Snow Falling on Palms

Public school was canceled today in the Midlands of South Carolina. As were morning classes at the University of South Carolina, meaning my course EDHE 730, "Evolution (History) of American Higher Education" was canceled. The images I've posted here would not be strange in any of the states I've lived in previously—Utah, New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania (except that there no palm trees in any of those cold weather states). But it is strange to have snow in South Carolina. Snow on palm trees is definitely odd to see as you can see in the photo of snow on the young palm in our front yard.

Instead of "Snow Falling on Palms," I could have titled this post as "French Toast Day" because whenever there is going to be a "snow day" everyone runs to the store and busy milk, eggs, and bread causing grocers to ask, "Why is everyone making French Toast today?" Or I could call it "A Blessed Day" because here in South Carolina people (a cashier at the store, a waitress at the diner, et cetera) regularly wish you a "blessed day" and because having a snow day on Inauguration Day is indeed a blessing. I love teaching and regret having class canceled this morning but being able to spend the day at home watching the Inaugural events with my children is wonderful. Teaching history is one thing; watching it unfold is quite another. So, a snow day couldn't have come on a better day.

Having a "snow day" reminds me of when I moved to New Hampshire in high school. Being from Utah, I didn't think anything of it the first time it snowed. I would carpool with my friends Grant and Maya to school every day. When Grant picked me up he said, gleefully, "I bet it's going to be a snow day!" His gleefulness made me think he was joking. The mere dusting on the ground made me think he was joking. That New Hampshire is a snow state, and the birthplace of the American ski industry, also made me think he was joking.

But then, as we drove to Nashua Senior High School the announcement came over the radio and I knew he wasn't joking. "Whaaaat?" was my response. But closing school for snow—if the superintendant even dreamed of snow it seemed—was the modus operandi in New Hampshire. (My poor sister had so many snow days her junior year that she was in school practically until July making up these snow days.) So we went to IHOP for breakfast, which was overflowing with high school students. Apparently, it was safe enough to drive to IHOP but not to school! (I do not, however, begrudge school districts and the University here in the Palmetto State for cancelling classes. There simply isn't the capacity to deal with the snow here—and why would it, given that it snows about once every half-decade?)

Speaking of New Hampshire, on this inaugural day I am reminded that I had the privilege of voting for a U.S. president for the first time in that important primary state. I just happened to turn 18 on election day—November 8, 1988. It was a thrill for me as someone who had been interested in politics from an early age. The first time I worked on a campaign was when I was only 15 years old and volunteered on my Uncle Robert's run for the Utah state legislature. Now I live in another important primary state as South Carolina holds the first Southern primary. I did what I could, volunteering for Mr. Obama in the lead-up to the South Carolina Primary. And we took the kids to see Obama speak at an event on the eve of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day in downtown Columbia last year, a week before the Primary. (Save your "oh, you liberal professors" comments for another time.)

So, I was excited to receive an invitation to the "Grits & Granite" Inaugural Ball, sponsored by Democratic Parties of New Hampshire and South Carolina. I was tempted to RSVP, drive up after class today (about eight hours to D.C. from Columbia), attend the ball, find a place to crash, and then drive back. I decided against it, in part because I would miss seeing all of the Inaugural events; in part because I wanted to see these events with my family; and, in part, because spending about 16 hours driving just to have a few hours at a ball seemed a bit out of kilter. As I watch the day's events unfold I now wish I were there, just to be part of it in some small way. But with snow falling on palms, that drive could easily extend beyond the normal time. Even still, how can you not wish you were there?

Well, whatever you call today—a Snow Day, a Blessed Day, Inagauration Day—it is certainly an amazing day.

The Mythical National Championship

There's an animal so cool that you just want it to be real. The jackalope: half-rabbit, half-antelope. Wow, how cool would that be?

And how cool would it be to have a real college football championship? I offer my congratulations to the Florida Gators for winning the BCS National Championship. But I hate to report, it's a mythical one.

Why? We still have no idea who could have won the national championship had the top teams had been allowed to play it out. I have no doubt that Florida is a great team, a really great team, but I'm not convinced we know that they definitely belong in the top spot. Perhaps the BCS needs a new trophy; instead of a crystal football, a handsome jackalope atop the prize.

Some argue that it wouldn't work to have a college playoff and the other bowl games. These bowls would be “consolation” prizes to the playoff games, they argue. But don’t we already have that, but worse? Right now we have one championship game and 33 consolation games. Why not allow the top eight teams to play for the title while still allowing other teams have their postseason too.

What if they did this in other sports? What if the NFL simply chose the top two teams—through some mixture of computer programs and polls—to determine which teams would go to the Super Bowl? And then gave the other top teams “consolation bowls” to play in? Sound ridiculous? Of course it does.

