Tag Archives: Alabama Crimson Tide

WPC again offers its top ten college football teams and their wrestling counterparts

Media day and, hopefully, most of the arrests, are over and the rumors of realignments have been put away for the time being. All that is left to do now is anticipate opening kickoff. The four-letter network opens the doors on this college football season on Aug. 29 and the gauntlet runs until Jan. 6, 2014. This is the final season that the polls will actually matter. I imagine that is a fact that sickens Vince Russo. In his honor, let’s take a gander at who the preseason top ten’s wrestling counterparts are.

1. Alabama Crimson Tide 

Your time is up, the Tide is now. There is no argument about whose time it truly is in the college football world. Alabama has won three of the last four National Championships and it shows little sign of stopping. With a game plan that is basically run left, run right, play-action pass, extra point, kneel down; the Tide’s five moves have spelled doom for most everyone in the college football landscape. Traditional power Notre Dame and its Samoan bulldozer linebacker were strangled with a turnbuckle in last year’s national championship game and Alabama has only reloaded. The Tide is loved by its devotees (who generally act like screaming fan girls in high times and petulant children in the down years) and hated by everybody else. There is generally no middle ground when it comes how people feel about Nick Saban’s football factory. Whatever they do won’t be pretty, but it is effective. Hustle, loyalty, and respect are all just part of the process. The Crimson Tide is John Cena.

2. Ohio State Buckeyes

The Buckeyes seem to have it all: excellent mechanics, a rabid fanbase and one of the better pedigrees in the game. They have all the tools to succeed, but they also love getting into monkeyshine. The Pontiff Urban Meyer took over the reins of Buckeye nation after some health issues and family withdrawal (actually he had his attitude adjusted by Nick Saban, and his savior Tim Tebow graduated) forced him to resign from the University of Florida. He inherited a program that was on probation and ineligible to win a championship because a slew of players were trading trinkets and gear for tattoos. While playing with house money, Meyer guided The Ohio State University to an utterly boring undefeated season that only raised the already high expectations for the program. The Buckeyes’ mechanics garner praise from football purists but their often slow and creeping pace can lull most onlookers to sleep. Most expect Meyer to return the Buckeyes to their past glory and inject some much needed speed into the depth chart, but the off season has been marred with disciplinary problems that have haunted most of Meyer’s teams. Urban won championships early in his career but the recent past has not been very highlight worthy. The Big Ten may once again have an Apex Predator, but it comes in the form of a program with a lot of baggage. Ohio State is Randy Orton.

3. Oregon Ducks

Their hot shot defensive end took his talents to South Beach very early in the NFL draft. Perennial Heisman dark horse Lamichael James has been plying his trade on Sunday’s for a year already. Mastermind of the Kliq Chip Kelly flirted with a return to Eugene, but he now calls Philadelphia home. The rest of the Ducks are now left to carve out their own path and build upon a strong foundation. That foundation is not without its weak points though. The Ducks are stocked with natural talent and seemingly endless Nike resources (their new football facility rivals the newly opened WWE training cathedral), but they cannot win the big one, or even the one to get to the big one, at times. When Johnny Manziel slapped the Tide in the mouth in Tuscaloosa, last year looked like the Duck’s year. But Oregon found itself locked in the hog pen with Stanford and could not win the low scoring brawl. Chip Kelly’s high-octane offense has buried conference foes consistently but has not been able to topple more physical and more established foes. Kelly is gone now and the task of maintaining his success is downright Terra Ryzing.  Can the Ducks overcome the great migration and go from players to The Game? Maybe, but for now they are Hunter Hearst Helmsley.

