CarrollVermin
IE Verminator
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Here is the argument you get from SEC fans.
Say you are Mississippi State and you have an opponent average of 20.5 (I made it up) for the season, where you play Alabama, Arkansas, LSU each year, and you add in two teams from the East (UGA, Florida, South Carolina are possible) and you have your non-conference games against UAB, Western Kentucky, and other non-AQ teams, is that tougher than playing Michigan, USC, Stanford, and Michigan State along with other good middle of the road programs?
Their argument has always been that they do schedule the "weaker" opponents, but that do that to offset the top tier opponents from their conference season. Case in point would be LSU this year...play Bama, Florida, Arkansas, Auburn, and Mississippi State in conference, along with a trip to West Virginia, and a neutral site game against Oregon. Yes, they have Northwestern State, Western Kentucky, and another state school in there, but is that justified when you look at the rest of the schedule?
Say you are Mississippi State and you have an opponent average of 20.5 (I made it up) for the season, where you play Alabama, Arkansas, LSU each year, and you add in two teams from the East (UGA, Florida, South Carolina are possible) and you have your non-conference games against UAB, Western Kentucky, and other non-AQ teams, is that tougher than playing Michigan, USC, Stanford, and Michigan State along with other good middle of the road programs?
Their argument has always been that they do schedule the "weaker" opponents, but that do that to offset the top tier opponents from their conference season. Case in point would be LSU this year...play Bama, Florida, Arkansas, Auburn, and Mississippi State in conference, along with a trip to West Virginia, and a neutral site game against Oregon. Yes, they have Northwestern State, Western Kentucky, and another state school in there, but is that justified when you look at the rest of the schedule?