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That is wishful thinking on your part. College football is absolutely nothing like the 90's, when they didn't have internet, they didn't thhave recruiting services ranking recruits, they didn't national football camps, they didn't advanced coaching and strength/conditioning coaches at the high school level.All that happens in the SEC is Saban retires. The Saban run is unprecedent in college football. However, the SEC has shown that when Saban is not on top, typically another SEC Program is in the running. Those recruits would be at other SEC schools if not at Alabama. You will then see more variance at the top similar to how the SEC looked from 2000-2010.
In the 1990s it was mostly Florida/Tennessee driven due to both those programs have stable systems and coaches while Auburn, Alabama (with the exception of first half of 1990s), Georgia, and LSU having poor coaching, unstable systems, etc. Things change. They don't change up in 5-6 year span because in the scheme of sports, that is a short time period. It is only 5 seasons or 5 teams to prove yourself. Look at it in a long-term trend. Long-term, the B1G just hasn't been that good over a 20-30 year span
So yes -- if CFB goes back to how it was in the 90's -- then i wholeheartedly agree -- teams like Nebraska, Tennessee, Michigan (my team), etc. could reach the top of CFB again. I, personally, don't see that ever happening, because all the things I have mentioned is big business now at the high school level. It is also why the best players end up going to a select few schools, because those best players have been going to camps, playing in 7 on 7's, following each other on social media for most of their life.
It is why a rich recruiting footprint in your home state is absolutely necessary if you want to compete on a yearly basis nationally. So I can see Florida reaching the top if they find the right coach, I could see Texas if they got it together, but Nebraska, I don't see any way possible in today's CFB. Same goes for Tennessee, as their top players seem to go elsewhere anyways. And Michigan is a pipe dream -- i think they will get thru the B1G, like last year, once in a while, but winning a title, I don't see that happening unless one of the dozens of billionaire alumni we have decides to buy us a lot of classes.