The "brutal SEC" schedule consists of at most two or three tough games and a bunch of DIV II and cup cakes.
If ND had that type of schedule we would be, in our worst year, 9&3.
I don't know if I'm comfortable saying we'd be 9-3 in our worst year but I agree with the sentiment anyway. The 'brutal SEC' argument is ridiculously overblown by virtue of the National Championship run. Props to LSU for scheduling a tough slate, but go up and down the rest of the SEC and there's not much to impress.
Florida hasn't left the state of Florida to play a non-conference game in about 250 years. Seriously FAU, UAB, and a win against visiting Tennessee and we're supposed to believe this is a good team? Oh, and they have freaking Furman on the backend. Color me impressed.
Alabama sandwiched a declining Penn State with traditional powerhouses Kent State and North Texas.
Auburn had Utah State and now Florida Atlantic in it's non-conference slate (kudos for Clemson I guess?).
Georgia took a risk with Boise State but also has Coastal Carolina (a win they're celebrating by the way) and New Mexico State on the schedule.
Arkansas opened with Missouri State, New Mexico and Troy, oh my!
Kentucky had W. Kentucky, Central Michigan and Lousiville (at home...which they lost) and they have Jacksonville State after their off week.
Ole Miss took some risks with BYU and Fresno State (a respectable program at worst) but still had/has SIU and La Tech.
MSU (Dan Mullens doesn't have a win against an SEC West team outside of Ole Miss) got a stiff test from Memphis and has La Tech, Tennessee Martin and UAB still remaining.
South Carolina took a couple chances with Navy and ECU and has Clemson on the backend. Citadel is the only real patsy.
Tennessee built all that "Tyler Bray is Great!!" hype on Montana and a down Cincinnati in their house and still has Buffalo and Middle Tennessee on the slate.
Vandy has Army, Elon (who?) and Connecticut OOC. Not terrible I guess?
I live right in the heart of SEC country (Ozark, AL) and my sports radio options are Finebaum, Finebaum and more Finebaum so I'm perpetually inundated with the junk about the SEC being so tough. It's really a tired argument.
Vandy is traditionally terrible. Ole Miss is traditionally terrible. Kentucky is traditionally terrible. Just about any average to good team in the country could go 3-0 against that slate. Add three BS OOC games and you're racking up 6 wins easy.
Mississippi State hasn't been relevant in some time, didn't win a game they weren't supposed to last year, and might warrant the award for "Most Undeserving Preaseason Ranking in History." (okay...Georgia has a case too) Sure the Irish opened 0-2, but they put a hell of a product on the field and had some ridiculously unpredictable things go against them in those games. MSU did nothing to inspire the preaseaon hype they garnered, outside of being in the same conference as the last National Champ.
Auburn, outside of a pretty ridiculous run on the back of arguably the best college football player I've ever seen hasn't been much more than a good, occasionally great, team.
Arkansas is much the same. They became 'nationally relevant' when a big kid from Michigan transferred down south and started chucking the football around. They come back to earth on Saturday.
Tennessee has been pretty *** since the twilight of Philip Fulmer's run.
It's not so terribly different than any other conference really. They're extremely top heavy in LSU and Alabama largely on the strengths of their defenses (Jarrett Lee and AJ McCaron aren't scaring anyone) which are undoubtedly very good. South Carolina is pretty good and Florida has a chance to be good. And yet they traditionally dominate the top 25 because they play such a "brutal" conference schedule.
Look at them OOC (outside of the 2 or 3 best teams) and you get a pretty clear picture of how good the SEC really is. Boise State pasting Georgia tells me just about everything I need to know. LSU put it on Oregon, no doubt,
but they're actually really good.
There are some truly elite teams in the SEC. Of that there is no question. But why does it need to go farther than that?