Justice Department to investigate Bowl Championship Series

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And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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April 17, 2008, 5:32PM
BOWL CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
Congress wants to take closer look at college postseason

By BEN EVANS
Associated Press
<!-- rbox goes here --><!-- rbox ends here -->WASHINGTON — Forget government corruption or corporate fraud. Three members of Congress want the Justice Department to investigate whether college football's Bowl Championship Series is an illegal enterprise.
Reps. Neil Abercrombie, D-Hawaii, Lynn Westmoreland, R-Ga., and Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, are introducing a resolution rejecting the oft-criticized bowl system as an illegal restriction on trade because only the largest universities compete in most of the major bowl games. The resolution would require Justice's antitrust division to investigate whether the system violates federal law.
The measure also would put Congress on record as supporting a college football playoff.
"Who elected these NCAA people? Who are they to decide who competes for the championship?" Abercrombie said at a press conference Thursday on Capitol Hill, gripping a souvenir University of Hawaii football.
Abercrombie said the matter is worthy of federal review because college football is big business with hundreds of millions of dollars at stake.
"It's money. That's what this is all about," he said.
But it's no coincidence that all three lawmakers have home-state schools with recent beefs against the bowl system.
The University of Hawaii and Boise State University in Idaho each had an undefeated season in recent years, but were denied a shot at the championship. And Westmoreland said he is still smarting about his University of Georgia Bulldogs being passed over for the national championship game last year.
Georgia instead was matched up against undefeated Hawaii in the Sugar Bowl, winning 41-10.
Westmoreland and Abercrombie said they started talking about the resolution after that game, as Abercrombie was paying off a bet with chocolate-covered macadamia nuts.
The lawmakers say the bowl system is rigid and blocks all but the largest universities from competing in post-season bowls, denying dozens of others not just the opportunity to compete but also a shot at the big payoffs and national exposure that come with bowl appearances.
Abercrombie maintained that television markets are one factor in selecting which teams go to high-profile bowls.
"We shouldn't have to argue about who the champion is," Westmoreland said, citing the excitement and unpredictability of the NCAA college basketball tournament. "That should be decided on the field."
The BCS was created in 1998 by the six most powerful conferences. It relies on polls and computer ratings to determine which teams qualify for the top bowls.
Congress held a hearing on the BCS in 2005, but no legislation came of it.
In a statement, ACC Commissioner and current BCS Administrator John Swofford said the BCS allows all qualified teams to participate and is beneficial for student athletes, universities and fans.
"This issue has been looked at before," Swofford said. "We're confident that it complies with the law."
 

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Ok is the Justice Dpeartmeant actually investigating this or are they just being asked to?

This is a misleading title I think by someone who must have the same beef as the boo hoo politicians do.
 

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i always like when these assholes have nothing better to do than worry about sports.
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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Congress needs to get its head out of the BCS and into healthcare

posted by Alan Schmadtke on Apr 17, 2008 6:06:00 PM
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The Bowl Championship Series isn't perfect. Not even close.
But, then, college football's postseason never has been perfect. Not even close. So what's true now that wasn't true, oh, a decade ago or two decades ago that's making Congress take another peek behind the BCS curtain?

In case you missed it, three members of Congress are calling for the Justice Department to investigate the BCS and consider whether the top tier of the bowls is an "illegal enterprise."
Oh, this is new: the Congressmen hail from states that might ring a bell: Rep. Neil Abercrombie of Hawaii, Rep. Lynn Westmoreland of Georgia and Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho.
Hawaii, which had an unbeaten team that made the BCS last year but didn't get into the national title game. (The Rainbows got squashed by Georgia in the Sugar Bowl.)
Georgia, which had a team that was playing the best football in the country at the end of 2007 season but didn't win the SEC East and whose delegation complained that the Bulldogs didn't get to the BCS title game.
And Idaho, home of Boise State, which two seasons ago got to the BCS as an unbeaten, stunned Oklahoma in one of the best bowl games ever, yet was upset it didn't get the chance to play for a national title.
Abercrombie


Westmoreland
Simpson
Ok, a minute: It's an election year. We're in a war. Health care in this country is a joke. (I just paid $75 for prescription nasal spray, for God's sake.) Social security is limping and the Baby Boomers have just started to retire. Gas prices overseas just hit record highs. Milk in some places is $7 a gallon.
We just had the first anniversary of the shootings at Virginia Tech and there's a proposal out there to let college students have personal weapons on campus.
This just in: The BCS, however flawed, ain't our biggest problem.
"Who elected these NCAA people? Who are they do decide who competes for the championship?" Abercrombie asked rhetorically at a Capital Hill news conference on Thursday.
Of course, by asking the question he shows how little he knows. The NCAA doesn't pick bowl participants. As we all know, bowl reps, television reps and (mostly) conference commissioners pick them.
The congressmen are begging the Justice Department talk to the wrong people. Why not ask the NCAA why it's so scared to take add a major-college football playoff to its roster of college championships? Why not ask why the NCAA, which gets most of its annual revenue from the men's basketball tournament, doesn't want to see how much more money a major-college football playoff would generate.
(The answer, straight from NCAA CEO Myles Brand, is that Brand has bought into the idea that bowls are an integral part of college football's history and culture. And that they have great value for players, coaches, schools and everybody else. Except, of course, players, coaches and schools that get left out.)
This isn't the first time Congress has gone after the BCS.
In fact, here's a statement Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany made before Congress as it poked around last time: Download Delaney.pdf
This is a wonderful country, full of hi-def TVs. And freedom of speech that lets dumb congressmen talk about anything. But we get to watch or listen to other things if we want.
 

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Key phrase is calling for. You are repensenting that like the DOJ has started one when in fact they have not.

Congress is not the DOJ. And its just three crybabys calling for this, not all of congress.
 
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Key phrase is calling for. You are repensenting that like the DOJ has started one when in fact they have not.

Congress is not the DOJ. And its just three crybabys calling for this, not all of congress.


I guess I get Idaho and Hawaii, but why the moron from GA.?
 
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The whole thing sounds kind of silly to me, but if this is what it takes to get a playoff system, so be it.
 

I'll be in the Bar..With my head on the Bar
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See what u get out of Pelosi and crew?????? we got a war going on, we got 300+ a day getting killed by violence, we have an idiot running for president who wants to raise taxes on over 30 million ppl because 50 of them are "making to much money"....i believe thats called socialism but it would be racist to say that and i dont want to go to jail and all these COCKSUCKERS can do is investigate steriods and the BCS...

Chinese come take over we need you now!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 

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lmfaooooooooooooooo of all the things they should be worrying about in this country, this is what they pick to work on. unreal is all i can say
 

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lmfaooooooooooooooo of all the things they should be worrying about in this country, this is what they pick to work on. unreal is all i can say


Keyword= work

They dont the meaning of the word..........
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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Key phrase is calling for. You are repensenting that like the DOJ has started one when in fact they have not.

Congress is not the DOJ. And its just three crybabys calling for this, not all of congress.
:WTF:

I just copied and pasted the article...dude:ohno:
I dont represent shit in this article ...but I do think the bcs is a joke....JMO%^_
 

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