Kernal
New member
Florida State didn't play on either of the two days portrayed in the graphs: a bye week one time and a Thursday game the next.
I hate to nitpick also, but one issue I have with the graphs is it does seem to take some visual liberties. According to the times given, the SEC bar in the first graph should be at 55.9%, not 60%. In the second graph, it would appear there are about 15 minutes of unincluded statistics (if the 35% and 17.5% portrayals are accurate). SEC coverage seems to decline from 55.9% in the first graph to 35% in the second, although it's unclear that this happens because the bars look the same height -- and because it's unclear where that decline went to. Indeed, from the provided times only, the first graph lists an extra 24 mintues, 39 seconds compared to the second.
The actual data the graphs are based on is in this article: http://awfulannouncing.com/2014/college-gameday-clock-west-virginia.html
There's more at the link.Inspired by Fowler’s claims, I decided to watch three hours of College Gameday, with a stopwatch, to compile the amount of airtime that was given to each conference during its broadcast. Assuming that, in the interest of being a network that “televises a bracket,” it would want to give equal airtime to, as Fowler noted “a west coast team, [a] midwest team, [a] team from the Big 12 or ACC…”
The results were staggering. Not only did the SEC get the majority of the airtime (totaling more airtime than every other conference combined), they gave the SEC nearly 4 times more airtime than the second-most aired conference, the Big Ten. The ACC received 43 seconds of total airtime, and it was limited to George Whitfield commenting about Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston. Here were the totals:
- SEC – 1:02:08
- Big Ten – 15:59
- Big 12 – 15:19
- PAC12 – 10:57
- DIV III – 5:00
- Ivy League – 1:08
- ACC – 0:43