Yes, assuming you can purchase the tickets for each game. Attend one of the (4) majors & the National Championship game or try to make the opening kickoff of the Rose Bowl & then fly down for the Tostito's game.
The Alabama Crimson Tide have won 13 BCS National Championships.
Yes. It is possible to attend two colleges or universities at the same time.
Bowl games do not directly affect BCS rankings, as the BCS system was designed primarily to determine the two teams that would compete in the BCS National Championship Game based on regular-season performance and a combination of human polls and computer rankings. However, the outcomes of bowl games can influence perceptions and may impact the rankings for the following season, especially for teams that perform unexpectedly well. Additionally, the BCS rankings were replaced by the College Football Playoff system in 2014, which has its own criteria for determining playoff teams.
This last season, Washington State and Vanderbilt had the least wins for BCS teams, each winning only two games. Four non-BCS teams won only one game. Among the FCS (formerly I-AA), two teams were winless.
No
It is possible but not recommended unless it is a cooperative program between two schools.
There is no real difference in importance. But I personally believe that the best two are the Rose and Cotton Bowls, simply because more national championships were played in those bowls than any other bowls before the NCAA went to the BCS system. The prestige of a bowl game is typically measured by the payout each team receives for participating. This year, each of the ten teams invited to a BCS Game (including the National Championship Game) is $18MM, therefore there is nothing more (or less) prestigious amongst any of the four lesser BCS games.
Florida and LSU have each won two BCS championships. No one else has won more than one.
one
Mark Spitz attended to two Olympic games the 1968 and the 1972
It is impossible to attend two schools
There are six conferences (ACC, Big East, Big 12, Big 10, PAC 10, and SEC) and one independent school (Notre Dame) that have automaticly qualifying status for a BCS game. Teams in these conferences would be your BCS teams. The other five conferences (MWC, C-USA, WAC, MAC, and SBC) and two independents (Army and Navy) are not automatic qualifiers and can only make it to a BCS bowl game through an "at-large" bid. These would be your non-BCS teams. Although the BCS considers ALL teams to be "BCS teams" with the division being between automatic and non-automatic qualifiers.