No one they will have to play the game again because its a tie, its just like any other games.
BCS stands for Bowl Championship Series. It determines what two teams would play in the National Championship Game. The championship game winner would become the college football national champion.
There really are none. The conferences that hold championship games are those that have so many teams that they are broken into two divisions. The winner of each division will play in the championship game to crown a conference champion. Conferences that are not broken into two divisions do not have a championship game.
No. The Super Bowl is designed to pit the champion of the AFC conference against the champion of the NFC conference. Two teams from the same conference cannot play in the Super Bowl.
No
The SEC did not have a championship game until 1992.
Two teams, the AFC Conference Champion and the NFC Conference Champion, go to the Super Bowl each season.
Only two teams go to the World Series: the American League champion and the National League champion.
Shannon Brown have a two-time nba champion
Lakers and Celtics
The lakers, and the celtics
This is acctually a complicated question, I hope this helps. The NCAA does not grant an official national championship in the FBS (formerly Division 1-A), instead the highest level of an official national championship is in the FCS (formerly Division 1-AA). As for the FBS, the national championship has traditionally been decided by two to three sets of polls voted on by members of the media or coaches. The BCS was formed to try and put the two top teams together in a "national championship" game using the polls to determine those teams. Since the AP poll pulled out of the BCS, however, the champion is decided by the winner of the BCS title game AND the Associated Press. So there could theoretically be a BCS champion and an AP champion, both of which would be regarded as the "national champion" for that year. However, 2003 was the last time this happened (LSU won the BCS, but the AP selected USC.) There are also a handfull of mathematical systems that grant a "national championship" but they are not typically recognized by schools, fans, or the media.
Michigan state and North Carolina