Riddlewire
Master
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2007
- Messages
- 2,570
****There has been an invisible hand at work in the sport of football for a long time. Constantly pushing things around. Changing the rules. Manipulating the narrative. At the high school level, it exists in the form of the "recruiting industry", which has a blatantly obvious agenda. In the NFL, it all takes place in the high offices of Team Management, in collaboration with their marketing partners in the anti-white media. But in college football, the hand that guides is known as the BCS.
****Bowl games don't decide anything. And the BCS bowls don't represent the ten best teams in the country. But that's how the media sells it to the public. The rankings don't agree with the teams selected for these ten slots. Four of the top ten ranked teams (according to the BCS itself) aren't even playing in these games. Instead, we get the #11, #13, #15, and #23 teams. How did that happen? As the media would no doubt tell you, "It's complicated". But I don't see anything complicated at all about these game matchups. In fact, I see a decided trend about these seemingly arbitrary team selections.
Take a look at these games and tell me if you see anything suspicous (I have included handy color indicators to give you a hint):
((Also pay attention to the media entity which is responsible for bringing us this Kabuki Theater))
BCS Bowls:
BCS Championship
January 9, 2012 New Orleans, LA, 9:00 pm ESPN
LSU vs. Alabama
Discover Orange Bowl
January 4, 2012 Miami Gardens, FL, 8:00 pm ESPN
Clemson vs. West Virginia
Allstate Sugar Bowl
January 3, 2012 New Orleans, LA, 8:30 pm ESPN
Virginia Tech vs. Michigan
Tostitos Fiesta Bowl
January 2, 2012 Glendale, AZ, 8:30 pm ESPN
Oklahoma State vs. Stanford
Rose Bowl Game
January 2, 2012 Pasadena, CA, 5:00 pm ESPN
Wisconsin vs. Oregon
****So which teams don't belong? #11 Virginia Tech, #13 Michigan, #15 Clemson, and #24 West Virginia are all ranked outside the top ten. The #6, #7, #8, and #9 teams all get left out of the bowl system that was supposed to give college football fans the matchups of the best teams in the country. What else do those groupings of teams have in common? The four teams from the top ten that got left out of the system all have white quarterbacks, whereas the four teams from outside the top ten that replaced them in the BCS bowls all have black black quarterbacks.
****Negroes have never proven themselves to be reliable performers at the quarterback position. Not in college and especially not in the NFL. Two of the black quarterbacks in these BCS games have been outperformed by their white backups when the situation has presented itself. As has EPSN's favorite black quarterback Robert Griffin. Clemson's thick-lipped black quarterback managed to guide his team to a three loss season against an incredibly soft schedule, with their only two good wins being against another one of the black quarterbacks in this group. West Virginia played an even softer schedule and, likewise, ended up with three losses on the season. Exactly how are the Mountaineers better than Arkansas, Boise State, and Kansas State, which all finished ahead of them? Tyler Wilson's Arkansas team has a particularly strong case against these matchups. The "Two team per conference" limit doesn't apply when two of the teams from one conference are playing in the championship game. So Arkansas should've gotten the nod over Virginia Tech.
****The caste media had their dream matchup in the "Championship" game last year. The BCS system couldn't deliver for them again this year, as Darron Thomas choked away two games for Oregon and Russell Wilson's horribly underperforming* Wisconsin team was the only other black quarterback squad in the top ten to pair up with LSU in the title game. So the BCS gave them the next best thing. A slate of BCS Bowl games filled with undeserving black quarterbacks. This is the image that the PTB want to sell. They spent many years purging the minds of America of any thoughts that white men could ever play runningback. In the last few years, they've set their sites on the quarterback position. You can expect this pattern to repeat itself in the future, with strange outcomes, rule changes, and curious bowl selections becoming the norm.
