In the current model I completely disagree with that statement.
So are you saying that if Iowa [who didn't play either Ohio State or Michigan this year] ran the table against the bottom 2/3 of the Big 10 that you would have knocked out Ohio State for playing for the National Championship???? That is simply wrong-headed thinking.
IMHO the things that should matter are:
1. What was the difficulty of your schedule?
2. How many wins, losses, ties did you have with that schedule?
3. If you had losses or ties then why? [I.E. was your QB injured???]
4. Who were your losses to, when, how was the other team playing, etc.
5. Is your team healthy enough to aquit itself in a Nat. Champ game??
6. What are your signature victor(y)(ies)?
7. Did you have a quality road record && schedule??
If you can't earn your way into the Nat. Champ. game based on the above items then you don't deserve to be there. I would say that "conference championships" should rank about 10th or so on the list and really should only be used to separate teams that appear otherwise equally matched.
If you have to whittle it down to 2 teams to play for the championship, there's noway you can justify picking a team that didn't even win it's conference to play for the championship.
If Team A has a significantly stronger schedule with the same or better record as Team B but team B won the conference due to tie breakers or similar why would you necessarily hold that against team A.
Also note that we've already had teams playing for the BCS title game that didn't win their conferece [Oklahoma] so that whole arguement doesn't make sense even with the current system.
If the conferences are going to have championship games, which I think are silly anyway, then the teams are going to have to live by the fact that winning their conference is a prerequisite for making the championship game.
As far as I can tell there are no written rules indicating that you must win your conference championship to play in the National Title Game. Seeing that Oklahoma got a pass earlier I don't see the logic of saying other teams can't get a pass??
This year, UGA didn't even make the SEC championship game- and this was because they couldn't beat Tennessee. Did Tenn have a better season than UGA, probably not, but they beat them on the field which is all that matters.
This is irrelevant to whether GA is better than OSU, Va Tech, Oklahoma, etc. If GA has an overall better season than the other teams then they should ranked higher ....
I agree with the top two on the list, but I think you're short-changing WVU. They wiped the floor with OU. I don't believe any of the teams on this list was beating a motivated WVU team, not even OSU or LSU. If Pat White doesn't get hurt in that Pitt game I think WVU would have won the championship game- they just have too much talent.
Actually I think that I'm short-changing Michigan. I think that they could have beaten most of the teams in the top 10 with the emotion that they brought to the table.
Also, I wouldn't have given up the UM/Fla game for anything this year- that was the perfect match-up. Plus, no way Florida was in the top 10 teams this season, not with 3 losses in conference play. They tied for the 4th best record in the SEC... that does not translate into a BCS game.
I was thinking that FL could go to the next tier of bowls ... like a Cotton or similar.
I could make an arguement that FL isn't as bad as you would think ....
One loss vs. the Nat Champs LSU.
One loss vs. #2/#3 GA
One loss vs. a Michigan squad that was NOT going to be beaten
One loss vs. Auburn IIRC which is a top 15 team
The only problem with FL imho is that they "signature" victory was a thumping of TN .... not good enough for Top 10 but maybe good enough for top 12 which is about where I think they should be.
As far as scheduling IAA teams or similar I really think that should hurt. Honestly I think strength of schedule is actually MORE important than your final win loss record because W&L don't mean anything without the context of strength of schedule.