
By John Witzke
What's all of that noise I hear? Yes, we've reached the point in the football calendar when sports fans are yelling and screaming about the alleged inequities of the Bowl Championship System system. This, of course, is always accompanied by cries for a Division I-A playoff and the assumption that it would cure all that's supposedly ailing the great sport of big-time college football.
Here's what the critics overlook. Nearly every season, things break just right for the BCS, and the two teams that should be playing in the title game end up doing so. In spite of all of the excitement, the proponents would rather air their frustrations than enjoy the great drama that is bred by the Greatest Regular Season in Sports.
Don't you think those critical missed field goals by Oklahoma State and Boise State would've been easier to make had a playoff spot been clinched? While we can feel pity for kickers succumbing to pressure, the "choke factor" is an evil imperative in sports, especially college football.
What makes 2011 unique compared to every other year of the BCS era (1998-present) is that everybody agrees that undefeated Louisiana State is the No. 1 team and deserving of a spot in the title game. The controversy came in determining who should challenge the Tigers on Jan. 9 in New Orleans.
Legitimate arguments can be heard coming from Stillwater and Tuscaloosa. Hundreds of columns have been written to decry the more "established" Crimson Tide receiving the nod by the slightest of margins.