4. Georgia Bulldogs

Georgia Bulldogs

Loaded with talent and athleticism another (this is the) year has arrived for the Athens faithful. The Bulldogs had a show-off year in 2012. They decimated most of their opponents and captured the attention of the nation as a dark horse National Championship contender. Aaron Murray and company looked like real world beaters in most of their games save for two. Unfortunately, these were the two that mattered most. Against South Carolina, the Dawgs were absolutely squashed. Carolina’s defense kicked them right in the head and the offense put up 21 in the first quarter in a 35-7 thumping. As luck and strange booking would have it, Georgia still had a title shot in December as the team made it back to the SEC Championship game to face eventual champion Alabama. The Dawgs bumped their asses in an absolute classic, but a signature win still eluded them. In the NFL draft, Georgia lost a great deal of their defensive muscle. But hopes are still high that veteran quarterback Murray, a strong recruiting class and an unusually low suspension rate can overcome the personnel loses. Bulldog fans believe in this team, though historical evidence suggests that they shouldn’t. Georgia always looks good, shows off and is often the more skilled team on the field, but they have yet to win the signature game that cements them as a true contender. This may be the year that they finally steal the show, thus making the Bulldogs Dolph Ziggler.

5. South Carolina Gamecocks

South Carolina has been playing football since 1892. The team has one the best field entrances in the game. Carolina has next year’s consensus number one draft pick returning to campus, and the team is led by bona fide fire-breathing legend named Steve Spurrier who has the best mic skills of anyone who has ever worn a headset (or visor for that matter). The Gamecocks have also never won a major championship. Their lone conference title happened the same year as Woodstock. The Gamecocks just have not been booked with the big one. There has always been a giant standing at the top of the mountain to douse the Cocks’ hopes. The end of their ACC tenure came as Florida State’s Bobby Bowden was on his way to being the winningest Division 1 coach ever. They entered the SEC Eastern Division a year before it became the toughest single division ever. They reached the SEC Championship Game just in time to be the next victim of a robot monster named Cam Newton. It has not been a charmed life for the men of Columbia. Even an 11-2 record couldn’t get them to Atlanta last year, and they had to watch as a team they dismantled got just four yards from capturing the SEC crown. Jadeveon Clowney cracked a coconut over the head of a Michigan running back in last year’s final game, and the sports world took notice. Anything short of an SEC Championship will be a letdown for South Carolina this year. The Gamecocks may have the answers this year and Mama Bailey certainly hopes nobody changes the questions. South Carolina is “Rowdy” Roddy Piper.

6. Stanford Cardinals

Stanford just does what it does, and lately that is winning. Only two loses and 13 total points separated the Cardinals from a spot in the National Championship Game. This after one of the best players and best coaches in the program’s history both left for the NFL. Stanford is probably your football coach’s favorite team to watch. The Cardinals enforce their will on opponents and quietly get things done. The flashy Oregon Ducks garner the attention, but it is the hard-nosed, get-it-done Cardinals that give the Pac-12 credibility. There really isn’t much to say about the Cardinals aside from the fact that they would much rather punch you in the mouth than beat you with style. The Cardinals would be the first man in the War Games and still standing in the match beyond. They may never win it all, but you certainly wouldn’t want them to be the ones you have to go through in order to win it yourself. The Stanford Cardinals are Arn Anderson.

7. Texas A&M Aggies

The eyes of the ranger and the sports world are clearly focused on tiny College Station, Texas, which has become a steep-pitched roof that rests underneath college football’s newest rooster-adorned lightning rod. Last year the Aggies became the western outpost of the SEC and proved that they belonged in the spotlight and out of the shadow of their big city nemesis UT. All this was credited (perhaps too much) to an undersized, electric quarterback named Johnny. TAMU’s 2012 ticked along exactly as it was supposed to in the early going.

