Alabama may have been the better team that year over Oklahoma State. The biggest issue that the writer/coaches/BCS computers is that they allowed a team that wasn't good enough to win their own division let alone conference to play for a title over a team that won their conference outright.
This was the same argument that people made with Nebraska in 2001 when they got smoked by Colorado and didn't even play in the CCG. So if it wasn't right in 2001, how was it right in 2011?
It's the same argument, no doubt. But it's still unsettled. There's no rule in place that you have to win or even play in a conference championship game to be eligible for the national championship game. Should there be? Who knows. But there isn't one. Is it right to allow such a team to play in that game? Since there's no rule to prevent it, I don't see the issue. The goal is to match up the best two teams. If one of those is a team that didn't win its conference or even play in the title game, then so be it.
It's entirely semantics. Choosing the "better team" or the team with the "better resume" are both subjective determinations. And the whole purpose of looking to see who has the better resume is because that's one factor in determining which is the better team. The goal is to match up the two best teams so you can determine who the very best team is.
Sure, but I will submit to you that before the championship game was played, there was no objective or substantiated basis to conclude that Alabama was a better team
OR had a better resume than Oklahoma State.
Nor was there an objective basis to conclude that Oklahoma State was the better team. That's the point. It's a subjective determination.
And the fact that Alabama dominated that game on its way to the national title shows that the voters, computers and BCS got it right. You even admit that Alabama would have dominated Oklahoma State if they had played. That's the ultimate measure of which team is better, not looking at who they played, their margins of victory, etc. The national title game should match up the two best teams in the country. You've conceded that one of those was not Oklahoma State. That ends the debate.