This season, college football hasn't proved merely that Mississippi can produce something wilder than Brett Favre's beard.
This season, college football has become America's most fascinating sport.
Of all the lies endemic to the game — "They're student-athletes," "The NCAA should exist" — the silliest was the traditionalist notion that the sport would be diminished by a playoff, that the regular season was sacrosanct because of its unique ability to provide virtual playoffs every autumn weekend.
In this, the first season to end in a four-team playoff, the game has never been better.
Here are seven reasons why:
1. Mississippi: The state has always produced talent but rarely contended in the modern SEC. This year, Ole Miss and Mississippi State rank in the top three in the country, adding both surprise and grand tradition to the top of the polls.
Both teams could be undefeated come the Egg Bowl, giving all of us time to discover why it is called the Egg Bowl, and whether an Egg Bowl is something that holds a Hotty Toddy.
2. SEC dominance: Baseball is at its best when the Yankees are competitive. College football is at its best when the SEC is strong enough to thrive, and strong enough for the rest of the country to hate. The league boasts four of the five top-ranked teams, plus No. 9 Georgia, with four head-to-head matchups among those teams remaining on the schedule, making the stretch run a virtual playoff to get into the national playoffs.