Which then does beg the question, why do they push biamping? … Would it be that the cross overs in them are so crappy?
If a poorly designed crossover in a speaker is the reason for poor quality sound, the solution would be a different and better crossover design, not a more powerful amp or biamping.
Biamping does not
per se eliminate crossovers. Active biamping, bypasses a speaker's passive internal crossover, but substitutes an active external crossover upstream from the amps. Wherever the crossover is located, it still has to be properly designed for speakers to sound good.
TLS Guy referred to power demands below about 400 Hz being a problem because baffle step compensation demands extra power for frequencies with longer wavelength than the width of the speakers cabinet. In addition, passive crossovers in that frequency range (as might be found in 3-way speakers) become expensive because large inductor coils and capacitors are required.
Large inductor coils, in particular, are also a problem because their long lengths of copper wire windings introduce significant resistance, leading to signal loss (also known as insertion loss). In that frequency range and below, there is a clear advantage to active crossovers, such as found in the bass management section of nearly all AVRs.