jmik58's Blog



Where were you January 7, 2007?
Chances are you weren’t using an iPhone -- a concept known only to Apple insiders at the time. You likely weren’t complaining about or declaring support for our current President. Barack Obama, an Illinois senator, had yet to announce his intentions to run for the nation’s lead position.
South Beach? That was a place where people took their families – not talents. And what about King James? He was busy guiding his Cleveland Cavaliers to their first-ever NBA Finals appearance.
And that lovable character Tim Tebow? The humble 19-year-old was busy grooming his famous touchdown celebration as the backup quarterback for the Florida Gators.
A mere 1,974 days have passed since then. Things were normal until that date. Teams shared. College football conferences ebbed, flowed, gave, and took.
The following night, however, Tebow’s Gators grabbed the BCS national championship. And with it the SEC took as well.
But there has been a little problem. They have refused to give back.
A running count of six seasons now the SEC has claimed the crystal ball and paraded around as home to the best in the land. Four teams in total have shared in the wealth – Alabama and Florida twice; with Auburn and LSU each nabbing the crown once.
But college football has been around forever and the Big Ten and Big 12 schools of yesteryear have dominated in this way as well – right?
Not even close.
Dating back fifty years the SEC has won the most AP national championships (14) while the Big 12 (I refer to them as such for the sake of modern comparisons) has amassed twelve.
While the numbers look nice, the traditional Big 12 schools built up their total during the pre-BCS years of 1962 to 1997 with ten AP national championships. During that same time the SEC earned seven of their own.
The arguments for the success had from 1960 – ‘70’s are difficult to compare to modern times due to the growth of the college game. Players train harder and are more skilled; therefore creating a larger pool of talented players. This argument alone lends to the concept of parity which would have us believe that teams and conferences would trade off at being the best on a yearly basis.
But this hasn’t happened.
Since the BCS began in 1998, SEC teams have won the national championship seven times. The next highest conference tally – two – is shared by three conferences (ACC, Big 12, PAC 12).
So is the SEC’s streak the best in major-sports conference history?
In an attempt to come up with comparisons it’s fairly clear to see a lack of examples may serve as a default affirmative answer.
Iowa’s wrestling squad (Big 10) has pulled off championship runs of eleven in twelve years. North Carolina women’s soccer (ACC) has accomplished a fifteen-in-twenty run. And more recently, the UConn women’s basketball program (Big East) completed a stretch of six championships in a span of eleven years.
While impressive, each serves as a single-team streak in a sport outside of the parity-filled genres like that of football, baseball, and men’s basketball.
If a comparative streak exists, I’ve yet to see it.
I’ll keep looking, though. After all, we have 218 days to find it until the next BCS national championship game kicks off on January 7, 2013.
That’s 2,192 days since January 7, 2007.
This time I know where I’ll be.
Where does the SEC’s national championship streak rank historically for you?
Justin is a staff writer for Operation Sports. You can find him on the forums under the username jmik58. Follow him on Twitter @long_snapper.
Chances are you weren’t using an iPhone -- a concept known only to Apple insiders at the time. You likely weren’t complaining about or declaring support for our current President. Barack Obama, an Illinois senator, had yet to announce his intentions to run for the nation’s lead position.
South Beach? That was a place where people took their families – not talents. And what about King James? He was busy guiding his Cleveland Cavaliers to their first-ever NBA Finals appearance.
And that lovable character Tim Tebow? The humble 19-year-old was busy grooming his famous touchdown celebration as the backup quarterback for the Florida Gators.
A mere 1,974 days have passed since then. Things were normal until that date. Teams shared. College football conferences ebbed, flowed, gave, and took.
The following night, however, Tebow’s Gators grabbed the BCS national championship. And with it the SEC took as well.
But there has been a little problem. They have refused to give back.
A running count of six seasons now the SEC has claimed the crystal ball and paraded around as home to the best in the land. Four teams in total have shared in the wealth – Alabama and Florida twice; with Auburn and LSU each nabbing the crown once.
But college football has been around forever and the Big Ten and Big 12 schools of yesteryear have dominated in this way as well – right?
Not even close.
Dating back fifty years the SEC has won the most AP national championships (14) while the Big 12 (I refer to them as such for the sake of modern comparisons) has amassed twelve.
While the numbers look nice, the traditional Big 12 schools built up their total during the pre-BCS years of 1962 to 1997 with ten AP national championships. During that same time the SEC earned seven of their own.
