CDAGRIZ said:
EverettGriz said:
CDA, are we somehow not being clear that the totally strange part is not only did two bsc teams play a non-conference game, but that also one of those very same bsc team played a non-bsc team in a game that counted as a conference game? Is there a better way we can describe this screwy scenario?
I can't think of one. I think, with the stroke of a pen, the BSC could've avoided this well before the season began. Could've gone like this:
*February 2019*
"Oops, that shit doesn't make any sense at all. Hey, Idaho/EWU, that's a conference game. Hey, EWU/[Literally any team not in the conference, including the LA Rams], that's not a conference game. Cool? Make sense? Cool."
*Scene*
Think about the timeline though.
UND got the MVC offer first and accepted, they informed the BSC and and said they would play independent for 2 years, the BSC had the schedule already made, so they decided to keep the UND games on the schedule meaning that UND and their BSC opponents wouldn't be scrambling to find games.
Then ISU decides to drop down, they had a standing invitation. the BSC upheld the agreement with UND and worked ISU into the schedule wherever they could. ISU and EWU were left with a common week open, since they were to become BSC rivals anyway they set up a game. It makes complete sense when you consider how it went down. It saved both EWU and ISU finding another game, it was a short trip, and it fit into maintaining the BSC rivalry.