Showing posts with label Golf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Golf. Show all posts
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Michigan Golf: Jack Schultz Interview
Posted at 8:00am -- 5/16/2010
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Michigan Golf: Big Ten Match Play Championship

Michigan Golf
Big Ten Match Play Championship
3:30pm EDT. - 5:30pm EDT.
DirecTV Channel 614
BTN
Written by GBMW Staff
Go Blue -- Wear Maize!


Labels: Michigan, Wolverines, Football
Big Ten Network,
DirecTV,
Golf
Friday, May 08, 2009
Mailbag question: What is your take on adding another team to the Big Ten conference or should they?

Hello,
Have not seen your guys take on the JoePa and "needing to add another team to the Big Ten conference" and also what Delaney has said about it.
What is your take about adding another team? Do you favor it? Would it help the conference? Would we compete with the SEC now?
Also what are the bad things with adding another team if any?
Do you favor the 11 teams now and could they tweak it better? Add more weeks? Play more teams, etc.?
Interesting to hear your side of this argument that has been debated on the message boards for awhile now?
Greg
-----------------------------------
Thanks for the question.
Here is the biggest problem we see with adding a twelve team to the Big Ten conference.
If you divide conference into two divisions (such as a East / West) with Michigan State, Penn State, Ohio State, and Michigan all in one division you have the biggest draws and toughest teams all beating the crap out of each other. Who are the other two teams that get placed with those four? How do you divide it fairly enough to where all the conference teams agree without feeling like they have been thrown into the tougher division?
Do you separate Ohio State and Michigan? What happens to "The Game"? If both sides agree they still want to play on the last weekend of the regular season, is it fair that they would possibly have a rematch in the conference championship game? Does it cheapen the rivalry if the regular season matchup loses its luster? There are a lot of questions, and right now nobody really knows the answers. One other thing to consider is if both Ohio State and Michigan are having good seasons -- would the loser in the conference championship game be out of the BCS? Factor into that scenario that a non-participant in the championship game could have just one loss, as with Texas and Oklahoma last year. Would the one-loss team jump over a two-loss loser of the Big Ten Championship game?
Ohio State, Penn State, and Michigan are guaranteed to fill their stadiums and bring in big television ratings. This is important to the conference and to college football.
We do think that The Big Ten conference, with eleven teams, needs to come up with a way to stage a conference championship game in early December -- but there is the 12-team rule for conference championship games. One alternative is to somehow extend the season into the first week of December with bye weeks. The extra exposure is good for the conference (the Big Ten falls off the radar with its early conclusion to the schedule). The extra practices would be great for Big Ten teams as well, especailly if they are headed to bowl games. That would be a great first step to gaining on the other BCS conferences.
We think they could keep it the way it is (with 11 teams) and just play every team in the conference (Ten Big Ten games -- two non-conference games) to claim a true champion of the Big Ten conference. But money is involved, and most of the Big Ten conference teams do not like this idea because they believe they need to play easier teams to get to the magical six wins to be eligible for a bowl. Playing more games in conference would make that goal harder to achieve. Our take is that if you cannot get to .500 in conference play, you don't belong in a bowl anyway.
The logical choice, and one the Big Ten should wait for, is Notre Dame. They bring more than football to the table. They bring prestige, ratings, and a rabid national fan base. The addition of Notre Dame gives the Big Ten more national appeal beyond Michigan - Ohio State.
Since Notre Dame turned down the Big Ten before the only other teams in the area we would feel comfortable with would be Pitt, Cincinnati, and Missouri. The problems with teams such as Syracuse, Rutgers, and those type of teams people discuss are their locations. The Big Ten is a Midwest based conference and by adding another eastern team you would really stretch the boundaries of the conference.
This is more than just a football conference. Most of the conference travel is done by bus for most of the sports teams (Michigan who has twenty-five sports programs), so the desire to add a team must factor in the extra cost to each university for each sport and game.
Think of it this way: One weekend Iowa plays Ohio State in baseball, the next weekend Rutgers, the following weekend Penn State -- the travel cost, especially in these tough economic times, would really put a strain not only on the universities, but also the fan bases that would want to travel to these events. It is one thing for football and possibly basketball, but a completely different story for other sporting events.
Again we think Notre Dame is the best choice, but we're not sure they will ever want to be part of a conference in which they are not the "big fish." They would be on equal footing with Ohio State and Michigan. Do they want to admit they are on a level playing field as those teams and admit they are not elite anymore? Penn State used to be a "big fish" before they came into the Big Ten -- now they are one of the "other teams" in the Big Ten conference in most sports.
Thanks for stopping by http://gobluemichiganwolverine.blogspot.com/
If you have any questions please e-mail erocwolverine@gmail.com
Written by CoachBt and ErocWolverine


