San Jose State remains perfect on field and social media

The San Jose State Spartans are undefeated and have a pretty good social media mark, too

The San Jose State Spartans were inspired … by the Boise State faithful heading into the Mountain West Championship on Saturday.

The Broncos’ backers had a lot to say about how San Jose State was overmatched and had to be thankful the regular-season contest was canceled due to COVID-19 issues at Boise State in late November.

There were those that thought the undefeated Spartans would still be no match for the Broncos with the title on the line.

San Jose State fooled them all, shutting down Boise State, 34-20, to complete a 7-0 season. The Spartans never trailed.

And then the social media team for San Jose State delivered the knockout punch:

11th bowl game canceled for 2020-21

An 11th bowl game was canceled for the 2020-21 college football bowl season on Monday. Find out which conference now has five cancellations

Another day has brought another cancelation to college football’s 2020-21 bowl season, this time the LA Bowl, which was set to debut on December 30 has officially been called off.

The LA Bowl announced the news on Monday, becoming the 11th bowl game canceled for this coming bowl season, joining the Bahamas, Celebration, Fenway, Hawai’i, Holiday, Las Vegas, Motor City, Pinstripe, Redbox, and Sun bowls who all canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The LA Bowl was set to be played at the brand new SoFi Stadium, home to the NFL’s Chargers and Rams.

The LA Bowl, which was set to be played between the Pac-12 and Mountain West is the fifth bowl game with a Pac-12 tie-in to be called off.  The Pac-12 did recently get an assist from the Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl, as a Pac-12 team will take on an SEC foe in that game this year.

All of this week’s canceled college football games

Here’s the on-going updated list of the college football games that have been canceled for this coming weekend

College football is getting by in what continues to be the strangest year any of us have ever seen and probably ever will see, God willing.

As the year has gone on the outbreaks of COVID-19 have as well, leaving many to wonder if coaches are finding convenient ways to get out of blowouts and help save their jobs, while others can’t preach safety enough.

What I do know is that as crazy as this year has been, I’m happy that it was at least given a try instead of simply punting on the year.  It’s been far from perfect but we all knew that would be the case when the season was ultimately saved.

With that, here are is your current list of games that have been called off for this weekend, as of December 3, 2020:

Friday, Dec. 4:
Southern Mississippi at UTEP
Boise State at UNLV

Saturday, Dec. 5:
Northwestern at Minnesota
Kent State at Miami (OH)
Maryland at Michigan

Also worth noting and I’ll be doing a piece praising BYU for getting this done as well, is that BYU and Coastal Carolina were able to get a game for Saturday scheduled on short notice after Liberty was unable to play due to COVID-19 concerns.

It’s a huge addition of a game for BYU who hasn’t gotten respect from the College Football Playoff committee to date and it’s a move that makes loud-mouths like myself have to shut their mouth and instead tip our caps in the direction of Provo, Utah.

Mid-American Conference Becomes Last FBS Conference to Resume Football

Every Football Bowl Subdivision conference will see action in 2020.

Every Football Bowl Subdivision conference will see action in 2020. On Friday, the Mid-American Conference’s 12 presidents voted unanimously to have football this season. Only six games will be played by each team in conference-only schedules. A championship game is set for Dec. 18 or 19.

The conference initially canceled its season, but its stance has changed just like every other conference that previously announced a season cancelation. This announcement came a day after the Pac-12 and Mountain West both announced that they would have football after all in 2020. The Big Ten also recently announced it will have a season. Also like with every other conference, daily testing will be implemented.

Conference commissioner Jon Steinbrecher released the following statement:

“I am pleased to inform our student-athletes, coaches, and fans, that the Mid-American Conference will resume the fall football season, Our decisions, in August and again today, have been guided by an overriding concern for the well-being of the student-athletes, institutions, and the community at large. Our medical advisory group, presidents, directors of athletics, and others, have worked hard to develop a plan that provides the opportunity for student athletes to compete. We will be diligent in monitoring the dynamic health environment across the Conference footprint and the country.”

Pac-12, Mountain West Will Have Football in 2020

It appears the demand for college football in 2020 has become too great.

It appears the demand for college football in 2020 has become too great. On Thursday, the Pac-12 announced it will play a seven-game conference schedule beginning Nov. 6. Soon after, the Mountain West announced a eight-game season that will begin the weekend of Oct. 24. That leaves the Mid-American Conference as the only Football Bowl Subdivision conference without a season, but a vote on what could be a six-game season is expected Friday.

