Nebraska only beat WSU 35-21 in Lincoln, so your argument is invalid.
Running up the score on #fuckingdreckfest doesn't impress me, even when one of the #fuckingdreckfest is a Nick Saban MSU team. Kansas tied for second in the Big 8 that year, that's how soft their schedule was.
All-Time Rankings superiority guy
honestly, I can't say I've done a total run-down of the Big 8 then and the Big East then. I do know that among Pitt, VT and BC, that at least two of them were top 20-ish type teams. I fear (actually I know) that people out west have a milder version of bias against the other coast's teams as they do ours - by bias I mean they're kind of in the dark and have to generalize a lot. I used to struggle with this with Roy constantly. and my recollection is that the Big 8 had a few more good (not great) teams than it did traditionally (traditionally it's beyond arguing that the Big 8 was REALLY top heavy).
i'll just say this - you're right, that Miami team had a tendency to lose focus at times, but when they were focused, they made a joke out of everyone they played. A lot of people out west at that time didn't really appreciate how tough Blacksburg was to play at, and how good Beamer's teams were at home. They had, as I recall, Kevin Jones in the backfield and one or two pretty good receivers, and they were always fast and good on defense back then. Miami opened that game carving through VT like a hot knife through butter, but, as happened at BC, they kind of let VT hang around and then gave up some big plays and before you knew it, it was a real ball game by the time they woke up.
I guess Nebraska 95 didn't have that, but comparing the two teams, I'd give the nod to Miami. I just can't see a Nebraska I back running through or around that Miami defense. Not in a title game. Wilfork, McDougle, Vilma, Williams, Campbell, Joseph ... Crouch may not have been Frazier, but he was a damn good runner and he couldn't do it. On offense, Miami was so balanced and could kill you in the air or on the ground. Running backs, receivers, tightends, awesome O line ... they had it all.
Hard to say, and there's no doubt I am biased in part because I'm a Miami fan, and in part because I grew up watching Miami teams beat, and often decimate, vaunted Nebraska teams.
A lot of Husker faithful will tell you that the most dominant Husker team of all time was the '83 crew with Mike Rosier, Turner Gill, Irving Friar and an offensive line for the ages. That team, of course, lost to Miami led by a QB with a Jewfro and a # 20 on his jersey (which I always thought was against the rules).