Since the loudest talking seems to indicate there's going to be a four team model taking the 4 highest ranked conference winners I decided to have a look back at the last 10 years and see who would have been participating. Just for amusement and curiosity, not trying to make any points or anything. For simplicity, I used that year's BCS to rank the conference champs (they're going to have to have some method). Had a hard time remembering who won what conference which doesn't actually line up smoothly with rankings. I went back and looked up when I knew I didn't know but it's still possible I got a few wrong. Things of note that I saw:
1) Non-BCS teams would have participated in 4 of the ten years but never host. However, none of them would have been Boise State which gave me a bit of a chuckle.
2) OU gets to participate the same number of times as they actually did, no change. That surprised me a bit. Thought it would have been more. They lose the 2003 opportunity and gain one in 2007.
3) If you don't count Miami, who is now in the ACC, Louisville (2006) and Cincinnati (2009) are the only Big East schools that participate at all. Hey West Virginia! Where have you been?
4) Oklahoma would have gotten to host 3 of the ten years. Washington in 2000, Auburn in 2004, and USC in 2008.
5) Oklahoma State would have hosted Oregon last year. Alabama doesn't even make the cut for last year.
6) If there's some sort of Notre Dame exception that allows them to continue as indie, then they would likely have made the cut in 2005 (depending on the special rule) and played at USC.
6) And speaking of rematches, I didn't actually go through all the schedules to look for rematches but I do see a few obvious first round ones like that Notre Dame/USC 2005 game. Miami and FSU in 2000 for sure. LSU and Virginia Tech in 2007 I think. That's actually more often than I expected. Would have thought that not having multiple participants from the same conference would have limited that occurrence better.
7) Remember the controversy of 2001? Well, Nebbish doesn't make the cut in this model. Instead, Colorado hosts Oregon for the right to be slaughtered by Miami.
Anyway, here's what I got, feel free to error check it. I didn't:
2000
4 Washington @ 1 Oklahoma
3 Miami @ 2 Florida State
2001
8 Illinois @ 1 Miami
4 Oregon @ 3 Colorado
2002
4 USC @ 1 Miami
3 Georgia @ 2 Ohio State
2003
7 FSU @ 2 LSU
4 Michigan @ 3 USC
2004
6 Utah @ 1 USC
3 Auburn @ 2 Oklahoma
2005
6 Notre Dame or 7 Georgia @ 1 USC
3 Penn State @ 2 Texas
2006
6 Louisville @ 1 Ohio State
5 USC @ 2 Florida
2007
4 Oklahoma @ 1 Ohio State
3 Virginia Tech @ 2 LSU
2008
5 USC @ 1 Oklahoma
6 Utah @ 2 Florida
2009
4 TCU @ 1 Alabama
3 Cincinnati @ 2 Texas
2010
5 Wisconsin @ 1 Auburn
3 TCU @ 2 Oregon
2011
10 Wisconsin @ 1 LSU
5 Oregon @ 3 Oklahoma State