Knightro wrote:PennytoShaq wrote:My point was that it was the same in the past. We were the school that was not in a conference and had to go seek out competition for years. FSU did not play home and homes. Many times there just went and played the away game and then won the game.
And that is why when UCF fans try and climb to the top overnight and act like they are national champs, it is insulting to most fans of legacy schools. Because now you are seeing how long it takes to build up to where you can actually play these schedules year after year and get into a conference to where you can run a P5 gauntlet and win a NT.
Your frustrations are real. But FSU alumni are no stranger to those same challenges. That is what I am saying here.
I get what you're saying. I just think the landscape of college football has completely changed, specifically financially.
Comparing FSU from the late 1980s to UCF of the late 2010's is almost like apples and oranges.
Yes, FSU was independent back then, but so was Miami, so was South Carolina, so was Syracuse, so was Penn State, so was West Virginia.
Like 10 independents a year were making bowl games in from in the mid to late 80 and early 90s.
It’s definitely changed, but the core fundamentals of what needs to be done have not. UCF is a top 20 school right now. Will they be that way in the future? I have no idea. But when you are a top 20 school, you can make things happen from a matchup perspective.
Honestly, the AD’s insistence that UCF was National Champs may have hurt his relationship with other schools. That is just my speculation, but I remember Herbstreit said something to that effect and it made sense. It probably rubbed some AD’s the wrong way and they are snubbing the Knights.
If the playoffs were a top 8 like everyone wants, this would be a non-issue. But since they focused on 5 conferences and only 4 teams, the NCAA created this mess and the fans get punished.
UCF simply needs creative leadership to find ways to schedule games. If that means no home game - do it. Go on the road in a one off and beat some teams. That’s how you build a legacy program.