The Aggies beat the teams they were supposed to beat and lost close to traditional SEC powerhouses. Then came Nov. 10. The Aggies strolled into Tuscaloosa and slapped around the champion Crimson Tide, robbing Alabama of its machismo with a quick 1, 2, 3. Johnny Manziel ran off with much more than a sack filled with $25,000 that day. He left with the nation’s heart, and the Heisman Trophy became his to lose. He was christened the first freshman to win the award a month later, and if the story had ended there it would have won an Oscar. Unfortunately, the following off season featured no realignment, no major coaching searches and no real controversy. This left the Twittersphere, the media and everybody with a camera constant watchers of the Johnny Football show. And the show did not disappoint. It could have been Jersey Shore South as 20-year-old Manziel didn’t meet a drink he didn’t like or a tweet he wouldn’t send. His whirlwind tour took him to every high-profile event from LeBron to Drake and garnered him the attention of a vengeful Internet and the NCAA. Apparently taking several thousand dolla dolla bills y’all (allegedly) to sign autographs is frowned upon by the powers that be in Indianapolis. While it is not likely that any real evidence will be found to actually keep Manziel from playing, the heat that the summer of J. Football has garnered has made everything for the Aggies that much more difficult. The best defense for a mobile quarterback is videotape and there is plenty of Johnny, both on and off the field. The Aggies’ roster is still strong but the NFL draft didn’t do them any favors. The slightest bump in the road may send the whole cart to the ditch this year, and that is what most of the onlookers are hoping for. There is a collective groan whenever the maroon and white number 2 jersey appears on screen. Is it possible that so much potential can go unfulfilled? This season will tell. Texas A&M is X-Pac.

8. Clemson Tigers

Who is Clemson? A casual observer probably thinks the Tigers are an upstart program from an indeterminate location that sometimes beats Florida State. A South Carolina fan would say they are the scum-of-the-Earth team that they have beaten for the last four years. The truth of the matter is Clemson has been playing ball at a fairly high level for a long time. The team was once coached by some dude named Heisman, and the Tigers won a National Championship in 1981. The Tigers have gone about their business and racked up a total of 18 conference titles in their history. This goes less noticed than it should because it happened in the ACC, which is much more known for hardwood glory than gridiron. In wrestling parlance, the ACC is the top indie promotion in the country. Very few football programs have been able to pull the spotlight away from the other conferences long enough to show how good their teams are. Florida State has been the most consistent exception. Virginia Tech made a bit of a name for itself. Miami has been in the conference for some time, but its real glory days occurred as a member of the now defunct Big East. Clemson is the latest challenger to attempt the leap from the Armory to the Omni. They have the athletic talent. Tajh Boyd is on the short list for the Heisman and the IPTAY crew is still riding high from its bowl victory over LSU, and as importantly the SEC, in last year’s final game. The victory gave the Tigers their second 11-win season in school history. Clemson is in the middle of the biggest push in three decades. The Tigers’ path to the main event goes through the Seminoles and constant foe South Carolina. Can they trade in their ACC title on a bigger belt? The Clemson Tigers are Dean Ambrose.

9. Louisville Cardinals

If the ACC is the top indie promotion of college football, the American Athletic Conference is a parody of a football conference. The conference is the cobbled wreckage of what was the Big East. The lone football power, West Virginia, now calls the Big 12 home. Wins there simply don’t matter. This is the hay that the Cardinals feasted on last year. That being said, Louisville is incredibly talented. Quarterback Teddy Bridgewater can be described as phenomenal. He is also the only player on the team that anyone can name without a media guide in hand. Bridgewater’s talent and coach Charlie Strong’s savvy should be enough to get the Cardinals through their absolutely threatless schedule. This should get them a nice BCS game, a fat paycheck and pretty much nothing else. There would have to be major collapses at the top of the food chain to get Louisville a shot at the big prize. To a school that regards football as a pastime until basketball starts, that should be just fine. In a dangerous move, Louisville picked up troubled SEC cast-off Michael Dyer to add some depth to its staff. The Cardinals are a prize pony in a field that is bound for the glue factory. The Louisville Cardinals are AJ Styles.