All of that talk about keeping college football players safe during the COVID-19 pandemic officially was for naught. The conferences can discussing daily testing all they want, but it doesn’t change the fact that they’re going back on their word and have decided to chase the dollars after all. Pressure from players, parents and others didn’t help, but the conferences couldn’t or wouldn’t stand their ground. Any compassion and goodwill they’ve gained over the past couple of months is gone, and if you haven’t figured it out by now, they never had souls.

A second FBS conference postpones its fall football season

After the Mid-American Conference became the first FBS conference to cancel its fall football season three days ago, a second conference…

After the Mid-American Conference became the first FBS conference to cancel its fall football season three days ago, a second conference joined them on the sidelines yesterday.

That conference is the Mountain West.

The dominoes have obviously started to fall towards some or even all of the Power Five also electing against playing football this fall, with the Big Ten already seeming to be on the brink of postponing the season.

Here are a few clips from the Mountain West’s announcement:

“Nothing is more important than the health and well-being of our students, student-athletes, coaches, faculty, staff and overall communities,” said Dr. Mary Papazian, President at San José State University and Chair of the MW Board of Directors. “Through the hard work of many over the past several months, the Conference made every effort to create an opportunity for our student-athletes to compete, and we empathize with the disappointment this creates for everyone associated with our programs. The best interests of our students and student-athletes remain our focus and we will persist in our efforts to forge a viable and responsible path forward.”

“Since the start of the pandemic, our membership and staff have been working diligently to prepare for a fall sports season,” said MW Commissioner Craig Thompson. “We were hopeful we could carefully and responsibly conduct competition as originally scheduled with essential protocols in place. However, numerous external factors and unknowns outside our control made this difficult decision necessary. I fully understand the impact of this outcome on our student- athletes, coaches, administrators and staff who work so hard daily to play the sports we all love, and I share in their disappointment. We will continue to navigate this pandemic together, overcome the obstacles and return to intercollegiate athletics at the earliest opportunity.”

Report: Mountain West cancels football, fall sports

The Mountain West has decided to cancel football and all fall sports.

Another domino has fallen as the college football season continues to tumble, Accord to multiple reports, the Mountain West is canceling its football season along with all fall sports.

Brett McMurphy of Stadium got the jump on the story and others quickly followed. He also says the conference is considering playing spring football.

A dozen schools comprise the Mountain West, including Boise State, Hawai’i, San Diego State, Utah State, Wyoming and Colorado State.

The Rams of Colorado State can now focus on the scandal that broke over the weekend and is plaguing the program.

Only last week, the MWC announced a football schedule model that included eight conference games and up to two non-league games at each member’s discretion.

The MWC joined the Ivy League and the Mid-American Conference in canceling its fall sports.

Mountain West Postpones Football Season

The Mountain West is next among the conferences expected to postpone or cancel their fall seasons. Now what for the conference?

The Mountain West is next among the conferences expected to postpone or cancel their fall seasons. Now what for the conference, and for college football?


The Mountain West is the next conference about to cancel its 2020 college football season.

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According to a report from Brett McMurphy, the Mountain West is announcing it’ll cancel its 2020 fall season with an eye towards playing spring football.

This comes on the heels of releasing its schedule model just a few days ago. The conference had announced on August 5th that it was going to start its Eason on September 26th with eight conference games and two non-conference dates, but it didn’t lock in specific matchups and dates like the Big Ten did. Less than a week later, it’s choosing to not play this season.

The conference was gutted by the lack of non-conference games like the MAC was, but the lost of a slew of big-name dates didn’t help.

Air Force was supposed to play at Purdue, Boise State was hosting Florida State, Colorado State was going to Oregon State and Vanderbilt, New Mexico had dates at Mississippi State and USC, Utah State was going to host Washington State and go to Washington, Wyoming was going to play Utah, Fresno State was going to Colorado and Texas A&M.

Hawaii was going to host UCLA and go to Oregon, Nevada was going to Arkansas, San Diego State was playing UCLA, San Jose State was going to Penn State, and UNLV had dates with Cal and Arizona State and a trip to Iowa State.

It’s this simple for the Group of Five conferences. Lose your paycheck games, and things become difficult.

However, according to McMurphy, there’s still a shot at playing spring football. At the very least, now it joins the MAC, UConn, and Old Dominion among those not playing this fall.

