TUSKtimes
Riding The Wave
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- Jan 15, 2009
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i don't remember why the tiebreaker broke the way it did.
but, florida shared the top spot in the SEC East in 2003 when lsu went to the SEC title game.
however, georgia went to the SEC title game.
It happens every year on my NCCA College Football '11. I get to beat them once in the regular season and again in the SECC.
TN's best chance to get to ATL this season is to sweep the east games, and lose to two of the three west teams. TN gets a new coaching staff early in UF, then gets UGA and USC at home. Sweep the east. Then beat one of LSU, ALA, ARK. Lets say TN beats LSU since it is at home and well its Les Miles. Two losses at Ala, and at ARK.
Ala wins the west.
TN is 10-2, and gets a rematch with Bammer in ATL!
Strange when you think on it. A loss to a rival from a different division just doesn't count as much. Playing every year should increase the odds that it does happen and then the caliber of the teams involved. Alabama, Auburn, LSU in the west, Tennessee, Georgia, Florida in the east. Only the Dawgs have failed to win a National Championship. Amazing it hasn't happened yet.
What it is saying is that keeping our natural rivals after going to two divisions, hasn't hurt the conference in the least.
When UT is up, Bama is down. When Bama is up, UT is down. Let's hope it reverses again soon![]()
Because since 1992 they've been garbage every year we've been good and vice-versa.
SEC championship is only 18 years old
and playing a team annually during the season often serves to hinder the loser in their divisional races, since it counts towards their conference record (which, in turn, also determines divisional standings)
there's not a terribly high percentage of rematches among any of the East-West annual matchups though (probably in part for that reason)