You know what grinds my gears? The SEC.

IrishinSyria

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This article. I'm block quoting it at the end of this because I don't want to provide a link. Besides the unabashed SEC worship shown in this article (it's currently a two school conference btw. Just because LSU is legit for sure and Alabama might be doesn't mean it's the dominant football conference) this line "At the end of the night, it became clear that the Big Ten and the ACC still have a long way to go, although the Big Ten has one of its big dogs back in the chase" turned me purple. Did this dude not watch the ROSE BOWL? Is he not aware that Michigan was the third best team in the B1G this year?

I know that the SEC has had a stranglehold on the NC game lately. Part of that is due to bias in ratings that almost ensures it has a dog in that fight every year (see: Alabama). But while the league may be a little stronger (rampant cheating and disregard for academics helps) it's not like the SEC is the only word in college football.

I can not wait for ND's chance to rip an SEC team to shreds under the bright lights of a title game. Until then, I'll be rooting for pretty much everyone but the SEC: Michigan and USC included.




NEW ORLEANS -- A speck of LSU purple and another of Alabama crimson stood out in the sea of Michigan blue in the east stands of the Mercedes-Benz Superdome.

The two fans looked out of place in the front row, but they didn't seem to mind. The LSU backer, sitting alongside her companion in crimson, took every chance she could to hold up a made-for-TV sign.

It read: "Oops! We're a week too early Alabama LSU"

The two SEC fans came to the Allstate Sugar Bowl for a starter course before the Southern-style entrée is served Monday night. From the looks of it, they didn't come away with a good taste.

The countdown is under way for the BCS title game, and the SEC will take over the Big Easy as it prepares to crown its sixth consecutive national champion Monday night. The next six days mark an unparalleled celebration for a conference that has had plenty of them in recent years, a love fest for a league that has become the king of college football -- and wants everyone to know about it.

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Chuck Cook/US Presswire
Michigan's Denard Robinson was held to 13 yards on 13 carries.
No one doubts the SEC's dominance, but there's a curiosity about which league has the best chance to catch up. If nothing else, the bowls leading up to the national title game provide showcase opportunities for teams from also-ran conferences to prove they're getting closer.
Virginia Tech and Michigan both had chances to help themselves and their much-maligned conferences Tuesday night. While the matchup itself drew groans from most corners of the country, the Wolverines and Hokies had the stage to themselves before the big show came to town.

At the end of the night, it became clear that the Big Ten and the ACC still have a long way to go, although the Big Ten has one of its big dogs back in the chase.

A masterpiece this was not. While the SEC can get away with a 9-6 overtime result between recent national title winners, other conferences simply don't have that luxury.

Michigan won 23-20 in overtime despite being outgained 377-184 and recording 10 fewer first downs than Virginia Tech. The Wolverines' only touchdowns came on passes that looked like interceptions when they left quarterback Denard Robinson's hands (he threw one pick and had two others overturned by replay on the same drive).

Almost every big break went Michigan's way, including a pass by wide receiver Drew Dileo on a fake field goal that hit a Virginia Tech player and landed in the arms of long snapper Jareth Glanda. The Hokies also had a diving touchdown catch by Danny Coale in overtime overturned by replay.

Virginia Tech thoroughly dominated the first half but went to the locker room down 10-6 after a folly-filled final minute that featured a near-interception-turned-Michigan-touchdown followed by a fumbled kickoff return. The Hokies received a big performance from sophomore quarterback Logan Thomas and repeatedly converted key third downs, but as has been the case for them and their ACC brethren, they found a way to lose.

"This game was about will," said Michigan offensive coordinator Al Borges, whose unit had 239 yards below its season average. "There wasn't a lot of great execution on [either] side of the ball, but at the end of the day, the kids played like they played all year. They wanted to win. That's why we got 11 wins now. We've had some beautiful wins; we've had some ugly wins.

More on the Sugar Bowl
For full coverage of the Michigan-Virginia Tech matchup in the Allstate Sugar Bowl, check out the Sugar Bowl home.
More:
• Sugar Bowl blog coverage
• Big Ten blog | ACC blog
"This one's more the latter than the former. But I'm proud of the kids. You've got to win games like that. They're not all masterpieces."
Michigan's players didn't care about style points, especially the seniors who suffered through two coaching changes, back-to-back losing seasons and questions about the program's legitimacy as a college football power. They just wanted to leave as victors.

It's why senior center David Molk missed only one series after suffering a foot injury in warm-ups that some believed would keep him out for the game. It's why senior defensive end Ryan Van Bergen played through a foot injury suffered in the second quarter and could barely walk off the field after Michigan forced a Virginia Tech field goal attempt in overtime.

