(AP) - Alabama and Texas get to play in a national title game. For TCU,
Cincinnati and Boise State, the math doesn't quite add up but they
still get a spot in a BCS bowl.
The quirky, imperfect method of
choosing a national champion succeeded Sunday in matching top-ranked
Alabama against No. 2 Texas in the BCS championship — a Jan. 7 game
between undefeated teams that will bring together Heisman Trophy
hopefuls Colt McCoy of the Longhorns and Mark Ingram of the Crimson
Tide.
And, of course, it also produced plenty for the little guys to get upset about.
No.
3 TCU, No. 4 Cincinnati and No. 6 Boise State also finished undefeated.
All three were included in the BCS, but none will play for the title —
a predictable result that will renew the annual debate about college
football's way of determining the best team in the land.
"It's a
fair question," said BCS executive director Bill Hancock. "The fact is
that the charge of the BCS is to match 1 and 2 in the bowl system. It's
a limited charge. It's what the BCS is designed to do. Based on the
season's play, we're confident we've matched 1 and 2."
Seeking
its first national title since 1992, Alabama opens as a 3-point
favorite for the game at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. That's the
place where Vince Young almost single-handedly led Texas to a victory
over Southern California in 2006 to claim the national title.
The
other BCS matchups: Oregon against Ohio State in the Rose Bowl; Iowa
against Georgia Tech in the Orange; Florida against Cincinnati in the
Sugar and TCU against Boise State in the Fiesta.
The TCU-Boise
State game also will pit a pair of undefeateds against each other, two
teams from small conferences that don't always get automatic spots in
the BCS. This is the first time in BCS history that two of the small
schools have been selected. Both should be expected to use the
title-game snub as motivation.
"We're here to prove a point," TCU
coach Gary Patterson said. "I voted for us No. 2 in polls today when we
voted. We believe we have a great football team and we're out to show
we could be the No. 1 team in the nation."
The Longhorns (13-0) have been on both sides of the BCS debate in the past.
Just
last year, their chances for a national title were squashed when they
lost a three-way tiebreaker for the Big 12 South title.
This time
around, Texas defeated Nebraska 13-12 in the Big 12 title game Saturday
to secure its spot in the national championship, though the
less-than-dominating performance certainly left things open for debate.
Still,
there was a big gap between Texas and TCU in the BCS rankings, the
coaches' poll and The Associated Press poll, which is not included in
the BCS formula. The AP awards its own national championship.
"You can still win the AP, so that's what our whole goal is within the next month," Patterson said.
Behind
113 yards rushing and three touchdowns from Ingram, Alabama (13-0)
defeated Florida 32-13 in the SEC championship game, an overwhelming
victory over the defending national champions that made the Tide an
easy choice for No. 1.
But is anything really easy when it comes to the BCS?
TCU
was ranked 17th in the preseason polls and never really had a chance to
rise above the bigger, more traditional programs that were ahead of
them.
Cincinnati made it through the Big East, one of the six
so-called power conferences, and needed a 21-point comeback against
Pittsburgh on Saturday to move to 12-0.
Boise State finished its
fourth undefeated regular season in the last six years, but still found
itself ranked behind No. 5 Florida, in large part because it plays in
the Western Athletic Conference.
A perfect scenario for an
eight-team playoff, perhaps, but that's years off. The current system
is set for the next four years. And to hear the BCS officials tell it,
there's nothing really wrong with their system, anyway.
"We do
feel like it's working and college football is thriving," Hancock said.
"We recognize there are elements in each constituency that don't like
it, but the fact is, it has a consensus. The critics, the playoff
proponents, do not have a consensus."
Certainly, he'll get no
argument from Texas or Alabama, who meet for the first time since the
1982 Cotton Bowl — a 14-12 Longhorns win over the Tide and Bear Bryant.
"The
system put us in the game," Texas coach Mack Brown said. "We were told
for the last three weeks if we won, we'd be in the game. We did that."
Not by much, though.
It
took a 46-yard field goal from Hunter Lawrence with no time left to
lift the Longhorns to the victory over Nebraska. Now it's Brown, long
known for not being able to parlay all that Texas talent into a
national title, who's a win away from taking his second in five years.
Alabama,
meanwhile, is in the midst of a resurgence brought about by Nick Saban,
who three years ago took over a program in turmoil and now has the
faithful believing again.
"There's so much tradition and so much
passion," Saban said. "There are great expectations for what people
like to accomplish around here, and it's a feeling of tremendous
self-gratification for everyone involved in the program."