Labels: Michigan, Wolverines, Football
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Sunday, March 01, 2009
Big Ten Golf: Match Play Championship
Labels: Michigan, Wolverines, Football
Big Ten Network,
DirecTV,
Golf
Wednesday, May 07, 2008
Michigan Golf: They make the NCAA Regional first time in 8 years
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http://www.mgoblue.com/golf-m/article.aspx?id=136812
Wolverines Earn First NCAA Regional Bid in Eight Years
May 5, 2008
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- The University of Michigan men's golf team earned a bid to the NCAA Central regional Monday (May 5), marking the first time the Wolverines will play in the NCAA postseason in eight years. It marks the third time the Maize and Blue will compete in an NCAA regional formatted event. U-M played in the 1997 and 2000 Central Regional.
A total of 27 teams and six individuals -- not from a qualifying team -- will compete at one of three regional sites. The Wolverines, who were the No. 15 seed, will head to the NCAA Central regional at Columbus, Ohio, Thursday through Saturday (May 15-17). The 54-hole stroke play event, with 18 holes played each day, will be held at the OSU's Scarlet Course. The other two regional sites will the East regional played at the Council Fire Golf Club in Chattanooga, Tenn., and hosted by Tennessee-Chattanooga and the West regional played at the Gold Mountain Golf Club in Bremerton, Wash., and hosted by Washington.
Competing with the Wolverines at the Central regional will include (by seeding order): Alabama (1), Oklahoma State (2), Georgia Tech (3), Florida (4), Tennessee (5), Lamar (6), Wake Forest (7), Indiana (8), Texas A&M (9), Louisville (10), Wichita State (11), Kent State (12), Penn State (13), Arkansas (14), U-M (15), TCU (16), Texas-Arlington (17), Illinois (18), Ohio State (19), Baylor (20), Colorado (21), Eastern Kentucky (22), Marquette (23), Eastern Michigan (24), Cleveland State (25), Loyola (Maryland) (26) and Sacred Heart (27). The six invited individuals selected were: Iowa State's Chris Baker, Minnesota's Clayton Rask and Victor Almstrom, Notre Dame's Josh Sandman, Western Kentucky's Brent Long and Northern Iowa's Jordan Weber.
From each regional the top 10 teams and top two individuals not from a qualifying team will advance to the NCAA Finals. The 2008 NCAA Finals will be Wednesday through Saturday (May 28-31) at the Boilermaker Golf Complex-The Kampen Course in West Lafayette, Ind., and hosted by Purdue. The finals will be 72 total holes with a team cut after 54 holes to the top 15 teams and top six individuals of a non-qualifying team competing for the NCAA title.
Before the Wolverines head to Columbus, Ohio, the Maize and Blue will close the regular season with one final tournament Saturday and Sunday (May 10-11) at Oklahoma's The Maxwell in Ardmore, Okla. The 54-hole event will be played at Dornick Hills Country Club.
Comments from Michigan coach Andrew Sapp
On Michigan earning the first NCAA regional bid in eight years ... "We are just thrilled. It was one of our main goals at the beginning of the season – to qualify for the NCAA regional. It shows that you played well and consistently throughout the entire year as opposed to just playing well in one tournament and getting the automatic qualifier spot by winning your conference. We have had some fine play from some players – with some individual wins. We had a couple of wins for our team as well. So we are please to be heading on to our postseason."
On if Michigan getting to the NCAA regional is the right step for the program at this point ... "It's a long time coming. This is probably something that we have waited a little longer for than I had envisioned. But we are very pleased to be going. Obviously, we don't want this to be a flash in the pan. We want this to be a regular occurrence year in and year out. Hopefully we will move on to the championship at Purdue this year and keep qualifying each year for the finals. We want to make this a regular event on our schedule."
On if he thinks his Wolverines are confident enough to advance to the NCAA Finals ... "Definitely. It is just a matter of playing well. We just have to play to the level that we know we are capable of playing. If we do that, we know we can advance. It's never easy. It's a matter of everyone clicking. The beauty of it right now is that we have been out of school for a week now and we have been able to focus solely on golf and concentrate 100 percent of our efforts into improving our golf games and getting ready for this regional championship."
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