Read this piece (bugmenot) this morning and elevated my blood pressure.
I flipped. Like a cheese omelet.
Or maybe more like a mob informant. That’s how stressful it seemed knowing that my Associated Press Top 25 vote could determine whether Texas or California plays in the Rose Bowl.
I moved Texas ahead of Cal in my final regular-season AP vote. Not because of the many e-mails and voicemails I received, mostly from Longhorns fans either begging or blistering me for my vote.
In the end, I had to stick to my main reason for keeping Texas below Cal: style points.
To: kwhitmire@dallasnews.com
Your “explanation column” is a disgrace. And it displays:
1. Why the mainstream sports media has no clue
2. Why it’s unethical for sports journalists to vote in polls of any kind that actually affect the outcome of the college football season.
Style points? Cal took its longest trip of the year to face a bowl-bound team that was at one point ranked in the top 20, and — depleted of most of its wide receivers — dominated the yardage and won by 10.
Would it have mattered if that bad clipping call had not taken away a touchdown? Or if Tedford had decided to pull a Bob Stoops and take some more shots rather than running down the clock at the end? Or if the game had taken place on Sept. 16 instead of Dec. 4?
Perhaps your vote might not have flipped if you were in a state other than Texas. Just a thought.
In any event, there’s no harm in me disagreeing with you. People disagree.
The harm is in the fact that your vote makes you a part of a story you should have no part in; you have _made_ the story rather than reported on it. Any reasonable news organization would realize that the current reliance on the votes of writers to decide the outcome of the college football season has created a remarkable ethical lapse.
That you seem to be proud about your illogical, unethical decision is all the more sickening.
-jason
Cal was a 24-point favorite and won by 10. We’re talking about switching the 5-6 spots here for two teams that failed to win their conference. Cal had a chance to prove it was the No. 5 team in the country and didn’t.