That was my point.
The SEC is VASTLY superior to all other conferences. Not just the top team or two. The majority of SEC teams are better than the majority of conference champions.
It wouldn't be fair to leave the #2, #3, or hell, even the #4 SEC team out of the playoffs because Ohio State won the Big Shit conference.
And my point about LSU and Florida was that neither team was playing their best. They had no real reason to. If LSU and Florida felt compelled to prove something on the field those two nights, they would have probably blown out Clemson and Louisville.
But there
would be a reason to if they were playing en route to a championship.
To me, I don't care if Alabama beat the brakes off of LSU in last year's championship game. They should have been eliminated from a "tournament" when they played in Tuscaloosa. All teams can't play each other. But all teams from one division can, and do. Whoever emerges as the #1 in their division won that "tournament". The prize for winning that? Playing the winner of the other division. The prize for that? Playing every other conference's champion.
It's so logical, it pains me that apparently everyone doesn't see it that way.
Who gives a fuck if the SEC dominates? They're going to anyway. But if there are 5 better SEC teams than the next best conference champ? Too bad. They should have won when it mattered. The BCS's twitter handle is @EveryGameCounts for Christ's sake. If Florida wanted a claim, they should have beaten Georgia head-to head. Georgia proved to be the better team in the fairest of possible systems. Texas A&M thinks they deserve a shot? Beating Bama's great, but you shouldn't have lost to LSU & Florida (who both lost their bowl games, btw).
This year Bama earned the top spot in the West by losing the least amount of SEC games. Then they earned the right to play for the championship game, when they beat UGA.
I don't see why this doesn't make perfect sense. Who gives a fuck if they have to steamroll Louisville (who obviously proved that that's not a foregone conclusion this year) to get there? Beat the best each conference has to offer, after they emerged as the best in their conference? That's the most accurate way possible to crown a champion.