LMAO medicore.....
Big Tem went 6-2 in bowls last year and I know a couple of the wins were against SEC teams.
Bigold I did not say when was the last year a SEC was in the BCS because if you knew anything you would know that all the conferences I mentioned get a slot in the BCS . So being in the BCS alone is not really worth mentioning.
Hmm every year dominated by the Big East or Big 12? Umm where is the SEC in that....
Btw you are wrong.
Tennessee won in 1998
FSU won in 1999
Oklahoma in 2000
Miami in 2001
OSU in 2002
Hmm looks to me like every conference but the Pac 10 has won the BCS title.
Do me a favor and at least look up information before you reply to stuff. It makes you look less foolish.
I am going to change my conference power ranks a little:
Big Ten
Big 12
SEC
Big East I forgot about Pitt when I did this...a big three of Pitt, VT and Miami is a nice little trifecta.
Pac 10 USC is overrated.
ACC
In 1998 the break down for conferences in the BCS is:
SEC, ACC, Big 12 (not Oklahoma) all had 3, Pac 10 and Big Ten had 2, Big East had 1 (not Miami) and Tulane.
In 1999 it break down like this:
Big Ten had 5 teams, SEC and Big 12 (no Oklahoma) had 3, ACC and Big East (no Miami) had 1 each and Marshall. Pac 10 had none.
In 2001 it break down like this:
SEC, Big 12 and Pac 10 each had 4 with the Big 10, Big East and ACC one each.
In 2002 the break down for conferences was like this:
The Big Ten and Big 12 having 4 each, 2 each from PAC 10 and the Big East and one from the ACC, SEC and one independent.
So if we are keeping count for total appearances by conference it breaks down like this:
Big 12 had 14
Big 10 had 12
SEC had 11
PAC 10 had 7
ACC had 6
Big East had 4
From this prespective the Big 12 and Big 10 are 1-2 with the SEC a close third and then the rest.
BTW Miami and Oklahoma were not even in the first 2 years of the top 15 so there goes the fact that they dominated.
Thanks
Art
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