- Thread starter
- #1
john01992
New Member
this is whats on their front page of ESPN right now........
espn headline: SEC depth
tagline: The SEC's national title run could soon end. And the biggest threat isn't Florida State or Oregon. No, it's the league's depth.
article headline: The SEC cannibalizes its own
intro: Even with a freshman quarterback, No. 2 Florida State might be good enough to end the SEC's unprecedented string of seven consecutive BCS national championships at the Rose Bowl on Jan. 6.
Or maybe it will be No. 3 Oregon, which has a stout defense to go along with its high-scoring offense.
Or maybe even No. 4 Ohio State, which doesn't look as strong as the three teams ranked ahead of it, but probably has the easiest path to finishing the season unbeaten.
Ever since Urban Meyer guided Florida to a BCS national championship in 2006 and an SEC team won every BCS title since, we've wondered what it would take to finally end the SEC's dominance.
NCAA sanctions?
Alabama coach Nick Saban returning to the NFL?
Meyer using an SEC blueprint to build a championship team at Ohio State?
Well, if we've learned anything over the past two weeks, it's that the SEC might end up beating itself.
i kinda saw this coming.......
this coupled with their "mizz/aggie prove sec is so good" article from a few days ago and its impossible to argue that espn doesnt love :bj: the sec and promoting their agenda
espn headline: SEC depth
tagline: The SEC's national title run could soon end. And the biggest threat isn't Florida State or Oregon. No, it's the league's depth.
article headline: The SEC cannibalizes its own
intro: Even with a freshman quarterback, No. 2 Florida State might be good enough to end the SEC's unprecedented string of seven consecutive BCS national championships at the Rose Bowl on Jan. 6.
Or maybe it will be No. 3 Oregon, which has a stout defense to go along with its high-scoring offense.
Or maybe even No. 4 Ohio State, which doesn't look as strong as the three teams ranked ahead of it, but probably has the easiest path to finishing the season unbeaten.
Ever since Urban Meyer guided Florida to a BCS national championship in 2006 and an SEC team won every BCS title since, we've wondered what it would take to finally end the SEC's dominance.
NCAA sanctions?
Alabama coach Nick Saban returning to the NFL?
Meyer using an SEC blueprint to build a championship team at Ohio State?
Well, if we've learned anything over the past two weeks, it's that the SEC might end up beating itself.
i kinda saw this coming.......
this coupled with their "mizz/aggie prove sec is so good" article from a few days ago and its impossible to argue that espn doesnt love :bj: the sec and promoting their agenda