10. Florida Gators

There was a time when it was truly great to be a Florida Gator. Steve Spurrier’s fun-and-gun offense, Urban Meyer and Tim Tebow’s Batman and Robin act, and championships at every turn made for a ton of opportunities for those with the benefit of flash photography. Those days are gone. We have only the pictures now. The Gators are now headed up by the fuming Will Muschamp and the flash-and-brash of recent decades has been replaced with a toned-down offense that is often unwatchable but somehow victorious. Once the arbiters of cool, the Gators are now just a bunch of strap-hangers with lunch pails in hand, quietly going to work. This strategy earned them 11 wins last year, just missing an appearance in the SEC Championship Game due to a loss to bitter rival Georgia where they could only muster nine points. If this same roster wore different uniforms, no one would pay much attention. But they still wear the orange and blue and call The Swamp home. The university’s blazing roster was one of the main reasons that Florida as a whole was known as the Speed State. But wide-open style has certainly been unprettied of late. Muschamp has thrown the kill switch on flash and is more concerned with a fundamentally and balanced attack.  He has had time to recruit his own players for this style, and with Urban Meyer and Tebow’s ghost finally exorcised, Muschamp is at last on his own. The Florida Gators are Christian.

College football and pro wrestling face off in WPC’s Fall Brawl

There are wrestling fans who dabble in sports, there are sports fans who dabble in wrestling and there are people like me who really can’t tell the difference. I get the same joy from a suplex that I do an on-sides kick (and let me tell you, it is a lot of joy). So I feel it is my civic duty to help bridge the gap between the two great Southern traditions: wrestling and college football. Here is the Wrestling with Pop Culture preseason top ten that is equal parts Bear Bryant and bear hug.

1. LSU Tigers

Fronted by the golden haired Tyrann Mathieu (who is know primarily by his nickname of Honey Badger) the Bayou Bengals have been hated by the football landscape as much as they have been loved by it, switching seamlessly from heel to face. They are most liked when they are attempting to topple universal heel Alabama. Anytime the Tide and Tigers mix it up, the stratosphere is reserved for their battle. The Tigers fell on hard times at the end of last season and left the building without the title. Couple this with the fact that you can barely understand most of their Cajun fanbase when they speak and we see clearly that LSU is football’s equivalent to “The American Dream” Dusty Rhodes.

2. USC Trojans

The times are always laid back in Southern California. Picturesque stadium, prized co-eds and without an NFL team in Los Angeles, the Trojans are The Whole F’n Show. They were on top of the college football world just a few short years ago. They held two titles, had just produced three Heisman winners and even counted Snoop Dogg among their fans. It was always 4:20 in the land of Troy. A funny thing happened on the way to the bank though; somebody figured out that most of that grandeur was accomplished while under the influence of the all mighty dollar. All that was missing from this tale was a late-night traffic stop with Sabu in the passenger seat. Now USC is striving to regain what they lost by starting back at the bottom. Maybe this year the Trojans will airbrush their jerseys because they are clearly this year’s Rob Van Dam.

3. Alabama Crimson Tide

More titles than anyone ever, an enforcing defense that is the driving factor behind their success, a cocky and arrogant fanbase that delights in telling everyone who will listen just how great they think they are, and a completely boring offensive style that seeks to basically armbar opponents in to submission; these are the ingredients that make up Bama Nation. Diamonds are forever and so is Nick Saban‘s scowl. Sprinkle in the university’s racist past and the Crimson Tide taste a lot like the original Four Horsemen.

4. Oregon Ducks

The Ducks have a fast paced offense that dazzles their faithful and can leave their opponents as lost as a run-over dog on the field. They also have a bazillion different uniform combinations so you never know exactly what they will look like when they come out of the tunnel. Their fast pace is enough to satisfy their foreign fan base (seriously, is Oregon actually in this country?) and it has gotten them way over in their little slice of Earth. The problem is this pace often blows them up and when it is time for a big spot, it is Botch City. Clearly, the Oregon Ducks are Sin Cara.

5. Michigan Wolverines

Michigan is always just on the edge of any conversation about the greatest programs in college football history. They don’t have quite as many titles as Alabama, their name doesn’t carry the weight that Notre Dame and they have recently been upstaged by their greatest rival Ohio State. All that being said, they are way over. Their stadium is called The Big House and 100,000 maniacs show up in freezing weather to cheer for the team in the wacky striped hats. Michigan was once great, they are currently sporting a giant white beard but seem poised for a come back. The Michigan Wolverines are Randy Savage.

