Not my write up, but definitely something you should chew on for a bit:
Over the past few years, USC has been "punished" for playing in the perceived "weak" PAC-10, while the SEC champion has been able to get to the championship game by playing in the "overwhelmingly strong" SEC. The problem with this, is of course, the PAC-10 is nowhere near as weak as everyone states... and the SEC is not the best conference in the land. Looking at it objectively... it's the PAC-10 that is the best in the land.
I've done a little bit of digging and I'm convinced more than ever that this is the case. Here is some information that supports my hypothesis. Note - all rankings based at end of year AP rankings. "Better" means at least .500 in-conference. I only looked at OOC records, since it is the only way to measure a conference's strength. Information is from the 2000-2008 seasons.
Argument #1. The PAC-10 has outperformed the SEC in nearly every quantifiable category. Here is how each conference fared against OOC competition:
vs. Other BCS Conferences -
PAC-10: 85-73 or 54%
SEC: 91-83 or 52%
"Better" vs. "Better" Other BCS Conferences -
PAC-10: 49-31 or 61%
SEC: 61-49 or 55%
vs. Ranked Top 25 -
PAC-10: 38-65 or 37%
SEC: 36-58 or 38%
"Better" vs. Ranked Top 25 -
PAC-10: 33-35 or 49%
SEC: 34-38 or 47%
vs. Ranked Top 10 -
PAC-10: 12-26 or 32%
SEC: 7-30 or 19%
"Better" vs. Ranked Top 10 -
PAC-10: 12-17 or 41%
SEC: 7-21 or 25%
Head to Head Match-Up:
PAC-10 vs. SEC: 10-7 or 59%
"Better" vs. "Better" Head to Head Match-Up:
PAC-10 vs. SEC: 4-3 or 57%
In nearly every statistical category when looking at actual games played the PAC-10 outplays the SEC.
Argument #2: The SEC's bottom half is ridiculously bad. How bad? The bottom 6 SEC teams - Vanderbilt, Ole Miss, Miss St, Arkansas, Kentucky, and South Carolina - have only 3 wins against ranked OOC opponents since the turn of the decade! Their winning % is barely over 10% (record is 3-26).
On the other hand, the PAC-10's bottom five teams - Arizona, Stanford, Washington, Washington St, and Arizona St - have 10 wins against ranked OOC opponents and their winning % is 22% (record is 10-35). This record is twice as better as their comparable SEC peers.
Argument #3: The SEC plays weak OOC games, allowing the teams in the conference to pad their w/l records, inflating rankings and allowing for more bowl eligible teams.
Here's a breakdown comparison between the SEC and PAC-10.
SEC (all scheduled OOC games):
# of games: 386
# of home games: 325 or 80% of total games
# of games played against FCS schools: 57 or 15% of total games
# of games played against teams ranked lower than 100 (Massey):134 or 35% of total games
# of games played against FCS or lower than 100: 191 or 50% of total games
# of games played against ranked teams: 51 or 13% of total games
PAC-10 (all scheduled OOC games):
# of games: 296
# of home games: 210 or 70% of total games
# of games played against FCS schools: 26 or 9% of total games
# of games played against teams ranked lower than 100 (Massey):56 or 19% of total games
# of games played against FCS or lower than 100: 82 or 28% of total games
# of games played against ranked teams: 76 or 26% of total games
This shows that the SEC schedules double the number of pansy teams in their OOC, and likely to schedule less than half of the ranked teams than their PAC-10 counterparts. Clearly there is a discrepancy between the scheduling philosophy between the two conferences. One is cowardly, the other mans up... you tell me which is which.
In short, the PAC-10 has outplayed the SEC in every conceivable measurement , yet USC continues to get shafted by not being able to play in the title game due to the perception of the "weak" PAC-10. It is truly an injustice.
Other statistical bits of information:
- The PAC-10 got reamed for going 2-6 against the MWC last year, but it's overall record against that conference is 43-22 or 66% since the turn of the decade. It is obvious that last year was an anomaly. Oh, BTW... what is the SEC's record during this time period? 8-6 or 57%... worse than the PAC-10's.
- How dominant is USC? USC has more OOC wins (8) against Top 10 teams than the entire SEC (7). USC's record is an astounding 8-2 or 80%. Given this, how can USC have only played in 1 BCS championship game this decade?