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Saturday, Jan. 31
The Indiana Daily Student

sports

Pac-10 commissioner wants coaches' votes public

Conference mad after Texas makes BCS game over Cal

WALNUT CREEK, Calif. -- California coach Jeff Tedford and the commissioner of the Pac-10 Conference called for coaches to make their votes public after California was dropped below No. 6 by six voters in the final poll.\n"It's something we need to know," said Tedford, who signed a five-year contract extension Monday. "One of the worst things that could happen is the votes being kept secret. If we had it to do all over again, I would hope that we'd make them public."\nCal (10-1) slipped behind Texas in the final Bowl Championship Series standings, in part because the Bears lost so much ground in both The Associated Press and coaches polls over the last few weeks.\nThe BCS drop caused Cal to miss out on the school's first Rose Bowl in 45 years. The Golden Bears are bound for San Diego and the Holiday Bowl instead.\nThe American Football Coaches Association conducts the balloting for the ESPN/USA Today coaches poll. The coaches voted twice this year to keep their ballots secret.\n"Those votes should be called out," Pac-10 commissioner Tom Hansen said in a phone interview. "We ought to know who did that, because that's wrong."\nIn the AP and coaches poll, Cal finished fourth. In the coaches poll, the Bears were five points ahead of No. 5 Texas, which will play Michigan in Pasadena on New Year's Day. The Bears were 62 points ahead of No. 6 Texas in the AP poll.\nSix coaches picked the Bears seventh or lower in the final poll: four at No. 7 and two in the eighth slot. In the previous week's poll, nobody picked Cal lower than sixth. The latest vote came after Cal's 26-16 win at Southern Mississippi Saturday night.\nThe AP made public its poll Sunday, listing each voter's name, news organization and votes for Nos. 1-25.\nNone of the AP media voters had Cal ranked lower than sixth. Eight had the Bears sixth, and in each case they were behind some combination of Southern California, Oklahoma, Auburn, Texas and Utah.\n"I certainly have a question of some of them," Hansen said of the coaches' votes. "Something pretty unusual happened between last week and this week. I'd like to have the Cal football team be able to know which coaches thought they weren't in the top six teams."\nAFCA president Grant Teaff said the ballots from the final coaches poll will not be released. He said he didn't believe there was anything suspicious about the final voting.\n"We do very good due diligence to run a credible poll," he said. "I understand their obvious concerns. I'm not oblivious to that"

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