kind of like how #6 won the Superbowl against a #2. Oh wait, except those rankings actually mean something based off onfield performances that make sense because there aren't too many teams where rankings are based on popularity and stat padding and not actual head to head matchups, and its not too disappointing because even when a #6 wins the Superbowl or a #5 beats a previously undefeated team to win the championship, no one really cares or questions it because they all had a fair chance, not this "every game matters...except when we vote otherwise"
SEC gets to beat up on the most non conference teams with the easiest non conference schedules, and for every powerhouse they do have they have an equally abysmal program like Kentucky or Vanderbilt, and it shows in the bowl season where the SEC hasn't had the highest bowl winning percentage in the past 9 seasons despite regularly getting in the most teams because of all their non conference padding.
2010 - ACC, PAC10 champions and ACC runner-up were all beaten by SEC teams.
2011 - ACC, PAC12, Big East (co-) champions beaten by the SEC.
Padding our schedules with other BCS conference champions. That's just what I can think of off the top of my head. We also tore up the B10 in bowl games. Maybe the B10 should ask for some more regular season games with the SEC to bolster themselves.
Top 5
Oregon's non conference schedule - LSU (13-0), Nev. (7-5), Missouri St (2-9)
Stanford's non conference schedule - San Jose St (5-7), Duke (3-9), ND (8-4)
OSU's non conference schedule - UL-Laf. (8-4), Tulsa (8-4) and Arizona (4-8) (Arizona beat UL-Laf. by the way)
Alabama's non conference schedule - Kent St (5-7), Penn St (9-3), North Texas (5-7), Georgia Southern (10-2) (Georgia Southern is a good FCS team)
LSU's non conference schedule - Oregon (10-2), Northwestern St (5-6), WV (9-3), W Kent (7-5)
Padding schedule. Lulz. They all beat up on crappy schools. Every team tries to get 2 schools they know they can whoop on. The Big 12 decided they needed to whoop on themselves some more by playing 9 conference games. Factor in teams like Wash St (4-8) for Oregon and Stanford and Kansas (2-10) for OSU. I would mention Ole Miss, but you could't really expect them to be so bad that they'd lose to Kentucky and Vandy in the same year.