Jeremy Foley should be fired immediately

Posted by rtmsf on May 29th, 2007

Ahhh… the long weekend is over, and in case you missed it, the College World Series brackets came out this weekend.  This ingenious concept – an on-the-field tournament to crown a college champion – just might catch on after all!  Although this blog is devoted to college hoops, we also recognize that each team is part of a larger athletic program in terms of all the normal considerations – fans, dollars, merchandising, and the derivative feedback loops – which merit occasional reflection beyond the hardwood.

As such, it’s interesting to see which programs had the most successful 2006-07 in a different light than the Stanford Sears Director’s Cup rankings, which the Cardinal dominates every year (twelve in a row going into the 2006-07 academic year).  Recognizing that football and basketball comprise the vast majority of athletic revenues and expenses at Division 1 schools, it still might be interesting and informative to see which programs are also successful at America’s third major sport, baseball.  To start the ball rolling, we took a look at the 2006-07 academic year in the three major college sports. 

Stanford logo

Stanford always wins the Sears Cup, but how does it perform in the big three major sports?

In our analysis, we only considered schools invited to the postseason.  In college baseball and basketball, this is a fair indicator, as roughly 20% of schools are selected for the postseason (NCAA Tournament or CWS) in a given year.  In college football, over half the teams are selected annually for postseason bowls, which skews the definition of “success” somewhat; but we couldn’t figure a way to reliably eliminate some bowls while including others, so we kept them all in.  

Still, even with those rather broad parameters, only six Division 1 schools were invited to the postseason in all three major sports -baseball, basketball and football.  If you guessed large state institutions in (mostly) warm-weather areas, you had a decent chance of naming these six – Arkansas, Louisville, Ohio St., Texas, Texas A&M, UCLA.  Interestingly, Florida won both the football and basketball titles, but was not invited to the College World Series – clearly they should fire an incompetent like Jeremy Foley immediately.  Stanford, who will undoubtedly win the Sears Cup again this year, had a short-lived stay in the NCAA Tournament (for about one tv timeout, as we recall), but did not make the CWS or a bowl game, proving that their emphasis on smaller, non-revenue sports makes all the difference in those standings.

 Bo Jackson cover

Can Bo explain the correlation between successful college football and baseball programs?

We thought there might be a correlation between certain sports, such as football/baseball, and it looks as if there is (at least this year).  Sixteen (16) programs made both the CWS and the NCAA Tourney, including the six above,  some little guys who should be very proud of themselves – Albany, Creighton, Long Beach St., Oral Roberts and VCU – and some of the old reliables in basketball – Arizona, Memphis, UNC, Vanderbilt, Virginia.   Additionally, twenty-one (21) programs (mostly from BCS conferences) enjoyed football and basketball postseasons this year – the six above plus Boston College, BYU, Florida, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Maryland, Nevada, Notre Dame, Oregon, Purdue, Tennessee, Texas Tech, Virginia Tech, USC and Wisconsin.  But fully twenty-four (24) programs shared an invitation to a bowl game and the CWS this year, including a surprising amount of non-BCS schools (5).  Again, the six above in addition to:  Arizona St., Clemson, East Carolina, Florida St., Miami (FL), Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma St., Oregon St., Rice, Rutgers, South Carolina, Southern Mississippi, TCU, Troy and Wake Forest.  For whatever reasons, probably largely associated with geography and culture, there is was more of a correlation between football and baseball this year than with the other sports. 

It would be interesting to track this over time, and maybe we will do that, but it’d also be very intriguing to match athletic budgets with these programs to determine if they’re getting anywhere near their money’s worth with the three most competitive college sports.  We haven’t been able to find it, so if anyone has a reliable list of those budgets, let us know.   

           

rtmsf (3998 Posts)


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3 responses to “Jeremy Foley should be fired immediately”

  1. ben says:

    Ole Miss did not play in a bowl game. That will not help the correlation.

  2. John Pergine says:

    I would like to purchase the Sports Illustrated magazine with Bo Jackson on the cover in a Royals uniform and Raiders uniform. Do you know how I can buy a copy of this?
    Or what is the date of that issue?

  3. Allison Shockley says:

    Is there anyway you can still buy the issue of Bo Jackson? (he is on the cover with Royals uniform and Radiers…which way bo?)

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