Originally Published: September 4, 2008
Five dream matchups that will put the spice back into September
I have rediscovered a long-lost romance and have fallen in love all over again.
The object of my affection is neutral-field nonconference collisions. College football needs more of them. I am convinced it will happen, and I humbly offer some suggestions below. True, these games take college teams off campus and into pro stadiums. That is not a plus. But they are a much-needed alternative to a September schedule, overpopulated by absurd cash-grab games versus hired cupcakes, that does nothing but hurt the sport. The 12th regular-season game has become a joke. Worse, it is an impediment to a sensible championship format, which would deliver far more cash than a pay-for-play scrimmage against Florida International or Coastal Carolina. But that's a rant for another day. My love for college football runs deep, but this sport has a maddening weakness: a lack of centralized scheduling. Unless more conferences follow the lead of the Pac-10 and the ACC and schedule a few league games early, we are doomed to more Saturdays like this one. Without some coordination of schedules between conferences, we are left with too many weekends like this -- without one really compelling, competitive heavyweight tilt. (Sorry Miami, the Canes have some rebuilding to do to get back into the heavyweight category -- just ask Vegas). On the flip side, other weekends are overloaded with great matchups, almost too many to take in. Against the NFL's opening weekend extravaganza, college football presents a feeble collection of big name versus no-name games that leave most fans bored to death and already looking to Ohio State-USC next Saturday.[+] Enlarge

Jerry Lai/US PresswireWouldn't it be nice to have more matchups like Mizzou and Illinois in the first month of the season?
Set your alarm clock on Saturday. Chris Fowler, Kirk Herbstreit, Lee Corso and the rest of the College GameDay crew will be in Los Angeles. Tune in to find out about USC-Ohio State, all the Week 3 action and everything else in college football. When: Sat., 10 a.m. ET (ESPN) Where: Los Angeles |
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Gary A. Vasquez/US PresswirePete Carroll and USC versus the best from the SEC would certainly draw interest in September.
Sunshine Smackdown
Miami has a hard-to-fathom 40 freshmen on its team. Seventeen played in the Canes' opener. Most of those guys are really good athletes, but most observers feel they will be spanked in a painful baptism Saturday night in the Swamp (ESPN, 8 p.m. ET). It's a bit strange to see Miami as a three-TD underdog against anyone, anywhere. You have to go back 11 years when 1-3 Miami visited FSU for a game in which the Canes entered as a bigger dog. They left as 47-0 losers to the Seminoles. It can't be that bad Saturday. I hope. The athletic gap between the two teams is not nearly that wide. The Gators just have more experience, more depth -- and a Heisman winner at QB versus a first-time freshman starter for Miami. I think Robert Marve (from Tampa) will become a really good QB, and Jacory Harris brings electric quickness when he's on the field. But it's a huge task this week for these Hurricanes.[+] Enlarge

Marc Serota/Getty ImagesRandy Shannon and Miami will face a tough challenge when they visit a talented Florida team.
"Coach Bill Stewart of West Virginia here"
That's how the Eers boss began our conversation the other night. We'd never spoken, so it was a really enjoyable chat, as Stewart was charming, funny and candid. He is not letting West Virginia fans or media bait him into comments on Rich Rodriguez's struggles at Michigan. But that will be a weekly challenge, from the look of things.[+] Enlarge

AP Photo/Matt YorkWest Virginia coach Bill Stewart envisions a big year for QB Pat White.
Poll Stuff
My AP ballot did not involve a flip-flop this week. I was voting USC No. 1 all along, Georgia No. 2 and Ohio State No. 3. Troy's jump over UGA is not that big a deal, since it is likely that the winner of next week's showdown would have taken over the top spot anyway. My thinking is not terribly original: I have the Sooners No. 4 and Gators No. 5. The big mover was obviously the Crimson Tide. I may have gotten carried away by jetting Bama up to No. 10. I think they're pretty good, but only time will tell. Teams debuting on my ballot this week: Fresno State, Penn State, Utah and South Carolina. My pal Craig James does me one better: He includes East Carolina. That gives him a whopping four non-BCS conference teams on his ballot. For a guy who has usually embraced only the glamour leagues, that's a real departure. By the way, only one BCS league escaped a loss to a non-BCS conference on opening weekend: the Pac-10. Arizona slaughtered Idaho, the only non-BCS foe for the league.Chris Fowler is the host of ESPN's "College GameDay." Kick off each Saturday with "College GameDay" at 10 a.m. ET to get the latest news on college football.



