This. I told my dad yesterday as we watched Auburn play Wisconsin (and after watching all the other bowl games with SEC teams in them) that the SEC is no longer the best conference. Whatever the reason is doesn't matter. The bottom line is there's no question and no denying that the SEC is no longer the best conference. I sat and watched (whether it be Ole Miss, Miss St., Auburn, etc) these games and noticed these teams were just as fast (in many cases faster) and just as good as the SEC teams on the other side of the line of scrimmage. The game of football is very cyclical. What the SEC did for seven straight years was amazing and may not be matched again. But the winds of change have no doubt blown in and shaken things up.
As for Alabama and last night. I'll leave the technical aspect of the game to JessN's analysis as I believe he has once again nailed it. But what keeps running through my mind is we just got beat with a team that had their third string quarterback starting his second game. He lit our secondary up and for much of the night didn't play or look like a third stringer only starting his second game. I can only wonder and ask could our third string quarterback been capable of the same? The resounding answer is no. Someone asks how Baylor, TCU and these other programs seem to be able to plug and play qb's without any drop off. Here's why. The type offenses they run are very simple to learn and very simple to run. Where as the more pro style offenses are harder to learn and take longer to learn it. Hence there is NO WAY if we were in the same position as OSU (with the first and second QB going down) that we could have just plugged in our third string QB and had any chance at having the same success.
C. Jones joins an ever growing list, it seems, of QB`s that are either new, undistinguished, or previously "average" for whom we present an opportunity to have a coming out party, if not a career day. Maybe, however, I`m overly sensitive on this, but it sure feels like it`s the case. Anybody else?