If we did it that way, perhaps this year the pollsters/computers/jackalope-hunters could select the Steelers of Pittsburgh and the Eagles of Philadelphia and have the “Pennsylvania Super Bowl” and play it at Beaver Stadium, smack dab in the middle of the Commonwealth. Oh, wait, Governor Rendell has already suggested that a few years back.

So, why is it mythical? Bo Schembechler, former Michigan coach explained:
"You play to win the Big Ten championship, and if you win it and go to the Rose Bowl and win it, then you've had a great season. If they choose to vote you number one, then you're the national champion. But a national champion is a mythical national champion, and I think you guys ought to know that. It's mythical."
The BCS system was created to avoid the problem of a mythical or split championship, but it doesn’t. It doesn't make the national championship any less mythical because we still have no idea if the best team actually won.

Who has a claim on the title? The University of Utah Utes, of course. It's hard to argue with a perfect record, beating four ranked teams, capped by a trouncing of Alabama, a team that spent much of the season ranked No. 1.

Texas may have a case. They beat Oklahoma too and like Florida they only have one loss. But they barely beat Ohio State in the Fiesta Bowl. USC's claim, under the current system, is weak simply because they lost to Oregon State. That's only one loss too, except that Utah demolished Oregon State. So, USC is out.

But—and this is a big but—who can argue that USC couldn't beat any of the top teams? If you saw them demolish my other team, the Nittany Lions, you know that they could compete with any team in college football.

Our new Professor-in-Chief agrees: “If I’m Utah, if I’m USC, or if I’m Texas, I may still have some quibbles. And you’ve heard my pitch. That’s why we need a playoff.”

Why is this significant? The creation of the National Collegiate Athletic Association was due to the influence of a president and football. President Theodore Roosevelt felt that college football was too violent and needed to be reformed and regulated. He called college representatives to the White House to discuss the problem, which led to other meetings by college leaders, resulting in the formation of the NCAA in 1906. I’m sure President Obama will have other, more pressing concerns, so hosting a “BCS Summit” at the White House is unlikely any time soon. But having spoken out on this issue during the campaign and since, it seems likely that, given the opportunity, he will speak out on it again.

This was the perfect year to vote in a split championship. The AP voters should have followed the advice of John Feinstein and voted Utah No. 1 to help dismantle the absurd BCS system. But they didn't and delivered Utah their only "loss."

Utah coach Kyle Whittingham made the right decision to vote his Utes as No. 1 in the USA Today Coaches Poll, even though it could lead to sanctions from fellow coaches. (They are obligated to vote for whoever wins the BCS championship. So, why have them vote? Why call it the “coaches’ poll”?)

So, in the end, we’re still guessing as to whether Florida is the best team in the land. Florida barely beat Alabama but Utah destroyed 'Bama. Could Florida, Texas, or Utah beat USC? What would a Texas/Florida game look like?

All hypothetical, of course. Which is why we need a playoff in the so-called FBS division of college football. Otherwise, the current champion is just a myth.

Determining the College Football National Champion...Been There. Done That.

I'm sure tonight's Final BCS Game (called by some, "The BCS Championship Game") will be fun to watch. I'm sure Florida and Oklahoma fans are revved up and excited. And I'm sure I'll watch too.

But not to see a champion crowned. Been there. Done that.

Pat Bagley summarizes tonight's game quite nicely:

University of Utah Utes are National Champions!

I declare the Utes national champions!

Care to disagree? Who, pray tell, beat them? When your record reads, "13-0" that means no one did. Not one team. Not Michigan in the Big House. Not No. 12 TCU. Not No. 14 Holy War Rival BYU.

And neither did the perennial powerhouse Alabama, the famous Crimson Tide, in the Sugar Bowl. This is the team that was ranked #1 almost all season—the team that nearly beat Florida for a spot in the final BCS game.

Who could have beaten Utah? Florida? Oklahoma? USC? Who knows? No one knows! No one thought—except hopeful Utahns (and later hopeful Utahns and apparently quite smart Vermonters)—that Utah could beat 'Bama. But they did. Big time. The game wasn't even close. Twenty-one unanswered points in the first quarter alone. They never lost the lead and won in dominating fashion with a final score of 31-17.

So, the BCS may not agree with me. The coaches may or may not agree, but we'll see. This year just screams for a playoff instead of the BCS and a series of rankings (now including my own!). Who can say the Utes don't have a legitimate claim on the title? How far would the Utes have gone in a playoff? To win the championship in the final game of the year? We'll never know...so, again:

I declare the Utes national champions!