"At the end of the day, we know, and I'm sure every other team that plays college football knows, the only thing that matters is the score," Van Bergen said. "It's not a less of a win for us because we didn't dominate some statistical categories."

Virginia Tech dominated in most of them, which added disappointment to the Hokies' latest BCS bowl setback. Frank Beamer's team wasn't outclassed this year, but still dropped to 1-5 in BCS bowls.

While Virginia Tech has dominated the ACC under Beamer, it also bears responsibility for the league's BCS bowl woes. The ACC is now 2-12 in the big bowls.

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Derick E. Hingle/US Presswire
Virginia Tech was uncharacteristically sloppy on special teams Tuesday night in the Sugar Bowl.
"We wanted to get a win for the ACC and wanted to get a win for Virginia Tech," Beamer said. "We haven't done as well as we want to in these BCS games. But you give Michigan credit. They hung in there and battled and hung on."
The Big Ten is grateful, as the league finishes the bowl season at 4-6. It took overtime wins by both Michigan and Michigan State to prevent another postseason disaster for a league that measures itself against the SEC.

The Michigan schools lessened a complete Big Ten backlash, but how close is the league from truly catching the SEC?

"Georgia was on top of LSU for a little while in the [SEC] championship game, and Michigan State went out and beat them," Van Bergen said. "The Big Ten competes with all conferences, especially with what they consider the powerhouse, the SEC."

The Big Ten's national title drought has reached nine years, and the league likely won't enter the 2012 season with a team pegged to unseat the SEC atop college football hierarchy. But the league certainly benefits from having one of its brand-name programs, Michigan, on the rise again, particularly with Ohio State banned from bowls next year.

"Michigan football is back where we need to be and where we want to be," athletic director Dave Brandon said.

But it will take more for the Big Ten and the ACC to say the same thing.

Until then, the leagues will continue to be appetizers before the main course.
 

greyhammer90

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Alabama MAY be legit? The whole west is fairly legit, LSU, Alabama, and Arkansas are on an elite level. Now that I've disagreed with you though I'll say this: the SEC is definitely overrated as a whole. Especially the East, which IMO has done nothing but ride the West's coat tails since Tebow left Florida.
 

phork

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Arkansas is not on the same level as LSU or Alabama.
 

ClausentoTate

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Even if Alabama is the #1 or #2 team in all the land, they already had their chance. Why not just give a title to the SEC before the season begins?

Way to vote OSU #4, Saban. Not sneaky at all.
 

greyhammer90

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Arkansas is not on the same level as LSU or Alabama.

Obviously since Ark lost to both of them. But I would still consider them elite for 2 reasons. 1) Who can beat Alabama and LSU? 2) They usually win everything else.
 

ACamp1900

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The top of the conference is the best in the country.... like it or not... but it is not this deep, top to bottom, unreal, super conference that the media makes it out to be...

A&M and Mizzou are getting laughed at right now... I see both as a mid grade/above average SEC teams... just like they were mid grade to above average Big 12 teams... neither can win the conference... but both can win games and finish high in the conference... Kentucky, Vandy, Miss St, Ole Miss, Tenn... NOT good programs right now... and sorry, Arkansas, Uga, SC and Auburn are usually not as good as sold either... The thing is the cream of the conference often IS the cream of the country
 

IrishinSyria

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The top of the conference is the best in the country.... like it or not... but it is not this deep, top to bottom, unreal, super conference that the media makes it out to be...

A&M and Mizzou are getting laughed at right now... I see both as a mid grade/above average SEC teams... just like they were mid grade to above average Big 12 teams... neither can win the conference... but both can win games and finish high in the conference... Kentucky, Vandy, Miss St, Ole Miss, Tenn... NOT good programs right now... and sorry, Arkansas, Uga, SC and Auburn are usually not as good as sold either... The thing is the cream of the conference often IS the cream of the country

This I can agree with. And yes, since USC got called out and Texas forgot how to be elite the SEC's top teams have generally been the best in the country. That being said, it doesn't help that the conference as a whole is so over-rated that other teams don't get a shot to prove otherwise. Would've loved to see 2 teams from Stanford/Ok St/Wisconsin/or Oregon end up playing LSU and Bama in the bowls this year instead of an all SEC rematch title game.

It's pretty much just the author acting like Michigan winning the Sugar bowl proved the SEC is the better league that got under my skin. The Sugar bowl was pretty clearly a second tier BCS game this year, but the Rose bowl and the Fiesta bowl showcased some very impressive football.
 

ACamp1900

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What kills me is the SEC rarley plays anything outside of bowl games... and when they do they don't do all that well.. BUT, the conference is so hard from top to bottom (apparently) that they can justify playing 1-AA teams in november... Bull.
 
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