Rewriting the Past with NCAA Football 2004
I am not the hippest gamer out there. My latest console is a PlayStation 2, and it will probably continue to be a PlayStation 2 until they finally perfect the greatest sports video game of the twenty-first century: EA Sports’ NCAA Football 2004.
We may not be seeing EA Sports’ NCAA Football series for a long time, a victim of legitimate concerns over player royalties and the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s obstinance in maintaining a facade of amateurism. That said, NCAA Football is a great time capsule for a frustrating yet exciting period of college football, before we realized just how flawed the Bowl Championship Series was, or how problematic Joe Paterno and the game itself really were. We can still play as Alabama without feeling the dickishness of Nick Saban pulse through our very being. Players retire and perish, but Houston QB #4 will remain unscathed in ways the real Kevin Kolb could not achieve.
While I have enjoyed several versions of the NCAA series, I hang onto 2004 as the platonic ideal of a college football game: easy to control, fun to play, and devoid of any of the disciplinary points and show trials they would add later on to give some credibility to the “student athlete” lie. 2004’s Dynasty Mode extrapolates the successes and failures of the 2002 FBS season, to the point where you can will a then-lousy Baylor to an undefeated season, only to watch as Louisville faces Colorado State for the national championship. This is the NCAA Football I knew and loved, where Tyrone Willingham was going to be remembered fondly in Notre Dame lore, and where Fresno State, Air Force and the New Mexico State Aggies became national powerhouses instead of Boise State. #MACtion was something you did at an ATM, unless you misspelled WACtion and added a superfluous octothorpe.