In the FCS Huddle: Will CAA dominoes keep falling?

NCAA Football Betting Lines

06/28/2010 - Philadelphia, PA (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Even with all the maneuvering going on in college football, what has been developing in the Colonial Athletic Association is as incredible as any of the changes nationally.

The Big Ten and Pac-10 - if that's what you still want to call them - haven't faced nearly as much offseason change as CAA Football.

At the end of the 2009 regular season, the premier conference in the FCS had two programs drop the sport - first Northeastern, then Hofstra. Now word is filtering out (including via a Richmond Times-Dispatch report) that Rhode Island, which for decades has struggled to be competitive in a conference full of bigger members, is studying a possible departure from the CAA to join the smaller Northeast Conference for the start of the 2012 season.

CAA Football will get back two of the losses when Old Dominion joins the conference for the 2011 season and fellow independent Georgia State, which is debuting its program this season, will follow in 2012. Yet considering the conference has seen five different members play in six of the last seven FCS championship games, including champions Delaware in 2003, James Madison in 2004, Richmond in 2008 and Villanova in 2009, it hardly seemed like a conference that would encounter such change.

The possible move by Rhode Island wouldn't be surprising, however. Although this season will be the Rams' 110th season of football and they were one of six charter members of the Yankee Conference in 1947 (the conference became known as the Atlantic 10 in 1997 and then CAA Football in 2007), they don't have a successful tradition.

The Rams were on an elite level when two-time All-American quarterback Tom Ehrhardt led them to 10-win, FCS playoff seasons in 1984 and '85. But since then, they have posted winning records in only three of the last 24 seasons (6-5 in 1991, 7-4 in 1995 and 8-3 in 2001) while going a combined 81-185 (.305) overall and 48-145 (.249) in conference play. Third-year head coach Joe Trainer is 4-19, losing 15 of his 16 conference games.

They had CAA Football's smallest attendance average in 2009 - 3,786 - in the conference's smallest stadium - 5,180-seat Meade Stadium - and lack the resources of many other schools in the conference, especially those in the south.

Rhode Island is allowed to offer the full 63 scholarships as a member of CAA Football, but that would drop to the 40 that the NEC will allow in 2012. The move would greatly improve the Rams' chance of reaching the FCS playoffs for the first time since Air Ehrhardt took them there. The NEC will have an automatic bid for the first time this season, and the Rams would be competitive with the nine NEC programs - Albany, Central Connecticut State, Duquesne, Monmouth, Robert Morris, Sacred Heart, St. Francis (Pa.), Wagner and Bryant, which would provide an intrastate rival.

The question facing CAA Football is, have all the dominoes stopped falling? If Rhode Island makes the move, half of what was the North Division - Northeastern, Hofstra and Rhode Island - would be gone by 2012. That would not only take away winnable games for the former division's other three programs - Maine, Massachusetts and New Hampshire (who would be the last three remaining original members of the Yankee Conference) - but it would mean they will have to make a bigger commitment to football financially (including travel) to remain competitive with the southern schools in what will be a true Atlantic Coast conference. The conference powers are mostly in the south with Villanova, Delaware, Richmond, James Madison and William & Mary, and ODU and Georgia State seemingly are strong enough to surpass Towson.

Without Rhode Island, CAA Football would have 11 programs, meaning it would need another member to restore two six-team divisions, which it had in recent seasons but won't this season as it switches to one 10-team alignment. Liberty or Stony Brook from the Big South Conference might be attractive to the CAA, or if a school with the resources of George Mason ever added football, it might be an ideal addition as well.

Still, it's possible all the chairs in the conference may not remain filled. UMass doesn't appear to be going anywhere soon (unless it's to the FBS, as some have suggested), and New Hampshire has been a national power since the late 1990s, but Maine struggles to keep up with the CAA programs that are from better-heeled states and have bigger stadiums, bigger fan bases, bigger athletic budgets and better high school talent. The Black Bears are much more competitive than Rhode Island, but they face an uphill battle as well.

While colleges want to be aligned with other conference schools on an academic level more so than on an athletic level, hard times on the playing field force athletic programs to make tough decisions - a la Northeastern, Hofstra and perhaps Rhode Island. So if Maine, long known as a hockey school, is going to make a hard decision, now would seem to be the time, perhaps in a piggyback move with Rhode Island to the NEC.