Also affected … BYU. The independent Cougars were expected to play Utah State, at Boise State, and San Diego State. They also were supposed to play at Utah, at Arizona State, and at Stanford from the Pac-12, and against Michigan State and Minnesota from the Big Ten. At the moment, they have two games still left on their schedule: Navy and Houston, with North Alabama hardly a sure thing.

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Report: Second Group of Five Conference Cancels Football

The MAC is no longer the only conference to have cancelled football this fall as another Group of Five conference joined them in doing so.

As we went back and forth with the Big Ten cancelling and then not actually cancelling football for the fall earlier today, we do now have word that another FBS conference has pulled the plug on their football season.

The Moutntain West Conference has canceled their 2020 football season in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and over fear of player health and safety concerns.  Brett McMurphy of Stadium was first with the report.

McMurphy’s report adds that the conference will consider playing football in the spring but makes no guarantee to it happening.

The Mountain West Conference is home to Air Force, Boise State, Fresno State, Colorado State, Nevada, UNLV, New Mexico, San Diego State, San Jose State, Utah State and Wyoming in football.

The Mountain West Conference joins the Mid-American Conference as the first two to officially cancel the 2020 season.  The addition of Connecticut cancelling football last week brings the total to 26 FBS programs that won’t play football this fall.

Historic player organization movements are only the beginning

If a players union is ever going to exist at the college level, it will not come from the generosity of college athletics administrators.

Earlier this week, a group of Pac-12 players sent a letter to the Players’ Tribune with a list of demands for the conference and are threatening to opt-out of the 2020 football season should those demands not be met.

The list was later shared by a number of Pac-12 athletes on Twitter, including Oregon star Penei Sewell, who is a projected early first-round pick in the 2021 NFL Draft.

The players’ demands cover a wide range of issues, from COVID-19 safety to racial justice and compensation. For COVID-19 protections, players want the ability to opt-out of the season free from punishment within their programs and for safety standards to be maintained by a third party. To protect the status of all sports during the pandemic, they are demanding pay cuts from Commissioner Larry Scott, as well as coaches and administrators.

They also want the right to profit off their name, image and likeness, as well as the distribution of 50 percent of total conference revenue from each sport evenly among the athletes in those sports.

In response to this, players across the nation voiced their support for the movement, including Florida defensive end Zachary Carter.

Groups of players in both the Big 10 and Mountain West followed suit, giving their own list of demands to conference administrators. However, the lists of demands from those conferences aren’t as broad as that of the Pac-12 players. They only address COVID-19 safety and not wider-reaching social issues.

These movements have shown unprecedented levels of player organization at a time when it is desperately needed. As players unions in the NBA, MLB and NFL have negotiated substantive protections for their players, college athletes — who have no representation whatsoever — have been largely forced to go along with the (generally terrible) decisions made by those who allegedly care about their best interest.

Of course, the players have power; any group of organized laborers does. It’s the reason trade unions exist in the first place. But without a union (which the players desperately need for a number of reasons, as the Pac-12 players have demonstrated), the players are essentially powerless as individuals.

That’s why these grassroots organizational movements are so important. Once players realize they have power in numbers, they will be able to affect change within the system. Maybe not everything they are demanding, but significant change nonetheless.

If a players union is ever going to exist at the college level, it will not come from the generosity of college athletics administrators. Allowing the players, who aren’t technically employees, to unionize would give the game away for the NCAA. If players can collectively bargain, the current system of college athletics would be burned to the ground.

And it should be.

Because ultimately, the value of college sports isn’t derived from the NCAA. It comes from the players. And the only way the players will get what they deserve is if they force the issue through organized, collective action.

If met, the demands of the Pac-12 players would preclude the league from competing in NCAA-sanctioned events, as nearly all of them violate current amateurism rules. But, so what? Do the conferences really need the NCAA to survive?

Talking to ESPN, Ramogi Huma, founder of the college athletics advocacy group the National College Players Association, phrased the answer succinctly.

Huma said the players are aware that if the Pac-12 met their demands that the conference would not be eligible to participate in NCAA-sanctioned competitions or championships.

“Right now, it’s clear that the conferences don’t need the NCAA. Each conference is an industry unto itself,” Huma said. “[The players are saying,] ‘We’re fine if our conference doesn’t belong to the NCAA at all. We need to be treated fairly.'”

Don’t misunderstand, some reforms are certainly possible within the system, as state legislators allowing players to be compensated for the use of their names, images and likenesses shows.

But historically, massive, systemic reforms for labor groups tend to stem from one thing and one thing only: tireless and unflinching advocacy from the laborers themselves until those taking advantage of them have no choice remaining but to listen.

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