What do you think?
Rate this book


With all-new reporting, a completely revised and updated second edition of the bestseller that takes down the Great Satan of college sports: the Bowl Championship Series (BCS).
Every college sport picks its champion by a postseason tournament, except for one: Divsiion I-A football. Instead of a tournament, fans are subjected to the Bowl Championship Series, an arcane mix of polling and mathematical rankings that results in just two teams playing for the championship. It is, without a doubt, the most hated institution in all of sports. A recent Sports Illustrated poll found that more than 90% of sports fans oppose the BCS, yet this system has remained in place for more than a decade.
Building upon top-notch investigative reporting, Wetzel, Peter, and Passan at last reveal the truth about this monstrous entity and offer a simple solution for fixing it. Death to the BCS: Totally Revised and Updated is brought up to date to cover the 2010-2011 season, listing which teams were screwed by the BCS (such as TCU), how much money college football left on the table by not having a playoff (based on 2011 tax filings), and how the calls for the abolition of the BCS grew even louder this past year. The book also includes findings from interviews with power players, as well as research into federal tax records, congressional testimony, and private contracts. The first book to lay out the unseemly inner workings of the BCS in full detail, Death to the BCS is a rousing manifesto for bringing fairness back to one of our most beloved sports.
256 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 14, 2010
without ncaa oversight and no impartial official looking out for the universities' welfare, the bcs honchos act like the worst of our politicians- more concerned with spending riders, petty pork projects, and special-interest groups than what's best for the nation. among the cartel there is a lack of comity and commonality, a stark contrast to its sport, which every saturday beams with millions of people at historic on-campus stadiums sharing passion and memories and beer and the dream of a playoff.
~
too many times in our lives, the american ideal doesn't occur. there are no level playing fields in business, little fairness in government. we're desperate for it in sports because it's still possible, this place where everyone is allowed the opportunity to win fair and square. the cartel neuters what should be a crazed november, an even more important round of conference title games, and a brilliant december- and january-worth of meaningful postseason football. any sport without a playoff to determine its champion is hardly a sport at all.