attention of the football-loving world.
Boise State coach Chris Petersen says, "I think that's what they expect out of us, and we're happy to deliver."
The drama even had a storybook ending when Ian Johnson, who had just run in the two point conversion for the 43-42 win, then scurried off to find his cheerleader girlfriend to ask her to marry him.
Now that opponents have come to expect the unexpected, they still can't stop it. As Matt James notes in the Fresno Bee, "Boise State football is now a Fargo winter. You know what's coming, and that information does you no good whatsoever."
Just ask TCU coach Gary Patterson, who admitted that his team had worked on stopping the fake punt in practice, but failed to do so with the game on the line, "The fake punt was a great call," he said. "They outcoached us on that play."
Bronco kicker Kyle Brotzman, who threw the pass on the play, had a simpler explanation. "That's Boise State football," he said.
Next season is likely to bring increased media scrutiny for the Broncos, and more pressure. But, after going 14-0 this year, and 49-4 since 2006, they might be ready to assume a position among the college football elite. One thing is certain, if the next BCS game they play in is the championship game, expect the unexpected.
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