Big East isn't in a league with other ranked teams in BCS

For you BCS Busters and Haters, here is a challenge for the Big East and the BCS Model
By Jack Carey, USA TODAY
In its first year without national power Miami (Fla.), the Big East retains its automatic berth in the Bowl Championship Series, but the early returns for the league show only one team — No. 20 West Virginia — among the BCS' top 25.
Three conferences that do not have automatic BCS spots have teams ahead of the Mountaineers. No. 7 Utah from the Mountain West, No. 14 Boise State of the Western Athletic Conference and No. 17 Louisville from Conference USA are rated higher than the Big East's top team.
West Virginia (5-1, 1-0 Big East) is tied for the early lead in the conference with Syracuse (3-3, 1-0) and hosts the Orange on Thursday. Pittsburgh, Boston College and Rutgers have a league loss each so the automatic bid is up for grabs. But WVU figures to be favored in the rest of its games.
The Big East is assured a BCS berth the next four years, but BCS officials are looking at a new set of criteria for qualification.
"Any evaluation that we would have of any conference would be more than a single-season evaluation, and we have not finalized how future automatic qualification will be determined ultimately," said BCS coordinator Kevin Weiberg, commissioner of the Big 12. "But what we are thinking about and what we are continuing to work on is a system that will take into account a four-year rating of a conference. We try to look at elements other than a single team's relative ranking in the system."
Two conference champs that got automatic BCS bids were not in the top 15 of the final ratings. Purdue's 2000 team, which was 8-3 and made the Rose Bowl, finished 17th. The 1999 Stanford team that made the Rose Bowl also was 8-3. The standings that season only went 15 deep, according to Big 12 spokesman Bob Burda.
The Big East figures to be stronger next year, when Louisville, which came within three points of Miami last week, joins the league and last-place Temple departs.
First impressions: Weiberg, in his first year as BCS coordinator, said that while he was surprised Miami passed Oklahoma for the second spot in the first set of ratings, there was no sense of embarrassment that the BCS' new formula did not produce teams at the top that most expected.
"Oklahoma last week (in a dry run) had been as high as two or three in the computer poll average, so I was expecting it would stay above five and that we would not have that scenario developing," he said. "I don't think we're embarrassed by it. ... I think this is working as we modeled it. We were very much aware that a consensus No. 2 could change if it had a computer average of five or worse. ... I hope we're not giving the impression of apologizing because I don't think that's the case at all."
Find this article at:
http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/ ... -bcs_x.htm
By Jack Carey, USA TODAY
In its first year without national power Miami (Fla.), the Big East retains its automatic berth in the Bowl Championship Series, but the early returns for the league show only one team — No. 20 West Virginia — among the BCS' top 25.
Three conferences that do not have automatic BCS spots have teams ahead of the Mountaineers. No. 7 Utah from the Mountain West, No. 14 Boise State of the Western Athletic Conference and No. 17 Louisville from Conference USA are rated higher than the Big East's top team.
West Virginia (5-1, 1-0 Big East) is tied for the early lead in the conference with Syracuse (3-3, 1-0) and hosts the Orange on Thursday. Pittsburgh, Boston College and Rutgers have a league loss each so the automatic bid is up for grabs. But WVU figures to be favored in the rest of its games.
The Big East is assured a BCS berth the next four years, but BCS officials are looking at a new set of criteria for qualification.
"Any evaluation that we would have of any conference would be more than a single-season evaluation, and we have not finalized how future automatic qualification will be determined ultimately," said BCS coordinator Kevin Weiberg, commissioner of the Big 12. "But what we are thinking about and what we are continuing to work on is a system that will take into account a four-year rating of a conference. We try to look at elements other than a single team's relative ranking in the system."
Two conference champs that got automatic BCS bids were not in the top 15 of the final ratings. Purdue's 2000 team, which was 8-3 and made the Rose Bowl, finished 17th. The 1999 Stanford team that made the Rose Bowl also was 8-3. The standings that season only went 15 deep, according to Big 12 spokesman Bob Burda.
The Big East figures to be stronger next year, when Louisville, which came within three points of Miami last week, joins the league and last-place Temple departs.
First impressions: Weiberg, in his first year as BCS coordinator, said that while he was surprised Miami passed Oklahoma for the second spot in the first set of ratings, there was no sense of embarrassment that the BCS' new formula did not produce teams at the top that most expected.
"Oklahoma last week (in a dry run) had been as high as two or three in the computer poll average, so I was expecting it would stay above five and that we would not have that scenario developing," he said. "I don't think we're embarrassed by it. ... I think this is working as we modeled it. We were very much aware that a consensus No. 2 could change if it had a computer average of five or worse. ... I hope we're not giving the impression of apologizing because I don't think that's the case at all."
Find this article at:
http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/ ... -bcs_x.htm