Tag Archives: Rece Davis

Conversation With Rece Davis of ESPN’s College GameDay

This morning I had the chance to speak with Rece Davis—host of ESPN’s College Football Live pregame show and College Gameday basketball road show—about the Capital One Cup (he’s a member of the advisory board), tonight’s Duke-UNC basketball game, and teams who could make a run at the title during March Madness.  The following is a transcript of our conversation:

ESPN's Rece Davis

How did the Capital One Cup come about?

It was an effort and initiative by Capital One to try to reward the best overall athletic programs at the highest level of intercollegiate athletics, meaning in Division I only, for their cumulative performance on the field. What we do is on both the men’s and women’s side we take 13 sports and they’re divided into groups, the highest group being the one that fans follow most closely—men’s basketball, football, baseball. For the women’s side it’s softball, volleyball, women’s basketball. Those sports based on their finish in national championship races are awarded points, and those are weighted more heavily than some of the other sports. All of them are important, but we wanted for the fans to identify a little bit and be able to easily follow and understand how the standings came about, and in order to do that we gave a little more weight to the sports that are normally the highest spectator sports. But the most important thing about the entire Capital One Cup—the competition’s great, people can keep up with it on our website, they can keep up with the bragging rights, how their school’s doing, how their rivals are doing—but the most important thing is that Capital One is offering $200,000 to both the men’s winner and the women’s winner to fund graduate-level scholarships for student-athletes.

We spend so much time talking about how in a perfect world athletics are an avenue in order for student-athletes to pursue their education or further their education. Capital One is putting its money where those mouths are in order to give student-athletes an opportunity to further their education. At the end of the spring season we’ll announce the winners; the two winners will come to the ESPY [Awards] in Los Angeles in July to pick up their award, and Capital One will give them the money to fund those graduate-level scholarships. I think it’ll be a great and exciting thing for the schools to compete in and the fans to follow along by the various media platforms. They can root for their team and see that it’s not only important, in Duke’s case for instance, to do well in men’s basketball, but lacrosse—also a weighted sport in group two—soccer teams, golf teams, all of those have importance in the standings.

Today is the most important day of the year for a lot of students here at Duke: the Duke-North Carolina game in Cameron. What do you think makes this rivalry so special and what are some of your favorite Duke-Carolina moments?

There are so many great moments. Number one, what I think makes [the rivalry] excellent is proximity and the commitment to excellence. A lot of rivalries measure themselves solely by whether you beat the other guy—that’s important for North Carolina and Duke, but it’s more important for them to strive to win championships. It’s not the be-all, end-all [to win or lose in the regular season], even though it might feel that way sometimes for some of the fans. There’s always something more to strive for, and when this rivalry is at its best is when these two teams are both competing for national championships, and when they both are potentially No. 1 seeds in the NCAA Tournament. I can remember [Jay] Bilas talking about when he was an assistant that there was some thought that you didn’t really want to play [UNC] in the Final Four or the national championship…. Not that Duke was afraid to do it, I’m not suggesting that.

Perfect example, North Carolina wins the national championship in basketball a couple of times, Duke comes back and wins it last year. There’s a chance to keep the rivalry going in a circle and to continue to pursue championships. It’s a weird twist of fate if they were to ever wind up meeting in the NCAA Tournament. You might not ever get the opportunity to atone for that; you might never get your shot at redemption. I remember after North Carolina lost [in the tournament in 1991], Jay telling the story that Coach K came in and told the guys, “Just because they lost doesn’t give us permission to lose.” Duke of course went on to win that game in ’91 against UNLV and went on to win the national championship. I think the way that they push one another to excellence, the way that when one wins a championship it spurs the other one onto greatness and just strengthens the resolve to be the best they can be, I think all those things make [the rivalry] great. Continue reading

GameDay Guys Take Duke—Minus Homer Hubert Davis

Poor Hubert Davis on ESPN College GameDay today. The Carolina grad and former NBA player, now a part of the GameDay team with Rece Davis, Digger Phelps, Bobby Knight and Jay Bilas, took quite a verbal beating from his colleagues on the show (which was broadcast live from Cameron Indoor Stadium this morning).

In case you didn’t watch it or couldn’t make it to Cameron, Davis was the only one of the analysts to pick the Tar Heels to win; in response, Bobby Knight says Davis should get UNC’s “Alumni of the Year award, because they are going to get their rear ends beat today.”

Even Bilas, a Duke grad who many fans think picks against the Blue Devils too often, sounded confident in his pick, an easy Duke win.

To go to the more general GameDay basketball site, which features all kinds of interesting content, click here.