See my above response to AAA.
And I'm not a hardcore "MNC or nothing" guy. It's not that the MNC matters and so all other bowl games do not. It's actually the opposite.
I've always understood the origin of bowl games, which were by definition post-season exhibitions. They didn't matter for conference standings because the conference regular season was over. Until the late 60s and early 70s, they didn't even impact the final wire service rankings. And even when that changed for good in 1974, they still only mattered if you really cared about the beauty pageant that was the subjectively voted final Top 20 or Top 25.
I always wanted my team to win rather than lose, of course, but there's just not that much of import on the line in the bowl games outside of a subjective and sometimes arbitrary ranking of teams from some biased sportswriters and/or coaches.
I guess I look at the bolded part and feel like it sort of warps things a bit.
For the vast majority of college football games, there's not that much of import on the line, and what is important is important to a relatively small group in the vast tapestry of all this. Now I acknowledge, a bowl is lesser, but I think declaring it meaningless exhibition feeds a corrosive attitude that reduces the meaning it could have. And while that meaning ain't as high as Texas-Texas A&M, it seems like the minor meaning should be worth celebrating to a degree.
It's a football game. There's spirit of competition. There's people who put in a bunch of work getting to do the thing they like doing, working together, for the 13th time all year, and it can entertain us. All that work, and they don't get that many chances to put that to use, so a last one doesn't seem like the worst outcome. And if they win, the joy of victory looks pretty sweet, even if it's after winning in Boise or Yankee Stadium.
Growing up, a parent often told me when I didn't want to do something, you can look at it as shit or look at it as gold. I don't think bowls are gold, don't get me wrong. But wanting to call them meaningless exhibitions (and this is not to pick on you, just in general) strikes as looking at them as shit for the sake of doing so. The hipster urge to be cool by not caring.
I guess I come back to the idea football should be cool and fun, if possible. Hopefully that's true of small high schools to big colleges to the NFL. Preemptively dampening the cool/fun factor for these games, which has become sort of a corrosive common attitude, just seems like taking away from possible joy for ... I don't really know why.