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Preseason BlogPoll Roundtable: Who's Overrated? Who's Underrated?

First, news of the BlogPoll leaked as anticipation mounted.

Then, the initial preseason BlogPoll was released and MaconDawg broke it down in detail (with a little help from fotodog).

Rutgers alumna Kristin Davis was pleased to learn that the Scarlet Knights were ranked 21st in the inaugural BlogPoll.

Now, MGoBlog's Brian Cook, who has supplanted Howard Stern as the king of all media, has put out the call for participants in the BlogPoll to answer a pair of preseason roundtable questions; viz.: "Who is overrated?" and "Who is underrated?"

Although 48 of the 58 BlogPoll voters chose Southern California as the nation's No. 1 team, a total of seven different squads received first-place votes, including the Badgers (1), the Bayou Bengals (2), the Gators (2), the Longhorns (2), the Mountaineers (2), and the Wolverines (1).

That parenthetical "1" next to Michigan's name came from me, so I guess you know which way I'm going to break when identifying the country's most underrated squad.

Granted, the Maize and Blue are ranked third, so it isn't as though Lloyd Carr's crew is getting no respect, but, while the Fighting Tigers and the Wolverines may start this season as neck-and-neck as they ended last season, I can't see placing Michigan behind L.S.U., given the givens.

This guy, by the way, is one of the givens. You can't spell "Les Miles" without two L's.

I am a firm believer that defense wins championships, but losing nine starters on defense didn't impair Ohio State last season---well, O.K., during the regular season, at any rate---so I'm not doubting a Big Ten team's ability to get it done on offense.

Jake Long is back on the line, as are Mario Manningham at wide receiver, Mike Hart at tailback, and Chad Henne under center. The Wolverines will score a lot of points and, with Ron English running the defense, the Maize and Blue will be aggressive on D, where their attacking style should help make up for the absence of LaMarr Woodley.

Anyone who doubts that Michigan will leap out to a 10-0 start for the second straight season has some explaining to do. Which team, precisely, will go into the Big House and upend the Wolverines? Oregon? Notre Dame? Penn State? Purdue? Those teams all travel to Ann Arbor, as do the rebuilding Buckeyes.

Aside from a potentially dangerous trip to Madison (where Michigan had won three in a row over Wisconsin before falling there by a field goal in the Wolverines' disastrous 2005 campaign), the Maize and Blue face a slate filled with tough teams, both within the league (No. 11 Ohio State, No. 13 Penn State, and No. 9 Wisconsin) and without (Notre Dame and No. 24 Oregon), to which Michigan is superior.

Their opponents are good. They're better.

Meanwhile, the Trojans, whose superior talent and aura of invincibility periodically are punctured by U.S.C.'s penchant for dropping occasional close calls to lesser opponents in conference play, will get the easy part of their schedule out of the way early---assuming traveling to No. 19 Nebraska qualifies as "easy"---before closing out the campaign by playing Arizona, at Notre Dame, at Oregon, Oregon State, at California, at Arizona State, and U.C.L.A.

That seven-game stretch run includes three ranked teams and four others receiving votes in the BlogPoll. Blue-chip talent aside, I don't see Southern California---a squad that played below its potential for three weeks last year (in lackluster wins of 28-22 at Washington State, 26-20 against Washington, and 28-21 against Arizona State) before dropping a 33-31 decision at Oregon State---surviving the second half of the season unscathed. In my book, an unbeaten Michigan squad is better than a once-beaten U.S.C. team.

This brings me to the BlogPoll's most overrated team, which could not more clearly be Florida. Don't get me wrong . . . the Gators will be good; the Orange and Blue simply have too much talent and are too well coached not to be a solid squad. However, the defending national champions will not prove to be the seventh-best team in the land.

In the Big Ten, where last year's conference champion propelled itself to the national title game on the strength of its offense, Michigan is the favorite because the Wolverines return a wealth of skill on that side of the ball. In the S.E.C., where last year's Gators captured conference and national honors on the strength of their defense while putting up numbers eerily reminiscent of those posted by a previous national champion from the S.E.C., Florida returns no one on the side of the ball that made the Saurians successful.

