I believe Alabama proved this to be false.Because Wisconsin lost to the team that was crowned best in their conference. You can't be the best in the nation if you're not even the best team in your own division, let alone conference.
I believe Alabama proved this to be false.Because Wisconsin lost to the team that was crowned best in their conference. You can't be the best in the nation if you're not even the best team in your own division, let alone conference.
You're missing the point of a playoff.So you're saying a team that lost to three average teams is more deserving of a fourth shot than a team that lost to one great team is deserving of a second shot. No thanks.Because Wisconsin lost to the team that was crowned best in their conference. You can't be the best in the nation if you're not even the best team in your own division, let alone conference.
UCLA won their conference. With little cross conference play, that's the only fair way you can do it. Take the "best" from each conference and let them play.
Really? Was that after they didn't win their division, and conference and got gifted a beauty pageant rematch against LSU?I believe Alabama proved this to be false.Because Wisconsin lost to the team that was crowned best in their conference. You can't be the best in the nation if you're not even the best team in your own division, let alone conference.
saunders45 said:the facts are, in the BCS era, the SEC is hovering around .500 against other conferences.
Did you read the article?saunders45 said:the facts are, in the BCS era, the SEC is hovering around .500 against other conferences.![]()
So now you're changing the story to say all three of UCLA's losses were to teams that won 9+ games? OK. That does help your argument.UCLA loses their 3 games to teams with 9+, Wisconsin pads their record against crappy teams. Records and rankings are irrelevant.
You had to go scorched earth to prove why it's not fair. Show a season within the last 20 years like this. Maybe... one? The vast majority of the time, you're going to be arguing over a 1 loss at large vs a 2 loss conference champ. In that case, the conference champ is the correct pick every single time.Here's another one for you:
Oregon and LSU play the first game of the season. LSU beats Oregon. Oregon also loses their next game and loses to an undefeated USC team in the regular season but beats them in the rematch in the Pac 12 championship game. Meanwhile, LSU goes undefeated and Alabama loses to LSU. The B1G and Big XII aren't as good and Michigan, who got blown out by Alabama in the second week of the season, wins the B1G at 9-4 and Oklahoma wins the Big XII at 8-4.
So you have:
LSU (SEC Champ) - 13-0
Alabama - 11-1
USC - 12-1
Florida State (ACC Champ) - 11-2
Oregon (Pac 12 Champ) - 10-3
Michigan (B1G Champ) - 9-4
Oklahoma (Big XII Champ) - 8-4
So Alabama is penalized for being in the same division as the best team in the country and they get left out in favor of a team that they blew out earlier in the year and have a much better record, USC and Oregon split their two games with USC having a much better overall record but because they lost in the wrong order Oregon gets in. And both Alabama and USC are penalized because they played had great seasons in great conferences while Michigan is rewarded for having decent seasons in (relatively) a poor conference. That does not fit any definition of fair with which I am familiar.
I never said UCLA's losses were to average teams. You did.So now you're changing the story to say all three of UCLA's losses were to teams that won 9+ games? OK. That does help your argument.UCLA loses their 3 games to teams with 9+, Wisconsin pads their record against crappy teams. Records and rankings are irrelevant.
But you're ignoring my point. Your argument against a one-loss Wisconsin team is "they had their shot." Why do they get one shot while UCLA gets three shots? Didn't UCLA have their chance to have a better resume by winning some of those games they lost?
Interesting theory. Where did I say that?I never said UCLA's losses were to average teams. You did.
Here?Interesting theory. Where did I say that?I never said UCLA's losses were to average teams. You did.
So you're saying a team that lost to three average teams is more deserving of a fourth shot than a team that lost to one great team is deserving of a second shot. No thanks.
I see 4 conference winners with 11 or 12 wins.... not 8 or 9 wins and 4 losses.2011:
LSU (SEC) - 13-1
Alabama - 12-1
OK St. (XII) - 12-1
Stanford - 12-1
Oregon (Pac) - 12-2
Wisconsin (B1G) - 11-2
Clemson (ACC) - 10-3
Alabama's only loss: LSU by 3 in OT. Stanford's only loss to Oregon. Wisconsin loses to 10-3 MSU and 6-6 tOSU. Clemson loses to 8-4 GT, 7-5 NC St. and 10-2 SCar.
Not very far off by itself and if you swap the 2012 B1G season for 2011 you're right there.