|
|
Division II-AAA: Parity,
Not Parody |
|
| |
From HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL DATABASE
Staff |
|
| |
Memphis University
School captured its second state title in Division II-AAA,
triumphing in the finals with a revenge-laden, 31-27 victory
over archrival Christian Brothers. The victory and state
championship give the Owls back-to-back 11-1 records and two
gold balls in the highly competitive "Super 7" (nominations
still being taken to account for the addition of
Briarcrest in
2005) since 2004.
However, detractors still exist, questioning
the "validity" of a state title earned in a league of only eight
teams.
Yet, a closer look at league data suggests
that Division II-AAA, while short in numbers, is long in talent
and parity, and, despite a relatively short road to championship
glory, is no laughing stock. |
|
| |
|
During the past four
years, the Division II-AAA champion has suffered at least one
regular season loss, compared to the first five years of the
league, when four of the five champs finished with undefeated
records. While some may point to a deterioration in the
quality of the league, others will point out the league is
becoming much more balanced, with the perennial leaders coming
back to the pack a notch, and the teams annually near the bottom
of the pack stepping up their level of play. And all the
while, the teams are still keeping pace - and then some - with
their Division I counterparts. |
|
| |
Father Ryan, which has struggled since capturing the inaugural
"Super 7" title in 1997, is showing signs of improvement, and
with former Oak Ridge coach Bruce Lussier now at the helm, the
Fighting Irish, despite going winless in Division II-AAA in
2005, still managed some quality non-league wins, including an
impressive victory against defending Division I-5A runner-up
Franklin.
Baylor, the only member of the original "Super
7" not to have appeared in a "Super 7" championship game, flexed
its muscles in the 2005 playoffs, avenging a Week 10 loss to
five-time champion MBA with a 16-7 win in the 2005 quarterfinals
over the Big Red. On the top end of the
league, MUS became the ninth state champion in nine years of the
league to sweep its Division I opponents. Overall, the
league has performed admirably against its upper level Division
I brethren, winning over 75% of its games versus opponents from
Division I-5A and Division I-4A. The list of opponents
defeated include three Division I-5A champions and one Division
I-4A champion - and all by "Super 7" teams which did not win the
title in that given year.
All said, despite the emergence of an
undefeated champion since 2001, Division II-AAA is still holding
its own. And while the road to the Division II-AAA state
championship is still a short one - there are only so many
bracket possibilities with only eight teams - the quality of the
teams in the league is measured by its results on the field, and
those results continue to be impressive. |
|
| |
Return to Tennessee
Commentary | Return to Tennessee
|
|
|