swamisez;1261857 wrote:Hard to defend the ACC in football given our recent history, but I will make a small case.
First, since we discredit ACC football because of lack in championships, can we say the same thing about the Big Ten in regards to basketball and their lack of championships?
Last ACC title in Football FSU in 2000
Last Big Ten basketball title 2000 MSU
Also, I would love to see the records of ACC vs. Big Ten since expansion of the ACC. Willing to bet the record against the Big Ten Conference is pretty good.
Going in to last year here is what the matchup looked like since expansion of the ACC in 2005.
For the record not a fan of the Hokies either. Has anyone done less with more than Frank Beamer? Great guy, but his teams never can put it all together.
That being said, Go Duke...beat Stanford.
Your first argument regarding basketball is terrible. What does basketball have to do with football? Nothing. But that aside, even the argument itself fails to mirror the situation. No one is saying the ACC needs to lose it's status because of it's lack of National Championships. It has more to do with their performance in BCS games which are generally the important ones. No one cares about the lower tier bowls.
An apt comparison to basketball in this regard would be to judge a conference by how many Elite 8 teams they have or even better how many final four teams. As a final four teams roughly equals the amount of BCS winners.
Let's use your 2000 date as a comparison.
2000 - Michigan State, Florida, Wisconsin, UNC (2 B1G; 1 ACC)
2001 - Duke, Arizona, Maryland, Michigan State (1 B1G; 2 ACC)
2002 - Maryland, Indiana, Kansas, Oklahoma (1 B1G; 1 ACC)
2003 - Syracuse, Kansas, Texas, Marquette (none for either)
2004 - UConn, Ga. Tech, Duke, Okla. St. (2 ACC)
2005 - UNC, Illinois, Michigan State, Louisville (2 B1G; 1 ACC)
2006 - Florida, UCLA, George Mason, LSU (neither)
2007 - Florida, Ohio State, UCLA, Georgetown (1 B1G)
2008 - Kansas, Memphis, UNC, UCLA (1 ACC)
2009 - UNC, Michigan State, Villanova, Connecticut (1 B1G; 1 ACC)
2010 - Duke, Butler, WVU, Michigan State (1 B1G; 1 ACC)
2011 - Connecticut, Butler, Kentucky, VCU (none for either)
2012 - Kentucky, Kansas, Ohio State, Louisville (1 B1G)
So that leaves 10 B1G final four teams and 10 ACC teams. Seems pretty comparable.
And then your second set of statistics skirts the issue as well. It looks at all bowl games. The discussion isn't about all the bowl games. The argument for the ACC losing it's auto-bid is more about their pretty terrible performance in BCS bowl games which is what the automatic bid is about.
Edit: Although I do give you props if your "football" team is actually Duke as opposed to some people who like to root for OSU in football (or another traditional power) then root for Duke in basketball and even troll fans of their football school.