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FROM MY SEAT: Kings or Peasants?

S.I. scribe Stewart Mandel ranks college football teams as kings, barons, knights, or peasants. Applying his categories to C-USA, just what are the University of Memphis Tigers?

Last
month, Sports Illustrated‘s fine football scribe, Stewart Mandel, took it
upon himself to divide the world of college football into a class system of
sorts. (Or at least the BCS portion of the college football world.) With a nod
to historical performance and prestige, Mandel assigned each major football
program to one of four tiers: kings, barons, knights, and peasants. (For the
record, thirteen programs were crowned as kings by Sir Stewart: Alabama,
Florida, Florida State, Miami, Michigan, Nebraska, Notre Dame, Ohio State,
Oklahoma, Penn State, Tennessee, Texas, and USC.)

All this had me considering Conference USA, and just
where each C-USA program might fit in this “old world” scheme. Keeping in mind
that most C-USA programs predate the conference (which started play in 1996),
and factoring in those pre-C-USA years, I hereby present my own Mandelian class
system for a conference still aspiring to BCS acclaim.

KINGS


Southern Miss

— The Golden Eagles are to C-USA as USC is to the Pac 10. Under coach Jeff
Bower, Southern Miss has had winning seasons in each of C-USA’s 11. (The next
most is five winning seasons.) They won three championships (1997, 1999, and
2003) and finished atop their division a total of five times. Southern Miss has
had no fewer than seven players named either Offensive or Defensive Player of
the Year for the conference. To date, the rest of C-USA bows to the Eagles.


Houston
— The
reigning C-USA champs are one of four schools affiliated with C-USA since the
beginning in 1996 (the others are Southern Miss, Memphis, and Tulane). The
Cougars have had five winning seasons as C-USA members and featured three league
Player of the Year honorees (including quarterback Kevin Kolb last year). With
two conference championships, Houston joins only Southern Miss among programs
with more than one.

BARONS


SMU
— The
Mustangs lose points for the “death penalty” that canceled their 1987 and 1988
seasons (the heaviest penalty to date handed down by the NCAA for rule
infractions). And they didn’t join C-USA until 2005. But it’s hard to match the
history SMU can present its conference brethren. SMU has sent six players to the
College Football Hall of Fame, and that doesn’t even include Eric Dickerson.
Having played in four Cotton Bowls and a Rose Bowl, SMU’s biggest challenge now
is matching its standard of yesteryear.


Marshall
— The
Thundering Herd program gets a sentimental boost for having rebuilt from the
horror of November 14, 1970, when a plane crash killed the entire team. And
Marshall has rebuilt well. They won the Division I-AA national championship — on
the field! — in 1992 and 1996. Among their alumni now in the NFL are Randy Moss,
Chad Pennington, and Byron Leftwich.


Tulane
— The Green Wave has seen
four winning seasons as a C-USA member, won the 1998 championship, and featured
a two-time Offensive Player of the Year in quarterback Shaun King. They’ve
struggled in recent years, but may well have fielded the best team in C-USA
history: that 1998 team went 11-0.

KNIGHTS


East Carolina

— What makes a Pirate a Knight, you ask? Their five winning seasons in C-USA are
topped only by Southern Miss. They’ve also played in four bowl games since 1999.
Over its 10 seasons as a league member, ECU has had a losing conference record
only twice.


UAB
— As recently as 1992,
the Blazer program was playing in Division III. Just ask a Memphis fan about
this classification. The Tigers have lost seven straight in the series.


Tulsa
— The Golden
Hurricane joined C-USA in 2005 and proceeded to win the conference’s first title
game. A considerable leap from a two-year period (2001-02) when they won a total
of two games. Tulsa has played in three bowl games over the last four years and
a total of 14 in the program’s long history.

PEASANTS


Rice
— This longtime punching
bag of the Southwest Conference is showing signs of life, having gone 6-2 in
league play a year ago and reaching the New Orleans Bowl. But Rice went 1-10 in
its inaugural C-USA season (2005) and hadn’t been bowling since 1961.


UTEP
— Quick:
name the greatest football player in Miner history. I can’t either. UTEP has
played in three bowl games since 2000, but also suffered three two-win seasons.
This is still a basketball school.


UCF
— Their
nickname may be Knights, but this program’s still shopping for armor. After
going 0-11 in 2004, George O’Leary earned national Coach of the Year honors the
next season for taking UCF to an 8-5 record and the Hawaii Bowl. The Knights
dipped back to 4-8 a year ago.


Memphis
— The
truth hurts, Tiger fans. But with only three winning seasons out of 11, and
despite suiting up the greatest player in C-USA history (DeAngelo Williams), the
Tigers haven’t earned their knighthood just yet. For good or ill, as C-USA goes,
so goes the U of M football program.

As a
founding member of the once upstart league, Memphis can carry the conference
banner as high as any of its sister institutions, especially when you factor in
the population of the Memphis region, and the lack of an NFL team overshadowing
its impact on football fans in the Mid-South. The challenge remains immense for
coach Tommy West. The program’s first league championship is all that’s needed
for a vault in status.

By Frank Murtaugh

Frank Murtaugh is the managing editor of Memphis magazine. He's covered sports for the Flyer for two decades. "From My Seat" debuted on the Flyer site in 2002 and "Tiger Blue" in 2009.