I'm glad your at least willing to concede that Ole Miss can also claim the 1960 national championship. Your list (Oklahoma, 1950, Tennessee 1951, Maryland 1953, Minnesota 1960, Alabama 1964, Michigan State 1965, Texas 1970, Alabama 1973) proves my point about 1960 being an "absurd" mythical national championship for Minnesota. You list 8 teams that lost their bowl game, but were still national champion. The other 7 teams finished with 1 loss, giving them an argument. Only Minnesota finished with 2 losses, including the bowl game.
Ole Miss can claim it, but from a much less respectable source: The AP and the Coaches Poll have always been the most respected sources.
It's fun making mincemeat out of people's crappy arguments. But with you it is just too easy. Over a 24 year span 8 of the champions lost their bowl game, and four of the champions in that stretch didn't even play in bowl games. Michigan State in 1952 (too new to the Big Ten, not yet elligible), UCLA in 1954 (Could not play in consecutive bowls), Oklahoma in 1956 (Could not play in consecutive bowls) and Notre Dame in 1966 (did not participate in bowls until 1968).
So we have national champions that lost 8 of the 20 games played.
And no one seemed to mind. Had it been an issue, it would have been addressed in 1950. Or they could addressed it in 1960, after the Gophers lost their bowl game. Instead, it took until 1974 for change this, after four more teams lost their bowl games.
That it took 24 years to change just proves that bowls did not then have the same status as they did today. The football world recognizes Minnesota as the 1960 National Champion. Deal with it.
Go on the Oklahoma board. Tell them their 1950 National Championship is invalid.
Go on the Tennessee board. Tell them their 1951 National Championship is invalid.
Go on the Michigan State board. Tell them their 1952 and 1965 National Championships are invalid.
Go on the Maryland board. Tell them their 1953 National Championship is invalid.
Go on the Alabama board. Tell them their 1964 and 1973 National Championships are invalid.
Go on the Texas board. Tell them their 1970 National Championship is invalid.
Go ahead. But you'll sputter and babble saying "But they had only one loss!" It doesn't make a difference. Either losing the bowl game invalidates a National Championship or it doesn't. The rest of the football world doesn't agree with you, so why should we agree with you?
You know as well as I do that this isn't some honest, well-considered opinion, it's just empty smack. So go ahead, babble some more, and we'll continue to make minemeat of you.