Sometimes, a playoff series prior to a championship game is considered to be the real championship game/series and not the actual final round/game.
Examples:
When Detroit played Colorado in the 2002 Western Conference Finals, many were calling that series "The Real Stanley Cup Finals."
Also, that same year, the Lakers/Kings conference finals was considered by some as the real NBA Finals.
When the Cowboys and 49ers had their three straight NFC title games, they were considered by many to be "The Real Super Bowl."
In fact, even S.I. caught ahold of that:
These parts from the article sum up what I mean:
Anyone care to bring up more examples?
Examples:
When Detroit played Colorado in the 2002 Western Conference Finals, many were calling that series "The Real Stanley Cup Finals."
Also, that same year, the Lakers/Kings conference finals was considered by some as the real NBA Finals.
When the Cowboys and 49ers had their three straight NFC title games, they were considered by many to be "The Real Super Bowl."
In fact, even S.I. caught ahold of that:
These parts from the article sum up what I mean:
Why did we have to mess around so long with all this extraneous stuff?
Of course, there had to be a Regular Season and Surprising Teams and Resurgent Teams and Disappointing Teams and Experts Calculating Which Team Has A Chance To Sneak In As A Wild-Card Playoff Longshot, and the myriad Pregame Shows and Postgame Wrap-ups and Hope Springing Eternal In Rust-Belt Cities Where Football Is So Much Like Life, and Franchises Looking To The Future and Where Will Georgia Take Her Boys and Blah Blah Blah.
But it was all Nonsense. Had been all season. Only two Real Teams existed: the Dallas Cowboys and the San Francisco 49ers . All others were mobiles hanging in The Classroom Where Football Is Taught.
The 49ers and the Cowboys played each other once this year, on Nov. 13 in San Francisco , and it was a Big Game. None of this Maybe The Little Team From Green Bay Or The Clever Team From Chicago Can Pull Off An Upset. No, these were Men Duking It Out.
And now they are, and thank god the swill has finally run off into the gutters where it belongs. The 49ers and the Cowboys are so far above all other NFL teams that it's a pity we can't turn their NFC championship matchup this Sunday into Super Bowl XXIX. Then that anticlimactic thing occurring in Miami on Jan. 29 could be some kind of postseason weenie roast.
Anyone care to bring up more examples?