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*Even DWFs and negro-loving trolls have no choice but to admit that when a college team has an offensive line that's more massive than the defending Super Bowl champs, there is no excuse for losing even one single game. All you have to do is hand the ball off over and over and occasionally toss a short pass. Wilson lost twice, even with all the time in the world to find an open receiver, and with the #6 scoring defense in the country. This is indefensible.
****Bowl games don't decide anything. And the BCS bowls don't represent the ten best teams in the country. But that's how the media sells it to the public. The rankings don't agree with the teams selected for these ten slots. Four of the top ten ranked teams (according to the BCS itself) aren't even playing in these games. Instead, we get the #11, #13, #15, and #23 teams. How did that happen? As the media would no doubt tell you, "It's complicated". But I don't see anything complicated at all about these game matchups. In fact, I see a decided trend about these seemingly arbitrary team selections.
Take a look at these games and tell me if you see anything suspicous (I have included handy color indicators to give you a hint):
((Also pay attention to the media entity which is responsible for bringing us this Kabuki Theater))
BCS Bowls:
BCS Championship
January 9, 2012 New Orleans, LA, 9:00 pm ESPN
LSU vs. Alabama
Discover Orange Bowl
January 4, 2012 Miami Gardens, FL, 8:00 pm ESPN
Clemson vs. West Virginia
Allstate Sugar Bowl
January 3, 2012 New Orleans, LA, 8:30 pm ESPN
Virginia Tech vs. Michigan
Tostitos Fiesta Bowl
January 2, 2012 Glendale, AZ, 8:30 pm ESPN
Oklahoma State vs. Stanford
Rose Bowl Game
January 2, 2012 Pasadena, CA, 5:00 pm ESPN
Wisconsin vs. Oregon
****So which teams don't belong? #11 Virginia Tech, #13 Michigan, #15 Clemson, and #24 West Virginia are all ranked outside the top ten. The #6, #7, #8, and #9 teams all get left out of the bowl system that was supposed to give college football fans the matchups of the best teams in the country. What else do those groupings of teams have in common? The four teams from the top ten that got left out of the system all have white quarterbacks, whereas the four teams from outside the top ten that replaced them in the BCS bowls all have black black quarterbacks.
****Negroes have never proven themselves to be reliable performers at the quarterback position. Not in college and especially not in the NFL. Two of the black quarterbacks in these BCS games have been outperformed by their white backups when the situation has presented itself. As has EPSN's favorite black quarterback Robert Griffin. Clemson's thick-lipped black quarterback managed to guide his team to a three loss season against an incredibly soft schedule, with their only two good wins being against another one of the black quarterbacks in this group. West Virginia played an even softer schedule and, likewise, ended up with three losses on the season. Exactly how are the Mountaineers better than Arkansas, Boise State, and Kansas State, which all finished ahead of them? Tyler Wilson's Arkansas team has a particularly strong case against these matchups. The "Two team per conference" limit doesn't apply when two of the teams from one conference are playing in the championship game. So Arkansas should've gotten the nod over Virginia Tech.
****The caste media had their dream matchup in the "Championship" game last year. The BCS system couldn't deliver for them again this year, as Darron Thomas choked away two games for Oregon and Russell Wilson's horribly underperforming* Wisconsin team was the only other black quarterback squad in the top ten to pair up with LSU in the title game. So the BCS gave them the next best thing. A slate of BCS Bowl games filled with undeserving black quarterbacks. This is the image that the PTB want to sell. They spent many years purging the minds of America of any thoughts that white men could ever play runningback. In the last few years, they've set their sites on the quarterback position. You can expect this pattern to repeat itself in the future, with strange outcomes, rule changes, and curious bowl selections becoming the norm.
------------------------------------------------------
*Even DWFs and negro-loving trolls have no choice but to admit that when a college team has an offensive line that's more massive than the defending Super Bowl champs, there is no excuse for losing even one single game. All you have to do is hand the ball off over and over and occasionally toss a short pass. Wilson lost twice, even with all the time in the world to find an open receiver, and with the #6 scoring defense in the country. This is indefensible.