6. Georgia Bulldogs

Many years ago, the Bulldogs had an amazing athletic talent who could do things on the field that no one had ever pulled off before. This propelled them to main event status in college football. After losing the title to Joe Paterno (talk about a heel turn), Georgia has made a habit of disappointing a fanbase that loves wearing colorful Bulldog tee shirts, but doesn’t really know much about football past that point. The Bulldogs are truly an enigma. They will fall flat on their faces at one point in the year or another and then go on a great run to give their fans just enough hope to hang themselves. Last year they won the SEC East which is the football equivalent of the Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, title thus ensuring high expectations for the upcoming season. For creatures of the Athens night, “Them Dawgs” are everything. To the rest of us they are a reliable disappointment. Enigma, yes. Charismatic, maybe. Are the Georgia Bulldogs football’s Jeff Hardy? Without question.

7. Oklahoma Sooners

Oklahoma kind of has it all; the respect of their peers, a loyal and classy fanbase, an old-school tradition of winning, and a ton of past achievements. They have had success in two major conferences and are very much in the conversation for best program in history. Yet at least once a year, they are embarrassed on national television, usually by someone whose actual talent level isn’t close to theirs. Last year they put over Texas Tech, Oklahoma State and somebody named Baylor (and the Texas Tech loss even happened in their own home town!). In 2010 they joined the Kiss the Aggies Club as they lost by double digits to Texas A&M. As usual there are big expectations in Norman, Okla. this year, but we all know that the “Higher Power” will never let college football’s Jim Ross get over without a fight.

8. Florida State Seminoles

Athletically gifted beyond measure, truly impressive to watch in action, astute at both offense and defense, Florida State can do it all – except speak well and come through in the clutch. Throughout the years, Florida State has been on the cusp of total college football domination. But at just about every turn some fatal flaw rears its head. They have been plagued with wide field goals, suspensions and odd hairstyles (see Deion Sanders‘ Jheri curl). They were pegged to be college football’s gold standard when they were led by the often unintelligible Bobby Bowden. He was filled with down-home country sayings, and was never above cheating to win. He was the college football equivalent of a doting black mother. The ‘Noles have finally wheeled Bobby into the retirement home and are trying to re-establish themselves as a program that matters. Maybe they should put in a call to Charlie Haas, because that seems to work best for their wrestling counterpart Shelton Benjamin.

9. West Virginia Mountaineers

Nobody really knows why West Virginia football is good. Some would even argue that it isn’t. They have a balls-to-the-wall offensive style, and their defensive formations resemble a child’s attempt at a logical chess strategy. They have never actually won much of anything (certainly not a beauty contest), but much of their style has been adopted by others to great success. Their fans will (and I mean will) burn a couch after a big win, right before they all pile into a converted school bus and head back to their multi-family dwellings. I would imagine they would have a good ole-fashioned 50-50 raffle at half time. The Mountaineers have to be riding on what are surely fumes, but you can rest assured they will huff those fumes. The Mountaineers are the tribe of Extreme Championship Wrestling, and we all know how long that lasted (for those of us in Georgia, they are closer to a certain promotion in Carollton).

10. Boise State Broncos

In 2007, a seemingly overmatched BSU team took on a monster named Oklahoma in a Bowl Championship Series game. Oklahoma let Boise hang around for too long and fell victim to football’s version of a surprise roll-up victory, and a legend was born. Last year, Boise State walked into the Georgia Dome and stole the Georgia Bulldogs’ $25,000, and beat them by 14 points. Aside from those two victories, however, the names that have fallen to the Broncos are not very impressive, and the Broncos seem to be stuck on the upper-mid card. The Boise State Broncos are the 1-2-3 Kid, but remember, today’s 1-2-3 Kid is tomorrow’s X-Pac, and nobody wants that.