the SEC being down this year is quite simple.
The SEC is currently 3-3 in bowl games.
The losses shape up like this:
Big 10 #5 team beat SEC #8 team
ACC #2 team beat SEC #4
Big East #1 beat SEC #3
If Bama played Louisville, UGA played Clemson, and Texas A+M (or USCe) played NW, the SEC would, easily, be 6-0. Those matchups would pit SEC#5 vs Big 10 #5, ACC #2 vs SEC #2, and Big East #1 vs SEC #1 (a much better barometer for compariing conferences).
In SEC games that have been won.... SEC #7 beat ACC #6, SEC #2 beat Big 10 #2, and SEC #6 beat Big 10 #3.
Conversely, if MSU could've played Big 10 #8 (Minnesota/Indiana), LSU played ACC #4 (GaTech), and UF played Big East #3 (Rutgers)... I think we would've seen another SEC sweep.
The SEC, by far, has some of the worse matchups in bowl games. We always play a team that, in the conference hierarchy, is higher than the SEC participant.
The Music City bowl, Peach Bowl, Gator Bowl, and Cotton Bowl all follow this principle. It occurs because the SEC always has two teams in the BCS.
With all that being said, the SEC was slightly down this year... but not nearly as much as the national media is saying.
/endrant
The SEC is currently 3-3 in bowl games.
The losses shape up like this:
Big 10 #5 team beat SEC #8 team
ACC #2 team beat SEC #4
Big East #1 beat SEC #3
If Bama played Louisville, UGA played Clemson, and Texas A+M (or USCe) played NW, the SEC would, easily, be 6-0. Those matchups would pit SEC#5 vs Big 10 #5, ACC #2 vs SEC #2, and Big East #1 vs SEC #1 (a much better barometer for compariing conferences).
In SEC games that have been won.... SEC #7 beat ACC #6, SEC #2 beat Big 10 #2, and SEC #6 beat Big 10 #3.
Conversely, if MSU could've played Big 10 #8 (Minnesota/Indiana), LSU played ACC #4 (GaTech), and UF played Big East #3 (Rutgers)... I think we would've seen another SEC sweep.
The SEC, by far, has some of the worse matchups in bowl games. We always play a team that, in the conference hierarchy, is higher than the SEC participant.
The Music City bowl, Peach Bowl, Gator Bowl, and Cotton Bowl all follow this principle. It occurs because the SEC always has two teams in the BCS.
With all that being said, the SEC was slightly down this year... but not nearly as much as the national media is saying.
/endrant