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"The kickoff specialist from Nebraska is not getting a Christmas card form us, I'll tell you that," Kelly quipped.
"Hey, 12-0. Show me why we can't be No. 1," Kelly added while speaking with reporters in Cincinnati. "We won all of our games. We can only play the games they scheduled. After watching Nebraska-Texas last night, we're as good as anybody."
Yet, should Cincinnati and TCU both win their bowl games and finish without a loss, they'll be left to argue over who deserves to be No. 2.
Florida should know better than to take the Bearcats lightly, based on what happened to Alabama only a year ago. The 2009 Sugar Bowl was the Crimson Tide's consolation prize following a loss to Florida in the 2008 SEC title game. The Tide came in flat, and wound up being no match for unbeaten Utah of the Mountain West, which became the best of the BCS busters with a 31-17 romp.
"Our legacy is going to be dependent on how we finish this season," Meyer said.
Now the Big East is sending an undefeated team to the Big Easy to take on the SEC's second-best. Cincinnati will want to defend its league's honor better than it did last year at the Orange Bowl, when the Bearcats, then ranked 12th, fell 20-7 to Virginia Tech of the ACC.
There is a bit of SEC pride at stake as well. Many of those affiliated with the conference espoused the idea that Saturday's Alabama-Florida showdown was the de facto national championship. That argument holds water only if both teams win their bowl games. Florida will get its turn first on New Year's Day in New Orleans, with Alabama playing six nights later in Pasadena.
[Associated Press;
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