This take completely misses how modern roster construction works. Oregon finished last season with a top-10 SP+ rating and their average yards per play was over 7.0, which is elite by any conference's standard. The idea that SEC competition is a uniquely insurmountable hurdle is outdated when you look at the actual results on the field. Teams from other conferences have consistently shown they can compete with and beat SEC teams in high-stakes games. Oregon's recruiting class isn't just about stars, it's about addressing specific needs with players who have performed at an elite level in high school competitions that are national in scope. The notion that physicality or preparedness is exclusive to one conference isn't supported by the recent data. Georgia's own national championship runs featured numerous key players developed outside the traditional SEC footprint. The gap is closing because programs like Oregon are building complete teams, not just collecting talent, and their performance metrics prove they can play with anyone. Dismissing their roster building ignores how the sport has evolved beyond regional paradigms.