You sit there and watch Kirby Smart on ESPN talking about the Big Ten having an edge and the SEC needing to adjust and I just think back to the 1997 Outback Bowl when we ran the ball down Wisconsin's throat for 60 minutes. We didn't need to talk about edges or conferences having advantages back then. You lined up and you hit the other team in the mouth and that was that. Now we are sitting here in April with no spring game to speak of and the head coach is on national television talking about how the Big Ten has caught up. I remember when we used to end the season with a trip to the Citrus Bowl or the Peach Bowl and you knew exactly what you were getting. A cold January afternoon in Orlando or Atlanta against a Big Ten team that wanted to run the ball just as bad as we did. Those games meant something. You earned that bowl trip by winning seven or eight games in the SEC and the whole city would shut down for a week to follow the team down there. Now everything is about playoff positioning and conference realignment and I am supposed to care about some expanded bracket that turns December into a month of corporate hospitality suites instead of real bowl games. The Gator Bowl, the Peach Bowl when it was still at the old stadium, the Sugar Bowl when it was the Sugar Bowl and not a semifinal site. Those were the games that built this program. Not this nonsense.