It's sad how much SEC guys have to boast about their conference. Knocking out 5 USC players isn't an accomplishment; the PAC 10 is weak.
No, what's sad is how much non SEC guys fail to realize how tough it is to play in that conference. Florida is 12-1. Michigan is 11-1. Florida has played 4 ranked teams, all in conferance (Arkansas has played 6, 5 in conference). Michigan has played 2. Florida wins that ranking off of strength of schedule.
It's also sad how much profanity somebody has to use to talk about how unfair it is that two teams don't get a frickin' rematch for the national championship game. The game has been played. OSU won. It's time to stop whining and move on.
And here's a few logical fallacies in your arguments.
Just because an SEC guy is braggin on the SEC doesn't make it true. If you don't think the SEC is the toughest football conference in the nation, you're both delusional and in the minority. We have more ranked teams than any other conference, not to mention the fact that the majority of the conference has gotten a national championship title in the past and the SEC usually has a team in the championship game.
Home field advantage doesn't mean anything in the rankings. It doesn't matter if you're at home, away, or on the moon, a win is a win and a loss is a loss. I'm sure it's counted in some abstract way in the coaches' and sportswriters' polls, and that's why they're counted in the rankings. But no matter how much you want it not to be counted because of homefield advantage, a loss is a loss is a loss, and you just have to deal with it.
Football players have classes, and if you don't think they have to worry about passing them, then you've been following some pretty dirty teams. I can't speak for anything else, but at Arkansas, if you don't pass the eligibility fair and square, you're off the team, no matter who you are. I've seen star players get kicked off the team for both cheating and for failing midterms.
It also doesn't matter when Michigan lost to Ohio State. The BCS isn't going to put two teams who have already played each other in the national championship game.
And no, it's not about having the two best teams in the final game. If that's the case, then there would be playoffs. The original purpose was to make sure that the best team in the country had to prove it. Not to mention the fact that statistically, Florida is better than Michigan. They're both 1-loss, and Florida had a tougher schedule.
And if half the words in your next post are profanity, like before, then this discussion is over.