If both schools depart the conference, that really would make CAA Football unbalanced geographically.

Maybe the Big Ten and Pac-10 are relatively calm after all.

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SPORTS BETTING: NFL Football Sportsbook Betting

NFL owners, already life's biggest winners, want to try their luck with the lottery.


That was the news out of their meetings last week, where team bosses voted unanimously to allow stamping state and local lottery tickets with franchise logos, if, ahem, any governments wanted to do a deal.

A shocker: Within days the Pats announced they'd be sponsoring the Massachusetts state lottery, the Skins said they'd slap their sticker on Virginia scratch-offs and the Ravens admitted they were talking to Maryland lottery bosses. In all likelihood, it won't be long before every team is a presenting sponsor of scratch-offs or just plain old pick fives. "The change in policy was approved 32-0," said NFL spokesman Greg Aiello. "So you can expect to see more deals soon."

It's a branding opportunity too big for the owners to ignore, and one a couple of dozen baseball franchises have enjoyed for years. The fact the NFL has been slower to act than those slack-brained Seligites is indicative of its complicated relationship with all forms of gambling. Consider this: Last Thursday, as the Pats and the Redskins finalized their new lottery deals, a lawyer representing the NFL argued before Delaware's Supreme Court that the state's newly signed sports betting law should be repealed.

The NFL betting is the face of opposition to sports gambling . And as much as it would like to share that responsibility with other leagues, that's not going to happen as long as more than 40% of all money legally wagered on games is bet on football. That's why the Brewers can do a multi-million dollar deal with a local casino, or the Celtics can make their own pact with the Mass lottery, and the response is, "Sweet, let's play." But when the NFL does it the stakes are higher, and everyone from NPR's Frank Deford to the Associated Press to the guys blogging at Deadspin will line up to play gotcha.

So I asked Aiello, who surely knew there'd be piling on, how the league can rail against being bait for sports bettors, then allow its franchises to be just that for lotteries, the most insidious and addictive form of gambling around. He emailed me this response: "We are not moral crusaders. NFL personnel are permitted to engage in legal forms of gambling, except for betting on NFL games. We are making a distinction here between the spread of gambling on the outcome of our games and supporting state lottery scratch-off games, that have nothing to do with the outcome of our games."

Here's where I should rip him. But, the thing is, he's right. Not to get Obama on you, but this is a complicated, nuanced issue. As much as lotteries are considered a tax on the poor, the NFL isn't a socially obligated government program -- it's just a business. Scratch-off's help the bottom line, sports betting doesn't. Now, it's okay to call the league hypocritical when it releases injury reports, which players have told me only helps bettors … But when it supports other forms of gaming? Big Deal.

Now, it's okay to call the league hypocritical when it releases injury reports, which players have told me only helps bettors. And it's okay to mutter something obscene when the league pretends gambling doesn't help drive TV ratings and fan interest and put money in owners' pockets. But when it supports other forms of gaming? Big Deal. The Bears should put an orange "C" on every deck of cards dealt at Harrah's in Joliet; the Eagles should slap their logo on roulette wheels at the Borgata in Atlantic City; the Dolphins should hold training camp at the El San Juan in Puerto Rico.

Seriously.

The NFL's problem, when it comes to the gambling world, isn't hypocrisy, it's worse: The bosses lack vision. That's why the league is picking unwinnable fights in Delaware and taking pot shots from critics after making smart sponsorship deals. Roger Goodell and his gang are acting and thinking locally rather than globally, which is rare for them, especially compared to their professional (and amateur) counterparts.

The NBA held its All Star game in Las Vegas and David Stern's kingdom didn't crumble (although the town did bring plenty of players to their knees.) I'd say it's 6 to 5 and pick 'em that Lebron will make a road swing through Sin City before his career is over.

Even the NCAA College Football Betting is more progressive on this issue than the NFL. Several years ago Rachel Newman Baker, college sports' gambling czar, opened a dialogue with Vegas bookmakers to learn about how they do business. She's visited Nevada sports books, studied their operations and listened to how they regulate action. Now she knows she can expect a call from bookmakers, who lose money when sports are fixed, if they think something sketchy is going on in NCAA games. She's not in favor of sports betting, but, as she once told me, "I know it's not going away, either."

The NFL can't seem to accept that. And until it can find peace with the idea, it'll get flack, even when it's right.

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