Jarvis Moss? Gone! Reggie Nelson? Gone! Brandon Siler? Gone! Ryan Smith? Gone!

The Gators have two---count 'em, two---returning starters on defense. For a team that lost its starting quarterback and spent 2006 living awfully close to the margins, those departures will prove devastating to the Florida football team's chances of doing what the Florida basketball team did: repeating.

The Gators should win nine games, but they won't be in the mix for the national title, they won't finish the season ranked in the top 10, and they won't become the first squad since Tennessee in 1998 to win a second straight Southeastern Conference championship.

(Honorable---or, I guess, dishonorable---mention for "most overrated," by the way, goes to No. 20 Arkansas and "also receiving votes" entrant Wake Forest. Aside from Darren McFadden, the Razorbacks have disaster written all over them. The Hogs may be looking at a season reminiscent of Notre Dame's 1956 campaign, in which the Fighting Irish went 2-8 en route to producing a Heisman Trophy winner in Paul Hornung. As for the Demon Deacons, the best college football blogger exposed the 2006 A.C.C. champions for the parvenus that they were . . . and are.)

At No. 7, Florida is ranked too high. At No. 3, Michigan is ranked too low. That's how I see it; let me know if you see it differently.

Go 'Dawgs!

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Florida overrated
I like Urban Meyer, but no way he wins big in the SEC with that defense.  I see an 8 win season for the Gators and tied for third place in the SEC East.  Florida loses to Tennessee, LSU, Georgia, and South Carolina.

by 34hawk on Aug 23, 2007 8:51 AM EDT   0 recs

With all due respect...
Michigan is a notorious choke-artist. I can remember even back through the late 80s that Michigan always had so much potential, but always managed to blow the season (much like Tenn has). Yes, they (both) have won NCs since then (and UGA hasn't), but it never is good to have one of your best opportunities to stumble at the end of the year.
Furthermore, I think Florida like being where most people have them, pushed out of the limelight. Remember, nobody wanted to give them props last year until they killed OSU.
Finally, while I think the rest of the Pac10 is gaining ground and that last season showed the Trojans are indeed vulnerable, they can react in 2 ways: continue to be exposed or work harder and reclaim the aura, I tend to lean towards the latter.

That said, this is all speculation (and by a dimwit at that).

by fotodog on Aug 23, 2007 11:00 AM EDT   0 recs

LOOK !!!
More ads for thongs - they appear the same day as Kristen Davis re-appears.

Perhaps you should put more pictures of Mary Louise Parker - you'll get ads for High Times magazine and interesting paraphenalia

Pictures of Bo Derek will likely mean ads for ED drugs (aiming for the demographic that grew up thinking 10 should have won an Oscar).

Pictures of Lindsey Lohan will yield ads for defensive driving schools.

Pictures of Britney Spears might produce ads for Valtrex.

Pictures of Meg Ryan will mean ads for Retin-A cream

Pictures of Ann Coulter will get this http://www.prankplace.com/hillaryvoodookit.htm

by Blogger who came in from the cold on Aug 23, 2007 2:44 PM EDT   0 recs

I just don't see it re: big televen
By which I mean, I just don't think that the Big Televen is that good. tOSU remains an unknown, and I think Wisconsin looked better by virtue of running over lesser teams last season rather than actually being great. Frankly I think Cal is a better team.

On that tenuous logic - which is to say, that 1) Michigan is by some small margin the best team in the Big Televen before a down has been played, just as USC probably is in the Pac 10, and that 2) the "others" in the Pac 10 are marginally better than in the Big 10 - I'd call an unbeaten Michigan versus a one-loss USC a push. In terms of the natural order of the universe, or something.

I also think that USC dropping 3 games total against conference opponents in the 2003 - 2006 seasons doesn't constitute a penchant. I do think that Booty can't get them to an unbeaten season on his lonesome.

by DC Trojan on Aug 23, 2007 11:29 PM EDT   0 recs

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