Triple crown from season’s first half

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A triple crown is a rare thing in the sports world, so this college football column will honor the recent feat by the Detroit Tigers' Miguel Cabrera – who led the American League in batting average (.330), home runs (44) and RBIs (139) when the season ended Wednesday – as he became the first big-leaguer to accomplish it since Carl Yastrzemski in 1967.

Instead of stats, though, my college football triple crown will consist of the three biggest impressions left on me at the halfway point of the regular season.

1. The Big Ten is down this year. It seems the days of bullying all the other, smaller conferences is over. On more than one occasion already this season, Big Ten teams have found themselves in dogfights with – and even ended up losing to – teams from the MAC, the WAC, the Mountain West, and even a few FCS schools.

Some of the Big Ten teams have taken on pre-conference season opponents from the other BCS leagues, but that hasn't gone too well. The Big Ten is 5-9 against other automatic qualifying teams, with Northwestern claiming three of those wins. Two came over Syracuse (a Big East doormat) and two more were against Cal and Boston College, two programs that haven't had a lot of success the past few seasons. Even Northwestern's win over an SEC team came against Vanderbilt, like Syracuse a perennial bottom-feeder in the best conference in college football.

The losses came to the likes of Virginia, Iowa State, Oregon State, UCLA and Arizona State – all solid programs, but none at peak form just now. One came to Alabama, which (as hard as it is for an LSU fan to say) has shown itself to be the team to beat this season, and the other three came to Notre Dame … which leads to my next observation: 

2. The Fighting Irish may just in fact be back. After a season-opening rout of Navy in Dublin, Ireland, Notre Dame has taken down Purdue, Michigan State and Michigan – the latter two of the best teams the Big Ten Legends Division has to offer this year – in impressive style.

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