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I think six consecutive BCS titles lays this argument to rest.
Not to mention that LSU won the title in 2003 and Auburn, for all practical purposes, should be considered a de facto co-national champion for the 2004 season. I'd go along with making OU a co-national champion for that year, too, since their only loss was to an ineligible semi-pro team. But we're talking 8 out of the last 9 years that an SEC team is in some way, shape, or form, at the pinnacle of college football. That's nearly absolute dominance. The SEC today is similar to what the NFC was in pro football from 1984 through 1996 -- a league of its own.
Couldn't hang with Texas?! LOL. Now you're getting delusional.
No, it's not that they couldn't 'hang' with Texas; it's that they had earned the right to get more revenue from the Big 12 TV deal, and Texas tried to grab more of it for themselves.
Couldn't hang with Texas?! LOL. Now you're getting delusional.
No, it's not that they couldn't 'hang' with Texas; it's that they had earned the right to get more revenue from the Big 12 TV deal, and Texas tried to grab more of it for themselves.
You are totally incorrect.
Please check the facts before making statements like that.
That guy is a lawyer in real life....and is a popular & prolific poster on my favorite Texas Longhorn sportsboard. Read his plans there to attend that game dressed as Pedobear.
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