The arguments for the success had from 1960 – ‘70’s are difficult to compare to modern times due to the growth of the college game. Players train harder and are more skilled; therefore creating a larger pool of talented players. This argument alone lends to the concept of parity which would have us believe that teams and conferences would trade off at being the best on a yearly basis.
But this hasn’t happened.
Since the BCS began in 1998, SEC teams have won the national championship seven times. The next highest conference tally – two – is shared by three conferences (ACC, Big 12, PAC 12).
So is the SEC’s streak the best in major-sports conference history?
In an attempt to come up with comparisons it’s fairly clear to see a lack of examples may serve as a default affirmative answer.
Iowa’s wrestling squad (Big 10) has pulled off championship runs of eleven in twelve years. North Carolina women’s soccer (ACC) has accomplished a fifteen-in-twenty run. And more recently, the UConn women’s basketball program (Big East) completed a stretch of six championships in a span of eleven years.
While impressive, each serves as a single-team streak in a sport outside of the parity-filled genres like that of football, baseball, and men’s basketball.
If a comparative streak exists, I’ve yet to see it.
I’ll keep looking, though. After all, we have 218 days to find it until the next BCS national championship game kicks off on January 7, 2013.
That’s 2,192 days since January 7, 2007.
This time I know where I’ll be.
Where does the SEC’s national championship streak rank historically for you?
Justin is a staff writer for Operation Sports. You can find him on the forums under the username jmik58. Follow him on Twitter @long_snapper.
# 1
Elgin2311 @ Jun 3
can vandy or kentucky take pride in this "streak"? The SEC is overrated in so many ways.
# 2
sparkdawg777 @ Jun 3
It's definately impressive but I don't think it deserves the name "dynasty". It's a conference, it's actually my favorite conference even as a Clemson fan but there are 12 teams in the SEC and only 4 have won a national championship in the last 6 years. A dynasty is 1 team, not a group of teams.
# 3
scottyo60 @ Jun 3
For a few years like 2006-2009 UK made bowl games. Vandy under Franklin will continue to grow and compete. It's not too overrated, but it's easy to say UK and Vandy due to their past. They have been a winning team out of conference, it's just the conference that always gets em in UKs case.
I agree with Sparkdawg that dynasty is 1 team... As bad as I hate to admit it, it's more like a SEC West dynasty if we are going to call it that.
I agree with Sparkdawg that dynasty is 1 team... As bad as I hate to admit it, it's more like a SEC West dynasty if we are going to call it that.
# 4
Jadakiss88 @ Jun 4
It's not a dynasty however it's probably one of the most impressive feats that any conference has pulled off. As a Florida fan I love it, the Gators, Tide, and Tigers (Auburn and LSU) have proven what so many fans of SEC teams have been saying since 91', the SEC plays the best football. Yea, you got perennial bottom feeders like Vandy and UK, inconsistent teams like Miss State and Ole Miss, and teams that have been rebounding since Rodman retired like Tennesse but for the most part there is nothing people can say bad about the SEC.
Everyone around the country continuosly said "Defense wins Championships" ok and when SEC defenses come in and dominate then people want to change their tune. The SEC was denied one when Auburn went undefeated and the SEC was always the last conference spoke of when it came to the Title Chase because of Analyst and Reporters jumping on the USC and OSU bandwagon. We play the best Defense in the Nation, we run the ball better than any other conference and each team has met a conference top dog each year (minus USC). Dynasty, NO, HISTORIC run definetly.
Everyone around the country continuosly said "Defense wins Championships" ok and when SEC defenses come in and dominate then people want to change their tune. The SEC was denied one when Auburn went undefeated and the SEC was always the last conference spoke of when it came to the Title Chase because of Analyst and Reporters jumping on the USC and OSU bandwagon. We play the best Defense in the Nation, we run the ball better than any other conference and each team has met a conference top dog each year (minus USC). Dynasty, NO, HISTORIC run definetly.
# 5
shadia147 @ Jul 7
It's not just Football.. Look at the SEC in Baseball, Basketball, and Girls Basketball. One year, maybe 2010, the champions in every major sport was from the SEC.
And to Jadakiss88's point... If you listen to the Paul Finebaum Show on Sirius, you learn very quickly why the SEC is so dominant. It's because the people down there will accept nothing less. It's a religion in the South. Other conferences have fans, the SEC has disciples.
And to Jadakiss88's point... If you listen to the Paul Finebaum Show on Sirius, you learn very quickly why the SEC is so dominant. It's because the people down there will accept nothing less. It's a religion in the South. Other conferences have fans, the SEC has disciples.
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