Year after year, certain
conferences boast that they have the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the
country and lament that they should get a rematch in the BCS
Championship game.
Two years ago, it was Ohio State and Michigan. This year, it is
Oklahoma and Texas. However, as history shows, only the SEC has proof.
Over the past two years, SEC teams have gone 4-0 in BCS bowl games,
winning two National Championships. Both times the SEC was
the underdog yet won in convincing fashion.
Over the past seven years, SEC teams are 9-1. Nine and one against the elite teams in the country.
Since the inception of the BCS ten years ago, SEC teams are 11-4.
In almost half of these games, the SEC team was the lower ranked team.
What this points to is an annual underestimation of the SEC. Sure
the critics say, they have good defenses, but the SEC isn't that good
because their offenses aren't great. Perhaps the worst underestimation
was snubbing undefeated Auburn in 2004.
This year again there is controversy with the Big 12 boasting that
they have the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the country. Except their
problem is that they don't know who is No. 1 or No. 2 in their own
conference.
Is it the conference champion Oklahoma, who is No. 1 in the Big
12, or is it Texas who beat Oklahoma by 10 points on a neutral site?
Coincidentally, the defensive coordinator and head coach in waiting
for Texas, Will Muschamp, hails from the SEC. Let's not even throw
Texas Tech into the mix.
Just like the past two years, the national champion was effectively
crowned last night in Atlanta. Soon, SEC Champion Florida and
runner-up Alabama will run the SEC streak to three BCS Championships in
a row and 13-4 all-time in BCS bowl games.
And next, year, they will have to prove it all over again.
Zeptogator is an scribe for the bleacher report. Visit http://bleacherreport.com/articles/90052-why-the-sec-owns-the-bcs for the original article.
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